The Signal, 1898-1-6, Page 7"dim
fiC
graph
Ile
Competition.
%scw1O laseLWAY o0
setablished to glue the
guise with tele and me
✓ ima prlanlphe sad 1a
roux.
Met of pesos wits
ya.
eh ase this t'•Br
Ib all lines std ra M
sada and Sero
umbi.aind Papoieteots lOo..S
West.'.
t LAMCLUIIII
alaaager se•dsri.h
■ ■� .
01\T T'S
)rget that we
est and Freshest
',TIOAERY
t
Irget to examine
:. Bargain Tables
GLASSWARE
— r
Yeg�:'�i6at tissue .
)EPABTI[BRT
Ae� -
x t
i»,gUah MVP ss
nt>UQ.
4. NAIRN
rte assortment of
RiYALS
manufactured by the
is Company, of naa-
ods aro known lbs
ligh Grade. AL s
f ANO TABLE
Don't tail to see our
18 IN SETS
_ IW —
it line and best assort
citi•..
ik your inspection of
yu will find our prima
)N & CO.
HARDW£R .
;on FunitUN Co,
de
arrangements with
3EY & SON,
s toll Ilse of their oat's.
t Factory Priam
Saeed kes eine. athat m�ane►
sampoinl•a Hams
lliaso
).Brssa•'h wake are flay
A I a
`Oa - -
RISTMAS
ITELON'S
Meed display 1t
Cakes
t
• Ade l ciAMwt Dt
G
.▪ eaPrastee, Tarty
Ir Patties or
Bolls
▪ wklpeed ereMMISMIl,
y.
Siam Inas and dial
pssermluv. had Chep w t
the muss day.
r ..
e!-
•
9,HE $TG\ .� Y
n and'Sold as
y-1liftde Qlotbjng
fss
J
Is clothing cut iftt by machinery, put together by
machinery, ,and with the
aid of starling female labor.
Such a garment stamps the
wearer on sight as dressed
in slops. He not only looks
G it but as a consequence feels
it. Men are. learning that
' they cannot afford to be ill -
dressed. Slops have had
their day.
Shorey's
Ready -to -Wear
Clothing
--, expresses exactly what the
—•---name would imply
YIJIT<' **Y.TO._WEAR.
�-
Made by tailors, designed by an artist, sewn with the
best linen and silk, cat to fit the form of man be he
tall, short, stont or thin. Any man not a positive
malformation can be fitted by Siorey's Ready-to-wear
Clothing.
By fitted we mean dressed so that 1Ie looks a Gent-
leman, and possesses that feeling of comfort and air
of ease that always marks the well dressed man.
See that Shorey's Ouar.Mtee Card le In the pocket
of every garment.
Nsiel
TWO KH IOS
"Indy Mead
sad
'Meer:
•
ato
•
' 1 t; lfl--
SUCTION OF. TRAINS. QUEER COLUNY,
ghat tK Timm tem World os s Little Ie.
ITS POWER NOT SO GREAT AS 11 lead l• the Mins„url plow.
GENLRALLV POSED. Sioux Citrate. are accustomed to regard
therseel.es ae the center of an unu.1ally
— enlightened mud prugrcn+oto region. ]gut
Nes Draw • Mas of OMIT -miry within tun .hilus of the local high wblnll
Wel L der .the cavo. -It Y ro... ill. building dwell' a tribe llt/onl� W bou t a
s '? prllamry papM mould tenni .s ✓marvel d
to tstagV�Ith1a Foot Ines of the VP"' learning aro rrllnena•lit.
est ERpross With Safety. '� Thu colony ►e leafed on a ere* of len_
ferltlerly Wel tided to the swW of , °breaks.
Lany ycnrj ago n °bongo In the channel
of the AMiesoult river cut It off and joined
it to the then terriWry of Dakota. On ono
ride are the muddy waters of tho Missouri.
On the othe r a chain of lukee marks the
old bed of the strIauu.
Pet ween Yh it 9,1 50 families live In the
bucolic last' runty+ of this little Island, ob-
11tIous to the toinwliu( the()uteltleworld.
A low o1 the older 1 -en and wtiltien can
yet reu+eniter something of its triati anti
pit•ulules. 1:ut of their children nut 0110
in ten has ev,•r bet n lite niUestrue' bonie
Scoter of 'hem have tort' own a 1'
eirthe. pewit .twos of the trlegnieli
telcpbone, ef.ra ke Ilght, trolley ear, any
and atony 0110 of the lu+protomcuts of
modern cl%IUrnrion, are re0efvtx: with
grins of tn..edullty. llut for the o.;Ct.
clonal passage of a Missw!,rt river packet
boat the nee of 1101111 ea • motive power
would also doubtless bo treated as the fig-
men.t of • dl*onlered imagination. Such
accomplishments as reading and eating
are unheard of.
Garment* for Mall and wuwen are GI
home manufacture. Such supplies all are
occasionally needed are furnished by ped
-
diem front Sioux City. L ...Slane Elk Sedate.
and Vermillion, all lying within a radius
of 20 miles of tbhs queer community. 11 ,
oompclled to go themselves for these arti-
cles, the denizen of the region would
probably c.titrive some method of doing
without thein altogether. —Sioux City Let-
ter in St. Louis Post -Dispatch.
Could
In view of the (act that a Ilan le said to
hare lost his life by Islas drawn by .ie
tion under the wheels of a pawing iralt
on ono of tho rttllroads In New Jers,), the
question of the tome exerted by ti 1. row-
er and whether 1t really 1n cif. sti:.., 1. art
strength to pull a n:an under a train be.
comet 1nteret lug and worthy of he. tell-
gatlen: The subjret was datelined by Lr.
Wilgus, the r-lllcnt roginces' of the city
and eastern di%Iaf"n of the Now Y. rk
Centrnl rail- 'ad, and Mr. CuMlw tie t .1-
pervlhor of O. yards at Forty :.1:. '1 ►D'e1e.
Mr. Wilgus esp.-seed the Opletloa that
the foice of the eucton caused by a tepid-
ly moving tr►I�1 would rot be sti1.4.k fit
to draw under the train such a 1.. e', 014-
ject as a man. If, however, the 1 . ,, lisp•
pened to be struck or brushed by the ti sin
bard enough to make him lose hiebal'nnee
and he abou.d fall so that the weight a
his body would acs In unison with tl.o
drawing form of the sir, then 1t n,fgiitye
possible. .. _--A..e-• ---. s-.• -
Mr. Curtis 'says, "It 1s generally the
oombinatlon oL�gllorthat= 11/11.1,11
men to be drawn under trains." In order
to explain this ft if noceasry to give a
short description of the track approach to
the Grsnd Central station. Thew who are
familiar with the tracks from about !Nine-
tieth street know that from there dour n
they run through a tunnel. This tunnel
L divided into three compartments. Two
tracks are in the middle compartment and
the other tracks in smaller compartments
on either .Me. At some distance apart In
the separating walls of this tunnel are
openings some b (diet wide and tall enough
for a man ja walk through. These man -
boles, as they are called, are for the pur-
pose of allot Ing trackman to pass from
one oompartr'ent to another and for safe-
ty when trains are passing.
Near Eighty-thhd street and where the
four tracks run In one large compartment
the manholes are in the aide walls. the
A HISTORIC KEY.
III Wads Thrown Into Loch Leven When
Queen Mary Escaped.
Title interesting key of Loch Leven cas-
tle is .1111 in existence. It was found in
the lake, and is supposed to have been the
one thrown in by the young Douglas when
Mary, queen of Scots. made her etrape.
u dl ftheThe key was originally In the possession
force excel
K
hod Stan ng ° --- e tq - Wi111almNasole...r..3esopsweentod
ri •��� fron�iLa Ur
%'z- 6o as.dlils'J1r_• •ist��,�4aa
.2.40..>...w,r,. �.< open holefn the .epartinh � form
tends
eD�avTng mn�e'ot It
RIGHT UP TO DATE
in style, quality, fit and popularity are the welt
known goods of
THE CANADIAN RUBBER CO.
.:.OF MONTREAL...
Standard Never Lowered.
. ALL DEALERS KEW ?NUS
THE AI`NAOAHTON SHOE STdBE
has nothing but thanks for the patronage of the year
closing. Wishing all our friends and customers a merry
and enjoyable Christmas,'and a happy and proeperons
New Year. During the year now at hand all that dili-
gence and courtesy can do to make the business of shop-
ping pleasant to our customers will be done willingly.
We have a full range of ,1
Boots and Shoes, Bolters, OTershoes, etc.
- Rop•iriug neatly and promptly executed Cheap for GAA.
• k 1 - B C. i s e`
For -1898
wall tends to blow the object out, for the rest -
an island of about two scree near the
sen that the compartment L just large northwest extremity of the lake. Queen
enough to allow for the passage of a train Mary, when Abe dismiseed Bothwell on
through it.. When therefat-..s trsln comes
along this track, It fortee out the; air in
Carberryand hill and joined the but'gbrresst
tb. compartment, and any one standing carried apace into Edinburgh and
in one of these holes would get the benefit - 0, the following day committed to Loch
er it. In these nu 'tholes a man is within Twven cnetl0. On the nth of March,
about three feet of a passing train. led' 8. she attempted to escape thence ina-
In describing the sensstion of being to
the disguise arta laundress, but was fru
one of those places during the passing of tested.
a train Mr. Curtis said that there was ab -On Monday, May 2, 1688, however,
at
eolutely do feeling of danger from suction, while the family were re supper, the toy,
and that the slightest resistance on the William d gaveougls, secured the keys of the
port of a person standing In the hole would emstle and gave egress to the queen and
counteract LI , outride force. He thought her maid from the stronghold; then, lock
that possibly the shape of the object such ing the gates behind them to prevent p` g-
as a small abed or house, standing nears unit be pier - the fugitives in a boat that
track might cause the air to form some lay near at hand and rowed thein to the
appointed landing place on the north side
kind of a whirlwind motion and pull one
Magazine -
under, but that 11 was doubtful. When �� lake.—Strand
asked whether the walls did not protect a
man by breaking the force of the current,
The castle of Loch Leven 1s situated -on
Mr. Curtis said that possibly they did, but
not enough to effect the general conclu-
sions. Ther are ln.tanees ween much an
accident might be credited to 'e suction,
as in the cane of a woman. '. he current
of air would have ar more urface to i.ct
upon, and the tendency would be to mace
the woman loss her balance, and conse-
quently her power of resistance, when the
current of air mlgh readily draw the body
under fixe care, or in the case of a child 11
would he possible. But in the cane of a
man Mr. Curtin said that the force was
not strong enough to pull one under a
,train
e
A Sort Answer.
No man is better known or more gener-
ally beloved In the city In which he lives
than Professor Adam Henderahott. His
conversation is quite decold of bitterness.
Only once was he over known to say any-
thIniundicating even the slightest trace
of 111 Teteper. '!'raveling townward on •
suburban trolley lino to call upon a friend
he asked the conductor to transfer him to
the city street cars at a certain point.
Soon afterward the car stopped, and he
was surprised team outside the very friend
he was seeking. Ho started to leave the
car, but the conductor accosted him.
"You can't change for your car here."
At Mount St. Vincent, a few miles he said brusquely. "Go ttoekl"
above New York, on the New York Ceti- The professor passed him, taking no no-
tral railroad, is • comparatively straight
track, and, according to the foreman of
this set'tion, trains run from 36 W 40 miles
an hour at that point. "Is It in your
opinion," the foreman was asked, "safe
for • man to stand within three feetof toe
0
"Perfectly," replied the foreman. And
then he went on to explain how a moan
might he drown under the can If a very
strong wind was blowing across the track
or if he lost bis holism* or was pushed
Iron the rear. By this time the limited
came In sight, rrgqnning at least 116 miles
as blur. Takfbg a position about four
feel from the train and near • post, in
ease of need, the writer stood until the
train passed, with the result that the gen-
eral opinions he had beard were verified.
The force of the current was hardly per-
ceptible except about his head, making It
necessary to hold hie hat on. It is true
that many of our trains run 10 or 20 miles
an hour fester than the one with which
the experiment was made, but tbe fact
that practically no force of suction was
felt in this case, coupled with the state-
ment made by the engineer of one of the
fastest l000motdvee on the road, that •
man could stand within four feet of a
train moving Ise miles an hour with safe-
ty, makes it fair to assume that had the
limited been going at thin rate the result
would have been the same.
From the above facts 1t may be conclud-
ed that the suction force exerted by a swift
train upon an object the else and weight
of the avar•gr+ man is not sufficient to
draw the object under the wheels.—New
York Commeletal.
In buying GBOCKBIES you want the Best and
the Freshest, particularly when you csnl_get them at
STURDY BROS. at the same price that poorer goods
coat you elsewhere.
If you want to buy a useful prefent, see the nice
things we have in CHINA and GLASS.
S7 URD Y BROS
,FOUR DAYS A WEE
are assail ;n your show, then why not have ease
th a t perlc d.
.... MP= Sniala.
BOOTS �T An BOOTS
SIIES TM An S110
AND THEY FIT AND WEAR WELL
Our long ezp ria is enables us to Select a goO4J,00t
'when we see is ; we i u't be i>mpOsed upon
la3ka.
Our Prices—Like our Ergots ---FIT
BAST -8T. AND BQUATBS.
ties.
"Can't change can here, I tell you,"
snapped the conductor again.
Profeseor Hendershott, deep In conver-
sation with his friend, merely waved his
band to signify that the oar might go on
A Mellow Tau/•g.
"It Is astonishing how true some of the
old sayings an," remarked Jenkins in •
ons of conviction.
,"Which wytngu?" asked Ellison with •
yawn. ""Von are Uwayi .o delightfully
vague to yonr assertions."
All of them, for the matter of that,"
replied Jenkin., "bat the one that strikes
me just now is 'a fellow feeling makes
one wondsoua kind.' Isn't that wonCer-
faly true?"
'Sometimes. If you are IanghIAg at a'
Bran who is running like mad after his
hat In a gale of wind, and yonr but gees
••fling down the street, then yon eertt.tn•
y do asperlsno• a change of feeling ane
syip.tkta with him. But a fellow feel-
ing 'tads me as wild as can lee tits caber
.ighR "
Wow wee that?"
"Win. 1 was 1• a crowd .t sew Wester
Iowa and 1 had • fallow Malta( at my
latl r,
Junklate wastes ertft W 4wikit and
inked tlfaufee his thl•ge-•elemd Med-
.•lea
eha• ey.
OWN tt MINetlea d Mart, he to eeNas-
plate- vs10a they would do. fife Mime t
illy W NOW we es and fllggu �rdM
NNIf+s tdlll/ hulls t1M
.Ilrgg' — ,
"Here, you o .y. cr e m
with the braes buttons angrily. "Don't I
Sall you that you can't change ears at thin
station?"
The good eld professor answered with
severity, "But I can change my mind at
this station, can't I?"—Youth's Compan-
ion. .
w
raolia T, .Yafl.11, issue"
S. K t „matt
?oper.Welimay
8, r R. H.l t rI M
darhsg says will present to its readers a lutldu1 pictorial 'epre-
ssauuoa of the world's most interesting and important news.
THE NEWS THAT BECOMES HISTORY
National and Inter - The Watt will continue to participate
national Politics in the great political events of ur coun-
try. It will treat of the social and eco-
nomic questions, and of the development
d the middle west. Its special corre-
spondent in the Klondike region will trace
the story of the great gold discoveries.
Social and Economic
Questions
Industrial Enterprise
jrt and Literature
LONG SERIALS AND SHORT STORIES
ID 1111
Twoiong serials will appear during the, res
a..tratN •r a*UONV
7r
year, contributed by authors of inter-
tattoos!
oter- ri[ attyOl'taT[Y N[aa1T*
t attonal fame, and will be illustrated. Z R, Raexr E. erocrrie v
Owen Wiater ; These and a score of equally prominent
Howard Pyle • writers will contribute short stones to the
leen Kendrick Bangs W agty in t !Stye, making the paper tape -
Nary E. Wilkins s cullyrich infiction Other featuresarethe
DEPART' ENTS AND SPECIAL ARTICLES-
60Y
RTICLES-
6 Y WORLD ,OROION NOM
,. .vein. • .. _.
01 ....Jill!' MILO*
LETTERS FROM LONDON AMATEUR SPORT
e • 41N016 r•ITIre a, ''ARP/ R WHITNEY
A IPORtINO PILOI,NAOE AROUND THE WORLD
in the interest ef the Wittig Lv,Cupar Whitney is on his way Area rid
the world. He will.viait Sam in search of big game, making his
principal hunt from Bangkok.- He will visit India and then proceed
to kurope to prepare articles 00 the sports of Germany and France.
J(lr. a refry !lewd fur free trot/yaw). Swbasri/Iii.A. j;.00 a your.
PosIve free in t6. Usm4ed Stater, Canada, otwiNi ,.ns•..
L-1/4 re u..su Address DAMPER a 'MOTION!, Psb lalan,dew Teri City
4411
Cad Sakura
Henry 'sues
I-IARPER'S MAQAZINE
Will enter the coming year prepared to sive to the reading public that which has shade it fase.elM
the past quarter of a century-contrtbunoe* leen the pens of the great literary men and wows" doh.
world, illustrated by leading artists. A brief glance over its prospectus announces such readies 411
OUR PACIFIC PROSPECT
PIUJI(Te FOR a I1e1-alAO0 A% CAUL T1,• l•ORRIICIIL11*011MORTII'N NII •. S 15 1, L
1115 CA.e,
D, 9m. DAVID T(•RPIE p
the .e;ewsJe$111 . ettfone!`.11=Q$10es!ol '"eta +stew
rsDess - vAiait :, —six.mx.OMIAMILIa
RCft11E1V'S"L'oI 1gER-'tfl4
NOVEL -OF -ME R
by 111NRY San,y Memos, An, author of "The Sewers." Striking novelties in shun fiction will
be Contributed by such autbon as W. D. Howells, Richard Harding Davis, Brander Matthews,
. irederic Remington, Ruth McEnery Stuart, and others. There will be a series of articles on
THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE EUROPE. POLITICAL AND SOCIAL ART AND THE DRAMA
entero tieeeeWgs SLUWEAI**AMEUICANSOCIETY AMERICAN CHARACTERSSETCNES
Pastore free to all subscribers in the Uetted States, Canada, sal .Ilene..
Sob. $4 a year. Address HARPER & BROTHERS, Pub's. N. T. CMP teed I.r bee prospectus
,... I.r w W all. a It S W:Ilu.o W. 1) Howells Own. wader
HARFERSBf1ZAit
T. W. Higeier,n
a thorotghly up.to-date periodical for w.me., will enter epee its
thirty-first volume in ing*. During the year it will be as heretofore
A MIRROR OP FASHION
Paris and New York i Each issue will contain carefully pre
Pas/rumspared drawfn of the advance fashs
of Pans and New Vork. Once a month
A Colored Fashion the KAZA■ swill issue, free, a colored
Supp/amen' fashionsupplement. Cut paper patterns
of certain gowns in each number will be
Cut Paper Patterns made a feature. These will be sold in
A 8i -Weekly Pattern ena•ectios with each Mane ata uniform
price. The SAZA. .111 also publish bi-
Sheet ' weekly, free, an outline pattern sheet.
LONG SERIALS AND SHORT STORIES
Two famous aut hors will contribute long
serial stories to the lits*R in tligli. The
first deals with Scntb and Continental
scenes, the second it a story of a young
girls verutile, and typically American.
Mary E. Wilkins These and a ow of other equally
Octave Thanet sc
prominent writers 1111 contribute
H. P. Spofford
KathaKatharine, short stories to the 1dAZAR in RAO,
Katharine De Fore„ making- the paper especially rich in
M. 8. Briscoe 1 fiction.
. DEPARTMENTS AND SPECIAL ARTICLES
OUR PARIS LETTER THE LONDON LETTER
Ay KATHARI.VF DR FOREST By Mrs. 'VVI. T.VIY BIGFLOW
CLUB WOMEN HUMOR
Sy MARGARET H. WELCH By JOB.V 4 E.%DRIt A" R.1MGS
There will be a series of articles on Etiquette, Music. the
Voice, Art, the Play, Women and Men, Leaden among Women,
Gardening, Housekeeping, life and Health, lodoor Details, etc.
10c, a Copy (Send ler Free Prospectus) Sib.. 14 a Year
Ptwtaer free IX tae !sited States, Canada, awl Me.Mc..
w, n. Hosea. Address HARPER & BROTHERS, Publishers, Nee 'fork CHy octave Theset
WILD HELEN
Er II ILLIAAI BLACA-
RAGGED LADY
By IV. D. HOWELLS
Japan's Growing Power.%
The western powers are beginning to
dew Japan's activity in navy building
with amaaement. A generation ago she
bad literally no navy. Even at the begin-
ning of the last war with China her mod-
ern equipment was confined almost eerie -
steely to a halt dozen unarmored cruiser
—the best of their class, to be sure—and
16 gunboats. The war brought many sub-
stantial additions to her navy, and now
she has no lea than 48 seagoing vessels in
ooatmisson, including two tint class bat-
tleships of 12,800 tone each. These figures
are not so imposing, absolutely considered,
except as an evidence of quick growth.
But the additional modern war vessels
that Japan is building In England, Ger-
many and the Molted States are of such
magnitude and excellent eonatruetloo'bas
Mr. Charles A. Orarnp, our own famous
shipbuilder. pronounces Japan's progress
to be more notable than that of any other
country In tad world except England. —
Moe b°er's.
le riled Leek.
With s childlike trust In Providence the
tail reporter, having an assignment that
took hlm,16 or 90 milt's int of town, had
gone without consulting tlmetafles a t1
return trains.
About 19:80 a m the city Miter recede.
•d the following plaintive dispatch from
him:
Downie VILWI. 11:18.. r.-{Ppeefal.)--flava
Mast miasid train. Will not report et can to -
eight, a the walking to bed and the nevia will net nom• until I o'clock. There 1•
CUotwt Iter, bee the town tnarahal Lea hens
Sy loaned mita Lala massed the one e( the ates
new eaiabetoe to sleep In. No gned sight. 1
shall be is cell 114. I M anything happese.
—Chicago Tribune.
Ranee lieb •s.
"I bay. never broken stones by W
p.adiede nor elsewhere, but 1 MN on We
OM the nearest tkleg to It 1. the tasking
at se index for hoot whore subject hes
no laterest for you."—"Ram bias, " by
Charles F. Bleokburn.
M a a` me en • jeers
/if'
�.th
aft hoot,
lett Wm awtrlsw lallerediF
Me 'rawly knots no go.ldNerMom a
mar gem bat tide sea he hop l+ Me
$hhetlw In Oa deg awl M id a 7e MAW
arias
WJllas Slack
Mary E. Wilkins
SOME OF THE STRIKING FEATURES FOR 1898
THREE SERIAL STORIES
THE ADVENTURERS FOUR POR A FORTUNE TME COPPER PR/NCESS
RpM.R. .w.(RR7aTTrrATROV 8, AjhrST lag e, KIRK MUNRO!
1s a thrilling story of a fight for is a stirring narrative of four It is Ca the bowelsef the earth where
II treasure roocraird in an nld companions who have lo- the kern has his adventure*, and
cattle in the mountains of Wales. cared ■ long lost fortune. from where he rescues the Princes,
SHORT FICTION
In addition to the three long aerial stories, the publication of which will continue during the entire
year, there will he short *retries of every kind, nl whish it i* only poMible to mention a leo Mies here.
Neat, the Owlet. ''TM Blockaders A Herber Mystery
R, STA RIMY J. a•RTYA ,v Ile VAIRME BARN= p JONN R. APIARA
Tbe Flunking M Watkker Obost A Orest Maas A Creators of Clreswataece
R, JOH.T KENDRA'S DLVGR a, ROPn!R RWRTT R, NOR .A.v RURSRLQOR
ARTICLES ON SPORT, TRAVEL, ETC.
Elephant Mooting In Africa An America exptlwer In Africa
R, armee RR,N+E5 p rrars t' ADAIM
P1ret 1.eeaes. In TIMer sad Sheet laying Oat a elelf Course
p DODLE, R. P. PARSER a, W. 0 EAR TARRR2 Rr'TPRRV
DSPARTMBMTS PRIZE COMPWTrrIONS
Editor's Table, Stamps and Ogles. Pberson.t mel Merles,Skstakk0.Pk.lepapta
10 Cher a Neeber (.Sud lar P'rr. POouprr.e.). .S.bkr(/tl.a, 41.00 • Fa►,
Pilotage free In the t oiled States, Cauda, sad Menke.
Addreee HARPER • BROTHERS. PnhIlabers, TrMLU* Btaaalle, N. It. City.
strYy J. wq.r M. a M. wet.. C0.., C. Mims Pennon aig.h. 1+A war*...
Ask your Druggist My
A
Wonderful Tonicand ��
aI.F.Ou S °I
oto
Remedy
Weak and Impure Flood
RIdney and Liver bout**,
ea•«so..ae• oe A. r. MaeLta)D. wane rte. •e1e.
/DY,
weir, Mo
[�deltff..
lie— (.1as
a. sVtlso•,
Liabt.—N
11,
Goode
alapa, H
elate, Mo
nd Colwell
wed 00
1 mayor
mfitem.
f tad d.
, H. W.
.ttora for 1
rheum peon
'he by-law
sad the ai
IM
td deputy
. Taylor
allot•
need.
td deputy
dham, th
there of
1 l.ioderlo
.ylor tor
F. Jor.lan
ad 1i. R
1. A ty
• Godnrto
usual an
foundling
;olwell,
th
the noon
I Friday
council t
LUCKN
pl..sen,
r
ladies
.beet Mo
Wan pert
t presence
aIle and
to the bri
eh the y
deeds to
DUNL
sleet nm
Mn. Re
ark•r was
.dine the
a +llaa,
ing are
Raw ins
i thee.,
•d bis dm
a their
• ] ari
hundi
I on Sunil
the fun.
Sr. Aral
r. and kir
ti days a
air the gar
their se
is not for
es put
reRL► )C
f year old
'yard, d
it 10 r
are stook w�
ter of •
re iuet else
Jay wbas
Lison of • t
weedily t
y msaaged
?bed wire
`he animal
ZONAL LI
Teen Hsi
tensa 1
Sunday
barida/ )
E —A fl
forth -et.
a meatust
ha bona
seting f
• desired
moo 0.
drrimaIr
rZind l
tirrjEvren
like
to
ays
won fall
th their
ion iron
bot one
rat part
play log
Hal maul
W
M takes
r MINA
leterokol
were east
ledosin
• ;ea;rsl
, e>4ter
telseee v
old be •
messed I
r the di
) were gal
moral I
A 1• a .
eatheets
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