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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe East Huron Gazette, 1893-02-23, Page 6-.Z�7;�__ g-__ -, -- ­ -_ - It : I :1 zl�,_, �, I 1 7 -MM- Z— zL--.-g�, Rv___M� " � I - - - , :_ �, -, iM - N i � ,7 -�, I i -3t 17______ __ - a, - :__;� , �j�-, �� ____ 'N W -g— gg,-�­O_­ 0 - K - __ - I � I'M I ff i 9 �_ ock - III - � -;, -_ - — `0 —2 W 27-9 � � . a W i� _, - -? F; WF- - -9,M 11 Ift ,_ WRI 7 57 1 31=M_ ME � . __i;� .� . ff� "� - "C - �*n - 6�- - - �,��­ - -- 1� V_--z�;­ tj , _ - _e I _­ Z, _� ��,__�� ,� ,-��,- , "I ­ � - ._�11 __ &-,ft-- _L��:�' `1 � , � � . _� Z �� -­ '7� i - - - �: �­�&,-­ -, �_—� -g �,.�rl;�� __ . - - '' � -- .-A �, - -- 11 - & " , - - __ -1 _ �;; , ,--- , I . M - --_� .--7!!-__-_-J-_ . , . -2 ­­- �,,­ ',,_�_ - . I . i 11 7 . .- - - , ­ � - � � " - 0 ­­- .1 � - 0.�;��_�_,, I : I W!� _� �� ,­,­ I ­ - ' _­ -_ I - - - ­___ -, � - _t _4 p - -1-1-11 - _Zz� �', - 7 1 `;� k I . _ - �. I - ­ — � , -- -P2 , , - - -, � 11 . 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I- - , , . : __ - , � , I - - I -�­�_ -, - �� - .. I ­�. _ - �. - _:� - 1,7, � ­ _." I . - _� � . - 7J. -1 " - ___ I I � 7 ­� I * - - '� - � � . . . I . 1___,_<� - �­ � - Z- ­.f -- - Z, --- Z'_ . - �� - __ - . - 7 ' * � � - 1 4 T XONTAIN TOPS. __:1 � I . - 0TA - � -, - -�__ ON - � - k'MATFM_ ONIAL . --Wy,Ap0N&- - - V4 - �01 ITEX9 OF INTEREST. 11:1 :1 :1 :­ - .. _ , ___�_'�__ . - H - - - - . . 06ND kEw FA ABOUT �L ... . - , . 30-REAU. - ANTIQUE . - ,_ nft __ �', , - I - � 1. - _��­ �� _. -_ " I . % - ,. - - - - , - I I ­ I -_ 1. I I . _­ " � e- - 1. - - __ I . - . - � —_ - -, I- . - ( IF019TRY. . � � . __ .1. _��. 1. _., , - I - _ - z, - - ',�__ �� - 11 f I . - I - I il�,lllri�w4livat'. li�lowa��t�li�-m,;.L"R�-ft�-ut",�4-�V-ell�e-iigLPi)UO- goldier&-Umt,-�EAuxbt,,iwithouA-Fitearms.- Aome Facts Furalshed-by the Engineers of Vanderbilt has a 61,6w -I.,hip. __.�_ .1 - � - . 11 � ,� 14terestift statistw-or-the- ­ 1. ., . __: With 'Wives some Years Ago. I - �.. -_ - � �_ , � - . . . - - . -Their Curious 1011111PRIVILL the New Peruvian Rallway. A yea,r,*s matches are wora $1,00D,000,- - I - I - est city from Rece t Retums.- . � . . 000. - � ....... I - . ­ I � . . An tTah&PPY .9X0ePti0U- - I - . ' - "Not many ye.troago-1 was in the whole- The Qreek p*e,- - Some practical facts are furnished by the � I'll x. The total po unty of Lon- Isale matchruaking busin . $5 ,.a. � . , -was 24,feet 109. - -, -_ , , . The speed of a wild duck is jinety -vailes - '. 1� - - - . � I I -changes; there�-is nothing ,pulation of the cO � ' - ' ess,: ail -an, ex- : The - di � I experience of the workmen engaged in the an ho u_r. � 111. � , - ; Tha world ig full o - f . don on the 6th of April, 1891, was' 4,231917 . otcer of 7thib army to a Washington Stdr me lawal afice was IS feet. - 2.2 construction of the new Central Railway - � here abiding I The st;andard Rol word was - _�� A dry AN tti� escelib, fleeting, transitory, 431 the increase in ten years being 397,237, reporter. I I It was matchmaking of th man s In Turkey they call the bicycle the 7 1% e I . qs swe evan I . over the main range of mountains in Peru. - � Bove - ' I . H , - �s where'er or 10.36 per cent. The number of inhabi matrimonial kind. At that time, in 1879 inches, - I The line starts fron Lima, ija latitude twelve "devil's chariot." I � sea, the sky, the stal , , 0 1 - I The e= 11 � , ted houses -was 557,134, an increase on 1881 and 188,0, Manitoba was being opened to The helm - weighed 25 degrees. The summit tunnel of this line at A dull season -Tasteless pepper. . v , , � the fancy ranges. � I ' et of Richard L i The tianth of time forever mars, all life is full of 68,249, or 13.96 per cent. settlement and there was a rush of colonists pounds. Galeria is at the height of 15,645 feet, or a Women are invariably clothu observers - A ,-IOU .1 of changes. � The total expenditure on the local govern- thither from Ontario and Quebec and from The rabbis say Cain killed Abel with a little under the height of Mount Blanc, but to their Rex, - . 11 ondou in the year 188&90 was - Ital -, � � , , tbat;ire for ment of L Great Britain. - The settlers were most club.- � I it must be remembered that tile climatic The convicted criminal is never allowed to Black � , U)Le sands upon the ocean's shor . V0,726,000, or as much am -an Australian ' ly ­ - I - I ever driftin.m men. Some of them had familit-s and would ' , David ale Goliath with a sling -stone, B. conditions are very different and more un- burry himself. He must take his time. tuous so all the fading scones of earth incessantly ll�re colony. This was equal to 92 10s. 8d. per ,end for them as soon as they had got some- C. 1063. - - w . . favo, Mr. E , shif ting, - X - head of population. The rates were levied what fixed arable in Peru than in Europe, . petuous I verse: tbao is no but very many were bachelors. Lane, the engineer -in -chief, finds that the The pirate considers himself a sea king. L�ke lhgnge rules the mighty unt ble value of 931,586,00, so They were'niaking homes for -the The cross -bow came into use in the The detective is generally seek -iDg &Iso. S. �. - Amer to block it. upon a rata, I - mselves , twelfth workmen up to an altitude of 8,000 or 10,- ter that the amount per 91 was 69. 9d., but the and naturally -they found that they needed' century. 000 feet do about the same relative quantity Many a broadcloth husband owes his posi- An in � I __ ratepayer Q41y paid 4s. 10d. of this amount. wives, Not a few of them. were sons of The pully -drawn cross -how bad a range of work as at sea, level, provided they have tion to the fact of his marrying a gingham It clant in . - One at a Time. Thecential rates fall equally uponall the English farmers and nearly all were respect. of forty rods. � been inured to the height or b ught up in -girl. ] An o �. , one stop at a time, and that well-placeld, parishes, but the rates for -parish purposes feet ro , I able aiid hard-working fellows. They Projecting engines were first invented by the country. At 12,000 the amount of At some of the furnishing storea in Ind. i head. I - We reach the gFande.3t height:- I are very unequal, ranging from. 3.9. 92d. could not afford to go and get wives, and, so the - Greeks. I work and at 14,000 to 16,000 a full third ianapolis, Ind., stockings are darned free i Very One stroke at a time, earth's hidden stores down to Is.Oid. For imperial and local p -pr' helpmeets had to be imported for them. Mixed i - Will. slowly come to light; poses combined London pays in -taxation Ycung, women eblain and plate armor was used has to be deducted from the amount that of cost. i ality. , I one seed at a, time, and thef�restffmws; I approximately E17,000,000. The Inland: from 1300 to 1410. the same man could perform at sea level. It is becoming fashionable for the bride I Large � 9ne drop at a Ve and the river nows Owing to the absence of malaria the per- - into the b u1iiess sea. ' Revenue returns show that the total incomes GUARANTEED AS TO RFsPBcTABrLrry, Gustavus Adolphus abolished all armor centage of efficient labor at the greatest ele - instead of the bridegroom, to make presents coarse I I . earned in London amount to f,123,513,OW, were brought over .from. England. in great but a light cuirass. � vation is a very high one. Alen coming to the bridesmaids. Goars ' Ohe word at a time, and the greatest book up that the burden of taxation amounts to numbers, and this business r-,pidly grew to The F rench infantry were armed with the from the coast are not found capable of St. Charles, Mo., has been under the do- . izatioll, rs writen and is read ; � , � One stone at a time a palace mars . - 14 per cent. The balance of the loans out- be an important branch of the immigration .pike until 1640. 1 doing efficient work for aboat two weeks minion of three flags, namely, Spain, France 'Very . Aloft its -stately head, standing at the end of 1891 was ;C48,032," traffic. One philanthropic lady in England Damascus .e_ One blow at a, time, and tAe tree's cleft- through ()00. ­ I I devoted her attention to exporting home- blades were famous- allover the on an average when taken to high elevations. and the United States. powers. __ : . And a city will stand where the forest grow On Jan. 1, 1891, the paupera numbered less but worthy girls by the ship load to world B.C. 50o. The capacity gradually increases and Scales in the msay office at Boston are A pr , - A few short years before. 112,547 and the cost of pauperism was in Quebec, whence t1ley were forwarded to The quarrels thrown by cross -bows often reaches its maximum in a few weeks or claimed to be so delicate that they indicate ,),nd ava . ,me, and he subdued. 1889-90 22,340,000, the cost of each pauper Maiiitoba- Trains would come into St. weighed six pounds. months according to the constitution of tile the ten -millionth parfof a pound. A dot 11 Oze foe at a -ti . ,1, . , . I And the conflict will be won' being;C4 16s. Id. Boniface, across the river from Winnipeg, Shields were not used in England after individual. The majority of the laborers Many a woman who res:)Iv" when she is lover of � 'da of life . are "Cholos," or Indians born in theSierra. married ko make over her husband, ends by I . . One grain at a time, and the 9an F Will slowly all be run. . The number of persons committed for trial bringing two or three car loads of availible � the reign of Henry VII. ­ They are found incapible, of doing efficient being content to make over her bonnets. . 0�1 's fly, Poin One minute, another, the hour 9 . during 1889-90 was2,906, while 109,748 were wives at a time. They were chaperoned The cross -bows of the fourteenth century work on the coasts or in the wa`rmer alti- sorne pe - One day at a time, and our.lives speed by convicted summarily. The habitual offend- with due regard to propriety and were con- weighed fifteen pounds. - A locomotive engine, for exhibition at k� Into eternity. ers knowntothe policenot committei during signed to the land and mining agents, who tudes without a long course of acc"mat'za- the World's Fair, that will fit into a nut- Blue ' have for 171 Swords equal to flfie best ever made are tion. If gangs of these 11 Cholos " � � one grain of knowledge, and that.wel.1 gored, the- year numbered 2,362. The-totalrepre- conveyed them to Winnipeg, where snitable still. produced in Toledo. . special purposes been taken down suddenly shell, has been made at Chemni Lz, Germany. astic tu ��,- - Another, and inere' on them * .. - sents a percentage of 2.7 to the whole pop. quarters were provided for their . temporary Greek helmets covered the head, back of from the Sierra to work at altitudes of from Denmark allows every subject, male or T-arge . And as time rolls on your mi�d will shine - �,�t I With vaany a garnered gem ulation. The cost of the police was 91,799- accommodation. The accommodation was neck, ears, and nose. � 2,000 to 5,000 feet, sickness and fever have female, who is sixty years of age, a small malicio t Of thought and wisdom. Andtiniewilltell, 000, or 215,12s.9d. per head of the incrimin- very temporary because they were soon dis- resulted from the change. pension, Only criminals are excepted. There R "One thing at a time, and that done well," I ated class. Industrial schools cost 920,652. posed of. The settlers who were bachelors The battles of Crecy, Poitiers and Agin- - . Mules and horses are found to do about A new Methodist Episcopal church is among , "' . � I ,� g Xs wisdom's proven rule W � In the schools of the metropolis the applied for tile girls'as last as they were court were won by the archers. - i4 -[Golden Days. I � . the same efficient work proportionately as being built at Glasgow, Mont., the nearest INI'a r r o F ___ pupils numbeted in 1890-91 652,354; the brought in. -Their applications were not The bow appears among the earliest human beings up to about 17,000 feet in this church being 267 miles away. and low i� -of the Board, schools -was 91,960- considered unless they were properly guar- sculptures of Egypt, B. C. 4000. " district. Mules stand tile climate best, but, A careful old lady in Southwark, Pa., - 1 iofal cost - � Music. I ity to support . . Powe. .. . � � 000, of which 21,272,000 was thrown on anteed as to cliaxacter-and abil In the seventeenth - century German again, require jorne weeks of acclimatization, concealed a ten,dollar gold piece in a work- I ,�l I local rates. - . ., .. a wife. Few of them came to Winnipeg ness ,)Qn _�l Was it light that spake fr om, the darkness The death rate in Londow in. 1891 was from a shorter distance than 250 miles. swords were most highly esteemed. and if urged to undue exertion at great bas'ket which contained some rubbish, A A retr �" Ancient battering rains were manned b altitudes they are liable to drop dead sud- tidy fernale relative threw out the rubbight 11 or music thatshone from the word, 21.4 per 1,000 of the populWon,'--whicli Most commoldy they were certified by let- y lack of r , . - I I - - - qLj� - -large towns, ters from. laaA. agents stating that John ptives. of perpetual snow in the district begains at � End., thought- Ifthc Wben the night wag kindled with the sound compares favorably with othei 100 or 150 men,- generally ca, denly. It may be remarked that the region and tile gold coin with iL M . . of the sun or the first-born bird 1 -on such and The double -banded swords of mediaeval a A bridegroom at Hammond,.' 16 � Liv about 18,000 feet. , n �bi Souls enthralled and entrain melled in bondage -erpool rising as high as 27,per 1,000. Smith, for example, was located . the sig . 1, The open spaces in London, without such a tract ofJoad,and was'the owner of times of ten weighed 30 pounds. it prudent to begin married life economical- �t` of seasons that fail and rise. - -1-1 --- � . 1Y. He gave fifty cents to the clergyman Obhq , reckoning the issued burial,,&64nds ex- 1500horses, was sound and kind and so In naval warfare the ancients used grap- - A TBWN ALL ABLAZE. ceremony, and then had F Bound fas* round with the fetters of flesh, and . . ) , cunnin � - % . blinaed with light that dies. tend to5,449 acres. Besides there are open fortb. On making pliag-hooks and boarding bridges. � who performcd the , � ,4' Lived not surely till musiespake, and the spirit 0 . I Many Soldiers Killed by Jumping or the audacity to demand a receipt. An ob �. of life was heard. . on its, borders which bring up the FORMAL APPLICATIONS FOR A N�IFE Many suits - of armor worn in the four Eiffel's plan for a great bridge across the dica-es a * - � . I - =of parks .. accessible to Londoners to . teenth century weighed 175 pounds each. Burned to Death. - 10 ' I . H. � . John -Smith was asked what sort of woman � � River Neva at St. Petersburg has just been Englis 11 � - � , music,,sister of sunrise and -herald'6f life 22,000 acres. I � . A St. Petersburg despatch says: -A , � -Co bd - �­ - � , . . . The fires in the metropolis:. In 1��91 num- .he referred-wh ether blonde or brun. Pliny ascribes the invention of the sling to most peculiar and fatal railway accident ,accepted, and the St. Petersburg municipal- forenead I - ette! tall or thin, etc. Having stated the Phconecians, about B.C. 2000. occurred to -day on the line between ity h . as voted the twelity-six million rubles e I .1 SmROT6 daW,,-n 6wthe spirit & man, and bered 2,892, of which 193 were serious. The his preferences he was introduced to one of In 1216 heavy, caivalry.were covered,horse reqwe A stee I . the thrall was free. , � d to build it. . merciies � lives - lost nnmbered 6L'- 314. of these Slatousk and Samara. A train composed of I Slave of nature and serf of tune the bondman , the availablef ladies, whereupon ruatterg and man, with scale or chain armor. The in L of life and death. having been taken out ali4i . The total were quickly arranged. ..A remarkable several cars filled with recruits was running In 1418 a battle was fought near Milan, � Dumb with passionless patience that breathed cost , of the. Brigade was E 12D,7.23,- or 611 d. Stone arrow -points and hatchets have at full speed, when flames burst from the in Italy, and so perfect was is the pr r . - butforlorn and.rellactitnt breath- ' ' _ � point was that no suitor had ever to be in- , I though the conflict raged � Heard, behold, and his soul made answer and per head of the .population. Thb' fire ,in" iroduced to a. second girl, Invariably be been found in every country in the world. foremost car. The flre swept backward, both armies that, Fine h . I surance companies contributed 927,196. and in a few minutes all the cars were blaz- from 9 a. in. to 4 p.m., no one on either side - taste an � . c6mmunerd aloud -with the -sea. - . was content with the first one and immed- Long -bow strings were of plaited silk, If e ; Property was insured fir no less a, sum ing. The engineer for some unaccountable was either killed or wounded, tboug on . Doubl . : � _. 11L - iately married her. Apparently the, men and worth five times their weight in gold. reason 6id not stop the train until he had man broke his collar -bone by falling off his , � � Morning spake, and he hearl; and the pas- than E806,000,000. considered that when they had gone so far tendenc, � � - r . sionate silent noon . . � 'introduction, they had committed At the siege of Jerusalem the Romans had run a considerable distance. In the mean- horse. I , "I Kept for him not silence: and soft from the I � as an -_ Large, � I- .. mounting moon , , I themselves irretrievably. 11 In this way, 400 large, and nearly two hundred. small time there was a scene of indescribable con- A miniature drag has just been finished lungs au ' I - - - - - - I Fell Incrof her splendor, hear&as dawn,s - RAINED TIRE 01 -THEN. by a- process of artificial selection, mys'elf catapults.- I . fuslon in the cars. The recruits, (or at least for an Australian sportsman. As described . � t � in the breathless night, I . The saber is an oriental weapon. It was as many of themas could do so, leaped from by a daily 'paper, it is designed to be a Short. . : I . � . and other persons, , officially in charge at the windows and door--. Some of them perfect model of an English coach, is built great na � � Not of men,butot birdswhose notebademan's - - �� i'' - . . llro . ad I Accident Burned Winnipeg, made matches by wholesale. The introduced into the French calvary in 1710. landed uninjured in the heavy snow banks, entirely of steel and hickory wood, and is Very t .. son quicken and leap to light; Spectators of a Ra. I � I . . ,e given free transportation . � And the Ong of i e, and the light and the . - ''I to Death. young women wet -, .The catapult was invented in Syracuse while others who ianded on the cleared to be drawn by a team of 13 -hand ponies. insecret ,I .- I . = � :: . 890f ., wereas chords in tune. ty.tbree miles of course, the object being to make homes 406 B.C. in the reign of Dionysius the Eld- track were lilled. It is 6 feet in height, and weighs only 10 . --- - . . -[A. C. Swinburnei.7 . Alton Junction, twen north in Manitoba and thus secure the permanent er. - Irregu . . - , . , , of � St. Louis,,,fwas the scene of a wr ieH of settlement of the countr�. Incident- " Those who were Unable to get out of the cwt. as"cQmpared with 20 cwt., the usual culture a � .1. I . - - - � , � ac'eidents, begun in a railroad collision, and illy the natural increase of the population The great two-handed sword was, when carq were burned to death, for the train was weight of a full-sized coach. Freckl � I . not in action, carried on the back like a entirely consumed. Some of the men were- James Whitcomb Riley, the 11 Hoosier � .. rare Thee Well. as a result eight persons are, dead, twelve was provided -for. I remember one man guitar. . of am ard - ... i �.� - - I - L mortally injured,, and as I many more seri- who drove over 700 miles, to get a wife. He � terribly burned before they jumped. When cet " told a San. Francisco reporter that A long !. ' I I 1, - . The sword of Henry the Pious, Duke of the confusion bad somewhat subsided the P I . ously hurt . - a train load of girls - ar- . the two keenest regrets of his life are that . . - Z, I Fare thee well! And tho'in sorrow . was prdsentvwben � - , . Silesia, was six feet long and weighed 30 officer in charge of the recruits, who saved was never well � � short for r " � OX I bow my head in gri9f, � - The first accident befell the Southwest., rived' and spotted the young -woman he . he is noomarried, and thathe � .. - ounds. himself by jumping, called the ioll of his 1, Hvo,).e 11 for a brighter'morrow ern Limited express train, which runs be- ucated. " I do not know the leut thing Tile u t .-. . wanted offliand. Within seven minutes P . ed � �__ . I 0 bring us a sweet relief ; I � tweea New York and St, Louis. The train after the train came in the pair were united The sling was made of woolen stuff, and men. It was found that forty-nine of them aboult grammar," he said, 61 and cannot tell rogance � �." I . were dead and twenty terribly burned and i - . I I When again we'll fondly tread - is operated,by the Cleveland, Cincinnati, ill matrimony and the bridegroom started 'the slingers always stood behind the infan r wrong. The ; �, - Paths secluded, strewn with roses, - whether a sentence is right o A dim L I . Aq God's sun shines overhead, Chicago and St. Louis Railroad. The train away with his bride in a buckboard wag- try. otherwise injured. only way I judge is whether it seems right cates we - . A strict investigation will be held to I . Where all Nature e'er discloses left St. Louis at 9:05 o'clock Saturday 6 � Egyptian bronze swords made B.C..32000 or not." Of the holy estate of matrimony, w _� God's great handiwork so true gon. I . The ri ,. - _� � 'NQMb Hil� Vatilte4 qrch of blue. morning and arrived at the edge of the were from 2 to 3 feet long, with double determine the cause of the fire. It, is sup. the poet, who is now thirty-eight, said: broad an �. ­. - tion yards at 8:50 O'clock. Just out- edge. . . . posed now that some of the men in the for- I I It shocks pe that I am not married ; why, ,I � I:` .1 H. - Shocking Crime ill France. ward car were skylarking and upset the A curl' -, - junp I I fe and children enjoys I 1- . . Absent from thee tho? I wander, side of the yard is a curve. After rounding . - . The Mexican fliut knives were made so stove. The draught caused by the on -rush- a man without a wi Ong and �, i, - � . 'Gainst life's ills to e'er contend; ihis curve, and within a hundred yards of ' A shocking ,crime has (says a Paris cor- sharp that they could be used for trimming ing train caused the fla,mes to spread with no life. Marriage is the poetry of existence� I . ,,, . I can love, in silence ponder a siding, the engineernoticed that a, switch respondent) been committe'l, under. very hair.' . mch great rapidity that nothing could be that is the only way to live. All the rest is A proj I . � I . 0 or thee as my constant friend; . was turned; The train was rupning at the �ainful 'circumstances, at Avor, in .the De- - ' E - artificial." If Mr. Riley did not get a good tion, sel - l . I I � rea .4 I will behold thee, rate of flity miles an hour, and it was im- partment- of the Cher. In a farmhouse at The shield of Hector, when slung at his done to extinguish them. It is asserted ,, schooling" when he was a boy, he had The chi Z thy 19ion; fair -come hear, � � gincer was guilty of criminal - - -backin walking, covered thebody from that the en J one distinction over his playmAes- His are inflex _� n " * I with fondness o'er me, that place lived a widow, with her three � -_ e n s possible to stop. ' I 1� id I the engineer, stuck to the I negligence in not stopping the train as soon , .. I g me be of good cheer. ' Webb F-oss, sons and two daughters. The old woman ' neck to heel. father, an eccentric lawyer, put. him in long A mon - '� - - , . t ee well! tho'we may sorrow, . engine, -a;IA-Was� applying the air brakes was in bad health, and her children took it Cross -bowmen were always attended by as he saw the fire. Had he done so the loss trousers when he was three years old, de- %-ward l I - - Go& will speed us a good'morrow. when it struck a string of twenty loaded oil in turn to sit up with her'at night. Soon Phield-bearers, who protected them in of life would have been very small. spite the tearful,protest of his mother. .0 ", I I 1IL I . ­ - Grmay e, - . cars. The second oil bar from the engine after midnight one of her sons had just.given action. . .. I , - Those you trust axe oft' deceiving, - obing An Adverse View of Mashonaland. Twenty-seven surviving heroes of Balak- with pru � � �- I _. - _. And false hearts will caiXse tt ee pain, eXploded, and 7,000 gallons of oil were sent up his post to another brother af ter wat The largesi catapults threw beams 6 feet lava, all that could be found by scouring __ , ger misfortune often grieving, flying in all directions. for some time, when he beard a noize in the long, weighing sixty pounds, over a quarter D&nl:el - - Lord Headly, who has recently spent ' �hirty-eighth anni- . . six England, celebrated the I -.1 - Bound, as 'twerp. with faWs iron chain, -it spread oat over the tracks in fire. Eu- th a candle , eavy, - - - . Yet be brave, and cease repining, sitting-room,and on entering it wi of a mile. months in 'Mashonaland, partly, it is stated, versary of that disastrous charge by a ban- � - � � A There is Yet sweet joy for all, gineer Ross was unhurt up to that time, and in his band,ke received a blow on the breast Th6legion was formed by Romulus B. C. in the interests of a. syndicite, and artly V. in London, re- . A pale . � I I For God all your tbou. k� he jumped from the engine to escape. , No with a heavy hammer. The atDack was - p quel at, S, James's Hall ' . stitution - hts divinir . i ted of 3,000 foot as the outcome of a desire to - cently It was a,n intere! .1 - __ cross through the flames that followed up, but the light having been ex. 720. It originally conSIS . see for him . sting assemblage , , I- - Casts aside despair's dark,pail; man conlil - -ept otle in plain I � - - - and 300 horse. self what opening for the investment of of gri, , A thi - _­ - �'l ­ - lln lay heart let deceit never . surrounded the engine. Before he bad gone tinguished his assailant was- not able to ea veterans, all ex, - 1- St, thy soul, now and forever. , � ital Mashonaland affords. has confided clothes, with no suggestion of gold lace gross org ­ . 11�%-. . __� __ I . I - I . ten feet -he fell and *as burned to death. direct his blows with any precision, and to Some of the wooden towers ereSted to cap esentative of the about them other than that afforded by tile - �� .. ­ I IV. S ries high, his impressions to a r - A loroa ­ � - . The flames spread to the other oil cars, this circumstance he probably owed his life, attack a besieged city were ten to � - . . =:._;, __ . When at eve the golden sun -,et I and seven of them ware soon hissing and In . the meantim-e his brother, who was nurs- about one hundred feet. Gold field Xezcs. Hi nounces Crimean medals on their breasts. The only dicates gr �z . .­_ i_;��' - Tinge the fleecy clouds with gold, - . I . '.Nir.Cecil Rhodes and all his works. -Mr. one who wore a uniform was gallant Ser- __ ��', _. . in the arbor where we met . roaring and sending up volumes of, smoke. ing the sick mother, hearing .*the scuffle, Toledo and Damascus bl&des were very Rhodes, we are told, is a man with Napol- geant Fawke, of the- Scots Greys, who was . Project . � ____ , - I Lot ug be still as of old Hundreds of -people flocked to the scene and rushed -out of the house and gave the alarm popular - in the Middle Ages and sold for onic ideas, but without the ability to carry twenty-two when he rode into tile valley of ��� (lest - itute . I . , - � �, � �, -1 � ", - � In the spirit, tho'asainder persisted in standing in close to the wreck to the neigbbours. When, however, he re- their weight in gold. e . The sn , ,,, I �_ _. In the body we may be. - them out. The government of the coin, death, and who at sixty is one of the finest- I Esq uimau �. �-,__­ . Hecdlc:,3 of a great world's thunder and -burning cars of oil.- I turned with assistance. he found the old - When Cortez invaded Mexico for the pany is very unpopular, and the country it- looking of the Queen's subjects. He gavf t , . �_. I __ Or the surges oflife's sea,. When the crash came the passengers were woman extended lifeless on the bed, her I second time he had eighty musketeers and self unprofitable , whilst the gold scarcel an exhibition of his strength to the other :1 A mou -- . . y �z ­ � . A bond adieu but not forever, thro,wn about the cars, but moist of them es- scull f ractured with one blow of the tsrrible eighty cross -b w men. pays to work. The follo�wing are a sample old-timers -by cutting bars of lead clean i 1, - .. . - __ - . I � � . . 0 f . eye show � . I __­�,' , . E'en death itself can ne'er us sever. caped injury. _ hammer, and, as shrieks .were issuing from - ns: -All over the through with . Warts .., __ _ . � . ­41)avid B. Metcalf. - The crowd ot onlookers had been - increas- the room occupied by his, sisters, he hurried . The value of infantry was not fully recog- of Lord Headly's allegatio one stroke of the sword. � --- - - - - - - f�­, � ___ - I . . . 1. . nized by mediaeval commanders until the country men are to be met who have*abso- The Emperor of China has, by imperial - - - � - __� , . - ing steXdily.. It was 11:32 o'clock when one to their assistance, arriving just in time to fifteenth century. I lutely no means of leaving the district, and rescript, raised the ancestors for three gen- � r I dustrioUs 31_'�' Love's Belson. _: - _- of the tanks exploaed, followed instantly by save both from a -fimilar fate, one of them ely slice leather 'to cover their feet as erations of Sir Halliday Macartnev, K. C. Al. . Amy in . � ' - - "I , � __1. - , BY ELLA WREELER WILCOX. four more. . Fully 35,000 gallons of boiling being already very seriously hurt, The The armor of the fourteenth century was scare weary and almost hopeless G., the Secretary to the Chinese' Legation i I indicates , -1 ,�..­ - � � . _,; -Z-��, . _�!�,- . and burning oil were tossed into the the air. murderer, was the third brother who he& so heavy that a fallen knight could not rise they drag out , I I I � I'll-, - �_ I In -ad sweet days when hectic flushes . ' exi;tence. Throughout the whole country in London, to the highest rank in the Chin- A proj .�� - , . - ily. He without assistance. . _;�;,J�� . ,-Barn red an maple an I sumac leaf, .The roar and vibration could -be heard for. thus attempted to kill. the whole fam. . I the spectacle is one of complete failure in darinate. Ihis is in accordance � confiden _­..­­._ � . . . - ese man ��� �_ ­ _ When sor . � . Vestern a_ - � I_ rowful winds ,wall through the miles.. , I - I - was soon disarmed and tightly bound ' pend- The long bow was brou,o,bt into X the admitlistration and even the laird. of with the curious usage of conferring ranks Thick, MZK1 - rushes, � - in the eighth century ; bows were i , -, 1 ��7�­�, - . .. The instant, the explosions came some Of ing the appearance of the gendarmes on the, Europe . Rhodesia's faculty for selecting good 8ub- %lways in .7�­­ . And all things whisper of Inss and grief, The oil seern- scene -of the drama. The only- explanation of nobility on ancestors rather tham descend- ­_�i When closeand- closer bold,Frost approaches the spect ators -tried to rttn.� 6 feet long, arrows 3. ordinates is unable to overcome the effects I ants. It is believed that the only other ��Pj��_ -1 - I ed to be carried'by the sit over. the great given of the crime is that. the murderer had Knightly lances were from 12 to IN feet ,. �, �: To snatch the blossom from Nature s breast� I f ndamentalerror. Whateversubsidised. European on whom this strange hollor has �� �­._­__., �1. When night,forever on day qncroaches,- crow(4 and far out, in the villa;g6. It seem- wistied to undertake a jou -ney for change long, the heads 4 to 8 inches broad, and 0 fu bt that - .­- � Oh, then I think that 1 love you bost, - reports may say there is little don been bestowed is Sir Robt, Hart, the Inspec . � I... ,- ­ - I - ed to fall in. stirgins and pools. of air� on the pretext that lie was snfferiDg fr6iii !2 to 20 inches long. . I � ''I . - . facts prove' the country to be a complete tor -General of Chinese Maritime Customs, � T here i I _ I � . �.._Ii,- : I -ircle--of- 100 yards from "influenza," and that the project had The Amazon Indians use a blowpipe with I, - __ __�._ li" . And yet when Winter, that tyrant master For thos.e.within the e . t . , . . rand in respect of affording any opening for whose ancestors were similarly ennobled of our co � - - - - - - - -, I- . Has buried Autumn in walls of snow ' there was no escape. Their- clothing was been opposed by his mothdr. . which they'throw an arrow 200 yards with niplily two'years ago. � . _,�,. �i�­ . I I . - I . poor men. The regulations of the co i ing, simpl, . __1. ,_,�, I I And bound and fetteied where bold !��;steast burned, and literally fell from their bodies. . i , ­�, �­. - I wonderful precision. are not caculated. to induce either rich or ot � ; -11-- � her be ,n I �-­�,;-_ ­ I In amoment those who &on I , The French just now are n very kind- I which faU I ­!�� - ' ouis Teadior. poor men to take up ground. The restric- 'Minister of - �. - - TAes outrageLl Nature in helpless woe, r - Tennyso n as a Religi The misericordi was a small dagger with. . 1- � - Id ei g' u a re, ! ­ Good - - I , - When all earth's pleasures in four walls;en , hither and thither, waving thr hand=n thin blade made to reach the vitals of an ! tions as to granting of title, which can ,only ly disposed toward the Prit � _�_ Iii tre screaming for hell). , � - : Let fools and sensualists say what they Madagascar, though be is perhapi the only I as, growni ­ I., - .- . . ­ ­', - I - And side by side in the snug home n6st- . antagonist between the joints of the arm- be given aftera year's occupation, the oc- i It ," - __ _ _ lit not enter, a,ter and will, it is the glory of Browning and Tenny- I - . - ,- , -�-_ - . `p best . Some Went to, f �--- - . i � , , I �� . lsin he nearest.' w man in thF, world who has the distinction ands, aw � _ . -1 , our. cupat on clause itself, and the powers reserv- �� �' Woeetthte'neltsav t7atst'l7lovoeh yeoun son - of having been the husband of three Queens. I bed. Sist .. - . _ - - - � - I others ran'inio the flelds', ah4 are missing _that, in an age which so much prurient - 1 - I, �, .. - ­ - . Palmedes, of Argos, was the first com- ed by the company as to floatation or pro- It woulci seem to be one 'of the mo&t im- �. ,� " -- - _b� e Panic reigned for a short.tiniti until literature has defiled with the empoisoued ,, wish : Pa. s*_ - '_ But later on, when the Siren Season . ��-_ , � � e' -r to array an a I r- line of motion, are directly op portant d friends - � ,,--�t,- ----_ . -4s; the trust of the senile King. Y '-.uninjured recovered their- presence of boney of French realism they did I mand rally in regnla posed to the land uties of the Prime Minister to wed i - 4'� -. , _. .- I Beft the - I . . � - � , not grope - being acquired for speculative purposes. At � , - , . , on,but � Familial � 5"-,- , ", - Aad glad Earth laughes at the act of treason, mind to care for the afflicted. in the foul abyssesof human degradati battle,'to place sentinels, or to give a watch , ihe ruler of his country if that potentate I . � WiL, - ' word. . - 1! - ;� L- ­ . I Two barre en from eviii lifted their eyes t,o- the. true grandear I . - � _. eance to s( . �,­ ­ . And'Wmter dies in the arms of Spring, . I is oflinsee�d oil Were t&k - .- the same time the admiuistration is faulty in haprens to be a Queen. At any rate, the 9 ` -, z _I -I.- 1'. - . When budsand birds all push and flutter � - - - At 200 feet only the best Spanish armor I . i S�� ­ - ­ � a grocery stot a and applled�'to.th0i- wounds of humanity crowned mith.spiritual fire. other respects. . . elderly statesman who is the husband of the i ally witho -... I- , � T61!reefab�Nature so,lo.ug oppressed, - - I - Many een, alady .whohas not ye- We are as -, ll ,,­ __ ---. 4 I thrill with feelings I cannot utter, . I by several ,physicians-wha hapipe"d i�D be � The'poets haVeruadelif6 brighter., happier� could resist the -English arrow. � present Qu - � ; �:L,�_ _,_ - � - 1, - then X ani c.9.Waft.1 !ova -you best. - - .. - . I opeful to us by teaching us to see, museums have steel corselets pierced through H,re Below. - reached middle life, was also the linsban6* to time up 11 ", - - 7__t_-_ �., -- - - . � - . on the grr,und.:,- .4yer ,house iii-tke,11ftle .more hc .- - ­,_ _`,__� � . - I - - qy � I - how; see I ,� by open- I by -an, arrow. � predecessors or- of life set! , ... I �� -,�,­­�� - -Rdt wimi;ufl leidox-the-qug _ ­ - � - . . � in the purest path of life of her two immediate . ­ � - . ", ;& Qnly. Summer, villagawas turnedinto a ternporary hospital, and what to see, i6nd to - ' ' , ­��, __ � .. - I - - - . � I ; _1 - - .- e- true, our eyes to the _e fourteenth centur - - ­��-,�- X�.,, `s J�le and every doeto r- in Alt6ff a its, Vicif2ity nag onr�.mind. to th In. tli the throne of the Hovas. � ness. and, -,�­,:�, ­�,'_�,_ -_ Reign -6ver iveartli and tj -9 . . Ind ' ,y armor became Let us live, strife, He has becomt ­ - � -_J��. - care sucb� care --��z WUi-maturlakweels t(lv the royal, 0 � 1. - . I � so accustomed to guard with jealous ­p�­­_,�� orner, - was summoned - - " ' --- ' beautiful; by. opening. our ears to the voices ,so heal�vy that � many soldiers only thirty And be heroes in the - _ - ��-,_ _­ JiLud even . - _. Just to give es that he seems ��" - - As soon as - si e a,- miu�was made up, e moun I I - the Sim INmes h ot with Love, - � � * , " ' ain _a�nd the sea; by quickenin years- 61d' -were deformed or'pe'rinanent1v . ikeying by � " �`-,-;w";'. - Z - I., W4en Plea%tra bas',ks in thq luscious weather, pos-bi t -- .0fth' t, 9 I �kll tile conquest, we 1119-Y gain the rights of his royal spous .- �&­ . - __ - I . � . - -_ - --l'. - _­ - I t!J I the suffekers.,. word brour,ht � -1 I . - . I . _ I - twe& o 0 . - _,­_�­ -our sensibilit . ht.' to forget the fact that th light, whi � ' � - and' _ y to the sweet influences:of the disabled by its weig � To soine lonel�y heart in pain e island is now a ,­ -, ­ t � I I - - Whose bravo struggles are in vain heed. An � , � , - -, __-_,­_ _ _. 4jV('hPe4Xrc__r 0 os Ife ocean. A thousand thin -mini . , _­� -� _ - . Is th here eph's Hoipital. . - I -fields and oft - . gir , Mining and counter ug were exten French protectorate ; and herein lies the - I- , - , _, I on - . - � - I— 1� . -*hichweshould Here below. 1�11 . ,&'47 ­_'�. � . I neverhave noticed, in which sively pradticed duiing,tbe ancient sieges. . grievance of which the French complain. over us, bl. ­ , 1_� - .�, __.-­-�,-.�-_ , _ - -"- I - . __ . - .r . I - . � . �­ � -,.,,- - I . �� �- -- ,_.� ­ - �� ,-,- .. have read God's auto- The inewasmadoi,thero6f supported - --I, - - ­�� -, � _ I . . ,,�� I - 7 �,- � I.-- --we should .never ' in by And foregoing every wrong er and wis .... ,,,. " - . I _` � I � essing,-..Tenny- -the beams w1lile we Stay, A serious famine prevails in Finland, and . . ­ . - __­ -, - _� - A. - I - I I ­�. . UXODttAk `Atta CRf I Good. Gc _-1, - 1. - - - ___ graphs of beauty ind of bl timbers; when all was ready advii�es from several sources state that a, � - - ­ . ' I I -, � I _` - �,- - - - , -1 .� .- inthe ri let us be strong root� are t I.... � _­ I - I . I I - ­ , ­ - I __ � . I - .. - VL— I � . 11 -obs ;�11 _- - 11_,��. �� � - - ,­ . ., - � I son has now taught us to erve with._dea, wore set on fire and the wall- caved in. 911, ­ _. 4� , . � . E, rge proportion of the inhabitants 'of that - -. ��, I _­ ­.� , ---- - 1, Thought for This Year. - - Minister to - Washington Goes light -and love-�he black ash buds . - I ery da3 hold la arvation "Goodb - ­ -_ - -­ 1- � , .� ... � ___ I_ � - . : r6st"or - in spring ; - a le - � � � � � . � � I The . Inourlifc� SIQ011 - �,��­, - � " -_ A complete suit of knightly armor con- country are perilously near st . .. , - ;� - - I - � _ __ -, � ­ __� I'll, 1, __ 1, ,��, � I - ­ ­ Eutpire. - _- . .. _ , - ­'_­-, t, - - - -, _ ,� * -thOurian& of y - � -fteg, jW-ijo-bei lbei6stio. , . Js�'wlhich taft the' lareli,, good deeds are our best gold - " Good i 1 Wwgeoj�y-�pjlght Of � - 6 , _ __ , -, _ ­ . the rosy plumelet . That - �_a�__ - � " . � ,e4hil, , ��' L�, Two hundred thousand persons of a tota �� _ jj�_]q tained the helmet, the cuirass for the breast, _?��.. - i6 1 - And will live when clay is cold "God gaal Y� ­P� ��7�-� '. -of men, ­­,". - - -- - , T'o&..degpatu-h says .�A Wash- tlio pure green streaks on the white leaves, �', _. - - -­ Afidtilwk�iavgedje ot millions , . - I I � [)opulation of 2,OGO,000 are entirely desti � �k.-� -a '. �� - 11 , . � epaulieres for the shoulders ; brassartsi Here below. I . F - . �­ f " , . ­�' - -_ _- ft leatabd qgh b1d6it-'and - - - - - I &:th6-f inles - . -�.;- , , , a_1 - __�11 .016 -mm - 3r Ahiil �--�Z-n !�--� - _h ;4 ,% overn -chestnut buds - , - , � � T . ­ ­ - __ .. e -G . m6iit of the onowdrop ; the y . I I � the winter ends it, is ex- It woul N. �-_ -- gumm 1� �f;_ � " - , � ingfou, specia i _, , arms.; coudieres,. elbows;, avant -bra tute, and before � , , , -- - - - f�__-� - _,� ,z __­ .- -1 . - - ,. 8, _�_�_ .� 1 ,:�- � , , . 7 - �, - , t0aws, - I I I - -11 p_, r - , �, I . . . . -1 � - I �. i �Itl,. - __ ,. 4"onl , in attin anyone wh C ", M - - arms ; gauntlets, gloves ; fandes for' " 4� 1 � * �, . vg and,thefi � is baving,'Some. � -4 Then, dear heart. we'll be content � which the! , � ,­ zo' ­� - - _' I cted that one-tou ,---- - � - - ignored or ,­ ;afts �, b t. a J d - J� . s I ­,��­ .�_ 0 t W1 . �Fr 9 , ,in the April blue'; the sea upp"r - - ­ �, _ � andAriim ,to -i � J___ - ie - I - a- win si - ill, chill - with flakes'. of , _, IzI. ,C ,ad �,­.�� �-�i�eAftebLra he � - t� - lower ust to do, ' pe rth of the whole number . �-t��-Merox_ nij- CA-. Z I I � . . 11 be in a similar sad plight. �,_.�-��_-�_ , � flanks Making life ablessingsont I � _- - _,.,�� �_ ,_-,�Vn - . _ , - ti1"ff.-Q11R1W.&40Xd'0 - �. -,.-. - . -1.1 -_ ,-, -_ , ­ - - ­ . .; baubergeon, a quilted surecat ; cuis- of inhabitants wi I , - ­ t-- - W ­� ­ " 'T -_ --;, . and the so � 1`�,___ 4� - �-­ -4heft--fraa stl� -unfilater, a .present feliat, t �i ��__ _- � �. afibingtot.-_ � he­� e bloom of theseb. ; the jitts, thigh pieces ; genjuillieres, knee -- Here below; The Finns have hard work to make a living - � lic I `�� -W;,- GWOWIng*,seems, ',Lrl, - �­ ---I - -,ki� kii.m'. '11 � - , '. .1. . _ -, _ � -7 - - . _ A-1 � ­ , 4 , �� - __ -_ - _7��', -,-*dd cOR'o,urg "a , __ � eW � 11 Pleia li __. ,-- - �ki , . _4! -i'- ail ikarn r like -firefl;[es in a silver - 11 Good -n4 -_-_-U, __ _#9 . I . - � 9-- __ .- -1 , . -e in every 1 -rigorous climate. - ­e��'L"­ - � - -kethe -may la - � - - Hv_ �,:.,- - - n wavonr-owm, - - _11", liat, I I ... 91 - � - iv, - . guards; grevieres,legpieces; solerets, shoes All the sins of lue efface, at the best of times, because of the poor � I - !�m - __ , -1 � __ _,� _� � 9 _�_ -, � - . �- � , ,z,-�,,- -_ 3�� - - , - -A, -a .Wll& I In.ievem Giving ioN place, _-�_4 - -',.;�:-_ - _-F- - _ - 61v.e& . ,. '.. futu" -, >,Chfiur,­,H& has lideft'ifiv �brraaild �; 6, e ink, -- ve-beaded baby iind, spurs. , I Until the Father's shining face Last summer the - c��� � �?�, _; � ­ � � � -�; _­ -_ - v " , - to - .fi � � �,,2���"TF­ ­,�:_ ,� .. � �� �N W ­.__ I - .li�� � soil and - ­:�- -%­- ­, � -,",-. , ,,, -_ -- --, � _t ­ i � - _h, A&ading- on,- the, - ba.1b - " - , " -Zt�-��n��_-_­��,�.- , - � " -1 ­ 7 �s -, -chief o�f w. ' ich* . licles ;,.the light feet *We - V_ �� , - � _'.�., � , -1. jr.4usacit6nain him-coM � , J! � '' - - . potato and rye crops were either destroyed . A Rassb :,���- -,, Z , ,.I- . � -, -1, -, - - _. ., . . ,- ­ , � ,�. ,-_ �� , - - -, - -, - __ .- � - - - . ..--. , , 1. , __ - . - I , ,,. ­-S­�:��. ._ � -.11 - ,,_ �; e shield, of Achilles, described by Smiles below � , _�e�, " � �,�, , ." _:�: 1'� " it , � I _ � � - �_�F�--�;,, -, � - ­ �_ , _­ I ­ ­ I.. ��. _ , , 4-aq,his-reh twa-viia aij-_--scheme 'dai d 7 ,�_th&drajqn- . - _�2,Z��.--.­�t-,'� �_� -; - IMMOY-Thits,�', ,I __ OtioO�._w] _ isies make,, e -mea, ow&roE Homei, were fepresent�d'tbe earth, the sky, ---.,.,I',— - - or seriously damaged by coiistant night � very succeE � ­ ­_�-. .%Ii � . - t � % .. I, ,-��,7?� ;-_�� ­_ �� ­ . . - -F.- ---- �- - .. � �V�, - - �.'joi�44mmorcla]L', co'D-, ssions auAhe pir -of -flylwsapphir�* ftsh of livinj light �Abo_ riVeg, - the. sea, the san, the moon", all the constella- There was an excess of 10,000 deaths over frosts in July, August, and September. - falcons to, _�_ . :w7 __ " �. - - _�f_ �� � � ­ - - ­ - .- - �- � ­­ - I- . � - , � - # . Z _7�_� �� ,,'-.- � 4, � I -, ­_­ _,W, ­)�F, r�� X�� �L � � _.� - - I _ 1. . - - - q* __ . itt - - - ­ ' W,7 ex 15_3� " - T _� __ I vh - -_ I* , sloping to:plur, It - _T t�­ I I � � ­ - 1. - g�911_ - . R,��,.-4� -11 - 10M V__Alw� 11 Willie b . kge in cataradt, 1. here has �­_-,_*�� �___:�, - `­­ ­ � . . -_­ . - L- --- ��P� - __ ltious� - two cities with crowds-filling� -the births in France during 1891. Many districts known to be in great dis- I ...... tention �w �_, __A� I ­�_ - " WE- - 1- , - ­'� I 6"u -S IN- hvmb,� Cxlo,Mrnment�-,as bla,dk.blocks its -breath of thunder - �­ - -1 - -tress are now isolated by snow ­_ - ,.�,��_,�-,44 . ?, � I 1. re-preseakw_ - - . . - � .-P formag.an-i armies besieging a, town, besides been an almost uninterrupted decrease in and ice, and of the use � `7,.,. - . . - - �- , i,&--��,�,4a��C;� __ I __ ­ - *1 . �_ . - , - ­ � - - _. , . _� , � , - !i��,�_ _-ER -1 __. - , �z, . -_­ -ktik -#` 1_- �1&er� -0 - t -AM, - , f. ��­.--* riada.cf-rivuletshurrYing- - the'number of births each year since 1881, in others the inhabitants are exiliting' 'on � - - - - -- _:� � �T __ �� . d I '40. .- Xk I a _4_1 ,9.10 AArdugUth6lad poses in t] -1 I - � �'Iv - - .W.% I aUL !,F,��- - - W __ - - 0- 'A , 1. � � -1 . � - I - _ f,* ­ , -t - '�,,�,�;. I - . , I , Is" ­_ ­ - '- -1 _Vi�� �� - __ _­ � - -_ ­,­ _. ..-1 ­ ,battles,single cbmbats,niral scenes, bar . I N I 11 -:I-'- - � � -f-,-- � Mori .e - .. . . I . I I � I - � ____, __w , .... -, - - - -h - 14%.-�-mo doves in iname - ' ' la .� Int * , -- - V -scenes, vin age scenes, ­_-�­­ - ,­-- 11 __ � �, A ­ " - ; - I . - � - irch - _1 - -V,7 �,i__AZQ�11__ �U 1 I t - ��_ - _ - - - .I ___­ . _M - v --- -1116. Ls -,' ` , -­ �V#e� t pictures of and the preven Lion Of an actual decline in the bread composed largely or wholly of b I trained cai , - "PiKe -A -.4-.0yew. � - - .- - ��,, L� - I ­ - ­ -1gT .4'e`hi�­bee _' -'- i I' i `k -, - - - - 6210 ­ �p ­ r"664 �. �.- �, _iuhumerable��, ,,-,. -, !--­ -__, - '. I I � - �,� . '. - I � �, , �� --11 �_ , -, .�4� - 6!i�� � - _; ,� - - � - ,�;f �� - �- ­, ,�­�, - - ,t� -! I � ��_ - prima -h - 4 A!id in � _. , " - , - 4 - - -, - I toanother � 1- I - . � - 4� - __1 � , EK�116r:__,11_ _ _ _w_ _- - T_n_-�_� - . _ tl&t , ��n - ,attle,beidini, lloa and totlil population is attributed to te has voted sever. - I _ , �1_1m�­� ­ ­ _ _. - ,,, _ the influx of bark. The Finnish Sena I I - _ ,z - - ,­ �_ .._� I - ' � I , - __" Z�, ­ -1 - � � _� , � __ - _' .- _ . % . ,. ,-�.7FArchAqacouFa'mr. - _b��'66 life, dances, � . ,Z- . - _-, , __� �, - , -�5�,-@_­-_141­_��-- ­ ,_ - I - ­_ � - ft- -6t - - -- � - I ox I I " �- , I .- -_ I - �� � an �- . I _­ - . - --M - -, � � __ --- - g-', 1-1 _ _1_1 -w� - � , - I . - 1 - o;�Aiih Sillid � , � � - : - - N k45��-, -;�,`t'., . _ : � - - r­��,_�WO�_�M_ - . � _tmwl - - - - be sulffer. tll� A , d..&_vkst,vii6iet_V- of mytho- immigrants. There were 285,OOD marriages al million marks for the relief of t. _hjjjjj�j*�t _ � ­ __ , ; ,�_� . ;_ . - I I � �. I . � �- - - � I " I the use of 1 . - = Msv_ 1 , __ ,�­ -- - - t0m Ma7UR ­.,��� -, . e r-,� :; � _- �, �—._._ -77 , , - ; , � I - " - ­ - 'enerally 1 �- , L_ 0MW I , . - _. � , '. ­ - -,- , , �Wz ter ,� bull ft I - -I---,- I--"- - �� ff t Al _. t --,;d , - fghting, � - , - I � - 1. _,�', �,,­. I I � I � , . � __ , ogle. - su 11CO, . - I - , - I - 1, �­" ­ , i ;;,-"-­­, ,-��-�,4�. - _� ,,-7- an� , � kve �4_ 1 &Y - 'b' is - - . �, M �,___, 5 � I wSr .- , , i xtensli,el - n-1 1, the greatest number since 1884,and ers, and a Government commitkwa is tryin* - 9 . U�� -�w - ��, W 'j- `&" ` " 'T e' . - . - y I - , �Z_ _r7 , - , 143�; �i��:, o liabletto tri � , - I ---. .1 _. .- -1 , I - I , r__ I I , granted d"g the -ss, bV% �t is _s%W7_ I _'Z�­ M . ta b,a-- -.2 I � � ts of -� : � : �� --t��7�_��,' ,� t� �,�­ ­ , 1_"; -be� " ­� , h 1 u .1 -h . �., ,. I., '' _ ­,'�,-,��,-_ - . , � -1 � . as�a�l _ � __ __ - -_ ­_ .1- -- ��7, - _, �--dK_-V&_W_-,_V ,eJ -, A 'n - . -1� - , poin A i ,_ _6 tLor y� - earn en(kigg An -A. -y0% ­_ 1-:_ -1� ;�, � - I �-_-,�,�-_ __ __ 1�.�_ "_­ a_�W�V,7.., �, 1� tk , . - _ - '.1" - -- ` - - _�c_ - I , ,� , - - ,- .��, -- - --. MR- -_ 1� _Vi_k,,,�Z2 ��_- - , - if _ - - f �_; _7� __ _a�... - I .;§ I __ , i * - 11 I -- - �;t�, _4��, - ­ , __ � �� _ _ � W W �� - - - " 5,752 divorces wert , � I -11 . 1. AN ,049-1 -R, " -a _ , to cope with the distv - - � . - I , - - caw w - TV6:904 'k '. " ____� " . . senger pur I ' _'j. - , -tljw I , --1, - 11" �; . -, .-..- �� I—. -m-ake-.& ljora��, uJunsu f` T&A,--­-Ii�-­Set;�drn u - $" lis .- I , - - . ... I _ . 0 --� -K. ­�r: - , , 1 41n) . .- - _Z�i�_4�__ - OM05�0___ .. . - -, 1. `i�;:=_ - - 'er - 'W -hi n _ : - - __ , lruft"WVV��__, -R�,._r_,�­�_�, __ w. � ' , . " _ ` ` -i - ' s w o ft A - year. The figures are from the official re further help is uigenar � �4 , ,,_ - -, - - - " - # frillid: - . a . I . ��f Z�_ � -M�j-7 �' ' - =re vo � - F ilkk M ,W �'_, - -�� - _;_w ��,-':13 I aa_ - - __% � - , _' ' : I ' ., . --_ - -_ , I 11);, z -W :�,, e'r -'" X - 11,��_� _0 - - - M -1A____ 7, ,,�­ ---7..;- - -------6 1_____- ­_ - I h ___:,7�_,�_ �, ._� �,�,� �111� -­_-'­` -,-_,�:­ .�, � ' - - ` - _ N - . _ ��­-_-:%:Z' -2 �_�-, , � , , I - *: a M�'Woln -,-- � , f,�, , , - _ - 11-:�,' � ­ issued. . - people. , � and some ,�:� I - - ­ ­ -��,,�­ * __ � �=­_ MA -Row glk" I R -:,w 50�-T, -t! ,_ � 1 -_ _-_ _.�.�., - �,. __- _ __ -, 7, c� ­.­- - -- - � rings - ' a6wn.- , - I -turns just . - . �_� - �­� '. - . -1 127 -�- 1- R ,11 --mm - - � - ff ­_ � % wgreat-=Ony men, , . ---,-- -,-� � -_­4F-��g�-� � . _'..., I p9%, , f _ _ . - � ,,,-- 1 ,4 ,7 ,. '?, �,yf� -, �, _-­­ ­ � I .- - . . . 11 I -1 4 ­�i��:r, - weight of - . . !Is Of - 09 , ". , " - , - : � �_ I I . I - -: - S- - I - - � _ _400, �W=R-W� -��-i6��-&--t�g�z�,�t " _�_- - - --- -- `� - � I - �' I ,�_-� v - , I - . . -: , --Rt4A��_ . - ,� -: "I - __�_-_M�7­ ­_ A t - I �� YAR -00 - , , - _ , , M , � 'k __ - 1-1 � - 1,e_ - , -.�4 -0 � _ - � I I _ � I - R ­ _; _:�r7f ,`�t�.�: " � jr�- -, ��.� - _ - - - - , - - -- ,­��In � -, ��T,� ��­ ­ ­;'R� -1. , 1: - -­- - -�- .,- -, , ;_ .1 1___7 1 __ , .- � ,L - -1 . . . - ­ �_- I �, 7 ,�� - � � i�� " ��r _-�. � , - ­­� , - I - , . I � . , _­,­_�- -- - - , - - - - , : �_ - � . - - I - , ­�,­­­,: - __�v ___ , - -- -I - ­-,I�­.�,�- --.­-.� __ , _-* - _. - , , - _;`� - --' ,.,.. , :_1 " - - hindrance ­ , ­ - � -1 __ I— ,_­� _T7� 3� � - - n , �4 � : , . , ,;�� - - -1 - '. -, _t _A_r � � - i , , _� �� T�, �� - __ _,- -: . - -, - . 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W -Ma. - ,_ � __ � , - . - , ,��-2- _. �_11_�­_ _�k �__��__ g7 -_,�,-� -.�,;�;,-�, " � ,� - - --� . �� I r- .---- ;-1 . ��,�i,,��­ ­ le,� - __�, I I - - li- -1 NEW - ____ __ ­- - ", , .- - �_ tons, - � -, - -,- �._ - 9 --!��-`-�`�M .�r ., - -, -11- ­ A�0-,�,-,�.: , '. , 1, .- � - - , , - I - R 9t - - � - �_4 � _7 __ ,5- Z __� -M-_,::. _�, , _ r'.. . _ �_ *:��-­-� ,i_- m- �X�5 _� ; ��_ �, ��?_­_­­ .�-. ��­-I-,T,r��­­_�,. :�, - r !t _ ,, - -, . . . ,_ ­ � ­ �_� ­­­ , &_,g0�_ -­ ­Z­­­,�,,� �,�__ - . _ ,C_ - �,!:n - �1-11,�117,��r�v--I_1-4-�I�,�-,�-�-,7 �,--,--L-��-�7�-����-,�.�,�-,----, ,-- - - . ��. - - -1 � --t- suft-er &---V - , _,_F � - -� 9 � a - �r� � , , _;_­�� . - .... � ��, g � �&_ . - - - -, -, --- ,,�� .i�� - I T0 ,� , I � - - �,�'-_�54 cNg�_�iellq�p I I , � - I �_ ��,;,. � �­ - , , - 4.1. ­"t.� '. - - . . , _. I I . - f _ �' ��:�j�-,­,— SO W, �ti�,, 5__ - 1. `,.'s I - "-�:�i,T;r�-Z��,,,--�',-��'t��-i-- " - � �"%,:"-,,��,&'2�' ` `�" -, -_--_� - - - � . � - i��­_�__ -1 - ::�',�� ------ .�� - . _�' - ,��_ M : � I ­ � " - ,� t� �­'. __­__�� ­ - ­� , z. � - - I - �X - _.� , _�M - �� " ft . , - , - - , �e�­ CP2 , 7w; _ lz�il�_ ,_,__n_n5N�1____ � m W - ---- - , _ �-,- ---­�, - - - '7--�� :V-1�,��-"-r*,-_;�­­`_ :�­_.:L:*�,'_'�-�'-, __�. �, �, � I � .1 I I ­!� - ��� ­ - �,� , __ i d� 11 Z , . . -�, _- . � ­ � - _:� R' - __ Wa�i , - _,�_ � T-, .. �11", ---�-,�,,E,i,-'�� ')4-,- ��_ V_ ,M--___- 4�_g� - �� ,�;_ - � ,� _- ,,, �__ - �,_p -�___, .1 _ - - - :� , � � , - � ___ __ � - - . , - i _ M -. -- 2 �� , '. __ � I E.. �,- ­_�� , - - ft , 97��, _W �,��­*j,f�4 - W, __ift��,_ - ­­ __ ­7�':,L_', -, � -;'­�`-__ — - � �� . - , i - - ��_ - � _ - _. - , : 4K�__ ,,-O'.��-,�� - �- jw�_ � Qr�tml.__., 11�.�. ­ , , - ­- �; ; " ,� --� , --- -1 �, �;N_ . �� I Z� ,1*1 ___ 1. ­ 4L ___.�,,- ',­,'�� ��_��-­­,� - ', � z, ­_��z - a:;�O,`-� _-�;f - �- ;. - .-:7! , I . - I � . . . - , . _� ,:_ �. . 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