Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 9 Jul 1885, p. 6

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 I- b i: 1 1 1 a If !â-  -U mm Nl l-M^m^jr^ ,-«jW*Je»Mi'« ?.-liV.--':«i'-^_' JOH9 TOELLB'8 DEATM. nsht wuk I John To«Ue, the Kinii â- â-  who hdthadapfltmtoitn«Kto with thaiMd dog May 7 haa died ftoa hydn^hobia. Ever rinoe hie battle with tiie dog Mr. Toelle had been hnalj eonvliieed thathe voolddleof hydropholaa. HlafiieDda nttaapted to penoade him that thace waa no danger, bat no amoont of penoaakm orarfoaentooaldahakehtaiinhla beUai that hla death was onlj a matter of tte*. After the battle hie woonda were eanter- Ized and he wae glren all the whlakej that he coold stand. A. mad stone was also applied to the bites, bat woold not adhere. ToeUeaooeptedthisasan(ma^ and told his phjiidans that h was noose, and that all their efTorts coold not asTe him. The woands all healed nloel7,thoa^ Toelle oomplafaied of pains In Us arms. Last Monday night week he visited his brother-in-law. He talked of the battle with his sister, and waa firmly convinced that he would die in a short time. When he retomed to his home be said he felt-sick, and wanted his bed made differently. He remarked **I will not stay long, I feel it coming on, and do not want to hart anybody, so yon had better strap me in my bed I feel that the first spasm is coming on." That night, as he had predicted, he had his first apaam, which was not,* however ' violent. Tuesday afternoon he had another, and the third occorred Tnesday night. £«eh spasm was more violent than the preced- ing one. Between the intervals of the attack on Tuesday he was rational and made his will. Till Tuesday night he had been drinking water and keeping ponnded ice in his month, Then he refnsed to drink farther, and the sight of water would throw him into convulsions. He also began to froth at the mouth and scream like a wild beast, all the while making desperate efforts to release himself from the ropes with which he was tied to the bed. He died in a terrible agony. His straggles were frightful. His ^es glared like a wild animal's, his month was flecked with foam, and his screams could be heard for a mile. Four strong men were requir- ed to hold him, to prevent hka him from breaking the ropes. He breathed his hut at about 5.30 o'clock. Mr. Toelle waa a man of 35 years of age. He was in good circumstances. The dog that caused his death was an immense Newfoundland, over three feet high and for a long time had been the pet of the family. Mr.Toelle, noticing that the dog was act Jig strangely, tied him up, bat he chewed the strap, and: started across a field. Thinking that he might bite some one, Mr. Toelle followed. When he caaght him a desperate straggle ensaed, lasting for over an hour. Mr. Toelle caught the strap, intending to take the dog back to the house. As he did so the beast sprang for his throat. Mr. Toelle got out of the way, when the dog again attacked him and seized him by e right hand, which he dung to with bulldog tenacity. With his other hand he managed to choke the dog till he let go his hold, only to renew the attack agidn. Again and again he was choked off only to renew the fight more savagelT than before. Finally, with his hands and arms lacerated and bleeding and hia body covered with bites, he got the dog's head in chancery and threw him to the ground. He threw his whole weight upon Vie dog and held him down, scream- ing all the time loudly for help, with the dog biting and fighting vldoosly. He was finally rescued, torn, bleeding, and mangled by a passer by, who shot the dog as it was being held down by the unfor- tunate victim. .^ij/laHK iti««»*P:??-ii*5'=aHSt'f«-" tJadv thta nthfsr fwninatiiig tUie, Mr. i, Onehok aighftlaat Joty, wiMOlheboidM ' aiiide ib^ 'of ptooi-ttmUag In a oIom koob in the pf tfaa Ji Tha thahMooMa of Bojal pMEaaaum* whleh Is iooMiHiat iHs a ptnrln tfng The ninth and 1m* of tha Qoaan's ehUdSaHi la aboot to Mtartha isar^M state, ind this in- twsitias oTMit Bug^ Taqr wa have tswipdod Bumu one to vantore opon a fam Of niogrsphy. TheQaeen, in her joor* nab, totboanotaUtttoof thahome Ufi of that happyelida bofoce the dooda ba- gui to horsr, and the Letters of the Pkin* cess AUee show that even Prinees have thafar domaatie oaraa like ofdinary folk. 8tm than iaa HmaWneas aboot Mr. Ar- nold'a fsois and figares, in view of the eontemi^ated appointment of a sdect committee to eonnder the forther claims of the Queen's deeeendants opon the national purse. By the grantfng of an annuity to Princess Beatrice^ Her Majesty is relieved of aity anxiety, respecting the InofHne of her sons aad daoghters, but the qoeation now arises what provision, if uiy,. Is to le made for her grandchild- ren. There is a notion abioaid that the Qaeen, owing to Uie careful handling of her money, and her retirement from pub- lic life, hss be(xme possessed of vsst wealth. Thepassing of an act in 1862 enabling the Sovereign to hold and dis- pose of private estates, gave rise to tUs conjecture. A glance at the dvll list and the claims upon a monarch render it very doubtful whether the Queen has been able to lay by a store anyUiing like suffi- cient to place hex very nomeroos gnmd- children, beyond the need of State assist- ance. The Qaeen reodves from the Civil list £385,000 per annum. Of tUs sum aboat £60,000 is apportioned to the privy finn nf tho Faiisas ffltjTImiis stmmtd al sbar of Tha Voitnlglttly. eonfinoy^ himastf to-l-saost soffoeati^, whan the hot air of Uas Ing flaa-biiRiarsaad tiw atlfllBgfoBea from .fif^ jati ofvar tgrpo^ eaaea saeo s ed bayoad hafluaeadmano^, PtekBhanhsmight haTO been seen working as only nlg^t-fiands on â-  morning papers can work, gsdng Intently at the agate andnonpateQ taikea, dadphar- ing hod mannaar^t and laborioody con- trlbodng hia aliue to make a morning paper. Â¥^th fevered brow aad tiredeyes the old eopy-holdar tolled on throogh tlie bosy rash of a ** heavy" night, gtding through Ida speetadea to oat^ a turned •• o •' or a wtong-font " s." Aboot 3.30 there was a sladc in the run of copy, and while Shanks andhis fellow- workmen were waltfaog for other jaooia, he began to tell how nht-wotk was wearli^ on him, how he could not deep throogh the hot days, and yet how depcoident he waa upon his small salary for livelihood! He loiiged to leave the deek, and told how he had lost a fortune in the war and now had to work like a alave; that he was poor and discouraged with his condition, and he did not care ho w soon the good angel called him to another world. A few nSnutes later than this the proof-reader who sat beside him came to a little telegraph ' take" which sdd some- thing about a vaat fortone in Kentucky. Thiimng he oould have a little fan by in- serting Us companion's name in the dis- patch, tiie proof-reader added in a few lines on the manifold paper of thedispateh these words: **Tiie only known heir of the Kentucky Shanks is R. L. Shanks, a proof -reade r, supposed to be workinglike a slave on the Times." The copyholder read it and laughingly TKB «•»â- !» iacpWAT. purse, wUch, together with the revenue I put itin his vest pocket, where it remained of the Dudiy of Lancaster, brings Her Mftjesty'spersonalincomenpto £140,000 a -^- AT. That is, supposing the remaining A New Torpedo for the British Covemment An official inapection has taken place within the past few days of a torpedo ia- vented l^ Mr Brennan, an Australian, to whom the Briclsh Admiralty granted facilities for the manufacture of and ex- periments with his invention at Ghtrrlaon Point Fort, Sheemess. The trials and inspedion having proved satlsfaotory the Admirallty have agreed to adopt, the torpedo as a part of the national arma- ment. It is asserted that the Inventor has been paid £10,000 on account, and various sums, ranging from £40,000 to £100,000, are mentioned as the reward to be alloted for the invention. The new torpedo diffan essentially from any ezist- Ing system. It can be directed and dis- clmrged either from a shore torpedo bat- tery or from a sUp. Separate prop -Hers are actuated by means of wiree colled in reds within the topedo, the motive power being a steam engine within the fort or aUp, from wUch it can be steered with great accoracy. Jets of light, produced by some chemical agency, indicate to the operator the podtion of the torpedo to night. â€" o Witty. Lord Oheaterfidd, whoee ** letten " oor gtandsires reodved aa the code of polite- ness, waa a polished wit and an aatote coortier. Chi one occasion, George II. and his ministers differed as to the person who should fill a podtlon of trust. The ministry insisted upon their man, and de- legated Lord Cheaterfidd to present the commidon for the royal signatore. In a deferoitial tone, hia lordaUp begged to know with whose name Hia Majesty would be pleased to have the blank spaces filled up. **With the devil's I" answered tbe enraged kinv. " And shall the instrument," asked the earl, wifchoot the slightest change of man- ner, "ran as nsndâ€" *Oar trnsted and wdl-bdoved eoosln and eonnaellor' f The king boxsb into a hearty langh and signed the ooouniadon. £320,000 derived from the Civil Llat no more than meets the daim upon it. The Queen's establishments are neecessarily expendve, and unlike a private lady, she cannot reduce them to counterbalance calls upon her purse in other directions. Windsor, Buckingham Palace, Osborne and Balmord, have to be cared for, not to mention two or three private palaces, one of wUoh is to be placed at the dis- posal of Princess Beatrice, who by all accounts, is to remain near her Royal mother, in keeping with the adage, " A son's a son till he marriea a wife, But a daughter's a daughter all the days of her life. The Q aeon's parse needs to be pretty capacious. The officers of the royal household, over one hundred in number, recdve in salaries £52.000 a year. In addition, there are some five hundred persons engaged in and about the Qaeen's palaces, whose pay and allowances must swsllow op a ooadder- able sum. And yet these are merdy items of royal expenditure. If asked to make tfoviaion for some of the Qaeen's grandchildren, people will naturally turn thefar attention to Uabilitlea already in- eorred. The total annaity voted by Par- liament for the sons and daughters of the Queen amoonts, Mr. Arnold tells us, to £167,000, but by the death of the Duke of Albany and Princess Alice the payment baa been reduced to £132,000 a year. According to preoedence the child- ren, not only of the Prince of Wales, but also of the Dukes of Edinborgh, Con- naught, and Albany will be entitled to annuities. In fact, it has been the cus- tom for Parlfaunent to grant an annuity to every Royal personage, as evidenced by the payment of £12,000 a year to the Duke of Cambridge, and annuities of £3,00t each to his two sisters. Princess Muy of Teck and the Grand Dodiess of Mecklenborg-Strelitc. Prinody families are more nomeroos to day^han, formerly, and a doubtful snccesson Is not likdy to be one of the troubles of the near future. How the altered dronmstuioes can best be met remains to be seen. The antl qnatei and obadete procedure of the Royal household, perhaps, stands in need of reform and curtailment, wUoh might leave a snrplas in the Royd income. Mr. Arnold tlilnke the Grandson of the Sov- ereign, like the Grandaon of a Duke, should beoome an ontitled commoner, as follows when the Qaeen's daoghter marries a subject not of Royd blood, which would, in fact, have been the po- dtlon of the Pxinceu Louise's children had she been blessed with a fiunily. Par- liament, it will thus be seen, has a deli- cate matter in hand. Out of respect for one who has proved herself a wiee ad- ministrator, loving wife, and modd mother, nothing, we may rest assured, will be done to canse pdn te die *t««.il ff lady who, for dose upon hdf a century, haa wielded the sceptre of Uds migh^ Empire. Bad Habits. Like flakes of snow, that f dl onper- oeived upon the eartih, the seemingly animportant eventa of life succeed one to another As the snow gathers together, so are oor haUis formed. No sfaigle flake that is added to the pile pirodoces a â- Â«Â»n« "»U change no sln^eaetlon oreatea, however it may exhIUt, a man's duoactar hot, aa the toapeat horls thaavafamehe down the moontain and overwlidaBa the Inhaliitanb and Ua habitation, ao passioo, aebing opon the elamenta of miechlef, whidi pendoioas hablta Iiave brooght together hj fasper- ceptfble a ee omnl a t lon, may ovarUuow the edifice of feroth aad virtoe.â€" BenfAam. for many months. Oi course no one ever dreamed that there was a word of truth in the sUly prank of a leisure hour, but it has now come to light that every word of that manofaetured tdegram is true. Mrs. Shanks one day found the telegram inher husband's vest pocket, and asked what it meant. Just for fun he said it was a trae telegram wUch he had recdved. She told a dater-in-law, and thlssister-in-h^w wrote to Stanford, Lincoln Co., Ky., to knowif It was so. The answer came that there was a fortune there for the heira of David L. Shanka, formerly of Virginia that he had at one time owneda number of shares in a turnpike road. He died in 1841, and the anniuJ dividends had aocamuIa«ed and been in the public treasury ever since, and that the heirs could not be found. When Dick Shanks saw that letter he knew that his father, who died jost before Dick was born was t^eforoMr owner of those shares, his name was David L., and he came from YlrginU. The story is a luge one, but it Is enough to say that substqaent commun- ication with the State Treasurer and ooanty cffidals has placed Dick Shanks' identity without a doubt as the heir of three-fif chs of the entire fond, wii^h hss been accam- ulating for over for^. years. The case is in the hands of Mr. J. Bower, of this dty. and Dick will soon have his money. â€" [Kuisas City JournaL All Effectual Kemedy. Theophllus Parsons, the most eminent of the chief jostloesof Massachusetts, died in 1813 onderdreomstances so peculiar as to cauae sharp, comments in the com- mani«y and diffidences of opinion •mong the doctors. He had been suf- fering from agenerd increasing debility when he began to be troubled by an ir- ritating humor. This faicreaaed until it spread around all his body. This Irritation was violent and constant, accompanied by some tever. It harassed him the more be- cause it was a new thing, as he never be- fore hadthe slightest eraption. He oouU not eat or sleep, and was wearied and then ill and kept his dumber. Dr. Rand, Us physician, whose prescriptions thos far^had given no relief, said one day. Tlmro is a remedy, if you like to try it, which issomettmeeextremdyefficadoiia " "Whatiaitr -Water, dZstwSd. ing. Take a bath of water just as hot aa yon can possibly bear it, and Ue there aa long aayou can. I have known it to cni» sidn disease almost at once. " The chief juatice was ready to try anything. His â- Of. *l^o pot him hi the bath, afterward â- aid it was so hot he coold nob bear hia hand In it, and that he begged his father \i*^t* ?*^1 f°°*" B°* no. l»e «ot in d^oush •hrinkingandevidenUysnffarinff wrtwmely. H* stayed there an hour and tben returned to his bed. The hamor appMred to dmost d»y up at once, and • day or two was sU gone, and hi three weeks the eminent magistrate was dead. â- o â-  'Whisli do yoo like the best, Mka Florenee, rowing or drivhutr he asked as he gssed Into her szore eyes. •• Oh, driv- yoo hava to oae both hands to row." They wen^ driving. ' HondayLnck. Friday,asevery one knows,has for many f"^S!!° ^^•^ by many aa anS lucWdar. BotthoreareothaJda^ofS, week wjSdi are regarded aa mow or £! pect during the following daVs rf J£ week aa to thdr haaiaeS. #t^ " 'Vews The NMmx ft AtlwHie BoOwaj (N. 8.) •ompaay ihava eoiptoteJ tlMf amngiMfta la Loadiim aad that wlllbe poahod farwaid vigoroaalj to plaHon. The nila hay* been porohaaad and win bo shipped forthwith. Mr. Gwnn Staphaa, Presldaat of tha Oaaadiaa FiadBo Railway, has aasorad Hon. Mr. N»qoay, Premier ofManltoha, that tha Manitota, and Sooth Western Bd-way wiU be azteoded to WMtoLaka paring the pr eae n t year. The Indian goyanuaeat propoaaa, wllAi a loaa of $50,000,000, saaetioned by parliament, to rapidly strengthen tha rallwny ^ystaoLof India la bothaeom- merdal aid militaiy sense. Thwa wfll be expended $10,600,000 in oonBtraeting arallway westof the Indoa, $10,000,000 will be Idd ootin bofldbg another rail- way on the east side of the Indos, indod* ing a ferry across that river, $2,000,000 will be need in the boihUng of a bridge, $1,000,000 will be nent in Uie eonatroo- tion of another road on the west side of the Indus, and crossing the Piaseen pla- teau, and $1,000,000 will be expended on sfUl another line west of the Indos. Who shall say that the love of the beao- tlfnl is not grsdually permeating all seo- tions of the oommonity when we find a railway company sopplying their employee with regolation neckties of a onif orm imd artistic t^pe This is what the Sooth- Western Railway Company have joat done, and doabtless other compsnles will follow the example that has been set. The neckties in question are in color a brilliant red, and have the effect of mdc- ing the South- Weatern porters kwk d- most pictoresqoe. Bat the object of the red neckties is partly fBithetio and partly utilitarian. They are supposed to provide a ready-made and eaally aj»oesdble danger dgnd. If ordinary signals go wrong, the South- Western goard or porter has only to divest himself of his necktie and wave it in front of an advancing train to Indi- cate that danger Is ahead. Trarellen by this line will pray that the oocadona when porters' neckties have to do doty as emergency dai^r signals may be few and far between. In. the meantime anythicg wUch brightens ap one's everyday sur- roondings is a mabtw for gratitude. Passengers on the deeping-cars of the New York Centrd Railroad have won- dered where the company seoored so many hollow-eyed and haggard eondao- tors. Conductor Hanson, of the St. Louis express, went to sleep while walk- ing dong the platform at the depot here, and narrowly escaped being run over by a dommy engine. Passengers who have asked the oondoctors for more bedclothes have seen the functionaries start off to get the covering and go to deep on the way. Oondactor Foster reached up to pull the bell-rope the other night while nearlng Elmim and went adeep with his hand ra theoord. The train ran three miles be- yond the station before he woke up, and ithadtobebackedtoEhnira. The cauae of the renerd broken-np appearance of the conductors and their pec^ar actions was expU nad. Eight of them sent ia their redgnationsand went home to go to bed. They claim that Dr. Webb, Mr. VanderbUt's son-li-kw, who was recently appohited superintendent of the road, has been working them too hard. Con- ductors on the St. Louis express are re- qufaedto^baupfive uighta in the week and do dl (he work, while the colored porters crawl into a berth and go to deep. A few nights ago, as the eastboond CUcago exp/eas on the Erie Rdlway was approaAing Waverly, a midup occurred wUchobstrooted the rear car hi the train. This ouU the throogh PuUman deeper from CUcago to Boston, which is trus- feirea atBhignampton to the Boston con- nection. In the hurry and hubbub oaos- ed by the acddent, three passengers who were In the csr were transferred to other cars in the train which went ontoBing- hamptoa, leaving the Boston car to bo Ix- tricatod from ita trouble, ^fter the ob- Btroctions were removed and the oar was in raadiness f or use when 't should be caU. ed for, the discovery waa made that there Vlu I»^n8«»' deepfaig peacef oUy in one J2^,'?^°^ ttoket for Boston. *He had slept ig through the hobbobof the â- edden^ He ssid he waan't to blame for the«»Uent. AH he wanted wastogj onto Boston, as he had a tidcet tt W9d to see Um throogh on that train. ^iS2 "ir °' "to ' looomotiy?^ attached to the car. The woold bo beooght withfai 121 „.n do atoaaoEB, faistead of^ •Jil bytha soathof Irdaad. ul^«C QoMBStown, woold go byS. Sjl* land oulls aad I«-«g«. aiijjjn ABluaBooklsRwdrecMittr^ retona of aoddents and ossndRi^H oral lallwqr companies 1q th tr^ Kingdom doring the year moA^ 'k b-rSl.1^ LtheVdrSLSl tj« of persons klUed on tbSM US4 (aa eomnared with n?S\ previons yoar), of whom 136 w*n. *^ ger8,646 servants of compsnl!?^ traotors, 66 parsons paa^T^^l^l orosshigs, 348 trespasseis ddas), and 40 persons not coi_ above daadficdion. TheniSg.*!*!! jored waa 4100 (as compsri^'*^ to 1883), of whom 149l?2SpSi*«f ^19 servants of companies or cSH^ 27 persons passing over level ctmJl^ 187 trespassers (Indudhw woiffJS ddea). mid 76 other person. Jot tS under these categories. In sddiK^ the above, three passengera -- "•1 and 114 injored whilst ascei cending stops at stations; 39injn^7:i being strack by barrows, .fes. „?* forms 2 killed and 30 InjorS'bJS^^ off platforms and one killed aSi jored from other cauaes. Ot^.' oompanles or contractors 6 werTvnl" and 982 injured whilst loadingrSofi' and shisetlng waggons; 223i;eMl^ •It I whilst moving goods in warehoW* SkiUed, and 169 injured, whilaTSi^i at cranes or capstans 3 were kiul^^ 322 injured, by the fdllnrr^*^ off or when getting on doors, hunpo, bales of goods A^ were killed, and 463 injaredrby or off auaoB^I engfaies or yeUdes; 6 were kiiw" 233 injored by falling off JS^ C.; mid others we^;Sed id, oSl by varions ndnor causes- maklmr .TS to tiUs dass of socldencs of 62 l^eJ?^ persond accid«mts reported bythejjj way companies doting the year wu ijj killed and 8023 in jurS. " ' o Alexandria and the JiUe Delt Egypt, it is Ustoricdly old. Yet to tj geologurt its site, and the Delta onj margin of whldi it stands, are butof » torfay, and the stone, of which the mk and the houses are mostly built, i,J^ the houses are oomparatlvely modern'date. thedufis of coliiinns aid ma^ oS brought down from Upper E/ynt Uml U nothinghere «, old a^Z Loffi t. ' miesoft limestone and indurated and the yichilty of the dty are of late tertC age, probably older than the adnJ of man. The mui of the Delta atnta!^ ing southiwds of the d^ is most likdi adeposit of the historlcaf human p3 -^ii!J*' f«yPtologists msy nike of muddled and unoertdn Usfcsof ECTptio kings, m«ny of them evidently SM' «!, or contemporary heads of local triba. ge history of Egypt as a nation 2 hegen after the Deluge. Anything » vipus must relate to antediluvisnIiMi We may alao assume, on the evldenoe n ably aummednp by Bawlinson of the con- vergence of the history of dl tbe anebt SST«^i'P°'?*'" 3.000 yean B.O. that the disperdon of men after the not floodls an event that occurred aome^ essthan6,000year.ago. Theod^r bts who at that time made their way tc the Nile vaUey must have foundlta oondl- ttons approxfanatdy dmlhtf to thou tk exist now, except to regard to the Mtentwdlevdof che Defta. Bnt we ^na of that early timea that they fei« higherthaa at present whether becuue ol aprntor snppfy of water or became of the bed of tte river not bdngso deeply eats ^mpldwIyleveUedasitafterwardebeouBa. we also know from the monumenU thit the early settlemente of the EeyptiiM o»» *« Upper and Middle Nile, not Ml the Ddte; that the earlier klnp were modi oooopied with worka of em- bankment and drainage that the Delta, probably because of its lower level and leas extent was less important than it IT?^i ^* ^^^ ^toiy advance* w V ri**',«»P»t«*l moving from Uppar JfigFptto Memphis, and findlyto driei far north on the Ddta. !?J*u ,?*"8*»»n»Fton on spedd time large dass who win «noana dalIMm. day. ud Mme of them will coort oood lack by sdltog to the first costomLwK! •PIKmrs Monday mondng at k«S5d fr W^ .Others liaye fbr varioosl«i,J, â- dect^ other 4v» of t\e wedk rK! ornnlucky. fST tte iS£?f*25' liages on Thoadays andSL^i^^; wouldappear that tfiie day. S^SSiS ashapp, ones by the mSi^SSj* liages on Thw«J»ys and Tueada,^ lat those days are regid«. those who ^«»..-i^*,-s:pS;jâ„¢^'«j lying. Donaghadee has now (sayaaLon£iS««? â- pondent) taken a defiSefoST^l^" pany lui. been f ormeSfo? J^^" promoang the sdieme, and It if SS^f the total cod. of the timiwl JflTSt^ «iw S:^*^ engiaeor, dsates thaMhi feet deep I. to bJi^Tla ^SSd LT depth of the^S,elir780 Sf 'SS^ fact of the tunadironU S ^^ "f" ««»yaead rooto. By the tonnd, Oisgow â€" o- ItATB MOTHElMir.LAW JOHS. I- T?° *â-  **® "*^"" profisient honaekeep* to the ooontry The young man'a moth- er hi-hw. A nun cannot be dtogetherbad whw neoanUsshis mother-in law aweloome wneit she ocmas-to stay with him. rJK^'f^^ ^^^ ^« fi»fc »In»nac i* printed in 164o. That accouita forth* paylmlrsonthehead of the mothe^lnâ-  law joke. "On account of the anniversary of aeath of my motlfer-to-Uw I wlU take PWtarwathalf.price to day," waa the no* woe poated on the door of a Greendeh, "onn. Plwtograph gdlery laat week. Talk aboat mysteries Iâ€" both moth** la-law of a yoong married couple h»n been Uving with the ktter over s week, •nd yet no aepuation has taken plaoe. _The Ptonaylvanhi Supreme Court h* Redded that a man has no inanisbleui- terestbi Ua mother-in-kw and cannot gamble on her life. This takes aw»y " on^ atimotiye feature which has ertf pertdaed to a motherin-hiw. Despair, otter and unspedtable, nertf darkou a man's soul until he diaco**" that Ida mother-inhiw has taken to **. Ing poetry, and wants Um"to fiidh*» gttjF and suggestive rhyme to " Sii^ js^

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