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The Wingham Times, 1893-10-27, Page 6THE W IN CrIIA a i ";iT%i ES OCTOBER, 27, 1893, , `•ZQ,.4 T,4 A.(0 1 and companion, stood elono when he gazed upon the unfrozen Polar sea;mg- 1 ing; and rolling beneath hint. The soul Iof Do Soto, when he first,, beheld the idle. way, But I do notsissippi, was not touched with half the quiet, steady,. happy y grandeur and sublimity, Tloro dreamt of intend to speak about. my (lotto at Ab- ! philoeophy was a reality; the inductions eruthuey Hall, my tutorehtp of those .0 of science a truth; the open Polar sea lovely children, and flow in beautifying was found! their lives my own grew beautiful. It The chilling grandeur of the snow, the is with the new awakening, the now E1 palaces of CO)iideal Alhambras glitter- Dorado of my companionship, my inti- t. the i antic mac with the rector, that I have to ilea Jai- ing r Lilco a thons.,ud st,tzs, t me g g y '�win- brilliant o w ort n of h x at o ile stairways of peau, surmounted by the � Ho was staudm �, brilliant arch of the aurora --but, above dowa on the morning that M. Ashley all, the oppressiveness of that hour of introduced me to him, IIotutnodround, solitude and silence --stirred his soul flooded grayely and then gazed out of with a thousandltiudlin;; emotions. But the window as abstractedly as before, 1 he stood there alone; he had no friend was not pickled at that --I ant not proud positively to realize with hitt that half awakening and (so my friends toll me) pat too low dream of magnificence; to whom ha au eetima'te upon myself. Though his could relieve his surcharged heart by survey of me was not a leisurely ono, I speech; to whom ho could point out this knew that he had already divined as or that object of attraction. The op- mnuoli of my life and oharacter as a less pressivenesa of hie loneliness was like a penetrating morons would have learned in dc:;pair; it was the strueale of longing a week. It took mo that long to mop and regret; he would even have gr)sped him even in the most incidental eonver- irreverently at the ghostly hand of Sir cation. John Franklin had he come out from Ile was a sedate, even tomperod man. his icy tomb to stand beside him there, • IIo wary often given to fits of abeent- It was somnot'ring of this regret that I mindedness, and from this I learned that felt in my soul. My mind went back to there was some great sorrow in his soul, the close, crowded city, with its sea of It was only in the pulpit that ho proved heated roofs, noisy factories, dusty himself more than an ordinary man. He streets and interminable walls of ran- was an analytical reasoner, subject to sorry, I thought of may sister .!disc, bursts of the most captivating eloquence with her dark spiritual eyes, brighter and strong in the yearning for the salve, - than the hectic flush upon her cheeks. tion of his fellowmen, The light seemed Poor invalid child! How I wished that to go out of his eyes and the spiritual she was standing beside me, feeling the glory out of his face so soon as he &- same cool breeze fanning her brow and wended from the pulpit. Pow stepped gazing upou the same changing vistas of into the aisles to grasp him by the hoed, scenery; standing beside mo so that I they simply bowed their heads with the could talk to her! But she was not there, memory of the recently spoken words of and the tears came into my eyes as I truthfulness in their souls and a sort of thought about it; tho silver abele grow sympathy for the secret sorrowfulness which raised him above the plane of their companionship. But there came a time when he took a deeper interest in me; when his eyes would neglect his book to follow ms around the room; when ho would meet me with a nosegay, or ask mo to stroll with hien through the gardens. I found him a more agreeable companion than I had supposed him to be. He would come out of that half dreamy lethargy in which he seemed to sit and converse as if he thought and felt like other men. I mnust say that he even became commu- nicative. He spoke less reservedly and less spiisnmodically. At first I conversed, and ho listened, but by degrees and un- consciously, as it were, our positions be- came reversed. Then it was that I stood mpon the confines of the new El Dorado in the world of thought. It was some- thing grand to sit at his feet, a quiet, impressible pupil. I must say it sooner or later., and so 1 will say it now. 1 loved himl Yes, warmly, fervently, passionately. I did not know whether may love was recipro- cated, neither did I caro. The knowl- edge of the deep love in my own heart was enough foe mo to dwell upon at any in my new home. 1 had nitwit' to blew nmy heavenly father for; ray linos wore cast in pleasant places. The amen= went by, and the winter, in the some e 't n.. e 40, ass} SyAUrsoRS Alt I,' C deers fir semi? come inane people ante aro s. .'. i, I:r : e.t:Yi't try,' said the widow. homely. Photographersr cannot oa y ; pretty Paco full just t. -;n with:ki r,reu e and makesurter nature without spoiling the effect flat- tooe r. ' with :kiln. Ute lo. I amm earns entirely, but wo can help out a homely 1-a .+-•e .al it forgive b° a long time be- person wonderfully, and the shrewd oho- rr� s: r �clt1 fox;ivo you. As for ort, I �.. t t c i to eanaeriea when Chalice goes. to;;repher down t uo gle ct to do it in :,u'il t^,1:. ern Sim for, ev on't you Ic1a? every possible way. I have seen cons- „l.c. ons-`me is a con o being built tort Denvtir mnomtlace looking women go into Geste, rich i:; to el-mip the woman 02 tho sies over pictures of themselves.. for he etor; ggle of liit', and espe- "The painter who can use the modify i .C' . the . .'.T, t' oa.,tons of light and shade in colors has ,l; for her battle ;Wins- l�u'i,e Some ,big advantage over us, but we have Writhe ego thetiocommittee offered stoat mid pretty well balanc `l things by touching c : de , sinus -Aim upon it for up photo, , aphs in water colors. It's , G c.c c,r.cti now to accept, ; wonderful what exalted opinions some ' tourriage removes the last tie . beauty. beet.s i „have of theirpersonaly ticet. bimmels mo to ee, lid. Yon will j I the o seen some of them who have been mye to m° sometimee, my friends, and n will address your lettere to Professor dealing with me fora quarter of a cen- <stxm;;,cott, Er-ia neipation colle;o, Don- I ttuy, and they expect that their pictures of today shall show as attractively as 1 mot.1 there I shall watch how the ' o those f decades ago,”—New York Com - sr fetors situ;; le goes in conservative old r thosemercof Advertiser. ,.;•1 .md, ante if I am needed you will f m nioliero again fit htirc in the fore i ort of the fray. Goodby —but not you, -is. I have still a word I wish to say to The Rector of A er tiiiie . indistinct, and there was a shadowiness "Gine me your hated, Ida, and yours, I shall Hover forget the time upon about iiot blossoming lilacs. tra,' said she when they were alone. which my eyes first foil upon Abernth- I was soon started out of my reverie. • lm, yon naughty little pussies, aren't ney Hall. Tho stage had put mo down I heard voices in the avenue, and in a ,, .:slmamned to lookme in the face? Did by a nook in the hig lmrvay, I felt w°any moment afterward Mr. grley reached u think- did you really think that I and excited and seated myself upon thr+ ;s so very blind and could not see trunks which the driver had but a mo - pi -little plot? You diel it very well, I ment before unstrapped from the boot. out his hand to me in his kind way, while the servants shorlclored may trunks. I read sly employer ata glance there test say that and really I think that I But the weariness all left mo, and the was not much indivulu:tlity necessary :e you better as you are. But you had .excitement changed to a quiet calmness . to clo that. His temperament was sa - M1onr pains for nothing, you little 881 gazed on the scene before me. aspirators, for I give you my word Some 50 yards to my right, embowered at I had quite made up my mind not among its little world of trees, stood the have him." manse. It was a beautiful building; And so within a few weeks our little there was no definiteness about the style 4 H les from their observatory saw a of architecture—it slum ly seeme :ichty bustle in The Wilderness when the creation of an exquisite taste. There genial nature. They would have given orse carriages came and coachmen was nothing about it suggestive o�nforti- !emelt impressions of geniality to a vary th favors to bear away the twos who fication and defense, like those of the aehild re destined to come back one. And Tudor or Elizabethan styles; it was nei- He chatted gayly as we walked to- er themselves in their crackling silk then of the open Italian order nor yet of ward the house. He did so partly to re- ean ,, .s ....:,4t3 i:s 1117:.1:::21 to rile big the modern pointed gothic. It was a lieu° me from embarrassment and part- ublo wedding breakfast which was sort of compromise between the latter, Ay' it was his nature. Perhaps Irl in the house of ter. Walker. Then probably what might be called the An- he notieed, too, that I had been weep - ere were health drinking and tears t.nd rlo-Italian, and a manse peculiarly adapt- ing 1 already Colt as if 1 had known tighter need changing of dresses and eel to the artificial landscapo gardening him for. years. There was no atmos- ce throwing when the cz:rria„ es drove in tIto front and the naturalness of the phere of mock. aristocracy about him, - again, ante two more couples started dus'-y- woods and the frowning hills in repellent because so self evidently put on. that journey which ends only with the 1.:a ,gror.nd. Therevras no acetone - "Carrie," said Mr. Ashley, ere we fo itself. lat't•it o2 buttresses and gables and tor- Feaclaed the hall door, "this is your new Charles Westmacott is now a flourish- rel.: ante such other conceits that lower teacher." g ranehmen in lie western part of the t' amity of a house; true, there were As hespoke there camp from behind a exas,where he and his sweet little wife tem:..! es, but they were ornamental ac- cluster of china lilacs r. beautiful child e the two most popular persons in all con ' niments—they imparted an lin- of 10 summers. She had an abundance at county. Of their aunt they see pc.. 1:g breadth to the whole group of of darer hair, with eyes from the bril- ttle, but from time to time they scone but: :Inge. Haney of which nothing could detract cerin the papers teat there is a focus ant, approach tothehousowas through but their shyness, while her figure was light in Denver, where mighty than- a 1 r, sad, extensive avenue, lined on Dither tho very personification of grace. She !bolts are being forged which will one side r: nth a variety of trees planted with sprang forward and caught my hand. y bring the dominant se upon their the most delicate attention to effect. I „Ohl I shall like you very much," she 'Hees. Tho admiral and his wife still detected the silvery green of the white oried, ve at No. 1, while Harold and Clara poplar mingling with the dark green of My heart throbbed wildly as I stooped down and kissed her white forehead. "I am glad to hoar you say that," I re- plied, "Carrie is both warm and impulsivein her friondships," said Mr. Ashley. There was a calm, steady look in his gray eyes. ' "I thought you were a groat, lank wo- man, with 'inch eyes as make one shud- der and with a mold on your nose," con- tinued tho child. I laughed at that and patted hor on the cheek. Mr. Ashley led the way into the sitting room. Carrie still clung - to ate. guino, with onough of the polegmatic to give him cal:emcse and dignity. He was still a young man, well formed and with that Intellect el emrpresslen upon his face which comes to men who read and think mach. Hie lips and eyes betrayed his ave talcon No. 2, where Dr. Walker con- i the native oak, blended here and there nes to reside. with the abnormal tints of the sycamore and tho purple beech. The gardens glowed with the same inspiration of beauty and taste. From where I stood my eye could not criticise their regular- ity, but I saw the outlined hedges of blossoming hawthorn. the fioworbeds en- circled with theirribbons of boxwood, and the gay petunia flaunting beside the humble violet and the bee haunted thyme. I felt that the spirit which presided over that exquisite blending of nature and art was thoroughly an artist, not simply of the appreciative but of the ,, creative school. Ho was more of an ----�.. artist than Vie painter on canvas. The latter commences with a tabula rasa; • his pencil is subject to his will; ho puts down a rock hero and a brooklet there and works in his buildings and trees as ,, taste may suggest or tho laws of per- spective demand. Then he can remove "Oh, yore naaedhty Iittle snasstes," with the same facility with which he As to the business, it had been recon- creates. The landscape gardener must !rutted, and the energy and ability of accept localities as ho finds them; he e junior partner had soon made up for must conceal deformities and croata the i11 tbat had been done by his sen- beauties. Tho greater and more sumer. Yet with his sweet and refined ous the difficulties he has to surmount, ome atmosphere ho is able to realize the more superior to the landscape wish and to loop himself free from painter is his taste and genius, sordid aims and base ambitionsBete are of tho man, says some ono, h drag down tho man where busi- ' who loves neither flowers nor children. lies too exclusively in the mnoney There is not simply a speciousness about rl:et of the vast Babylon. As ho goes • that remark. It is the embodiment of k every evening from the crowds of truth. We are conscious of the weight orton street to the tree lined, and importance of the caution, no Mat- eriel avenues of Norwood, so he has ter how limited our experience. As I rd it possible in spirit also to do gazed upon the scene before nee 1 felt s duties amid the babel of the city convinced that the proprietor of Abs yet to live beyond it. ernthney Hall loved both flowers and nit L:.lm. children; that he was a gentleman of re- fined sensibilities, a Christian and a Women In a Photograph gallery. • scholar. I had some to act as governess 'If yen want to seo scale of time rami to his children, I had mnisgivingla of life. just pass• a weer in a plmotags reference to illy new home, My tonjec- r`a gallery," said one who has grown tures of hat'almess and a want of appre- nutter anal Cheesomuking 130th Vroilta'b10 Tins Season. Better has bden Nutting at unusually good prices this summer. Timers far. niers who do not patronize a ubeese factory will no doubt reap the bandit of these high prices this season. Though the price of butter has been high, the price of ebt'esu has ale) boon good, so that, whether the fernier this )discn has patronized a cheese or but- ter factory, the profit is equally as good from the one as the other, Dur - Mg the warm months the farther will usually nmalco.moro by patronizing e cheese factory. The dithoulty with the summer creamery is that the ma• jority of dairymen do not gut the benefit they should from tho skim milk. It sours before the farmer can use it, and is not worth half as much as when kept in good condition. Skim inilk when kept m as sweet a condition as possible ought to be worth at least 10 cents per hundred pounds. The good prices of flutter and cheese this sensors, and which have been maintained for some years post, go to show that any kind of dairyiug is pro. tittle, 'The firmer, therefore, who makes a business of kiieping a herd of first-class cows is making his business more profitable than that of his uomgb- bor who adopts the plan of growing and selling tho grain oll his laud, whether he makes butter or cheese - making his special branch of dairying mustard sturd ut' t daily bread, it when It ennui to putting theirs o with the rest of the push and dishonest lrliik uatlh one had Conceit 01100/411 to see that it would end in it lol,ing game. They preferred the uaoic+Gy of the best. .Natty of the patrons thought that the ter,t would be indult• through the taking; of the t,alnl.le. This we over- came ver- c o by �trnlll , n little t kn10 in the conductor ttpuut end setting a pint intent udder it, thses secul'irng altuost a 1terleaG satuple, <4 few dropam from eat+h lutlf 10)0011 0f trlill; ttm0at ueces- eerily meals the bail!!. Every pxttron's faille intuit pass over the saute hole and the patron sa%+a that no favoritism is sliowe, Duriug the nine lllnttthe that we have used the test our yield bus been about three- trealm of a potttid higher than during the same ntwaths of the four years previous. If the test will bring about so groat an improvement in so short a time with the 131)1110 cows wo may reaeouably expect it stall great- er improvement when the patrons have had time to improve their herds.. Before the whole object, of the patron was milk; new it is butter. The average price per bnnrlred pounds of milli received cry our part'ous from April to December inclusive was 90.1313 cents. Patrol, No. 1 reeeived 51.171. Patron No. 2 received ;31.0 . Pat- ron No. 3, received 81 ct•msts, Patron No. 4, reeeived 751• rents; a difference between the highest and the lowest of 411 cents, One hundred pounds of No, l's milk made as much butter as 155 pounds of No. 4's and as mime as 1253 pounds of the avorege, In other words, 100 pounds of No. l's milli broutzht him. 55 per cent more than No. 4.'s and 29 por cent more than the average. We have•heard niany erenmery men say wife can render her husband at critical that they believed it the only fair way periods, when two heads should be to pay for milk, but 1h,i extra labor better than one. and expense of testing ane bookkeep- As man's wife often knows more than he does about a• great mauy things, and while he need not lower himself m her estimation by admittiug her mental superiority, it is sometimes well for him to silently recognize her superior intelligence and profit by it. If be is a wise man, he will not be tun ready to come into accord with the opinions of his wife, but will affect a great deal of wisdom on his own, even though he knows he has none. It never increases a wife's respect for ger husband to know that he is inferior in anything, and it certainly does not increase her respect or affection to have hire intimate by word or look that she does not know anything at all. The judgment of the average woman regarding the disbursement of money is often better than that of the average man, particularly when it comes to spending money for domestic purposes. it takes a shrewd trades. man to get even with the average sensible woman, while the tradesman finds it easy to work off stale goods on the average roan; and the most con eeited man might as well acknowledge frankly that his wife can attend to most of the affairs of her own house- hold hotter than he can attend to them for her. Women • often have the most acute perception regarding business affairs. If men would only talk business with their wives, instead of taking it for granted that women don't understand anything about business there would probably be fewer failures. Many a successful business man owes his success to the keenness of judgment of a partner whose name does not appear iu the firm or over the shop window, and who is supposed not to Menus any connection with the busi- ness, and that partner is his wife, in whom he is wise enough to confide. Woman's Wit. Although the bachelor merchant, perhaps, has an advantage in respect of his cheaper living expenses, says the Merchant's Review, yet the pros- pects of success of the married dealer ehonld on the average,be more promis- ing, other things being equal, on ac- count of the assistance which tbo ammo time. To be sure, his eyes et tunes warmed up with a beautiful light, and ho would oshibit the most earnest solid- tudo for a temporary ache or illness, but beyond this I observed nothing. Ip did not speak of love. What I had no - tined might have been merely occasioned by his strong friendship for me. I was one day reading Goethe's "Dich- tung and Wahrheit" (Poetry and Truth). Mr. Jackson observed the work in my hands. "Is Goethe a favorite of yours?" be asked. "Very much so," I replied. "His works have never been faithfully translated, and least of all the one you are now reading. It is not even second - handed. It is what Mrs. Austin called 'a bad translation of a very bad French translation.' Two elements enter into every translation—the author and the translator. Thus, Hoole's 'Ariosto' is nearer to Hoole than to Ariosto. So in Pope's 'Homer.' The Greek is nothing, tho Englishman everything. Transla- tions have been called pressed flowers. If you want to enjoy Goethe in all his freshness and fragrance, you must go to the original. In no othor way will you be able thoroughly to appreciate him." "Do you understand German, Mr. Jackson?" I asked. "I have boen told that I am a perfect master of the language. I have Goothe's works in my library, Yon mnst study Gorman." Wol1, I mastered German. The study was a pleasure and a recreation. I caught the innpiration front tho vory lips, as it wore, of Goethe and Heine and Schiller. I learned, too, the trutlmfl1l- ness of Coleridge's definition of gentile— that it consists in carrying on the feel- ings of the child into tnaturor years. Men of true genius giro themselves up to the first simple impressions of eon - mon things. They are content to won- der and smile and admire, just as they slid when they ~veto children, It is the opening of the heart to all owed inane maces. Wo aro not called upon to write poetry for angels or saints, but for. mon-for men who Sorin and think said suffer. no who is to photograph humanity must at least be able to stance on a colnmoU level with it and by his many rmymnpa- thies enrich his special experience with all that is ttnivorttal. Poetry is the nun toric of truth, and let it conte through what medium it may ib is always mu - deal while it is true. 23nt that literary feast also became tt "1'.felmesinahl," To conjugate the verb "to love" in that rich, full, sonorous dhI- Comelc Wit (gang to mc. " What layout name?" she asked, "Jenny Gray." "Sol 1 like that, You won't !hake Me call yeti Miss Gray, will you? But I 'mustn't ask so many „uess'aomtB, Only I !Want you to red Fred, She loft the room, returning in a ntin- n the art that ifntnortalizcn. That elation at timnee made nmo almost shrink j ute or two with her brother. I was soon of our patrons is of the class of away from duty. Dut 1 was satisfied upon social terms with hila. ITO closely e people is a common belief, but and wholly at ease as 1 sat there upon "piing his father—had the same ie light, correct one. time baggage which made up the stint of Darling hair, calm Was °yea and e eo�ttrree 'pretty womemm of a certain preetstive lips. Ile ryas riot se taekativd y fay earthly possessions. ars (1,rrio; be was more tlmonghtful and an c guns mrianti8ImUtttber of picture) And yet therowas nmueh of regret con- j reserved, more observing arid loss tor. wnwh they ails almost as 001110 netted with it—not on account of my- alsivte. des cattle, to give away to every- self, but on account of another. We P 1 was in dna tiimtito tT:drtyurtYrly ins Called t a InrgA nrttnlrer of ordora read that William 14f orton. I(ano'sr friend ing made thew slow to adopt it. We found that it made considerable extra work and expense for acid at first, but after having a pipette made holding nt,e-third the regular amount and using the test bottle es a compos- ite jar at the end of three days we have the required amount for a sample and have the test but once in three days, or ten times a month. We have about 100 patrons in our home factory, and it takes tors nbnut throe: hours to test then all, equivalent to one hour each day.—Manager Hoard's Cream- eries. TO at cottrr;Vrv. Itch on human mud horses and all ani- mals cured it, 130 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. 'I'hismever fs,ils. War- ranted at Chisholm'sdru•g store. It would seers that if a farmer can grow eheap fond in the gumumer, and turn it lute high-priced butter in the winter, he rhould not have much trouble m making a !'arm pay, With good management there ought to be a wide margin emetwueu the cost of the production of hay, ensilage, grain and root:', Had the market value of butter produced by the same. We doubt very much if there is any part of farm management that will better repay close study than this. Testing Milk at the Creamery. After leaving uscd time Babcock test for several menthe and 4ecoming sat- isfied with its aoourauy we sent time fntlowiiagg mitts tri each of our pat. rota: 13y request of tuany of the patrons of this creau,ery, April 1, we shall start itt op+retion it test vat. All milk ntmtor'iug this vat will ha paid for in proportion to the amount of butter it will nailer, AN decided by the Babcock test, Alt}+oratins desiring their milk to go into Phis vet must give es uotice' on or before April 1 or wait until the next month. Further informnation ; will cheerfully be given at the cream- aq. We tintioipated a great deal of op. position from many of our 1 atrons and to serve Leal muot.y proposed a separate vat for all those who proferred p,.oling their milk in it,e old way. To our bltrpria0 00 the looming of the firht not rA pooled Of milk went into tbu old vat. Utley of tho patrons thought their i silk would test low. Certain of course, knew that they would berry to elute skitilttiirtg, anti in taitlt'f (ratted tont meant surgliuni or Arr..Kerman ,Hicks Of Rochester, N. Y, Deaf for a Year Caused by Catarrh in the Head Catarrh is a CONSTITUTIONAL disease, and requires a CONSTITUTIONAL REMEDY like Hood's Sarsaparillato cure it. Read "Three years ago, as a result of catarrh, 1 entirely lostaly heating and Was deaf ter MOM lban a year. I tried verities things to cure it, met bad several physieians attempt it, but no nmprevenient eves apparent. I coadd disttiu- 1tuisi>t ua ,find. 1 Was intending putting myself ander the euro 01 a s eClai[st when some one suggested that possibly IIood's Saat-- salmarilla would 00 me selno good. I began laking 0 without the expectation of any lattlnfC 1 holy. To me�f eurprble andt�rent jay 1 found When 1 llad taken three bottle8 !Litt! nmyy Lenin- lug wfni re*sruiu.g. i kept on 111 1 had I taken thre8 anore. Is la now over a year and I Can Lent merfeetiy well. 1Tatm troubiett but rleeltnanrknbli twit, nand eordlally reoomntend Hood's Sarsaparilla to alt who have eatxrrh." 1?i fanrAN Btoits, a0 tarter Street, Roehester,1. Y. _ ! y3C1dD'19 PILI s mita parely rregatable, add do qct bprgI. Dom► or gat* tiotdby SUdntai1itittti 1't Dani IIE TELLS 7 WAS BEA One est Daniel Wel lawyers we cation hap] profession. pracsitIone "there was Ham! i afraid, and There were enter the 1 occasion B defend the his opponei cunning la case a as 1e when it we Was retain., came on fo that Bruce no store u The tnetire strong, tint ed the ease The princil plaintiff w, up for the menced a FumtIoUs pulling his appealing wore a red stances, to this red -c Barnaby, common e7 take from hesitate tic of his land red •coat ed "During ing up and ed and eon gone, "sues of time jury white , ho lattng and in his eioq opened Oil discovered undershirt brightened his pocket: confidence ASTON and all on'. concluded of his cher is safe !" commence, ing argurn. gave a res of his red, patrietienm and his elm city, 'Buts broke fort eloquence, 'what are stand herr no founda+ ever; of as troy our t+ my witne gentlemen gentlemet: made a st by the hos displayink Barnaby coat cone( "The e; was beater gained th( Hole's Infleenza. eases of tl valent in nothing a certainly remedies. often nee'. or are inj+ in either es. What, ient, [toll if recover, , the alarm is purified the cure, and vital severing i partitions stain atoll ands of p the use o, have beer other the The pt an article wonderfi' over prof son is en of it at ri true end beat prt reach of pay asls tional c bound to industry,