Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 16 Oct 1884, p. 6

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 ^..c AGBICULTURAli: m 1 i i^ )11 â-  1 • ?ii i » |1: 'M 111 '1*1 K 'I. ,; â- * "i ^1 fi-'tia H'i 1 (i^ i"i ilj' ' I II WWâ€" 'tt* wboU«o«Dtiv, Hfjy wi* •M»fco4M|* n htfje gt^wtt iJ gr Mi »r â- â-  jtmOamm #W8 «Tvy whore flash. Still, in â- ome plMai, it tnwobiai'nd tint alMep did not l»y onflMh M iMt M wImd the growth of fgcum wm I Biodcnte, it wm too w»tuy and con- 1 IcH nriMteaoau Bat Septomber hM I dry ov«r a laigo extent of coantiy, and .bavebeoome ahort. Thia will, m Buay Motioaa. keep the conditicm of aheep loww tiiaawir ie desirable for fall sales, and thinner than they shonld be for the asost profiuAle winter feeding. We do not believe tliat any ftederoan aflbrd to let hia sheep get thin fceoaace his pasture is dioit â€" that is the policy of the nan who remarked that he " always made his hay bold oat whether his cattle did or not f Wlian an animal is not thriving all jmi at cnoe ce ase s, and loss begins. The qnestion then atiaca, what shall the aheep-feeder do to keep ap a steady growth on yoong sheep, steady gain on fattening sheep, and a fall, healthy condition in breed- ing sheep, when droagbt oats off the tnpply «f grass f If the Ensilage system has Oeen fally entered upon, then saccolent clover and other grasset preserved in silo may be given to excellent effect bat thia system is only yet on trial bv the " one in a thoa- sand," and won't apply to the general sheep- feeder. For breeding sbeep one-half poand of whrat bran, fed in troughs in pastare, will probably make ap the deficiency. A little extra food goes a long way in keeping np condition. For 8 months Iambs and yoang growing sbeep. a half pound of bnm with one to two gills of com, or one-balf Erand of oil meal, will keep them thriving, or fattening aheep to be sold in late fall or early winter, one poand of com and a balf pound of oil meal thia, with half pastare. will pash them forward favorably. These specific rations are not intended to be considered as adapted to all catea. The feeder's eye must take in the situation of each flock, and adapt the ration to each particular case. Bat we have seen the quantities named produce excellent lesnlts with the different classes of sheep mention- ed. There is another method which we have adopted on several occasions when pastare was cut off by drought. We took early cut and nicely cured clover and timothy hay, cut into very fire chaff in a power cutter, then mobtened this chaff to that ground feed would adhere to it, and mixed the bran, oil meal, c., with it.' This mixture was placed in the troughs, and the sheep ate it all down. The cut hay was about twice the bulk of the ground feed. We found that the whole «ai more completely digested when cut bay was added. This plan soald only be fcllowed by those who US' a cutter, and then it does not add very materially to the labour. When cats are cheap, there is no better food for sheep Aapssture. Tne rule of profit must always be to full feed growiofi' and fattening sheep. This brings them to maturity acd market at the earliest period and commands the best pro- fit. If sheep are allowed to stand still, with- out gain or growth, then the food eaten is ntterly wasted. We have always found a little grain in the fall to (ay even with fair pasture, because the fattening sheep caa digest a little concen rated fooa besides all the grass tbey will e^t and this concen- trated nutriment will all go to gain or profit. Every feeder should look carefully to his sheep and see that they have enough regard- less.of dronght.â€" [Canadian Breeder. "6. Thasi'rehaa th*bca«,buut. diraet inflaeooe on of the ^MBBICAS FABLES. Look after tlie Weeds. One of the most thoughtless and unwise things a farmer can do, and yet a practice â- o common that a farmer's garden has be- oome a synonym for a weed nursery, is to let weeds take possession of every plac made vacant by the removal of any crop. This practice sot only exhausts the fertility of the soil, but fills it so luil of noioas seeds as to greatly multiply tbe labour of keeping a clean garden the following season. It is a very sensible practice to so anaoge the various plants that those maturing to- gether, at differ«nt times, shall be grouped, so that as they mature and are removed, the vacant ground shall all come in one plot, gradually enlarging, as others mature and are removed. When so placed, a boy. horse and cultivator can go over the groond in a very short time, and, by repeating tbe operation at intervals of one or two weeks, the grocnd can be kept entirely clean. See to it now that all weeds grown in and about the garden are carefully cut or pulled, and all, root or branch, placed in a pile and burned. Tbe seeds are so fully matured that it is not tafe to place them even in a compost heap, and it is better to sacrifice what little manorial value they contain than to scatter the seeds. By catting or pnlline them when damp, but few seeds will shell out, and by patting an armful of dry straw or brush at the bottom of the pile and leav- ing them till mid- day, they can be easily burned. Every day you now neglect this little "chore," tbe more weeds yon will have to contend with next summer. 6o for them at once 1 GeuAral Bnles for Breeding Licht Horses. Mr. H. Pratt, of Gawsworth, Co. Cork, one of the most successful breeders of light horses in Ireland, lays down tbe followinff rules for the breeding of hunters and saddle horses "L Determine exsotly what it is you really require to prodnoe, and having done BO never loee sight of it- " 2. Procure a young mother that has ar- rived at matnrity and is healthy, roomy, well-sbaped, round, large-sized, with good temper and good action, and remember the better bred the mare is that posse ssas those qualities the more valuable she wUl be, " 3. Tbe dsm, as a general rule, has more direct influence on her oflspring as regarda health and aize than the sire has. "4. The ofpring bred from greatly dis- rimilar paren'a in either size or character shonld never be used fcr breeding purposes; their offapring will certainly prove to be mongrels of nondescript cha'acter. Th«t tbe parents shonld be sa similar aa pras b!e is a rule the nefileot of which baa led to more disappointment than almost any other rule I know of. "5. A pure thormighbred aire that haa got good mea aheold m sel.cted, and I do not believe » really good weight-carryisg bnnter will aver be bred from anythmg bus n thoroo^bred bona. quOttiia. a«Bpeibeliev«tha_.- Wa»iHrtfbv!r«ttiold.befoceih« ia pat to the bcna." How t* Ssre Cnn Fodd«r. Pfof. Sanbom. of MiMOuri. aaya the oom- plaiat that atock wiU not eat com fod^ wan, at over ona-foortii to oBethird of it. arista from our method, or laok of metho^ of aaooring it. Moat of oar oorn is allewed to atand as it grew, and to have its nntrition washed oat of it, and thai it ia fad whwe it grew to oattle roving throagh the Bald. The blsMbed staff is Uttle Lked and little eaten. A few cat it and pat it into large chooka, but not nntil after the com ia dead ripe. It ahonld be oat while the stalka are yet qoite green, the oora being in the latter stsges of the dough state, or before the oom is too hard to cinsh easily in the fingers, and before it is dry tiironghoat. It should be pat into shocks made from four hills in place of the oil 16 hilla square, and bound round the top by rye straw, twine, or a green omn stalk. It ia well to bend the tasiel down, binding the tops under, thus turning the rain. In the coarse of two to four weeks, depending upon the weather, the small shtcks may easily be husked out, and the com cribbed The band will not have to be rvmoved or tbe shock taken down in husk- ing. After hukking, the hills of com, around which the shock is made, as fast as the shosk is wanted, may be cot, and the fodder of the shock may be quickly and easily, by one man, passed to the waggon for stack- ing, the baud around the shock always re- maining on. Thus treated, it will be tender, more palatable, and more nutritions, and when fed with clover, oottnn seed meal, or middlings, will be nearly all eaten. It wi!l als3 be liandled from the start at h ss expense per acre than by the system of 16 hilh square shocks. A Litte Hero. A sad story of a French drummer boy is told at Heidelberg, in connection with the last siege of that city. The Austrians were in possession of the place, -and the only means of attacking them was by crossing the old bridge over the river Neckar. B jt the defenders were well prepared for the at- tack they placed their cannon in such a maimer that it covered the bridge and its approaches. The French planted their can- non on the opposite side of the river, and kept up a terrible fire, but were ntterly un- able to dislodge the Austrians from their end of the bridge. The attackers were determin- ed to take the city, but had no other means of doing so than by crossing the bridge, and that was swept by the guns their oppon- ents. They made repeated charges from their side, bat each time they advanced they were mowed down by the Austrian artillery, or repulsed at the pofnt of the bayonet. The French basd advancod aa far as the centre of tbe bridge, exiting tbe soldiery with their martial strait s, but were compelled to retreat with the retreating men. Again and again the musicians adv.«- c-ad and retreated, with their comrades, uncil at last a little dramoier boy, dis'^aioing flight, mounted on the parapet of the bridge, and, although his fellow- bandsmen fled with the soldiers, stood his ground manfully, beating a wild air to reci.ll the men to the charge. On rushed the Austrians with fixed bayonets, wbibit the little hero, still beating his drum defiantly, was run through the body by some brutal foe. As he fell over the bridge into the rapid rushing river below, the poor boy cried out, " Oh, my mother I my mother I" The last words of tbe little con- script were heard, both by fri nd and toe, and are yet remembered in Heidelberg. On wild nights, as tbe peasant crosses the bridge, in fantsy he still sees the form of the little drummor boy beating the fierce alarm, and still, amid the rush of the waters, imagines that he h(a-*s his dying words, " 0, my mother my mother I" â€" [Exchange. A GhostSStory from the Pacific A correspondent in Canton sends the Pall Mall Gazette the following story from the Marshall Islands The end of last year an American ship the " Rwier" was wrecked I on these Islaads, and about 20 men found refuge on them. But their number being too large for their supply of provisions it vas agreed that the party should separate. Tbe captain caos^d a small twenty-ton sofaooner to be buit of the remains of the wreck, and taking ten of the crew and a share of the provisions sailed vway for another island of the group about 200 m'les off. Toe rest of the crew was left in charge of the first mate â€" a son-in-law of the cap- tain. The s -cond mate was sent off to makd his way to Saigon and appeal for aid. This he did, finally reaching ftoog Kong, when tbe U.S. corvette "Euex" was de^ patched to the rescue, Cirrrying the second mate ai a guide.^ Meanwhile tne king of the isluid on which tbe shipwrecked men were, who was kind and foienaly to them, was fall of forebodings as to the fate of the captain's ptfty snd the second mate said they wuul.l never see them aga-n. and so on. Bat one iay be came with elitferent tidinigs. It seems ne was in the hsbit ot ho'ding spirit- ual communion with his dead w.fe, by name Olivia. In cme of the aeances he bad, I sup- pose, asked her if ahe could give him any tidings, any hopes, for his shipwrecked friends. She said that on a Sunday a sail would be seen, and they would be rescued. The king brooght this news with great joy to the rbfogeeo, and with aenne curiosity they awaited the result. Thia must have been »ome four munths after they were wracked. Sure enough en tbe following Sunday a sail was seen, but in spits of tbeir erta to attrack attention the ship pawed on her coarse. Bat the Sunday atter that the rea- caug ahip, the "fissex " appeared in aight, and eventually took them all jff This story eras related by an officer of the " Eisex " to a friend of mine, who a* onoe told it to me, Theae Islsnds are in the N jrth Padfio Ocean, to the 8. W. of the Sandwitch Isles, tad tbere ia very little ccnunonioation with them. A Fast Idfe on a Slender InoMM. "There goes a man who leada a fast life." "I» he rich T"' "N' he cSily gsta $75 a mbnth." " Then be must aual to lead » fast life on that income f 'â- Oh, no he's a railroad coBdnotor." BtiOB to PifBf^^. fcomTwgrJ Words they '»'««^^*%ft2! ss'S.-A-^Sssrid^^^ SoSTto oesJ;«d when order had basn Bo- '^iS'FSht over how a «« if-M b. BatsB wW none of y6p have Sighted a Ship for the last aix mwths r hobal: Steal your Melons before you draw lota for the Biggest. THK JUO ABD THE JAB. A Jag and a Jar which foand thomadwis on a shelf iorf«ther began to plume them- selves on tieir Merits. „ j *!.. "I coat thirty-eight cents." observed the '°"*And my owner walked ten milea to secare me," replied the Jar. ^^ •• I hold two gallons of water. "And I am nearly always fided with milk " " My maater takes me to the hay-field and gives mo the sha-iiest spot." •' And the women carry mi m their anna up iand down the celUr stairs." Tbey were still disputing when the Pea- sant's wife entered the room and said to her- sslf «• My husband having brought home a ne* tin pail, I can now throw the old Jag and Jar out of the back door." moral: Oar merits are best known to oursalvca our faults to the world. A QfTEKB QCABTBTTB. Aa Elephant was standing in all hia ma- iestf under the shade of aBinyan tree when a Hare, a Frog and a Sloth Approached him in Company, and the Hare Announced that they Desired to journey across the oonntry witb him in searob of wisdom. "Haw! haw! bawl" laughed the o'd Colorsal as he flapped his ears around, " that's tco good. Toe Idea of such Insig- nificant Nonentities as you are thinking you cai Teach me Wisdom. Well, well, but tbat's worth Bottling up." The Hsre stuck to her point so Persistent- ly, however, tbas the elephant finally de- cided to humor the trio, and a start was made. Tbey had not proceeded above a quarter of a mile when the Sloth asked for siov^er pace. Tbe Elephant sneered at this, but in tbe next ten minutes discoverea that had he stuck ti his swinging pace he wonld have run into a Band oC Hunters crossing the Trail. When tbe journey had lastel an hoar the Fare suddenly called for a Halt, declaring that the notes of the Birds in the Branches above Betokened Strangers in the Forest. â- - And what of it " sneered the E'ephant, but nnxt moment the Hare pointed out sev- eral Natives stealing away from a Pitfall they had Constructed in the Path. A hun- dred feet further and tbe Colossus would have been Trapped. The Quartette had scarcely circled the Dangerous place and struck tbe path again before the Frog began to Croak. " And what's up now " asked the Ele- phant. " Tbere is going to be a terrible storm. I, being a Swimmer, will remain here. The Slotb, being a climber, is safe In a tree. The Hare, being a Swift Banner, can distance tbe Flood. As for you. Sir Colossus, with all your size and strength, you must at once hurry to the Hills to save your Life." "Poor, Silly Foch 1" exclaimed the Ele- phant, as he looked down upon them in Contempt, "When such as you teach me wisdom I shall expect to see Hen's Feathers growing on the backs 6f Wolves." Nevertheless the storm broke and raged fiercely for hoars. Next day, when tbe Frog, the Sloth and the Hare met again, it was Bsside tbe Dead Body of the Elephant, and the Hare answered HOBAI. " Many a great Statesman, feeling secure in place and power, has been humbled to the dust by degrading words of wisdom from a back cotuty." How to Judge a Horse. An old horseman aays if yon want to buy a horse don't believe your own brother. Take no man's word for it, Toar eye is your market. Don't buy a horse in har- ness. Unhitch him and take everything off but his lialter, and lead him aronnd. If he hss a con, or is stiff, or has any other fail ing. you can see it. Let him go by himself a way, and if he staves right into anything you know he ia blind. No matter how oltar and bright his eyes are, he can't aee any more than a bat. Back him, too. Some horses show their weakness at trioka in that way when they don't in any other. But, be as smart as yon can. you'll be caught some- times. Even an expert gets stuck. A horse may look ever so nice, and go a great pace, and yet have fits. There isn't • man vonld tell it till something happens. Or he may have a weak back. Give bun the whip and off he goea for a mile or two, then all of a sudden he 8t3ps in the road. After a rsst he starls again, bnt he soon stops fcr good, and nothing bat a derrick ooold move bim. The weak pointa of a horse oan be better diaoovered while standing than while moving. H he ia aoond ho will atand flrmly snd iquarely on .hia limbs withoac moving any oi them, the feet flatly upon the graond mth legs plamp and naturally poised or if the foot is lifted from the ground and the wdght taken from it, disease may be na- peoted. or at least tendernese, which ia a piwouracr of dissaso. If the hone stands with hu feet spread apart^ or atraddlea with hia hmd legs, there ia a wmknesa in the «d thejddnoys sre disordered. °^»^ PtOing bends the knees. Blniah. mil^ oast eyes in horses udioat) moon bta^nees or something else. A bad-temper taok«ghomisaiittoliavoic»irred 1^ A stambling horMhaa Uemished knees HFhan thetkmisroogh and harsh, and does not more cMly to the tamoh. the horse u a beavy eatir and Oigwtion is bad. Nevi bnyakorsawbQao bnathing orsans are it IS an iadioatioB of teonU? ^^ ^^ f h to gf ii* i «y "Wy- SSIi.dintoaphotogf.p'»"stedij Tho srtiat. a vonng man ««»»? S»7**' *^ -w!lU teidifoot." said tto b«^ ••bo replilTU Tiritor, puUing •»* £»JS^ "l asked you how mncn you charged for ' "TW your pardon," answered the artist, quietly, -bat I did not understand your brst remark." "No? I don't repeat remarks, youM feUer," replied tho visitor, pul'ing out hu pistoL "I asked you how much you charge for piotures?" „ "Eight dollars a down, large 8 aa. "Aslarse as my siw " sneered the bul- 'y-. 'As large as my answered "I have taken them your siast the voong man, ooolly. ..... j "Well, loo^ here, you I I don t intend to p*y any snob price. My sze is too big for this itoblishment. Yon sre going to give me a sitting for nothing. Da yon uoderstand f-at, stranger?" •I think I do." .. "Then the qaicker you m-x the ohemicili for the scenery A this view, the better. Step lively I" ,_ ,, The yoang artist looked black for a min- ute, and then, as if he thought the matter a good joke, burst into a laugh. "You are sure you want to sit for a large size picture " he asked, with a qneer look on his face. v .. "UTei. And you want to be quick about it, too. No fooling. That won't go down with this son of the plains. Where are yon going. "I must ge^ the materials for the picture from my other room." "Oh, all right!" growled the bully. "Tboaght you were goLog to out. Bnt you don't fool thu chUd I" The artist went into his other room and came back with lAie prepared plate which he put into its plaM in the camera. Un- observed be also slipped somet hi n g else into the box of the instmment over which the cloth was lud. "Now then, sir," said he, still laughing. "How will you have the picture, sitting or standing?" "Well, I'll have it the way I am," an- swered the desperado, throwing his pistol on a table and folding his arms across his breast in a defiant manner. ' Very well, sir," said the artist, quietly patting his head under the cloth. "Now, then, just fasten your eyes on that projec- t'ou in the comer over there. Don't move. If you move an inch I'll defmd my rights withrtisl" And quick as lightning, the photographer threw (jff the oloth, and polled out a re- volver from the camera, where he had hid- den it. It was a soeine for an artist. The bally looked along the barrel aaw it was as steady as if it rested on a stone wall, and the sweat gathered in big drcps ou his foreheaid. Like meet bullies be was a coward. The artist bad him completely at hjis mercy. He coolly took oat ms watoh with hiileft hand. "For large-pictures of tnis kind, I general- ly -take three minutes. But to insure a g;ood sitting in your case, I will make it a little longer. Steady, my dear sir 1 H thia revolver should go off, in haste, it might damage the picture, and I don't w'sh to spoil my reputation as an artist. Yon will keep your eyes on that point, or be prepar- ed for the consequences." Still covering the trembling bully with hia weapon, the yoang artiat advanced to the table, t^ok the desperado's pistol, and came back to the camera. "Five minutes. There is a good impres- sion on the plate b^ this time. Still, to make sore, seeing it is a large size, too big for this establishment, and all of you may not be taken yet, we will continue the sit- ting a few moments more," At the end of anqther minute the bully's face waa livid. The artist, still with a glit- tering eye on him, pat the cap over the camera. The bally departed and left the photo- grapher nmater of the field. The lecture waa a wonderful likeneaa, and the artist hung it and tbe pistol on the wall together, where they served the double parpose of an advertiaement and a naming. He has never been again troubled by that visitor. â€" [Youth's Compamon. Tbat 6iye Milk and Water. Da tree pcodnoss bread, lo-oaUed. wet should not be surprised to find qm tha gives milk, and saoh a one waa dSKvored by Baron Yon Humboldt in Sooth America. It was called the palo do vaca by the natives, or "cow tree,,' and when the bark waa pierced the sap tbat hMked and tasted like milk ran ont ma clear strsam, forminc a delicious and nutritions food. Tho trea is a vanety of evergreen very oommonin the higher regions of Venenela and the milk not only looks like that of the cow, but taf tea like it, and the discovery wasransidered Bo valiuMo that attempta h^jW^d. to t««-pU«t it. though *3!?.i'*^^**? " *« Traveller's tone of Maduasoar. It some what resemblee tte h«u«, bat grows taUer. the wS S^ graceful ian-shape, tiie entire gronp re- aemblmg a gig«tio fan forty feet Sthe air. ten or twelve feet long. ^^ It u called the TraveUor's tree, as it takes ttepboeof spriag, or wluTand L S! are exhanstod, prodaoes au abundant suonS •Seam^iiSflSfn*^.«Pa ^oh a !^. ^J*' *»U flow that equals any Sfe w^-o- «wiy to io fr«m »he li^ So^n5L?S!L*S*'J2SS? that town is a pnzzl r^ Not one pnsti £»,«•, the ma'ls and escape SS?" a. men% but every y^^ ^^ »i"!» oidss to take the chano^ "o^ sure that Us liver is oSt «J^'?»0 about s-q different remldl'^Mri" A California farmer hu k.4 of $10 fcr knocking hS,lS,'?i?P«»., a benoh of grapes wsigCr bi*""^i was cheaper than 6mtifL***0 rook. Wisoonsinbai uotU, vr isoonstn iiai a two-hnii.j legged oaIf,thechsmp:oiidnS!: ' M 000 tobacco crop, sSefeS^^fti gobble up about all the goo;"Sj5jj Tneaveragetimecouttmedbva.. ingoutap, o. money order uXf*^ while the average woman tikL!l then Cilia upw the clerk tow7* wnte a new one, tew it, One^iasueofaNew Yorkdiil,, sixty-four advertisements of "ni«J,- cheap beca-iae tbe .amily u f*' town." None of 'em wJt 1^. •« they are going. emwantanymttjj; They are pnzzl-ed in Indian to whether a boy caught steilingmZ,: be brained with a club or sent £ some gt ol advice in his ear and iului kicks in his pocket. ;,There was no particular ceremony it, aays an Arkansas papjr in refei,! the lynching of three horeethievei, uf' emony and more rope is just whattbi" country is aohing for this fall. A laboring man in Syracuse dttv hJ in a lottery, and his first move vu t, his wife a set of oiamonds rained tt li! He said the poor thing thould have onl if the money didn't last even ten ya^^ A man who laid cla?m to half the yj wtiioh Baffa'o is built raliuqaished all n for $2 and a thuooprng Lig drink of wU Tbas's his regular rates for reiuqajglu he is taking the citiei m rotation, Lmdon has tested the tqueezing of a boa boa constrictor twenty-five fo«|i, and is satisfied that he couldn't cnulii ribs of a woman given to tight if he was given every show a suktg aek for. When Prof, Proctor predicta that i|i water will disapear off the face of i in aboat 15.GOO.O0O years more, it's jiij] good a prediction as John Snithoonldi and entitled to just as much credit. They still stick to it iq Mtoneiotatliitf| tornado of last fall carried farm hosMila mile and set them down so soHly thiti bit of plaster was loosened. That'irqi/ but there should have been cellan out for 'em. The run-cff-with-father's-coaclimaa i seems to have had its day, and after i ii beatings and two or three weeks' dietdi potatce^ tbe various bribes willapeatsl front dc or with tears in their eyes andin of divorce in their pockets. London restaurants are advertisng "ii erican pie" aa a draw for customers. If is an American who can tell what u i erican hotel or restanriut pie is lotioflil would like to see him and feel cf hii I ' The English imitatioi muet kill on i For foorteen long years the peoplsoil buqofi allowed Martin Jackdou to nu t town because it was believed that he w| dangerous mvi to provoke. The otiieii a woman baif killed him in a row, anii every D abnquer stops to give Martiniki â€" Ml « » » â-  A Joke on a MnsiciaiL Handel had such a rama kable irriti tf nerves, that he coald doc bear to heiii tuning of instruments, and therefott* was always done before he •"i^'^J^' theatre. A musical wag, who kne» «»! extract some mirth from HMidel'i ttaM ty of temper, stole into th« orchestMl night when the Prince of Wales wm «f present, and untuned all the jM*""*^ 4s soon aa the Prince arrived, Hsndrt j the aignal of beginning, consj)i,nto\w* waa the horrible discord, that the musician started up from his (^it, woi ing overturned a ^iouble-bass which »wl his way, he seized a kettlsdrum, whiaj threw with such violence atthelaad«ai band, tbat he lost his full-bottomed ni the effort. Without waiting to reP»JJ he advanced bare headed to the ftont «J orchestra, breathing vengeance, batwj choked with passion, tbat ntteranee" nied him. In this ridiculous al*w" Stood ataring and stamping for »«"•., ents, amidst a convulsion of ««"»' coald he be prevai'ei.npon to reaumewi nntil the Pimce went in parson, »• mnch difficulty appeased his wrstn. Hade a CalL L^ffc in a Florida cabid «««•??£ wanting in excitement, d tw '-, story of adventure, told by tne .fferoU, is trae ,, „ „,.„ «si White a settler on Cook's BayooW^ tha back yard, the other d^F- '"^l wile in lunging a kettle, V^^^ washing, he w« star led by the ^j, child left sitting nearj;he op»r'j^ Harrying into tne housfl he toono ^, alligator lying in the door-w^,'*^ body being in the houw, ana j month wtthing six inches ot w uoe. ^lintor' As aoon as he entered, the i^ j^| fright and wheeled into the »»"»V^| hiiTiirom^t appearance the child been carried away. The RWieBt Young Womanto ^^ Miss Mary Garrett, ^}'L^^£,il late John W. Garratt of B»I«»gi,* said to be the richest ""'^^"J'Jutf'.yj erica. The estimates of her t.^ M runs from $15 OOO.COO ^^^fZ^vi^ this she has a third. Mia.Or^^^i as her share of tbe pr^F'** " » tf*f^ eooty residence at the oor^to ^^ snd Cathedral sfareets, w" â- * ^i.^ -jj fumitore. and PW*""' iJ Seb«"» tJ wiU also be th*J owner of M »' p^rg the beautiful G .rrett cot* ««• j^ t.^ whore her father died, l^ »* j,,. »i ,p|t^perfcy. M.ss Garrett wdl^^f r Wttaird of rhe P«r«nal9«^ji ator. MissG*rrartis28y«»"

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