Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 9 Jul 1885, p. 3

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 n«t{ i rHB-^ inilar]naiili]|] mp (or MwaidowiBi,. ichjne THAT i's Oiina itIx)ril]ardTs, MJXB. 6£. ALCAHAJHiil C^ABOO I Dd.hand Blo7ti«2 Dies. Send'for Ugt 13c. Biampforhi ever Issued !â-  Hont The Eifti I Vtuberi Oil rented until w mkn «i f Uj yejjs oM, wilklf thii nseoii II board, canvU wash to to 100 in onelionr. wanted all ada. Sample he good a;eDti;po iter trjinu it; on goods in Sft t CO..FatenteMiil O.Canada [OX g«WL " I. â- ' iOB' ture ^^• â- 3eTM.t3ssa3asa:fWPnsi:~ji-i- tmmaepK!:^ /-iivy.£im*4^mmAri.f(^M,mrsiiijm:: -Ji^ juried "•^" r'^^Z^'oiSdMtSa nigbt ouna down. .jjto tram tl" *•*•?*»• *?•»*• '£dW^" " "" ' ***^ .i/.aA set town and tcnran •nJSgSttorSesUeaJhwn *^u .K- »«jrae Bleep stUl In her heiiA jt'twtK»Sat?rr.p.ihed««L ij miveB nnder the walla. Ittw^^^tthwhuabaad'ahalla. ,, i..nr^etul boaom aohe. ?!-:el?Sud?Siwere.Uawake; J k,ik«a them broad that night, -iSmS^nloctrimaied a light. "' ,^ laid them pUloir or aheet 'offidaywaeoa their feet. .n Bmuty cuPi and one IllSnTIec youngert Ban. ed aad kissed tham. and hoahed their flW-jpreaaed oat of her longhead eyei. ,.fher who lay on a lower floor, [^"berBtTptotheoomdor. .„n cAiae. and saw her atand "^UdrercUnging to either h«id. J -The cnirg smote my heart. tmydTeams of death apart. I m iflavo theie se^en. I died. ftye Iriep: when the child has cried I „,. pra I nas" to my many dead I^^°fi?;nwi? and had no bread. „« lamD two were at a strife SSSSS'fted. T«U your wife.-' boat. A Convict's Adventures. under Caalfield, Baya the New York employed upon aix Ice-barge 'foot of west 17fcb Btreet In June, ad daring a qaarral.kllled a fellow m with an ice-axe. He waa only I old, and waa aent to atate prbon Ke. He waa taken to Sing-Sing, ge be waa removed to the Clinton 1 and again removed to the Anbom [prison. Here young Oaulfield waa ' to spend the remainder of hia Last September, while a gang of Ltt were at work on a barge, a large ffell into the water, which made a Lpluh. The cry wentap that a man IfiUen overboard. Thia created a Ideal of excitement, during whloh jCanlfielddived from the end of the [and swam nnder water until he i the other aide of the canal or About two milea from Auburn jtpad convict prevailed upon a far- I give him a suit of old clothes. The M to Bulo waa an easy one. leld wanted to get to New York. He ride upon a freight train going to n. On the way he got Into a qaar- Ihthe brakeman, who cauaed his j [at Little Falls. He waa aent to the ' penitentiary aa a vagrant for alz Upon March 3 he waa diaoharff- 1 eame to New York and went to lua t'a honae. |tried to get work, and waa upon the obtain^ a gooi aituatlon when |of hla old enemiea recognized him iformed the police. He fled to Uoa- |id from there moved to Providence, I he worked aa a laborer. Ha could epaway from hia mother,and ao re- to New York a few daya ago. I the police werenotifldd. Deteetive- Qts Murray and Maguire went to ^Qie the other day and captured him. ^vy handcafis he waa led to Jeffer- f uket, where he waa arralnged be- Jostice Gknnan aa an eaoaiMd con- Canlfieid waa remanded to await ppeaiance of the cffisera from Au- iwho will take him back to serve â- t of hia life sentence. Oaulfield gly told how he got to thia city. Fnn in a Cpnrt Boom. waa a delightful and iatereatlng In a Texan court-room the [day. The coanael for the defence be prosecuting officer in a murder ame to blows, and were pegging i each waiting for the other to pro- 1^ pistol, and the audience, aa at the South, flying from the [of the fight and not, aa in other ^«^ toward it. Thereupon the I promptly sprang from the bench, I he reached the floor, got a atlng- W under the ear from one of the el In the case, which he repaid with â- ^ knockdown. He then summoned ' M a posse to quell the riot, and Mr auiatance separated and ar- «»e combatanta. He fined them «h for conteTipt, except the man [Mhad hlmaelf floored, and who ^D»bly completely got over any opt of court he had ever felt. No F ocer of high rank has probably 'â- yed such a part in a court room fi(»pt Andrew Jackson, who once ^Mlt lummoned from the bench â- etc arrest a deaperattjaharacter, s»^r?*^"8 *^« Sheriff outalde the S •^«^"«°"» terrible aapect aa ^ttc8dontheruffiani8aald,lnthe wuan legend, to have so cowed him 'urrendered at diacretton. '^en to Name Themselres. J« fromthe State of Kanaaa, who "ndi. u n? " " to reUtivea ». Hat!rvP'?°' ^»'^«' of t»«lve X are « i ?^"'*°' " that the aniaJH'*?'^^^'"»darede- "*^«^of1fc^^ ^^ r^""' â-  »Uow rtT ^®' ^o^«^ arrange- •'y^iJdw! f.^^e*' when they ^^ty to dSi f ""'to'^hocae names r» i 80 r"" "" not to coin- Klewh Crr^\o' Agreat n^^J awT ^^^ burdened aU W SStK^*"**' '^^n^d have ^*^farmer is trying to boallad, writerm th«1ittabu sntadng hfa skur â- maUlroii g bow. Next pine knots or **Ii^^woa •»~* Thin %itti tom^uMn to ib# la ilfla oarefolli, ^^ oftk»«oatiidltlaill Inyolantanl7m« feels awed bf theii^ with here and tibace a tree stanicQiigoiit like .a gxlm sentinel in tjuswaataof^ffiiii and water. Oooaaionally thej pas* a vl- butary stream, and Into one of these anuOli^riinr-Vahitinirboat, tfl^ng d- lenUy along in the f nlet night, with the moon riaing slowly over the tall ^ass. Now all is chani^ 1%eydart into a dense growth of palm trees aadswab palmetto. The lof 17 cabbage palm xean its straight trunk aloft, ssutoth and even as a marble shaft, crowned, above by a glorious f oUage, while moire humbly the many otiier trees ladiffenoiu to this wii^ ellmate stand With « foMrallookiiig Spanish muas hanging hi filmy gray drapery ahnost to the water's edge, and the small patches jU ground here and there vlslme are ooy^red with poisonous vines and lovely ferns. Here the *^'orack- er" gives the order to oease rowing and, striking a match, he lights up Ids cage of pine knots, lUuminattttf the water many yards hi advance. .With his rifle cooked and In readiness ihey push silently ahead. Soon what appears to be thc^end of a log^ appears a few rods in front. The boat drifts alowly forward nntil tha little sharp eyes -of a *^ gator" shine forUifroBL. the log-like head. He la Immovable, transfixed, as it were, by-the bright glare, and now is the tiiae to shoot. AUning carefully; either at an eye or behind! the fore 1^, he pulls the trigger, and the deed is done. The huge reptile awakea from his 'echargy. A gnrgUi^r roar, like that of a bull, a violent plunge and powerful lash- ings of the tail indloate he ham received his death wound. After this flunr, which lasts perhaps for half an hour, the body immediately sinks to the bottom. To prevent this he is secured by a rope and andiored safely. When a sufficient num- ber has been shot the "raraoker" proceeds to skin his game.. He takes a sha^ knife, and making an Ircision on eiUier dde from behind the foreleg, removes the silver-gray skin from the belly and sides, the armored skin' on the back and tail being useless. Then, securing the teeth, he returns home, and after salting the hides they are ready for the '^commission man," who pays the hunter about 92 per skin. Bound to Beat Bob Insersoll. In Dale Oonnty, Ga., only a;,tew miles from the Barboor line, lived a few months ago an old gentleman who had given the best years of his lifia to hard work and free Uvlng. He was a free eater and £ree drinker. He was devoted to his mat- utinal, ante-prandlal and evening tod, and he did not hesitate to say that a good art- icle of com- juice was about the most sat- isfying thing he ever tasted. Ha was an eccentric individual and no- ted far and wide in the neighborhood as bemg in most of his ways q^te peculiar. ^11, he discovered less than two mondis a£0 that he was approaching his end and began to make his final arrange- ments. He called his family around his dying bedside and made a last request. He had read how Bob Ingwrsoll had employed a secretary to take down his last words when the end should come, so tiat the Sunday-school and Dorcas society books ooidd not forge, as he appears to think they would, a final retraction of his unbelief. The intemperateold man would beat IngersoU. He determined that his laatendahould bein keeping with past acts of his life and not a denial of his habits. Only the immediate family was to attend his funeral. Othws were not expected and did not attend. When the coffin was ready to be lower- ed Into the tomb the eldest son drew ^e lid and exposed the face to view.- He then moistened I4ie lips of the dead clay with whiskey fooma bottle provided for that purpose, tiook a drink himself, passed it to cash member of the family present, all o| #hom dnttak fraely, when t^e deathnieal- injt poison waa put in .the ooffiii witJi'UlQ diait of the intemp«rato old man^ and Us remains laid away to await the resurreotioil and jodgmenit^ j j Tnia wa^all in accordance witib the dead man'a laat Artie al||tei!eqaest. It is not a newspaper exaggeoratton, but the solemn trurh; The repbrt^hka. every assurance that it really did hsppenl. ' ' fndtgiowiM. and l«m whan Bi^ M ^-rqM lUMwre h m»A tta potato T0«% ihooti arapartlflalarly tloh and sneciknt and wfflbe gnkdlly Atenby thecows;^ .^ t ,^7^ JH^**' *^? **^!t^ winter and are not They yield well and keep well, do not fla- vor the milk and IttlMr, and are cqnaUy good for horses, sheep and swine. Pe«Dh orchards need ^tash, and the yel lows win not be any loaiit a ascieaB draw- back to peaeh growing.; PoiiAtwlU ji^ Nstorea tree that is U^ufed by the yel- lows, but will prevent ilk lii.ail orchards if epplied when the trees ar0 pet,' or better stm, before setting. Mikhares for oom should, for moit iioJDs^ contahi potash In some form, and pS6i- phates. The effect of smmoi^ oii xirhk is usually noVweU narked,' but podijb^ will require all three. AmmonlKii aa|ate ia«p» bntis astaUy iNMecl w^bei^p- pUed tocsom, but valnahle fornotatM^ Valuable aa Am|nonia,|a|r.qtops»4rit too .extienslveip. comneroial: aoanuriMto be used on a large scale, ca ttieept aa^ Is made on or in the farm Itself. We W in thesoUadvlsedljr, for all fairly fe^a land haaki It the dementi from k^Oi cultivation will develope nitrc^^ and other Itwms of plant food. A serious Ion occnie when the drill will not distribnto fertUgnrs evedly. Not only wiu the misslog places be poorer, but uev will ripen ktor and; ofton be filled with Ughtichaf^ grain. Anddddilnaj thus hf imperfect distribution of fertilJB- en tose enough gndn to pay for a new one In a sinsle season's crop. Beans proauce an enormous crop in deeply trenched soils, and will fanprove as mnchas any trop by surfaoe manuring. Peas for a fall crop m^r besown. Itls, however, uselen to try them nnlen in a deeply trenched soil, and one that Is com^oatlvely cool in the hottest weather overhead, as they will mildew and prove worthless. fotiH cflop^ CHi Bot wainnabiy be baridaathli»the|ioaad „ ised fov wooBC ehlwki tOltwo ^MboUlatinsk/ialMid kf the isw /t «( am nlOk, mIl nlanios fend isdMsas, out of a meal nade hen grain inthefol- pstHBaaiSOas. eom,16IbB. ^-oiH, Rr1bi.teilef, 10 ma. wbihtbna: gflad«^«»d iiodx, bak» ttd eraarida Into Maided nflk, ghHs^no wasar: The milk JB.filAellqnid needed. There is seldom » deali In the brood If so fed. To Atom WtmB. B Herald An Aer^naut'slTerrlblelleatli. A shocking accident occurred at the drooB gKondB,OhBrie«t(m, theother after- noon ioat prtor to the opndng perform- ance of Blcharda Leon'a drcus. Among the outdoor attractions was a bal- loon asceoskm. Just as the ropes hold- ing the baUo on were cast off, the hot-air BJOTO used in inflating it wias overturned, and set the balloon oh fire. The b.miing balloon shot npinto the airat a rapIdTSto, with William Fattenon the aeronaut. In thebasMt. WhenashjDTtdlstMicomthe crowd yeUed *• Jump f bat he did not heed the sdvtoe, andflter go"W««^«S hundred feet up the baUoon coUapaed, and Patterson fell to the sartha Ufeton mass of humanity. Pattenwn waa 22 years. oW, and lived a Wellsvffle, Ohio, where be leavea a widbw and fam^ IirStaSr t^ â- *^«- first ascension. The baUoon was totaUy j b^ consumed. We cannot bum stubble where land is seeded with doverorgrasseswithontiDJur- Ing these. We wouldnotbunitunder these conditions if we could, as it Is Worth more to remain on the ground. But dry stub- ble plowed up is apt to do more harm than good, and it is better economy on most kinds of soil to turn it into ashes where it orew. That it Is bettor to spread manure on the field at once rotten than to place it in heaps and thereafter aprwad it la obviona if the matter is carefully looked into. It is not probaUethat the escape of gaseslnto the ffar is any greater in the one case thui in the otber. Spread evenly, the soluble parts are carriea equally faito the earth, the manure is more easily turned, under than when newly laid, and it tokes long- er to spread from the heap tluui from the wagon. The matter is of speelal Import- ance in manuring for summer crops. Poultrr Points. Don't let your fowls roost in the draft. Move the coops of young chicks occasionally. To fatten poultry quickly, feed them with rice boiled in milk. Keep apart young and old fowls of the Light Bndiama variety. Every poultry yard should have at least a pair of guinea fowls in the flock. Young chickens tamed into the garden will eat FP ell tiie bugs and insects. Select hens with red combs, bright eiyes, dean nostrils and legs, and that ap- pear active. Give your poultry pl^ty of run. They need exerdse give them apace and tJiey will take plen^ of it.' Turn once evoiy day a^l eg|^ that are being aaved forhatohing purpoeea, other- ifise the yolks may set to 6ne side and- sdhere to -the didl. Ini^ best indosnte f or tonltry yards Is the wwe fencing. It nakas a pretty appearance, and at the same time proves itself of much value. It is said that eggs JErom mature hens â- are much better for hatching purposes ithan those trom young ones, as a larger pcopbrtion of them are ldy to prove fertile. On a large farm it is rarefy necessaiy or best to ooi^ne fowla hi annmer. u given free range tiiey wlU do aa nudi good in destr^^ng insects as they mjnry. Plant at lesat one tree in your yard, as Sultry need shade as wdlaa sunshine, ant plenty of Bun^wers. The aeedla not only rdished by fowls but Is also pro- ductive of health. As the ground often beconn haid and compact, cspedaDy after a xafai, e cm- venient mode of making a dust belli b to spade up a few feet of earth, worUng it up fine. It will serve the poipoaeadiMV- •bly. Poultry cannot be kept to advantsge unleu they have a pn^edy arnnged h'juse for theiif accommodation. Tim is just as ttecenary to thdr well-being as it is that hotsaB and cattle' abedd have a "Do not throw soft food on the ground. do (The Fireoian's Heridd eondensn into aoaall eompau avast amount rf useful in- formation having a tendency to prevent fire,thnaw|Oi-^ 1. Always bay the best quslity of olL 2, Never make a sudden motion with a lamp dther inliftlngit or setting it down. |( S. Never put a luap on the edge of a table «r mantoL 4. Never fill a lamp after dark, even If you should have to go without a light. 6. See that the lamp wh^ is always aban and that it works freely in the tube. 6. Never blow a lamp out from the top. 7. Never take a li^t to a doset whrae tbare are dothes. HneeeBsary to go to the doset; place the llg^t at a distance. .8. Use candles when poBsible when go- ing about the house and bedrooms. These ^are cheaper and can't explode, and for many purpoaes are jaat aa good aa lampa. 9. Hutches should always be kept in stone or earthen jars or in tin. 10. They diould never be eft where rats and mice can get hold of them. There ii nothing more i» the taste of a rat than phosphorus. They will eat it if they can get at it. A bunch of matdies is almost certahntobesetfiire to ifaratgeta at it. IL Have perfectly good safes in ~«r. {dace where inatdies are to be jsea and never let a metdi be left ou the floor. 12. Never let a match go out of your lumd after lighting it until yon are sure the fire is out and then it Is better to put it in a stove or earthen dish. 13. It is far bettor to use the safety matches whldi can only be lighted upon the box whioli contains than. 14. Have your furnaces examined care- fully in the fell and at least once during the winter by a competent person. All the pipes and flues ahotud be carefully looked to 16. If there are any dosets in the house near chimneys or flues, whldi there ought not to be, put nothiog of a combnaWfile nature into them. Such dosete wUl soil silver and crack crockery and bum bed- ding. They form a bad part of any houae thatcontaina them. 16. Never leave any wood near a fur- nace, range, or atove, to dry. 17. Have your atove looked to fre- quentiy to aee that there are no holes for coal to drop out. 18. Never put any hot adies or coals in a wooden receptade. 19 Be sure thwe are no curtains or shades thaji can be blown into a gaslight. 20. Never examine a gas meter after dar k. -- V.^_ ^^ Leaning Towers. The wonder of Bologna is its pair of leanli^ towers. Wonder is the correct term, for a leaning tower is always un- pleasant to look upon. The motto of a tower should be ** I aspire, but I am strong " a leaning tower aeema to surest, ** I am weak because I aspire." Who, putting aside tiie marvd of the thing, am help regretting that the noble cam- panile of Plsadlds^t find a firmer foun- dation 1 and this Is'ffven more true of the towers of Bologna,' whose lines are simpler and aeverw. They, stand side by side on the Mercato di Mezzo, in the hasrt of the town. The oldisr, called the Torre degli Aainelli, built in the beginning of the twelfth century, ia full ninety yarda high, and leana a little mtte than a yard from the vertical thik ,^lS^r, the Ttucre Gariaenda, built In rivatrjpr.afew years later, leans over more tiiaii. eight feet, Hod thus was left Incomfdete at a height of 138 feet. Yarioua exj^bilaatibns have been given of these leaning towers, some bebe^dng that tiiey were imrposdy so built. Goethe's reason, quoted by Mr. Hare, Is, that as in old tunes every im- portant family poaseued a' tower, this, when vertiealfbeeame. a familiar and com- mon object accordingly, **a leaning tower was built architect and owner at- tained thdr objdot the man of upright towers are just glaneisdat.and alt hprry on to examine the leaning onn. Ohms have attributed the ineUnation to an earth- quake. To ma it upears more probable that the ade cause is a defective founda- tion; for at Fisa ^e subsid en ce evidently oommenoed eariy, and after the third stage the builden tried to remedy the evfi. LaGhoisenda, also, is ssld to have become mote ont«^the perpendicular during the last hundred y An egg althin an egg is said to have bean hdd by a Dorkfasg hen at 0#ais- boro, Ej. the other day. The couirodty was of unuw*l siz) and when broken, and the white and yolk poured out, a Bssaller egg, with perfect Bbell, was found iii«M« a So acute la the aheep'a sense cf hearing, it is said, that it can diatiogaish the cry of ite pwn lamb among a thousand othwa, all Ueetlng at the same time and the lamb, too, la aUe to recognize it* mOBher's voice, even though it be in the midst of a large flock. The new goBB whkb have 1 •mHo natatain tha^avd n pyi is ny of bnfctiMf have to andergo a oooaej^ •• perimentatoBBt^ the laBge taUea aai other p artieolMa, and It will P^^ -Oa 'aBa begUBlBg o( next year Mnm they Mareadi^ aea. Thlawfliihfow- ever,lM earilev Ann the ddpe wlndh an to carry them can be completed, and there win beanpltf UmeavallaUefor a fullaad leiaardhf sMidy oi theb reqoIieBMnte and e a p ah ilfti e a The first ol the four OS-ton Bted brseeh-ktadara for her Mnjaaty'fe Bhlp Rodney will be shortiy finished, and wUl be used asan experimental gun, care being taken not to damage It in the pro cen by any of the aurgicd ppwationa'to which experimental gnna are occadonally aubjected. Although seventeen Itona llihter than the 80-ton maizTe loadora on board the Inflexible, the 63-ton gun hi expected to surpan the older weapon in Ita'destraetive power. It will probably throw a 18^ ixMi ahot of 1,260 ponnds weight wicn a powder charge of about 680 pounda.and the eatimated vdodty at the matzle is to be 2,100 feet per second. Iha £0 tonproj e^ weighs 1,700 pounds but the cartridge is but 460 pounds, and the muzzle vdodty recorded is 1.600 fees per second. Should the new sua realise expectations it wUl penetrate 29 inches of wrought iron armor at doae qaarten and Brpve too much for 27 ischea even at the berid fighting rimge of a thouaand yarda. Still more powerful, but not in the same ratio of increase, will be the 1 10-ton guns now being manufactured for Her Majea- ty'a ahlp Beitb3w. There are three of these inina ordered, one of which will be aurrendered for the pnrpoae of adentific experiment, while the other two are aent on board ahip, where, however, they wilt not be wanted until midsummer of lfl^6. The prpjeotile will be 16^ inch diameter, and weigh 1,800 pound a i,r 2,000 pounda. The powder charge will be the enormous one of 900 pounda, or half the weight of the projectile, tuppoalng thia to be 1,800 pounda, on which aappoaition the velodto may be reckoned at 2.060 feet per aecond, and ita power of penetrating armor at 3l| lochea near the muzzle, or two inches leas at 1000 yarda. The ^una will be vaatiy auperior to the Itdian 100 ton guns, which are at preaent at the head of all the kvd artillery in the world, and they are ,j the like extent in advance of the 100 ton guna which are doing duty for Eng- land on the fortifioattona of Mdta and Gibraltor, dthough theae are larger bore by 1^ Inchea. The aubatitution of atoel for wrought-lron admtte of heavier chargea of powder, and thia fact nuJkca dl the diffdrenoe^ Baby Buffaloes. The herd of baffialoea at the Zoological Garden, Philadelphia, la increaalng, three woolly caated atrangen having come into the world during the paat week. The young atrangera keep doae to thier mothers, who lie on the gran dodng in the warm sunshine. **No keeper haa entered tiie indosure In which the mothers and odves are kept for severd days," add Superintendent Brown, "for a buffdo cow la the most jedoua and watehful parent In exiatonee. She will allow no one to approach her cdvea, apparently fearing that they may be taken away. ** The herd of bnffaloea owned by the Garden ia undoubtedly the fineat In the world, and they are becoming more rare each day on account of the rapid dis8| pearanoe of the boff^o from the plaina. An inddent which csured last week gava me a livdy sense of their vdue, and now I would not part with a bofEalo under any drcumatancn. I was called on by a man who had come dl the way from Nebraska to induce me to sell htm one of the buffa- loes. He was willing to pay anything in reaaonfor the beaat, and while I was com- pelled to tell him that it was impoadble to sell one, I became curious to know what he wanted it for. 'Itls a sertona matter,' he said, in a solemn manner^ and I muat get aome kind of a bcffdo to take back to Nebraaka with me, for there ia a whole tribe of Indiana wuting to cde- brate their nationd medicine dance around him. There ain't a buffdo to be got in the WMt,aiid I have come Ent ea- peoiaUy to get one." Thatlittie c(Hk- veraation iMomed boffdoea with me," concluded the Superintendent, "uid yoa couldn't get one of our herd now for love nor money." Fortifying SebastopoL The Rusdan Goverment is re-fortif ying Sebaatopol without lou of time. Enor- mous earthworks are in course of oon- straition or repair for some distance dong the shore, looking seawards, and on aU pointo commanding the approaeh so the barbor. They are being mounted with immenady powerful guna. The bat- toriea are numerous and powerful, and all the works are being pushed on aa rapidly aa poaaibla ui.der the direction of a large force of aappers and artillery msn who, with the soldiers under them, never cesse work, on the strictest of Rusdan holidays. The completion of the iron- clads Tohesme and Sinope, in course of constmetion In the dockyardsof the Rue- sian company, is alao being haatened on, the work being continued durin thenifrht, by the aasistanee of the electric light. The statemen'ifromSebaBtopol, whidiappeared in a leading journal, that the captain of one of the drodar Irondada there had been re- move i on account of hia Eogliah prodlvl- tiea, ft c. ii a pore mistake. The cap t*l*» TwMrnd fmm osmmand of the Nuv- «»ui.-' 'tj. Lv.tnploted seven and a half yes, i^' ":i^ aiid forno other teaBtm than tnap it t.'-*s in acoordanoe with the regulationa of the aervlce. H» was alaaosb inunediateiy afterwards gazstted to the command of the torpedo iquadron In the BkckSea. Ii ^â- â-  HI, Vuh V::\l â- ^4a H m ' „g^ ilHii

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