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Durham Review (1897), 7 Jul 1898, p. 6

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\ t ts | 14 U cam paign. . | Carara prepared for the encounter | simply by girding _ his hunter‘s coat | tifhter round him, fastening his broad | Alpine hat on his head by the clasp usual among the peasantry, and loos-’ ening the folds of his cloak. The Hunâ€" garian, conversant in the language of 1 the storm, looked to the various points | of the compass for those currents of] the clouwds which so strikingly mark . the direction from which the force of the tempest comes in the higher Alps. Large masses of rolling clouds heavily burst up from the whole range of the vast crescent of hills, which form the central barrier of the Tyrol, and each went forth its gust; but in the northâ€" east lay asolid leadenâ€"coloured pyraâ€" mid of vapour, reaching from the, earth to the heavens, on which the Hungarian gazed with evident anxiety. "The weight of the tempest," said he, "is beyond Mittenwald; but it is, I fear, by this time, coming up through the Pusterthal, and the pass will, in that case, be altogether blocked up before night Ed CC ‘Then," said Carara, with a smile | which was far from an expression of : his feelings, "we must attempt it by l daylight. The ghosts of the Brenner | will not stand sunshine, if they are. like our Italian ghosts. For Mittenâ€" wald, thenâ€"onward." ‘ His companton, answered only by following his stride, and they fought their way together manfully up the side of the mountain. Fierce gusts, that seemed to burst less from the clowds than from the earth, frequently caught them in their middle way, and forced them to cling to the shrubs and branches of dwarf? oak that sheeted the glen. The valley, which had been broad and neariy level from â€" Brixen now began to contract, and the giâ€" gantic pines, that hung and rooted upâ€" on the bhuge blocks of granite, split by time or thunder ages ago, gave . a deeper shade to the road. By this pass few travellers ever attempted to entâ€" er the mountains but in summer, and the Count and his companion, scarcely disturbed the falcons and wildâ€"goats that throuch one half of the year, posâ€" sessed the unquestioned lordship of the soil. _ They gazed on the strrggling travellers as if they were of their own species, and seldom moved foot or wayâ€" ed wing, till they had passed. eR The evening fell, and through the centre of the valley, which was now narrowed to a ravine, was still sheltâ€" ered,. it was evident that the storm was making wild work above. At length an abrupt ascent led to the summit of the road, and the whole range of the wild scene opened nn‘ them at a view. Nothing could be | more magnificent or more fearful. As far as the eye reached, the whole horiâ€" | zon was filled with snow, assuming } every fantastic form of the mountain | tops, and shaping th>â€"m into strance‘ beaut y. Carara‘s imagination dorâ€" mant in his days of prosperity, had } been gradually awaking since his first step in these wild regions. But now all his eyes were opened at once. Evâ€" ery trait, hue, and _ feature of the scenery, formed to him an indispenâ€" sable portion of the most glorious landscape that he hbad ever gazed .np-‘ on. "Look there," he exclaimed, pointâ€" ing to a boundless pile of snowâ€"white clouds that touched a distant mounâ€" tain so closely, as to seem a continuâ€" ed mcountain ascending into the heights of heaven,â€"*"There is Pelion upon Ossa, and both in silver!" _ Another enorâ€" n;omxlvnvl-l whose covering of snow was partially darkened y a thunderâ€"storm F L . s se L .25 92. Nh ces "‘ll Eol e ies aeinit C o es ts 9t lay to the right. "There is an Etna, but ten times its bulk, pouring out immeasurable volumes of smoke, and bree broken into a thousand chasms | 0t flame." The range of pinnacles that shot up round the horizon, sheeted with the snow, were fairy palaces, turreted castles of ivory, bowers of amaranth, magic palaces of steel. A last gleam of the sun, as he plunged down behind the Middle Alps, shot through a chasm of hills, and swept round the whole range. It was like the outpouring of a stream of solid gold. It transmuted the whole landâ€" scape instantly; the effect on the scene was indescribable. Wherever the stream fell, it turned the spot into all the glorious hues of sky, flower, and metal. Roundless sheets of purple and rose seemed to bhave been sudden}y flung over the enormous sides of the hills. Cataracts of gold burst down their sides, long stripes of the most vivid green, like valleys of emerald, lay between ridges of chrysolite and silver. All was splendid, prismatic¢, magical, As the sun descended, every Carara stood entranced with this | sight of unearthly beauty, when he was | startled from his vision by a sound as if of remote thunder; h> looked to the clouds that still lowered on the Brenâ€" ner, but it was as laden and solid as ever,. No flash broke from its mighty womb. If the thunder lay there, it was still to be born. The whole hemisâ€" phere lay in the same quietude. 'I‘he| gusts had fallen, and the tempest seemed to have gone to rest with the' sun. Again the sound rose, but it was , now not the low growl of distant thunâ€" | der, but the roar and dash of ocean, heavy, hoarse, and continuous. ifle‘ turned to the Hungarian for an exâ€"| planation of the cause. "T‘robably some : new fall of snow among the hills," | said he; "but at all events, let us not stop where we are. The road deâ€"| scends a few bundred yards forward, and anywhere we shall be less exposâ€" ed than here." He started with the : words from the summit of the ridge.| and hastened down the steep. Carara followed; but when he found himself . in the spot thus selected for safety, he could not conceal his surprise at the selection. "I altogether give way to your knowledge in these matters," said be, as the Hungarian turned to } watch the progress of the storm; "but ' this spot strikes me as exposing us to be either buried in the first snowfall, l or to find our road totally closed up." \ The Hungarian fixed on him a look which, even in the twilight, he could ‘disu:over to be singularly different from his usual calmness og philosophy. It was a smile, but whether it wore more of contempt or fear, more of reâ€" sentment at being thus questioned, or of that embarrassment which the sight of overwhe!ming danger sometimes |producea in the haugbtier minds, was | difficult to define in the shade; but ! the impression was there, and his reâ€" | spect for the philosopher‘s {firmness | suffered no slight diminution for the | time. W But now all struggle was useless, for now came this terrible instrument of destruction. From the side of the mountain, some thousand feet above, came a dim and mighty mass, itself like a loosened mountain, _ rolling, bounding, crashing, and at every bound increasing in gpeed and size. The largest trees snapped before it like willowâ€"wands; the solid crags, which had resisted the torrents and the thunder of winters innumerable, were torn from their ancient fixtures like feathers, and whirled down into .the ravine. The light of the snow, or the rapidity of its course, threw a strange and melancholy gleam around, and rendered it drearily visible as it rushâ€" ed along. The air was filled with the roar, crashing and incessant; the valâ€" leys sent it back, every surrounding TORONTO mountain returned it, like the echo of a thunderburst. At length an M mense cloud of mingled dust, stones, snow and wrecks of all kinds, rushed into the valley, heralding its way. Carara, in blindness, and utterly beâ€" wildered by the snow, still felt l‘x‘imself wiaermcu 0J uHO BMR CTEREC C1 ark l grasped with what he thought the conâ€" vulsive hold of death, by his companâ€" ion; but he felt, at the same instant, the ground quiver and heave under his feet; he in vain attempted to cling to the rock; he was caught by the whirlâ€" wind, and flung forward, where he knew not. A hollow roar still sounded in his ears; he still felt himself tossed and flung like a weed upon & WaVSi at length a blow, a sensation of inâ€" tolerable chill, and a sudden plunge as he thought, ten thousand fathoms deep, extinguished all sounds and sensations together. _ _ _ _, . Antonio di Carara, and the violence of the shock, which rendered him insensible at the moâ€" ment, had iossed him like gossamer under a nuge projecting crag, which fortunately lay a few paces beyond the direct descent of the snowfall, The ground close to the spot where he lay had been torn up; as if a â€" hundred thunderbolts had rifted it; fragments of the crag had been evidently splint~ ered off by the concussion; the whole surface of the mountain above bhad been hurled into the ravine. If he had been fiung but a few paces nearer, he must have been by this time in eternity. RSERUUE® When his recollection had completely | returned, the state in which his friend | had been seen for the last time recurâ€"l red to him. What must have becomcl of a man who bhad been palpably deâ€"| prived of all power to help himself,even | if he had not stood directly in the road of a devastation that might have l torn down a pyramid or buried a city? | Carara looked round in vain, he was / nowhere to be seen; he shouted his | name till the precipices reâ€"echoed itl on every side; it was equally in vain, no voice of man answered; he even tried his way along the shivered and falling masses left clinging on the face of the precipice, to the spot where they had last stood together; but all search was in vain. The whole aspect of the hill was altered, a power beyond man had been there; and what was man, in such contact, but the dust of the balance ? Carara, almost subdued,. gave a final look to the spot which must be considered as the grave of | his eccentric, yet zealous and sincere. friend, and dejectedly took his way up the little mountain road. The caserne of Mittenwald, a postâ€" house and place of rest for travellers, had been visible for some hours before the fall of the avalanche, and it was to this spot that the Count now directâ€" ed his steps. The caserne bhad its occupants even in that rouzh season; and three or four stout peasants from the Hertzer valâ€" ley, and a nondescript figure, who, on his own authority had the courage of an Alexander, and every virtue under the sun besides, but whose short Ferâ€" rarese sword, rusty pistols, and weaâ€" therâ€"beaten visage, strongly marked him for either the contrabandist or the | highwayman, or both as the occasion might serve, had taken up their quarâ€" ters with the old soldier and bhis wife who were stationed in this winterâ€"bufâ€" eC uITeT + t he la’y_in t_his sti}te“Of ol:‘- AN AMERICAN TORPEDO BOAT APPROACHING THE CUBAN COAST. w, a sensation of inâ€" and a sudden plunge ten thousand fathoms hed all sounds and (From a sketch.) Daylight came, but the attempt was more hopeless than ever. The clouds, which had lingered so long on the northern range, had during the night moved forward over the whole extent of the hills, and flooded them with snow. The caserne was covered alâ€" most to the roof, and all the rest, a8 far as the keen eye of the mountainâ€" _eers could reach, was an ocean of white surges. Another day passed in this lofty dungeon. Still the tempest was unabated. A week passed; and Carâ€" ara‘s impatience could suffer this conâ€" finement no longer. He determined to ‘attempt the pass at all hazards. The peasants declined his largest offer for | their services as guides; and he preparâ€" ‘ed desperately to set out alone. _ He \felt that his anxiety was wearing away his strength; that the Emperor ‘ might be gone from Innspruck; that | his enemy might anticipate his appeal; that chance, or barbarity, or subtlety, i might be exposing his family to the last miseries, while he was lazily wastâ€" ing his days in the wretchedness of a mountain hovel. feted dwelling. Carara‘s first propo* al was, that they should go back with him to look for his friend, alive Of dead. But the peasants declared this to be totally impossible, the veteran acknowledged it to be next to hopeâ€" less, and the contrabandist pledged him by all the ghosts of the mountains to be beyond the power of man OF fiend, if the avalanche had but touchâ€" ed a hair of his unfortunate associate. The project was on all hands pronountâ€" ed utterly impracticable, and the Count had no resource but to wait until dayâ€" light should enable bhim to continue his search by himself. = Paralysts Comes On After Working at Great Depths. An interesting case of divers‘ paraâ€" lysis is reported from Guy‘s Hospital, London. The patient was working with five other men at a depth of 162 feet and went down three times; reâ€" maining below 20 minutes each time, the ascent occupied six minutes. He felt quite well after these descents, but at the fourth descent a heavy piece of maâ€" chinery slipped and jammed him up against an iron beam. He did not lose consciousness, but tried to econoâ€" mize the air at his disposal. _ After about five minutes he felt suffocated, had intense pain and noise in the head and began to lose consciousness. It had been noticed on the lighter that the: air tube was not working, and another. ldiver went down and by following the ‘line reached the patient and freed the l air tube so that he could be drawn up. | He felt very giddy and sick, but did ’;not notice anything else amiss. _ On | standing bhe noticed a feeling of numbâ€" | ness in his feet, and this was present | also in his arms, both as to power and ! sensation. _ On admission to the hosâ€" | pital nine weeks afterward there was | marked loss of power in both legs. ‘There was no marked wasting of the | muscles of the legs, though they were | soft and flabby. _ The knee jerks were ! normal. _ There was partial anaestbeâ€" sia over the inner side of both legs from three inches above the knees to three inches above the ankles, the areas roughly symmetrical. _ There was no loss of sensation to pain ; the sensations to heat and cold were normal,. The patient, who had had three preâ€" | the curves, and carefully smooth as vious attacks, gave some interesting inâ€" | you go, constantly keeping the picture formation as to the difficulties t0 | in your mind. which people engaged in this occupaâ€" | \When you have finished, smooth the tion are liable. He said that in his background ; if you cannot do this experience the paralysis only comes ON | neatly, make you a stamping tool and after working at great depths and | stamp it. seems to be due to too sudden alteraâ€" To make this, get a piece of square tion of pressure. _ The disease is freâ€"| steel, about a quarter of an inch quently due to divers baving to b6 | through and three inches long, take a quickly bauled up, owing to the @it | tnreeâ€"cornered file, and file furrows tube being foul. _ Old men, he thought, | goross the flat end, then turn and file are more liable to these attacks than| the other way, making a dozen or more younger ones and the character of the | jj;tle squares coming to a point. When water and the duration of the 8t@y | using this tap firmly with a hammer. are not so important as is the age Of| _ Now you will find this a great deal the diver. _ At a depth of 150 feet there| eagjer than you think. Try it and you was not much inconvenience, but °¥â€" wij| be pleased with the result ; and ery two or three feet lower makes & ) ;nxiqus to do something more difficult. difference. _ When diving at great| popy‘t say you baven‘t the ingenuity, depths the men always have a sense of fulness in the head, buzzing in the ears, and flashes of light before the eyes. On coming up there is often bleeding from the mouth, nose, and ears. The patient also referred to the condition known to the men as "bends"â€"that is, wristâ€"drop and footâ€"drop. This usually lasts from two bours to twentyâ€"four hours when it completely passes off, unless it is an exceptionally bad attack. This condition was ascribed by the paâ€" tient to the bands appli_ed round .the anklpe“;u;(i. wrists to make the diving suit waterâ€"tight. Then you . & ardent spirits? ePE CECWTC IORCOOEOC O Not at all, replied the Prohibitionâ€" ist, cheerily. I don‘t object to a man being in ardent spirits, but I hate to see a man who bas ardent spirits in him. DISEASES OF DIVERS. (To be Continued.) HIS POSITION. are entirely opposed to gé'sfifl'm Door Factory. Aaving Completed our New Factory we are now prepared ~ 0 _ o lssssm~a DDAMPTTIY Hfl"lng vuVIuIyICUOR N CCC 0 0 to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orderse can be filled. Liumber, Shingles and Lath always gâ€"s:aâ€"tâ€"s.â€"*â€" o â€" oâ€"oâ€"sâ€"0â€"0â€"* * Young Folks. ] §â€"0â€"¢â€"0â€"0â€"¢â€"¢ â€"¢â€"g@â€"@â€"#â€"9*â€"# PoINTS ON WOOD CARVING. Have you a good pocket knife, one which contains two blades, a large and a small one ? If, not, get one at once. The best is the cheapest. This and & quarter or threeâ€"eighth inch chisel, is all the sharp tools you will need. An ordinary mallet completes the oatfit. For n;at,erial. get a piece of soft pine, free from knots and about an inch thick + Now take some simple picture, which is plainly shaded, so that you can get the relief points correctly. If you are not apt at drawing. get a sheet of transfer paper at the stationâ€" er‘s. Place this mpon the boards, lay the picture smoothly on that, and fix the whole in place with a few pins. Now take a sharp stick or lead pencil and follow the outlines; the transfer paper will leave them plainly on the board. Remove the papers and if the outlines are weak, follow them over with your pencil and leave them disâ€" tinct. Now lay the picture handily by to refer‘to. . ; > ".,.%;%" ‘ sheet of transfer paper at the stationâ€"| One day a very funny thing hap or‘s. Place this upon the boards, lay | pened. _ Muff had been robed in a the picture smoothly on that, and fix clean frock and was lying on the sofa the whole in place with a few pins with the soft silk shawl about him, P * 198 ___ | which covered his black paws and quite Now take a sharp stick or lead pencil | concealed his head, when the bell and follow the outlines; the transfer | rang and the clergyman was shown paper will leave them plainly on the ‘ in. â€" He would probably not have noâ€" board. Remove the papers and if the | ticed the bundle on the sofa except outlines are weak, follow them over | for a slight movement â€"under _ the with your pencil and leave them disâ€"| skirts, which was caused by Muff tinct. Now lay the picture handily by twirling the end of his tail in his to refer to. dreams. â€" Thinking it was a baby the Next take the chisel, place the edge ' clergyman exclaimed : "Ah! how de= square on the outer line. and with the | lightful! what a blessing to bhave a mallet strike lightly, driving the tool ‘ .baby in the home," and stepping up straight down into the wood. Do not | he turned away the shawl with the try to go too far at first, as yow will evident intention of kissing the sleepâ€" be apt to leave a ragged edge. | ing child. â€" When be saw a great black Follow all the outer lines this way, ‘_ca.t instead of a fair, pink hbaby he going over them again and again, until | drew back in such haste that be overâ€" you have reached the background, chipâ€" set a chair, exclaiming: "Abhlâ€"now, ing away as you go. : just fancy! _ Who would have supâ€" Now look at your picture, find the posed that a cat in clothes could act nav+ naints in relief from the backâ€" like a baby ?" ns BB aibtrs. BP condh Art t Jn Now look at your picture, find the â€" next points in relief from the backâ€" ground ; carefully cut straight down | again, do not leave any ragged or split places, and chip this away. Work back ° this way until you have finally reachâ€" ‘ ed the surface. Now you have it in the rough. PF t e ao hg \| ";ulk;_?l; small blade of your knife. and proceed to round over, shape out the curves, and carefully smooth as o W e e Ue When you have finished, smooth the background ; if you cannot do this neatly, make you a stamping tool and stamp it. _ To make this, get a piece of square steel, about a quarter of an inch through and three inches long, take a threeâ€"cornered file, and file furrows across the flat end, then turn and file the other way, making a dozen or more little squares coming to a point. When using this, tfl.}!‘fi‘l_'mly ‘“ith a bnmmer‘. Once upon a time, there was a little girl who loved her family of dolls very much indeed. She kept them in perâ€" fect order. â€" Each doll had its wardâ€" ib}"yfou. have, if you have patience, as this is the secret of a genius. robe of clothing, all neat and well made, and the tidy little girl was so fond of seeing them gowned in freshly starched daintiness, that she asked her mamma to hang them up about the room by & ribbon tied about their waists, so that she would not crush or muss them. â€" Then she would stand back with folded hands, admiring them with such tender looks that ber mamâ€" ma thought there had never been such little girl loved more than her dolls.j rifle against a horde of savages. Maâ€" and whom she treated with still greatâ€" | sina was brought back to Apia in the er tenderness. That was a large black ‘ John *Villiams, her grief somewhat cat named Muif. _ Muff had played , tempered by the knowledge that for with her and the dolls ever since he | some time she would be a central I‘i(-'-I was a tiny kit; and as tghg was very . ure at all district meetings of the thoughtful and kind to him, never takâ€" | mission, where she would be expected ing him up unless he wished to be l‘o tell her story. In a few days the taken, and never running .after him | treaty officials received from _ King or frightening him in any way, he lMfllieLoa an official communication trusted and loved her and let her do j signed with the royal sign manua) and just as she liked with him. So she lduly sealed with the great seal. In it bad gradually accustomed him to'he recited the canibalism which bad being dressed in cloihes, like the dolls. | been practiced upon Neemia and (he For a long time she did nothing but | bravery of Masina. In consideration lay a silk scarf over him when he had | of these sad events and the great grief his naps. â€" Then she tied a soft little | into which the widow was plunged, he hood very tenderly over his head. Next | had given her permission to retain (he she pu! on a petticoat, taking care that ! family rifle and her store of ammuâ€" the band was not too tight to be comâ€" | nition and to bring it ashore with her. fortable to an easyâ€"going, unfashionâ€" | The mischief had been done and was able cat who had never worn anyâ€" | beyond repair. All that remained for thing but a loose fur overcoat. the official board to do was sharply Finally her mamma gave bher a long !to remind the King that he hid no baby dress that she had hberself worn power to grant landing permits for about eight years before, and it fitted | the contraband munitions of war and Mr. Muif to perfection. And thenshe ; to assure bhim that the Berlin treaty very gently put on all the garments, | took no cognizance of grief so profound petticoat, dress, bonnet and shawl, and ; that it must be assuaged by rifics laid bher live black b‘l? down for his â€" morning nap. _ And Mr. Muff not only | _ _ â€"â€"â€"mmmommame saw no objection to sleeping in cosâ€" | Meny a boy who runs away t tume, but he seemed to feel rather ‘ & cireus is only too glad to wal: proud of it; and be washed his paws home again. But there was another pet that the ;e;y' mnice and careful little dear as A CAT IN PETTICOATS In Stock. N_ G. &J. McKECHNIE and purred hbimself off to sleep with a look of the greatest satisfaction gleaming out of his big, blinking yelâ€" low eyes. After sleeping two hours, he stirâ€" red and scemed to wish to get up and walk about. So the little girl very thoughtfully removed his clothes, as she knew he would never like ber if she did not treat him exactly as she would like to be treated if she were in his place. _ He stretched and yawnâ€" ed, and went away for a walk, while the little girl folded up his shawl and his gown, and his petticoat, and laid them â€" neatly in a drawer. The next morning At ten o‘clock, when Muff got ready for his long nap, she took the clothes from the drawer and put them on again as before, beinw careful to undress him the very momeâ€" ent he asked to get up. And so it came about that every morning Muff would go and sit by the drawer and wait to have the clothes put on him before taking his nap. * | _ For several years Muff took his naps in this dro‘l way, until the little girl grew to be a large girl and moved away from her home. And then, alâ€" _ though Muff loved ber very much inâ€" | deed, he could not be induced to leave , the old house, and before very long he _died, because he had no one who unâ€" ‘ derstood his ways. Muff blinked at him disdainfully, then smoothed off his silky paws and went to sleep again; while the little girl‘s mamma talked to the clergyâ€" man of the weather. It is very important to understand the ways of one‘s friends, whether they be people or cats, It Clustered Around the Family Rifie After MHer HRusband Had Been Eaten. The Samoan will give away anything which he possesses when anotber memâ€" ber of his family comes along and asks for it. This makes personal property a most fluctuating matter. One thing however, is never given away under any circumstances, and that is his rifle which each man keeps in readiâ€" ness for the outbreak of hostilities. No attempt has been made by the European officials to disarm the naâ€" tives, but a close watch is kept on the importation of any new munitions of war.. When the yacht John Wilâ€" liams of the London Missionary Soâ€" ciety returned from a tour of the stations of New Guinea, which are Erved_by San_lpan pastors, it nrought the sad news that Neemia, a respected native missionary in a remote nook of the Gu!f of Papua, has been eaten by his imperfectly ronverted congrega~â€" tion. The mission vessel arrived too late to save the pastor, but just in time _to rescue his wife Masina, who was defending her house with a single rifle against a horde of savages. Maâ€" sina was brought back to Apia in the John ‘*Villiams, her grief somewhat tempered by the knowledge that for some time she would be a central figâ€" ure at all district meetings of the mission, where she would be expected to tell her story. In a few days the treaty officials received from King Malietoa an official communication signed with the royal sign manua) and duly sealed with the great seal. In it THE SAMOAN WIDOW‘S GRIEF. T9 away to join to wals back t‘,& IHE VERY LATEST ALL THE WORLD 0 interesting Iteras About Our O Great Britain, the United Ali Perts of the Giobe, C ‘ ssorted for Easy Reading. Brantford is taking steps future floods there. Hamilton is enjoying & seasonable cut rate on CC The Galician smallpox quarantine at Winnipeg, The price of flour was sents a barrel at Winnipe MHannah Lute, aged !|/ rested at Hamilton, Ont of infanticide. The Ontario Agricult Guelph, bas hbhad over since June 1st. Private Thomas Roberts John‘s, Qae. bas be through the use of cigar Albert Webber, econducter, fell fr fering from cons Miss Millie Dawson Postmaster Dawson of very serionsly in iured of soms« Hyacit palrer, v Andrew Harmnison. 0. employee ol the Canads pany, was instantly ki with a live wire. The body of Miss Mar disappeared from Lachi ber, has been found u yrence River at Quebec A young © Binbrook w wood wage torn and b torn and broken. The Montreal | ers have acceple Minister of Publ provement of the mony o *do NNN C Dominion bank at Napt ed up in Montreal, and there are hbot after t passing them. The adian Falls, Ont the death Mr. F. X. Grandma the Hull Electric Comt damages for the d¢ was awarded judgmer Friday for $275 and c Cadet Sergt â€"Major | onto, youngest son 1 won bonors in all sub} number, at the Kingst lege. This is a new institution. A small tormado visil W. T. Monday night, the skating and Cw turned three freight c blew down the walls in course of erection, ble, and a number of and uu(,â€"')u.lldhl'sl The medal ol the Hun"‘e Association ed to. onductor MoeM Cruise on Marc a telephone wl the trolley line POT M Three Riondike © were sent from ()lJ by the Public Works parties will start 11 explore rouves thro waters of the Pelley& party will enter the Stikine river. It has been decid the electric rail way io Montmorency thi thing will ve £0° * the winter to chang er from steam 10 P" of the entire w 4o Cane Tourm® Ste. Aune bonas ol ©2°0,0M! . thern Railway, on company “ub.l" Quebec, that the and that through or vice through from Parr or vice versa, Mr. J. C. Roy, 4i the Dominion GoveI ed to Victoria from has been with Chie the Public W orks ining the GE{?&N Y ukon Myr. 3 to be A fine trouble this : that several enou‘h have river. Nr. A. P. Low Survey, has left in â€" Labrador._ It gold exists in Labi Jities and an ab of coal in diff journey into the 1 ous and long. and is not possible t season. Mr. Low pared to remain and summer. _ 1 tions will be no m.“ (hQ "Mu as is not at prese At the meeling C uncil it was dec nde nf m-m t cally de El:tnd binet Pi€ A Sceotch memi authority for . the Governorâ€"Gel a position much nlus CANADA Cape nt from OU4 ‘ublic Works will start £1 rouves throi Klondike GREAT dJ o_ofpha C onies Lhe t rvtirule: way _ signal pesulied in | hbe go Mr. Roy this seasor veral ste March 16 ngineer m U t R puassel M J th Wo har atte re A mme ULT n )0

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