The Wingham Advance, 1921-10-06, Page 3-.4
44
1*
flunfmg Well
Gazelpioo are familiar to all readers
of poetry, where they appear In 430
gentle'and domestic a guise that YOU
are a little shocked to read about
parties being made up to Lunt them.
as mop�e or wildcats, or rhinoceroses
ore hunted, In Morocco however, they
are a particularly choice sort of game,
and A correspondent of the London
Times writes to his paper an, Interest -
Ing account of a gazelle hunting ex-
PeditiQu.,
There are four of us, HaJ Thanif
Glawl,' the Pasha of Marrakesh, Nald
Hammou of the Atlas-, Bid Ayadl, Kald
,of RafiamnA, and myself. There Is a
car for each for us, and at the InVita-
tion of my hosts I take my seixt, beside
the ch4uffeur, with, two beautifully
dressed black slaves In attepdhace on
the back seat. The kalds enter their
cars, and we set out.
The cultivated lands 4re quickly left
behind, and. the great plain of 11abum-
tia lies stretching away be -fare no, with
the snow peaks of the Atlas bounding
Its southern horizon.
Kaid Ayadl gives the signal, and the
four cars spread out—a few hundred
yarda'apart—and proceed at a slower
pace, 14bout fifteen miles an hour. The
ground Is stone -strewn and rough, and
careful steering Is, necessary. There
are b-puldera of every shape and size,
loosely strewn over the plain, end lit-
tle channels- warn by water, insignifl-
cant enough In themselves, but highly
damaging to motor cars If the cars are
,net skillfully manceuvred. Our chauf-
feurs, three Frenchmen and an Algerl-
as M Morocco
mInuteg later we see t-hom appear on
the outline Qfp6 low hill,. bounding. over
the rocks.
It vao not long before fresh berds,
appeared; but, (tlwAys breaking away
to, the lort�, they succeeded In reaching
tile low,4400Y slopes that form the
nortborXi.,'4ouodary of the Rahamna
plain. At,,oL signal from It -aid AyvAI
we turn southward to seek more ad.
yantago,ous, grou)id., and, emerging
from the stones, our cars roll across
the loeyel. plain at a pace of thirty
milles AA: hour, - Qame,- however, ii
ocarcer-UP'Te—though a great busturd
%alln to*idy. gun-, brought down by a
At lost we spy a lord of a dozen
gazelleg in tho oppn, and at an In-
creiise,4 ispeed the ears ruoh forward.
The speedometer of my car marks
forty miles an hour, but we are not
gaining. on the g4zelleo, which, appear
easily,"to.,keep their distance of tour
or five hundred yards ahead at us. At
another signal, we increase the pace
to, fltt�, �411ea an hour. The Plain Ii
level, 'but there 'are Stoneor and little
undulatlo�lis and many small water-
oouriseo; merely little declivities. In the
surface,, but none the less exciting to
pass ovei. The exhilaiation is In-
tense.
It Is wonderful driving on the part
of the chauffeurs. The cars sway from
side to side and rise and fall, like
boats In a -rough sea, We are closing
upon the herd, and it looks. as if my
car will be first to come up with them -
but suddenly they swerve tothe rIghi
an, are skillfuldrivbm and accustomed
anu Pas"own `0 Alue 'ut auva"Ang
to this sport of the "great kaide."
cars.
Sudde,ily one of the slaves. In my
The Pasha of Marrakesh's lithe
figure is clearly visible as. he stands
car tries out, and away a -head of us I
in his, swaying can The gazelles pass
r, ee a.herd of gazelles bounding over
him, and with right -and, left barrels he
the plain.. My car Is on the extreme,
brings down two of them, It Is beauti-
left of -,he line, and our object is. to
ful shooting. Kaid Hammon's cax Is
head off the herd from the more stony
the next, and hie too shoots two gazel.
ground and turn them to the right,
1,oa, Once more the ber-dowerves, and,
where the plain is more level, Edging
passing between the cars, breaks back
away always to the left, our,car quick-
to the rear. We allow them to escape
ens Its pace, rq4ling from side to- Bide
—all except one, a young doo, which,
and bumping, Seizing every QppGr�
paralyzed with fear, stands motionless
tunity of a few yards of good ground,
and is easily captured alive and un -
we spum forward, only to have to slow
hurt. It Is carefully conveyed back to
down agaln in order to cross. some
Marrakesh to become. a Pat in the
awkward spot, The gazelles -are out
pasha's house.
of range. You can shoot them only
You may argue that this clus-at
with a saotgun loaded with solid tullet
hunting Is not sport, that the, gazelles
or buckshot: to. shoot with a rifle out
o -f a car going at from forty to fifty
have to chance of escape; but it Is
miles an hour over rough ground la too
,at so. The risk is great, an- accident
much to expect, There are less stones
may occur at any moment, and the
I stony surface of the ground gives the
now, and we are making headway.
gazelles a good chance. Of the many
T.he three cars on my right keep a
herds- that we saw the four gazelles
little in the rear in order to facilitate
that we shot and the one that we took
my turning movement; but they too
alive were our whole bag, though we
are making good pace. At times, for
covered over one hundred miles on the
a few minutes, wo are travelling at over
forty milea an hour, -and once or twice
'plain alone, without counting cur Ode
to and from'Marrakesh. Thehandling
the gazelles are almost within range;
of the cars. required the greatest skill,
theu.some little watercourse or some
-and the shooting ii by no means easy.
extra stony patch gives them their
Tohit -a running gazelle from a motor,
chance, and Vney increase the distance
again, At last our course seems clear,
car travelling at the rate of fifty miles
an hour over rough ground needs no
and the car bounds forward. The pace
'little skill.
Is splendid but rather terrifying. Halt
We return to -a late luncheon at Kald
standing, halt kneeling on the seat, I
Avadi�s house, --a meal beginning with
wait to get my chance to shoot; then
a roast sheep and continuing with un -
suddenly the car -swerves in a way
limited courses of meat and fowl and
that nearly thrcws me Dut—and stops.
sweets,—most of which Is! left im-
h yard or two ahead is a dry water -'tasted.
The afternoon is well on, an(I
course, a metro wide perhaps, half a
the snows of the Atlas are rosy with
metro deep and full of boulders, an
the rays of the setting sun as we roll
Impassable barrier—or rather a barrier
back to the city along the straight
that makes, us search for a Practicable
'whita, road. Before sunset.'we are In
passage and allows the escape of the
the pasha's palace, having covered
gazqllos, whose course toward tile
more than one hundred and eighty
tt-ony ground is now tasy. A few
miles since our start in the morning.
X -Rays in the Factory.
The next development of the uses of
radiography will be the application of
X-rays to Industrial purposes,
Experiments which have been In
progress, for some time point to won-
d,e.rful possibilities. in the near future,
when every great factory and foundry
will have its Own radiographer and
laboratory,
,There is no reason why the X-rays
hitherto used only for medical and sur.
gical work, should not 6 utilized In
detecting flaws in, say, an ingot of
metal or block of concrete. Progress
in this direction. only awaits the per-
fecting of sufficiently powerful appar-
atug, The importance of this to the
metallurgist and manufacturer must
be obvious, and research work Is only
hindered by the abs-ence of the neces-
sary funds to prosecute what are
necessarily v�bry costly experiments.
Last Time Round.
Just as two Irishmen. were In the
middle of a large field, one at them
turned and saw an angry bull making
for them.
With a yell of warning he bolted and
just managed to clear the hedge. His.
companion, less nimble, ran wildly
round the hedge to find an opening,
Twice he went round without escap-
Ing. Then as he passed his anxious
friend for the third time he shouted:
"Tell my missus my Insurance
policy Is In the bottom drawer. This
is my last time round."
Measurements.
A two -foot rule was given to a la-
borer in a Clyde boat -yard to measure
an iron plate. The laborer not being
well up In the use of the rule, after
spending considerable time, returned.
Mick," asked the plater,
1 " 7!n — - — - � - —
"Well," replied Mick, with a grin of
Camel Meat Like Beef. satisfaction, "it's the length of your
The hump of a caniel Is said to I rule and two'thumbs over, with this,
taste like beef, and is regarded as a I piece of brick and the breadth of my
great delicacy by the Arabs and hand and my arm from here to tbore,
others. bar a finger." '
MN irNn4rz"�
I I
JUST C�\W_= kt-1
c>T-T- �I� RJ:*\D
A04 BIZ006Kr—
, e, W ) / e I , , - , -
S
CLEVER BIRD AND
STUPID BEAST
The ostrich' and the rhinoceros, are
stupid. So at least most persons.
think. But Mr. Carl E. Akeley, who
has spent years In hunting, collecting
,and stud7ing wild antinale, says that,
though they are right a -bout the
rhinoceros., they are wrong about the
ostrich. The ostrich, -he declares, has
brains, and to prove It he tells this ex-
perience of his In, Afrlca:
"One day I had been for some time
following a wary pair of ostriches
when I came to a wide opening in the
scrub growth In. the centre of which
was, a dense green bush a dozen, feet
In diameter. A beautiful cock ostrich
broke into the clearing just below the
bush, endas I raised my rifle he dis.
appeared behind the bush; f4c.1 held
myself ready to catch him when he
passed out from behind it on the other
side. I stood there until I felt foolish.
Then. I ran quickly to the bush. The
ostrich was. nowhere to be seen, but
his trail told the story. As he had
come- into the open he had seen. me,
and so when he got behind the bush
he had stopped short, turned at right
angles and run straight away, keeping
I the bush between himself and me. I
have not known many animals to do a
more clever thing.' I
But the rhinoceros. Mr. Akeley holds
up to scorn. "Many experienced hunt-
ers,," he writea, "consider him as. one
of the most dangerous African arxi-
mals. I cannot quite agree with that.
Of course, If he runs over you, you are
likely to get hurt, It Is, also true that
m soon as he smells you he is likely
tostart charging about in a terrifying
manner. But you have only to get out
of the way and let him charge by;
sometimes even that Is not necessary."
One day when Mr. Akeley, far ahead
of his gun boys,, was, going along the
bank of a river he heard the thrash -
Ings and snortings of a charging rhin-
oseros. He carried only a camera.
"There was," he -says, "nothing to
climb. Between me and, the thicket
from which the rhino was coming was
about tv�enty-flvo feet of open tiiace.
Behind me was a thirty-foot drop to
the crocodile -Infested waters of the
Tana River. The only hope I saw was
a bush overhanging the brink; It look-
ed as. it it might hold me it I swung
out on It. My mind was made up to
try the bush and let Lhe rhino land in
the river. He came ful tilt into the
opening and stopped with aisnort. His,
head dropped. His eyes, almost closed.
He looked as if he were going to
sleep! I felt� a poke in my back. I
reached behind and took my rifle from
the' gun boy who -had come up. I
drew a b6ad on the old fellow, but I
could not shoot. A stupider or more
ludicrous object I never saw. There
he stood, half asleep and totally ob.
livIous,, while 1, with the gun half
aimed, talked to him about bis ugly
self. About that time my porters
came Into hearing� The rhino pricked
up his ears-, charged thropgh the sa.
fari and off through the bush."
Mr. Aheley believes that the rhin-
oceros is. more inquisitive than foroci.
OUS. His eyesight Is -i poor, and when
Ile 81110118 Something he come$ charg-
ing toward it to investigate. - His
blundering bad manners are getting
him shot so frequently that already an
old rhinoceros with a large horn is a
rarity.
REGLAR
Ht 111111�1
BUM _Mt�t�
-.r RNT L L -T" 1�-
'Fhe Seasons.
Often we meet people who say that
they don,1 like summer, others who
don't like winter, occasionally some
who dont like autumn, and once In -a
walle. some one who doesn't like
spring. Seldom will anyone admit --
or boast—thathe likes all the seasons.
equally. And yet If a. mun, were to
keep a recor& of the days In the year
that simply from the point of view at
weather and physical comfort he en-
joyed, there would probably be no sea-
son.that would establish a decisive
claim to his, favor. And it there were
any such, it would almost certainly
not be spring.
People -.are generally governed In
their likes or disilikes at the seasons
by the extremes rather than by the
average of weather displayed. Per-
sons of cheerful and optimistic spirit
or-- likely10 remember a season by its
shining days rather than by Its stormy
ones; and persons ' who are easily af-
fected by -adverse circumstances take
their strongest impressions of a sea-
son from those days when It Is at Ito,
worat, By thatreasoning It might ap-
pear that to -such per3ons all seasons,
re equally bad, and that to the others,
all are equally good. But Impressionp
are relative; and anyone who shud-
ders and shivers In cold weather is-
pretty.sure to prefer summer, how -ever
hot it may be, and one, who really suf-
fers from heat is likely to think that
winter Is the beat time of the year.
The law at compensation that Emer-
son preached applies in our attitude
toward the seasons. It we did not
have foggy and windy and rainy days,
we should not appreciate nearly so
much as, we do sunshine and blue sky
and a -oft breezes. If we never looked
out into utter blackness of night, with
blasts of wind arid snow beating
against the panes, we, should not look
up at moon and stars and the silent
spaces, of the heavens with quIte the
-same love of their beauty. Even the
most wonderful things in nature might
grow stale in our eyes if there were
no contrast In. the circumstances of
their appearance.
Enterprising.
A business man advertised for an
office boy. The next morning there
were some fifty boys in line. He war,
about 0 begin examining the appli.
cants when his stenographer handed
him acard on which was scribbled:
"DoWt do anything until you see
me. I'm the last kid, fix line, but I'm
telling you I'm there with the goods.1,
Odd Afflictions.
Druggists frequently have to listen
to amusing things. Here are a few
examples,:
"My little girl has Just been oper-
ated on for egg noggs, in her head."
"What can you recommend for my
sister? She has Vera Cruz veins in
her legs."
The Avergae Man—
A French statistician estimates that'
at the age of fifty years. the avi&rage
man has slept 6,000 days, worked
6,500, walked 800, ainuved himself
4,000, spent 1,500 eating, and has been
ill 500 days,
To Protect the Swallow.
The number of swallows that have
migrated during the summer months
to England has decreased during the
past four years, and because of the
economic valu& of the bird steps are
being taken to protect Wand Its, eggs,
Gene
Fak the Futur
"Cairada is brtter able to face the
futuro tban almost any other country
In the world," said Sir Robert Kin,
derr,ley, a director of the Bank of Ung.
land and G*erwr of the Hudson's Bay
Company, at tho recent annual meet -
Ing of that corporation In London.
There are few men outside Canada,
better able to speak oh the business,,
lature of this. country, for In Addition
tO being one of the JeMerfv In the com-
morclul and financial life of Great BrI.
tala, he 18 -head of a company that has
been trading In IDanada. for over 260
years and has travelled It from end
to end. He should know whereof he
speaks. There Is no corporation that
knows more about Canada and few
that have been as successful, 40% an
the common stock,the rate during the
last throe or four yearo, Is. a. pretty
fair retura.
Taking advantage of the action of
the 'United States In placing high
duties oft, Canadian exports which, If
nothing else lo. bound to make It more
dIfficult to sell American goods In
M -1A +hr—oh fln. rl.i�w r.+. �f —
change, the British are making special
efforts to capture Canadian trade, An-
nouncement to this, effect was recently
made In the British House of Com-
mouls, Samples of American goods.
that have been sold very generally in
the Western: Provinces have been
taken to England with the result that
The Destination of Canada!s
Opfimisfically
British nipwitacturoro will endeavor
to moot this demand.
Unutm.tl Pains are alfo being tAkea
to $Locure the ilght kind of agents In
this country, It appearf; as It the
United States looks with complacency
on the action of Congrow In seeltIng
to keep out Canadian products, saying
that "it 10 an ill wind that blows no.
body goo4,11
'Ae gross mercantile warine toii�
nage on, the Canadian regWor at tile
end Of JUUO Waa 1,680,000 tons. As an
Indication of what this -means It may
be said that the total gross tonnage
of all other Biritish Dominions outside
of the United Kingdom Is only tqnal
to 400,000 groso. The Canadian Pa.
cifle now occuples an Important place
AMOrig the goeto of the world and has
recently acquired a, furtXor 22,000 -ton
vessel, the Empress. of China, Thirty.
five Years ago the Company Bent out
Its first vos3el, "The W,B. Flint," a
sailing ship of 800 tons, from Yoko,
Lama, Japan, to Fort Moody, near
Vanouver, ton days before the Trans.
Continental route wary opened, up.
Italian shipping Interests being able
to book a great many more Immigrants
than they can land In the United
States under the present Immigration
Restrietfon Act, are apparently look.
]ng to Canada as an outlet and so the
NaYlgazione Generale Itallana has In-
augurated a Canadian service, the first
established line between the two. coun.
tries.,
United States and 1,668,930 barrels
SCOTLAND YARD TO
SCRAP OLD METHODS,
IN FERRETING CRIMES OF
THE WORLD.
Sweeping Changes Will qivo,
London One of Rest Staffs;
of Rogue Chmoro,
The Scotland Tara nyatem, admirea
and feared by the wTongoer in ibo
four corners of the earth for hay. w,
century, will be scraped, says a ion.
don despatch, The old order of *11n a
will be revolutionized. A thom)gh re,
organization Js being directed -by Gen.!
Sir Willigni Horwood, Commissioner ot'
Pollee, He bas outlined far reaching
reforms.
As a moult, London is soon to have
a new detective force recruited from
the beat and smartest brains of the
MetropoUtan police. Some obanges al.
ready have been made.
"At present 60 per cent, of the Crim-
lUal Investigations Department Is ora.
,played as Jnqulry offices," one oiflolal
says, "The department has been al.
lowed to become an Inquiry bureau
with only a small nucleus of the staff
real detectives. We have many able
men, but their energies have not been
directed in proper channels, It is V,
tradion of Scotland Yard that once a
member of the 'C. 1. D.' (Criminal In.
Vestigation Department), always a
'C. I. D.1
Crop. valued at $18,370,895 to other coun- Expert Criminal Harmful.
tries. Of the experts of Can- "Now It will be the duty of the
During the seven yeara 1915 to adlan wheat flour to other coun- department heads without partiality or
1921, the total'exports of grain from tries than , the 'United States, 1,- favor to tell when a man Is getting
CAnada amounted to 1,222,664,772 801,964 barrels valued at *17,329,860, stale. During the last three years pro -
bushels. Only fifteen per cent. of this were shipped by way of the United i gresa- has been made quietly until now
went to the United. States, the balance States ports and 2,884,929 -barrels a detective force of $00 has been
of 85 per cent. going to other coun- valued at $27,190,791 by way of Can- equipped in such a manner as to en.
tries. Of the total exportation of adian seaports. able the men to take the field against
grain during this period, 416,950,748 ----------- f,-- the forces of disorder.
bushels, or 87 per cent., left Canada State Education. "The expert crIminal Is the most
by Canadian sea ports, whilst 641,900,- harmful to society nowadaye, it isn't
167 bushels were exported via the A political speaker remarked -the the dull witted fellow but the bright,,
United States. Grain, however, -ex- other day, "Is it not just as reason- alert, Intelligent, well educated chap
ported through the customs ports of able that the province should main- who stops at nothing. To meet thim
A-bercorn, Coaticook and St. John's, tain a school for blacksmiths as that type face to face Scotland Yard must
P.Q., has to be hauled for long dis- it should -pay for the education of doc- produce his equal fit ability, skill and
tances on Canadian lines. The quan- tors who charge -high fees for their resourcefulness. There's been too
tity of grain destined for other coun- 'services?" He had, not reasoned far much merit given because of a system
tries than the United States and, ex- enough. One learns a trade in less that hitherto exiated, All thb4 must be
ported through these three parts dur- time'and at less expense than one! altered."
ing the seven years amounts to 137,.F,Iearns a profession. Besides, the ap- The official said that the now policy
449,846 bushels, which for practical, Prentice is paid while be is learning, means that sweeping changes will be
whereas the student is under
purposes may be regarded as an addi- great put into effect which will perhaps
tion to the quantity exported through expense during his whole universityl change the complexion of Scotland
Canadian seaports, viz., 415 ' 50 ' 748 course- No one is deterred from be-, Yard completely, but he was certain it
bushels and malcing the total to be coming a blacksmith solely because of will be Improved.
653,400,694. the cost of I -earning the trade, butl
In the pexiod under review, the many a boy would have to give up his)
heaviest export shipments of wheat ambit4on to be a doctor if the province Personality.
were made in the three war years, bore no part of the cost of his niedi-
1916, 1917 and 1918, the )argestquan- cal education. And what a price in Variety, we say, is the spice of life.
tity being 189,643,846 bushels f5r the human lives would be paid if some Nature provides many sorts of
year ended March 31st, 1917. par youth with a natural talent for sur- 1 flowers. We'd tire even of the rose
1919 the quantity fell' to 41,808,897 gery were prevented by poverty :from if we had no other ilower.
bushels, the smallest of the series. becoming a surgeonl i The seasons alternate. Pe". etual
The total wheat exported for the . The education of its leaders in medi- ummer or perpetual winter IF mono -
seven years was 818,696,828 -bushels. cine, in law, in theology, in teaching,[ stony.
Of this quantity 713,622,796 bushels, in engineering, and in other walks of i The weather changes. Sun all the
or 87 per cent., was destined for coun- life costs the country a great deal of time is as undesirable as continuous-,
tries other than the United States, money, but it is money well spent.
Where there is� no vision, the peo I rain.
451,691,743 bushels or 63 per cent. go- " ple National customs differ. M)des of
perfsh." Where there are no leaders, I
Ing through United States -ports and dress and of architecture are lot the!
261,831,053, or 87 per cent., going the state retrogrades. Civilization' same. Languages are minutely sub-'
through Canadian seaports. itself cannot exist without education. divided into dialects. i
The latest r(Aurns of Canadian ex- Canadians will require to become ac- Life at sea is utterly different from
port trade show that niore than one- customed to greater expenditures on life on land. To board a shi-i
third of Canada's exported wheat and university education. Far railways, next thing to "going from the world,
one-quarter of its flour in the season gor water power, for roads, there is we know to one of wonder still."
just elapsed, went to the Unifed abundance of money 'but, to provide
for these, the universities must strug-1 A voyage through the air is not'
States. From September Ist, 1920 to , like a journey by water or on land. 1
May 81st, 1921, wheat exports am- gle along on pitifully Inadequate All through our lives the rule of,
ounted to 122,549,528 bushels, valued revenues. On the part of the general perpetual variance prevails.
at $268,262,638, of which 47,656,963 Public there 'a needed some clear And so it is with persons. The inex-
bushels valued at $100,689,425 went to thinking on the relative value of edu- haustible resourcefulness of Nature in
the United States, 28,171,956 bushels cation. creating so many types of character,
valued at $60,079,445 to the United so many rates, infinitely various in,
Kingdom and 46,720,609 bushels valu- $ome Drawback. feature, is amazing.
ed at $107,493,768 to other countries. Two tramps were discussing the Nature did not intend us to look and'
Of the wheat shipments to countries ways and meano of living In. this hard -walk and act and feel too much alike.1
other than the United States, 62,378,- world without being IaJd up with She meant us to own our souNl, to de -
194 bushels valued at $109,288,164 bodily exhaustlon. velop individuality, to speak out of,
went by way of United States ports, "It It warnt sich a long way off, Bill, our ininds with our own voices; in!
and 22,519,371 bushels valued at $58,- we might go to the South Sea Islanda. short, to assert a personality.
335,049 by way of Canadian seaports. Ookernats and bananas all' over the Life is too tame arid tepid if -we
Exports of Canadian wheat flour for place for nutlu," remain neutral in the background al -I
the nine months ending May 31st, Bill ruminated deeply for some time, ways.
1921, reached a total of 5,432,405 bar- and queried, 'I suppose yer las, to Seekers of the limelight and the�
rels valued at $56,713,745, of which pick 'em?" head -lines we have v.ith us always, and
2,617,963 barrels vallued at $9,16,149,756 "Yus$ a? course," they aye odious. I
went to the United Kingdom, 1,245,611 "Ughl" was the disgusted reply. 1,1 But it is possible to have a stroilglyl
barrels valued at $12,193,107 to the knew there'd be oome, drorback.11 developed personality without making
0 0 a bid for noisy notoriety.
Keep AlrplAne Affoat. Change Color of Birds. It is important that we should dare'
French and British Invelitom com.- Scientists have found that the color to be ourselves, that we should big
blued their Ideas In perfecting bags, of birdo In three or four generations willing to be different. It througli
to be quickly Inflated with compressed can be changed. to white'by keeping moral cowardice we invariably aasen�
air carried In bottles attached to them them in a white room with white our- to theprovalling, fashion on our *pin-
to keep affoat airplanes that hapi rouadings and uttended by Persons Ions, we make one more in a crowd�
to fall upon water. Wearing white, but a place of loaderohip is denied up.
A controlling force whorev"r
goes, whatever he does, in, the ma
who has conAotions, and takes sidti,
.... .. and does not hide on the defenslvo�11(
a Wlight zone trying to assume
tint of the bukgroun4.
It is a glorious event in a lifetil
to met one who hag a strong 4
vivid paroonality. To ruth a pe
mW5 rv�xz5 we cleave where and wbsn we And him
�%R crateful that the contact gives 111r,
and accent and oleetric atimulatiorr
keep us going tMough "those h
lone days."
`71 The avorage COM 1A COW& of I
I ironiAl A %W186AW in im w4
�Xry M 9,800. To tW* nwat be
of
the loss ov am"ge multing Irom
10
commission of RM OAMO, togoth
with the support givea to d
of the man imprisoned, sis W1 am
oconemie loss to tho state of th6maW
'a of
labor. Though a limited amount I
Vehitentl4rl
work wiq <lone at the 4 m
(1-uring the past Yoe>, u revenue of
f M ,V, to the govern -o,
,143, 44 was r,�.,.urjy.