West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 3 Jul 1919, p. 2

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Elna i' d our the ”In. stretch of mid Ilse; the MI " just this time in the naming; he would still be planting] of the year, he Alway- can. for them "aetty " sundown. With a "sh of -ation Julio fumed that at “anti he would mu y pl-oddingl She sitthed r"helliousir. "But the bare upon don't show from here. You can’t ace- the Gerry's barn needs painting nor the mortgage on Jethrtr [month farm. You ean't see theI gran-rd: that aren't bearing nor Mail trpteiile not Bonny and the other bowl liming on the bench in front of s',", Ioiloy's. If folks could live up hull '" thei 't'.trirr--but they’vg got any 'J'lit down won; them, that's the trouble. It isn't to much having to work hard no it's not having any- ”. to work for-." no blue Spock was moving anon a. hold out into tho mad. John in 'err'irtg for the can. At this tin. .fth-r,uatwareiiileFi'r" than " with I em 'fons with thi Ibo Island. "It up here." " her little world of field a In! and white farmhouses, to beauty with the tender gold< of the late sun. The sky " near as the earth, up here Edge of Things. Ever since Julie could re this rock had been her ' Pure" as she called it with when she had carried her griefs, her girl-drum: and th restlessness of spirit that so as now, bea6t her. Chin on palms she at forward, gull where e blue-jun: speck across one of the fiehU be John Muse, in his potato m th " "Don't you be in the clock ahead." I "Let Julie have her a good 'steady boy thing he hasn't (rot Ill "nun when I tret back--" She was gone in tt whirl of faded pink trhteh 1m skirts. The screen door baneed behind her Byine feet. "I declare I don't know what to mr-ke of Julie sometimes!" Ma sighed. “She’s so ftiehtr' PII be thankful} when she man-in Jnhn 11----.. __, settles d Julie’a dazed eyea lifted from her fell handiwork, widened with a new and revolutionary idea. In a single minute ahe had freed herself from the symbol of the meagreneu and pow-J any of her existence. What if there should be a way to free herself td the rest.' Cheeks flushed, blue eyes mischievous. she stood in the door-) way pulling Pau old straw hat over' her auburn curls. I “I’ve broken the big platter!" The] words bad the liit of a sank. "And! I'm going to pick some Bowers to! vm'ehrate.t Don't touch the kitchen-- I'It finUh when I get back--" I She was none in n mini-l ..r #_o_m -""---_aa'-.--a" CHAPTER 1.---tCont'd.) I potatoes in the “Julie! o Julie."' Ma veiled from; prayer meeting the next MI. "You broken all Ten! reading the wee Commandments at once or what? I! manna in the a never heard such a to-do in my born} Unexpectedly days'." II_‘-.I L," - Don't the rumour. Far below stretch- ttle world of field and orch- white farmhouses. touched to ith the tender ttot.den bloom te um. The sky seemed " the earth, up here on the 11:...” Keep your eye 1 on this Brand l, ,V. vvulll'l‘ she called it whim-kally, had carried her childish ttirl-drearm, and the vague , of spirit that sometimes iiElJjllfi'lfin, " sun- 'ontent Her ft the sid n lorward. gazing down Inc-jeans speck toiling of the fields betakoned in his potato iUtd. _ could fhrur. out when] things in Farmington," "It looks pretty enough! on a Sealed Packet is vuraaaiiG: The Legacy on Wheels Julie cogld remember, The one Tea that never moot critical tastes. marries John in tt fret to hurry Gran'ma advised. r fling first.' John's r but they's some- ot and that's the Julie inherits her " "wailing By Dorothy Don-ell Calhoun. ow what tojall crimu " Ma smhed.’ eyes like be thankful short in Massey and} "Why,; cupped lunar-mun.“ An American soldier and a Tommy thrown together in France were vy- ing with each other in telling tall utoriee. "I new 500 German- dron- ed in Game," nid the Ameri.. can. "TUt's nothing," Tommy 'tng.. wered. "At Zeebvmgge there were: three German aubuuinee sunk in} Friend s1!taaiHrlv)---"wtat makes that new baby " your house cry so much, Tommy?” Tommy (indignant- V).---"" down} cg so very nmeV and, anyway, if alt your teeth were out and your hair off, and your legs Io Weak you Tth" even 'tapd on them, I fancy tou' feel like dtgtriit yourself." I ,1 Ladr--Graeious, Mary, how can 'you regulate baby's bath if you don't Ian a thermomehtert Marr-ue ju, you, mum.' If the darling turns I'blue, it's toourowld--it red, it's too‘ hot! The Prince of Wales will visit Can- ada in Augult of this you, nnd will open the new Parliament Buildings nt Ottawa. It is understood that he will open the Canadian National Ex- hibition " Toronto the same month. He will spend two months in the Do-l minion. __V_., "m remarkably developed by note-reading of the pin who through long practice well-trained eye and an e ordination of eye and ban Quick and accurate vision valuable asset in my neunn‘ There are three good met] communicating news and Telephone, telegraph, and tell man. lean than port then h: John Masses, plodding along road on his nightly errand was denly confronted with a little n all crimson Cheeks. ulnwinu kn:- . MF-" -. W I; prayer meeting every Wednesday, il, reading the weekly paper and the at.. "mnnnc in the evening. I Unexpectedly the impulse that {freed her from the thralMom of the Batoneware platter, swept Jullie now. 'She clambered from the rock and fwent down the steep paatareside to :the corner of the stone wall that ibordered the highrotvi. Her heart ‘hammered at her throat as she hur- lried over the spongy turf, but the gallant blood of United Empire Lor.. alist ancestors flowed in her veins and she did not turn back. She was going to be loyal to herself now; she would waste no time in shilly‘shally-l‘ ine and discontent; she would findi: some way to get free and claim" youth's rightful heritage of joy iiiiiil opportunity. f ' Director em in it mums approximately to or at the rate ot 882 per eh, in the opinion ot the :or ot Transportation, is would have cost to tram- Amorican ships. eye and hand, disappoints the it wouldn't ever occur nt onions there just for Julie's glance wan un- -'ornfu) then it softened In, some thinly. Al.---. n's slow-working mind accusation in the quetr. any pgrson’s life, is Great Brita as!" he said almost " always flttare on s in the south field, used to, He always some things come a minute, like ex- . When I yaw you got to tell you. I r--~v--u luv, " i by the rapid Piano student, vetiee aequires a an efficient co- same '1e-'lr going to tr h, and .. $totusip, methods of I a Most rting a ross the tely to $82 per III earth. We have fought a naval action which lasted for twenty-one months against a Beet of U-boets numbering over 300 trom am to lust. and we have destroyed twothlrde ot that Met. We met the full stroke ot hi- Olen-Ive in March and April and enmeshed n. We HAVING SAID THIS I The British have done it. The navy ‘choked Fritz by the throat, and the army walloped the life out ot him. We F,',' fought the devil all over the war] t we hate teaien his lesions in every latitude; we have tinaneed the war and tough! the war. We have car- ried the toodtrtuth, the raw materiel and the Ioldlen. both our own and our allies, to and from the ende of the 1 l rr IS FURTHER agreed that it was [ the gallant reel-tame of Belgium, the matmitieent "ttttne qualltlel at the French, the devotion of the Run-lane, the valor ot the Serbian. the resource- tulness and whole-hearted co-opern- tion of the Americans. and the superb struggles of the Ecumenism which enabled us to secure a victory over the I enemy. IT IS HEREBY agreed that no one nation would have beaten Prussia, Bavaria, Saxony. Wurtemburg, Aus- tria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey. the ‘wnsmng and ironing she will Iear ‘even more about the materials he (dresses are made of, and will quick]: [are why the dainty little party dres would never do for school wear, am why, also, mother desires her t, wear soft crepe underwear in sum mer in preference to that which rel quires starching and ironing. It takes time, of course, to teach these things, and there are but few farm mothers whose time is not lim. ited; yet other things can better be slighted than the opportunity of ’" Though the desirability of simple d. cut be impressed upon her, do not 'tt confound simpleness with plainness. A simply cut dress finished at. neck ’iand sleeves with a bit of lace, or 'l brightened by contrasting materiall “:in banding or piping, is attractive,‘ d, but a plain dress, absolutely devoid; elif all "finishing touehes" is actually; " homely, and in all but the poorest of,' I families, wholly unnecessary. Teach' " the value of these simple means of, _finishine a dress. Contrast the sev-' rerely plain dress with the slightlyI " trimmed one. Also, when opportuCl if ity presents itself, point out the mm" (ttik of overtrimming. A-dress halt:" ’covered with lace and ribbons andg‘ I ornamental buttons is not only in bad 2 Haste, but is generally mere'cheaplll Misplay. , wn nd If you are making school dresses, to get samples of 'different materials at and ask daughter to choose that which at she would like. Doubtlcss she will r- make a wrong choice, selecting the he most unsuitable. But don't laugh " " her; don't make her ashamed. En- " deavor to show her ler error in a as way she can understand. Get her to te tell you what qualities, in her opinion, V-l a school dress should have. Of course,‘ tdi you know it should wear well, wash l well and not show soil too easily, and dl not be readily torn; but she may (never have thought of those things. e; Let each sample, then, be analyzed to _ meet those requirements. e) When the suitable material has dlbeen selected, attention should Pl l turned to the cloth’s suitability to the] child in question. The color must bei '/ one in which she looks well and the! l pattern appropriate for her age. By} lsuggestion, display and study famil-l‘ _ iarize her with these requirements, I Wand you will develop in her a taste] Ifor simple, well made clothes shelf lwould be far less apt to have were)! ,she continually wearing dresses with , ‘no thought as to why they were of“ jam-h a color or material or out in t such " way. If British. Well Done! Giving ht lle- cognition To (liners Who Helped. If the impregnabk siiiattniii' clothes, and the first stops along that line should be taken as soon in the little girl's life " she can under- stand the most simple of instruction“ - yew on "on. __ *..--.. w In". "Him; -. new; T" on uer name VIII" J" Wipe lamps W so absolutely on mother's taste to bel lr, becommgly, yet economically Wet a sheet of 1 correct, that when they leave home dressed. idly wash all the and are thrown on their own res- them on the stove ponsibility, they tind that they know Refrigerate" PM" Food. too hot and wipe ' nothing about cost of materials, The principle of tteientifle food pre- Everything can I 'mitabilit, of eoltrs or correctness of senation involved in a modern house- this way and lat 'style. Too many time. they 'spend hold refrigerator is not always under. will shine. their money on cheap, gaudy things, stood by housewives. All that is “A or else wear dowdy, unbecoming “can” to preserve food is to keep THAT WICKE clothes. it at . dry temperature low enough - Part of every girl’s training should to protect it from miero-orttanisam, tG,,,,,, of the Ladle consist in learning the lesson of bacteria, which want to consume it H as Made the th clothes, and the first steps along that, as food just " we do, but which if line should be taken " Soon in the, allowed to work quickly render it un- Printers often pen little girl's life " she can under- in for human consumption, the pen and turn te stand the most simple of instructions. These bacteria lie taye tigers! 'egtz'n,et, Ian; If on are makin school dresses, the air is kept cold and dry, ll . ey get simples of 1'llllu'f,','t' materials grow rapidly in water, hence It'll. in a temptimnce see and ask daughter to choose that which necessary to keep the air In a refrig-i In the Ioea page; she would like. Doubtlcss she will erator from becoming moist. Themeant Wat? t a run make a wrong choice, selecting theldrier the air the better the fool But] the pglmeriwr; nost unsuitable. But don't laugh " keeps. Circulation of the air Is for 'll'i'tfJl"lt, n I ier; don't make her ashamed. En- therefore an important feature, and he otnt e a CONT“: leavor to show her ler error in a the walls of the ice-box are insulated; divine Btood Matn tray she can understand. Get her to so that the cold air will be kept “Ll dTgkludl t th: da ell you what qualities, in her opinion, It is necessary for the ice to melt n y as an , school dress should have m mm“ = H’ ' _ __- helping Daughter Dren- Correetlr. When a new dress is to be made In" daughter it is so much easier to go ahead and buy the cloth and select. the pattern ain't so)! than to} 'eo-operate daughter regarding it, that more often than not the dregs is made regardless of the water’s wishes in the matter. Many tum. girls become so used to wearing what-l ever mother makes or buys, rely“!!! let nhn'u-6-I_ --- -‘ - aughter lends WELL DONE, us: ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO glllSlB, (4 VII. 1;»; ' I If f rr "AM, 7-? , . T t' u _ V _ " li . n A Ma . 'i,i'ihiir, "if1Gi""", Illia-iii' , "'kyiistiii'i)its. a hand at the ' she will learn e materials her and will quickly Party dresé I wear, and 'es her to To? 1'iiie','1c0Po Not "rmit,2tt"diatr " the ting material) . e. is attractive,’ To have a comment made on dishes Jutely devoidi at the table, as too much or too little, i” is actually,'; seasoning, ete., is a habit into which; he poorest of, many families unconsciously fall. It, sgary. Teach is very trying to the housewife, and; >le means of. besides has a tendency to make the' fast the sev-lfood appear less inviting, and gives! the siiisriiiirli depressing effect, as all fault-find. en opportun/ ing does. I out the iii1rl One mother noticed that this habitl i-dress half' was growing on her children, and de-) ribbons and termined that some way must ye, ', only in bad; found to stop it. She called a family: mere'eheap;" meeting and told them that she did [her best to have the food and table: land at the just as nice as she could, and that', , will learn ( they should do their part and be kind}V aterials herfnnd polite, keep still about any dish l will quicklyithey did not especially like. Shen party dress) emphasized the fact that criticism at31 l wear, and! the table was not good manners. (tis her to! She told them that if they had " in sum- anything special to criticize they ' which rel could come to her alone after the. I ing. meal and she would be glad to listen! a e, to teach to the complaint. But strange to lay, tl re but fewi being forbidden to criticize " the is not lim-‘table, the children made very few? I hate.- in -..:....- -_i__----, a @015! _ ,,,,‘._.. ”nun. vcuy Jew befprivate comments: oil From that time on the mother was line. We invented and brought to per- ' faction the arm which produced the ' decision of the War-the tank. We . swept his aerial navies from the skies and blinded him. We have, single- , handed, crushed the Turk and secured , a complete military decision. We have l fought tour African were and have been victorious. We have raised,‘ equipped and maintained an army ot 7,000,000. and have equipped tt Rus. sian army ot 2,000,000. We have fought the Prussian, Bavarian, Saxon, Austrian, Turk, Bulgarian, Ankari. Toxoman and Bolsheviki. We have established the Arab in Arabia and the Jew in Palestine. BUT IT is HEREBY agreed that no one nation would have beaten Prussia, Bavaria, Saxony. Wurtemburg, Ane- ‘tria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey. I IT IS FURTHER agreed that it was the gallant resistance ot Belgium, the tnagnitieettt tighine qualities of the Much, the devotion of the Russians, the valor ot the Serbian. the re- sourcefulness and whole-hearted oo- operution of the Americans. and the superb struggles of the Romanians which enabled us to secure a victory over the 'memr.--Phm, Toms Topics, undon,IEnglanI' ”,7.-. --.-.n, - lulu foodstuffs, which really absorb n_toits/ tare should therefore be placed so' that the cold air reaches them direct‘ from the ice, passing from them to) those foods like melons and onionsl which give off odors. I in order to chill the air properly. Al the melting goes on the refrigerator is chilled and the food absorbs the cold. Thus while wrapping ice in a newspaper or flannel will undoubted- ly keep it from melting, it defeats) the, Purpose of the refrigerator, and i withhold, the cold from the food. Al steady melting must go on, and the 1 imodern refrigerator is built to keep, the melting to a necessary minimum,' although precautions should be taken,' to see that the ice-box does not stand; where the sun's rays strike it. Nor, should it stand near the fire. i Cold air falls and warm air rises,' and the coldest place is below the ice; instead of above. Milk, butter and teaching your daughter all pm know. ley can learn about the why and' wherefore of the clothes she wears} When she grows up and finds work sway from home, you will forget the, lduat that showed on your choirs, the stove that needed blocking, and the; many other duties neglected, to seek) her opinion and work with her on her; clothes, in the satisfaction you have of seeing her on her home-visits wise-! [ ly, becomingly, yet 'auvaiirl dressed. at for Minnrtth Incredibly large ope Dominion farm prodm able in Great Britain, the Canadian Trade C l' the League of Nations, and what Ir ‘freally said was that our impendim i fate, eclipse or empire, was bound ul ewlth it. In this mistake the prime: was not to blame, but the reporter who lost his Job through the politt {cian’s fury. The latter's own Pom (elocution Wait probably to blame. l Punctuation, or the want ot it, is 'proiice “in humorous bowlers. Here is one from an agricultural Journal: "Wanted, a woman to feed pigs with washing-board lodging over stables." At tirat reading one is apt to wonder whether the pigs liked their washing. board, and whether they were all lodging over the stables together. Yet he w the League really said fate, eclipse with it. In was not to who lost hi "Our Impending fate, ecu] Dire. is bound up with the Nations," said a politician paper recently. h'naglne the dismay ot the school master whose prospectus read thus: "The distinctive feature of the school In the roughness---" He was only referring to the thoroughness of his methods. , "Only last Sunday." he said. "a I young man died suddenly, while I was ', endeavoring to preach the Word in a " state ot beastly intoxication." I Here is another “clerical error," lculled from a parish maguine: I "There will be a collection in aid ot 1 the Arch Fiend." l The fiend of a printer should have E put Arch Fund. Doubtless he prevent- ed many old ladies ot limited intel- ligence from putting their hands in ' their pockets. l The "war-scared" veteran was the printer's improvement on the "war- scarred" variety which the writer had in mind. The young man who wrote that love-letters were a never-fading ink was really informing his tinancee that such epistles would torm a never fading link between them throughout their lives. I "Drurtkennesn, ls jolly." said I dean in a temperance sermon duly reported fin the local paper. What the dear man 7 meant was that drunkenness was lolly. [But the printer was in playful mood, tor lower down In the dean's dlscourse I Some of the Ludlcroul Blunder. He Mu Made the World Laugh At. Printers often pervert the power of the pen and turn tears into smiles by l the‘change ot a letter. t Bet all the lamm in a row, t.r.el/"t2, “nu ':before. beginning to fill. Use a litrhtl "Well. Dick, I don't mind telling c.“ with . well-placed tspout to pour, you In emttidenee, he's after your tob." oil from. man that day on the otBctat val Wipe lamps with when I never troubled by the bore. Wet a sheet of newspaper and rap- - I idly Wash all the chimneya, setting '." ' ' them on the stove. Take " before, The f,',",',",',,',. to Alu 2'et PI!- too hot and wipe with newspaper. 1?llrf.fC,'1l'1'f {79" I'.". ut any w..--, _ - - __ _ Trim wicks and wipe burners every day, so they Won’t smoke and black the burners. Turn theoviek low taG"iiowi,s. out the light so it won't smoke to much. Our house is lighted by oil lamps and the work I Ute mont is cleaning the lamps. I have mode it a any as possible in the following way: self. Ind did not allow it done by the others. She was watchful, however, that every thing was well cooked, and the habit of fault-finding at the table i, that family has entirely ceased. cn_r_eful no! _to criticize may dist her- THAT WICKED, PRINTER. ’l “a me no other, rite openings for our products are avail- Britain, according td" mg late, eclipse ot em- up with the League of a politician in a local an ardent advocate of Nations, and what he 5 that our impending :omma. and the eminent f attain a self-confessed! Oil Linn. m be "diGGiriridTy" iniaceompyi.ment u. 10mm." 5.22 lamps and Chimney'leveri'r choir member should tstrive to Incqu e. ; Iommission e reporter. the politi- own poor blame. “a I I "Dick, do you know why Collins con- 'ttet-t to come here so mgularly?" he asked. "No, air.” "Well. Dick, I don't mind telling you in eorttidenee, he's otter your tob." From that day on the one“! was} never troubled by the bore. T. ARTS Par! d the Arte course mayhem by corretspoudenu. MEDICINE EDUCATION APPLIED SCIENCE Mining, Chemical, Civil. Mechnnienl and Electrical Engineering - “I M amm- at: July and Lawn. December toApril I M GEO. Y. CROWN, Rm. ( 00m UNIVERSE t ll ff '"l',elgf,"" How was»... at Iona. A municipal government one!“ who had an any-going doorkoeper van for u long time pastoral try 3 home. Find- 1rt"shttturmtaruntomtriaot him tor good. nus new on Tlit nu Blllltlltillittimigiitmt MEAT-WIRES . EMPIRE CLAnK's All can... Writ. tor we... TORONTO ML? WORK. a. d. 0L!" . . TORON‘I' SALT JUST HEAT Alli? SERVE CANADIAN BOELEI [WNW A may. mamas . ml. W. CLARK ft-lst, hunt-O.- Letttit', Alter month. at mm. an-. 8m mm “ovum-a an. and mu- "mu; Btaddtng tme. All Mtt8tgt- min. And my M M I,“ and ain‘t- lad In home “i u... - querlll cup shaped, and by the a“ of mulcqlu action the vemre an be more elevated, "o that wlwn mmmmwme bark the loot not. like s new. sale I: nomewhat cup duped on- -11 " __ _ _ _ v- “we“ .. lucli» erg, by new! of which may ascend Inch smooth Jurtnoee u the stems of bemhooe. Booted or ungulete mimic. such a sheep. pin, camel- and elephmtn. MYOJIVOII up min. their tore limb. in . mama manner, end employ them .01er for progression. Cone lquentIy tree climbing in out of their ‘iine. in Africa end Byrie occur, how- ever, eel-uh representative. of the order known u rock was, or hm. the Syrian specio- beiu the one re- ferred to tn the Bible " the coney (the old nune of the rabbit). Certain Atttdan hyme- have, however, taken to tree climbing, and the way they mange It ll this: In each In". a... In than weird little taiartiii' tips. ot the was He clouded Into cushion- llko duct, capable of man; u luck- - 5- ----,, J _ - A The geckos which run up (in _ , i and over the ceilings, of hour, i 2' warm countries acord another in. stance ot the sucker principle. Mate are not the only mammal. which have nailed themselves ot the sucker. in the an” III-Ma Ind the Philippines dwell [an and and slender limbed little lemquko cmtures known as union. whole habits the nocturnal m those weird little nan-n. n“ -.,, insuL'icu'v.it ior suspt 1. made use of the an“: this purpose 'PICS: u: Mon has been th why. ly in two distinct lune Brazil and the other ' In the Brazilian spud. take the form of, stallw ed to the palms of the t soles ot the feet. The Malagasy species are I Br mean- ot the such are able to ascend hr Very carton it in to no! tr between the suckers Ind those on the Inn: ' SUC‘EOH Certain hath their hook like insumcle.:t tor made use of an thi- nurpOse. '1 lion ha. been d, striking fr Quite a dittemmt type ot r or rather hanging, appai'atus, I developed in the cloth: of America, which spend their the treetops, where they rent pended back downward by tht like claws. These claws, whi be three or two, have been r the IMO! “If.“ at the tall (1-11.. Itructum which my be autumn-.1 the climbing "on Iliad by work”..- Thm tote the tom, of a tes In“. vane low- ot lame. trlnngular. hum scales. with their points directed Im- i WIN. Them, scales. when pun ~. agrntemt the hark ot a tree, Illllsl " .1. , moterlal old In climbing. TM AW' Climbing Scales, Another group ot animals in tth,,' "climbing trons" have been dI'VI-Iu] " I. that ot the only untentors or l' tl callus. of India Ind Asia "'t'eittutv vhlch not more like living tir run. than manuals. The scales mm' larger than thooe of the scaly 1uilru .quimsts--oover both nurtures of (m body, " well u the head and mm: so that It can actrcely be Sulllw ..1 they have been developed for (In!) ing. Indeed, only a few eperries rl',t,il but these have found the am» .2 afforded by the scales on tho _ I I side of value in an £800"! and h tr l ually make use of [hull it'.A r,',, . Hons. There I. one [mp of African m dell... designated hotly tailed sun: hell. the member- ot which Beetu I. have felt the malty of tsdditiol, I dd tor the purpose of tree Climlwm They hue locordingly developml .. . "he. “an heat “I of Tree , can... has... om... . liner] one of the hkher animals is in some way mechanically adapted in ita mode of we and aurnoundinga. a home or an antelope heal: from one mint of View a living galloping or trotting machine. Putting such or IUD!“ lake. there are numerous cuea of more peculiar adaptations to which attention may be contitted. For example. the climbing creatures. P. may be noted that a number or species. such an Old World monkeys and squirrels. present special modW cations tor a lite in the trees. the en- scntiai being that they ahould have the power of rotating the forearm on the upper portion of the limb and that their tom ahould he mobile and [uni-had with clav- or naila. er Hoof“ Dom. Bitch " HOW ANIMAL. CHANGE WITH TNIIR "ODE OF LIFE. ADAPT THEMSELVES ' of Wet “Bil-ELL} yum u the atoms of nu or the lllumlm and lhn test. The suckers of th, octet are horseshov likr t the sucker: these bat, “and knit-a! surfaces an Ide nnoe of adaptation do of life. The tht be 'rsoditied into a Iso well tor sun» ten the creatures Generally. howove waives Lem dnw to note the slmilari M of these bats I'll. of the cuttle. In _oach 160:3}; tttf Alla~creatures “VIM tir Cotter, O "atmr---much the scaly mum surfaces of the m ll trw tim n and m justod, eern,in an be taming and lore, there te,. deep dom the times an will have to liberated. After that the hon tn “at b to puck tbe am,» one. 44 tainine " the borie sold it will solve; then apply bentoued oxid ttine ointment. " I lump form neck or shoulder rub in veteril lode: night and morning; but if In” that... In the or mania. " Whor " Tl the don. vi And i the on not the out close u and dare , taken the th at! " m TI mow dowr they the l nature of " that many who do not Nation they lever adjuatl teeth. They Place. ulna”; there they I “It white th be I" "to " Justabt wick-no Neithe 'eeotttr it Ion flies: wee 'ttty purl doing this view when the soil. I tivate wrong think th thrmurt u ft make very Haiti" what If rutisatute I or h not than“ hm; everyth that “lid " " Th mid the " "

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