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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1900-02-15, Page 2e • ••••• • E CLINTON NEWSwIlECORD le publisind creri Theeelay at Thit News•Reererel Pewee Printing hiOuse AIMERT STREET, • VidlaTON• 'teens or Suaecnierione-theil Per aim la advance 51.00 may be charged if not so paid , So Penn" discontinued men all arrearageS are fetid, unless at Os optioe the publisher, The (late to whielt (weer eubseription in paid le denoted en the label. AuveartaING" BeTES.-Transieut aavertise nerds, 10 eenta per notwatiel line for first Meortion ape a come pee line tor emit seine . $ te.letithisertion. Small edvertisentents not to exceee one inch,stuth is"host, Strayed, "titelene` eto., Inserted once Mr 00 cents and flitch %Moquette insertion15 cent*. . Advertarimente witheut threctiens will inserteti until turbid Ana charged edema balk, Colo' for changeof adviirtisements on pages4 end 0 must IX tbe office on Saturday and tor papal cold 8 on Monday to ensure eliengc for foliewine issue. oos'rEAor13ime.-The following table shows our rates for specified perioda and space% snvEyerisnie Bans. I Yr. Mo, 3Mo. I MP Column Vio 00 1.14 00 di 00 ;a 54 Eoluinn 40 09 23 00 10 00 6 00 k Column; . 25 00 IS 00 00 2 40 Column , 18 00 10 00 0 31) 2 09 Inch . 6 00 3 50 2 00 I 25 Sr Spegial position 'from 25 to 00 Per emit extra, 141011,141/110 One Dose %VIII the itory. Wnen your head aches, end you'leel billets, comet - Pitted, and out of tune, with your StOMitelt sour anti no eppetite, just buy a peckage et Hood's .P1'lls And teke a dose, from I to 4 Mile. Yoe will be surprised at how eitelir they will do tbeir work, etre your heitembe end billousnese, reale the liver aria =eke you tee happy egein. [ 23 cent*, Sold by all medicine dealers. vsr, .7:MITCHELL, Editor and Proprietor, ' J. Shannon Secy-Treas.,.8eaforth P. 0, • %hos, BANKS • "Til SUNDAY SCHOOL' disenseion-turns away h°M P""nal 11108T WONDER/IL GROWTH * religion to frivolity. * *21. The hour cometh,„when ye shall iNTERNATioNAL LussoN, FE% se neitber in Oda mountam, nor yet • Mena Are kepi Mostly In" ‘eritionis ewe. Xerusalem, worship tile Father IN THE TRANSVAAL, Min .1010ST EITINUONE BRITON 1.99.91 n • . II/AWAY TRAVEL IN SOUTH AFRICA The peaceful pursuits of cone, KILLING THE BUFFALO, Golden Text 1....."4.1041 la a Silvia 1044 1211;1 Shall no longer be loeal. "Wie ha in- WKS" 4. mere* are apt to be so disregarded in 'Iteatielis Why the Noble Ashanti Wisick SLIVInkiytlinPi II: kaa-Vri°04"Cnir:le: a Wadi Time eleesitle Mtn Moe Weretille sum Quiroa eeeee tbe peace ot worahiPt he set Se t'keao men 4."4/1"Inale a4a ar to be worshipped," i ed t.a coneider what effect the pros- Nier414 Is Now Seldom Orel?. err' 0010 Ta the right the ragged PRACTICAL Nom. .The growth a lauwere le South At- t fr t in South Africa will have One cia the west extraordinary - U.. Te worsitite ye know not what. of Samaria, '''It ;was about a day which is better. Salvation is of 04 derful and fascinating one almost run what are called the etores, half of the pr ,,esent century is the es. 1,tbuanti biTisotethrelniettlitetthieereveerodiulitcrlseAepfirireactia. re the Sews." equalling the mushrown-like progress . /*I the and a half afterelee had lett Jere:3416ra j 2882 Te4u.841"11.12,Elletnulane. In spire • e b. S tl as opinion of thet 'Authority terMination, the Wiping out, ot the lino. locinno, ,nansinir in 3 se4tin Of Many 0 er towns. o men Y . , whim be saw before bine a little wall. tt anti ,it !. . trent. Qin& la Spirit. and whneo..P. W. eoneulted on this subject American ,bisou or buffalo. weep! The ehaggy Treuevaal pewee, • ed village or town. Syclear• Pro" God is truth, And we are to whrehip the year 1290 the raU!oads the.re, it the atrugthe, however it ends, will be "In 1870 and later," Paid an Army " cropping the sweet herbage, ehakeo bably a village nOW called El-Askar, him. net only sincerely, but "wttli a we except the Single Itne running to a ditaittrous thing to the atorekeep- officer to the writer, "the plains about two miles frone Sheehenat and warahiP oarresPendiag to the nature of were strietly confined to English col - In neither place exelusively. time of war that no one ban patte. Meatese tlie Pleas or the 'Weil Is V..st on the sky, a Vulture" gorged' Ye't Wm' tut Spirit end to Troth." Julia 'Stet. would teiteli her conceraing the Being . • More /Redeem siestene. 7 See th•e Revised Vereion of thisi verse Ma e t ars haa been a Won- eel ee4" en the tradere in. the TraneVeal who events that has thaeaeteriaed the. /alit o r cern ye kopjes, atrewn with white boulders Verse 6. Then cometh he to a lilt their heads impatiently at the impedie were alive with bison. and in cress. Ore. , II • she bey its Object," --M. R. Vincent., , , oaten Until that year the Free Ste- lief tee Brawl, ke ing plaims 41/fietoty seeete • ea') -1,.. N*1 ;Bent ot the bit. 24. (Tod ie a Spirlt. God is p r t. JOHN T. EMMEBTON Sychar is an Unpleasant nante; it - The JeWs often lost stele of thus, .ters, Transvalleirs, and Beers genere THE LNAPING liARBER -mmati drunken town or leing town. 25, I know -that Mosinee, cosmeth, ally apPeared to have bed an unsur- "No plaea in aU the Holy Land wee which lie called Christ. A remarkable aneuntable prejudice againat the iron Alm Agent for • • t ral change has taken place he the woman, tor n, STANDARD LIFE INSURANCE COIVIP, ANY mere ore Y Bread Office for Canada, Metered" seenere, and none waa richer in ite Insurance ta terms • • e• • 4116.400,000 verieci 'association') than that region Investinentsin Canada, • . • • wenn , I ' Netehholed 182.04. The em rehehie end favorite. Abet °anis witbin the aweep Pte. the Ovenee-Stnith's block. opposite Vest Office. eyes ofJesus ait ballet down to rest by tho well." -11. 0. Triirabull, The 1NSVRANoa parcel of 'ground that Jacob gave to bis eint Joseph. , jacob bought tbe se, Itch as the up-eountry Boer a from the levity of Our beginaing of scoffs at attp to very rece,ntly least) the utUtty of cannon. But the inevitable, reaetion est In at length, and their dislike and doubt tUrned by rapid stages into respect, and froro respeacteto inthusiasro. itself, One eloquent example of , this ie to be found in the Orange Free State, that shapely country being out into halves by a great trunk line, and when the projected and already prospeeted liners 1.ntended to radiate froin it are open- ed there ivill, irreepective of the liar- rismith-Dueban railway, be some half score of (railroads branching across country from the parent trathle. The Tranavaal itself ere another century is gut of long clothes Will be a veri- table network of railways. Already you may go 300 miles by train up' or down the "Itepublie" and eonsiderably upwards of 200 cross-country. Travelling over South African rail- way systems, already affords a mag- nificent amount of "life," but from the nature of the country, and per-, naps, also the libe,ral liama pn which the rolling stook m built, the speed attained ia not calculated to terrify the Passenger. Tbe engines, too, have a way of getting puffed out that oc- . camenally gives the traveller an op- potrtunity of p STRETCHING HIS LEGS. an the veldt 'without .much risk of streening atemaluta4eshiti with the train. But any leek this dir- ection is not allowed to discount the faxes. There are three reguler ways cif patrotaising the Smith Afriean rail- ways, viz., by 'travelling first, senond -or third cities, the last named being practically make:Lied no class at all, dedichteel les it is to coloured ladies and gentlemen,* 1 Kaffir Meurning (nem Johannesburg, to Cape Town with' his saeings will hahe te red.uce them by §22.50, in favor of •tbe rail- way company, alis entployer, if anx- tons foe a whiff oi ozone, will have to diabarse ses for his ticket, in addition th smell sums for necessary extras, exclusive of situnerous exteas. •!Sec. 'THE McKILLOB MUTUAL FIRE g•round from Shechem, Gen. 33, 18-20, end when the land was divided it fell INSURANCE COMPANY to the inheritance of dime:Ada:Us of Farm and isoleted, Town Property J Oseph. AO has been renatirked by only Insured. " OFFICERS J. B. McLean, Prehident, Kippon P, 0, • Thos. Frazer, Vice -President, Brucelleld P. • W THE MOLSONS BANK • Incorporated by A.ot of Parliament, 1855. - E. Hayes, Ynspeotor of Losses, Sedorth P.O. DIRECTORS; W. G. Brow:Mot, Seeforth ; John G. Grieve Winthrop ; George Dale, Seaforth; Thomas E. Hayes. Seaforth ; JOIDOS Evans. Beachwood John Watt, Harlot* ;Thomas Frazer,' Bruce. field ; John B. hieLvan,' : James Con- nolly. Porter's Hill. • AGENTS: Robt Smith, Harlook; Robert McMillan, Sea - forth ; James Cummings, Egmondville ; J. W. Yea Ilolniesville P. 0. ; John (loveideek and John 0 Morrison, auditors. Parties desirous to effect insurance or trans - sect other business will bo promptly atunded to on application to any of the above officers ad,dressed to their respective post offices, CAPITAL • • • 82,000,000 Misr 51,500,000 READ OFFICE • :MONTREAL, Wm. Mottos MsceirinsoN, - President F. Wotrsiterrins Thous, General Manager Notes.discounted. Colleotions made. Drafts issued. Sterling and, American Exchanges bonett and sold. Interest allowed on deposits. - SAVINGS BANK, Interest allowed on sums of St and up, FARMERS. • . Money advanced to farmer. on their own notes with one or more endorbers. No mort- gage required as security. . ICC. BREWER, Manager, Clinton C. D. MeTAGGART BANKER. • A eeneral Banking Unglues Notes Discounted. Drefts Interest Allowid on Deposits, Transacted. Issued. ' • • ALBERT STREET °LINTON, LEGAL•• ty. SCOTT BARRISTER, SOLICIIT011. Money to Loan, eto. OPrick-alliott Bloek - CLITONN BRYDONE BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. . Notary Public, &c., Germs -Beaver Block, CLINTON CONVEYANCING • OHN RIDOI'T CONVEYAN COMMISSIONER, STCI, Fire Insurance,' Real Estate. Money to Lend. OFFICE-91iTIRON STREET, • CLINTON MEDI° A L DR. IV. GUNN R 0. P. and L. R. C. S , Edinburgh. Night calls at front door of residence on Batten bury street, opposite Presbyterian church OFFICE -ONTARIO STREET, CLINTON. DR. WM. GRAHAM (SuccEssom TO DR. TURNBULL.) Licentiate of the Royal College of Phy- ' sicians, Loncion,Eng. OFFICE AND Essumittos-PerrIn's Block, lately occupied by Dr. Turnbull, Cr.rmros. DR. SHAW Orrice: Osrsino STREET, opposite Ensile CLINTON. DR. c. W. THOMPSON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. church, \ STORY or QUEDN ViCTORIA. tvriter inthe London Quiver tells the following atory of Queen Victoria and vouches for its, train When the queen was only seven or eight years old, she had set' her heart on a cer- tain doll, which she bad seen in a shop ivineleta. She had to wait, however, tuttil she twilit' save the prize, aix Shillings, put of her pocketemoney. Ab last the dae came, and the coveted doll was paid. for and received, The story proceeds: as follows: "And now, with- the precious trim- suee upon Ivor arm, the little lady bade the shopkeeper good afternoon, and was ahoub'to step from the door,when a poor, miserable -looking objeet of a man met her eye. He was stahding but a couple of feet( away, end seem- ed' as though Ile were going to speak to her, attracted doubtlesa by the in- nocent kindliness of her expression, and the tenderneths of. her blue eyes. But though his tips reeved, net sound came front them. ' , "He 'stood aside to let her pass -a mute -agonized appeal in his sunken cheeks end quivering Olin, "'Did 'you with to speak • to me?' asked the little lady, staying her steps "Encouraged by' her winning voles, the poor man. said, in trembling ac - many, few places in Palestine after Jerusalem 'have had so mucal of Bible history connected with them as this "parcel of ground." 6, jocular; well was there, Jaeob's spring or fountain. It has been eon- jectured that it was originally a well of living water, but later becarne so filled nonfat it had only,,surface we - tee for drawing. Jesus therefore being wearied' with hie journey, set thus on the, well. That is, as he was tired: and worn out, he sat. on the limestone ourb on the well or on the ground by ite side. It brings Jesus nearer to us 'to notice his. weariness, bow he was touched with the feeling of our infirm, ities. It was about the, sixth hour. Which, according to the usual aewish cents: ' " 'I am very hungry. a veould not ask for help if were ,not.' ready to sink with hunger.' ' . "He looked famine from his eyes. "1 am •so sorry, 1 hatie no money or else-' "His lips trembled forth a humble 'Thank .you, lady,' then he shuffled on his. way, hunger impersonate. • "'Stay!' murmured the little owner of the new doll. There was a quiver in her childtsh voice, and a moisture in her eyes as she spoke. 'Wait a min- ute, please.' "She stepped back into the shop, ap- proached the womah behind the.eoun- ter, and said: " 'Oh, plettie, do you mind taking the doll back and keeping it for me for a few days lon,gerr "'Certainly I retitled the shop- keeper; 'and you wish me to return you the money?' "'Yes, if you please.' "This was done, and the little lady, hurrying out of. the shop, placed the whole of the meney in the hands of the starving man. "Ile was like one thunderstruek. Never had bounty rained uhon him in such profesion re. "The object of har bounty neurmuLee wherever it goes m.akes the desert tot a low tone, though louslenough"to rejoice and everything live. reach her ear: 11. Sir, thou bast nothing to draw "'If the Ahnighty raade you a queen-, with. The people that go to dip wa- it would not be more than your good- ter out of Eastern wells are provided nesa deserves e with email leathern buckets,"-Ilitrin- • neer. The phrase " Sir " Is a more re- spectful title than the woman has heretofore used. The well is deep. A fact. 12. Art thou greater than our fath- er Sacob. Even Jacob, great as he was, had' to dig this well. Can you get we- er without digging for it? And Jacob in his turn had to dip it up painfully with leathern beasts. Can yon draW the water without the bucket's/ 13, 14. Whosoever drinketh off this water shall tbirat again, The water of Jacob's well, which ie a type of all wells of enjoyment dug tby men, The supply widt gave nut. Our spiritual natures can never ba eatiefieds with physical benefite, Whosoever drink- eth ot the water that l'ethall give him shall never thirst. "The craving is satisfied as men as ever it recurs" - Plummer. The water that I shall gtve hinv shall be lei him a welt of water springing up into everlasting ditei. II te abundant, overflowing, not needing to lee pun:tied or lifted, but floWing on. forever "satisfying the seta that reckoning of time, would. be noon. Ilitt John seems to compute time differ- ently from the, other evangelists and if he in his later Ephesian life adopt- ed the Itomnn mode of notetion this was six o'elook in the afternoon. 7. There =meth a women of Sam- aria to draw water. ". Of Samaria" means a Samaritan in raw and re neon. Dr, Trumbull suggeats that this women was, like many in the East, engaged in ' the labor of the field.% and that she bad acme to draw•water for the men who were ert- gaged in sawing or reaping. Jesus saith unto ther, Give me to drink. Sesus used hirethirst as a means of ap- proach to the woman's heart, and and turned the oonversation from the watera of Sattob's well to the, livirigwaters of salvation. Let •us fol- low our Saviour's example by doing good in our hours of relaxation. , 8. For his disciples were gone away into the cite to butt meat. .1 They may have taken away with them the skin bucket which as travellers they would carre. , "Meatt' means food, not nee cessarily flesh, - 9. • How -is tt that thou, being:a Jew, finical], drink of me. , That Jesus was a Ater, was pri3bably made plain by every feature of his dress and man- ners. "The glances mere," as Sadler eaye, "that he would be rudely refused, tn fact he was ote another. occasion when tinder similar circumatances he sought a night's rest in one of thie ages' of this alien race." (Luke 9.58., pertieent. frivolity. At Wells and The woman's •questian is one of im- fountains in the Best ,women were more free with men than in other places. A woman of Samaria. , Sews bad no dealings with the Samaritans, and rabbia had no dealings with wo- men. It is true that the two races traded together, but they were never friend's, and the Samaritans were ex- cluded by theejews from the temple at Jerusalem. . 10. If thmaknovvest the gift of God. Thee gift is to be explained by refer- ence bere to the text in the lest lesson which tells us that Go& gave his onl,v begotten Son. Thou wouldst have ask- ed. of hira. Dr. Plummer expands this thought thus: "Spiritually, our posi- times are reversed. It is thou. who art emery, and footeore, and parched, close to the well, test unable to drink; it la 1 who can give thee water froths the well, and quench thy thirst forever." He would have given the living water. Running water; spring Water ; a sm.- bol here of divine life, perennial life. The gift of the Holy Spirit, whith. her convermaton. to this. noble state - meat. lifessias is the same es Mesidah la Hebrew; Rs Christ In Greek, end as Anointed One in Enalisb. 26. r that tspeak unto time, Oral three times, so Me as we know,. did Sestets declare that he was the Messiah, and this, the fieht declaration, "WAN made to a hetstle and a foreigner. • - ALL ABOUT "THE STAFF." • What Kitchener Wits lecture Mint-Coaltless • it **riffle stequisitv. Lord Wolseley says "the Staff is to an arney what steam: is to a Iccomo- live ;" and the Oomnaitnder-in-Chief ought to know. ° • The Comnadnder-in-Ohlef give$ the following detail of the Staff of an Ar- my Corps: One general officer com- manding, four aides-de-camp, assiste ant -adjutant -general, assistant-quar- termaster-generae„deputy ssistante adjutant -general, and &put yeassist- ant-querterntasterageneral ; ethe • offi- eer commanding Royal Artillery, with his brigade -major and, aideede-camp, the ofenier commanding the Engineera, with his 'brigade -major and aide-de- cemp, the commandant of headquar- ters, the erovost marshal, the prince- , pal veterinary surgeon, two deputy- commissary-generites-one for the com- missariat and transport departments, and the other for the ordnance -two chaplains; wand the principal :medical officer. This makes twenty-five offie cora in aal, to whom are ,atteetbed fif- ty-six servants and seventeen Dierks., two generad service waggons being al- lowed for baggage nnd equipment. It will•thus be seen that part ot the Staff beaongs to the Adjutant -General's and part to ealte Claarterinaster-General's "Pair hait," adviiiis a lipecialist, OFFICE AND REOIDENCE-,- The Empress Eugenie, at the time . Next 10 mouoifs Bank when she was a fashion leader, had feet and: hands so small that her dis- RATTENBURY STREET, °LINTON, carded shoes and gloves could not am Worn by her maids, and. were given to DENTISTRY childrett's charities. DR. BRUCE SURGEON DENTIST. Specialties -Crown and Bridge Work and preservation of the natural teeth. Optima -Coats' Block, • CLINTON. DR. AGNEW DENTIST. CROWN AND BRIDGE WORE. OFFICE -Adjoining -ioster's Photo Galleres Ceuvrote • Otte, VETERINARY BLACKALL & BALL , VETERINARY SURGEONS. GOV. ERNMENT VETERINARY INSPECTORS OFFICE, TBAA0 STREET,' lessucesos, ALBERT STREET, CLINTON, AUCTIONEER THOS. BROWN' • . IJCENSEID AUCTIONEgtt, Sales condlieted in all parts of the Counties if Huron and Perth, Orders left at TIM NErve Rzeolto °Mee, Clinton, Or addressed tO Bea forth P. O. will receive prompt attention. Sat. isfaction guaranteed Or no charges. Your pat- vonageselieltedt? MISOELLANEOUs GEO. TROINHILL KOltlIESHOEtt AND nitiNERAL BLACKSMITH, Woodwork ironed and firstalass materiel amid work guarenteed. enrol inneements end mn- chine: rebuilt and repaired. JOBBING A SPECfALTY, Atitairr &MUM Nonrit, CLINTON. ESO YRARS' EXPERIENCE TRAbit MARKS Deseatie CoeVneeitre di4 ones Setuiltitt Sketch inutdeitenottoit tildt gummy tocertem fine opinion tree .,•wheteer invention is preeneyeatentees, corarrantica. tionsettletlyanteoential,_iituatbookon Patents sent nee. °Mast tomer tor stemma patents, FAUNAE noon through Munn & Co. ICOOMM special notiet, *Mout ehotta, lathe ,finttriCalte ititatasoritely illustrated Wesley. Lerseet ter. '6iirtitninVigMilr4iT Vat! mUNN 11,002"6"44**Y.NevitYgrk ce. set ste lastahinstoe, If it was only health, we might let it cling. But it is a cc•ugh. One cold no sooner passet off betere another cornea. Rut it's the same old cough all the time. And it's the tunnel old story, too. There is first the cold, then the cough, then pneu- monia ot consuntption with the long sickness, and life tremb- ling in the balance. gers herrg Peon! loosens the grasp of youreough. The congestion of the* throat mid lungs is removed; all in- flammition is subdued; the part* are put perfectly sit test and the cough drops away. It has no directed tisanes on Which to hang. Dr. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Plaster ar.„ps inflaMtnatiOtt of the Wets. *iv** Oki* itemember We hilvstiMealeariepart. *mat, 'Hoe PETS eti1 eesepletet whet* 4rra Atte *titre the beet theiteet Melte C:torE4Ilfrelrgi9retitb"41111 zits! ou cat. mt. a. o. multi tswini, longs for life, "It is so abundant that et 18 enough tor everlasttng needs, The water that I give becomes a tome- e department, although both on active service, are under the Chief of .Staff - All matters connected with the general efticienoy, duties, and discipline of the troops, and all the . ' MULTIFARIOUS DETAILS. . , of ilnarteritig, encamping, and moving the 'Army Corps, are the care of the Chief of Staff and his officers: It is lucky that Lord Hitchener is' such a gleaton for- work when the var- ied duties of the Chief . of „,,Staff are taken into consideration. It will be apparent that staff -work is mare of an administrative than an executive „nature, . Staff offieers do not commend troops ; they are the mouthpieceof the general in ewhase name they issue orders., They must carry In their heads all important in, formatien about the ,ermy with which, they are serving -such as tale strength, composition, and eposition of each corps, division eand brigade, and the names of their ,commanding otficers. In action they must be all eyes and ears, and anything remarkable must be reported „without delay. As a large Staff is likely to attract an enemy's attention, ad draw his fire, a gener- al, as a rule, keeps With: him the Staff °Weer whose opinion he most values; while two or three allies -de -camp fol- low at about thirty e,yards' distance, and the rest of the Staif remain about a hundred, yards away. , Coolness is a grime requisite in a Staff officer. The apparent contempt 'for death „end. danger, so valuably stimulating in e :regimental officer is equally requisite, in the Staff. Ai St'aff Weer has a grasp of the general's plan of action, and may frequentla find hiraself ft position. where ur- gency demands that he should take up. r•n himself the , leVERY SERIOUS RESPONSIBILITY of ordering movements 'without actuat orders from the generahoonimanding- in-ohief. "It is a matter in history." says Lord Wolseley, "that Lord Ilar- dinge, at the Battle Cd Albuera, when serving as an A. A. G. Oussistent-adjute ant -general), on his own responSibility directed the movement Which won us the day." sAfter an action, Making. out lists of killed, wounded, and•missing inen, re - terns pf guns, stores, and prisoners captured, the literati of the dead, and the fornaation of the camp or bivouac, Comprise the work of the Staff, On the mareh the zewl and ability of the Staff is Wed to the utmost. Baocked roads, advance -guards without ool- umns, lost brigades, and wandering di- visions, inissing baggage, and need- lessley-fatigued men -in short, chaos of the most -heart-breaking deseripe tidal results unless the Chief of Staff and his junkies are weal up in their business, ' Nevertheless, a Staff appointment ts intensely coveted by the latter ; and Os English system of making Staff regimental officers interchangeable en- genders a proper sympathy, and pre- vents the tomer from being' looked upon, or looking upon thenteelvett, u corps eapart, thus causing rivalry Which cannot be but detrimental to the A rray's i teres ts, tain, swells into a river, and the river, wipe:ids into and loses. itself in the great °bean of eternity." -Dr. IL R. Reynolds, 15, Sir, give me thist water, Sbe hal Only 0 vague idea a what the Teacher meats., but whaever great gift be has for ber she wants.. 16. Go, call thy husband. Her Savi- our must find hie way into the Wi- tten's heart; hitherto she, has poised her bright Mind Against his. '17. t have no husband, A.s if she had ilever been married, She was probably a young woman. Thou bast well said, 'Thou, hest trttly said,e 1 have no husband, "'With especial em- Phatna on husband, ..-Gobin, 18. For thou heat bad five huebands Angelina. watts on Edwin. Complete effaeetattist marks luir Status. The and he Wbom thou; now hest is Mit thy huaband. The faeility 01 damtleot morsel of the joint, the ehole. divorce among the ancient jews watt est feint, the most oomfortable chair, one of the moral diseases which were "d t.he eezleet "'rile'. et the room, should each as allotted to the spoilt hula:and, eating out the natiottal rife. It is inn. perative that this great evil Who accepts all. He allows her to fetch and carry for him as he would a dog, be .antagonized by those who love Christianity. If all the Sunday often without a word of thanks equi- whoa! teathers en this Sundday had valent to the pat bestowed on the thi eat truth d e in th ir hearta dumb animal. Truly a :Mont husband bias and a, spoilt dieposition in eon- ratteh good would be done. What Ian.- t citizenship of the antique world is lin- dace on thotie with whore it is brought frig Mopped to enable you to take for - depend on the tram ee The soft warmth of mink, the rithe Hazen hue with their black eyea. They even had morning wigs, small and periled and finally .detsteeyed the :sequence, which exerte a potent influe and YOU latt7 nese of. aabhe ,and ,eleinchilla !eye gri „, tightle curled, .ot any eolor, end' they dermitibag the eltizenship and pros,. int° Contact during the routine of maI PorAnsitton of it. Indeed, the, evallY bee°mdmg+--i ennh w2en. tae3r f '"' kept/ tnel beautiful fair onto to receive poet) of our own countey, daily life, Thie enight have been °the. guard will, if tiec,essary, slip &lento to ieh --e hie - - - - their litimirere et night. blessalina 19. 1 pereeive that thou art . a awls° had a little caMillen Sense afid the hotel for it and make ne ehargs in 'suite pro ue ne t ft estred ef eisf e fen, the eight tint, or had a htnitired and fifty, Wigs. te elite prephet., PeoPheta were „believed to selfereetraint 611 the Part of Angelina for hie trouble, though needless to a ea atop 0 fall yelleWleh lace will add the e je have sttperaatural firelight bite the led her till eitad. her due ahare of re- eny, a tip wilt not (tome amiss:, necessary touch of color: but the hand- - ' ' , . guiSti er 86 * of our Lord's lea the woman to credit , v Eh ht f the , and Mill I el ht sPeit and devotion from Edwin, him with divine, visien. 0 ,..... THEIR OWN FAULT. Many a mien is censured as asel- fish husband when Int is really hard- ly responsible for his fault. There are women eo constituted that they spoil every living thing within their prove bide by over -indulgence. One of this type so overwheltos her husband by kindness thee he emote his role of aivinity as a matter of course. Where- as, before marriage Edwin waited up- on Angelina, anticipating her itvishets Nktith lover -like rapidity, she now waits upon herself, end in a little while the positions are totally reversed, and ond class", is a great institution in Sotteli Africa, thouttie la by no meens eerveti to keep the harne heeded; Sons of toll from the supeirior comforts of first. The . miner returning' 'south cOoliatry will be itt once Opened ., thein, tra.st were the bards. If "Dig! Pig your gravel" • and as settlers from Europe %UMW any one hail told me then that in tweie, liew the 8/41 eelitee UPett the Paltt. ty or thirty erears thee evould have be. leg earthl-Hotv atilt is everything, ot tolexate the ohlefashione4 *thee* te•ted all liver the Hoop, Veld( they still! The Man neither starts nor will have to make way foe the up -to- have, yeg earae almost entirely extinct, 'should how eilerlf-onliiionelY anent and arelial the statement as that speaks. Slowly he aweepa his gaze date shopMan frorn Britain. et an insane person." "It is remaricable how various coma This grand anineal, that is to -day re,e avowed, There before hine sleuth 4 tales get accuatomed to certain manu- Presented by a few individuals. forte - Tee erly ranged in mil equad of burghers, low-browed,.bsar4- ed, silent. factarea and modes ot buying. lions from the Allan - tie seaboard to the Gull of Mexico, from Texas to the Great Slave Lake, and as far wesif as Central Nevada. As to tbeir numbers, thea were like the sanda of the fierishore and the Re- aottnts given by those who hunted them twenty or thirty years ago to- day seem like vagaries* of a disorder- ed imagination. Colonel Dodge, in his memoirs states that on one omission he rode 25 miles in Arkansas, alwaYs being in a herd ot buffaloes, or many email herds with but a small separat- big strip between them. This herd observed by Col. Dodge was later found to be fifty miles wide, and to occupy five days in passing a given point on its way north, From a high rock, from which point ten miles distant could be seen in every direction, the earth seemed he be cove ered with bison. To make an accu- rate estimate et the numbers seen would be impossible; but Mr. Horne - day, by a conservative calculation, es- timates that Coe. Dodge must have seen four hundred and eighty thou- sand, and that the herd comprised HALF' A MILLION BUFEALOES pewee of custom anti habit is FMB" derful„ Go where you will it is the same; "When 1. was in India, the, brandy Was Exshaws' Coward supplied the tinned provisibna, and Alisopps the ale. "Just as no :shop in India is coin :Adored proeerly stecked without a goodly supply of Illacessar oil, tapes, and seldlitz powders, no in the Trans. vaal the Brat thonght of tbe etare. keeper le ta see that be does not run short of sweets, "As a rule great smokers are not pa,rtial to sweets, but. the Boers, be- ing unlike any other people in the with.a tveeli's growth on his chin and end a life independence in his pocket has a hankering alter travelling iirst class, which ha is not 'slow to satisfy, The naaximum farre from Cape Town to Buluwayo isethee,reepectaete pile of 592,25 me:doh is at the, rate of 6c per mile. But, there are other end leregular method.s az travelling on Cape raelways that are, however, not only countenanced by the authorities, but hare a special scale all to them- selves. If a Man must travel. without delay, and there. is nothing handy ex- cept a coal or goods train, he can have it putted dawn by some wayside sta- tionmaster, and on payment of 4o per mile (second clams fare) he may claim the privilege of travelling in the corn- pany of the gaited in his great Wm; baring van, a method of getting along in high favor with some people. ff the freight train passenger desires more perfect 'solitude or objects to the two penny rate, he can be accoon- modeled in the corner of a truck at a penny per mile. This is roughing it to be mire but With sufficient warm clothes. for the chilly nights., good to- bacco, and literature, with perhaps a tiapauling in the background against rain,ethere are men who declare this is the finest way of travelling on earth. As to the speed of South African trainst a good idea, will be gained when It is: said, that thel fastest long- distance train is that which runs be- tween Cape Town and ,Bloemfontein, and pe:rforms the long stretch. of 750 miles in 36 hours, or an average pace of barely 21 miles -per hour. From Cape Town to the recognized Trans- vaal capital, lEaretoria, is the big journey of 1041 miles, over which the engine pulls and stiorte, more or less for 52 long hours. • Porrt Elizabeth a,nd East London treble are still more stately in their movements, the gradients being ra- ther less favorable, Notwithstanding that the dtstance, from the former town to Pretoria is only '741 miles, the same, time is taken as from Cape Town. The East London express chops ten hours off this time, but even then the average speed attained is only 16 miles an hoar. Yon may traverse /104 iniles of metals over the Natal Itailivay system, Mit' re- cords will have to go if the journey is to be performed much under 17 hourse which is considered respect- able tune. The slowest railway of all howeverr-though that from Port Elizabeth runs it desperately close -is the Dotage' Bay Liam, the 395 miles world, simply adore them, "Nothing can be more ludicrous than to see a big y ellow-bearded felloe, looking for all the world like a great. echoolboy in leis slier'. jacket,. stand-, ing in front of twenty glass jars full a his favorite dainties, anxiously con- sidering which of the varied assort- ment he shall partake of toelay, "At last, having purchesed a pound, Made up of ounce packets, the nuts- siVe felllaw with the self -same expres- sion you see on the face of an 'Eng- lish archin when making 'himself sticky, will go where hie harse • is standing, and demolish the lot. 'Sro one Transvaal store is to deseeibe, the lot. P'Thetia. ownente beef/des suppl,ying ' the wants et the pepple ase expeet- ed to. bue from them all the wool of the district, and any tobacco the far- rahrs do not re:quire for their own growing, • "Transvaal stores are always pro- vided with jams, „ olive oil, and small basinsd The peseple„ prefer drinking theist. poffee from`small basins instead of cups, and a basin is alscl necessary far ablutions, whielt in a Boer house- hold take once a day. "Just befere dinner' a. basin con- taining a little hot water' is handed - round, and all preseait having dipped their hands in it, • proceed to dry these inembere by waving them abonte far a minute.s. • "N.B. No seep is used. • "The fidelity. with which tbe Boers cling -to articles the outside world discarded years ago, helps to, swell the stores profits., • "Dynasties bare eeme and gone, but ,the I3oer eaddle remains. "Thiebest description 1. can give of a Boer saddle is tbat were they in use in England, horse exercise would go out •of favor. "All sterekeepers when stalking, lay ose plenty of bamboo' for. whip ndlese and ,a eurious sort lir bus-, ket made by the Kaffir& to carry the native beer. • "Although Boers profess to' regard their mediceil men with great 'vener- ation, still their made of life, mon- otony of diet, and a leanefut habit of closing tightly the windows and doors of thew elehping apartments, which are alehas Overcrowded, produces such general bad health, ,thttt they patronize patent inedieinee, as much as they do sweets, "The busiest time for the stores is diming the Church festivals, a which tlierre are several annually.. ' "To attend these the Boers travel in their wagons with their families, from all the surrotending districts. "In the intervals of worship, Mr. and Mrs. Boer and family visit the stare, their purchases being so heavy that tbe booneward journey is hard work for the oxen. "In the eastern distriets a Nue tal the storces are mostly rim by Ger- mans, who do a good trade with the Zulus in gaudy cloths. "Some of these German traderet are very enterprising, still, for sheer com- mercial aptitude. they are not in it with the Scoteh. There, are a dozen Scotch store-keep- e,rs in the Transvaal, each owning a dozen wagons which traverse the whole country all the year round. "I do not know of any Boer run- in,g a store. 'Hie management of a bulled; team is wonderful, but nature has, not en- dowed , hint with comtriercial in- stincts." This man Mane upon his rifle: and glowers at the Englishmani.that man squatted upon the turt look,a care- fully to the tvorkings of Ma weapon; these few standing in.a careless group talk low, so. low tbat the guttural souncla rurable across the young ma&s brain, without leaving behind them ane meaning. He fetes tbem all, and his gaze gearchee the ridgee to bis right, . 13oers, Boera, Boers, shaggy! ponme and Boers, tbe glitter of MT/ on rifle barrels, camifires blazing, and black guns crowning the hills. just carer tnose hills, and across elm rich valley beyond -bow well the young man knows it -lies a British column, hun- deeds on hut trioxide Ithonsands of hui countryman who would risk their bees to help him. Hut they) de not know. .They are "over there." They ratgbt ite well be woes oce'an In dear old -England. "Spy! Dtg your grave." How green and soft the tad He takes, the spade firmly, casts his eye over it with the glance of one who has been used to turning hia hand to any- thing, Leisurely he takes off hie coat, neatly he folds /it, and carefully he lays it upon the grass, His adieus, his manner, his bearing betoken educe - tion, gentility, manliness. He deliber- ately roils ap his shirt -sleeves far above hts elbow. Seii how his tame - ales stand. out! Whae health, . Sun- burnt, rugged, brawny, a: true oon ot • oar world -enveloping empire! • A. m,art shaped by. many climes, His erese tha fire that flashes from them was( kind- ied on prairie and veld, on ranch and in bush, wherever the =Hieing ot our mighty empire breale upon a jagged shore op savagery and darkness. Thudl The spade cuts the turf, over, turn,s the earth; cool, rich, red. out. upon the gree' grass it spills, The sturdy, shaggy Boers watch him narrowly. They know a man when ther see Me. And here standa one. Tbe burghers slowly, noiselessla get upon • their feet, straighten their shoulders, and stand in single . their rifle -butts an the ground. They gaze -how do they gaze ? anger? 'No. hatred?. No. In contempt? No, no. Then with pity? No. The spadefuls of earth ara flung •ont, the b.rawny Englishman is putting his, ahounlers to his work. Not With pity4 No, no,- no. Anyone can read their faces, but who can aescribe the gaze! Their eyebrows are down,1 their eyes twinkle, but not with glee. Duty is before them. Ordere have been given,: and they will obey.. Arid. he? ' He, strikes tbe spade deep nitre the earth -and thinks. Then this is the end? Mast certainly. It is the ende The sun will swing acroes, the 'sky.. the moon will peer _over the rini of the veld, Ube lion Will come forth wlien the *endows -of night fall upon the scramble of rock and launch. Ina roar across the valley; but -it is the end. Time ceases, the vvorid disap- pears, and over there, just over there, the other side of tbose ridiculous hills, oleo of bis own race and tongue swarm -they are talking of the coming fight and of home! Hemel • "Have you any message to senate "None!" His toees are clear, 'there is no tre- mor in his voice, Home! . Thank a kind •Heaven bis mother will never • hear, for no one Boer knows' him, and his grave will be unmarked; She will wait his coming, BM she has ever waited, with hope her heart, and sho will fall to sleep at last, strong in the faith of meeting hiin ecnnewhere. knowing well the penalty exact-. • ed in fate threw him' into the enemeee hands, he bad risked it all for the good ot Vie Army. Successful he bad beenp butt he was not such a fool as to Imo agate he must always be successtui, He could not upbraid bimself, lie eyes had ,never been abut to the great clan. ger. The Boers; had tramie4 biro -the Boere were right. ( "Enougb, quite deep enou,gh." Ha Sticks the spade. upright in, the turf beside the red. hole it .had shah - ed. Ktpon his outepread palms on the edges. of the gravel he springs to the Level ground again, he brushes hie trowser legs free from the red son, down -rolls hist shirt -sleeves, slips on his coat, and tutns towards the Boers. "AnythIng to say?" "Nothing." • The guttural tones this time are rough mild loud theft the leader ad- dremes to his Men. The words bring the burghers out of, theesetral-stupor into which they had' fallen in watch-. ing the young, :man. And he? Her gm is fixed steadfaet aeon the blind- ing sun---- • . Crash KISSES ON INTEREST. • A train on tile Kansas Pacific road in the State in 1868 pulsed between the towns ot Elsworta and Sheridan -one handred and twenty miles -through a continuous herd of bufteloes. They were packed BO thBE the earth was black, and more than once the train was stopped, the surging mass be- coming a meneee to human safety: Hunters have heard the rearing of buffalots at a distance of from three to five nation and that the earth trembled when they thanked we can well imagine when the bulls are known to weigh 2000 poufads. the cows 1200 peends. It has been 'estimated that previous to 1870 nearly threeequar- ters of a•enillion buffaloes could have been, killed yearly and the herds kept intact. How muny were killled -and wasted will never be knowne„Eaoh mat, however, had a value at this time, estimated by• Hornaday at 5 dollars; the robe 2.50 dollars ; the tongue, 25 cents; hindquarter meat, 2 dollars ; bones, horn, and hoofs, 25 cents; and this was sufficient to attract an array of destroyers-. The hides were the greatest feature, and one Erman NOW York Petersen 1876 and 188e paid the, killers nearly 1,000,000 dollars, or ta be exact, 923,070 dealers, for the robes e xitti ai o aorfk tahnedadniisma garl.e and hides, which represents the final eable subjec' t to probe, bet it. is interesting tnnote smile of tee methods of these nation. al calamity -makers. A band of half- breeds in two hunts, according to Ross, killed 47,770 buffaloes, 620 raen being engaged in the sport, out of which about 30,000 animals were - WASTED OR PARTLY EATEN. liornadarestimates that from 1820 to 1825 five buffalo expeditions went out, composed ef 610 carts each killing 118,950 buffaiges. From 1825 to 18241 five expeditions, of 750 carts each ,kill.. ed 146,250 buffaloes. From 1830 to 1835, six expeditions, of 895 carts, kill- ed 1.74,528 animals, From 1835 to1840; fifty-four expeditions, of 1090 carts each, killed 212,550 buffaloes. Many buffaloes were killed by run- ning them down; this was the popu- lar method among the Indians, who shot them with rifle or bow and ar- row or chasedethem ov,er precipices, The groat herds north of the Missouri were mostly exterminated by the In- dians ot the Manitoba lied River set- tlement, who hunted them in a regu- lar allay. One division ot suck an army of exterminators consisted of 603 carts, '700 balf-breees, 200 Indians ,000 horses, 200 oxen, 400 dogs. The move. ments against the buffaloes in Ne- briska were often made by 3000 people, and as eaehenan killed at least 10, 000 buffaloes bit the dust. In. this way Indians, as above, killed, it ia es, ,fillivbiunfgfaalotest..he, iaat Gov. w65ere ernment censtie, made eight years ago, 256 pare -blooded buffaloes in captivity, the het of the untold millions that covered this continent during the past century, which tells a pitiful story df the greed of the white man and the extirpation of a mighty race within three decades. LONDON LAUNCRY SCHOOL, "This is the way we wash our clothes" is a familiar phrase in the play -ground. and the nursery; it hars now a new and a very practical Mean- ing 'for the little girls attending, wheels' ih I,ondan. Laundry classesi, at which they may acquire at least ens useful aceimplishment, have been established in various ports of the me- trepolis, and, according to the annual report of the school management coni- mittee, have proved thoroughly satia- THE ORIGIN OF THE WIG. The' Brat wig mentioned in history was made out of a goat's skin and worn. by the deughter of Saul, king of Israel, The first artistic wig:3 were made in tbe south of Italy for the Gap- iniena; who lived in Apulia, and *ere keown for the luxuries of theist toilet. These people were, they say, the first who painted their faces, this they did with the juice of atravebetrries. The Persians wore wigs, aten,ophon relates that little Cyrus, when he Visited A.styages, his grandfather, factory. Durmg tiles year they were whose eyes were framed in blue paint separating Johtennetsburg and Latin. attended by 12,262 aspirants to pro- and who wore an enormous wig, threw B1300 Marquez oecuPYIng juet 27 hours fichtney in the art of oleaneing and hintselt on his knees and cried: "0110 articles of every -day wear. mother, what a beautiful erandfather whiels represents a rate equal to a heautifYing trifle over 14 miles an hoer, There are now seventy-one pertnanent I haver A.gatin, a meld of honor, laundry centres, and two others are was so struck by the appearence of The longest direct railwtty run in building. Each tschool consiste of one the old gentleman that she rem:lined South Arran Is still, of course, that clasa-roorn, with aceommodatien tee act distance being 1360 miles, to cover fourteen, children, and is fitted wun The phoeuietar, women, who were with Aetyages as a slave, from Cape Town to Buluwayo, the ex - desks mid seats, fourteen waehtubs proud of their hair, having been order - which tear days, three nighta and. the ironing tables, a copper, and a sitik. ea by their priesta to offer' it up on better part of a fourth are consumed. The whole work is under the superin- the altars dedicated to Venus after Naturally a few eandwiehee in the tendence of Miss Lord and Miss Jones. the death. of Adonis, obeyed, butt with pocket will barely suffice for this pro. digiOus railway journey,. and refresh- A.t present there is a deficieney in the supply of 'instructresses, and a number murmuring. Soon they were consoled by a. Greek merchant who told them ittent faellitlea are provided On a gen- are being trained under the former's that he would give them the means luaus scale. On mail trains 'tbe pea- stipervielon. The salary of the mime of hiding abate bald. pates under luxe senger may have dinner served from erbiteadeate commences at Z150 Oer urtant curls, In his chariot het had the fcain kitchen piping hot; In ex- year, and rises to A200. hundreds of wigs ef all colors. eellent ittyle, and at a really milder- :Wigs were in vogue in Rome to - ate tariff, On ordinary trains the 1 ward the end of the republic and so Shilling sandwithes, which can be :got well made that, says Ovid, "'No man at every statiost, la extremely .popti- THE ART OP arnAptiNG FURS., eould knotv If his wife: had any hair at late It Le not ine much a sandwith, So few women uaderstand the real all befere she had givers biro, au op- al:mew between pro4igious eliees of " bread. as we know bne here* it is a veritable e . ecomingnees ot furs. Why will dark, POrtunfty of sisizttig her by, the ties - sea, ( xf you ere not so easily setts. swarthy women wear Persian lamb, fled, you may better 4 sumptuotte din- and, pale, colorleas blondea gray fox, erg of blond hair foe rich Roman Witte Teutonic, peasants Wke the provide nee by Wire from anywhere en :route when both require a very opposite f cesses, who loved the contrast of its . eeinest thr gartnent is a failure if - ,•• worn with a tenet whose finite ,and CO. Our fathers worahlped in dale A PERSISTENT cANviossrt, tonna womsbt riAttnym, coloring& 016 at War With it, The town a Ladysmith thti Witte IN TIME OP PEACH. triountaln. The Samaritans telected Carivatiser-I have here a work-. .-• --,---..---- of the recent operations in Natal, is Mount Geriiiiri as their sacred plaee. llt twatchin on the borders of Rua - Master of the Ilottae-T mill read, # a ,. 4,..' IA laid out on a eloping hillside near the „ Canwieser-41ut your children-- site is die oniy town in the worm ex- SOME BOXFSTY tArT. Itlip /ever, an uniMportant 'stream An Old. legend *aid that Nash bad been aaatifiaad there Mehl ei tuu t h 11 I li b'l elitsively inhabited by men. The Chi. .1eWs belleVed that Mato had been dren, triumphantly, g a t etre are a ew Ones • saerifieed on Mount Morten, Where couvosoor-wsn, ype want home. 0118 territory' and nre even forbidden ee-1) nothing but meet, nese women aro not allowed te live in aia inai le I ft. Two venire ano I met „ whieh flows at its foot. .1Some thirty the temple stood, Vor four hundred boy around the eorner to buy a post range of meeetefes tepee e - - - - -- " miles distant the -great Drekeitherg shoulders will break her down, Those Into tbe rough, hard bands, that have done so thing to throve at the eat, to paas tbe great well of Heiken and to etird. I home never seen the boy to years the Samaritan temple had litood thli day. blue eky mut Abetters ell the slope !many necessary things for you, will on 1.fount Gerizin. Ye day that in He took the book. , entet Mongolia. All. the Chinese ot this .....----,...- ...., upon which the town rtands• Al" be crossed upon her lifeless Wilmot, 36rusalern is the place where men border town are traders. 4 4. father, talking to his careless daughter said: " want to speak be you bf your mother. It may be that yott have noticed a careworn -look up- ott her face lately. Of courste 11 has not been brought there by any action of yoUrs, still it is your duty to effase it away. want you to get up to- morrow morning and get breakfast, and wben your mother comes and lirs- gibs to expense her surprise, go right up to her and kiss her on the mouth. Yon carat imagine how it will brighten her dear face, Besides, you owe her a Wag or two. Away beck, when you were a little girl, eh° kissea you When no one else waa tempted by your fev- er -tainted breath ,and saritillen face. Yoe were not as attritetive then *erne are now. And through tbose years of childish attnishine and shadowe she was always ready to cure, by the magio Of a mother's kisti, the little, dirty, chubby hands whenever they Were in- jured in those first skirmishes With the rough old World, And theft the Midnight kiss with Which she Meted so many bad dreems, as she leaned over your restless Pillow, have all been on interest these long, long years, Of course, she la not so prettyeand kiss- able as you are; but if yeti bad done your share. of wok during the last ten years, the contrast would not.be tie marked. Her lace has more kles than your*, far more ; and yet it you Wara atok that feels would appear more beautiful then an angi31's as it hovered over you watching every oppop. trinity minster to your corafOrtrand every Of thtlatl weinkles would stem to be brittle twavelets of ettliallitie chasing each other over the dear face. She will leNve yott one Of these att3tel. Theist burdens, if not lifted from tier You &Jail tall that boy honest f ought to worahlp. "Ye," Jews. The it t hit kl lot --9.919991,91999999991.19 yes sir! orni / though in the heyht of summer Thoat, neglected lips that geee yott W01210.11 With remarkable selfeenite ra 45 41 146 on W 6 E "E" MI5 hg received the heat is frequent y 01;*Proasive, Yet Yotlr first baby kiss will be forever tal with that on the beak* Dear • - --,- for nog of the year the elLtoitte ia valued, and thole tad, tired eyes will The place hait, have opened In eternity, and than you "6ng a larRe "dtb" trnere Yaw PO0t41. I slarle'd. both dry and breading. control aticl craftiness seeke to divert ratty be removed by soaking fon eg tabbing them between the and within Mx months two-thirda of houre in sour milk,. and then that- Scottish girls emigrated to Matiltritia, the eilliVettlation from the eibbar- business with tin4 penny you gave me Imes& ,ntted, wee recoMutencled aa a will atvreelate your toother; hut it teasing personality to a great current f"tightY and have 1)w/sorted.' Thanks. resort for owissiseotivse, will hs too late," Irds. them were niarried. •