HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1899-11-09, Page 7le • , egeetete.
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es oeitnet, if they tre ever so
itia""1411"444t h because he will stiok to the Man "
Cultural eted will ewe. (atrength to the tab -
prowl; ilint. Poe" lite bills or Inter.
Man Who °ate his float.
MINYA
WHAT OAT= M4,11GE, IS.
• (Waft Mange le e very anclexit Van
teetieue disegoe. Mole* deserthed It.
la dile to a parasite, the Aearna
proviaed with tour palm M
lege, coVered With haira, and sealell
and furnished with muation (MN on
&mod With Mewl or. hooka, and Pt,"
vided with Mandible's or jawe.
The fttreale inseeta are lea.ger
the Melee. they lay from ten to twtan
N-ty ego, At the end et from fou t
eleiren natei tbe young larvae b ;toll
' They 'oha,nge, their forna, I :tut
dergO rnetamorPhosia 'three o
timee beforalbee arrIve th
tate eteiree ana, are Able to relar
They' mature in from tourteen
ettteen deeps, 'and live from ttiree
tele weelpti after laying, Omit Me
inp 'longer and more active d
weather. Ilk a dry 'Place the
their Vitality, in from four toeix
, 4
/111SSIAN CAVALRY.
. i
t, team 01* ',Yet it IYatilltt Pray lin Arnim.
oat Path
i,.'
; Mi Aims impossible to dOubt that in
, the Milt of a cenfliot between th
a forbet'of the Dual and Triple Alliancea
a. conflict Which, In the opinitet 0
Mater is sooner or later Inevitable, the
n Cavalry of Itinisia would Play A role 0
- tins first magnitude by eitrue Rot only
O ot , ta nuMerteal superiority ever the
, c bined cavalriea of Germany and
,. etria-Hungary, to. winch it would
yt be opposed, bat also owtng to the uni-
que organization, training and meth -
Ode of action which differentiate it
.
•frOm the cavalry of env of the great
0..ifuttighboring powere, net less than
# from that M Russia'o atlY, France. tie"
cerding to the -British Admiralty and
House Guards Gazette.
To begin with, Enema. is a country
extremely, riell in hams, the number
of which has' been estimated by Col.
Soukhotine at 20,000,000, of which at
least 11000,060 are saddle horsele-tit for
1 the purPoses a War, .while.the author
of "Latkivalerie Russe " bolting his
calculatione on official returns of 1,-
078 squadrons and 160,000 horses in the
aenty, shows. that the cavalry M Rue-
sze would, ou mobilization, exceed the
combined avalriea of Austria-Hun-
gary and G 'many by 25,000 men. The
Vrance, Militraire also, which hati de-
voted considerable attention to the
subjeot, aeers that it is not owing to
the consciousness of this numerical ad-
vantage alone that the ttuosian cave
etre feels itself to have a crushing
suPeriarity over all possible adver,
series. It has boldly entered apon an
entirely new 'path as regards organ-,
ization and inilitary training,. there
being now left in that huge body of
mountee • troops, 'if We Include the
twelve xegiments of the Guard, only
tees types of oavalremen.-the dragoon
and •the Cosecelc. As regards the
formee, to whoni it is more and more
sougbt to assimilate the Cossack, the
ideal steadily kept in views is to nuke
him • an equally effeoient ' fighter',
w,hether .mounted or dismounted, in
the shock action of the charging horse-
man as in the fire action of the coin-
batants coi foot.. -:
This aual foie, only reluctantly ac -
°opted by cavalry in other•armies, is
one of which the Russian is fitted. in
nature and by the traditions of his
race; but the new organization hea
tor all, that, been scathingly' attacked
by' German and Austrian -especially
by German -military writers,' whose
.contenticin is that a tool intended for
two quite dilferent 'purposes is geed
for neither, and that for cavalry fight7,
ing en foot oan never he other than
exceptional and abnceenal. • To argu.-
ments of this kind the Russians reply
that their cavalry, as inialry, hi fully,
equal to that of any otber powee,
While at the same tines, owing to its
Peculiar organization and training, it
is equal, when fighting on toot, to the
partormance of special Mance with'
•which Getman or other, cavalry would
be ueable to grapple. It te asserted
that this advantage, joined to their
-nunierical superiority, would enable
the Russian cavalry to score import-
ant success against any hostile 'cavalry
at all events in the early stages' el
operetiOns following mebilization: It is
generally admitted, according to the
authorities wham we ha.ve cited. above
that Russia could put hi the field 155,-
000 cavalry to the 112,000 of GermailY
and Austrie-Hungary combined. ••
.
be
rop
tose
daYe
ot the different aetiaeOtio dtstga
hill.thent, as *ill alao ptitae 40111. -
tit", lee. tureentine, tar, ,t0b MO so-
Utien, sulphur and soft e‘tiTi
• ture of nulohur and •11
int'? an emulsion with
Wa,im water ie paitliule.r1b• tractive
to theau,
„The Parasites live on, hepeurface of
1'Pe'licin and adhere, to 'the, fatty mat-
ter and the_haire, Thbr Prodaee
litter*, inflatitmation.. of the akin
throngh the Admen. 'stings which
theY They
vvith a inagnifying
A mix -
made
- a
e eately .. seen
bets uPon atiY
dark surface. In ha citing the. afflict-
ed anireals, ahould ene of the para-
mtea get upon ma they' quiekly die.
.1gange is never d veloped, but from
__mange a speetan us cure has neVer
been teen,: The ly sate diagnosis
18 tbe•mieroscinido search for the Ac-
, time the. Paraaite is deposited upon the
eras 13ovie- Aftei, expotiurc from the
- body tit tbe ilm et the infla,mraation
et tbe ekin Otoret been inounative per-
„irrd, ot. from twoseto six weeks, depend-
'ing epon , the „nember. of perasitee
' tranonaitted, , • •
.A.nimit4 whieh ' are emadated or
weak ana'an poor condition EITO partic-
ularly predisposed.' The disease first
•alppeameaa oemples and vesicles, then
scalin4:,,and 'the formation of crusts
4
and scats,: '' hese aro attended, by in-
tense 'itch' , Worfed during the hot
Part Of the ay. Animals scratch, rub
and,hitts theinselves on affected parts,
the' hate !gas, out, the skin becoraes
bloody and -thickened, ulcerated, scab-
by, And wriii)iled. The .whole surface
et the beey 'mak he invaded; bug the
'the neck 4 d shoulders, the base of the
I/
dicsease use lle begins on the sideof
hence antlethe root of the tail, spread-
ing the ' to the back and the ribs,
Tree 14 should: be preceded by e
carefa °rubbing et the akin to clear
off t (trusts and, must be 'renewed
afte ernes time, The first treatment'
on Mote t he parafite, but does not
k' _,J e eggs. In about a week these
e birth, to new paraaites. In inanY
the it is necessare to make a third
lutation. .• .
;elk ...i
FOOD FOR THE bAIRY.
Formerly the dairyman planted the
smalletit amount of. corn. possible for
food for his cows, and depended upon
grans and hay whenever possible. TO -
day we ate .going gradually 'more- to
corn a,nd, leap to hay. The reused is
that we can get more from An acre
•nr Corn "than we cen from hay, both in
euantity and quality. •
Corn far outranks hail for the dairy -
mates needs if it is properly fed.
Whether we out the crop for the 'silo
before the grain is readefor harvest-
ing ,or 'simply raise it from the grain
and feed the stalks 4. the stocks, we
get more for our labor' per acre than
lithe land wad used fox rattling .hay,
Corn la a wonderful food plant, and
. undotibtedly the finest, in the world.
The ignoiance of feeding the grain too
fiseelyoto animal's aa an'exclusive diet,
ned.catising sickness thereby, does not
. id the leaot tnjure the real value of
Zore cie a food. It merely shows that
the true way to use the crop for food
'Wee not understood. W.herever corn
does its best oats and pease thrive
also, and theae erops are inteeded by
suture to supplement that. of core.
They should be raised in limited way
with corn and fed in conjunction with
Then the dangers to cattle so of -
'ten threatened by injudictotte feeding
or corn will all f38 averted. With an
amPle supply of corn and some oats
and peaae we have a standard of ra-
tion that cannot well be excelled.
These crops should be raised so that
the, dairymen need buy as little by-
prodUcts as possible.
The faShion has become in recelit
years to recommend the feed of by-
products of factories, such as linseed
and cottonseed meal, and to Ignore the
by-products of the farm. Undoubted-
. ly this faehion has helped .the large
concerns operating in these by -pro -
ductal and the micas for them have
steadily advanced *under the demand,
ao that to -day when a farmer Pat's a
400d round wit° for a ton of any of
these by-produete, it Is question
whither it would not pay him better
to buy a ton of oats or corn from a
neighbouring farmer at the market -
price.
We ahould learn to depend uponeur
farm oropa for feeding, SO fax wipes-
sible, and with a little skill in man-
agement it is aft entry mattor not to
be forced to buy' any food for stock.
In thie age of seience and ititelligent
farming every daityman ahould know
something of the relative value of
goods, and of the relative case of rais-
ing them in difterent elections of the
coutitry, but. by the ^way that some
negleist their opportunitiea, and drift
with the tele it would seem as if the
husineee Of dallying was crowded with
many left-cwees from other prole/s-
ienna, and took to this business as
last resort. Soonest or later such peo-
ple will learn that it takes' skill, in-
dustry and intelligence to he a suc-
cessful farmer or dairy,tin.
' STAND: THE HOG.
• tf one hen learned hew to breed
add iinprove n hog, to feed and Ohre
ter hime and if he has kept the wolf
from the door, in bygone days, paid the
mortgage anfil etore bill, put you on
salad battle, and been a rewarder
,tif all year %are ..tola your trial's of pa-
tience, them etand by him now, even
if his pries is to low that maily de-
, clare hint a robber. Sheeproen have
add the g/ory of the hog hats depart-
ed, the lgolden hoof would moon wear
the oroten and everybody would eat
Mettake now aftd for evermore, and
' wear °et* I inebead of cotton. Soon
Fe.itirenkld leant, how to ptesetvit the
allheeietrhotte, the lime and loins, and ben-
- Allah /kirk from European Markets.
Then teMeer alma% the etately lisefer
and mare, "I am king and wilt reign
hareetter, AWay with the hag It nee-
nt Obeli het said that hale king I° But
the day le not far diatent When the
hhtf Will hit teasal the throne. ands aid -
too to all, game, hation, eiluatige„
Pige feet and Win ere too securely
„ fastened to thet astcend appetite of
men tn bn die/edged. Pokes* will find
that they Make 4 iniebtke in Wolin
hie ptideobelOW poet slerlrixinttioa• "8
hog will atiok to ble Mit terms
In 40e4te of annibine. greed or d•ishon-
eety, So ettific, fo hire! DOWn hilit
FRENCH FINANCES.
finvernmeut Uns alone Into the Ad-
. terming itustnessi to Help Its Treasury.
-France, whose national, debt bas -been
growing every day since 'it paid its
milliards of redemption money to Ger-
mane, after exhausting apparently
eitery -conceivable means of tatation,
has lately tairtik to advertising as a
MOOS of money making. This method
had already been seized upon by Nem -
emus municipalities which have field
the space on certain public buildings
to advertisers, As the railway sta-
tions, gendarmeries, custom houses, ee-
trepots, barracks aud numerous °thee
public( buildings, as well as the pack-
ages in wheel several kinds of mono-
poly goods ire sold, are entirely under
the control of the Government, It is
evident that it has 'advertistng facili-
ties at its command which entirely
eclipse in extent and value anything
that private advertisers can 'offer. The
valets °Oleos may be greatly enhanc-
ed by legal reetriotions upon the own-
ers of private property, preventing the
sate of space for similar purposes.
Tne lateat device of this sort is the
'alettre annorices,” or advertising. post-
paid, letter sheet. One half the sheet,
of ordinary letter size•papex• and rath-
er poor quality, is devoted to advertis-
ing,. except a apace about 41-4 by 5
1-2 inches, reserved tor the addrese, on
which is printed a fifteen -centime post-
age stamp. The letter is written on
the other half of the sheet, Whist is
then ingeniously folded end 'held by
a gummed flap. The whole thing ts
aold for 10 centimes ; that is, two thirds
of the price of single letter postage,
or exactly the satne as a postal
card.
thie means the publisher eaves
MI6 third the postage and gete hie pap-
er and envelope for nothing. Norain-
allY the /scheme is worked by a corpor-
ation, Societe Anonyme ; but, as it sells
postages at one third off and has its
wares for sale at the postoffices and
Govermnent, tobacco ,shapst it is prise-
tieally a Goverament etiterprise. The
new eyagra will evidently take the
place of the postal card; it will de-
crease the sale of poatage stamps, but
the( receipt& from the advertising will
enable the Government to make a aub-
statitial profit out of the project.
FOR BRIDES40-13E,
Not lohg ago a young lady Ilving
in a small town was about to be mar -
•
• e.
••••/a.
eee,
)1. h )
1.
ett
t ,
"
, %An:,
04,1t4,.
'a+ ,"
HOW THE BIaTISH OFFICERS GET KILLED IN, WAR.
The extraordinary fatality among the leaders of the British soldiers in action at Smith Hill and Elands-
leagte is clearly explained in this picture, While the men in the rashes up thetkeptee took adVantage of every
cpooveerr,mtahrekosffimeeenr! esteemed it their duty to stand erect. In this poSition they beceine conspicuous quarry for
4rk.
'ate
And he is but 40 years old.
liE HA It is imnossible to conceive that this 'ELEVEN DAYS TO DORN
•
CAUSE TO WOR,Ri ,„
• -enYY, nuisenlar man, eix teat ene in
. his shoes, wee ever a weaklin,g tient '
• • • • • • r.
BY KRUOER'S FORCES. ti r. Oni obengu, OA t
la. lled him "the
etite is a won- KLONDIKE REGION IS NOW A COM-
FORTABLE SETTLEMENT.
CECIL RHODES MAY BE CAPTURED %13x.°8d tcledfl
i teraintional taw Will Not Avast min His app
,S101111 lifiallleti 00111 RW110008104 NOW Carr,'
man who eats a whole wen ey for hie
dinner."
eheit-naooes was sent to Kimberley te _ ,treonattis Right Ditto the hohl ma,
nit, Unt lives la Ineetotte own Pliers .
Most Hated enemy. . NO MORE PRISON FOR HIM. evie Frost in the Ground.
if oars mid 06.11 of Living •in [mewl-
,‘
Oom Paul would rather have the '
seal of C cil Rhodes for it Christmas
P e rookit Did Not -WO' to Warn'.
present, than the Kimberlee diamond country is the condition ot affairs by
It is well known that old baohelors rail and by water to Dawson City and
Mines, though heels after both with are perverse, So
all the. fervor of an intense nature. we ratty .repost the e p
' th Klondike t the resent time, says
Eleotrie light steam heat and .
after Doing a erisoner Twelve Tears, comforts of travel in a long settled
I The wet" the" ter $ emuutet 11"4- THE SUNDAY -SCIIOOLlod.44,TM tt Vgd 7=0 ,
ler et the plek and /Move/ le a dollar .
a day to board at any one of t 1,119fri aloe. Be not_ ire *prod a them. An
injunction winch Idoct and ensits soot -
twenty hOteh0, and Mettle. range trent
*2 tO *4, depending upon what you INTERNATIONAL LESSON, NOV. 12 onto moot frequente repeater/. ;Bee'
God's! preseeoe that one man with-Ciod
There is very little rowdylem going Nee. e. tee, 44)1•11(el lame Eistelle.411, to mightier then many without him,
pQleeeltlaPinakwe°then eitterW441Fkree atthme amiainPe°'ing. -*Oise 7?.41itteCiTbia°11AatLeirTli4Bigh Perstan and your da Ittero, your witrea ant{ .
right for your brethren,. yeer eons
towns of Denver or !San Orancesoo, and
that ever,ybody cameo a ann. It us not
eo. If they eaten you with a gun in
the town tbey arrest Mr arid gtve Yon
aix monthe et hard labor.
THE KLONDIKE 1$ CIVILIZED.
Tbat la proven by the Improvemente
put in ao rapidly up there.
It is not enttrely due to the mount-.
ed police that the countre is 60 PeaCes
Ole. 'Die min are all good, men,
There are po foreigners there who will
work for lamest nettling. The miner
is a miner. He knowe his work and
he demande hies pay. Colonel Steele,
of the Northwest Mounted police has
won the respect of Americana and Bri-
tiithere alike. There alweys will he
disputes in mining towns. concerning
plain* and 13takes. But Colonel Steele
lute alwayo handled these little diffi-
culties aucioessfully.
Besides that the men love tbem be-
tause of the effective mail system thee
ebl lera Weinegwebatethaneb ltihSraehaeicmdetUagor inwnohgti et hg oh e et ee el ttrreaodeutge tat:. . a04 lal Id I t fia.jutudmahona.ntikmeoaribion, ammo and Israel of the people. Habettgeons were coats
histor,y, was the 'little kingdem must .have greatly inspired the rest
The mounted police have relay stations en before the fury., ofAttuhemeorten hteart ta..io.i: hof9usmectiol; Tjhuedahru,leasescoWmeimreanhdeirnegditoafrfif,
, chieftains. They .stood behind all tne
Thee cerry the "mall on dog -sledges,
every twenty oe thirty miles apart.
snider's. Its people, like the Jews, Were ceps should stand, so as to direct with -
the way.
dothdisettdtno:oeso foromdstatphtarowoda.roinvientrotbstelotnaggwuocarhya:techoog; Dexzkinleiedi, aanndd INnedhiveinicleiaahl A4nmdmoothnieteer ,aeliwhoe Oa being in
17. The statement of this "verse is
.
with Whose hiatory we ate f miner
a , tn,e.t the °amnion 'Workmen frora Jer-
miles, is covered in. a, reraarkably ,iisalein, and. from the surrounding
short time and the boye in Da.weon grew to be fa,verites in"the heathen' country wake aexaed while they work-
CtwIterlvegetto tilfoeutrrtemeenil dtarysem. Seattle in ecoxutrralsot.ioAnt,thbouurgnhofTaobtiaa.hranwraost onfiavloeZ ed, the bearers of burden's especlally •
There is very little quartz mining if holding weapons in one hand while
we r g . y un era an t e in they worked with the other.
i htl d t d h • tima-
i• •
1
S.
hour, but It (mete from! le to ti?
member the lord. itch a. moral pow -
eat. On an avere.ge mete a mein. 1115 mobuttailog the Well* or earositilettee er cameo with the ague/manses' or
a day to live,
141"r 11/1110 In Samaria' He wa4 Q4 rearer ifii=4 POC'rliatL aaDrIVIT4103:4ttbgr
Moabite extraction, and had come art- building their walla, tbis gam:neat al-
Odlinvia:01: tvitroatim niloworonobailtittemm. tTehc:uagh lit::: .aateovv,itawt:1140,. beeatenie wi ithhout :I.e. walls
graphipal rivalry' between
line on whieli the Hebrew kingdom band natone! of their homes or dear *nee waa
tit° citles °I that we reetuerunred.
nvotaa, :::32, aeisezNehaMiala.
Samaria and JOruealein bad become profoundly belle
ation M Jerusalem under so vtgorous of rebuilding, which haGde,dtemb:rfellrleit;
this 'thief city, of Paleottee. The reator- trated tbe plates for attack, the work
a governor as Nehemiah. threatened ceased' was "SuP•ed.
16, This attack taught NeliMmiah a
Sanballat's pre-eminence. There are
Wills. .
indicatione in thit otory that Stinbak. learianbunda--nftriromprothpataredtimtrfern1; boo
lat was saPportted by a oartY in Jer. Nehemiah's servants, eornetimes called
iitialera. Ills daughter was married to lik.!8 Vnulog In
_ en, were hie. body.getirda
a grendoon of the high, priest, Elia- brorgIT vi'llilh TiTntTot:g11:4 :Steer:lit
oldb. Toblan, A Per&ian officer annul*" was the need of hurrying the work,
entlY atilt higher fin rank than Stin-' and so few were the workers that he
ballet. Eaot of the little kingdom of detaohed otne half of theee' men to
Jedate tied a therm in its aide througb work upon the walls wbileAbe other
half etood guard Such an examPle
done in Alaoka, tbe moat of it is plac-
er raining. Of course, when the wa- tion oi Scripture, he laa,d risen to be 18, Raildets. Bre-Terry thug ex -
a favorite "at the court of Artaxerxes,
and, like Nehemiah, plains; "Unlike the bearers of 'turd -
ter ta frozen up for two te four months
lap ever on the next week, and he may suspicton of expreeeing sympathy with , dogs and wee dig out the soil `end pile it up link his forces with those. of Nehe-
had noW been ens,. who could woek with one hand
witial hung girded by:their sides." He .
in the winter there is no washing and carry a weapon with the other,
done. But the' week goes on just the tna.de the governor of bis own nation. the. builders needed both hands in
same, In the fall, winter and.aering But he did not, ao one might expecte their work, and f3o carried swords,
the dangers% of Ohincoot Pass near the sluice boices. When the wa- rolah.; but, on the contrary, joined sim- that sounded the trumpet was by me.
The Austrian wlio early sought ad- reached front Toronto bY rail and by ning freely' we dump( the dirt into the ilar to those which had aroused Sanbal- of all •tee 4rItmen and of all the
. remark. nutde by a famous bachelor a .11. letter from Dawson.
A man of Krnger's strength can hate •
•
01 hours a. (lay and have seine left to yeer or wo ago without arousing
There is .00 more use for sleds and
allow' it to warp hie judgment to a it'
are now over. HaWion City can be - ter js warm in the ;summer and run- enemies, and probably for reasons sire- That is to ea I saw/ the commander
certale extent. • • . .
%endure abro
Patine nee high in the Egyptian one miles portage ariaund the grand can" intertering with each other, and it .
HALF A MILLIOkINIGOLD DUST -
choke of passion and a slight twitch oapitve in the, Su,dan. When at length •ne,
eee «arrow gauge railway which bas stowed 'mac in tinen4a at the foot that Judah should be divided between •
boxes and Wash out the gold. I have lat's energy AMMO/lend Samaria were forces, and all orders came directly;
Whee Kreger can-brtng himself to ad, and, Who, as Blatla boat with the exception of five seen aa mach ad a far enough apart to flouriah, without from me.
speak of Rhodes at all he invariably
Galls him "that mu d " 'th
vice, spent many years of his life a yon of 'Wht R 'd
seemed to be to the • interest' of both
of a man's ed and the door was not theni or at bust, in' modern phrase-
FALL FUN.
ilariOIMP
of hit muscular fingers, as if he could e , was rerued, tbe ex-prisener was reeentie been hum lex the White Non locked night or day. The Man who olog,y, that each shOuld have its Wh3^ ao they easy, " poets are both.
not repress a. desire M stick° him feted .and lionized in Cairo, and many e
then and there if hp but had the" dia.:. lad3 set her cap at him. Presently law revolutionized travel in the gold would steal attetherei gold woeld not "sphere. of influence" in southern not made ?" They want to put. the .
naond king within reach. Next to his fields And hae ta en elmost all the get out ot tea country. alive. palestine., Like Sanballat, Tobiah blame on some one who can stand it.
religioue fervor there is no sentiment the rulmor arose that the hero was en- dun -- • ••The difficelie whicsh must be solved was supported, hy jewish nobles end '
gaged to be married, and one night at ger out ex e journey. It runs •
in the Klondike, is the frost in the apparently wad related by nuirriage • . .
round The , Usher the court having been mueh
from &viler up .the White Pees to annoyed be the 'sbuffling of feet, -
so strong ein the breast of the po dinner a. lady asked him, pointblank if cold in the air is not to some of the atuonger families in
wer- . . the head -waters of Lake Bennett from troublesome, and •ahen we are all Jerusalem, The Arabians. •Wild Will ,ye hould yer ton ues .up the
ful Dutch President as his hatred of vthich place the rest .of the jottrneY dreesed in.fues we ceade to thinkabout desert wanderers on the south of Pal- with yer feet in the efitery '
it were trues. .
the gtant of England. These two are ...Married ?" explained Slatin, "Whet, . it. The frost in the earth has to be estine, who fettened on the wretched- .•
lle• is not in e id Mrs ShortlY to
we I • No, 110. I hat already been ean De made to Dawson City by wa- thawed out before the soil will an- -nese of the country, and dreaded,noth- ' ' •
the eydiopean figures of the closing prisoner twelf years-eevaire; no . .
•. ter ' swer to the pick. Thiele done by means ing more than the 're-establ* Iment Of the collector. Madame,. I know he is
century, and the battle between Bre. more) Chilkoot Pius, whose name has be- of a " blower e fed by kerosene, some.. military power to any degree in Joe.
'a wnootottno,. skaoiodw,thlea:ohlleecatoory.1 Watat I. •
ton and Boer is eothing more nor less Shitin Pasha was among the most
than a tembat between these two self- Angloe-Egyptian expedition
active officers in preparing fon: the. . the asphalt egvement, It is also done tioned as their leader. That he was ' Returned Volueteer-Wbate an ap- . •
come fearful to all travellers, has been thing like the blower you see used on usaleni. Geshem, or Gashmu, is men-
br steam.
against, aeanaoned and with it 'the city of powerful is indicated by the grouping propriate gift from a soldier to his
of.27$ feet, in the hope of `gettingpbe- tlal Satllett.gndilTzbri - . Mr" a Powder hox about the right •thin:.
confident giants.• • the Mahdi, and so much work fell up- D.Yea. across the Lynn Canal from Ska- Shafts have been sunk to the depth of his name with that of the influen-
. .
ieueBEBeByroTiaNTE.. onjEcTnrE on hitt shOulders that.ne aLmost broke gutty. "
• afternoon, he said to his superior of- •
down.. As he wee toiling one roasting At the present time it would coat 1 w the frost; butwitheut success. re- es. arie let toug, s isweea‘ctliztrlit w? Jhasy7:1071,-t Iyoslxhotui,ld bink
fe or leeilprin of the Academy of Na- history. been less civilizea than Moab e
Rhodes has perhaps made. the ells- ficer in a. confidential tone: about 8200 to go 'fixed class from Tea tural Seiences,'Whom, met utr in Daw- or Judah. Tcs the end a large num- enestion, Fritz ? Fritz -You yourself
take of hie life int settling himself tn with I were back among tne ronto to Deevaoe City:and barring de- son,. is of the opinion that the cold" .ber of its people were nomadic, and told us only, the other day to remem-
/Kimberley on the very eve of the con- dervishes as a wispier. There, et lays occasioned bY•waiting for boats that froze up the ground to se 'great even predatory, produeing an& ber that "speech, is silver, but silexice
Mot, for by this act alone he has made any rate, i-wae not worked to death." a. 'depth le not the mild cold.that livieg on the weakness of their riat is ;gold.". , . ,
the trip could be d i tw Ive daye
ma, e n e .
Oddly, ehough, this chalice remark
. __ . lets there to -day, but a prehistoric honed neighbors. ; As we have (men, •
c ld f th 11 th ' ' •
war. Already the' Beers campaign is ty printed in an anti-British newspae to' S ' 000 m
. • ea overheard, repeated, and ultimate- rt would take four and one -hair nays
go to eattle a distance ef over 3, oso o e glacier period, To tali had probably been . atm -
m thod must soon be invent- mended to organize the mit'
' ' b•
dee Geeorge, t
Rejected Suitor, flippa.ntly - Oh,
of the grociend;esoeue ere are just as good. fish in
directed against"this place, which has Per 'In Cairo. IA copy drifted down • •
strong strategic inducements. ter its into,the Sudan and found its way into :riles. There. yOu ,won Id take the boat ed by1Whieh th 'a ld -' b d • th A '
ZiThmaekergeell eir r
0 y weeet still uennortrgeani ed ton, but we° '
ashlers ever erftght. Ste-Teot :
WIRD:17 occupation' aside from the. r f t
tlie hands of tbe Khalifa, •the SUOMI., 0 Skagnay, 1,000 miles more, and you
workable Ver little coal i b reel willin to ein eTobinzhhez:ea
conspilatorjs against ?Jeenrusaleme e, buet That My?: Toapisail amYakaersa. merle ea.rtgry;
nadmthneontionneod 'ionhange u nb a.rte,;th u , un etss y •
fact that it is the .residence of the eeThee chief Mat odnee ' would then be on the boa,t, three days. in Beweo'n. Therm is an anunsnanuaa eof
am:tenoned his fol- So that in seven dayo yoa would be wmoodo,of the pine. tree tyee, .which not willing to be governed by him or _ with her talks ' about yachts. Whel I
diamond king, the gold king, the raii- 'lowers .and Pointed out to them how in e., lueke. From,. seuguur by eau up. • ,...illf ...3,TTelient. fires, and it is tbis atty. other. man. ,,Ashdodites. • Phihs- , „ .. • - - _ .
oroiroado.kiage, fellktiniong „of anaviitiooltio.;moolllion- life as
coutitrymen WEIS better than existence "'lie
a fettered slave cumeng 'hie , .,_._ ,„,... ow ner 1 naa put a new binnacle on
w rime powi to Bennett, .e. miles Leei 7.eie.ii s used to make 8team, tines, taking their name from one of e`orepe
th let 01 --t 1 -t- t h h tnyi yacht and sh ked ef I had
, e as me 1
Kruiger bewailed when Jameson and under the doMinion of English dogs, In 4 hours. From
' steam" ' . ' :, . • ' e . ' - se:doae :it! 9.1The eit:aleelse ol e.]=1.1.8eri:
his band were (tonight and charactertz- The tribesmen howled with aererovat .bost to Dawson cint ye,illicheltngbiYng boats , • ' ' were made up. 'Nehemiah 'seems to Customer, in a rage -When I but, -
d all the old ones off the hull.
. .".T THE BA.CHBLOR GIRL
- • ' ha b 'lt on the old. founcrtions The t d '
are pe le to whom the term e peturesque-"a split down the beck. Clothing Deal- •
necessary to go by portage around the.
Kimberley the ebjective center of the 'w
ed as "wily the ones." All these de- at this vedit
new proof of the brutality of
at White Horse Rapid's,. where it is .
tested, personages are bound up Mime.' their English enemies'. . • There op ELebre 'idiom, here i a • onq your coat for the first tinie • it
stalwa.rt body, and the nameg of that
body is Rhodes, Who possibly does not
realize how comipletely he tnearnates
to the Boer zatnd everything that ex-
• •
1, cit •
• • • • "bachelor al con ures u hort-
-g 3 p a s hem e was applied to the wal er-Indeed I It must be, then, thee the
MANY PUZZLERS. canyon' -for about five. miles, ' • ,
• THE •NEXT BOAT ^ haired, short -skirted female, who j'eni •
be. opped. Before ays 9f ex-
t° buttone were sewed on too strongly!
breachee bevel
• . strides, sticks her bends in her coat p °sires battering •re•ms were relied They say she married.: for inoner.'•
• • 1 below 'the 'canyon carries.Yon 450 miles pockets, lectures on woman's righter- Atop That's where they were wrong.
cites its aatimosity, towards Englartd, immense rosin! Droaritnetit nal Acquitted
and he may also put too strong& faith Itself Favorably.. to Dawson City' and the kb:nu:like! Thie
ot rather her Wrongit:--and who warns unmenee shooter -was given to one pare,
in war against fortresses. An.
thought she married for money but
As a. caroller 'to. the recently issued again4 titmorlaiminlidezmit.repedatyi:
in the defensibleneaa of the place he route hao hecome the eccepte4 °A's' hee "down -trodden" sisters she was mistaken. Then what del she
•1 .1 Sb h isn't found out
Piccadilly. • report of' the' nostpuister-general, •
is said to have pronounced es "safe as , Y
The other iS the ail -water route tb St.
the "tyrant, man," while all the time and. often for weeks and monthS to' ry ox e a
Michael a distance of over 5,000miles • •
If the price aet upon the , from Toronto. This route is onlyarrac- keeping e sharp lookout for the inio. gether, untd its strength gave way.
,WHA.T RHODES 'WOULD GET. where ,the item of insufficiently Or 0
the Colossus &meld lead to his cap- with, it mcie be noted that the depart -
head of obscueely addressed letters is dealt
Um' from the end of June, to the miu- . very sturdy. it toppled. over*, at other an old adage, sate sirepkins. How was
. suticie ner to change her own name. times
, guided male' Oreature who' will per- Sometimes' where the musketry was I was discharged simplY to vindiCate
great holes were made in 'f
• I- that? The "adage says.; " Where
Ours alive there is no doubt what -
would lia.ve the "benefit" of an Ian- • '
ment had had many tough tasks to dle. of September, w i e e. The bachelor girl is, on the contrary,
ever about his ultilmete fate, for he
mediate military trial, and if hesitated iiimetaaltiV, says the Londom Tele- t
The " Take Pass "
only closed two months in the year.
Jack Dail•°°'s r'rr"'"' domestic sister. , She is strong, in -
deal with, and 'has acgairecl itself tri- ..„ as..sweet. and womanly as her more
hanged that would be. 'the • best he t and the Chilkoot .
to it on which was inscribed -"Gro- Peas are now consuered enfavorable
the sense whtch hod eo need to show
•
be lucky eiretugh to J30 shot. instead of • graph. • Once on envelope -intrusted :the Stickine roe. deed, in the truest sense 9f the term
Would get. •
es, u w ,
Twenty-eight years ago Rhedes was
hie doctor declared could not live sin Sir liumrphrey Davy. ' een any amount of boats running .
from Seattle to St. Mionael's or Ska- when required in any: einergency, is
a lanky, thin -faced boy of 18, whom was delivered to the eftanent scientist, b
South Africa., making a footnote of But terhaps St. Martin's robst sur- somely fitted up -so handsomely in -
guaY. Naturally these boats are hand- never wanting. .
ohe has one quality Whitsh, even
months, even in the ,milder climate of
this prediction in his memorandum passed itself on points 01 cuteness fact that the sadden change to the
though she lacked all others, should
book.' To -day for relentless force end w.hen recently a letter reached the au- dog sledge and Chilkoot Pass was fear-
aheer personal power he Is counted a thorities whichelted been posted at In- ful. ' In those days transportation endear her to every! one, viz: her dis-
b •i th rad 1 'down the Yukon River was had by like of gossip. She herself never discus-.
ses her friends' affairs, and should
regarding some person's conduct the
bachelor girl is sometimes guilty of
rudenesa in telling her inforraant that
anyone insist on airinvher own views
she does not care to listen to other
people's troubles, ,having eneugh of
her own.
She is broad-minded, and is interest-
ed•in everything, from astronomy to
horse racing. With such a wide lati-
tude from,which to choose subjects for.
discussion is it any, wonder that what
"she said to him,' and vice versa,
should fail to interest here
The bachelor girl is proud of her
"singleblessedziess," and cionaiders. it
rather a sign of weakness when one of
her chums allows herself to be led to
the altar. Not that eke le a "man hater;"
feSrheir°0111penitly tells you that she infinite-
ly prefers converiting with a man be-
cause he usually is much broader-
WEinicdecepd.t when the exigencies of soc-
iety demand it she rather shuns mem.
bore of ter own elex, at least in this
strength o the bearers of burdens is
abstract. And when the "bachelor
girl" finally deoicles to make 801310 man decayed. 'The workers employed on
. the wall had given up in dee-
happy by 'sharing his joya and sorroWs
:pair, Very likely their wages
she is the best Wife in, the world. ume fitfully, or not at aIl, and the
She is sufficiently domestic for all
practical purpoaes, but also under- ale,rutnly-uflavoted debris of one hundred and
years must be cleared.
Stands that a husband la Mere than& tau
away. We are not able to build the
niOneyemaking macs/line; that he, as wall. They Were able to build it, how -
well as she, has some rights in the . wver, arid they did. All tbey needed
beilliniesPlaoed futnitune and smoking i'LaseLe.cenvetent leader and God's
the family.sittingt T00133. do not fill 11. our adversaries. eiamed in verse
her with horror that shakes to its foun-
dation the orderly soul of the purely '7, They shall not know, neither see,
domestio woman, and which sometimes till We COMS. OUT conspiracy must be
resulta in a scene, Um culmination be- perfeeted before a movement. us Made,
ing teats on the domestic wemanife "1'62. etThtheeJ tilluwroprwishefoshhaalisl obit cboyrattphl ee e
fredete, Lonaon"-sent froth Italy - • For the laot two years thete have
ittelf in eccentriciti 'b '1 h' h
, .
statesman second to none, since the "Tughnor, PIM, 4 Colstraly." Every means of kg re
cided, considering the quarter whence Mrs. ' /
fie or dugouts and
British dominions. 'erten wits puzzled. Then it was de- many lives were last in their Icy wa-
death of Gladstone, in all the vast
Ile was a youth. of hig ideas, with the missive was sent, to call in the But now regular lines of steamers
a •will power that /laminated' even his services of an ex..soldier of a High- ply, betvveen• Fort Bennett, on one of
physical nature, and he needed a lint- land regiment, a Gaelic speaker, who the tributaries of the Yukon, to Daw-
Mess fortune to carry out his dreams wits employed . as a mail cart driver. son City. Fort /3ennett is at the end
of power.' That was hits dominant This authority thus read the inscrip- of the White Pass, in which the little
idea. from the very moment he set foot den; "begat More, piper, Gold, Aug- Alaskan railroad ram
on the. Dark Continent. The round- tralici." Then the gold rush to Aus- .
matter he attended to as being a ne- rainers. Months afterwards intelli- ators which supply the beet ; cushion-
wfibtrohd
(sturdy form was but an incident, a More, it was sarm4sed, was one of the furnishes light ; regular steam rad':
upT.heTeeheirlhvearvebateileacrterio.npieleallt
'Mg of his physique into its present trail& was in full swing, and Hugel
Ocssary detail of his career. • His one wince reached the department to the ed chairs and benches and carpeted
dream was to found an enormoue effect that the addressee had been dis- floors. Indeed, so comfortable are they
United States cif Africa, In eveey act covered, .The letter, which wag from that one often forgets that he fa in
of which ha has been the mampula- hie brother, was delivered to Bilge', that dread cold country, Alaska, Which
tor this has been the dominant idea,
and his continued cries a "No taxa- while he wee delighting his Caledon- •
fan comrades on the gold fields by inhabited by" whites and knew noth-
fifteen years ago, was practically me.
tion without representation!" "No
rale of an oligarchical ring!" were so skirling on the bagpipes. ing of civilization,
hestatent throughout South Africa,
The only break in: the chain is at
throwing down of the gauntlet by that LATE.ST LS THE, "BATHOIMETER.'•, the White Horse Rapids. Here the riv-
er rushee tbrough 'tetnyon at the
that they at last ouintinated in the
other mighty power, Oam Paul ' Of the inventing of long -felt cyciing rate of
Kruger.. went& there sis'ems to be no end. The • SIXTY MILES AN HOUR,
rim WEALTH. leteet of these is an instrument by The canyon le very high. The snow
Otte hundred million dollars probe:- .wfhlelx it is eeny to record automate. never melts on the (summit. Of course,
bly expresses the wealth Rhodes has catty, riot only the distance traveled by it is linPcesible for a boat to live in
•
accumulated by the moat brilliant its roide. In the winter the water
manipulations of modern finance, a bicycle, but alms the various &rec. freezes within its narrow wane. The
of money for the sake of possession, meow of a oompom, pros needle is
and used often, it is Said, to fill a pail
full of diamonds from tbe Kimberly
mines, Oaring out the glittering heap
perched upon his coffers he was fond
again and again with almost childish
, rthooeohrdillsofaseivadirdeedotioanand idsesochettiodiendo,d Tbhytt
auspended at the top of the "patho-
emu are taken.
meteri" as the apparatus is called, dir-
ectly. above the tape on which the re -
dons followed during the journey and.
here and is carried bag and baggage,
oinigieten atlumronstuntot I It hteh e troop lost at ha:loll ontraosos..
eler to the Klondike changes' luata
rest of the water piles in upon it freez-
through with great noise. The trav-
In the bummer the river rushes
During the petted When success first
pleasure. To -day money to him is but on dog sledges or in thet summer on
a tool with which he expects to carve -
_ waggons, to the other end of the can -
his Way to higher ambitions, wbose you five miles away, whesre a new boat
AFTER, THE BOOM WAS ovitit. just •att handsomely fitted up as the
high -topping summit perhaps he him -
His greatest reproach egainst him- man on the dry goods bot, everything dela'
first one Is awaiting him; and in Lwo
he is in Davvson City.
self cannot clearly see- When' I came to this town, said the
self is that Of all ambitious men whose I htur in the world was tied up in a 1.10,W00/1 City, ton, la a revelation. It
restless energy resents ane moment red bandana handkerchief. is'the largest • woolen city in the
ried. About two week's before the time snatched for rest or recreation, He Au& ked th t 'et ho w°14d.
the wedding was to take place this
young lady visited the various stores
in the Place. At each of the jewelry
(Mops ehe oalled the proptietor aside terprises, and hes foam e all empire. gages,
and told him of herapproaching mar- - - -
ritige and then said: '
It has some twenty hoteris and
8. Conspired. all of them together.
through which; -the hostile soldiery
Wroth.. Mad. with jealousy.
rushed. These are the "breaches,"
:ow'rwunsalem.. e0 fight
Lilted had a tette against smoking: I amok-,
ed and was heed. •
there's smoke there's fire," The boss •
Their yiatioinudtdmi inI tuhzdteprsisttanold,dusae.ild ytletsertdoauyrisatnthinat.
noeent bystander was severely wound-
aaTi gilt: 3 ro ,at al agaottn inicierr uNtryhuetesroi:ri leom .
Prime Par- ed. 'Needn't worry, 'friend, replied
pose was to prevent the success of Rubberneck Bill. They ain't no inno-
Neheraiah's endeavors. They would cents in the whole tome
not rush into actual warfare if they Mrs,
Youngwed-Are you bappy,
ceuldedeter him by other means, but
bloodshed was.expected be both' parte sem with elect' a kind and loving mate?
ties, for the immense empires of an -
we need not think it strange but actual dear, to be sailing on the matrimonial
dent timea were loose aod ragged at Mgt' Ytheienkngw
weed,d-Ybeetteinrdpeeodt ; i nb ut ot dpoonr" it
their edges, and the =lard of remote a little while and ship a cook? ,
provinces were frequently a law to
An Abaorbing Topic. -Dick - lilies -
themselves, Thuo even in the time of
our Lord and unden the Roman sway King to so reserved, and has so little
Herod Antipas, who was the subject of to say that I eatet keep conversation
Rome, had his private' war with Are- with her from lagging. Jack, ner for-
tes. Such a conspiracy as this was mer bea,u-Mention pearls to her and
would be more natural for Artaxerxes -aed bul3r. todo but listen
very dangerous to the Jews, for it you' will have nothing
to believe the teetimony of .five or six
chieftains wbose loyalty he had not Blake -Se you didn't go abrond this
doubted than to believeAfts single un- summer? Itodgeo-No; / was thinking
supported testimony of'Nehentiah. " ot going acme in the Gevendolia, but
9. We made our prayer unto our God, she had hardly any life preservers and ...-
and set a watch' against them, day and no boats or life-rafta to speak of. Blake
night. "Watching unto . prayer" is ---But you could heve taken the Bar -
the godly man's first duty. "Our God" bantam. Bedges-I know; but she had
is a beautiful phrase, for while •God. is such a sOinplete outfit of life-saving,
the God of all men,;he is in tipeduliar devittes that it really looked suspic-
sense the God of his owirpeople. For ious, I didn't think it safe to trust
"against them" 80010 eoholarg read myeelf in herl
"beside them," believing that, a special .
I suppose you hed money to biirnin
attack was now anticipated.
10. Jude's, The resident's of the ter- the 'Klondike I No, answered the man
ritory o the old. kingdom, of judah, who had been lying by the hour, we
Not all o • the returned. captivea, how- didn't have anything but chunks of
ever, were of the tribe of judah. Tbe chilly' incombustible gold. We'd have
Paid a pig price for a few scuttlefula
of dollar •bills. .
Anebody, who knows enough, acid
Mr, Spilling, ca,n lee= something front
anybody eise, howeier ignorant the
latter may be. That is true, assent-
ed Mrs. Sphinxes, cheerfully. Now, I
can occasionally^ learn something from
alma .
To it, going te rein to -day, Brookst
No. It never rains when 1 bring my '
umbrella down -town, and I brought
it this morning. Then you Won't need
it„ Lend it to me for( two or three
home, for fear of accidents. I don't
dere do that, Rivers, It always rains
when I lend it,
part, and a firm closing a the Area .
6 fi The volley of the returned Israelites
calls himself lazy! Yest he has fought wee waiting for a train. boarding houses,. two banks, and tive down the steps :in all the wrath orti oef!
• bad been to settle. around. Jerusalem Mrs. Caudle -110W do You dare to
MA It is lighted bv eleetri-, and naturally so, because a majority ,„
many fierce wars with nativeSt he has Amid now, replied the mail On th0 box, Ida: - !fended dignity,
built railroads and telegraph Imo, he soratehing jaw, everything Pee gpt city, and baa a watet• worke which The bitithelor girl is in every reispect of them were members of this tribe of "'""`" "-- -
om the tavefn eo late
cite of Toronto,
ix LI'. totttltr.g.ttle, haa anft 01,0!1,52r. Onandorlet-hyYehtlhonuanr:
when Completed will equat that. of the Judah ; but there were many ot other as
has conducted vast and auccesaful en- tit the Werla is tied down with niort-
Ottlin of Gill, h
'Now, It is very probable that Bottle
of my, friendo May come in here and
'select ine, a preoent. It's horrid to get
abinething you don't like, se X watt
you to look out for me, and. if yea can
Satisfy yourtelf that a present is
about to be purchased for me induce
the purchaser to buy something Twill
now select."
The peoprietor could Nee nothing
wrong tn granting such a request,
and ,the Young ladY seleeted a. number
ger eeT3hg !iv:ecrTrit argilhaentg tale haesr-
sietante mattlied, Prole all that can
be learned the scheme worked well.
MS ONLY ALTERNATIVE
The Lady-41/1int caused you to• be-
come a tramp/
The Tramp --1 win drove two, trom
* happy home me forced to become
Witheerer.
The Lady -How did that happen/
The Trarees-Me wife /Mr 1110 mudder
dat 1 eider heater go to work et
gib oat, an' I got out.
Of course W6 hal/6 tO pity more for
coat now than we did a month or. two
ago, said Mtn. 'Ohmmeter, but we
ought not to mind that. r euppoie
meitne that they have been ratting the
poor cold minim' votes, 6
Samantha ontld Mr. Cherenttor,and
he looked at net over hie &sees, you
axe too good for this wieked world.
)„. 7.„.
tM;,E‘i
r
•1614'
fitted, to be. her husba.nd's c ufnii ier tiribee, WO know .trotithth,erepithoritttorteo,a,...
arigclrunkairnd, Maud wl must turn oVer a
new leaf 1 Mrii. MMUS, et filet apeech-
less, then breaking out In anger -What
do you mean? Am I to read the cur- •-
tEde lecturee liere or ere you?
ir•s•LL.•••••
approve of them, she' hi
able to condone, and talk over and their old family homesteads. Liefrig
Yet he geetlY probable that these had setled near to
' 'laugh at with him. 'among thes conspirators, they over-
_ Having the newest and best ideas re- 'hoed some of their plans, and prompt-
garding hygiene -and practicing them reported them to their eountrymen.
has a healthy body, ooneeatientlY Ten times. That is, indefinitely, many
44 • a 'healthy mind, therefore lb is bowie- timea; as we Would say dozens of
` 'Bible for her to take distorted views of times. The rot of this verse has a
(a.) the accidents of existence. She is very different meaning and a simpler
herself happy an& desires others to be one given to it by the Revised Version,
'see... happy atom, and 00 far as lies in her "They said Unto us ten times from all
;power makes them so,
, Long live the "baohelor girl!" plleheeyee,weYree intaurktinrgetuirno tuheisitra ruesitt.':
tives who had flocked. to Seruertient
• 4 partly to earn wages, partly urged. by
, A nrataxitsi, sucasa ,patriotism. These more dietant
• • h f II f d urge
ng u view 0 6 anger,
Biggs -Row did Brown -Smith, mak; !their friends andlinemen to return to
• his money /. protect their bonne.
flogge.--He invented new method 18. In the lower plasma . on
• edvertleing a patent medicine. the higher places. "In the lowest
131go-Lrid then sold ibit idea Vs a parte of the space•," "in this open
pittent inaltaine firm/ places." Wherever the wall was es-
4C,11110ERLEY*OUTOIT
1 •
WITHOUT PREJITD/CB.
Ai party of young men and women
tvere bieycling along a country road,
it was a sketching class and every •
eye was wide open for an artiatio 'Mb -
Jed. Suddenly the whole party
diamouitted with various exclamations
of delight and eunpriee.
just 'within the fence on the left
grew innumerable graceful "stalk/heath
•obiek :dr iondg inottoof tggrolosheeonodf peao roger. e e n th at
How enchanting!" said a young weld
man.
HOW decOre,tiire I Bald a yOung Mart.
Jatit whet seL, aro looking fo., maid
the teacherpatfledged artiet. ..
Boggs -Not much! That a where he peelally weak there Nehemiah citation- •
iti, gardener Wait /deriding near at
man t* invent a potent medicine ior Willett was to be lilted AA a rempert, Do tell us, cried a girl, what those
showed his clevernees. Be hired a ed armed Men. Behirid the wall.
him and Used the Idea himself. beau-oo-tiful thinge am/
Atter their families. Everything Which t replied the gardener.
'ON THE BRINY DEEP, ele , ,that the :ewe did, *ail done by tribal Why, th e, maid the girl.
Them Is oni toed thing about an the Seotoh clans le the tenacity Le/1th Them/ t'scad the gardener, with a
_
railiieliAseend familial; not altogetheti
wean I voyage, remarked the globe which this relationship woe held'
highland orgaiiitatione o
hr 'chuckle, Theinte, onion* gone to seed.
,.
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the ;ewe tor eenturies. . "TOMMY' ATKINS." .
trGttVflyeeti Te that t queried his coin. 14. Said nut° the noble', and to the "T°111m/ Aitkit*" 4" bee°1*4 th*
Pleat", ce.",..e° idaY *need eml'Ibw-1 vitil Margin. • *et "deputies.° This In the army have the name •fThouievi
thine We 144 ettlY 16000,4ko iintrrertil the reivantrig la t Nehemiah &Ye genet- Atkine," printed to itilicatie where the
Wiry, a move evni get VI tlgift to ho Per "ruler*" the Theelised Version, 046 teat that the printed forint need
matakirliamtkand to the rest of the PeoPle. nklit^13488118 1/4 the nelt$ 161)166r fr°111•
pantorit
tratsler. I , Were rftiliated hy tut- user should write his nem*
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