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The Huron Expositor, 1932-08-26, Page 6J r .1r a k. t" :N . yi . 1 �. +. aaYa , a l . f k , r'f7. F,7,7`7 i I - . I ., t TTV, I 1,1 - � 0 . ' ' , , �f,! , , " 4� - I P°r'' countz y. `qi gue+ss I vvas to'o curia f) he admratted. "I was warned not to travel in the 'heat of -day but how could l see the ,pretty crocodiles if I ,, idn't, 3 Moak the "bug and had to carte home. Mz s, Marsh got it rico. We nearly died:" (By Milford L, Smith, in the St. Williams Ti'mesi-Journal). "Do you hope your Qule,bec expe'di- ti'on will result in valuaible contzibu- (Rev. D. R lvlar,b, the subject of wax, paraffin and resin 3'5 years old tions to science?" "We hope sq. We it -his =46cle, spoke in Seafoirth a slhort reproduces the quavering -voice of a will phoitagraph through yellowin trine ago in ,First Presbyterian little 'boy singing a childish hymn. the spectriym, also through violet, "CihWeh. It will be read with interest It was 'the inventor's s'orn, then fou;, green and red:" Dr. Marsch e.•c'hibirt- hy the, 'many friends he made at that years old, delighting' • . his fat'her's ed the colored filters necessary in time. , friends-.- I , the photography of the photospihere, NORWICH, ONT. Another invention, 'perfected when chrolmaspheire and c'o'rona of .the, sun. "Forever Singing aslthey' shine, Dr. Marsh was at Blackheath, was He hoped the cameras' seared: might . The hand that made then" is Divine the sterlCcrphone, acclainved then as a Aeitect the comiplemept of radium, a This old, Scottish paraphrase syvaluable conrtr ibution to medicine. At- hint of which was gained by Pitts- Ibolizes ,the of Rev., D B. lc cd infringements ents of his Pa ten ts burg scientists at New Haven. Y Marsh,I'h.B., Sc.IJ., F.it.A.b„ Nur- derived hint of financial benefit, I "If you find it, do you suggest its wieh theologian and astronomer who An interviewer, bent on sketching curative powers may be, harnessed?" declarers that where there is knowi- rice portrait of a scicn'thA-divine, "s "That is what we are after. Aetron• edge of both science,, there k no re- rnverwhclnnerl with 'human inrtimacies only has given ci'l°ilization its great - cord, hut I.h'...Iharsh, who has kicked a foot- est benefits." - "As I look into the heavens and hall rely once in his life and sleenr firs. :Marsh is not content ,with ponder on the mysteries of the uni- but five hours a day, finally submit- the ard,timLs duties of a trrini'ster's ,veiste, the old paraphrase seems to 4i.; UA to ini,portunate pleas that he re- wife; she assists 'the astronomier, do - appropriately," he dismisc,ed t h e veal some of the heavenly mysteries ing most of his mathematical calcu- query w'hic'h sought to learn the ef- through the instruiments set in his lation. She will call the •time dair- feett of intense. scientific research up- observatory &-arden. ing tine 141 second Quebec eclipse so on his religious beliefs. He quick4y focussed a 75 -inch tele- the eight scientists, operatingfour In the quiet sanctum or his home, scope—h.is own handiwork= -;upon the cameras for the Hhaanilton centre, which is "both manse and' observatory. sun arid revealed a lone sun sipo'.'. Royal. Astronomical Society, may Dr. Marsh outlined plans for the ex- 'T'h'ere was a staccato description of work in unison. . rpedrition' of Hamilton scientists to iti: significance, couched in seienrtific Quebec where they will photograph termis. Then r.a home-made camera .1111. the eclipse of the sun, Au'g'ust 31, in was affixed and a definition of the The Western Fair attempts to find the complement of sun, almost a foot in diameter, was radium.produced ,within an arm's length of The Western Fair at London is al - Dr. Varsh's retiring personality the lens, ways looked forward to by the people seeimned ra direct contrast to the ro- The secret of the trick, which won a` sr adventures which have tint- Dr. Maash his fellowshipin the -Roy- of �!"este.rn Ontario as the bieges y - vent of the year. e ey tuned his career. Born on. a farm al Ast:•ronomical Society, was a tiny People are coming to realize more near Water's 'Falls, Grey courty, ho lens. - "Simplex simpliciter," he ex- and. 'more that bhe more they know; gained a love of 'mechanics frim his claimed as he tripped' the shutter, the better they are equipped to meet matihen,. who 'al'so was a student of "T can give you a camera with aom etition and the battle of life, the skies. She imparted her Icnowl- hundred fact focus 2n•• a moment with tand�tihat the proper place to keep . edge of the stars to him and he got -this lens." abreast of . the 'times is the madern his: first%taste of ,practical astronomy Dr. !Marsh signed with Captain Exhibition with the latest d,velop- with a "bird's -eve maple compass madsa Bernier in 002 to make a dash to the meat in AgriculWre, Dairy Products, by his grandfather, a Vermont. sur- North Pole and was building a tele- Live Stock, Manufacturing, Comuner- veyor. scope for the expedition when gov- .,cial and Industrial achievements. At 17 be framed a huge barn for 'ernmient officials advised the explor- From September 12Th to 17th y.ou Phis father, The ' in,bers were too err to :plumb the (Canadian Anictic will find every please of endeavor in sturdy for his youthful `,ends aria ho first and then da,Svh for the pole if farming and •nvatrufacturing, gather - had to call in neighbor boyo to help conditions were satisfactory. So the ed together and centralized in one hi,m operate the old-fasl'ionted bocrn3 explorer took the preacher's instru- spot for your convenience; exhibits' machine, He also 'built a tiny :steam m'ents and started explorations which, if you wished to v-isd•t s"par- ang'ine, flitted ik in a bark canoe and which, in a auar•ter century,.toak him ately, would cost hundreds of dollars isped over the' takers. His was prob- to every corner of :the fax north. and entail 'a journey of thousands ably the first canoe kicker. The en- Te'nd'erly lifting .the treasured tele- of miles, :;/well as taking months of gine, fueled with pine knots, drove scope frarn its 'box, Dr. Marsh con- valuable time. a screw the size of a saucer. Re- • fided:' "Captain Bea•nier- sent it to . minder of his boyhood am'bit'ion, the one three. years ago when he retired engine and boiler stand, in the Marsh. to Point Levee, Quebec. He is 86 sltu,dy where the genial m:inaster dein now. See the telescope is stilt car- EnglishJustice Seen orstrated it with keen delight. • ered with the leather casing I made 'Coincident religious and education- to protect the explorer'+s hands • fi•orn As Swift_ and Sure a) experiences sent young .Marsh to 'the- cold metal," (By J. V. MrAree in the Mail and Toronto' with $30 in his pockets to Dr. Marsh accompanied the Can- Empire) launch a college career in rheology .adian• government eclipse expedition . ar,d science. Knox College graduat- to Labrador in 1905 and beaded thy: Thomas S. Rice, the distinguish- ed him. in 1891 and he was ordained British -Bermuda expedition to New ed columnist of the Brooklyn' Eagle, at Eraam'asa into, the Pr•esb' terian Haven, Conn., 20 years latef, The f was a lawyer before he turned to cruredt. Three years tutorinig in sci- latterwas founded on his insatiable I newspaper, work, and criminal mat- ence ,gave him a taste for more and tinkering with the star§. • tors have a special interest for him he went on. to Chicago where de- In 1920 Dr. and Mrs, Marsh ac- since he can speak of them with un - glees of stiemnce and philosophy ey- eepted a call to St. Andrew's Church, 'usual• authority. His last Sunday's entually, satiated his appetite. Harnilton, Bermuda, The watch which cotumtn was devoted to a comparison This recital does not fringe his had served him .faithfully. for thirty -,Of the leg•aI rmethads employed in carr experiences. Funds had ;:o be five years suddenly started to cut up London in the case of _firs, tivira garnered for his board and tuition at antics. Inv- ssdgating•. he learned of- Dolores Barney and those which c-Alvge. Ile boarded with an old ler--ficials cat their time wherever fancy would have been employed in the inan nilly in Toronto, Het house v.•as. dictated. So he set up a me-Idian United States in the, case of a wo- itt di:rrepair so he contracted to re- transit in the yard of the manse and man of the same sor,ial standir.i;, _1St. r-uvato it. Ile spent his ChrkLin-xs' ;;ave the government the correct time, Rice noted that the shooting of Thos vacation building. a chimney .anti, as "A Montreal whip limped int') sport, William Scott Stephen taolc place. on 'r t r e badly a 'ae b ti vii he had no ol.he tools he rat i h, a d m d a storm. •rrr v h c t y £' y May 31- Mrs. Barney was sutnse- mortar with a shingle in weither drove her ,two days off her course." quently arrested and indicted for .. eight degrees below zero Ili. .Marsh recalled. "The captain murder recognized. She .faced either Then the ntiss•ions beckoned and had no way'to correct his time and the, death penalty' or a severe sent• the stud'ent..tao ..a.charg•e at Dwight, Captain Gladowin and Holmes, mem- once for manslaughter. Her trial be the donated lumber he started a hers of my congregation, told him I gan on July 4. Two days later the clurch on McCutcheon's Poin'.,- Lvt would help him'out. °W'bat the devil jury returned a verdict of not guilty, his owh.-ovonds relate the fun he had: do I want with a •min'ister,' he blus- O,n the 36th day after the act charg- "Most of our 1•umnber was stolen an,t tered. He wouldn't come up. So his ed the defendant had received a full taken across the bay. We leamcd friends appealed to !me. I told them and fair'trial and had been acquitted where it was so I got the boys to- I could get a star at 11.30 that morn.- —five weeks and one d'ay.In all pro- gether after service and crossed un- ing. I had fargatten it was Sunday liability the verdict would have been dere cover of dankness. We rafted the and that I wa;s due in the pulpit. the 'same in any United States court, lumber out until the 'wind caught it "It was a pretty fix but I rear- but the proceedings would have been . and drifted it toward home. We Lgot ranged the service to, that the choir vastly different. there at dawn. We worAip;Jerl in was slinging an anthem at the ap- In the first place, Mfrs. Barney the church the next Sunday," hr. pointed time. I slipped out, made would not have been tried in July. Marsh chuckled as he recalled the my observations, set the sihip's chron- She might have been tried in Octobcr, satisfaction of A job well (loin. ometer and resumed my service. The In the meantime millions of word-_ Later that year he and-- the .lake ship sailed -away shortly after noon would have been wHtten about her Rev. John Much, of Toronto, earned and two days later I got a cable by sympathetic women covzespond= the 'grq$itude of Captain Marsh and from the captain saying 'dot.' He cn,ts. Site would have been deluged life pales on the Mary L„ tiny Lake.had check Kl my time with Cuba." with flowers and proposals of mar - of -Bays streamer, for their combiner1; Dr. hlars,h declined to accept sal- Hage. She might even have earned a ingenuity in repairing a broken pro-, ary for his services to the Bermudahandsome sui:n of money by -writing peller under water. • government. "They heard. in 192-31 her civil Gtory of the case, or as it His inventive bent drove the young' that I would like to photograph the 1) would no doubt, have been called, her minister inti" new fields and Thoma,; eclipse so they Gent me a flock of: love life, and would have, contained Edison harely heat him to the phono•' m'on'ey and told me' to go where I 1 Some soun,rl moralizing about the ev- gr•aph. ' liked. I took a party- to New HavenI ils of cocktail parties, and pure love. Dr: Marsh's original hand made r and cabled my son to come down! The • warden of the En'glis'h prison ,phonograph which dclig•ht(,rl Cayuga t f'rc•m Hamilton to assist me," he i w'her'e Mrs. Barney was confined ad- . and Caledonia audile -ores when he w•a; smiler. ; mitten no intervievvcrs. No photo - on. that circuit, is still capable of In neer] of a vacation, the Marshs 1 graphs were taken. Sh,e was not per - playing 2.1 =ong,s without re -wind- trcked to the South Amgrican mission mitten to obtain valuable publicity ing. A time -worn cylinder of. bees- fields and. px;evled around the Orinoco by the method sn often used by wo• men awaiting trial in the Unitce _... „.,. . . _._. _. _-.._-.--- I_.. . _---..._._.-_--.._..-._- . States, namely,' by sending messages of syrnpathy to other prisoners or to Other peep e. who recently had swum ® �i�u the Fngli,h channel or flown the, At- ® ^��pAO )antic. The general idea in E*ng'land A 91 ` MIR was that ,she was a woman who stood 1. . �� aihh6w in a ter•ri•ble .position, perhaps facing the gallows and that her privacy 9%NJT, FMS should not be inta-uded upon. ... Tf"%URJ ILM Her lawyers made no effort to have the trial postponed. No attack was made on the indictment to lay the 1 foundation for a subsequent :appeal. (7��/, There was no furious forensic de- JASPER bate ac este thedefence counsel, to have access to the hninutes of the PIAIrI011ilAL . grand jury. There, was no change 1. Iof venue clem'anded. There was no QAJ K request for a commission in lunacy 1W \ n to 'be issued iv'i her behalf. As Mr. PACIFIC \ Rice says, "No lawyer.-oftTaveher side brake dawn with nerves or epizatic COAST as the day for trial approached and asked far ,a pastponernent until he IV was so far recoveTed than he could ALASKA Flo the 100 yard, dash in 10•Lyz sec- aonds or chits -the (bar (gymna +ium.) A 30 times witllnout rsibapping. No last minute application for a postpone- . This summer take the top -to you can follow your favourite IMent was i made, on the grouted that the Coast you've alwa s ortrlghtacrosstherAntinent. the prdmcipal wiirrJesS for the de - promised yourself. Stop off for gee hundreds of miles of sky- fomite 'had th'er cerbi•fwarte of a shyster a few lags of golf at beautiful piercing mountains. Follow physidan that the witness was ad. . Minaki, in the Lake of tie the rustling, tumbling Fraser fe>rirvg frain all the diseases In a Woods Distbent etinePrairia-s River toVapcouver.P(fsitVi� farmer's almamac. No �niemment at their beet. Stay awhile at jasper, National Park and enjoy the . healthy, happyy recrea• tionsthe"Lod e" , . , provi4es--�in 116c 11111111111 j,; 0 lona. an a trip was asked on the group "shat ' 'idnr• to Alaska. • pion-bantt witnesses for "the deifeniee Pull information had,fled the jurrasdietiorr of the count. regarding routes, No other self -'evident absurdities or fares, etc., from obviously lying subterfuges were of- adian National fared by the defence to obtain brutal• adian National Railtsiays. tY UMOCeSimry trial, a's, they would have ben of- fered in ,a'lmo'st ammy court in hhe r-20 Rev. Uarited Staates when the" dIRP04dant �AA� 'such !a corsipricuou� womianl--- , (A• A0M N. AM .. ftLWAYS was and would havel been gra,nited almost without que'stiron i,'h almtost any 'court iti the Umuted.,, 'S#rates." • •'I " ,. . • z p� f �5f J. i 4 L, 1Nt SA ( Ci y t i r x ^t �: y . i a x �' v i r 1 cat t i e w• r t 9r v a4 Y a �. `i n vi 7 1 -k �. ,r t h is W r 'r l yr r r� , {u �' �',:� 5 n N S to Y ry, 5 � A. r !u , *'N 5 r ,. t t' rl � �'1 t' �. � , � "fir` 1 e'' t iti J s ,�f i , , s u J,r yrkyJ Y , i,. , rl "`al'-�u`r M1'"S4;`r ,4I�.�a �'4 I�rn�r 4�ih - t J is ix , tl'r' S 'y w": r } 5 n 7tA� H Si+r $i a ...;. it u n ! x ,; '., .; •au 13 vJJ�6 r a4�"r 1F, t + ,,- All, } 1. It :IRON E 'OSt1TOR 0I. R ! AUG} 'SIr VIQ Bilious, For Days FRIEND TOLD NSM At Time a getsUntil she From ,Ashdour, ' to ,Astor Took Vegetable Pills ABUT ALL -BRAN Gratefully, Mrs. C. writes: "The first dose of Your wonderful Carter's Little (George Qreel in The Elks ,Magazine) Liver Pills gave me great relief after �— - 4 , ".,I every medicine I tried failed." Because they are PURELY VEGE- The Astor f rti ne colorer than any (headgear. wmulaitian By 1837 .as he, had fore - And It Brought Relief From TABLE, a gentle, effective tonic to both orches huge ac of wealth, is ge "" seen, the slwnv had hit cite wait _ P Constipation 1}ver and bowels, Dr, Carter's Little remarkalble for 1 lawildeiing con- beaver pedis dropped" frown: -six dol- „ Liver. Pills are without equal for car- traits. Behind' -those highpiled (mil- tars ,to one --and Kit 'Carsoni and 'his ; recting Constipation, Acidity Head- lndige ons may be seen gallant daring and honest industn•y and fellow rtrarppetis cuxsred bhe,-haviga and 'bellavrred "hlell every Indian t rilble found 'itself thou - aches, Poor Complexion and mean greed, wrathfully that Those who are bothered with con* tion. 25c. & 75c: red k everywhere. ,stark ps rapacity, frugal virtues and, was full of high silk hales:" stipation should read Mr. Gelpke's Ask for Carter's by E. brutal exercise '08 rpaw'er, There was srtnlll another reason unsolicited letter: . . It was in 1776 that the cobbles of New York felt the solid tread of the other +than dindnishing receipts at the 'back of John Jacolbs mind. He "I have suffered with..constipa- �.r--.,..- _ at w old In the United S'tate's a first •Ashd'our, for so they spelled it then. Heinrich was his naive, aril he was now the richest man, in the Unit- ed States, a' great (banker tion for years. A friend of mine told take A I have tick n ALL -BRAN. me 'to tr y have ttMen several 'days to •secure came, over wibh England's Hessian ..anal a mighty landowner, and. the fur 'busi- ALP -BRAN for the past six Weeks as a jury. do the case of Ruth Sny- -mercenaries, not As "a fighting man, ness was "small potatoes"' c'oanpared a breakfast food. It has regulated der dive lir y s and two nights were however', ,but merely a,s 'a bultcher. An to his other enormous holdings- my bowels as clockwork. Now I devoted to this task, while in ling- amiable "'Dutx'ihman;" he spayed on .Land, after all, was really the would not be without a package at I -and the jury was picked and the after the war, and' in 1784 was jointed great Asitor As, far back as all times. —Mr. Leslie Gelpke (ad - trial concluded in three days. Mr, by his ltaather, Jahn Jaco(b Ashdour, .pass'ion, 1789, the bought two lots) on the dress upon ,request). Rice says that about .the time the Snyder case was 'being tried a 21 -year-old lad from, the medieval ' Bowery Lane, paying $62'5 and as- he, Common constipation—with its -Gray there was a trial in Toronto of two little German town' of Waldorf, There were same Hudson Bay erten prospered, he "bought rhtore. Soma part of his holdings were honest headaches, loss of appetites sleep - lessness is due lack of "bulk" people in ,,oJnew�hat similar .circum- On April 25, 1927, Mrs. on the ship that brought John Jacob pur- chasers, but generally this land ,came — .to to exercise the intestines, Vitamin stanicets. Myra Fisher and Josepth A. Vaughan over, and, excited by their talk of rich rofitsi he sought 'and found em 1 p g P oy- to shim thro.0 'the foreclosure of mortgages. The chief stockholder in B to help tone the intestinal tract. Both are present in Kelloggs ALi.- were accused of the rn'izJrder of the woinan'Is hu:sbanid, • before (Judge trvent with a fur dealer, his' pay two four banks, John Jacob was able to BRAN, as well as iron for the blood. dollars a week and :board. For quite keep accurate rtraek of the financial Riddell, whom Mr. Rice refers to as a 'while be, gained muscle by -beating 'condition of !his feiiHolw citizens, and The "bulk" in ALL -BRAN is Much -. "that distinguished Canadian jur- stored peltries, far mothballs were he used ,this knowledge shrewdly and, like that in lettuce. Within the ist and delightful author." It re- s't'ill unknown,; bort northing ever gave ru•thl'essily. body, it forms a soft mass, which gvired halt' an hour to ,select the Riddell`""lemarked Jahn Jacob greater pain than•to make ' The Eden farm, caveaing 'the gently clears the intestines of fury arzd Justic .money for some one else, and in -1786, istretch that now centers about For- Wastes. Being a natural' corrective, that. it was alt�rgether tall long, a year after his marriage, he started ity-second 'Street and, Broadway, was ALly-BRAN is not habit-forming. On ,the fourth day of the trial they in business for himself. .,, tartan dryer by 'him for $25,000. To- Try ALL -BRAN in place of pills ,. -a r acquitted, so a br u ire w e h d w uti ]sort q 1 m xr �: da it is worth y 5d 0 0 Ob 00. I t $ n he , —so often harmf ul. Just and drugs—Bo s the time occupied in choosing the jury wou'l'd seefm to ,both of them to Now came brave Sine years that make unstinted ca'l'l on admiration. same manner 'he obtained' ipoissession of the Cosine farm an ex- eat two tablespoonfuls daily— If b:,ve been just perfect, With a pack on his back,. heavy with acreage tending .along Broadway from Fifty - -serious cases with every meal. your' intestinal trouble is not re- ,Mrr. 'Eke says that Airaerican law- lawmakers. and interested lay- gay cloth and bright 'gewgaw'sy and a third to Fiftyseventh, and wesit and lieved this way, see your doctor. yers, men dot ,not me sdl 'to go, to England flute in his 'pocket, Jahn Jacob trudl- ed forest aisles throughout the g$x,000' to the iRu son River, ;Hie foreclosed a mortgage for and the ipso • - In the red-an&green package. At to see criminal, justice administerad length and breadtth of the Six Nations ,pellby ito-day its worth that many all grocers. Made by Kellogg its with a reas'onalble degree Of d@- risking the sullen ferocirties of the 'm'il'lions. 'Governor . Clinton's hear, London, Ontario. :patch and expense. They...need' only Indians to 'barter for "their rich catch- falling into diffiicul'ties, thought hi!m- v:sit the courts, in Toxtinto a,, -,d els of ,beaver, martin and muskrat. seH lucky to save one-third o€ his — ' Montreal. Particularly should . they Back in Nei York husky Sarah stood Greenrwi'ch Village estate. The other go to 'Montreal and see a murder trial handled -by Mr, Justice Charles guard over the two -•room home, bear- ing cher !babies in, the back and sell- two thirdts, going to Astor, now pays the estate an annual income of $1,- A five-year rotation of swedes,1b A.'Wilson• in the Superior Court of Ing funs in the front. •00,01)0'00. oats seeded, clover, timothy, cats is oats see The rim, ti sod is low- 1' the Province of Quebec. It may be so bat we do not share, Mr. "rice's en- It viii nothung for th'e indtamita(ble young Ge"rm"an, strong and round- i7' ,k � ed at 5, 71 and 9 int% depths in the thusias far' sheer speed in the mat• dministering barreled as a horse, to cover thou- The avarice of the urian. was in the nature 'of madness. During the panic fall ton three of the plots, while other are ,ploughed 5 and 7 inches ter of ,justice. , Per- sontally we are so -•steeped in sin that sands of miles a year, ranging from the wilderness of Pennsylvania to the of 1837, when the very fate of the pilots -d'e'e in the spring. The nine-year we believe it would take' considereible frozen solitudes of Hake Champlain, nation hung in the balance, he wan- Without other concern than to take' average yield of oats following the fall is 47.6 bug':els, time for aur innocence of anything to ,be estairlished, and it now trudging .through mow to his full advantage of every distress and ploughed plots 45.6 bushels and 47.2 bush'el's per • probably would, be established ;better after a. waist, now ,driving his canoe, up erkek or down river. He knew no French, ,it ,is recorded that he floreclosed! acre reiveotively, for the depths giv- month than after a week. More than ... no Indian, dti'ai'ectl: and ,his English more than 60 mortgages: Having bought, 'be ra're'ly stolid, for from Ger- en above. The 'plots ,ploughed 5 and 7 imheis in the spring have averaged• once we Gat in the Toronto .police c.ourt and marvelled at the celerity was a broken thing, but red man and, white liked his courage many the had imported the idea of 40,6 and 40.7 'bushels per acre re- which seoned •to imaply the gift of a and cheer- fulness, and lowed to lister: to the 21 -year leases. It was up to the ten- ' spective'ly. mind reader in the magistrate. It tunes' he coaxed from his flute' at ant to develop the hand and erect 'buildings, and at $he end of the lease, , • The yield of swedes the following after the land was ploughed at may be that in such court's justice is served in 51 per cent. of the cases. night around the fire. Cautiously 'at fLxvst,, bunt more bold- it was the Astor policy not 'to "renew, ywear these 'depths varies from 17.17 tons In other words, the average .of ,ludic- *wisdom ly .later, he established his own chain but to rent the lot and improvements to another 'tenant at a higher figure. per acre for the 7 -inch sipring 'plough- ed to 18.96 tons for the 5 -inch ial is proibably slightly .bet- ter than could be attained ,by tossing of postal in the; Iroquois country and on the Great Lakes, sendinlg, out 'his', ,Every year .saw 'the Astor rebus ptdt fall ploughed plot, not a sigpificant ' a coin in each case.: _. own fur brigades, and by 1794 was ,go higher with less' -and less being ,done for the "tenants'. Where once he difference. These results reveal the following able' ,to quit the woods and shay in .had enjoyed reeipeot and liking, he points, of" interest: (1) The klleep, . Some Humorous Ads New York. Iron economy had, been a necessity during the years of strug- was now :hated and des'pi'sed, but public loathinghad no Power to !bat- ploughing of sod land did not bring about an increased in For ,Sale---Baiby, carriage, slightly gle, )but improved circumstances worked no change either in Sarah or ter 'drown the wait of gold • that shut '}Lim ,off from hu'm'anity. Time howev- yield' grain; (2) There was no appreciable in - � crease in the -.yield, of swedes grown used. 'Going dot of business. Just received .a fine lot of Ostend Jahn Jacob. Thrift had 'beicome av- arice and when, he. voyaged to Lan- er, was an enemy. that could not be on land that had been ploughed deep rabbits. Persons 'purchasing' will be don in 1799 with a c'arg'o of furs, he .denied. At .the last he took his nour- isohment' from a woman's breast, and the previous year; (3) The results indicate. that fall ploughing will giver skinned and cleaned- while they wait. No -having once tried one went in the steerage, enduring its hardships cheerfully 'because'o£••the for exercise his atttendants !tossed- appreciably higher yields than spring person these money saved. hi'm gently in a ,blanket, nevera'l iplougting• on •mvedium to heavy clay of coffin's will ever use any other. - * * times a day. Still, with incredible, soils.. 'Wante(4—A good girl to cook, and The London .trip marked a tuTmng "'t Lt still he hung i y, u g to life, and .till an _insatiate greed convulsed him.. Par - one that i011 make a good roast or Point in Astor's• life, far not alone don, in his life of John Jacob Asitor, broil and will steno well. did he sell his--pedtries at a juicy pro- relates the following conversation be- T o all through my Wanted—A competent pete person to fit, but he learned of the rich thiole. ,�ree'q, :the octogenarian and one of is on life with surprise and impatience with surprise undertake the sale of a. new medicine trade,. and his moon•face went red as his rent collectors: the people who think it clever to that will ,prove highly lucrative to he heard of the fabulous prices that One morning this gentleman eban•c- 'criticize adversely everything of the undertaker, furs brought in ,Canton, Siberia, once ed to enter the room when rte was beauty which is original and new to .'Wanted—A- .boy to open oysters 15 thick with sable and emnine was now enjoying tboutf exercise; The thein--nviheiher a stature, a pieture� y ears old. trapped roped out, and the mandarins of cis old man ,cried Dort from ,the middle or. a ,poem.—Lad Y Oxford and As - the Flowery Kingdormi were o'pemlig of the,blanket: quith. their ports ibo any ship that brought r "Has ,Mrs. Blank "paid that rent o: - Many things now said in the name the furs they Loved: yet?" • •-- of economics are such as to :make �t By 1803, he hada mullion dollars 'his "No,", replied the agent. Canadian Cattle in Demand at an economist iblush for the reputation afloat, to quote own admission. "Well, ,but she must pay ,it " , said Glasgow. g of his craft.—Professor Lionel Rob- Ships of his building carried ,peltriles the poor old. matt. burs. to Chinn:, 'bringing back rich cargoe:i Mr. Astor," rejoinred the agent, 1Recent 'advice 'from, the Canadians of tea, silks, cinnamton and ponce- "•hut she can't spay it now; she has Government Trade Commissioner at In the books of Lewis Carroll, as lairs to (be sold at enormous profit; also selling furs in the London mar- had misfortunes and we mrust give her time." Glasgow, Scotland, is that Canadian) c.'attle frond S. S. "Sularia," number - .in tho e of no other writer, we find ket, .his vessels returned with wool- ' "No, no," said Astor. ,'I tell you in., 443 bead, met with an active de - the true mirror for our own genera- lens and cutlery. she can, pay it, and she will pay it. maid. They were ' of exceptional tion.—LOrd David Cecil. War with England, while' it con- You doWt go the right way to work quality, nearly all polled Aberdeen, -4 vuls¢d the rest of the country, work- with her." Angus ,Crosses, Hereford and Sbort- ed no interference with John Jacob's The agent took leave 'and mention- horn Crosses, mostly good prime beef Folks, Meet the Mattress schemrte, of acquisrition. Now one of ed. the anxiety of the old' man with or suitable for short keep purposes. the richest men. in Armerica., he had regard to -this unpaid rent to his son, The attendance of buyers was large, Walker, First of His fiat" established close contacts with po'liti- who counted out the requisite sum, many farmers being present as well A macadam road and a first class cal powers and many and lucrative were the privileges eattended to him. and told the agent to give it to the old man as if he had received it from as wholesale and retail beef traders, from' various cities. About 70 per' matins,- have one thing in common. In 1808 he had 'beaten the embargo the tenant. cent. of the cattle would go far Isut only one, of course., if thy; mat- that held other ships in port, serol- "There," exclaimed Mr, Astor when slaughter and 30 per cent for further r r,•,;s i- really first class, • I ing a ,vesaeI to China and making he received the money. "I told you. feeding. The Black :Cattle sold from is, The New l'orker tells us in $200,000 on the cargo of tea brought that she would pay if you went the £21 to £29 per head, while the color - an erlitiwial note, a slight crown in hack. In 1812 an artier from. Albert right way to work with her." ed cattle brought from £18 to M. the nri,Idle; and out of this crown a Gat'iatin, secretary of the treasury, The end came finally on March 29, Beef cattle made from £1 per head slightly hald man named Harmon allowed hirmi to transfer his furs fromi 1848, when'he was in his '85th year, more than at the -last sale. Rumzie has built hn unusual career Canada to :1Za'ckinac, a bit of favorit- The bulk of his $30,000,0010 fortune, Again, on July 21st, 532 head of —jnattrr .s -walking. g• iG vet than cautsed no smart outcry. colossal for the timie, went to hits son. Canadian cattle from Si. S. Air - This t Town, or ridge, The New It was also charged that an Astor So, died the richest man of his thria" were sok, at Glasgow and Porker +ells uG, "is to prevent the agent, 'a British subject, s'tippecl over day, and but for tris lave o moarey, met with a sharp demand. The s'hip- mattres, from developing, as time the line with mews of the de'clar{{i1tiory one who might have been a great rent was more a miffed lot than the goes on, a -gully or gulch where the of war, giving the enemy an it va it mart. exceptional quality of the previous sleeper's body rests.,' A cer-bam lady tage than led to Hull's surrender at shipment, but tilts cessati6h of ship - ignorant of this, ,became instantly Detroit, and there were likew(see de- 'r ' merntsl from the Irish FVlee •S'dalte suspicious when she rec'eiv,ed a cus• finite assertions that he worked an owing -to the imposition of a traiS tolin-built mattress, into her home the "underground" between his American Depth of Ploughing . of 20 per cent. created a keen de - other day. posts and the British lines in Can- mand. Prices were from 20 shilling9 "'Seeing a bulge down the middle, ada, trading reports. Be this as it The question of the best depth to to £2 a ,head or more higher than she.thoug'I:t something was wrong, may, it is certain :that he received plough fo'r grain :and -'subsequent the last. The shipment originated in arid phoned' the makers of the mat- news of the ,treaty of peace several crops has' been asked -by many in- 'both Ontario and the Western Prov - tress to send right over." Continu- days in advance of any otber i .ew terested in the gaewc run of improved inces and included (black polled lbul- ing the story: York xneachanrt, biros enabling biro to methods in agriculture. An expert- hocks of excellent quality and several in an hour or so, Harmotr Rumzie dumphis stock of goads at war pric- inenit was started in 192? at the Do- ,well-bred lobs of cross 'S'horthorn and arrived; pulled the mattress on to the es, minion Experimental Farm, Nappan, 'cross Hereford bullocks suitable for floor, covered it with brurlap, took " * .x Nova Scotia, to, secure data. that short keep. The success of those two off his =hoes, and began solemnly Stringent Yawns forbade the intro- might answer this question in so far shipimients illustrates strikingly tate walking up and down on the mat- duction of liquor intto the Indian coon- as a medivan to heavy clay loam soil. possibilities orf this market for good; stress. f • ry, but Astor brushed bhearr aside, for is etincerrned. Canaidiaai exWe. , This prank delighted the lady and site took her shoes, whiskey was ab all lmpartant factor. ' off own thinking to 'o' lits- R in the fur trade, Drunken Indians 3 rn rrn, wmzre discouraged her. 'Hie takes his work steriously- could not only ,be abort-weighed,but they could be over -"urged. The rifle ,. fl• �.R h f. =p No Jumping up ant% down, nothing but 'the steady tramp, tramip, tramp, that cost Astor $10 was- traded to. the Indians for $30; powder 20 cents furlong after furlong, till the mgt- a pound, for $4 is pound; a dbllar , tress is level. A furlong is one-e�ighith of a mile. brass kettle for. $20i; a $2,,110, beaver 'trap for $10; ten clennrbs- a pound to - Mr. 'Rcunvie is the only m!attresm- baicco for $2 a- pound. Even, after walker in ,due trade, says The New 'bantling over sill their ftfms, virtually Yorker, as it tpzweeedm with its ac- every Indian t rilble found 'itself thou - count of this remarkable vocation. He does walking in addition to his sands of dollars in dedrt, Whiskey other regulation work. It would and hiigih wineis, as a matter of 1pet, were ,profitable as well as befuddling, take two or three weeke of eteady, for even after excessive adu'lterat'ion sleeping on a vattreas to wear off the rice ran fr m $25 to $50 a gal - the crown that Harlinorn Rumzie can lion", vralk off in, an 'hour or so', 'Small wonder that by 1834 AAwr's He gets tub or three calls a month •go annual profits were running close' to to • mattress -walking --amore calls n nmillioaii. A rich return was; the sar- in su•maner than in winter, more calls prise wdtetn' John Jacob suddenly an- iti Novevn'ber than in any other month, He calla bits visits "sittia irs," nounceid ithart he was going to db - iso'lve his Almenleam. Flaw rCompnmy SSametiimes one sittihrg iJs enough to level 'and get o'uft orf :the 'businreisis4 Two off a mattress, isome'ti'me,s he lie,: to go back. He walks two or years bofore;, however, ,the shrewd 'old Haan realized: that the Aealpeir three furlohga at a sittiamg. 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