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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-12-10, Page 6a f: • British Freighter, Ituna, History was made in-Canaidian the. Patrol from Liman under Patrol. Scouting on November 17th, +last, On Leader Frank Zurbrigg, and also Lone that date 'a rally was `field at, •Mark- Scout Ron. Sage of Ingersoll',, who is 1st Markham• Troop, recently organ- hers. ' Troops , st. nem - ham to inaugurate and .send oft" the..else • of the let• keens bed In that • .town.; The. Leaders of the 1,501, London. • • This. Troop.' was. .the direct re,silt'" Troop were:alitea present: •and placed of..the enthusiasm and grit of, •moo 'their Troop Headquarterss at the :.dis brothers, Muir •and'• Percy North, whoa posal of •,the Laiites. and they., ,also : • in April of°tbis year enrolled as Lone pro'idod' there with •• supper, 'which ` Scouts, tend speedily rallied • a, 'L, lone kindnesses ° were . very Mach aper"eci-:. Patrol around there,, and they are area, - ,, • now .'both- Patrol 'Leader* in . the new In • spite :of the inclement weather: .,Troop, ; , all pfesent' °had Iota of fun ,and greatly The •` ontstandrng :feat -are, ,however, enjoyed • the pro Teatiings " • nand,.. are, .'1 of this rally is the.: fact, ',that there• looking Yorss and to more rallies ot were r,:epreseutatrves of ne fevter.than this kind -,in. the future; •° , �,,,.x „ •• _ r • three Regular • Scput Troops present, We rtnink'that .f,hrs tivas' an aspera- ,,„" •g..... .`... `haveaUeen sarted .as tho'" ,nice wh1ch,.:.as. o,.:mig ..,btIrtis would� t•:• , :. . • ; .. ;� ..�,•..,• ;•,. •' .:.. ton_ •' .o,:. '(41. cSton direct • result_of Lone Scout Actiity.with .adventage iy sameof the other °. •Swansea Walesagrbuhdin' a blanket mis ingFonly short ;.distance.safe Passag'e',, into ; neaaaa>ins• -members of the'. Maple Troop Lege Scent Why not egg- aalaragansett Bay -;R T._"_ -were -present •withtheir Scoutmaster•erh to Pew; tS_contnastei? • scouts. -give :yon--the-opi►ortumtv_to..�aee ,',itther — and an even.-greatdi�'rhsimbcr-of- from the 1st'. Tinipnvoop were l Lonies, in your district, .there,both of these troops •:haying iis • been •4formed **thin ' the • last ,,few i • At. the time that •these notes are be- • months.. + ing written the Royal Winter Fair A1t4etler. there • '.were over' . 2,510 . at Toronto' is to full :swing,, and no. Scoots, Leaders •and Friendw present 1 doubt a ,number of . Voiles will attend, aa -and •never-•.before.'have th a `ez-Lon this interesting exhibition. • les" Troopsmet together either in • . Lone. f Scout Charlie -O efts, •: of" Canada, oi. as far as we know, in Ay Sparta• bas won a foua days' trip „to .--,_ , other art, of the ,• wori8- - "" ' • , 1 -To. ;onto+ to •attend' the •Fa;;r,. -'and is- Pail, 'staying at the Royal .York Hotel'' with i'ield Secretary 'Art' Paildon. Cap• . y g y tarn • Johµ; Furminger (Commissioner a party of -other boys: ' We congrate-- _'for :Ontario' Lone Scouts); Scoutmas- late Charlie and know that he j ter Don Iiutchrson of -the 2nd Ontario'`greatly enjoy the; trip,. Lone Scout• Troop, and Scoutmaster George G,_,'.Emery of . the•3rd•Ontario • •'We: hate heard of a large'number. Lone: Scout'Troop drove -out •Trom''10- '0! one °Scouts in. tl:iis, Province who • .ronto.: to' wish the new ;Troop "Good era now getting busy w&th •thein Xmas. Luck _and -God Scouting-'' i Toy Stop activities, .and ' some poor Games . were played and competi kiddies will shave a . brighter. Christ= ons -•indulged in, and `mo'st._of.._,the mas in consequence. members of the' Troop, from: the Scout, The Lone: Scout Commissioner has. .,.. master_ downwardaa .Were Invested. .as, received' a letter from one little boy Scouts,• and': later refreshments were w1 o kas 'no ' father; and-. -WOO- has rto served by the fecal. Girl 'Guide Com- work hard to earn a few nickels .to' pony:. •••-•°- .•-~� -feeder and m clothe •-himself. -:•• He -says. 1�;pleasing incident during' the eve •tiiat,•last year dome kind Lollies re- • lhfn g`•°was°theapreseu:tation_to_.the:,troop _mombered_him and hie littlebrother by , Mr,. Mason,' the' ,former Lonies' and. sitter, ; and'hopes4'that.Lone. .Scout ounsellor 'anrt 'friend, of a .handsome Santa Claus' will not forget him; this shield for use in connection with,inter-' year. Don't you th n . it • s' us sp en-' patrol'competitions, Mr, Mason was did to have the. opportunity to-do a -estedaas-a--Scout-at this nisei•, "Cto_od Tern" to kiddies like `this? • ". •. Those :of you, who- • have ,already • This .,as the. eighth regular Troop started your Toy Shop activities will« :wh.ieh has .been. organized in Ontario. stick to it, we hope, and'' if you have as a;•jilirdct :result of Lone•.; Scouting.,1 not yet started .there is still time to • get busy . •• On 'Saturday,. -November '14th, :last -Don't forget to let your Scouttnas- 'a rally of the 1st Ontario Lone Scent ter, know just what you are doing. . ,Troop was held in Leaden, under the direction • of Mr- Jack. Lawton; the • Information about the Lone Scouts `,'Scoutmaster of that Troop.' • `may be obtained from the ' Lone Unfortunately, the. weather , was Scout Department,, Boy Scouts Asso- r tber unfavorable which•••prevented elation; 33Q Bay 'Street, T.oronto, Ont. large attendance, but nevertheless Write. today for particulars,• ' Mr Lawton was. delig1it to meet - France's -E" France's Mystery Plane , I New ;Rail Zeppelin' 50 Na,tions Pledge Truce' of Arims One -Year . Agreement to ,Re- frain from Armament~. Construction Goes into'. Effect, Brian Re- veals at • Paris „ 8r 1'r Geneva: A one-year truce iii ar- mament construction, dating from No- vember 1, went, into late tionai ea fect recently on true ortty • of Chairman Aristride . Briand of the• .League Cpuncil, • , ' '0? An` announoenient; ;from-the=lahgue. secretariat under M,;'ilriaid$••sigua- `cure said that some 60 venirnunts had declared • their . wilinguees to : lea 'accept, • and • c'onsequeutly 'the. truce Is, :had- becdme•au, established fact;...* • 'A null her 4 ..governments mute -. their acceptat}ce;. condItlona1 ail 1 e'c.i�,, .: ; ; +procety; it w`as • ',legated r outt ^and r such ,reciprocity; had beets-.aohpet ed• ' Many •re. lies Were said to ;have con . tamed' .lutenpretations, •and.obscivar' tions but .a1 'appeared to•' bd-'fn'"kefep ' , ing ' with the spirit of • the Leaeels • . 1 caution. " ;._..• a Britain Participating. Fatal Irq me Disease 1I "'The leading Owers rticiplting , ` . g P Pa.. News has.. been received of a • n;ys- i Undergoling. Changes _ Found . Near Canal Zone' are: Great Britain; the united tett' aeroplane which' has .been Gori,, Hanover. The new .Zeppeline on ,'Chicago: -.Germs of the fatal equine States, France, Italy, Germany; structed in France: 'Built .in•.tke" eats t `. i akin";Ja n and .Russia- Others are �' rails being:. built here ir•om the , hit, disease reIated.to tyitiuosomios ,s, :Pa , est secrecy 'and worki`ng`on an entire roved deal ns 'f Dr Franz Kt -liken:• to trio saeeping.sicknesa,of'SoothAYri= :Pirgent ria, LT'ruguay, Peru, 1^in,laicd, - P g,.. o ., A l tutsg 'eanbodie's senna important straw: can origin, aria of Chagas disease, ori Bolivia, Belgium, Denmark; Chile 500 miles lie ne 1 100 it Clark; microbe hunt The Leagu�9 -Assemt 3y -adopted-- a. .r .. s• -.- r-•,, pane expected :nes .o_iehiie' amtsajing•_results. Speeds ofatneai_-•changes. from the origihal one relapsing fever;. were two d1 the Snds and Poland a ur- ar y miles', whose run :from Hamburg to h i an° hour Berlin of Dr. Herbert C. her than th resent yea • � • eaP wh has r Ord held• b_ ,.'Britain ---are` expected,._ .: __ _._ - i • .- Central American g ;hour was the fransportatlon sees* imposed exile in the • , at a speed that reached 144. miles an er o justeturned• from a •self - and i•t is calculated• that the .maceine .tion of, last summer: i jungles. will be able to reach' a height, of 1 ;The new speed wonder has dropped•1 The equine diseases; says. Dr: Clark, fifteen miles or more, ';its• air. pfi'oiiel'ier. screw -has •no •out-'assu es importance' -in view of the in -i The: Pilot a>td 'the .mechanic will' be''•ward.. propulsion •device --and 1•nsteadi terns tonal: highway. now being built enc,osed'-1 nit-4air=tf it- metar7rathat of a asolikie en rine i -t has one of a whic would tiausport-the-disease--in- supplied with oxygen from reservoirs.: g. ' differ®nt type that burns crude •oil'f and `to .the plains of .Texas; Chagas dis- m t h They will •thus be able ,,to breathe delivers the power directly to' the 'ease is ,common in 'Brazil-°but..so far normally at terrific speeds and at the wheels.' This is expected • to produce ' MO six humans have contracted it. highest altitudes.. Italy, too, is said the same high, •speed. while elitninat.. Only : the mormoset, ,or, squirrel, ara- to' be 'bolding `holding secret trials' on Lake ing;• the difficulty' experienced with the dilloas; opossums and:' -certain bats,' and Garda. i propeller in reverse. dogs carry the parasite A plane abl„ to,' achieve five hue=' ' The new.rail Zeppel'ine while retain- I •Dr:`' Clark will make his report to deed miles, an . hour could do aston 'ing , the streamlines and . light metai ..the Gates laboratory of troplea�l ' and ishing; 'things, • In our latittides; mor'"bod' •of the original design • will be' reventive.research on malaria aimong y g g,. ,p, example,.. the surfaoe' of the.earth. almost' twice as,long, and.mounted on: humans ,and' .animals of file 'ooastal mala ib at" a" speed of '*bent. 5'00P m1'ies . "three trucks, making the-.hegotikting' lairs of--the--trepies.- Dr: •€}ark- has ,. an .hour: By rising into the air •.anti of curves at high speed. It will • ac-: been, in the Canal Zone twenty-two -:travelling._ • in the opposite direction'. commodate fifty passengers. ' years engaged in research. the lane could alwa s keepthe sun. •' iit " a -bee p y_ �.,._:. .� ••:i' Concerning Malaria i has n d. , ad _Match• -the countries ' • ed .that' Prehensile • simians are t cover t p • • resolution ' at its fina! Meetings ou ' September 29,, calling onthe' govern- 'meets invited .'.to , the. 1932 disasxua went conference to ' ''give proof of their desire. for. a successful issue of efforts to insure and organize peace andato,.eeirain ,fro.m,_any measure in- volving an increase in armaments." ... . •• The • truce •'originally was ada'o- • ' Gated' by Foreign Minister 'Dino Grandi of Italy in the form o(' a "gentleman's ''agreement" =..to ' sljs. pend virtually ' all' armament ' build- :1W uil'd- : nig. Tari ;.rand d'ird''s,e a intt)ie err-- _ for,.one year au a •gesture of 'fa.ith, in the forthcoining conference: The fact that' the truce. has bean made,..efectivea16 ,interprete.ci_, . here as an optimistic augury for the, sue- a •cess of "the.' disarmament meeting •in• February • -and. - as ` eounteracting la'. some . extent the warlike • situptioe of ' the world rotate beneath it. It , y g • r. q e - riFtai ' �disan . Memorial --Light s �1e�x • $arliai�rit 'People P 1010, d n't workfor-ai• v. n po i i t' ' • i Te isg, r s Satisfac b n Y but live -on their: money; oirtnnmber�-all, other • classes in the House of Com - aeons today Lawyers come next of those elected in •the a great National sof-sat' _ Conservative victory, and, business istacto_ry tests made ret curly I men follow the iawy.'e~s pretty -closely,, with,' a 300,000;000 candlepower` nati- ,In tables .compiled byProfessor •-H. aircraft searchlight :at Heins Pont, in ;East Potovrao Park:-} J: Laski, and contributed, to the Lon- • Washington: =Preliminary work on the project for a perpetual' light mem • orial' here to Thomas A. Edison Was regarded as completed as a result don New Statesman and Nation, :the t ..The memorial plans calls for a •pow- orw° • "aristccra_t"means either the J • Prbdfktss-1.932eather • the ;on1 .' s ee e -`i s of mon'' xey to have existing-in-the-Par-Fas out, c d, in, a word, make •tiele stand k'rankfurt;an-Main, Cgnsiderable "malaria,.although not quite the same as• still. • r Cancer Discoveries progress in thealiossibilities eapredict-., that afflicting mankind. • There:. are Uses Waste•:MolasseS To Produce Fertingerr ing weather a .long timeahead was • eight ' such species. +• • Professor Franz Baur, director• of the Aid War'on Disease German Research Institute, on long • London; Ont,' -Important _discoveries range•.weather, forecasting. He recent- in 'cancer research . work now being ly has gain ;new insight, 'be ,said, ' into carried out at the 'University ,of' Wes-' connections between the solar con- tere. Ontario Medical, Scheel .by, two Stant; sun spot *moot problem in me= separate. groups, which will . bean tegrologytand the world weather on nounced in a short period, are 'expect •b'osis 'svh1ch he could predict, for in - ed to contribute greatly to the fight stance, that July• and Augustof 1932 against the dread disease, it was 'would be dry in; Central Europe pro - learned recently, ! vided some great ` volcanic eruption orktiee- led-epeirdvtir-along -aao-•jes nut upset the ladiatiun. bullet chemical lines Dr. Jelin Hewitt, of in the 'atmosphere.: , thlrat'a -at the n I6-Hostnt --is"Prefeor Basr re: 'contributing oneli f of the reseaheh_, searches to America as soon as siinpie while the cancer growth is the subject means are available. , of, *work. cuing handledE. . by. Dr. E • .,j_ _ ..- Percy Jones .and. Dr. F. J. H; Camp- @1 b il, B.A-, M,R.C.D;; • of the • Institute `o ,21 00,0Q0 CalxGelled of'. Public Health. 1 • By ,Rajah Celebrating All- .three,refuse to. divulge any de-;' . • Birth• of Son finite* information on the discoveries New Delhi,' India.. -For a' hundred at the *resent time, because they have years no direct male heir has been iiotaae_,yet proved perfect,..jrltt;,ii is_hp it ,in `the line of Alia; • successive stated' the results of several etiperi-'maharajas -. of Jaipur but recenty neem --have-beer et i3r i•1ig t1 er-e=is.cis agelfteent-de-bar. for the• wife of the Maharaja Sawal Kan Prize Opal Singhi Bahadur has resented him The most prized variety of ;opal is Oration, and the Maharaja `announced'. the. "precious," cr "oriental" opal,, wholesale remissions of fines and rents whose' gorgeous' flashing tints and col-' over the past' five. years, a.' gesture ors shift with its every movement. • which involved about• $1,200,000, Formerly nearly all "precious opals" j- - • -r came from -Hungary, but to -day the 1 "I don't think that our danger now •finest specimens are found . in New 'is fro the" Red .menace as much as South Wales and Queensland, in Aus- tire •conservative' meuace,'�Sinclair tralia.---Gas Logic.. erfuT Tght ray projected dire . d into the heavens to formalin holder of a hereditary title, or the son war ing,haft. of, light visible forom 11v- or wife o£ such a' Person.' • "Rentiers" are thosewho live on inherited wealth ave miles. The final tests .• were: and follow no .'occupation.. Rentiers, made under the direction of Fair - 165; businessmen, 111; lawyers,: 136; fax Nautly project engineer of the 'accountants, 8' soldiers and sailors, memorial, with a big , searchlight 43; farmer -landowners, 15; teachers, which 'is Bart of the equipment 'of Battery' A. 206th Coast Artillery, D.1 11; bankers and financiers, 47; doc- tors, 14; retired civil servants,: 5; jour - C. National Guard. I ii.alists, 15; brewers, 5; trade unionists, • Placed' on the roadway at- .the tits 32;: others; s; total, 615. of }faint; Point the light. was pro- , • - jected straight into the air for ob- ` servation froth various pbihts -of van- No Ripts in Canadian Prisons tare by members of the District of Columbia Edison National Memorial Laid to Iranian Discipline • Core mittee.• It' also was projected •1Wi ipeg"Sound ,humane - disci:pi- at tiarious angles for observation of. line accounts, for the fact that Cana- com.parative,effects: dian penitentiaries ta'•e not been the I scenes of revolts suoh as those ' ex- perienced in penal institutions in the Dye Made on Petroleum, Base United States, in the : opinion of Austin; 'rex --Texas yellow nnay Brigadier General ,'W. St. P. Hughes, become a new color. This is:• the'superintendent of penitentiaries in name being given a bright yellow Canada. • • dye,' the' first to -'be ulnae from" 'p`ef: }', ' "Hard times..are not the thing which , roleum. It has been • worked out fill t Canadfan penitentiaries, said by Barnard Biggs of San Marcos,General Hughes. ' '"Question;ng the , Tex,; a graduate investigates in the, ' thousands of men who are, wards of , chemistry 'departitrent of the u'ni- Canada we find that in the -majority veil -shy of Texas. It is derived from . of. cases their start on the road to a nitrogen base. Most dyes: now trouble is directly attributable to. in use are coal -tar derivatives„ lack of home influence and control rf • •aa There is a lack of school •control;' too. Canada to Take ' Fewer Corsets and Fogs Lead • Over More Buoys -• To Better Health in London Two of the buoys between. Pres- don. -The diminishing use of the Cott and Kingston which • formerly corset-aa,young women, daylight sav- have been maintained by the United; ing timeand fewer of the old-fash- •`States Government will. be main= iotred London fogs-Dicken's -London tained in future bi• the Canadian 'particular •-we`e some of the factors Government, according to an,. en- an- mentioned by Sir Ernest ' Graliam- nouncement from the Marine Depart- Little as, contributing to the h':i'Pr meet, Ottawa. . ' , health. o£ Londoners, Lecturing at One of the buoys : will lie numbered' the Royal Institute of Public I eii1 1i he painted a grin tune of 'con-,' 6 1-2-T and the other 5 3.4•T. r_---- ditions in London al earlier tines. I i' I "The eighteenth cantury was s•iti- Seventh Decrease Slit wn ated b excessive alcolaolisnr which,' in •Britain's . Unemployed' indeed may have been called one of `toriihrt ---if or--tire-seventh• success iii eentury's-••gr ea -t -scourges," e' s 41, Sive week England's unemployed total I'�.Di.stilling was a' new trade. in Eng*": decreaseit; reaching 2,64$,42'9 on No- • land 'and 'gin became the greet de- vember •16. That Was •3'5,4'95 Iess than I stroyer, tri. Loihdon there was • one ilia '*neck before; bet 362,442 more'pothrnise t'i eleryr Six'.houses and to, than it the sales thine a year ago. ' every forty -sever► persons, • 'withra'son. 'It was an elaborate cele- • Lewis: • ' • t Heavy Influx of .wrists,, ' --` Ottawa, ;Records .Reveal Ottawa. -Automobile tourists' con:' time to find Canada an attractive holi- day country,• and'. during. the arse ale. months of this year 1,25f,000.'entered the Donanion, an increase of approxi- mately, 400,000 • oven the, corresponding period of last year. These tourists ,ens tered-t1 o -Dominion ., for' periods -up --to' sixty days: • . ie --to rists--- nt-tin• -•-for AtirEomobi sr en e g Ic nger stags, the Department of Trade and. Commerce reports, in'a statistical "review recently,; numbered approxi mately 11;3'55, as compared with slight- ly more than 11,160 las.t'year: Prairie Population Shows .. Increase of 392,537 D"itawa.-The population of- •tire Prairie Provinces increased. 392,537 cordigg to a census bulletin, . by elec- toral districts, issued recently by the Dominion .Bureau of •Statistics. Re'tu nr s from, the Junecensiss shout the Prairie .with a' total'populatIon of 2,348,619, as compared with 1,356,082 in 1921: Manitoba has a population "of 699,841, as against 610,118'a decade ' ago; Saskatchewan, 921,281,'as against 767,510; and Alberta; 727,497, as, cone, Honolulu. -The perfedtion of a' new, process for converting waste molas- ses into fertilizer was • announced re - L c ^ .i. . Gently by Dr FA•ancrs` E. Hance d rector of •the, chemistry-,depaitiecnt of the'ilawaiian- Sugar Planters' ,es= perirnental station here. The ,accomplishment is . the result of seventeen. years' of research into a •theory advanced early in• 1914' by Dr' H. • L. Lyon of the experimental starvtion:.,statliaths addi.on of the rock phosphate e tothe compound re- -suiting _from _a _ mixture.__ol. molasses - :and :sulp`huric acid might produce a commercial fertilizer.. • The lallpratory work bas .resulted, --Dr.-Hance-sa'id in - the development of a compound which.. • coatains all the essential elements of fertilizers now imported to Hawaii for use hi sugar plantations,' :' In addition,' it can be produced very- • cheapl{• if manufactured on a. large I scale. The ,finished• product is easy.\ tto handle, Ueng d'ry,rya Tean.8 por- table.. The composition 'may be'vai9edl at wit simply. by shifting. the' + athr- iials employed to neutralize the excess • oL sulphuric, acid. . • ' Hawaiian plantations produce al oui: during the ten-year period 1921-31, ac - pared with 588,454- ten years ago., .I o ' Attempt . Recovery of "Lusitailia" Treasures . t+► .o -x: pwr .. 1,J/ 0w• 4' i;, aa, ,r6 0.4. ' e. > ataai';r',aar.° ea 1',ing 11 curious steel' divan; �_tairway in; r•n cri hp Sinion`tt ake, the submarine builder and inventor, • ,. nail, of men heaped by rattly: H., 1.177 11ri]zy; 7rers-nrra-l-rent`enentative-oE--Adieiral yrd--d'uriir�;,•tire--,ant- •uretic expedition, wi11 make a daring effort to reco ver' some of the :treasures ,lost' to the norld ;'when the steamship Lus•itarna Kent to the bottoi'n .of the Atlantic .ocean on May.7, 1915. At rile lusycr end of the f,, o e. ,c , ., „ . . e sit steel lube, or ..tirirwa}y, is an obs; rsatian chamber from which a d><ver eotilcj desrcnti on id b}°wreok and conduct his investigations' with the aid of powerful lighting apparatus, IleatIiieteet 200;000.„ tons of waste molasses; an- • • nualiy, ail 'of which 'is available far use in'niaking the new fertilizer. Munic Consumiri • Less Consuming Beer, l ore Milky Statiistic&-Show Munich. - "Tare Munioh Mer-ic'ai ' Weekly" a'stonishe's the country with the report diet Mih'nactt • drinks more milk per capita' than, .any other .Car- man city, the average for 1930 having been :55 liter, or more than a• third of a quart: The. consumption of beer,`""' on the other :hand, it, droppang•'stead- ily. From 420 liters • (110.9. gallohs) a; head of po�pniation in •1896 eonsump-• tionfell to 220 alters 'in 1928 and below 200. for 193'0.. • . • Ireland's: Grand Oki :Woman Celebrates' Her 111th Birthday 'Lo'ndon.--Ireland's . grand old lady, the Hon. Katharine Plunket of T3aily- mascanion,. County Louth; recently celebrated her one hundreca and elev-, enth birthday anniversary, •• Fondled as an infant by air. Wal- ter Scott when' the great novelist visit- ed her father, the Protest'aut Bieliep' Of Tuam, she is , stili. In excellent health, • 'although coh.tared to her room; Si:.p has lived In the reigns of five 'so,ereigns and has know:six holders the' titre of -Baron ?Iunket. Her' gh•antlfather, William Conynghant iunket;: after a brilliant career as a • tesman became Lortl Chancellor of Tre,'and. Her mother was the daugh- ter' o ` the Last Speaker of the old Irish Hcisrse''of Cominon.s. Bally Princess Starts to Wallt, • London -Princess ]Margaret is be." ginning•--tow•alk--•=� ourteen- months •, •old October .21, the youngest' daughter 'of , tlje Duke and' DitchesfP,of York. • Irak tmiren• lige lint steps, ttoldirtg vii • • to the °heed of her iurao.' She Is a1sil'. s'ta'rtiag td taut. • • ti • • 10.,*"11 •'.. ...