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Durham Chronicle (1867), 8 Apr 1897, p. 2

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â€"-v‘_ “-s'v“ Viut‘v‘o Some of the prisoners come home so Weak that. they do not feel like eatâ€" ing, but crouch in a_ corner of the noi- enxne den till. the cool night air revives their appetite. Others worry down their rations the best. way they can, and then sit fannin themselves with against. one of the numerous prison reg- ulations are fanned with cowhides. At sundown, or sooner, the guards and their assistants make their reports. 80 many men black-marked for laziness, (so many for talking, for insolenoe, for disregard of orders. The assistants, espeaally, are almost. sure to prefer a charge of some sort. or other. They are trusties, or paroled prisoners, try- ing to curry favor by an excess 01: zeal, and find it the cheapest. way. to Signal- ize their loyalty at (the expense of their fellow-convicts. Fighting 1n quar- ters is also a frequent. cause of com. plaint. "Bet. senor, I have not been cost the Russian Empire 500,000 men, and 1,000,000,000 rubles, but when the rebel chief Shamyl was finally captured the Czar lodged him in the Winter pal- ace for a couple of weeks, put. an Ad- .jutant and a relay of saddle horses at his service, and finding him deeply sunk in religious melancholy, paid Ihis expenses to Meme, and dismissed him death. Hundreds of captured chiefâ€" tains were burned at the stake withâ€" in the first century after the discov- ery oi the new world, and it might be lives in Spanish convict camps and state prisâ€" ons. One 01' these camps on the Isla de Pines, the "Isle of Pines,” south of Cuba, has the haying of mastiffs for a matin hymn, and the bowls of horse- whipped delinquents for an evening lullaby. The presidio is located in the coast swamps, and at break of dawn yhe convicts are marched out» to work ‘vâ€"~v_w- "v quamtance,” as it were, and recall the to a sense of their duty if they should stray off under a spam of hypnotism. At 10 a. m., the guards are relieved; about. an hour 3er noon the prison- ers get a twenty mmutes’ recess for rest and lunch, and at 5 p. 111., they are driven back to their swelter pens. The prihcipal meal of the day is then serv- ed 111 the form of sun-dried fish and 1" 001108 (13 maizâ€"coffifrgugv‘filiwgroafia and bakeg Al‘nto cakes mth dltshwater. under escort. of shotvgun armed guards and .a pack of gal 05, fleeter and fier- cer thax; our bl hounds. As the pris- oners file out of the stockade zthese brutps snap at. their heelsâ€"per recon- odeleosâ€"to .“renew their personal ao- l“‘nl.nfnnnn " n... :4. ._._-_._- Time has changed the weapons of Spanish armies, but not their methods of warfare. “Those fellows carry on like a gang of-marauding Apaches in a fury of personal resentment," a correspondent wrote from Cuba, and if the agitator Stephiak had seen the manâ€"pens of Cents. and Les Pines he would retract his assertion that the Russian jailers are the most inhuman despots on earth. The Russians and some of their neighbors manage their prisons Wi th barbarous strictness, but not. with wanton cruelty, and can dis- tinguish an assassin from an armed in- surgent. The forty years guerrilla war against the Circassian highlanders the notion that rebels and dissenters have no rights which a loyalist needs respect. King Pedro, of Aragon, boasted his success in entrapping a he- roix: Emir who had come to his court in response to A FLATTERING INVITATION, and was beheaded the moment the drawbridge of the castle had closed be- hind him. The Beni Harath», a band of Mauritanian partisans who had been captured in the citadel of Seville, were treated with a barbarity that provok- ed the protests even of North Euro- pean visitors. . be apt to treat prisoners of war with a. cruelty which the valet of Tom Moore would have hesitated to practice in a. dog kennel. The 800 years’ struggle against the power of the Moorish invaders 1m- pressed their Gothic adversaries with {cal purposes. Their conjectures were Younded on timeâ€"confirmed personal imâ€" pressions, but can be applied only to Special character traits of the Spanish nations. , Perhaps no other race of the pres- ent world has more strangely localiz- ed its idea! of social du'ties. Their con- ceptiom of generosity could be defined by the word, class-loyalty. The mean- est blackheads who ever succeeded one mother on the throne of a great coun- try were Charles~ IV. and his son, Fer- dinand, yet for these two crowned ba- boons, the Spaniards poured out thelr blood like water, brave the hardships 01 the wilderness and sacrificed them- selves by thousands in the defense of Burgbs and Saragossa. A Spanish hid.- algo would sooner cut off his right hand than betray a trust of friendship after the manner of Thomas Moore, who burned the autobiography of Lord Byron to please a clique of bigots and backbiters; but that same hidalgo would HDRRIB SPANISH PRISONS THE MONSTER MAN-PENS 0F CEUTA AND LOS PlNOS. l‘aradoxes of the Spanish Characterâ€"The Trnest Friends but the Hardest Task- flaslersâ€"l’nparellcled Cruelflesâ€"chu- latlons that Provoke Epidemic 01 Suicide. Foreigners who have enjoyed the hospitality of Spanish families in the birthplace of chivalry have again and again expressed a suspicion that the horrors of warfare in the West Indies must have been exaggerated for polit- THE FESTEBING TRENCHES house or roomyvbei‘e a dgseése suppos- ed to be infectlouq prevaxled, the. doct- 91‘ xvqplgi skrike films cane pm the floor I have discovered, said Bdinikley’a plan for economizing in fuel that has saved me a great deal of money this wimter. How is that 3 asked Dimkley. : \Vhenever my wife tells me to order coal I make it a pomt to forget it, and she makes things so hot that (we don’t need it all. to agitate the powder and then apply it to his nose, {Hence all the old prints of physicians .1 represent ‘1:th with canes to their noses. : Arenfit you afraid your husband will be fascmrated by that pretty widow ne§t (1ng he 0 anger; 4 . likes a arden a she. keeps chickens. g Dd Favored by luck a few deslperadoes have also contrived to effect their es- 5 cape from the preeidio of Palavan in the i Phillipnisne Islands, but the plurality of s the refugees can desert only across the Stygian ferry, and often choose that mode of ranid transit by dozens at a tuneâ€"especially after the sessions of a Harrison court-martial, though the SDa-niards ascribe the frequency of suiâ€" cides. to the influence of the climate, Quoting renorts from the neighboring! coasts of the Asiatic mainland Where the jaundiced Malays commit self- slaughter upon absurdly slight provo- ca .1011]. v . ‘ These world-mmounce-rs are Budd- hists, who realize the vale-of-tears doc- trine with an intensity unknown in the cloisters of our gloomiest ascetics, but men of the west Caucasian races can not easily be persuaded to relinquish: ems- tence, Like a dwelling we are quit-ting, Like a garment no more fitting. Amd risk a plunge. into a possiblv shsoreless sea, unless the evils of life make the danger of annihilation a blest alternative. To lighten the weight of their own troubles the jailers of the Palavan presidio load down their able- bodied prisoners with balls and chains and clean the horrid dungeons only once a week, even when rats, floor snakes and vermin have multiplied to a degree that makes sleep almost im- possible. The love of life would hear up against all that and connive at the foul diet of fish and spoiled rice me], but the abuse of the trustee system turns the scales. The government in- spector calls only once a year, and in the meantime, whenever the jailers want to treat themselves to an outing, they deputize their functions to a gang of brutal and vindictive ex-con- V}cts. Upon their return the excur- sronlsts may be informed that the» cham-gangs have been decimated by an 4 epidemic of suicide, but will consolef themselves with the prospect of pock t- l mg an increased percentage of t e1 yearly appreciation. I coast dwellers whenever the boom of twelve guns gives the signal for a man hunt, yet, nevertheleee, the at- tempt is made every month in the .Y 631‘; Prisoners dig out, elamber out, leap from the walls, or break away from their guards in the quarriese in the hope of reaching the hospitable hill tribeq of the interior or losi their identity in the crowd of an Agerian seaport town. BURIES THE REFUSE, rinses out the box with salt water, and sends a muleteer with a couple. of sacks for a. Ire'shuâ€"or comparatlvedy fleshâ€"supply. Recaptured deserters ms]: to be somrrged to death, and a Standing reward of 200 pesetas (about $00, a aLrge sum in that poor county.) secures the assistance of the Moons}; The Ceuta mam-pen is only twelve miles from the hottest point of the Mediterranean coastlands. The hills in the southeast intercept the land Wind, and in the early afternoon the glare of the western sun becomes often so unbearable that the streets of the 'lit- tle seaport town are abandoned for hours together. But during these bake-oven hours the convicts are kept at work, quarrying, digging and kiln- stokLng, While their guards, fanned by proxy, are watching them from under a. movable umbrella shed. They get no dinner recess, and if the progress of l their work is allowed to slacken a little ‘after noon they owe it only to the on:- cumstance that their taskmasters heel- tate to leave the shelter of their sun shades, and now and then indulge in a [1913. trusting the consequences to the Vigilance of their fan-boys. The rough barley bread of the Morocco peaser and a sort of cheap treacle is the sta- Ple diet of the convicts, w’ho mostly prefer to shift with half rations rath- er than touch the horrible melange of salt and slaughter-house offal that is served under the name of beef at sup- per. The remailns of each meal are flung back in the meat box, and under the mfluence of a torrid climate, salt finally fails to prevent the visible dis- mteg'ration of the scrap pile. The cooks knowing from experience that dogs will decline to touch it, then grees in the sun-blistered barracks is the average of a summer afternoon, and it may be near-midnight before the influence of the.n1ght Wind begins to make itself felt in the upper bunks of the crowded dormitories. At midnight the blood still simmers .in fever heat, at 5 a. m., the indoor air has at last turned pleasantly pool, but just about that time the reveille gum booms from the parade ground, and the turnkey un- chains the four-footed revivalists. that enter the dungeon whenever an unbearable state 01 atmospheric con- ditions compels the prisoners to re- move the bags that serve as window- screem. _A temyelfature of 115 _ .de- The refuge of the wearir peace m sleep is curtailed by clouds of quarrelling; I tried to stop a quarrel," pleads a newwmer‘ “This rufflan at- tacked ‘my father, a weak, old man, who can not. take his own part unarm- ed, and I merely interfered in the in- tergstflofpeace andâ€"” -- “Calla la boca, perm,” interrupts the jailer, "Hush up, you cur. Take them out, Gonzales, and make them remem- ber the day of: the weekâ€"twenty-five apieoe~gag that rascal if he says an other word. Give him ten extra, any- hsoy, for Atalkirng without permission.” OLD CUSTOM 0F PHYSICIANS. HEAT WITHOUT COST NOT CONGENIAL. VENOMOUS INSECTS Brown Bettyâ€"Pare and core some apples, them chop them‘ up very small. Mix with a. third of the quantity in cold milk, and two tablespoonfuls of oomflour. First scald the tripe, and Opt it into very small pieces, before Sltting on .to ball With the cold water. and herbs. Chop all the vegetables 1n- tb small pieces, add to the tripe, and boil slowly for one hour and a half. Then take the con'nflour, Work it into a. paste with a little cold milk, add to the boiling soup, and stir over the fire for ten minutes. Just before serving, add the remains of t‘he'milk, the chop- ped parsely, with pepper and salt .to taste. Serve the soup very hot With tried bread. . . 1 Tripe Soupâ€"Necessary ingredients: Half a pound of tripe, three pints of water, a. turnip, a. carrot, three onions, sweet herbs, parsley, half a pint of __ vâ€" 'â€" Pom'ing over the sink every night boiling water, in which washing soda. is dissolved, will remove grease from the sink and pnevent the pipes from getting clogged with grease. Ever particle of refuse should be scrape from the sink each time it is used, and the sink washed out careful- ly. .One of the open wire dishes for placmg over the strainer will be found. of great assistance in keeping thg Sink free fmm crumbs and food. The dish-towels must be rimsed after usmg, and hung near the fire. They should be put with the dish-cloth into the Weekly washing to be boiled and ham-g out in the open air to dry, and frgsh ones provided in_ their_ plgges._ A dirty sixnk is am abomination, and should not be allowed. From the kitchen comes health or disease, ac- ooa'dingas our food is prepared, and the cooking vessels clean or otherwise. A dirty dishâ€"cloth "is covered with disease germs which“, if aMUWed u) re- main on it, will multiply to an alarm- ing extent. The practice at using any old rag that comes convenient for dish- cloths, and hanging them wet under the sink and out of sight, cannot be too strongly condemned. The dish-cloth should be of strong, loosely woven amen, hemmed and prp- vided wiâ€"tha tape foa‘ hanging it 1n plain sight. It mtmst be dried before 1tmis used again. ’ - ‘ € v When butter is found to be too solid for immediate working, cold water poured over will seem have the desir- ed effect. Butter shouild never be rubbed in Workmg, as that Spoils the grain, and gives it a. greasy appear- ance. - Six large potatoes rubbed through calendar; 1 cup sugar; 172 cup salt; 2 tablespoons ginger; 2 quarts hog wa- ter. When cool and ingredients thor- ough-1y dissolved, add one cake of dry yeast well soaked. No flour, or it may become sour. C’ork up tight and keep in a cool, dark place. Use two-thirds cup for ordinary baking. This makw livelier, better bread in cold weather and is more economical than the store yeaslt. good' recipe for jug yeast, Whichvwe alxXayq make inficol'd weathr: __ < Many think that good home-made yeast cannot be made without boys. But such is not the case. Hops are mot always at hand and the following is When removing clothes from the line never jam them down in the basket in any kind of way, fotr if each piece is partly folded and laid in separately there will be fewer wrinkles to coin- tend with when irronin'g day comes. Some say: “0, I can slight my iron- img if the clothes are ornly clean,” and they Will simply fold towels, etc., and la them away. But I thitnk the sat- is action of seeing and using nicely irromed articles more than pays for the lamtr and time spent. Some may say the continued use of "washing tea.” and such helps will in- jure the fabric of clot-hm; . But I think mot, if used rightly. ’m sure my clothes are not injured in the least, and last as 10mg as could be desired or expected. ed places well seeped, and put into boil one-half hour, While breakfast work is cleared away They should be stirred often to loosen the dirt and when removed to tub but little rubbing will be required. After this “suds- irng” it is best to let them lie as long as convenient in the rinse water, af- ter which comes the blue water, and the clothes are ready for the_line. The Wash boiler is subways filled as soon as possible and betfore the water becomes scaldizng hot“ the required amount of washing tea is throvén in. The finer White clothes are merely dip- pqd aznd wrung out oat: cold ‘watg-r, 5.01.1- In most households the hardest task of the week comes on Monday with the family washing. I was educated to a washing machine, and considered that ome 0f the indespensables. But I soon found that the more soiled articles needed so much extra rubbing by hand that the machine was abandoned ex- cept for Washing bed clothing, Which seems to be its proper sphere, and have since used “nine o’clock washing tea” or something similar, with the best results. Now, you older housewives who still rub and boil will shake your heads and be filled with horror when you hear the rest. , Only give it. a thorough trial and you, too, will be convinced. HINTS FOR YOUNG HOUSEW’IVES. Many young housekeepers often find themselves in a “sea of dotubt and pear- plexity” as to how to proceed with this orr What ails that, and are often over~ Whe'lmed by the amount of waste in- curred in eXperi‘me-nting writes a cor- respondent. For the benefit of those who, like the Writer, may be situated several miles from ki-th or kiln, and imbued with too much false (3) paride to ask advice of a. friendly neighbor, I will tell of a. few things I have. learn- ed from actual and ofttimes bitter ex- perience. About the House. SOME GOOD RECIPES. CJAIRE OF THE SINK. The eighth wonder of the world has ‘ begun t ogrow, for the demolition of . the buisldin-gs on the site of the Exposi- . tion Universale is under Way. The French have. begun to rear at. last, or » begin to rear the fabric of what they ' confidentally assert will be the most. iwonderftull Exposition in every detail in which the nations have joined in mak- ing a magnificent whole. The site for the Exposition includes gthe prubiic grounds on both: sides of the ISeirn-e from the Place de la Concord, fthat great monumental square in the Eciity’s center to a point beyond the gPoiznt d’Jena. This inc-hides in its isweep of territory the Champs de Mars, ithe Trocadero Palace, and park, which iwas the site of the Exposition of 1889, ithe ESplanade des Invalides, the Quay gd’Orsay, the Quai de la Conference. the: gCovur ia Reine, and a large section of Etz’he Champs Eiysees, the latter imcl'ud- g img the site of the Palace ’of Industry” iwhich was the International Exposi- ’tiom of 1855, the first of the series OF FRENCH EXPOSITIONS. Leaving aside the matter of conveni- ence, the location of the Paris Exposi- tion seemscin its entirety to; ‘be super- !ior to the World's Fair at Chicago. iDirvided as it is throughout its entire f length by the Seime, it lends: itself ad- im-irably to the work of decoration and Embellishment. The VVoman’s Build- ing, which has practically been decided :upon, is likely to be in the form of a Ecomposite head, this head being made in accordance with a composite picture of the most beautiful women in the world. The head is to possess many unique features, besides containing ev- erything that can be thought of‘ as a comfort for the weaker sex, from the rooms where they may gossip in" easy chairs to the restaurant where thev will gain at the same time ideas 5x131 capital meals. The World’s Progress to be Completely Outlinedâ€"Some of Ethe Great Features and l’nique [deasilhat Are to be Illus- trated. WILL BE THE CQMING {FRENCH 1N4 TERNATIONAL EXPOSITION. WONDER UF THE WORLD. The worst spot made by greasy head on wall paper can be removed by pa- tience, perseverance and a hot flat iron and blotting paper. Wipe the spot first with a clean dry cloth, lay white blotting paper against it, then hold the hot iron to the paper till the grease is absorbed. Try, try again With fresh‘ paper till you get it amt. If you are tired of your White lace curtains, or if they do not harmonize with your new cream tinted paper, make. them of a pretty ecm tint. by wash-mg, drymg and dipping in thin starch made with coffee instead of clear water. Dry them as rapldly as you can by pinning them in a. room where you can have the Wind blow on them. above the cake. 1m this wa a cake may be frosted evenly and t. ‘°'ckly to the very edge. Do not remove the band until the icing is perfectly dry. To prevent the icing ofa cake from running down the sides, double a piece of buttered paper about three inches Wide and pin it round the cake, letting the upper edge project half an Inch above the cake. 1111 this way a cake dII'OPS of ammonia, then thinning it with Water to the consistency of cream. at will keel) if tightly corrked in a hot-- 6. ( A silver polish.- that it is alleged Will clean silver wimhotu't hand rubbing is Ipade b5; mixinsgwhi‘ting withAa fey? Lacquered brassâ€"like that. on most of the iron beds, etc., nOW'adathould 11th be cleaned with. acid 011‘ scoured Wlth anything. Wash with hbt suds and dry quickly. Nuts that have become too dry for picking out entire may be freshened and “plumped” by soaking a few hours 111 water. .- ' Dry Yeastâ€"One way of making a dry yeast is as follows: One quart of wa- ter, put it on to boil with a handful of hops and let it boil for half an hour. “Then done strain the boiling hop water on one quart of flour, let it stand until quite cold, then add one teacup of brisk yeast, and two quarts of sifted corn meal; make a stiff dough, then squeeze it thrreugh your fingers into a dish, and put it to dry in the sun, or in cool weather near the stove. When used soak in a little water. Some persons prefer this kind of yeast In warm weather, as it is met apt to can afford rump steak instead, your dish will be more appreciated. Cut up the meat into neat 'pieces, flour it well, and season with pep er and salt. Put four tablospoonfuls o flour into a basâ€" in, break into the flour two eggs, stir all together with a spoon, then add alowly a pint of new milk and mix till you have a smooth batter. Place the beef in a pie dish with the batter. Bake steadily for two hours. This dish is very good if steamed for the same time. It. may also be made with cook- ed meat. C'ake Without Eggs.-â€"â€"One coffee cup of sugar, powdered, two large table‘- Spoonfuls of butter ru’bbed into the sugar, one and a half cups of flour, one-half cup of sweet ore-amt, one-half teaspoonful of soda. Bake quickly 111‘ small tins and eat while fresh and warm. ( SUGGESTIONS TO HOUSEKEEPERS. 111116 Uffl'doUUL mun, GILL“ u vuu van ~Fâ€"â€"-_, a little cinnamon and nutmeg, at} sweeten with bnown moist sugar. MAX all well together and bake in: a mod- erate oven. _ Toad In The Holeâ€"Is a really good and inexpensive dish. Take one pound .and a half of nice gravy beef; if you fine breadcrumbs, add ‘a bisfc of butter, ....3. .. A peasant living near 1y bought a pig, which. Sll’. gnebvuo Do you call that a veal outlet? he demanded of the‘waiter. \Vhy, such 3.. outlet as that is an! imsult to ever selfâ€"respecting calf im the British Empire. The waiter hulmg his head for a mo- ment, but. recovered himself and said. in a tone of respectful apoiogy': .I really didn‘t. intend to insult you. 811'. As for theaters, panoramas. c.. there are suggestions without number. Of course. it is proposed to have. the Pas- sion Play. Another idea is to have a submarine theatre. Then comes the usual Alpine panorama, and another which. it is alleged will represent‘ the mysteries of the. ocean. The doings of the recent expedition of the French. to Madagascar are what some one wishes. to exploit. on canvas. And so it. goes. DETAILS STILL EMBRYOTIC. VVhiz'ie all the details of the architec ture have not yet been worked out. it is certain that the Palace of. the Tro‘ cadero. which was utilized both for the expositions of 1878 and 1889 will be.- used, as wail as several of the great exposition halls of 1889 in the! Champs de Mars, although there will be changes- in all of. them. On the. site of the Pal- ace of. industry in which the exposi- tion of 1855 was held. will rise a solen- did structure to be used as the fine arts hall of the Expositione Universale. Just west of this location and on the same side of the. Champs Elysees the ground has been broken for the. hall! of liber- al arts, which is to be a permanent edifice... A broad avenue will extend be- tween these two buildings from the Champs Elysees to the Seine. At its meeting place with the river the stream will be spammed by a stately bridge. Which will be known as 'the- Alexander bridge, for the present Emperor laid the corner stone of: the foundations thereof the last time he visited' Paris. This bridge, too, will connect. the Champs Elysees and the Esplanade des Invalides. , The plans as revised are as stated. éT‘he key note of it ail, however, is the determination of France to excel ev- erything In the way of expositions, that the other nations of the earth have ac- complished. It is their purpose. to spare. neither time nor money, Genius is at their command. The brightest minds ed their quota. The. extravagant im- agery of France has developed what may possibly be termed the most ex- traordmary suggestions that ever em- anated from a human brain. The Eiffel Tower was a wonder. The Ferris wheei astonished the world. It is no extra- vagance, whatever to assert that the Exposrtione Universa'le will give birth to a. marvel. at which the nations- ot A Madam exquisite. had gone into a “fest End restaurant, and was far from pleased Wjflh: the way in which hi: order was ffllled. The captived balloon will be present in all its greatness as it appeared at the World’ s Fair. and other expositions Then there Wi: '11 be an exhibition of the works of man from an {early period up to date. This will apply particularlr to the more notable inventions of great artists 810.. and will include portran’s statuary manuscript, c An immense telescope has been suggested by My Deiioncle. The saline genius also 813;}. gests a ZOO-ton clock. A wine ‘vat thar will hold 88,000 gallons, is another sue gestion. Camille Flammarion, the fam- ous astronomer wants a tremendous moon constructed. around which these who desire shall circulate in a balloon. Among the other propositions present- ed im a palace for the acoolmmodalion of the public in general, a. gorgeous affair, which. it. is declared. shall con- tain everything that, heart could wish and which money will buy. The-re will be very few things that are free. It is not the custom in France to give sogethi-ng‘fox: Imaging. q There wifil probably be one World’s Fair feature. The Ferris Wheel. which astonished people of all countries at.‘ the \Vorld’s Fair, will, it is likely. re- volve in Paris for the: edification of the thqusmnds [who‘ may view_ it. AN AERIAL “CHU‘TE.” Two towers it is proposed to erect each of which Willi be several hundred feet in height, both exactly alike. From tower to tower will stretch an aerial railway. Over utuhis. and just as upon the railways which rest Upon terra firma, will be trolley wires. At. the top of each tower Willi be a large depot for the arrival and departure of trains of trolley cars, which willspeed alone the aerial railway at a twenty- tmiies-a'n-hour rate. - POO-T sou]! Anoflhfid‘ teature is the huge globe representing the earth. About th" sides of this globe. hues of railway cm 0'16 to the tap, so that the visit journey in most curious fashion the base to the apex ofr'the giant baa} On this sphere, too, the earth's surfing is cleverly represented, hill! and dale mountain and valley. Nestlmg in Vari: ous spots Where nature seams to have made arrangements therefore will he miniature Villages, clevgr products of artistic labor. Electric hghts will be so placed at. night about this globej'as to give the effect as much asr possxble of the moon and stars. . ' . ‘ t ed through the pupes leadmg to 0m tubes, Uhrough which the fountain spout. The. resplt 9f all this would be the throwmg In the air of streams of water to the height of 150 to 200‘ feet. IN A PIG'S STOMACH. F REE FIELDS. MEANT NO HARM. LIMITATIONS. two notes of the firmer took the enjoy meet I forte!» MS OF WELT degâ€"imme- min cure is Nerv fiegvilipe for pen Vlhne} [3 beyond Ct helm. er-up. use it mm! b sometimes imm one invites ridim m’t carry {LPG gl‘c‘ carry the bar :1 the street- )1‘ StUCk nude , handkerchief A Bfickmakel' L ‘Slx Boxes of iDocth‘ ”I V"" 11.914211 perhaps mmzens oaf thxs «morally 1 the stre tnpes. 001]) bet‘ centime. 8V0! .. At 96 between oouh THE

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