Ontario Community Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 22 Apr 1886, p. 6

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 THB FABIC. Btoeklofeaii â- i .:.! Ami .; I: if r It ' 1 11: Ail ift Jl^-* li' HoTwiiflM moifellkdyto Bak«ili»p- paanoM the fint tw* WMki th* okMla u* ca gmn. It U ft dirtntioB «f tha nmn, OftSMdbyitMfromnadiKartrdfoaA. Yonag graai, pwolsrlT d«nr, ta wmn apt to prednM tttiun old gnw aad m* pi^ar- age Is mora daBgaraaa ttaa diy paatonga. PreTaatka ia bettar than onn and I writa «f it now booanae ' fonwMaad ia foreann- od." Allow tlMoattlo on tbograaalrat one boar tlie fint day. Ondoally incwaae thia tlma with a rate that will aDow theoattle to eat their fiU by the end of the week. Do not torn oattla npon the pastor* until the dew is cff, for at least two weeks and if the pasture ia mestiy olorar, not at all. It is naver safe to torn oattla iipniwet olover. Tbongh the preoantiona aaggeated above be taken, hoven msy possibly appear and it is probable that it will show ifcMlf in the herd if these precantiona are not taken. If the disease is noticed in its first stages, give doses fiom two to fonr draobms of ohloiide of lime. Another remedy ia to give a tea- spoonf c 1 of pnlverfzed charcoal every fifteen minutes, in a half pint of milk or water, sweetened with a little molasses. The der- nier resort is to pnnotnre the abdomen. The pnnctnre is made about three inches I elow the spinal oolamn, midway between the hips and the last rib. in the hit flmk. Gat a competent veterinarian to perform thia operation, if possible. He will ose a trocar. A sharp pointed knife may be nsed, insert- ing a pipestem or a quill in the incision to allow the gas to escape. Celic is most likely to attack hoisis in the spring, as then are most apt to exist the conditions which produce it â€" change from dry to green food, unusual fatigue, weak condition of digestive organs, grtting wet, ete. The remedies suji^est themselves â€" oare in feeding, watering and working, and the administration of wht medicines are necessary to put the digestive organs in good condition. The best remedy I know of â€" one which I have never known to failâ€" is turpentine rubbed against the upper jaw and inner side of the upper lip of the horse. Fill the palm of your right hand with the turpentine. Bub some on the Inreaat also. Apply every twenty minutes nntU relief is given. The mule is an animal of many virtaes. He is much nnderated. He ia the victim of a blind, unreasoning, colossal prrjndice. The populace hold him in contempt, many fear him, and he has none to trust or love him. Yet he is patient, docile and tract- able when decently treated. Cursed and clubbed, he is not so vicious as a horse would be, but as he is more often so treat- ed, be has acquired a reputation less credit- ble. He will do more work than a horse, eat less, suffer less from heat, and fron aickneas. He ia stubborn sometimes, but al- ways ready for work. Will kick, but not oftener than a horse under the same treat- ment. The mule anffars, not ham a fault, but from a misfortune â€" lack of beauty. Hence, he is not petted and borne with, but abused till he is soured, and becomes mean. The man who knows how a mule should be handled â€" as kindly as other animalsâ€" baa a high opinion of him, and he jostifies tliis opinion. It will be set down as rank agricultural heresy to oppose the ringing of hogs. The mtjority ot hogs now wear rings in their snonte their owners are responsible for this, hence, must approve of it, and the manufacturers of rings are sure it is a great thing. Hogs should not be allowed to turn the turf of a pastare field upside down. But I have raised hogs lai^ely for years, have never nsed a ring, and yet my pastures are not inverted. Perhaps I have a breed of non-rooting hogs. I have raised Poland- Chinas, Berkshes and Dnroe-Jerseys. If they are non-rooters, it is because the way 1 feed them makea them so. I give them a variety of food â€" pumpkins, apples, roota, ete,, along with their com, and salt and charcoal regularly. As this pays in the greater thrift of the animals, I think it is better than rings. The Lord Intended the hog to use his scout in moderation. King- irg is pemicioua. It antagonizes health. Honor To the Bare Hand. As an ounce of rngged fact outweighs a much larger bulk of isflated theory, let us oite â€" apropos of the agricultural educitlon ditcuasienâ€" an illustrative case of oontraries coming within our own olMervation. The boys of one rural villager were taught to be useful from the time they could perform the almplest helpful service were charged with humble duties not beyond their capioity, or to their physical detriment, or encroaching npon thefar time for study and play. Their responsibilitiea were gradnaLy increased with their age until as yonog men the habit of industry had c( me to be to them a kind of second nature, and they entered at once the fair road to independence and good dti- zsnship by slow and steady gains. Another man's sons, every way more liighly endowed, had easy times learned early to shirk and loii came at last to lounging at the corner store. This tondea- oyte Indolence relaxed thdr mental and moral fibre, and though much more time and expense was involved in their schooling they grew up and " graduated" with deiire for genteel situations, where work was not so much an object as high salary and they liave proved ineffective and a source of anx- iety t« parenta and friends. Tiiis is a ssm- ple facs from ft whole impressive structure standing across the dalUanoe path of the •• patent leather despisers " of the " bare- liand education,' who drop dainty bnckete into empty wells and grew old drawina nothing up. Tne inore culture we can have of the doirg power, even at oost of ignoranoe of language toig deoeased and often ederiferana, the liet- tor for the prosperity of thia ooontry, where Labor ia omning every day nearer to its own. There ia among aa,aaeftmeat8tndMitB «f afibira reo^nize and laoent, ooaatant im- molatlDn ol Hoaor in the reoklesa liaste for radden wealth. What ia needed to stay the msh of mammoo wonliip, olherwiae anre to bring natioaftl dlaaa er, b net more lawyera er more men m the "kid-glove nrofeaaiona," bnt tiioee schooled to a know- ledge of tiie dignity of honest manual labor directed by minda enlarged by praotioal ed- The sohools wlilch are to haatan this re. formate not the faahkmable •'universities," the ThlMl^ttMM _. Mrifieed to tlM ikfcmen'i â- Â«Â« MsdMatMKsitir tMB asd«bSItUeti« aaii tbair eHbeUo wifa* sMrvatoa the ratlva â-¼irtoa af ooaatrr yoatii wbIA tobelMlarad kirn slnBgth to £1 Mahdi's War DonUes Fiiees. "Tha noant tioablsiiB AlHai;" aald • dealer in wild aaimala, "have Bad* all AMeaa amiasls SKpensiva; bat M many Indian animals have Iwea shipped to all parte of tiie world thattiiey can be bought varycb«»p. YeucannowgrtaflneBeM^ tiger, that would have osat yon frwn t2,000 to $3 000 not long sgo, for $1,600 or SI 800 " ' Whit sort of animala command the highest prioea " quaattonad the raporter. •• WeU, yon know that there is a great deal of fraud in the show bnsiaeaa as well as in other professions and other lines of trade, Oa gensral prinoi|des a showman will pay the highest rates for any animal he can advertise for any especial peculiarity or quality. The most glaring instance I can remember is the price paid for Jumbo. We had here a couple of Malay elephante that came from a menntalncna country, and which by a provition cf natare were cover- ed with hair four or five inches lang to keep out the cold. There was nothug very ex- traordinary about that, perhaps but those animala were widely advertised as • wooly,' and we had no dlffisnlty in dlapoaingof them for $10 000 each, though thoy were as poor, smaJl specimens as I ever saw. One waa orly thirty-two inches liigh." " Which anbnali sc 11 the best ' ' The moot expensive probably are the hippopotunL Tliere are none to be had in the market at the present time. If we had one we could readfly get $7,000 to $8,000 for it. A rhinoceros will command from $3,000 to $5,000, and is hard to get. Ele- phante are now a glut on the market, and are oonaeqnently selling cheap. Those we used to get $6,000 for we now sell for $2 000." " How do the felfaies sell T ' " Well, here's a lion, in good condition, we have marked at $1,000. Lions are caught when about five or six -months old by our ageiite in Africa, and kept for about a year when they are fully gfown. It is al- most impossible to catoh ^em when they are old. Tigers bring the same prices, a first-olasa one running up nearly $2,000. I have a magnificent pair of black leopards over there," pointing to a cage in which two hvga creatures were growling. ' They are the orossest brutes I've ever seen, though we've had them some time. They're worth $500 each. Here's a nice little pair of spot- ted leopards," putting his hand through and caressing one of them, " that are worth $500 for the two, because they are particu- larly good for a citcop, being quite tame and consequently available for exhibition by a beast tamer or for a parade." " Do any other aoimals bring good prices ' " Oh, yes. A chimpanzee brings $500. If we had a dozen giraffes to-day we could sell them for $2,000 apiece. A good baboon ia worth $250. Little monkeys sell from $15 upward. There are few African ante- lopes now fn the market, but they always bring good prices. A Hazardous Occupation. Sometime ago the statement was publish- ed, upon apparently good authority, that in the course of five years' service about 70 per cent, ef train bauds upon our;: rail- ways are injured. This statement has never been denied. The average life of a freight brakeman is about ten years. It the number of ao- cidente be taken Into consideration, and the expense entailed npon the companies for damages paid In the csmo of such ao- cidento be estimated, it will be seen what a burden ia carried by the roads on account of the defective appliances now uaed on freight trains. Most of tbe accidenta and nearly all the loss of life causel by them is because the freight engineer has no control over his tn^n. The methods of stopping them are antiquated and imperfect. Under these circumstances does it not seem straogs that on all railways the most modem appliances for stopping freight tnJna and looomotivea are not used I There are diver brakes for freight looe- motives ani automatic brakes for foeight cars which do all that is c!a!med ior them. This being the case, why are not these new appliances generally adopted I Shcckins; Bad Taste. "My dear, don't you intend to invite Mr. and Mrs. Green to your party V asked Mr.BiUer. i^ " C«tainly not" " Why not, my dear T They are good friends of ours." " What if they are I I am going to in- vito Mr. and Mrs. Brown." " Well, can't you Invite the Greens, as well?' ' " Why, John Biller, you shook me with your taste I Brown and Green in my par- lors together I Why, next you'll be asking me to wear blue and yellow I I declare, you men have no idea whatever of har- mony 1" The American Bison. Twenty years sgo the chief featare of the plains beyond the Missouri was the countiess herds ef buffalo everywhere to be seen. Kow sll have disappeared. Theodore Roosevelt oays there are not 1 000 bufialos in America It is said one may travel 1.000 miles on the Slalns and never be out of sight of a dead uff alo nor wtthln sight of a Uve one. But a newspaper has the curious statoment that a new species of buffslo is developing in the weedy predpitons rcgimia of the mountain rangea It ahona tha open plains, Uvea in smidl herds, b mdowed with great aotMty. and b a cieix mm of the •Survival ef th« fittsat," » » « Sow It Glows. " Oh, Fanny, you'd aerer beHave it I" " X" I,*»»id. ««d I'm dying to bear," Yon know MlUy BOfiggiat I l«arf fromC-Ua Rouger that sh^ enn«d? "lasnataU! I thought Veu^SS^. Ing to toU me tiiat she hadelopad.'*^ " "WeU, dear, you oaa make it aa eloDo- maat whea you tell the atoiy." PAUL BnV TIOfQBT* Oaa BMMBbg ft BMT afga haagwthe d^ of aa offioe ia saa maat aaliwiasarted parts* It waa aaall and aapra- ilagat " Paal BMti Lftwyar." Vtep» t aoity of T II waaaaiftUaBa «b]^ taatieftadbsta M thraa woijla to^ nad itoardesaly «* P«""^«i»,^Ti^^ derad who thb yeaag asaaooald be, for tbay jadgd ha maat ba joaaih ^* " " f^Sr abed tha Bftaia for aoma days. Blaaoho May waa par^g aloag the ateaat oae morning when tha aaw alga mnhw eyea. Shaireadit tha aeooad tiS^wM* STwood fled from bar laoa. Thsa aha slaaoed at tha wladow aad aaw ft gaatbmM Saalas at her. He was aloaly dressed, tha hneo! health oversptwid hb oonntMiaaoo, and he looked every laoh ft niftn. She only looked ftn Inslaat^ thea let her eyea drop and passed on, sad or happy it b needlasi for ms to say, Paul Bent was talented busmeaa poured In npon him and snooeaa orowaed ftll lib «• fortt. Hia name baoameoelebratod through- out the city, and whan it was kaowa that he would speak, the oourt-room was crowd- ed, for he was a aatural orator. A year soon passed away, and on a plea- sant afternoon In May, while Blanihe was waMng In one of those diaded squares so nnmercui in our large dtiesshe â- â€¢w ^f " enter at one of the gttes. be walked M- surdy along with his eyas bent on the ground, and seated himself oa a bench. She watohed hfan oloaely, but he aever looked up he seemed to be deeply meditating, Tuea she seated herself qnletiy by hb side, and touched hb arm. He looked aroond, and seeing her a happy smile broke over hia countenance, and he exolaimed " Blanche 1" .. She held out her hand, bat he hesitated to take It. " Paul," she said, " will yon not take the hand of an old friend " " I am not worthy, Blanche," he mid, sorrewfnily. " Paul, I know aU. I have heard abont your terrible batties with your temptation, and I honor you. Before I pitied yen, now I honor yon as a hero. I glory in the sue- ceas which ia crowning your effort, and my heart b happy, for in you I see to-day the answer from God to my prayers. Won't you take my hand now, Paul " she asked, with a winning smile. He reverenUy rabed her hand to hb lips, then let it drop ahd turned away but she caught him by the sleeve, and in an implor- ing voice said " Paul, don't leave thus Do you know why I prayed for yon T It was because I always loved youâ€" and that love u not dead yet I" She blushed ss she made the avowal, but she had hardly finbhed before he caught her to hb breast. Then they seated them- selves again, and talked till long after the sun had gone down. Paul told hb whole story, how one night, after months of hard drinking, he had given up all hope of re- forming or of becoming worthy of the love of Blanche, who had been betrothed to him in better days. His friends had all long since deserted him, hb money was waated, and every article he possessed of any value had been pawned. He steadied himself against the side of a saloon-keeper's door, from which he had been rudely expelled, and looked around him. Far up and down he could see the dark street stretohing like an immense serpent. At last a policeman bade hfm " move on." He walked slowly away. He was without ambition hts only detbe waa for rum or death. He walked toward the river, reached the bridge, walk- ed far out on it, thea stopped and looked down into the water. He oast hb eyes toward the olty, but not a living object was to be seen. The streets were tenantless, and tiie houses frowned on them as darkly as ever. But one window was lighted all the rest were dark, and the city seemed to have laid down to rest and was silent as the river. He took off hb hat and laid it down, re moved his coat, seized the top rail, uid, placing hb foot on the lowier one, bagan to ascend. Suddenly the stillness was broken by a low sound. He paused in alarm and looked areimd him. A low, soft noto, sweet aa the voica of an angel, sounded across the water. He paused as though he had heard a Divine command, and half sitting on the top rail, Ustened. The first noto was followed by others as ravishing, nnd then ft voice thftt sounded strangely funUIar broke forth in tones of sweetest melody. The voice was low and melancholy at first, and some of the words were indiaUnot, butaa she proceededâ€" for he oould toll it was a woman's voioe â€" It gathered volume and the sentences rolled over the water db- tinot and grand. He was entranced. A strange trembling seized him, and, without knowing why, he got dawn off the railing and quietly stosd there, drinking in every word and note of that magnificent verse, so descriptive of hb dtoatton. Old memories orowded f aat upon him ha aeemed again to hear the voice of hb promb- ed wife as she said " Paul, my father fiUs a drunkard's grave. I cannot trust my bappineas to one who may w'low in hb path, I love you, Paul. Prove yourself a man, aad ia tiiree years come to to me I will be wdting for yeu." A few low notes aad the mnaio oeaaed, and all was still agdn, bat the silence found Paul Bent greaUy ohaaged. Deep sobs were shaking hb frame and hu knees were bent in prayer, for a soul and life hftd been saved. Ha rose after a whUe, aad looking np hb old coat and hat parsed over the bridge and through the town out into the oouatry. aadaoonhhaamawaa forgotton by ail bat ftfewinthfttgreftt dty. five yaara btar he returned a new man. When he had flniahed hb atory Blaaohe "Didyaaavwaadoot tiiOBame of the aiagarr* ;i"?*»Ti!? ..'•»**• "I hope to aome day, for I wish to thank bar." " Yoa nsed not wait long," she aald. n«*ur»l Ufe. Soa-fii.law-Wall. I /oa't know why you dioalda't. I teak daughter iff ywirhairiSr namuuL Mr, J. H, ParaaU. brathar af tha Iilah laa«*r,hfta lUalyplaalad500aoroamaraiB raftdhaa on hb OaM|la farm, makiaf a to- tal af l,aOO aoraa ia that froit, Tha Dsftu «f Winoheatar b aboat to ra- alsn fha marbla-«ov«nd laiDophagaa of WaHftm Bvfai to iti ftBolaat plaoa iMfora tha high ftltar ia tha Oathadial. Mr. A. Caaaen, a wiieleaala maroliftnt of Montraal, haa oaoaad the airast of ten yonag man fo f aifary ia baaing bogai aoteaof iarltatloa to ft parff ft! Ua hoaaa. Mr. Albert MUlftud, ft well-kaowa Fraaoh jouraaliat aad oompoasr, ia aoaa to beoama tlia husbaad ef Madftma Judlo. It b gen- erally known that Mftdftme Jadic u ft widow, M. DaLssseps deolftres oonfidentiy thftt the PftOftinft Caoftl will be omnpletod within tha next three yaara, Few paraana ahara hb ooafidaaoa, although hb words have the weight of ftuthority. At ft garden party which Is to be given at Dublin in May by tha Earl and the Countess of Aberdeen the ladiea Invited wIU appear in maids' fancy dresses, and the gentlemen in Irish tweed suite. Mrs. Gtarfieldhaa offered her Cleveland houae for rent, and will hereafter live at Mentor, the former Garfield homestead, where some $40,000 has been expanded in beautifying the house and grounds. The death Is recorded of Captain James Manrioe Shipton, B. N., who aerved under Nelaon, Duncan, Comwallb, Napbr and Sydney Smith. Me reodved the medal for the taking of Fort Trinito at Martinique, Mrs. Potter Palmer is notod as carry- ing npon her persoi more wealtn in the shape of jsweb than any other Iftdy in Ohicago. She wears a collar of diamonds, besides aigrette for the hair, superb roie- shaped diamond aolitaireB. Mrs. Paul Trae, aged 95, of Plttefield, N. H., very foolbhly omitted the whooping oongh from the Ibt of her infantile ail- mente and b now down with that dbeaae, but expeota soon to be abont her work again. Thb ia a pretty tough story, but it's true. It is commonly remarked in France that If the Orleans prinoes were not so rich they would be the rulers of the nation that is, if they had spent their money more lavbh- ly they would iiave won a following strong enough to restore them to the throne. Thrift b unpopular, Stepniak lives in the northwest part of London, not in a luxurious mansion like that of the socialtet, Hyndman, but in a small and severdy plain house, sparely fur- nished. He is a heavily built man of hand- some face and polbhed manners, and al- ways dresses in simple black. There will le an important sale of pic- tures at London in June and July. Tuese pictures, numbering more than four hundred most of them fiae examples, are now in the collection of the Duke of Mtelborough, Tenlers b particularly conspicuous in tbis oollectien. Perhaps no dngle canvai in it has greater value than Cario Doloi's "Mater Dolorosa." It turns out that Mr. Edgar Fawcett is the ftuthor of the ftnonymoua story publbh- ed in Pliiladelphia somr time ago under the title of " The Bnntling Ball." The pub- Ibhers offered a prize of $1,000 to anybody guessing the author. So mftny peoplo sus- pected Fawcett, owing to the turgid style, that the purse has been divided np and the guessers Will only realizs 12^ cento apiece. Belva Lackwood, of oonrae, has taken a hand in the low-nook dbcussion, and seeks to create additional bnstie by adding the trained skirt to the tabooed articles. She has written a letter to Miu Cleveland, in which she declares that " while the' train'ed, skirt b untidy, extravagant and in crowd-' ed assemblies pealtively vulgar, it b also undoubtedly in Ito origin a badge of servil- ity." With Sb Henry Taylor, who died in Eng- land March 23, in lib eighty-seventh year, a living epitome of the nineteenth century has passed away. Ha had aeon the reigns of the Tfabd and Fourth Georgea and Wil- liam lY., aa well aa the whole of Victoria's also the rise and fall of the first Napoleon, hb Bourbon auooeesors, and the Third Em- pire; Scott, Byron, and Shelley, Lamb, Coleridge, and the Lake Poete, together with Dickens and Thackeray, Irving and Preaoott, were of hb era j he waa a well- grown lad at the time of our almost forgotten war of 1812, wad had witaessed a completo reoonatraotien of the peliticd map of Eu- rope. Mary Anderson b computed to ba worth $500,000, which ia aald to be aafdy Invested in realeetato, gas stocks and railway ahares, both in England and America. A aniall portion of it b In American bonds. She ex- peoto to dear tbii year $150,000. But our Mary IS not so rioh as her aistor professional. Lotto, who, fts ft rule, lives fragally. and b eminently businesslike. Sheolaims to be, ftnd probably is, the wealthiest woman on »• •^•. Her doUars are estimated as totalling np to ooBaldarably more than a olear million. Most of the money b held In tiie name ef her mother, Mrs. Crabtree, who hfts been her dftughtor'a business manager over dnoe ahe appeared on the stage. Lotta has sustained only one serious monetary los« A man she was engaged to was at the bettom of it. She let him have $20,000 to specu- late with. He lost the whole of It, and Lotta s heart and hand at the same time. Almost avery vbitor in Paris who hfts ndden out towftrd the Bob has seen the old mui in the Uttie oarriage drawn by sheep pottering ftlong ia the avenue dn Bob do Braloiwe, These ahsep are two fine fat South Downs, but the oooupant b a oripple named Dr, De Reroy. He baa been by tarns a soldier, a traveUer, a pelitiolftn, a joumal- tst and aman of lettora. A nephew of the Abbe lammeBab, ha waa for a while privato aaorataiy ^of Lamartina, aboan intimato fnend of tiielf ftiqub of Hftrtferd, ftt whose gftoe in tha Bob ne frequentiy met Prince Jtapeleon. Daring tha war he voluoteered to ourry important despatdias out of Paris Mr the government of tha Defense Natf onale. Ha started aloaain ft bftlloon, which waa oaoffbt in a hnnioaaa, oarried bito Swilzer- «»»•."?, oamedown inldia midst of the !i?i ^S^**" gM«r, where hb lega were so faoatUttanthfttthi^liftdtobe iSipatatod. Baddet Ua legs, lia loat his fbrtane by the war. -.t AbagMfrtt- Alwayswhatlth^^ A man of his wowi^'**ki NbethfagiBt No one can reiirtVlNw, Adeedoft.u,t^'»J*^5 N»t always „H,J*yC Fine weather i,Br^"S nUst, "â- ^Wid^ It'a a poor man »ii. 1 amies. "'^tknJ '-Iki. A knight of beater. ticketir"' "' ^Anin.olenttano,.,^J i.g^it:i'"'°"«^l-tte^j Hl8toriaiuwaim«ui».D by hia Home rule. ^^'^•NH tothecom.Btalir^»"l"ii^| A policaman, like t ».. dor. goes the rouaS"" ,. J«ci«tl*X7*'^^'K re^t??hV;el^^i"«^.Hl 't^iuh';X7tfit*^"'J ««»rofD?i^-!3aii shine follows sammer ihowan ' A murderer ia like a ih,ph«j.,- bsuretotnrnnpintheeSr* Rsmorae green and dentb very much wern in lawiSh. "What festival of the ohnrcU beat, Bertie!"" The pionioar The pen ia not only mbhtiBi sword, but it can Rive thiiboyoott The barber ia the graitat da* elers. He roama oontiniultf bm Tennyaon pwaphraied to nit derson F»nltleealy fsnlty, nioilvj splendidly dull. " ' At. the breaUng np of liku seems to be penalve. Even the ' brooks are thaTedfall, If a fellow ateals a kisi fni b would it be jnat the tjght thiiigtt a male robber! The miaer ia unlverally de almoat everybody enviei Us charactoriaticaâ€" nil wealtii, AnxiouaR»derâ€" No. Yoiirb Buma did not write a poem cilledli cotters' Satarday Night. Is it fair to anppoae that when the thorn in hia tide he had been agahist a barbed wire fenoe! " Did yon hear the leototeiiit asked Wiiliama of hii neighbor i "Ne," replied Bsuley, "my lii at heme." " Few sons take after theiifitki marka an exohange. Tne, bit i many fathera take after their m Boggaâ€" I aae that blind pecpli cated now by mesoaef raiadletla â€"That's Dothiog. Why bank a*' often educated by meani of raiad " Clear out here I" yelled u H saloon keeper to a dead beat "»{ you ain't tolerated in any dwrtj that'a why you are alwayi pM here." ' You hardly ever hear a minai ing her Idea of diatanoe by ayhll thbig b "within a iteoe'i wn phtase b too bdefinlte and r^ for accuracy. j " What youdon'taeintoteliL have aotoally taken the atfck to yjl Why ycu haven't bee» 'â- fj months!" "I kro» •*â- â-  S?* *1 waita to beat hia wife until il»«1 brute, that'a all." IronCcean8teaiiie» The first iron veaaelwulM«*' andfaitiUineilitenoe^'rtJJ did the work 8ericu^bjgB^"3 the Lloyds began tobuMimiWp for short voyajjea. A o""" J^ jadioehadtebeover«»w^^ many doubts aafcitiiwrja But it made ita way. »4 253 iron â- *»»«»« J»*Vjhh.h5l in 1843, the Great Britain. "PI Great Western Comp^.J7J Great Britain w« »» J^rf;] large slzedahip. "•"i^r-' bu?den,aiidwassnJ»yV bluing the new «.*-^S«^ constrnotJon. ^J'TOrtuftfl andtberiilpb't'Uf',^** within a few yesrart 1*^1 lla. Her wcoeaa W Eagluh marine, and toiw^^ wLeatablUhedbet-J^j York of Iron forewi»^j^ profitable mall contwjj^tflg 5ommerctalunde2^«; jgj management has Wn'jjjriT the United ^^^.^»V^i never taken root the Wj^(« American, begjnjyj^jl â- teamera.anddoii«w. njl »'"°"' ^aSvoJolffr" they are entlrwy w » or where they awgj^'f*' possible te UK »«*»" ^, ing service. «""**Jl| Ifany,skeptic*^ji Solomon's 'f^^ii^" member thennmberWjt J That fact ought fJ^^^VJ XT- "I thbk'«?,g^^| f;;why..b^«b^*;;| he's a Pfrffjujipr.** ' »Bd a perfect '«' " toagi^i"***'

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