Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 22 Sep 1898, p. 2

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---~_ comma-our PARTY; 1 latest hirig-ma.ybe I ought ngs--butl .Miiia Mildred Par- her brothers. Master Law-\ 1 the =J3aby." the invitations "A---3-\n_nnf alite now to`: they've ask- Among tho paaaangit sf. Liverpool, in the atedmship Bonny ms the Rm{.`\C. `B. q-oogipxan. sail`!!!- ,`liah miaaiohary trm`~sisx-rs. Duane; "" ----- --ul nnnf`lRn I nan mxamunaug um... ......_., to,be killed, but a dispute aim and \ his execution was Eetpouad. For m- _ an y4eekaJ1e~wa,3 kept. in captivity, and suffered greatly in-gm dygsenter: _and A The xeverenad genlleuim some thrilling_p-ersonal exporiencea in _ the Mandi country. He1'Wu-vIt[!9*1,,.. black-water lever. Eventually he "was rescued. . - A Loaon "Daily Mail" representa- tivo has had` :1 cm with Mr. Goodman. who still bears marks of the trriblo d upon to go through In Siam: Leone he was 1310 misaionary of the United Methodia id that when Free Chuth, and he aa . the terrible wave of murder f ticisma swept over the Mandi country. gm a.:.mn.less misqionariel. on: lanai-A of Umteu nu-..........- byes Churh, said wlxoi: the murderous and some 500 deionceless misgionariel. harmless traders. and helpless women * and children were savagely done to death he was laboring among the flit- onkoh section of thiiltndi tribe. `The ` Tikonkohs sought to protect him from `L ,,_.n. xhmnliu Hm most powgr. sought. to plutwm. ...... ._ thermoxnpeh ~Mendis,_..l.he xx;_qs_tmpowar- Eul section of the Mandi tribe atllilmtvlfo chief instigators of the revolt. The Tikonkohs kept him in hiding for several days aiter tha outbrgak. but 2 were ultimately forced to giv e"h_im nip `* H-r ninnqllre Whlh W3. ultimately Iorceo w 5.... .__-_ owing to tha'_...pbessuro `brought to ` bear upon them by-the Bompehs, who had got wind of the pros- enoe of a. white man among the Tikon- kohs. So he was hooded over to be ` murdorod in cold blood as he thought. 5 ` But, as Mr. Goodman expressed it. : `even in the savage `breast of a Mandi "PorroFnia.r'1'l some vestige oi suite: .- Ieelinga wouV1d`_age_mb cl's;p&1, fox; Gru- bruin, King 0! the l'3 V a.l}y exerted himself R TO SAVE HIM \ ` ` Ls- mhoh hqd bvafg TU SAVIA nun from the cruel fats which had taken his cno-workers. A, grand palm- ver was held in tha glodrn of the for- est. Grubruin stuck to his guns. Mr. Goodman. as he said. was no live for the government or trade. but mission- ary who no savey war but come for to ` do good," and (irubruin carried `day. , ` _ ; Mr. Goodman said he was seven weeks 3 captive with the Bompeh Mendis. during the. whole of which _time`he sut- ierad noiii-treatment heyonci the hard- ships which his cap_tivity entailed. He the_ _ 3 expiained at the'lKhT(i`" fi`ht in tha~ . ... _-s ...n {mm nnan. They B01.-I`B&u]luL W, ...... ._. entailed. explained `that the`Mi{di` fight `char bush, ang will not go into open. dig pits a. few yards from the byxsh. tracks over whiclrthe troops` have t and at whom with old tlintnlooks remaining concea bottom of their hiding p ..n...- wannonsare spears a lad themselves at the they mxe pumuu... and a few capguna. laces. 7 coneealed themselves at uiu places. Their other wenponsiare an _ tary cutlnsses. and a peculiarity their armxinien of 9. short thin barbed spear. which they shoot from theiig guns. 4 The King of the Bompehs, as already statedgis Grubruin. but Berews, his ' war chief enjoys great influence, and. . aocording._to Mr.Goodma.n. he `is re- sponsible for the inurderv of several of the American missionaries. During his captivity Mr. Goodman's diet consist- ed almost exclusively o_rice and salt- -`-"more often." he said, of salt and nee." ' ~ . '- Mr. Goodman . added that when.'he left Sierra. Leone 8: number of refugees were.still.com`ing in to Bonthe. mostly 'women-widows_of, massacred Sierra. 2"! Leoneens. A _`grea.t many of these d old min. _ (2 consists in two species A ` `uh. .......uhn-inc: in- '\Y ULuOn'- u buy .. .. ` Vgraaft many of the_se poor creatures had been wandering m- the bush for weeks. They hadven~ dured terrible sufferings. a.n ` Goodman said that the tgatimonypl these women" would have to be rehed L upon to; mo_sj.ofV the evidence in con- -ing* c:rials=in:Free- 111101; inost of evidence m .wu.- neetion witli `t1i'cb1iiing*{;rials=xn:Free- town. ' ' ` 3 I , /The general belief in Sierra Leone is that hte whole of the hinter1a.nd_~`wi11 be changed from a. Broteetorate into a Crowri colony before the year is out ~~---._...__..- FRUfI'1j' DRFSSING FOR supms. The best dressing for black` loathe: is orange juice.-; , ` ' -3.11 Over the ._sho or boot, and z_low i to"dry.. f1`hen4brush brisk_Iy with soft brnsh__ _unti1, it'pahi1_1e_3 l1kefa- loo! emu a-lam. ' SOII`. u1'uu.;__ mg glass, .1: most c LIE g~1ass,.` _ " . - A most convenient dressing for to shoes is the inside of a ban_an_a'skx: This` is srubbsd; well and even1y,a.1l- ova . tho shoe. -and removes all spots or diit,-r as `veli as gives a. fine pohs which .las__t is b1;o_gght out by using ` flannel for vwipxng dry and sooth ' clean. annel sfor polishing.- . A ulinn nf leulonois alsosulsed as a ti flaunelyjr puusmng; V . A slice of lemonis a.1so u_sed 19&th6,l"f,d1`eA83ingTi' " V T /V , _ _ Patent leather must _neva1j be blag . "ad or . pO1isiIeI1"Y:r}j:3r~anything` but oil. A fine sweet oil or Vaseline ist ' best. They are the hardest-kind . 4.... m Imeo 1:: good ord.'e'r-. It Li_s _n me nluuuau `Alum shoes to keep in good ordzer-. is n essary to take 3`. u1ean.spongejan_ctcle ` them from `all dirt b`eafore_apply;ng `'1 `ml . V It. i mm:..t`he'n- ha -,rubbg,d 51;; Egsary take clean spongejaqu mg dirt b`eafore_apply;ng"1 Gil.; z-It than ha . G ` `finish. . L once with is ilannll for 012159 which will" V not " `.scratq y ".'hi,iraoe;.~ `ihfqhxu hey` j~s1;a11 n_<;t- fig rl Q`ro\|*.`-J w \- Lgerous LY! * Viietiog. ,s.o,r _s.,s~ yu . r ca._;r1ed I i_n_ tye ` pack DBL U18 exuxnp raltar to Spain nrn mavlv "'R(m ' In_ a humorous pusaugu u. um. ........ ' story one of the `characters tells what ` he would do for mankiiid if he had uni- versal power, andis asked; What about .,,-_o for eichgthousand they now possgss. `France, torjnatauce. should have 7.00 _ so1diers; Auatria.,V.abotit the same num- ` " bar`. Prpasia, 300.; England. 450; Ru: 4 sis. 800, and the United States, .900. The great naval powers should be nl_1owed- ~ j 8. Ishipapieoe and one or two gunhoats. . Themlittle armies and mwiee should go about figlffing away like fun and undertaking. what u-would then 41` mb&ttlu and sieges._ 1:99` Ii1_ huniofous passage of this same` ~n---. -..- .0 n... -e-hamntnrn tells what ,fUndon1Sted1y it is "the dream of all )`hils.nthr_opi5ta_that war, should be Eb? ; _o1igne& from th earth, but the prn.c- ` tics! men` W119 cgndupt the business of utatas and nations pave never` sympa- . thfzed witlfthis _dreqml They desire _ p5{wd.brut `their maxim is, _"It- you " ?w\o Id xnaixgtain pace you must be `pro-. for w a.r."' ' _ `Jol-85` ~p~- ----._~ ,7 _, . Little Clarexicg. who reads and pan-` ...dar&--P9..=I have just` been rea_diug`7`9.v :pa.rag,xaph which say; there are var:-2 . Ans zreqsongfwh Samnn who;t`a.lks'V in win nhnmrnhou not "marry; w1u;zt`a.re tnmrb_. those reagonarsrsn. _ _- / rea:o_n.'_ my . Cal. Tim. 1503* . 'tq1k_s In; h_ita_ja1ep. . . VlC'ORI`A'B'.BBEAKE'AST memblfar tit T the`? Quenfa household in `,that.`bra&kf@at- aver; Mint as ` Q11 hhersglta. concegqed. ' tug: " _ `iama ityhja your ' round, .-It ' * b$90n.;za.LLthin bread dutea. ,0ocaalona1ly por- `IE 1 op 'thje"men'u; but zreqsong. wh Vmmnn wnotiwxuy us his slag Vaboyu mt'min`ry3 What` are . m9fD.. than 1-%M0na.<:'PM ` 'Il'rv-n.lH1'i31`v--Th best my M -anaov ugh` tha Kim` n ' ' 5 f are advised .; " em-" 9` ` u; Th the decidedly .1 pro- sam'e.c:m-' ma era exiiplo sess. 5. >700 `Good bxftte owed- -- noat. Reign mum whereyer r the pubT1T ` and there Llll`: LRLIVUDUVA, ..-.._ sauce of mm amce lmrveet. has Gaun- edlbuf/ts scent: fall growthei the weeds in the stubble fields. For some years I have -mowed the worst parts of the stubble fields, and when I put them in corn again it was plain to be seen where` the mowing had been done by the absence of weeds. 1 nl-' ways seed all lun in small ' grain as it is required to keep up the rotation. Other years it looked hard to mow off the clover in the stubble that was ten inches high` and bloa- soming, but still I do not think it hurts it any; it `ust stimulates it `to . better growth. It) 9. bunch of clover 0 Is` allowed to`go to seed it -seems to _ have filled its rnission. lays aside ac- ` ` ~- ~-"-u-mu much l11OT'8, better growuu. 11 .. -_. is` nae a:..n.. nnd does nor."gro* xts lnlsmuu. ...,_ - tivity and does nor."grow much while it tha bop is out off ibrenlizes something more is wanted of H; and it awakens to newness of life. sends out roots in new directions, new foli- - zrgwnppears and all goes on gaily. -The protction `the standing -stubble and weeds afford the young grass may be something. butij left stand- -" ing they willbe gathered in with the next hay crop, while `when mowed the ings as` umnlch are 1 rubbish and clipp .. ...-Mk. benefit to the _yq1_1ng grass, ~- A6 pea.r;m`ce ` . `e`d will wellmepny. thetid " in Hm trouble of doing it 76! Wlu ~ for the ` 5.-4....-. _ . not enough encourage- ment izrgiven`fa.rmer=s to induce them to improve their butter product. but on the other -hand. they are frequent- ly told that good"butter can be made . :\n.re advised to Be As a. rule. nd their milk to E; ~t>hem.~ There areege .,_._'% T_ . V , .poor~ d` W -`same-can .be said 1 eniployed in. " Good butter. is good butter. and poor L.. butter` in poor butter, whether _m;'xde F on the term it ine.'pubiic creamery. When honestly `judged `by an expert. _ Tzenfust _ stand :01; its- merits.` _d it may` have been made. -But ml, puhi,-Via not the expert judge. V IL-.. ...,.,,,n, of the butter-male '_ `public c1-eameriee.-` `bu1 'i LLu; n ....V...., and. almost complete1y,unde_r the con- trol dythe' proprletdr. and it he is ~ the right kind-ot 11 dairyman all of `f _ `these conditions wi1l..a.s a."'_1`ule; and in t , the, mainybe such aa`are.requ`ired for ` ' tho, prbduction of V butter. If he is 1 `not the right kind of a dairymim; or_ Aatxjivingto become one, he is neither i ._ lz` to__ "produce rmilk tor vu '-`public -ureanmry-.0; make butter; at `home. It, aeemavto the writer?-ht_thereA isnnd ` g has rbefan hr. X some: time,` organized - 4-_.u.-....I nlfm-hi to boom 'thg, because all the ;:onditiVon`f-from the M herd and the pasture or tub1e.'to the U picking of the butter, ~a1e-dlrect1y fa -nnd=.comlned- warm to 0001;: bun, public oreamery, if uo to~.dispamge' A um farm `dairy. The government. through` the agricultural. department. 41098 (0.) good deal for. the one and but little fm"_-`t.he Other. :.All state, and mationzxl dgxiry or anizatlons` lave: hd.tirst`_a.ndm_g1ve t e hitter butf Iitt1e-- A attention.~ In fact. one'n'a$\Qn'o.l `but- m- makers assooiutlop l;1'thi_s'oo_`u.n`;_ ` 3ttent1on.- fact. one napmmu mu.- ter makers association ln'this'ooim;_ -try does non admit to -its membership. prlmte dairy butte;a;" yet a .prqduceV commission merolnmt q1' a._ m'an,umo , tare: of public .o_r9amety`o.ppamtus can 1 * become a xgembbr .b! 9.; payment: at um requ1redu_toe.} Vwhm Au pod. enter- prising tarmarg, [_q1':_l}i!1_>fVY-I ,e. L9. r, to` ' gaixi ' lnlormatlan j In _t1xa(_`o.rt` *9? uttar " . ` _eb'a.!iradj,rom Vjoinw , kt dingvtha mm-vine: `attains. I{i}f`f1formation}1n the nu ox Ductar { making would 41gb,rrad rom . ing tlgg gnaociatiqn, ormttendiug who v; '1ir`xi *B999rova.1r9,s; attains-% . Mt1;\ e'= hm: plan; :o_Hmprovmeu1;_; `It ~ .1 +5 .u.mu in `thin .mnntry..~`a1l wonn 1303 THE PRIVATE DAIRY. ,. ._.-....;... ugomething. bu v gather y clippings use. benefit t 11 they are 0 t my crop. e of the fie well ._ repay . trouble tjj left smnu- u ed . n I mulch he young ` ut of the way of 1 And the neat ap~ . who 1d after it is mow- the tidy farmer it; re. that whsn one he .c:1n (iud' of them are N W3 `h~'y. , must gnih in mowing. Laud very short wn But read- even to the pln thus-3 'impuritie,:. taksm out in Ch 4... ea or nourgng uuu. -`cum. of course, 4%: straining. but most soluble. and th ' sulwstqnce. even it of tliem in it. Lt du Lye in ft .d E be me, H es di ding grass ij Vleft I an M a. "' '|"`nul_ E v_pall. the steel nluulg .. .. To get jhe cloth the right : the cloth over the fuiil and .in place with the aprlng, H: where the spring comes an ` thsrham Just there and `Bpriu3}hrough R3. .:...:|.... ...-rmiimment. u llprlugiurruugu re __V .. A emnlur arrangement, used by___'n mp he took France with Qm.1.nmm irginla dmymffn? _""`5 `d t 5; has been discovered among some old 1` ng of telegraph Wlfa. out to 110 5! papers belonging to the- poet Samuel A inch smaller than the top 0! the pail` , `Rogers that were examined recently. and bent 3 the ends 'm almost Britons having found out what the meet. A circle of cloth an inch lorz-V. Akoohd of SW is are now engaged . ' er 'ell._nround thnnthe ring. so there .. ` should he a little nag. hurl a` ham In investigating the Alnmmisaluku of ~ nhout the edge through which .thelBunhnn, who has put huneelt at the 4 I 3 Wire_wue run. This was placed justl head of the Sierra Leone insurgents, ` 1 `e`;;i`t:`t`oih; ) Timltfhihe DR iIn'l.iY!:l:; British museum. the authorities hov- r . no n case was calm e 3 part` of` each millr-poil. rm! tlltxh `b`;3m`:::"`;hd 3 3`: dig: `K3 t`.l`~ t upon it was pron! 0 l 8 - 0` 33 M ' - 6 new of it. but. while a gain over the _cycles `a day hd'l}86n 10 lmD"ii~' V6 o1tl{;n'milll`r-.-41`:11il, is not age _oo'l as `the dA98l;'lHlBl lm fil1|)1;18:- t H h t ` 0 er, w to protects t e entire` on. air of the,` r `o _t e rep 6 1' 31: ff. mi ?"i f. V``"i`;3 t- A has been presented to the C0|l.i_l1.u' .-..;ii ..'3`3:'. 532 st(i3z`x`inlri)g clggtmxmttnople poorhouse by a lady ot _tlnx,t/irty - ' marl Fmlna Ilanum. A_gI`/leaf proces- IIIAI nn lye filthy nnumu; um . ... V, distasteful and unhealthful to him than to theeteer or horse, and that it is impossible because of the nature, of the animal to Lsurrouncl the `hog with sunitxxry conditions. Filth is :1 i - prolific source` of disease among 0} nlmls; and` because the hog IS _ brought. intd contact with the most filth, there is the most `disease among` I swine. Filth Voppo:-.ee_ the _ hegxlth and : thrift of swine just as it opp ' health ofthorses Jot mnu. The first step in growing hogs without diseas- es is to- keep filth away from them. to give them clean fond. clean drink, clerm quarters. oleun shelters. \ ,`{n ._.__..._ about n.v1s1c than ; I.u;~uv II`: ,, during ethundersiorm. and how easy 8 everybody it made the work` becaus thehouse, which was only women, had hid in closets and under feather ; beds till. the sLorm was over to `escape - the lightning`? but I don t think lever did tell you about V another experi- ence Ihad once in a. thundersiorm that 11 didn t Work exactly that way. '0 "I had.stru_ck 0. house`, a very good house, indeed it was, too, that was 5, empty, as for as people was oonoerned, >{ but very full htherwise. 1`lie silver- ?` ware was very slick, and I thought that altogether` I had never` struck i anything that seemed simpler and eas- j iar and more comfortable; I d got there and got in justhin time to `keep out. - of the thunderstorm. that wu.s}comin'g mun \V\Illl ---`Va, hon: : emptyaas far 2 very f1_;l1_otherwi ~---~ nun nH(\.`r up" " . . - "Rain? And here I was justmgs snug ` as could be and just a~listen'u`1 to it 1 _cmn-a_ down`, as though I'd be_e1{ in my " ` own house. But.I-ca.u t say `I stayed cormfortable very` long; because the lightning. was omething peit-tic, and I thought the hxmder -d push the , ,,_house. in. V. .. 7 ,_. ' -.. -r 1J}'.}}f Bcr'n.f.heI"1l1'$i" \1D"`th8 :_.uuu..... V "Just ms I Bnfather _things there came aush ' that made th houserock. : heal` things rip and smut somewhere, and then I qou ' through theblinds on one windows that was where :+ vn... linr|\fnil1I? had stru and then 1 (>9u1__u can ...,..- A Of the front` ` I `could see it. The lightning struck the porch of the house. and. ripped off :1 lot of the woodwork there .a.n_d bangedyit against these blinds hfd 'enoug ' smash em in and smash the window, a too. ` hm "Von lrnn\' I ought to hze teken .agZui't"th;' enough to Vopean aVu1u.gv .9 .. ..-- V, imzmh ` m `n ".`d smafsh France s society for the "reformation 1` W5 ` 00- - . -` `- - ~ ` . evoke .w( "You. know ought have taken f .39.;m`,`_3,", the. ``at` of 9`-` am-mam, warning by, that, but I said to myself gmphique. has received very W86 lightning IIQVGF` strikes tW'109_ 7311 -U19 bequest from-a Frenohihfen who died rfn*se` - same place and went .nhead.*Al1ttlela.t- `mommy meBmmoa Apes," It consists zogisg . A . , 6 of 270,()00`aoi_`ee of land in Argentine, .the income from -which is already 320,- the iilr 000,- `Of this $11,000 ay rlantl one- the worla -half of the resldue76` to the society `um forest for its purposes; the `rest is to he div- 15, 3mm ided up into prizes` _to persons who have pfmnt done` good to mankvngt. - ` -would m Beer is gpparenftly. the Germanla rt number ~ thought `whenever anything happens," thz'nf3zEl`fl I8 . . No sooner was-it known that Bismarck that came withit was awful. . . V ' . ' - > ad to T6 'r- "Standing there looking and M W33 `1`l th`m 3t.~d..t3 `ft th.vB9" from` thn if) ins to`*the lest` "mountains-' tnmblinc `in UniV&1`8lt`59.Vt 1 Bugumons to St. Pete It arad _,t`hinkiptg it get eixetf .a beer feast of mourning in his hon- Ltpnglon ,5` `W 81.1 15' V9532` "5 W `W ~ ` or.7f1`he "Traner oomif1eraj"wne held " -sudden that the coffee- tlwes hold- . ' ~ - V J:: . I ~ . shows i la ' -3; i ,1 H, :2? ;;,d';,0{, teEth:u'i1t`leid:h(eb:is1x?:,a2i'`::g:%i?le` `;3E; o*j ins" e me.a'e1.e-o -, ._ `1ng`e.ro1'md,`I8d.WthatQI~WaB now hold- 3.Wdt --P 5`.7 T. `tf 3-"51 "`"7 , hagvnot lug only the."fhnndle; the lapped-off, body-_ vh9`9."'_"537 t_.u`.l~"."-9r."yl- 5", Says Jtlx otthe eotteepot wuslying on the oor; PT639Pt-` WW9 u``319.5w`% .`- l-` the Pet and; then I realized that theldazzling 9dlWIth:,1ad15~; T1 P*909**%I%K8 $3,-trede. t `b1ue=a nd,_"white` light I. Athadeeen on 7``. `.`o` 137--`. :." ?1.."""h 01.18 tut` . the-house heroes the we ,wae the`fre- !1`U`31$5iEiI!_le`_t.11, h.},1v What icndgonl ` ,fleotion"ot.a`: holt it_hat:h8;g.'inaaae`cl with Gd;,hai% 9 1 '?.1`a-.`l`' `d``?.`-"`* inxaninohj of me through umoominl bye GW`191 .E`3t`.`lT 9. an ad: `=7-The - A wmegobg-., :1 lg, to t?,`:.5 ;:.:?:ii`:`t3Z,%`:?:`%%5:: mo; n Wm WM` 7% -. .1 ~'m- mlamenc1'ei'.". after whih-u`1."~9 WW9 ifg er. just as I had. picked up a. bigheavf silver coffeepot, there came 8. little lul , end I turned for nminnte to look out 3 through that opening in the blinds, he-' 7 tone putting the coffeepot into the bog` As`I etoTJ'd there .looking' `there came 9.` flash of lightning? thatcovered the whole front of the house opposite,_e.a for as I could see` through the hole in the blind, `with 3. sheet of crinkly 311-- ver and blue light, and thevthnnder THE mgmusn BURGLAR. lug U111 vuv. u-....-, 7: __ oHh cot! pot Ll ' . th 11 '; vw=~,-~- . _ shah Vfrean: tsggltg t0l:`erd:zz1(x111Tg f1MW`t1`i.`d3'; Th PS"?"?.33 8W1,.trade. `blue*and._whiteL light I. Tlw;d;Laean Wm? th9xP1Y`!`3 0` ,3 31 " 111`h' one `at. the-how_saV across ,wo,y ,was 1-*_*`-M Smi; `_t.h, xtndgon ,f1eotion`ota e bo1t.t_hs.t:had.'paaaet1 will God hath done I13 = tollowad inlan` men; through an woman by "Gau mad ads wm1,.,1V3m`,a_ ~ _ * . drops onVBm_naruk.vThe.pres1dIng atua . Well. I_ain't`el1Ix> unit" 1 dent than e*1VMh ! "`U0r`tha "mu. ' t know .a:sf1I'~1` ovr scary: but `I _ M 35`-" Wmh.u1 ` ' wlshadwhan_thaxe'd.,b6en_sozxiebodyjn3N51 .5!18B-L _ V 1 ' - L ;. t(:i111( wugnY(i11;d.'I . ,IxijLds91fmx;toh atjagyima Pgrk.l':ng-V _ 1 A T wan ova 931 1 e1'em_.ae a one. -land. r_e6entV1y ai.1arli"tl_y1ng aprosgthe '_ `%$ &?4%$%%% ii%`3n:: g;rsxg aev1t%bwe: 'u'a*mi ~ ~ +1: heA-handle; 9* 3 9 ' ` - TT fExT>fli6nt`A';with%~mwar4-gatxonwlpr, ,3 '.thso.rA " `R %`-"4 W a A` V, V ` I` ` a%,'*?h9,.1iHht%' `mic `a;wara".txid`d\u,1n3_.tha lxgst Geri`-q1jijil ?`~ M:'mn*man~ " .;ihbnr=wmr7:`Bu.?' Ii .1ik1si1r_ ?=j5_goA e;;1xgV gm: ;,'1`he;.hark1n:g. 0; fm 1 cam.-ha dim_:n;1y:* . _8','ff3!1 uleygtlon m. . . i Bixh utherin'g\1p*"the and acraah ads and.I could hings am1 smash and tear here, c9u1__d see light '4 4: nm `frnnf `B5 pa" \.Uy;, gnu rd over the `steel, , ` m"er tho mp ox. ma ling it in {ti plgoe. 0&1 the si_ze. pass` y fasten it ` then "mark 4 and fold up 3! ` ~>---- Chg P -.--.- tilt is of`/flcially estimated that thesa- V tire Klondike output thisyeer will not r reach 85,000,000. Those estimates rans- ' lng trorn 850.lX)0.000 to upwards of sQl00.000.0_00 seem to have emanated i._\ largely from the transportation `lines whth netursllyere interested in keep- ing up the gold excitement srlon Iapossihle; but it seems little less than I erirninsl at this time to advise Klon- '* . `dike trsyell. _,There are many return- ing nrgonauts who have been heg- garod by their experiences in the new ' gold fields, but somehow their `_ mis- tortnnee do not claim as much atten- _ tion in the press as do the rare cases of success. 1! a man returns with '10.000 his name is heralded broad- , cast Ind his actual-earnings` ore multi- `: plied many times in the telling; but nothing is heard of the hundreds who have come back empty handed. One - , now has in his possession s small glass 5 `bottle containing the entire result of one season's work in the gold fields. It _ /consists of gold dust and is valued at `_N_ V` $1.05." It cost him more than $500 to ; _ .*`xetlhst*dnst.~endrhsis:no,longer,s "Klondike enthusiast. But there are others who are, and unless they trust ` mo-re~-in sotnal experience and less in y the imagination ot_transportion agents the mourners` .b_ench next season probably will be` overcrowded. ` *- -.4-oa- m"e .5: . {ta Olaundowworffeven ' *` V ` _ png, Agent: from the Congo Free tata -1 3" ?`'i!1R _3il1m and lye tar Eagt I a\ o a year. .. . A Dr. Johnson : `ppcket notebook ot the fmifg :13; ;){--~: to0l:~to _1_.ho Thralea Wm to E been homo k in the W 9 9 Rogers id 13 I C. . .9/.1. :"_`3`l`M}:1 {;r :_H I Britons havmg ,_. -. a.....\.; a. are 3 nu.-.u.... `th is less 1 ` Lhe .1 U|'|L_UIl3 unvnua -v-- % Akoond swig a in . `I Bunbnn, pu J Lex ' ` ! ,-.-LI:-I....l 5 N ..,,-.-. `ed against (ha railings. to`th`e Con.l:1_!19' 1 nople .tlg1,t,,6itY named Emma A gref .:,... nf nhn officials angtiilitmfy 5? - ` A ..c... ' named Emma llanuun. -sion of state officials I cnmpnnied the relic was made. ' " K `l'\...-Ivan: AV " of Wales and of Napo her mum. . Royal hair sold` chenpjn London to.- oently. Locks of King Edward'IV`,. of George III. of the Princess Charlotte leon I., with a bit 7 A: William IV}: cerecloth. and the tegt-` of Napoleon 1 of William IV.'a cerecloth. a imonials of authenticity brought 814 .at auction. I . . n---- m M ...--nah, who 15 Gd [0 Dtllluuui-7:5: vLuV,u_l' rhicgil 311 istuyiling 9.mak.ut` mgg The cities along the shoresof thei "T118 0 ona e spot 0 aiiin socie y. . . . j . `quick ,9 makes a daily ascent accomP? md'b Etw liege m/`.l.suim(,)n3' This would n h . in is own as Chinas S_oi'row. the, ma, her maid. because it always overflows its hanksi In a f cycling. has now turn re- ` _ `Gently. Locks after e_ heavy rainfall. The bed is not View ' sufficient to contain the drainage of wt: mi rincess . test- many as lt0,0{).) people have been drown- ` ' tle sleep u`. mt ed in one of th ' d'cal ' unda- 314~t tions; `But, wit3l`ieti)i:in:\.`>)urxiousu:)ersis-i "Fast tenoy that is characteristic of the fmhei wis 31 Frank T. Marzials, who is wellknown ~ as a song writer and composer and has gllllflelfe raee.hthe survivors rettikilrn to is mu: ` . . .. . cir or r . also written stories. has Just `been pro- tar 8ubSi`8' b`:lr1I`:9u"`5;8*:"; E`;`L_5ka gig: `t`i;)".ld'.,1 is so : rmoted to the"p'osition"of>Accountants1cease to appease the d Egon of me ,a_ ' General tithe W3 Offioellin which he ter. but take no furtherr steps to'r'their :h9'PPY ~ ' has been employed for more than for- pmtwuom i `the Japanese are different. and-are T] ' ty years. . In a recent Chancery case involving -as fond of, inundations as the Chinese the right of agricultural tenants in -939 01470564 t0U}8lI1- ' 331133 has been` Thai Derbyshire to mine forcoal. the evi-_ llzafgotgglin8g :l`Sf'897ni glmh::I tosay_ 59306 P1113 l" "1" the right W83 `hilt, ited Ciecikcham with*enoi`mgi)usgiatality,,5 3` 3" ,1 bt3f0T8 8 parliamentary. commit" The phenomenon being called to the` mace : tee 500" am the d~'1t1} 0` K1K.Ch"' attention of the Government, an in- read les l. The case was decided on evidence vestigauon was ordered by Ban-nary PMt'y th i1al1ey through iihichlt flows. As she Sm P `retiring of cerecloth ie more than 200 years old. _ experts, who reported that the city was - . Two lives for one cent is a recent Sic` built upon a swamp. and that at cer- 0 0100! i1i;m mc0rd_ A mioon keep in 1:-n1-`tain seasons of` the year poisonous gases ., Sucl ermo drove a knife into the heart of a ` :)5rS(`l1e`:_d `:1`:miSE]:1`:3'{ ;`;iw:: 1`:_:; t`;`l ; to dre 15-year-old. boy who was unalile to P33 v governor, to select a. new location as gen! theicent 1 d f0.` his d1`i11k3- The ` convenient to the old one as possible, -436 M bY' W00 bl0U181'5 51! dW the 3?` whe`e the natural conditions were brow; sassin before the police get on his heu1hfu1_ A new city was laid out "F0 pe track, and are now under arrest. guy experts_ and each property hoider . er `Lava streams that have flowed ontj in the old one,_ was assigned a site-that M939 r`i- of Vesuvius during the last three years ! :'i*(`i9`?d`,"1f` `:h'"" "(:hhu-`t he 9 9d F wsmom i1hi m:Bie`rip`t:veliiI:a asnsse am: s::i,a:;. of lavhon the sides of thevmountain. I my and belongings-_ - M A cone of lava 330 feet high` has heeni _.Sewer_s, roadways, andVsidewa1ks,pnb- day 1 ms formed, out or which fresh streams` lic buildings. water works. and all oth- -`vi; are flowing. The valleys oneither side,er~puhlic improvements _yvere' laid out ed. gthe observatory peak have been com- liytlthet Government in the nelw ciityr t 61`- etely filled up. ` -_ wi on expense to the peep e. iit ght Sea serpents having gone out of style' they Were required to pay the cost of said melt in England, the octopus has taken their lizhe removal of their own property. this 15, so . . . , ` s not_so expensive an undertaking as :as- place. Constable Holmes. while bathing , one Hugh; suppose. because most of the iere at Kildysart on the Irish, coast, wasghouses and other buildings in freck- out seized by `one which.twined its ten-icham, aswell as in other cities, are tiicles around his arm. With the aidibuilt of the very lightest wooden ma;- (3, terial. and a Japanese house offers the . of another policeman he succeeded in art with- freeing himself from the beast .- advantage. of being taken up ouhditfieulty or injury; 7 p . rrim undertaking is a notable i1lus- dea, the first womn Constable l:10ln_'.\er_s, w....., ....-____ \ V V the Irish, coast, wasgl sgkized; its ten-H aid`! m 1 ' If the beast.`_ \: \4 sther_Bonomi, doctor at a University of Genoa, is n to obtain that dggxfee in Italy in modern times, though thre are sevefp.l_i}1_siances of woman doctors, ' ---J!-- n.nr|1rT. Another W0lIl_!I medicine of th SeV8?.l}_l1_8Eauceu u in. earlier ~cen:urYe;s. doctor, Katharina van I. Wvlurnu \. womari Tu sschenbroek, 'I` has been made professor ofagynaecology A cg the University of Rusaia's*\'v'6iiin`crimina pesants, who have murder- E most part ` ed their htisbands, T V the crime is believed custom of marrying gir the ageof puberty. To cribed-the excessive number oLd.enths 4 ung children. "the mor- < year "of ` being.2'[;per cent. whereas the Eur- u 4-. is per cent. . `s for reformation' of _spei1ing`.y the "Association of Ortho- ` ' 4---a 1: amnilarlze among ~very fyo tality under 1 V opean average 13 Utrecht. is'a_x~re-Ater..t.l1'e 5 he prevalence of t to be due to the I is long before 1 this is a`1so'a2s- age in Russia ` 1580;!` is v_.ppuu In "` thcught hwheneii ,.: was dead_ fhanatl g Univeyrsitya student ,o.o_rpg._~ ' present;'wh1e' ed` withgladxes, `this. M playi re. a;1d;it_hasinqin1 -Ah. Godihath done 2 by-"Ga u` 3 d1`6,5B`0n_BisI_ma '1 han kggq student _qo_x:p. J: The motor mttmany In .ulB uuu, uz. var----._.~ _ > _ V ` ma wiunshe b.anners.a`nd,-*%1.ra f.Vth.\m9.o4o aires.,t1.1e towns or ,~uv.~~.- 1 . has*n`cvt mi1ch'Imore than begun.-_ He -. 6t-%he.p:otessora at the.univ.ers1ty were` aaysypthatamthgrto vgrgig tom; 3_ of ` . ` , . . . t praisdntfwhgle th54.~g;.119rios'swe1`e h_l1'_- Pemhmygagiu -gm o;;_e'%-fa up tor I e edMWith:1a13,~; T139 PTSW9"d .33 M33, -trade. and-j`n6W'.`mi1\3_,httve._ 1! built. ad!-h`|`hh.l)1aYlIlK p. \_1naIj.l n9`{0l}' Archangel. one` at'Pushlal_:_ta.\ ' ~ 1-: ;.a. Wn|n,~n1| the .I.anla'nd. V w`:k't'>.rx>6r,ea to ..*9.;'iv`/"?t:V`,`er.`.~~~-~' a try the V`samr1ra~, hi v 'l.`h 4 mukfldiet ,wg_i: ` < `the: - l8l'!'ll hvuuu u......,,, , _ V` hm. yum .ed cycle stable in the`bab r many nsehunclred `The v had been left. cw no A the `beard `otthe Prophet Q4, esented ruse thaycity `*3 / the ill s anti/tfiilitmfy no- he n the transfer in Vlyress Dowager of Aosta, en hated the excitement of bi- or . turned to ballooning, th to make the tash- ' s trying .rt of Italian society. She Y .ily accornpanieclby . 7 3 be ir ks . 8` ml Napoleon abit test- :1 E thrown in._ 6 lint ' t t writer . ,,:--.-. tn... hunt Tum pro. ` and some Ulu g A re 3 t tfthe -` as 4 m 3. stable the as_ {may ` t - M nn nrnfc. v ---w `I An llnluenlllny (`Icy to be Destroyed-and lln_ lulubltutn lmnund to ullew loft 0'! K tlon. V ` _ , I It is; probobleihut the action of t _ ` Japimese Garnment in orderi > destruction of the City 01/ Formosa. and the r'emoyil ct ell `of it `h ' inhabitants to a new location; is pro-` 1: 3 bably without itfpreoedent in history ` p l .The city_ ll-l/8'/llilled on the north-west t ' coast q`t'he island, and` has been Ire-3: `t qt/xrentljf subject to pestilence, with the ( sacrifice of thousands of_ lives. As long Formosa was under the control or ' the Chinese. no attention was paid to i ` the matter. and there are several cities 1. Y 5- Fr 4: L._.-......n. Mlnxitinn occur I the matter. uuu Luau: unu .....---- 7 _ . China `wheresuch calamities occur 1 with regular frequency without any - etfbrt. on `the put uf the government ` the pedhle to brevnt qr remedi] r vthgm. `V 9 VA ` A -- u=-- ..I...m Ihn ahnralof than utlou tong wasunum ...... --. Van: `Philppiuon, anti; this you thomonaum us but mu. gure` kg ` - 1* --ants. Now. however.` I ' ~~~~~ -v - `they required the cam. u; a \ the their This 1 `is not so expensive undertaking I one_ suppose. -'hous_es_ buildings ichum, as" well other built ligbtestwooden 3 apart rnm undertaking noteble ( ``1` Archangel. 9;t'Pushlal_:a. Vb .and;on_e.:'_t9o.._a.t Kola,1on th`e.I.ap1a'n( |~ ,. >1` I; -' \,; `. _ The whole w.or1d`s eonsumggtlon of V j woqgtumounta y: a .y`e_arto ubguf, 80;. c _00Q.000j,00_0 `cubic teet. bf` which almost & exab,_tly~,. onevhalt is;use1~tor tirewxiod 4 "a.nd_theLothe1'V halttor buildin `operas I V .at1ons.;9, .%1_.inda--hou%es..% ridizes. .4 -_a!`hips,~_ ynhlqlea, V f(n`iit\1ra`.- ' and ` _m`nt(9.tioz_\, ussia use: threef` imea aipv;mu,chm;`wo_1`gtor:`t\x9l _ as ,1}; `d ` out. dimcmty ur u._,u.,. table illusr \ ` The undertaking no tration of the pnterprise and . the `wis- dom of the Japanese Government. THE OLD FIREWOOD "QUESTION. muovme A Tn. i tori fuel. ?T1i f7 iff`i;hr `7""c;Ziiti1t1$i `V V: . trjonrwhioh in large amount}.wocu1,ria ~ Unltpd. expat-tpd;to uiher lands. the ' .V,sAgy3zb.- V@as1?aI.,:;n1 Norway _ana;awgc1+,; :. -a "iim.,Vm ooiin'_'t.'r1e whidh. V g9:_.=the1r' awn of w A _ ggpg " {deruble _'amon lies shoreno the; lvr_ nre illustrations. 1 This 5 kn3\}vn as"'China's S_oriow,".; 1 ,t envy The is 1 L drainage j y \ - L....... A.-nmn- I. I-supply I\nd`!l1_e lmprobm i nr'l`helr Exlmllsljon. I] . intervals the' declaration 1er-Vtha;*tAlx wo_r1;d ~s_> ' .pidly givingzout or- tliit ' wochcfsupply. through the j .d indisoriminta destruc- _ mining -fo`resta.vis nearly at rtunately; `however, for all IKIIAIJ Av vu-----_ "Nine o'clock. Oh. deal`. it doesboma !" and Clara White looked 1 L at the long hgnda at the clock, with just a Hftls shadow coming over M1` \ bright nu ` ` 5 ' V "That. in nnt-very late." her cousin Effie said. who turned the luv/esof U19 `book that aha held in` bar hands. :8 if ,' wbegiu another chapter. ...r`a..i H 1. ms: had-time. ind I 1333`. to Degm uuum... ._ ._ tiiui it is my bod-t\'}me..`4 Mina nnv .. __. `plea.-as when my friend: the evening with me. `I stopped before she com} ' tence. for there way. 1 on Clara's face that my - "N would be wgjong %toIaauno that much .61 mm (bro coma: I ghlnxe, `plea.-ze lriends are apendlnz .` and--" Bills 1 completed the sen- wash look of anrprige , that} reproved her. go "It would w ong to disregard ` mammzfs wishes : her absence. While } she might not insist on my retmng at exactly 9 o'clock. I know that she doza ' not wish me to remain up later than this time." and the honest little girl , looked straight into her cousm's face. "Well, Ivrill go if you say so. but E this story is so moe. I think that the _ . . r_- ~:...L nnvw'nV." and-Effie atraig-ht mm 11 go 3 nice. 1 `clock is.t.oo fast. any `closed the bogk some mum. nlnck L9 always l0Uluu nun--5.... ___ nut ` ` a.nywuy.jf_me_gd~Eftie book somewhat relufiintly; . The clock is always right. was the reply of the little girl that f not be. tempted to disregard gher` mammals wishes. ` e ` - In .1 few moments both little `girl: ' ' --.1... gnr lnuuuuam u......_. ~ few , were fast, nsleap in their Ili('A . Mrs. White came home fro ' to 'n neighbor`s house at ` ' stgepped into Clara's 1 - retiring to kiss the we . sleeper. - "Vncxf. asleep. I knew ti TBUIIH5 W ...__ , ` , that I should . `ast asleep. find her thus. wishes in every ` the dearest. little gir , world." and` as the loud mo , this softly to harm: whappy ..littleJ_l;g_n1e_r ugaxn. thing that I think she l in the whole that "said She is so loyal to my ` lf,_ she. kissed the ` usu--.. _.,, "For it wouldn't/be polite to dress up,\ she said, after ` you not to. _ Honey \'Bunch_wa.s invited. too, and mamma put on her bright little every- - plaid. _ _ Who's coming out. `you s'pose. mum- ma_ ?" -asked Betty, `fMildred 3" "Why, no;_1 think that ca V it said momma. with a smile. ""S_he's on- -5 seven; end young ladies do not usually eome;outf before they are eighteen. at least." `And so the coming-out party began. Can you guess wholczune out? Forty-one little, wet, yellow chiek-I ens l_They didn't all oome out a.tone'e- 35- dear me. nol It: took some of them :1` 5` good. while. They had "to sew open their shells with their tiny hard points 19 on their beaks; and then they had-to w rest and then they had to wiggle and. we squirm out. ' When they were out'!.w 1 how draggled end homely they were I p But it didn't take` long to dry and t scramble over to the little windows- (1 the cunningest. yellowest little com_e- c outegjs, as Lawrene called them. ' You gee: Un ole~Lem's-big .lneuhet0,1; 1 Was out in the woodshed: and the yel; , low chickens werevin mm. The ehll- '1 dren watched them through its win~ dows. `~ 1 "It's A beautiful party l'." exclaimed 1 K lBett . witha long sigh ofoontentment. 4 / `"0 . .isu t it l'?.e`r1ed Beth. ' 7 And Honey Bunch said so, too." . After 9. while it was ove'r;:and then h in the kitchemof egg- sala.d7'a`nTlTll'IL`ke`Ir;aIidwiches. {But the best of t all was that each little guest - .....~r:.a home a wee. wee. flufy_yel1ow Ln: nu..- mo.mma'a_3 AL SON} :. hr .. 1:6:-_ 933' .' B;{rt`_haul the: lioat out of . vimfef, -:1 V-`LEAKING, BOATS. h her well inside; and ouf. a._mi _let dry thor9ugh1y.. `if possime V under` ' shelter; _Turn hef bottom up. and let`, rst on-pieces of`so.ntling so `pho- ~ as to keep rigid and pfgvent "wa.bbling" about, If "them". are rough places on the hull `rub thm' `with heavy sandpaper. `Haw :vi]i r1s requireja good. supply 9; umgsu `* \ _c<`)ppe_1_j..tanks. `Next Mgi; your .s1ste`r or _ yqur chumfs ggster `t`aS6`` hqms a.x_;$:`i`n;;v11_ - V ; stemto star-npost: L V . I drayv..._astrai`ght -line d9wntheTcenter ~ . at the \k'o_$l,. 1 bc'ginuin3:a.t t11'es_t;m,' A ` .V tack the :g\[1slinL-tem_-: .th;a: bhijeL 1a.'s ` ' `girls ; sleep nice warm ._ e from her vxmt xb0l"8 9.30o'clock.' :d room before 0 awegt-faced lit- tro_un nowth hmowing late} of I Serbia and want and privgtiou. '1' - transport! in: use is unugm. ....._ - t Th ( igovitgbte reaction has come. and n of 1 cold makers oeema as u the exodus (mm the Kondlko regox; Is no urge as to paralyze all lneana 0 1011. All th?s'Amknnpo ts are crowded to auflocstinnud nun!- c btoohe exists. _

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