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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1890-2-6, Page 7PHUNNY PARAGRAPHS. Vorke both way—A walking -beam - An eooleafasbioal point—The chorea stee- ple. Kind worde are like bald heads, they can never die. An artiole no family should be without-- A marriage certificate. Never buy milk from es dairyman whose wagon has a creak in ib. A prudent man le like a pin; hbt head prevents bin going too far. Honesty ie donbtlesi the best policy, but it seems to have expired long ago. Is the woman who goes to church to ex- hlbither sealskin sacgue random! !dove Is a the heart instead kle of ton that swells ead of the bead. Ib seems paradoxical to say it, but some riots men have more dollars than seinen It's no sin to sin, bub it's a sin to be oaughb sinning. That is --if you are in society.. The serpent was the moat subtle of all the beast* of the fi fld, bub the array trader *sutler. In vino veritaa" doesn't always oome rigbb. Some men lie dreadfully when Eliot are drank. The_ a is more billing than cooing in the honseho d where there is an extxavagantl wife ab t is season of the year. A THRILLING ADVEifTURE, A Flatboat and its Fomenters Saved from .Deslsuct est. 4. party of twelve or fifteen persons had a thrilling ezpeeienoe on the Stirgneh•. anna River ab ettiddlebown, Pa., Wednesday afternoon. A ferryboat piles the river from Middletown to the oppoeite side of the river. Besides the people there was s horse and oarrige on board the. boat. Cowing to the low water the regular ferryboat can- not run end an ordinary fiat has been in Astrong wind was blowing, and the ferrymen started up the east aide of the river for tome distance and then started for the other elide. Toe boat bad aoaroeiy been poled out Into the stream when, the waves caught the flat and bossed it about like a frail orafb Inmidocean. Ib seemed as though the flat would be swamped, but ib veered around, and going broadside down the stream the waves dashed over it. The Conewago Fails were only a mile away, and to be carried, over them meant, death to all, The Draft wag now at the mercy of the waves, and death was more and more appar eat, aspolo after pole was snapped sf' while the men were endeavoring to guide their boat. Hundreds of people lined the shores, awed by the awful danger of those on board the fiat as it was being carried onward to the deatit•vugu'f eg fatly. Encouraging The man who is:ure he can't Ile wrong le words were Shouted; by many, while curers always the impossible wi There is no ed in adduce,' effective cut w In the Spr g the young 'pries fancy Uglily turns to haughta cf love. Tho trees also become Sapp about the ammo time. Interviewer --"t the chief fnxtrumd heathen t'- Return tion." Ii we couldkno> r all the bad things that our neighbors say about ne we should prob. ably talk about th 'never* worse than we do now. "Bis Geln, Q .r Lou,',sae the motto Which they fold tine Starlet to reproduce, but he got it aocideuts fly. "tis Lem, Oar Gains" and now the widow,. Is suing for libel, If you happen to stutter, It would be mach the better wa, to propose by snail. A. th it is th offered suggestions. The ferrymen worked dry one Io tlntl ne o with superhuman strength but their efforts loft alevaye happens. were powerless agelnabthe wind as Ib dasbed corn lite that which is utter- the waves upon the oral''. The shears give the most Ie- *moment of deepest suspense there en they shat up. was a ohmage. The falls were only a short diatanoe away, and al the water railed upon the rocks* ib seemed to sound the death knoll to those on hoard. There was only a What do you regard a plow of a polo left, and with a mightyt'fforb natality in converting the the craft was pushed towards the shore. ed bdlaslortatg.-+tladlgott• noadeacoglatifeintedomball Punta woe plunges added to the aansternation of the peeceogera, 11 few on beard prayed for a safe landing. The led ceased In its wildest Airy for a moment, and in that time the craft was made to shoot for the 'bore. Twenty feet away the horse, which had been taken from the shafts of the vehicle and stripped et its harresr, became unmausgeeble With a wild aaezt and a mighty plunge he was free and cleared the waitere between the boat and the laud, and clamping up the bank eras Connecticut man tr d, It the other way, and lemu out of eighr, at the end of the 'worth round wee *truck A rope wax thrown. by portion on the by paralysis. shore to those in the first, and the latter was Ponsonby--" uunderstand that Digby's lulled to lend less than fifty feet from the wife Is deaf and dumb," Susgi,s--"'pleat first raelt: in the tote. AU on board were set I wonder it she converses with bee wet to Cita skin, but they were thankful for finer* 1" Ponsonby ---"Gaeta so. Illghy their oseape* is about the baldest man I ever saw." Severe Adorer (about to enter the minia, try) —" I true% you finch great deal of con- tort: thinking of Seripture verses:'' Inter- esbleg Inveild-14 Yea, indeed. That text, ' Grin and bear it,' does me a heap of good." Mrs. G.—"I hope you will excuse my husband for not attending your brother's funeral." Mrs. U.. -"" Was he ill r' Mrs. G,—" No ; but he had one of Wanly Moon, and then he would laugh if you shoved a gas bill at hire." Cremation reduces the huenaa body to a tittle paper of ashes whiole a postage stamp will carry any distance within the bounds of the country. Stingy people can con- gratulate themselves on the economiosl rates of travel In store f:r them. eee The views of the Veteran Chaperone— "Doesn't Mrs. Maxwell, believe in co-eduaa tion of the sexes!" "Co -adulation 2 I should say not 1 Why, she believes a girl ought to be raised so carefully that when she aeoe a man she willeay, 'What is that, mamma?" "My dear," whlapered a man to hie wife its t abed tbomselves at the theatre, "I leftnookethook at home." "liaven't you au money At all 1" "Daly forty Dante." of our alphabet. Thera is nothing in the 'Won't that be enough?' "Enough 1" ho combination the travelers have given ns repeated impatiently, "Why it's a five -not mere improbable than many of the amble - play l' CROWN&. Ancient and Modern Ryles of those Worn by E are pea. Meileareb s.. The German Emperor has just: ordered new drowns for himself and the Empress. Of coarse, the crowns are to be made to order, for no monarch who knows bis social and royal duties dreams of wearing a ready. made orown, The King of Roumaniele said to buy his crowns of a Jewish dealer in Frankfort, and when they are too large he puts a few thicknesses of brown piper under the rim, and ex -King Milan of Berrie wore seoond•hend erowas that were well known to be merely plated, and that were usnally as tawdry as they were cheap. But these are nob the Mt of mttnarella from whom much is to be expected. As for Emperors like those of Germany and Austria, or Kluge like those of Italy and Denmark, they would as anon think of buying ready.made trousers as ready-made crowns. Many years ago ib was the correct thing for a monarch to wear the identical crown worn by his predeoessore. A King never was formally drowned on the day when hs succeeded to the throne, but the ceremony was always postponed for a week or L-wo In order to have the crown thoroughly rend- vate3, In the days when the French bad Kings the monarch was so liable b be upset by a revolution that he was unwilling to delay the cElenefeenT OP OOQRetnen q t, and it ofeett bapg that a now French King would soncl out the Prime Minister with the crown within twenty minutes after the previous King's decease: with orders to have it blocked for 2if. while he waited. But there IS no doubt that this custom of banding down the same crown from generation to generation had its die• advantages. In the first place, It rarely happens that two King' have heads of pre - chilly the same ate, and u te rale the brown which fitted the original King for whom it. was made never fitted any of his sucoeaeors, bat was always either too large or too small. Nothfaglocka more abaurd than a very small orown mak- e4 °utile head of a very largo .King, except, perhaps, a crown which Is numb too large for the wearer, and oontinualiy falls over his CAM There was, Ib Is true, a certain rover, enoe for ant'gaity and inherited rights shown by this custom of weekday an ancient a ceat'at crown, but Ratted net be supposed thrt any monorail ready liked it. No mat• ter bow cerefnI1y a Klug might have Ha father's crown secured and repaired, he always NO that he was wearing another clan's clothes, so to speak. As for gram VICTORIA, It Is well kuotvn that she ordered an entire let of new crowns whoa she came to the throne, remarking as she gave the order that sbohad as much Wootton for some of her relatives as anybody need have, but as for wearing anything that had been on the 'cad of that 'orrld King Wiiliam, she would go to her grave bareheaded flrat. Tho German Emperor Inherited the crown of hie grandfather, for his father did not live long enough to bo orowned. As can', be readily imagined this orown ryas mach too largo for hien, besides being a very old- fashioned one. Nevertheless, Peinoe BG. memoir, for some not very evident reason,; has steadily opposed the peeing Emperor's desire to have a new crown, and even pointed out to him that the Amerlean Proal dont always soars his grandfather"a hat, although lb is a very ugly one, and so large that it fa constantly slipping down and bonneting him. but the Emperor proudly. said that he did not follow the example of republican Presidents and that he should order a new crown no matter who mitthb oppose It. It need hardly he said that the moment the Emperor informed the i, npress that he meant to be met;sured for a orown, the instated that she must have ono, too. Tett leEW CROwr1 African Names. A oontemparary rattan the question whether recent African explorers have not sought to add novelty and myeeery to the regions they have elated by purposely adopting media of spelling and dividing ne- tivo words, which sive them a needlessly strange and uncouth appoarenoe. By way of illuetration the name formally written Kilimandjsro is instanced. it.eenb African explorers, without snoring a Metter, make two words of it, and write it Kalinin NO jaro. Doubt Is oast upon the correctness of this representation of the sounds by duggeating that by a like trlak we might puzzle the arena/Ate and pub tho ordinary reader on the wrong track by writing "Mount Waehi Ngton; "Cu bIberland mountains,' Wisto Nein," ebo. Wo will venture to suggest, on the other hand, that African explorers know what they are about batter than any one who has neverheard the native speech of Africa. It would net be surprising to find among the numerous languages and dlslects of the dark oontinent vastly sounds and oombinaeions of sounds which do not mar in Eogliah and whlch it is difficult to represent b the lettere Mies Chastnub—" Is ib true that your marriage with Mr. Callowhill bas been indefinitely postponed Y' Miss Walnut—"Oh no, nob indefinitely. Poor, dear Pido, you know, was attacked with la grippe and died, and of course I couldn'o think of marrying for a year." Mistress—"Bridgeb, I wish you would LI my inxetand far me. Bridget (parlor maid)—"Please, mum, ivory tofine of fills that inkstand oi gita me hands thab black they don't git °lane for a wake." "Bat you surely do nob expect me to do it?" "No, mum; but oi wee thinkiu' yaz moighb ax th' colored nook. " "No," said she, with the complacency born of knowing that she had the' prettied and moot etrikieg costume in the ballroom, "I don't dare much for drew. I like to feel that I, for one, am above ouch vanity, you know.' "Ion are, indeed," said her ad- miring companion, "head and shoulders gather respecting the epirib of one or more of above ib, as everybody here will say." the African langaagea. "Perhaps," said the fresh young man, as • he plumped himself down on the sofa be. Should be Investigated. tween the two giddy girls., "perhaps you The prospectus of the company being were disoussing some ohoioe secret?' "Oh, no." maid one of them, "I was just saying formed in England to conetruob the railway from Qaebeo to Labrador will no doubt be as interesting reading as the prospectus of the Canadian (Dire') Meat Company of Three RIvore, Mr. Bender being one of the promoters. How the Eagliah investor will yearn for shares when he ready, as he prob- ably will, about the big business to be done in transporting :elves from Labrador to Chicago to be slaughtered ? Before.grant- ing a charter for this line the Dominion Parliament should investigate the affair very closely. The acheme Looks magnificent on the map, and English investors know nothing about ib but what they can learn from the map and the prospectus. They do not know whether the north shore of the Lower Sb, Lawrence is a populous farming country or a barren wilderness, and they do not know whether Sb. Charles Bay or any other Labrador bay is aooessible to shipping two months in the year or lees. We are not sure whether Parliament known buil it ought to know before granting the charter. If the scheme ie at all feasible, let it have every encouragement, but there Is a big "if' somewhere in the scheme. Unless it , is posaible to carry the railway aoroes the Straits of Belle isle and Newfoundland the `harbor question threatens not the least` of the difficulties is the way of the undertak- ing, atlons in Russian words, or stranger inap- pearanoe to persons who know nothing of the laugnages of either Africa o r Rneeia If we may believe the state ments Af Adan travelers, conbinations of consonant sounds sb the beginning of words which seem strange and puzz Ing to as are peon liarities of some of the African language!. Thus we are assured that in the name Nyar z'. the y has its consonant Bound, and is pronounced close with the Initial N. Nya or Nyan is not pronounced as two syllables, bat as one. Pronounce the word yet and then put an n before it—nyet—and yon have the sound. The sound of ng, or some sound which is most nearly expressed by that combination of lettere, is also common at the beginning of words in some of the Al ricau languages,. Ibis not surprising, there fore, to be told that the sounds expressed by ndj are found at the beginning of a word. Such a beginning would not be out of harmony with what we have been able to to Minnie that nothing thonld separate us, but really I didn't expect it to happen so soon." .And the beating of his own heart was all the sound he heard. .Poverty After a Victoria Cross. Paved -place, Santhwark, is a cul -de -ane running out of Gravel lane, Borough, mis- erable, dark, and dirty, and here during the early hours of Saturday morning James Gorman, able Boxman, who was awarded the Victoria Cross for conspicuous bravery in the Crimea, died in great poverty and in receipt of parish relief. The story of why the deceased was awarded the cress will D`" repeating. At the battle of Sebastopol hipman Hewett. (the late Sir W. N. W Hewett, Admiral,). Garman, and about seveu men of the Naval Brigade were stationed on some rising ground ab the end of a long valley with two naval guns. The enemy were seen advancing In great force, when Hewett, received an order to f pike the mane and retire. Hewett said to Gorman. "I don't believe the Captain gave such an order, because if they come down here they can annihilate the whole of the army, and out off our retreat," and galling upon the men he asked them if they were "game"to stay. Theyallanewered in She affirmative, and Hew- etb planed -Gorman and four men in charge of one of the ono, and ordered them to load and fire, taking the other gun himself. The enemy were held in oheokuntil some French cfficera, seeing the danger they were in, brought assistance and repulsed the Russi- ans. Gorman and Hewett were mentioned in the dispatches, and were both awarded the Cross. The deceased held medals for Inkerman, Balaklava. Sebastopol, Indian mutiny, and relief of Delhi. He was severe- ly wounded, evere-ly.wounded, and noon being told he would nob live a week in 1862, he sold lois pension. He was born in 1819, and name from Suffolk, He leaves a wife and several' children total- ly unprovided for, He Knew Better. First Tramp—Lsb's go up to this house and see if we.oan get a bite. Second Tramp—Not by a long ohalk. F. T. -Why not? Do they keep a dog ? S. T.—No, but there's a newly married couple living there, and the young wife gave me one of her pies the other day and it nearly killed me. Four thousand merchants of Lisbon paraded the atreeta of Lisbon on Monday night shouting "War to England," have both been ordered, and the maker bas guaranteed a fib ha each case. They are said to bo very chaste and beautiful, and bile Emperor's orown is iurnlabed with a light rubber cover which he can put over It when it rains, and thus keep both hie head and the orown dry. This, it is said, lb William's own ides, and it nndouttedly does credit to his inventive powers. Tho truth is, the aoctpted pattern of orown might:be greatly improved. About a year ago the Emperor of Rns :"a wrote +o a 1 hie brother sovereigns propoei..e th..t • ; should adopt the ,ort of crown which be wears,whiob is made of half-inch et:el gilded, and covers and eurrounds his entire head, endeed, it is nothing more than a helmet of the kind worn by the knights of the Middle Ages, and though it may be the p.erb of pen. denoa for a Magian monarch to wear a bullet proof crown, bis fel:ow-monarchs did not care to imitate his example. With this exception, no serious effort has ever been made to introduce a new style of orown. Little unobtrusive improvements have bees made from time to time. For example, the late King of Sweden had a little mirror cot in the inside of his crown, so that when ho entered oharoh and held his crown before his faoe he could see if his mustache was properly curled. Bab substantially the orown remain. as it was in the days of King Solomon, and is essentially an article of display rather than of practical utility. The Wise Grammaiian. Teaoher, "What part of speech is 'but' ?" Michael. "'But' is a conjunction." Teacher. " Correct. Now give me an ex- ample of its nee." Michael. "See the goat bub the boy. 'But' connects the goat and the boy." An Exchange of Remarks. "I wonder why the gas doesn't go out," he said significantly as he edged a little dosser on the sofa. " Ib will as soon as you do," she respond- ed with equal significance. And he didn'b waib for the house to fall on him. Many a person who claims to be stage- struck turns out after a trial to be only stage " truck." The late Horatio Allen, of Montrose, New Jersey, ran the firsb locomotive that was ever used in the States. He was sent to Eogland in 1826, by the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company, to buy the rails and three locomotives for a railroad of cis' teen miles which they wished to build in connection with their mines in the Lacks- wenn% Valley. Having performed his commission and bulb hie road, Mr. Allen could find no one to act as engineer on the locomotive he had imported, the task being considered most dangerous ; so he tookhold of the lever, and ran the engine several miles down the track and back, to prove that it was safe. Mr. Allen was graduated at Columbia: College and studied law, but left that profession for the more congenial pur- Buib of civil engineering, in which he gained prominence. JOHN A BATT'S Indian Pale Ale and XXX Brown Stout Highest awards an4 Medals for Purity and Excel- lence at Centennial Exhibition, Phil adclpbia, 1876; Canada, /876; Australia, 1877 ; and Paris, France, 1878. TESTIMQNfAIA SELICTED Pro1.1111 Croft, Public Analyst, Toronto, 68,73„,....t Ando to be perlootly sound containing 1,19 irnpuritifsa ox adulter- atfo,•e, and can strongly recommtndit as perfectly para and a very euVerior malt liquor,” John 11#Idwarus,Professor of Chemistry, Montreal.. "I findthem to be remarkably sonnl ales, brewed from pureISalt and hops. Rev. P. a. Ed. Page.Profsssor of Chennistry Laval Un ver slay. Quebec. Says: ---"I have analyzed bks /nom Palo,,Ale manufacturedo 3°1mLabatt,London.Onta,lo, and pare found it a lig/Axle, containing but little alcohol, of a deli.- cloud flavor, and of a very agreeable- taste and superior quality. aIle compares with tate best imputed ales. 1 have also analysed the Porter X$8 Stout, of the same brewery, which is of excellent quality; its never is ver? agreeable ; It lea tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it is a little richer in alcohol, and *an be compared advantage- ousfy with any is:ported article. ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT. mss eintzman& Co IVE, UFAOT V R S OF Grand, Square Upright 1'IANOFQRTES. The Oldest Manufacture's in the Dominion, Seven Thousand Pianos Now in 85ea The Heintzmau Pianos are noted for ''heir Pull, Rich, Pure Singing Tone, Their Finely Regulated Delicate Tau , Their Perfectly Dna Wen Balanced Bad& The Whole Comped of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship Send Fior Illustrated Catalogue. Factory ''"West Torollto unctio1•117I.Ing- taWest wi. oP1Oi'it C;), A THE AFA,; yEXE TER TIMES. 10111010110001011101101101/111111111 How Lost, How Restored Just published, a new edition of Dr. Cutter. well's Celebrated .Essay of r h s radical cure of SraaxAroaaiftaa or incapacity induced by excess or early indiscretion. The celebrated author, in this admirable essay, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years' eucrersfu) practice, that the alarming canesquencee of self- abuse maybe radi mlly cured • pointing out a mode of cure at once simple, certain and effectual, by insane of which every sufferer, no matter what bis condition may bo, inay cute himself cheaply, prl• vately and radically. tar Thiel lecture should be in the hands of every yetith and every man in the land. Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any se-" dr as, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, or two postage stamps. Samples of helicine free. Address THE CULVERWELL MEDICAL CO 41 Ann Street New York Post Office Box 450 9E8&iy WEAK MEN and mo7aN can quickly caro thom- eelvee of Wasg Vitality, Lost Manhood, from youthful errors, etc-, gnietly at home. Book on all private diseases sent free (sealed). Perfectly reliable. Over 30 years' experience. Address— OTDED PILL CO., TORONTO, Canada. our 'Belief for Women" is safe and always reliable • better than Ergot, Oxide, Taney or Pennyroyal Mb. Iutures regularity. Send for perticulare. Addroea GELDED BILL CO., TORONTO, Canada LADIES BEon ARDS'n.gctatntaaesthe da to 000 0aud yismoothed greateat achievement of modern science t Most vrdb derfnl discovery of the age. Like no other preparatio*J Magical, sure, almost inetantaneoui in action! Boyys with whiskers) Bald heads "haired!" Carious sp.ctbclee, but posttno truth". Only genuine table in market, and certain to give absolute satisfaction. Guaranteed. Pride e1 a bottle, or three bottles for 92. Each bottle lasts one month. Address A, DIXON, Box 306, TORONTO, CANADA. MADAME CIOVANHANI'9,PREPA9ATIONS, SUPERFLUOUS HAIR A preparation that wl$ permanently remove Price superfluous hair without injury t0 the chis Warrented. Price 51. PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS prom0V Sia Lollm•10to�800}dayys. Warranted. Price for DO days tr^atmout, $L A-9 { I. CO'"PUL LICE PILLS ran . • , e gorge e whoa, inbou paint i, a matter of tide whether because it !e ww::n, tamable or nrilaeh " lose AT roams thing ' A,S nosickess; cE PiL s" lose 1a lbs. a month. They onto. no sickness 1 contain no poison, and never tail. Price for one tnomh'a treatment, e2; or three months medicine, 50. {warranted, COMPLEXION WAFERS* oIAB850XcAL3- Bloch the akin. develop the form. Iinrmlo•e. Permanent h r • qct. Warranted. Price S t a box. or six burns for 55. 8ddrens ire Ai0Xdi Gls'ts3FANIt7.aNt, 71 ;SQL+ aBbng Serest Toronto. d''tg, An Austrian professor claims to have found the microbe of la grippe. The London "Rialto," refer"Ing bo the knighting of Manager H'okaon, says : Who. ever recommended Mr. Hickson for tins un- expected and all the more flattering distino• tion recognised the merits of a very femark- able man. Sir Josrp`I is one of the hard- headed, broad - chested, warm - hearted Norbhumbrlans who make their mss k where ever they chance to drop. As pati! of Sir Edward Watkin he wont out to Canada thirty years ago, and hats beendoing a giant's work there ever since. Hs built up the Grand Trunk system as it now exists, and without him I question if there would have been any Grand Trunk in existence today. He strug- gled and fought hard for it when its fortunes seemed desperate, and disappointing as ito financial results may still be he has made ib e splendid road. Even the Canadians admit that, little as they love the Grand Trunk, and Sir Joseph Hickson i$ one of the typical railway men of America. Ga4 y X41 �Ji 6��� n1�,tii `l ' o� "�`s~c�`.�:+ 4_0yet++„ dose- . . V� .11 ;� 4.,e�se. •4`AO' ti o t� $ti, ti, "~ C G4 c fr �`^��Opt 0;z. 3'b oc'r 0 en rel ti O �O i`e,�apOc �0 'cfi" y9 4' .„,,do by, .da eoeOS eax 4° c,0* ? eVy"Acte 4y Q+° igt Sn.� y?`�. S'" 1}t eat lfannf.eksred only by Timms, Holloway, 73, New Oxf.n'd Street, late 533, Oxford Str,.et, London. Purchasers should look to the Label on aha Boxes and Pot:. If the address is not 53S, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious. Exeter Lumber Yard Tho Underaig nod wishes to informhe public in general that he keeps -constantly in stock— All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL DRESSED ORUNDRESSED. A. large stock of Hemlock always on hand at mill prices. Flooring, Siding dr ssed—inoh, inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two in Sash Doors, Blinds, Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, etc. S[t [ E $ A SPECIALTY.—Competition challenged. The best and the largest stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1. All dressed lumbar thoroughly seasonni and ready for use. No shri nka assured. A call will bear out the above, t+' THE OLD ESTABLISHED as• il1is,Mana € e L HOLTZ AN AGENT : Hay Township Fanners' Mut- ual Fire Insurance Ca. A PURELY FARMERS' COMPANY. Live Stook also insured. when in the fielder, or on the road In eharee of owner, or servants aleo.manufaetnrer of the Improved Surprise Washer and Wringer ttaohinos. Agent for TombStones and the Watson ,Implements. Undertaking promply attendee to. G. HOLTZMAN, eerie -.ma,; 'ra�'""�� �` � p 33 b Fly EdP r'i'ic 1LO : P1 IVEIDE'•OA 5 • ', Pe tnt xis pest - C tons guaranteed. Salary dud ke peuoeo l? 'sat. Peru• liar advan:ages to beginners. Stook complete, with P1aat•selling specie hiss, onerierse 'omen. W puaranbee vitae cod advertise. Write litiltt)'(ltTltl+ iSurheryneen, Secy haste _ . ants house to relish -10