Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 25 Jun 1885, p. 7

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 â- n^ifc«*M(Bi»3»,ifa AVENGED CAtJlI AFTER STORM. ,fTAPrERvi.-(CoimKX7ED) 0,1 Monaieor Berixand looks f TSie Bteadfast •ng:alsh of the ^Tto S some Bign that they re- S" ,,..1. nnrnose but there u ralUoIy. **I monwr upoa you; I do not dmrSiS .--• --Tfj- -•--♦.-uma., ., taM4 pnrpose but there la face 1b white almoBt m Jiere is no softening In I wdlo'mVsaUen eyes, no relaxing In " Itaes of the cruel Ups, wmle i St. J«t. pe;e, nods his gray r.h.oed he»d significantly and, jSort dry cough, the lawyer pro- ' wi'hbis task. " Jast tells me, madame, '*^Tw^'»tolly unacqnalnted with I* l°(Ma In the French code relating to SSageofminors I,th,t«or ' Cert»uJy' Monsieur. .Ttmt ia unfortunateâ€" very unfor- If "he says, iu the same dry niiim- Ennad toae, but looking straight over oracafal head " because it Is preclae- .^ article that deprives yon of ail *CI bat status aod invalidates your marriage. r'hear me oac patiently," he adds oalctlf. as Crssslda is about to in- r him with a passionate txclama- â- ' 1 do not for a moment deny that in England a wife but in France minor mu contract a marriage without formal consent of his parents, and in icise that consent is distinctly refus- ,.jj distinotly refuse 1," Monsieur St. L echoes la a complaoent husky bary- L "laidore is a minor, a child, when Nent through this farce which madem- \\\e would treat as a serious fact 1" the lawyer shrugs his shoulders, impa- nt of an Interruption which he mentiUly kmatiaes as in Intamjus taste. Cressida looks only at him, and says in low J tonesâ€" 'Monsieur St, Just was twenty-three I sixteen, or so oar ages were enter- fin the church register â€" " ' Praciaely, midama he does not ab- [h'smnj^rlty until he has reached his inty-fiftn birthday; consequently" â€" fpiueea, as though even he, case-hard- V} and callous as he is, hesitated to lik the words that branded the inno- young life with an ineffaceable crce and shame. ht Monsieur St. Just has no such cplas h-i ia what he hmself describes la thoroughly practical man, who likes Iseeafair case fairly stated, who has 1 morbid sonaitiveness either for himself other people, and prides himself upon I fact. He has delegated the present (k to his lawyer, not because he himself sn'ifrotn or In anyvray specially dis- led it, but be^auae the other has a pro- leional knack of stating facts clearly [concisely This knack however has, IM nsiear St. Just's opinion, lament- ntVled him now; so, with little hes- ion, bu, rnach of Irritation and con- kpt, he takes the explanatory duty In- hla own capable hands. "Laeten to me, madame " he says, in a dec'slve fashion. " We only tell lu the faults, we do not criticise the ex- pe imprudence of my son or your irdims' culpable negligence. Isidore, Ung a minor, you have In France no jadow of a claim upon him he is free marry to-morrow if he pleases. lb nnda harah, perhaps but Monsieur |Brtrand, and all the lawyers in France, â-  that matter, will tell you it is the law- ' the land." IA3 Cresaida listens to the words that live her into a dark outer world of ilchahe knows nothing, that take from name and fame and home, sha raises- leyeaaud aeoiia to see Isidore's face iBke has never saan it yet. In that p!i:nlDg.lik3 girsncc :he Jast grain of her uliisuiove for the handsome French- hn who had dazzled her dies out of her •t,and simethlng like loathing terror «s lis place. She clasps har hands pore her facs, and scaggera back agamst Mvall, growing po deadly white, that jley thiak she is about to faint but she f:rols heraeif qiickly, and turns to Fnsiear Bertrand, who la arranging **»«5W erie.. with a sniden intSiJi if ocmviotion fcbat thiilh and frIghtWSm. thiilartof my many wrong. ,oVh»te notdrmgwd me down so far febat I^ touch your money I" He aUowi her to pan without another word speech seems to forsake him. and round hb heart there ontdlee aehiUii fear. Victory Is his, a trlnmph abaolnto and complete the roabed enemv ha« abandoned the field withonb a hlnb of ratum and yet, as he wipes the neat drops of perspiration from his brow irtth a huge bandana handkerchief, and stare, stupidly at the green-baize door throueh which hi. adver.ary has Tanlshed, he admits that sush another victory would be tantamount to a defeat. "M«n Dim, Isidore! Why did you not tell me that your WJe Anglaise was BU3h a fury Your life, la.bcu,h2m been no couch of rows thou art well out of that galore " Isidore smiles, a cold faint smile, bub Klves no verbal answer his conscience Is infinitesimal, and his nerves are steel- sfcrung but, while his father speaks of Cressida's temper he thinks of the one year they have spent together, of her unvarying patience, her unchanging gen- tleness, her childish love and trust and remembrlng this, he does not find it easy to answer. " What wiU she do now She has no money," the father goes on musingly. And Isidore answers with abrupt irri- tation â€" "None! WemuBt seek her out to- morrow. I can bear no more to-day." And with these words h« turns on his heel and quits the office, leaving his father to follow or not at his pleasure. In the meantime Cressida, with an odd stunned feeling, walks througU the strange and busy streets, much aa she mlghc walk them in her sleep. She has suffered the cruellect wrong that woman can suffer. A wife and no wifeâ€" friend- less, homeless, and all but penniless, she stands alone In a strange land. Yet she is conscious of no acute mental agony. Just now she only knows that something terrible has come to pass, and changed the whole complexion of her life. Sne is tired, for she has known no rest after the sea passage and double railway- journey she Is faint, for no crumb has passed her lips since she left the English shore but she is not conscious that sleep and food mleht save her reason, and keep her from that gnlf into which she is slipping fast. Sometfc ng within her urges her to move on and on, as though in some fashion she could outpace the cruel destiny that pur- sues her. ]5*iido«» Ml fie^Mte h« now. For "Hwwe w vskiiig faoai mim Udeoa. ^^ ttd^Beiflmwibh outrtrab^ '•nfl^â€" I bhon^ikâ€" .- •«««iw« m There die iMHiMa. rtfB*«n f^h. ji^,^ gana la-e b«n ttTdl^'^hS^^'S!; P»lMe. of modem PtaS. The«i3ed«k «^ enep. beneath her feet. Then .tauuUherWhand, with eye. like rteel •nd cruel wUte Up^ Thi mercifulae- foreTerâ€" lb 1. all real, all _,.. „, ' -, aira^ bo the with a dim .anM of raaUtj, and roondher vibh wide vUk inhar oeaily lorei her. ** WflQ, bob EMilly, gnDdAMuna," bh« gU penbt., yon do Mewed diansed MMehovI FranknobioedikaawaUasL You kx^ Mbhoogh yoa had foond aome- **IhaTefoandagteabaavh^pine«,' lAdy Gordon nldgeiitty aad her deader fingora tcwnble aUtfcle OT«r tfadr ddioate WOK. 'Pe'8 in their pigeon-holes with studied '|Thialaqm^.e true'" I " Qolte," he aasants gravely. " I have 'Kereatbdeieiving you, madame; I "ideeply for your false position. rf "I'Qddera a little, but does not drop Zrf V^^ "^^ '® tearless a-ad nn- r;rli?"y °n§li5. as she sayf very quietly. muk you; then my business here is I lu Is ""^.^^ mechanically to the door, K^^l-i" St. Just intercepts her! JWMjaneas dtcelves him, acute a. he uediinka she ia taking things beau- .J; 'i'htrue Brltiah phlegm, and hi. C*°" '^^^ benevolence and friendly \2l "'^^®' mademolseUe-madame, ke mo«t^~*°'" ^y ^^^^y "ao'al ^gl^t KL "'"^^^ *^^e youiB-but ifet ,/°\^ When the laws of nation. '^v^V^ '°'"e» abide by our f*ai We have settled with the "^Cn.if"^^*^' "beral spirit, I «llth»tSltu? break the strong " d^^^*' fettered and held "ess. bhe cbups her hands with "»« rinffj,?!"'®?^*' "^^ breaks Into a •^ siting teli° ®°^°^ ^^ ««* *b2L"'^«" he had leb »lili oim1!S*°* conclude the busineaa ta«M°""*^*^ooJ, jfi^^aoesyonand one ooneenu your wn, mon- U you pleaw," he nya So hour after hour she walks on through the Parla streets, the hot asph- alte blistering her feet, the sun pouring upon her aching head. Once or twice she pauses at the fountains on the Boule- vards, and drinks thirstily of the spark- ling water, while the passers-by stare cur- iously at the beautiful bewildered "lost" looking face. But no one speaks to her and she passes unheeding on her way. Poor as she is, she might eat if she chose, for there are a few shillings in her pocket but the hot fumes of the various confectioners' shops create only a deadly nausea within her, and she passes them quickly by with averted head. At last, as the ua sinks lower and low- er, and the evening shadows fall, she creeps wearily to one of the remoter bridges that span the narrow river, and rests her dazzled eyes by gazing at the cool dark stream. "How placid it looks," she thinks, a little enviously â€" " how good it would be to lie quietly at rest there 1" She has no definite purpose In coming here. She no more thinks of suicide thandoes the little Eaglish terrier that licks the hot drooping hand, and stares with round wistful brown eyes into the fevered face, until he is called off by the two ladies who own him, one of whom looks back with a gleam of interest in her bright black eyes. 'Fido has good taste, grandmamma I never saw a prettier face than that girl's, nor a more wretched one. " But the grandmother's sympathies are less on the surface, and she is more awake to the necessity cf not wasting time. So she does not turn her head, only sighs a little wearily, and aays with a wisfaful unile â€" "Poor «^1 1 It la no grief that you can lighten, I am afraid. ' When you are of my age, Florence, you will learn that you must not look at all the misery around you, or your mind will be filled with pain-pictures only" â€" a piece of Ufe-phll- osophy which pretty Florence Oarmlehael finds it hard inieed to accept, and of which Lady Gordon herself i. destined bo repenb in t^e days to come. " There is Franki" the gW orlea eager- ly, as her bright eyes flaah over the bridge and meeb thoae cf the young oars- man below. ** Oh, grandnukmna, do make haabe, or we shall miaa him 1 " So, bhe proepeob of pleasure b a nfahing aU sympathy wlbh pain, bhe bright young girl pawes on, and Creaalda la once more alone with her fate. Ibcomea wibh fiaroe abrldM now; It rtands pale and abem and menadng, abore her, while, all unconaoioua of ita presenoe, die reaba in a nook of bhe old brl^ie, leanaonehob bemple on bheeod atone paapeb,and doseaher bired eyeafaithe â- billneaa bhabia half abnpefadioii and half Bleep. "'-S.l::-' "Orearidal" ludon bruel "Oreadda-'-die shrink, nearer and nearer to the parapet, farther and farther ST.V ?-S^ *^° â- Â»*â„¢ *o cheriah •nd protect her-a dumb horror in her ?^i!!r "/,?" ^? P«ted lipfc " Ore«Ida, L^7 'oUowed you all day. and tradced you down--ab Uwt. You duU listen to s^ii-r^Ji^r?. '^•^' ' '-p' -^ *v^j ^®?Ii ** accustomed to subdue the docUe childlike girl that he paViS mechanlcaUy for her submission now! But there Is no answerâ€" only that dread- ful dumb stare, that doquenb shrinkinir from hi. look and bouch. "Come with me, Oresdda,' he repeats, more gently. « AU this is hard on you- terribly hard but It is my father's wilU I quaireUed with him, Cresdda, two years ago; I was in debt-in trouble. I fled to Jfingland and earned my bread by teach- ing in a school but the bread was dry and bitter, your England sad and duU. So, when it pleased my father to break our marriage and find me another bride, apoifrinatre heiress, Cressida, who will replenish my coffers but never touch my heart, what could I do but submit 1" He finishes with an uneasy laugh j but still she does not speak. All words, weak or strong, are alike powerless to paint her pain or the infamy of his conduct. "Cressida 1"â€" he lays one hand upon her shoulder, and the stony calm is broken. She turns upon him with a tragic Bcorn and pasdon â€" •'Do not speak to â€" do not touch me " she rather gasps than says but he holds her still, and says with some show of authority â€" "This is nonsenseâ€" high-flown, ridicu- lous, and dangerous I D j not struggle, Cresaida until some arrangement M made for your future you shall not wander out alone. Bah I What a child yon are Have you thought what will become of youâ€" even where you deep to-night " He puts the question half-eamestly, half in angry mockery, for the demon within him Is roused by her opposition. And she? Only the angels who weep for human frailty and human pain, ai they set down the sad and blotted records of our lives, know whether she gave it a wilful and premeditated answer. Isidore St. Just only knows that a smile like sudden sunlight bursting through a cloud breaks over the pale tor- tured face â€" that, repeating the one word " Where ' wibh a wild triumphant thrill in her voice, she breaks from him with sudden strength â€" and then There is a shrill sharp cry, a heavy splashing sound, the waters part and close, a long rippling line of light runs down the gray bosom of the river, and Isidore St. Just stands done on the bridge, with the big drops of a mortal terror on his brow and the agony of the first murderer in hi. cold and .elfish beart- An hour afterwards he stands witn leaden-hned face and chattering teeth in his father's study, and teU. the tragic ending of the tale. " I never dreamed of this I thought she would join her friend. ,in Australia," he says, almost piteously, and Monsieur St. Just shakes his gray head. " It is terrible, of course, but almost for the best. She would not have sub- mitted quietly. She would have joined no friends save those in Heaven, with whom she is happy now. Did no one see you together?" "No one," Iddore answers gloomly. "We were alone on the bridge, and 1 came away at once." "Goodl" Monsieur St. Just's face clears wonderfully. " Courage, my son 1 Providence favour, us, and all will be for the beat 1" Iddore L imaninml^ pdir 1b Mm ' CHAPTER Vn. A pretty morning-room on bhe western dde of a quaint old gray-.tone houM, a broad verandah overgrown with climbing m.e., two chain pliMed t^s-a-v^s in the scented shadow, two ladie. occupying them, and appearing exceedingly happy in each other' company. Lidy Gordon, a handaome, abatdy old lady, whoM fiine-feabured, delicatdy- binted face la beaubiful .bill, despite her Mventy years, .its upright in her loung- ing-chdr, with a bib of fine embroidery in her ringed white fingers, while her companion watches her with pretty arch- ed brow, of lulmiration and wonder. **Wliy, grandmamma, you are the moat wonderful old lady in the world 1" die aaya, oompoaing henelf into an abbi- bode of boylah eaM. ' Yon are not a day older bhanyon were bwo yean ago, when I left you in Parla." **SitabraIghbln your chair Florence, ftini do nob baUc nenaenae I" bhe grand- mobher annren, looUi^ wibh affeebion- abdy dlaaprodng eyeaab the alender llbble fignn bhab {olaea ibaelf ao audadoudy on bhe aim of tiie diair, the mall ahining head wlbh dunrtjaUfyearla benb eagerly forward, the UbbleAiged haada daaped onthecroaaedknee, bheaoMU dippered foot, wibh Us gleamiBglraeUe and cardl- nalaboekfaurfollf dinlayed. Mlaa Oar- ssaiS'iiJSi js^safiSTii ;sssu'sa wr*--'.-«. ** You mean u r eâ€" t oa 1 She 1. very beanblfai, i. die nob, gnndouuBuna? Her face i. peifeob, in line and oolof bub she looka ao Twy, very sad. laahe anytJdnc like aunb Boaauond r ** Very," repliea Lady Gordon, wlbh auddm emphad. ** w like bhab whm I nw her fireb I bhong^bâ€" " She panaca, a fainb binge of odour rldng in bhe fdr old cheek bhab is almost as smooth a. her grandchild'., bhen goes on a little absent- lyâ€"*' But there is one differenceâ€" Bom- mond' eyM were blue, her., a. you know, are an exquidte lurown, like your mother*. 1" " And Frank' are like her mother'., I auppoM," the girl finiahea, wibh a Ubtle tinkling laugh that 1. like a peal cf allver bell.. " Papa i. dway. lamentii^ that I did not inherit the Gkrdon eye. in- atead of hi. own little black one" The brilliant orbs she maligns sparkle anew with the words and Lady Gkrdon ignore, the mock-modeaby, and an. wen with perfect tranquillity â€" "You would have little cauM to complain, Florence, if you took after your famer in every re- spect. Sir Robert Oarmlehael wa. one of the handsomest young men I ever saw " "And will be bhe handsomest old one, as you will admit when you see him â€" the handsomest and dearest and best-^that is to say, he was," the young lady adds, catching henelf up wibh condderable vi- vacity â€" "now he Is a tyrant! I do not think it is good for the father of a family to be made governor of a lot of wretched aVject niggen. It gives him such auto- cratic ideas." Lady Gordon amilea as ahe note, the petulant pout of the red lip., tihe angry sparkle of the bright dark eyes. It is rather the face of a spoiled ofaitd thwt rt- ed for the^nt time than that of a reckless and rebellious young woman. But, dl the same, that shrewd watcher is glad to remember how many mile, of .ea and land now .tretch between Sir Robert Car- michael's daughter and the lover of whom Sir Robert Carmichad so strongly disap- proves. She has not seen very much of Flor- ence, for two yean she has not seen her at all and she is but vaguely acquainted with the story that ia evidently in the girl's mind. AU Bhe knows is that Sir Ribert Cirmlchael, her son-in-law and the governor of an hnporbant South Afri- can province, has « ritten to her in hot haste, telling her that Florence was fretting after a most undesirable lover, that he was sending her to England in her brother's charge, and trutSed her grandmother would, for a time at least, receive her. She has just been six weeks at Gordon Cross, as Lady Gordon's pretty dower- house is called, ^d in that space of time she has contrived tc win her old place in the stately old lady's heart. Her old place but no more, at she laughingly com- pldns for, though the dowager ia gent- ler and more expandve In manner than when, as a Khool-girl of .ixteen, Flor- ence parted from her In Paris, tiie pent- up tendemea. of yeara ia not laviahsd upon her. " I dedare it is not fair " she cries, catching at a creamy rose that dangles j ust within her reach, and tearing its fra- grant satiny leaves remonalessly to bits. " You care twice as much for cousin Cres- dda as you do for me, and you have not known her half as long." Lady Gordon neither denies the impu- tation nor answen her grandchild's smile she looks away from her across the sunlit lawn, as she answen gravdy â€" " There were no arrean of love due to you, ]*lorence. I never .qQarrdled with' your mother." " And yon did with aunt Rose T' Miss Carmichad says quickly. " Oh, grand- mamma, do tell me bhe stary It is like a romance 1" Lady Ghrdon hedtates a second then she says with a little tremulous sdiileâ€" " Very well, child if you can dt stiU so long you shall hear the story, though I do not think you will find it particularly j interesting, and there is much that pains me to tell. It Ib the history of a foolish love and a runaway marriage, Florence." (10 BB COirnKUKD.) The British Coinage System. During last year the coina dtruck by bhe Brltiah minb were of no leas bhan tUrty- four different kinds. In addition to the different pieces used In the United King- dom, bhe authoritiea were called upon to provide silver cents for Hong Kong, silver and bronae cents for Canada, bronze pias- ^xlm ton Cyprus, niekd pence and farbhing. for Jamaloa, bronza farthinn for Malta, bronsa cent, for Mauritius, and .liver and bronae coin, for obhdr ooloniea. Among the cnriooa ocina abruek were diver pen- niea and half- pennieB for bhe apedal um of bhe queen. Ilu^eiampriae her "Maun- dy money," and are given bo the poor of bhe pariah bo which ahe bdonga on Barter Jtonday of eadi year. The coinage of ']IiMindy momey" la of Tsiy andonboilgin. Laab year ib omnprlaed £60 aberilng w«irtii of bwo-penniea, £89offour-penniea, and £08 (^penniea. For bhu imperid odnage alone forty- (me mlUfm {deoea were atrnok. Thevd- ne of the aoreieigna and half -aoyerdgna indnded in bhb leaohed JB2 216^513 aber- ling, of bhe afivw £664,433, and of bhe hraM £69,846. Xhe valneof the iflvw •olnediabo haU^^nmn aod ahSHnga b al- I BMib «ae4yi|ik4 TteaoKMinlof fib and* by tif* ^vmBumat k aUe. It amoontad laab year bo £87,700 aberilng. During the pnvloaa year a mneh larger harineaa waa brauaobed by bh« minb, and bhe profitaaaaoanbedbo £1S6,- 713 dtaaUng. Slnae 187S bhe profit, of tba natJonalmlnb have amounted to £899, 660 .tarihig. The dlraetraa of the minb make no ang- geationa about givlii«uptlieadanb ayabem ol eoinage and aubatibutlng one bhab would be muw more eonvenienb bo the people. The Oanadlana aaw how ea^y It waa to compute the money UMd in the United State., and adopted the aame ayatem of eoiren^ many yean ago. But little knowledge la required to compute money when bhe ooina inoreaM in vdue in a ben- fuldrablo. The dedmd ayabem (tf coinage resdba in a greab aaving of time, and pre* vents many mistakes. Tbe money used in the United States and Canada ia the most ea.y be compute of any in bhe world, while that of England is the mo. o difficult. Ic seem, rtrantta that .0 enlightened a nation a. the English should ding to a barbarou. .yatefn of coinage, and diould have a different Krt of currency in every colony. SCIENTIFIC. There 1. represented to bea totd of 247, 720 miles of telephone work in America, already. An exchange says the tin-bearing area in New South Wdes is estimated at near- ly 8,600 square miles, but at the present time the New England district yields the most of the tin produced. As American vines appear to be prov' against the ravages of phylloxera in the wine-producing countries of Europe, the Italian Government has taken measurea to encourage the growth of these vines by the people of Italy. Writen in the London Lancet call atten- tion to the great valae of hot-water appli- cations to the head in fainting or syncope. They say also that a prompt use of it, ap- plied to the forehead with cloths, will very often avert such attacks. A German engineer is reported to have made an important discovery in aeronaut- ics, by whidi he is enabled to condense or expand the gas in a balloon. The agent he emplcys is compressed carbonic acid, with the help of which, he says, he is able to ascend or descend at pleasure. The importance of wholesome potable water for cities is shown In Vienna. Since the introauction into that city of water drawn from the Styrian Alps a (constant and very considerable decrease has been observed Instomachand Intestind troubles and cases of typhus fever have become rare. A cheaper light than Ldlson's has been invented by Prof. T. S. G. Lowe, of Nor- riatown. Pa. It Is not electric, a lighted jet of cheap fuel gas coming in contact with a spiral of metal, the composition of which has not been made public. It i. said a light of twenty-candle power will cost the consumer one-quarter of a cent an hour. Cut ateel nails appear destined to super- sede the ordinary common iron cut nail as completely as the modern pointed screw nail has the old-fashioned blunt screw nail. The cost of the steel out Is not much more than that of the iron cut nails and in quality and finish they are f dlly equd to the best hand-made nails. It is surprising that they are not more gener- ally known to wood-workers. In British men-of-war expRriment. have been made with a view to diminish the rolling, by the fitting of lateral water tanks to the hull. With the motion of the ship the water flows in the direction in which the ship rolls, but the vessel part- ly recoven itself before the water has gone from one side to the other. Results show that with the tank;) half full the rolling is diminished about 27 per cent. A New York paper has arrayed a num- ber of sdentific facts showing that plants flourish much better under the electric and other lights than under the dtemat- ing influence of light and darkness. Di- umd repose is not necessary for the life of plants. A series of experiments is pro- prOposed whereby our Department of Ag- riculture may determine the ounditlon. under which the electric light might be advantageondy and economically employ- ed in forcing the growth of garden and hothouM plants. A sympathetic ink for writing on po.td card. 1. .imply diluted .ulphuno addâ€" one part by measure of acid to seven of water. When the ink is applied the card will at finb show roughened traces of the writ- ing, but after dr^^ these disappear and the writing iaaainvuibleaa though done with water. Of course, only a gold pen or a quill should boused with this add ink. If io i.deabed to avoid the auspicion of qrm- pathetio Ink having been employed, the card may be written upon acrou the fint writing with tincture of iodine, which will entirely fade out when heat 1. applied to devdop the lympathetic inlc. The gift of bhe Emperor of Bunia to bhe Bmprea. on Easber morning was an egg of gold. Upon opening ib bhe yolk of an eggiM diwdoaed, made of sold of a dif- ferent color from tiie ahdL In bhisyolk la a little hen, oimtalnlng a diminutive imperid crown of diamond., and Mt In bhe crown ia a round ruby of nnauriMtfaed beauty. There ia conaiderable barbed fence in Maricopa Oonnby, Arizona, and bhe vaat flocka of wild docka whldi fn|uenb bhe valley oftMi fly low, and, atnldiig bhe barbed, fence, beoome Impaled thweon. Ibia mU tkrt tow of dnoka are gatbw- ed daily by thehof B,fnN»4|i9^ fencM and â-  k h\ \i- I ' -1 f " ,i--^ •1' 'â- '

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