Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 24 Jul 1913, p. 5

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- __l --'- -7----v A Hunting game from an aeroplanei will likely be one or the recognized: eld sports. In France an aeronaut_ wasinvlted 'to.take part in such an event, and while ying about the field! from one of the guns and painfully. though not seriously, wounded. Hef managed to bring the macmne safely` to.the ground,vand then had his wound dressed by some surgeons 'whoha.p- ills was struck in the eye by a bullet` tO'be_v,a.mong the spectatcrs. While on fauvivsitvto two of his sis- ters who were attending college at .Montreal, `wealthy "young Mexican land owner I t and farmer, told of incidents con- nected with the daily life of the country of revolutions. "ii a small army comes along, ? he said, we know better than to offer resistance. Very politely `we offer grain or bullocks, perhaps, and with a ourish the rebel cantain will write a note` promising to pay in the name of his leader, but the rancher very well knows these will never `be redeemed. ` Senor Muriel speaks good- English but uses should- ers, chin, hands and body to` give his lwords better expression. ` I Senor Ignacio Muriel, a` 3 ye i Made New Man of Him ' I-Iolesin the_ intestines caused by ,ulcers had become healed, and even la wart, that had been upon Mr. Pat- terson's forehead from boyhocd dis?` appeared. His complexion had become like that of a child, and in every re-' 'spect he was in better health and `looked better than for many years be-; .fore. Mr. Fletcher says many persons iimagine that those who go for a con- siderable time without food become irritable. That maybe the case with those who are what Edison has called "food drunk," for with them it is as with the drinker who is deprived of liquor, and according to the experts the fermentation of excess food causes ,a similar irritability. The mastication authority says that when one has `gained the appetite to obey the will there comes a mental exhilaration and that one is far "better-tempered `without food than with it. A Defect of Nature I What most of us-identify as a sen- [sation of hunger, says` Mr. Fletcher,` `is what he would call habit hunger?` {We feel that we want food notbecause, {our body requires it, but because it.` has become a lif long habit at certain hours of the day 0 eat a meal. The only way to .find out when we should `eat, according to Mr. Fletcher, is to begin experimenting and discover how long ,we_can comfortably go without food. The human body is something -like an automobile. .'t will run for a considerable distance with the gaso- line" supply shut off. j __...-uayuvvu vvvusu. UC ILILC. |_, At the end of the three weeks the lady's face" was seemingly smaller, butvnot apparently thinner, and her symmetrical gure was as before. Mr. Fletcher hirnselfgw;ent_ without water for 100 `hours, just for- the purpose of studying the effects of fasting. He` mentions the case of John I-1. Patter-; son, president of the National Cash: `Register Company, who was supposed ,to be a hopeless invalid in 1904. He was traveling in Italy, and it seemed doubtful if he would live to be brought `home.` As a last iesource he accepted `the advice of a medical man and tried; ;_the starvation cure for the diseases} that were wasting him. He went} without food for thirty-seven days, and I at` the end of that time he was cured.l` .. `abut; uugn, uuu GI: nu: cuu UL the period` cf fasting both normal and abnormal persons will find their health beneted. In fact it would be avery good thing for the average man to eat nothing for a couple of weeks each year, and thus permit his system to get rid cf impurities. , ` , Cured by Fasting Mr. Fletcher says that ne observed an unusually healthy woman who went-without food for three weeks. For the rst three days she took no water whatever, and after that but very little. Throughout the course of the experiment she suffered no dis- comfort whatever. This patient was threatened with neuralgic twinges in the vicinity of. the heart, and believing that a week ; fast would do her good she abstained from food. At the end of the week, however, her sensations were so comortable that she was tempted to go on for curiosity to learn what the sensations of the starving Suffragettes would be like. I A4. L1... -.._1 -n Weexs or months, _ ~ Mr. Fletcher says thafby this time everyone should know that a normal human being can go without food for twenty, thirty andeven fty Lays. Ab- riormal pegsons suffering from certain diseases can do Without food for per- haps eighty days, and at the end of `kn nn_8...l. ..c 0-...a.1_._ 1_-A.|_ ___..-_I -..-I ~Horace Fletcher, the famous` ex- ponentof. the art and science or chew- .in.~saysf that the hunger strikes at the Sutiragettes are pure takes. and that the British Governmenthas per- mitted itseli to he made ridiculous by forcible feeding. He is rather in favor or the women doingwithout food, and says it is the best thing that could happen to them. They would emerge from prison in better physical health and in sounder mental condition it they went without food for a few weeks months. " l `II. 131.. 1 -- -:- ~-- f00l eovummtnr f L. a " fl_\q&gIyjzto Mastlcat|o.n -.E;cpo.,`rt:.,..l ,; _r.- .`.' _ ,. . -_ ' 1- 5` Long Fast in More Benecial ` * Than Harmful ~ I . Huntl by Aeroplane 3____ ___ ___ ; n Politeness In War -\a unit vnnv unau vs man _-_.._..IL I..- __....A...... ad %`f _22-2 J alwam n ' Irish etween Am (1~.u.~ has been of the nm. Fifty of thenl will be Canndizm lines, while tH'e._.. "<)'t he_14-4 will be used in the Uni6t?S,tntob.- %-2| -.' I.',7"'~-EH13 -. u? W. _A - cl .~Thesc 1oco1notiveg ! . of-3` cial, will be of the. IV! 5 "1 LIL L|v`L\|. J31 uoav LJJIJIIIIVI.-"`N7,vII`vUP ..v.I1123*.Y-:, - dow. type, and the largest They are wlmt we call IV The 11('\\' locomotives` BUILD .\`1<:w I.OCO~MOTIVES.._' TQ: \-- G.T.R. TO* SPEND $1,s75%,9p(x- The (lruud T1'1111kRailW' agmj-xucnt is determined f`to their ]uC0l1]f;tiV8 poyvgfl caug'l1_t napping` in th8~'b\Iy-5:a:I;5u and when the frost and} eanoti7v"1?_ei1d transit 1it o111t and 9 Vwwovv - . \-Qvu..,.v - QC DlLp1'm:u- \ .....,, `H H" in the Virlnoenta rate ` . 9 . `X1364 eect.iv(- Monday. Pas-sen - . rducecl to two cents 5 fnegr-atw_ 9`r9' new frc-i;:l1t rates carry . :*e(%gd'*`;\.th -; of from ve to forty` . yU"'VV V , " "'*:'5 _/Fl'r~ Milch COVVS- f0'l_7` : .y_.~ on hand, -Apply. Geo.g_':` ` but(-hc-1'. .\]1z111(]a1e. _ -_ Mrs. A. II. Ferg'us0n s ried off tho first prize fit the. Picnic at Jackson Point and ]\f1'.<. Wm. Penny s tured the second prize. .` record will be hard to beat. % N The m-w passeI1g`er E M a raw mule`-1'0d by the AUn1te&'_ States,v su.p1-olno (`nnrt in its rece1_1tjdec1s_1.on .1. \I.'mm.~nm vnfn nnn9ar}mma'rna'a* M s. ` . I` ` II. AA; 4, `C '._`=: have Ioturned to BuVil1-:,_, ., panned by her mother, .. W * Bruntrm. 110 u Tlu, B ~t 7 '- 7. Emir1~1'}:::n$dA1`&EeM?g`qi6 4 . Ulllaag p0s1tion. --Thee .Ways avai %S1}op, A11: tall. available at Leligif \ A11andale.' [Wholalg fhec hoicest T1103 S _ ` . . n] . =9; - -. ....'4; J `V \ . .,`,.`._`F If advierr,is-inig v'vi::r`:i-ot , Avitaiforcejjiifthe. businesguworld ofto_-day how long think the_largst re;ail_ busipessoand industrial rms woulc?l3"coint ionueA to spetid othe hugiesums they do #ev%eryiyear_ in news;pap.oif,\.space?7:` I.s;ito"tQ$ong};le._1:9` `S1PoQse;,it-_l}at, they are wrong in otheitj conclusions as*t:e_ the`fcTaCL y~i0A 2i and its worth to thei ibusi{1ess`in:iioni:I1g?7W;f""ti?-1:f'hY."D01 hi3`V`iafi1d`,v looking out for. moire? is: `f`rc'asonabie5 to `F suppose ; that you hm foiinoti3`?i5?;`"`o3E" . 4 ed out` the_ 1' YOU_ wx LL` 6*:;N`s.`WER.T" _itl?e;yi dailies `s 7* ' 9 these publica1_iq31osoi:i* H you (}.v.eI'; home and is tising `elf, ands who," J hoUsoes`_.\gij'i Eii'o`A h o A 5 Every spare foam should have a Iwaste . basket, a chair, and a, T good- . light in it. i , . - To' stone raisins, free them -frqml ; ,the'ir stems, put them in a bowl and icover them with boiling water, let-E ; ting. them remaixi in it for`- t.woL min-. Afterivashing ibljuik `silk of cottdn `stockings, -rinse .i_p.: salt wateg. T Sept. .8 t. 14-15~ 1 Tab1ecldth and hee.tss} 1ou1d[ not .be looped on ' the `line, but hung taut. ..._ " ` . j ` Vegetable makes an exellenti lling: for pillows.` __ _ i ' Ink stains` on garments 7 Aaxi Be.` ;`sqaked out with salt and milk. A A rush" runner - is an "excellent `thing for `the verandah. ' . l % Soften harcluyvvatei-_ for,toi1et bya pinch of 7ooraxv.T ' ~; 1 i Liixens `are "best bla-held A on `thick! [clean glass. 7 .. ifr; vinirs d19,r1.; Z d On : Fridday even-iilig th- club started a handicap contest: to com .` tin-ue for? six ~shoots `which will be held on Friday evening of each week at Bayeld street wharf. ` { I The result or % last .Friday,s shoot`. `were -:--W. .C~ro'ssland 22, E. ~Will4 ia.ms 21, W. Ness 19, T..Villiers 19, L; _amp_bell 14. `% .i "V The following are the p_rizes .-to be given to the vivinnerz`--First, at gold` fob, presented by Camp- ibell; `second; - "a si1`ver~wa`tch fobA_ `by the-Qominiqn Cartridge 00. V |" Each Vmomber taking". part.'....inA `this contest vV_vi-ll shoot lat 25 | birds -each evening, making .' 150* birds in all. ` J .\ Jmp * 1118'- 115 up; a7;c`.:1;_1`rwhik ;o_ Y` &. A *`;SERIEsA:AoE;SHoQTS; = ; =`'1`.hv Bayaend, gs}e%.iVw1m:AV?; was ` the_'*scenj_e Vc>Lf t'h e_; Weekly 1 shBot ~ the Gun"C`{ub.di1 the lit-13, the numbr shot t` .was_=25_. _'Th'e scqres ' wre: -`EQ ` Williamy. Wm; Crossland 20 , Wn1..ANe:;a[20,4[ III `Vol. 4 -A --' TTIPS To I-1oUsEWIv%Es I. _ ' ' g A preserve closet should be cool V, and dark. If_ it has 'a glaissv door '._hang a bllabk curtain over it. It is id, good plan to wrap jars of-Acherries, r fespberries and: jsatrawiberries in` paper ito exclude thelight. " '5 V V I I A delicious dish of peppers is made in this way:--Wash, halve and seed the peppers, then -run through a food chopper. Put a little butter in a frying -. pan._ Add the peppers {and their juice and half a.cu.prfu1, off `stock. . "Simmer till` tender. . , Linen or corded material garmentsl should. be ironed over an ordinary` ironing board`, taking care to iron! lengthwise or directly crosswise.` Ironing even a little on the bias will put them out of sliape. ` `As between mea'1]nibb1ing and the drinking` of water `copiously "during meals areyboth: 1w.rm`ful,. I so, too, is Vsleepingi in 9.` room in which there is little or_ no fresh air. _ If you desire to `obtain ,a beauti- fu1,lustre on cut glass, t__ryd-W-ashing it` in two quarts of fairly hot water tb which one tableploonful of 3 tur- `pentine has been added, and you will `nds ythe resu-Its very satisfactory; opt v "of ,..o'ne s hands into[soda'. water --is to `rub "them*.w'e1l with A` a -piece` of ~mutton fat. This counteracts the "bad eifects ._.E __,'I. is Ail`. excelleimt, 1118.134 before pu.tti`ng avaaa_\IV'\jf\l "U : Lu. cu: `xv H91-l,11-I5 v-'-!.'"a_ -. J . > _ A_so7o;p a`nd-i.-w,atr then c_o`veri_;1`1'g_- them with whitewash, Walsh-` ing `the'; whivwash after some hiirs "and polishing` the place - that" be/en~ stained by. rubbing. .' V 5-` Tc 'mq,_k_e V _awnings_, _waterpr<'>of,'? plunge ; 1s t* into. 9, solution contain-" ing"-' 20 pei-` cent. soap and afterward` in {mother _>so1u`t_io,11 having the same! perrogntage of copper. Wash after-3 .wa . J. . / .'. .,'1 I, 9% N6W.,;h ohuse`wives realize the effec. - . ivenes wof; kerosene as a disinfectant.` ; Put ; it down. the drain pipe and: it 4 will kill al-Igerms.` L . { I |. Iodine acts as a` healixig ',frem_edy.l aasrwell as aw. and is` especially` helpful for wounds caused by L rusty` nails etc. ` ` I aiaibitei ma.@,%.1othi1,g1 bftr{A~7than nd1C.w4at_Ver.~ Stains` may be ;removed"oy- rst. fwashing +hm.}.~-'.L..:4'-1.. ....'.... .....t~_.;.~_,. -:_.1 4-; 1.he Ontari'o"Gvernment gavetwo hundred fleet of land: at! the Institute for the Blind grounds fo be used under, Pu-lisf Board iauspiees for recreation nurposgs.` . _. Cpndttions are t i (ttta;ched.' that` no? blldlngs titre tobev arectect] "one, the; 3;9upg.'vg1thout`i.the cdgsant . qt?` 4 "A, Boston man -visi oT._tne ; Trent= Valfelooking a.ttVer_, We '_thou_sand`s .7pt., E."is?'1 09-04. -- l Small chicks." in order to do well. requireaccess. to good drinking water a at any time thev want. it, and in such a manner as to prevent their getting into it. fouling it-_or drowning them- s`_elv_ea.- This can 7be done at amaiii expense. Take _a clean tin can, such as a baking-powder can, and ` punch I small hole through it near the rim. Then iii! the `can with water and jpince _a dish overt-it, the diameter of `which is about tvgo ii-nchesymore than `that: of-.; the can. 3yW-turning the can and dish - oven-.quick1y,' , `the fountain can he set anywhere i`deire_`d,.,{0`rfast at . the .chieks_ `drink _ . the water: {out -of the dish` .it`;vvil.i.be 'auton{aati;j:al!y.I ,lied 'tro'rn ".. _'`x' __ '_. '_Il`is'ht vet:y':ke'e!il!." - _ - Gambler by Nature Sentiment growing. however, and Blane realized that it would not be long before the petty States that permitted gambling would be wiped out as political entities. So he began to look elsewhere for a site,.and hit upon Monaco, a tiny principality. which no other country envied save for its wonderful climate, and, finding the ruling prince in straits made the deal. Old Blanc is said to have been an. inveterate gambler, and for hours would `dice alone, his right hand against his left. Frequently he would play against his own tables, not stopping to realize that whether he won or lost he was playing against his own money. He acquired an im- mense fortune, and some of his child- ren married into royal families.` The only son, Edmond Blanc, is now` the head of the gambling establishment. Patron of the Turf A He is famous as a patron of the turf, being by far the. `most important breeder of racehorses in France. It was he who paid a record .;price for Flying Fox. He -made several vain attempts to win the English Derby, and has been a frequent ttarter on the En gli-sh= turf. In France he_ghas won all the great races, the Grand Piix at Longchamps n o,fe_wer".than nine times. In spite" of his wealth. and his racing success hethasbeen unable against the game was: to. secure [admittance to the French . Jockey Club. He islsaidito feel a the Y 9 i ;- { VI l 3 3 1 3 1 V 9 #3` any Iva _ snyulj LU l.`l`BuU'wf > ', _ '. Soj;Bianc wasrable to make a bar- aln that was profitable both`. He. paid a large - sum of money down, &8l_'eed~ t_o-p:'1y`all_ the expenses op the Principality... and to hand __ over a cer-. tain percentage of his, winnings. in ex- - change jfor thriexolusive privileges of, `gambling in the -principality oi!"3Mona- oo, ithe rights to extend iofstty years. ' A ' " '1 `New Agreement gwlade` Thelease came to any end recently._ but` in exchange for ti bonudrunning into the millionsthe Prince of `Mona-: co- extended it for anotheriiity years. This was a breach offaith,`foj_r itswas; only on the understanding that the bargain shouldibe terminated at the end oi the original lease that the present Prince of, Monaco was recog- nized `and received by Queen Victoria, by Emperor William and by some other monarchs, who saw in him merely the `agreeable protcjotor. ot a gambling game. The Prince, how- ever, is so `absorbed in his scientic studies that he is indierent to the praise or censurefot the .world. Since his people pay no taxes and are all well fed and contented, they have no complaint to make, and since the gambling ,tables' add yearly to the Blanc millions, he, too, is satised. B|anc"s Strange Career , Francois Blanc, the founder of the gambling industry, had a remarkable history. He was.a Frenchman, and a broker. When. he attempted to se- cure a seat on the Stock` Exchange I 1 ' at Bordeaux his reputation was so I I I J unsavory that his appllcaticn was re- jected. Shortiy afterward he moved _ to Tours, and he and his brother were {placed on "trial for bribing ._sema- phore ` operators to transmit wrong messages. In those days the de- spatches on which the Stock Ex.- change business was transacted were sent by means of semaphores, and by L F bribing the men operating the signals the Blane brothers put through what * would now be called a wire-tapping r . caped on a t.echnical'ity. game. The operators were convicted and imprisoned, but the Blancs es- Francois, phowpver, realizing that his` reputation F . was against him in France, mdvedto , a lot of money." Germ8_l1l'. and there want boldly into. the business at running a gambling; ' establishment: ,He.ope_rated a resort at Hamburg for some time, and made 1 I 1 lab is 3. lfttief _j.t.h%?ls i B1zg;;v':madee1i"is` dealt {wi_th` V _ ng. rncelot` _,on'a_co~{a nd s_et` `P.?"`31,Temp1e. to .the `Goddess : 01. Change. th6 "ln0St_ tamo_us;gamblin`g rooms in:~thez_world, Even `titty `yY?;"3 880 _ public sentiment strongly con- ` demned 8a.nf1bljing,so -an-_ out-of-the-way 5D0t had to.-be `found by. B1ancswhen he determined to, establish gambling gill; 9- tglnd scalle. In Prince Charles .. o onaco e found the man `he had been looking for, Charles was a lgonaiide prance at the head of a free W11 FY. an be was also in very hard` !lu_clt. being so badly pressed for money, that he had been obliged to sell `part not his territory to France. A A ' - n D`nvAn ..........`Li. L. _..'-1_- _ L-.. F_Im5.uaA c,;a;mbIm_g[_ ',R*sqtt'I B_nowc=;!% r `Lean VVltI"1 _Prh_i`e -;o%;5Mb'a9;f__*i Who is a `careflfie Monarch -AV Handy chicken Fount Goyjrn Rich;/ [ Vgvoifaid ~Qns3:o1_ns oice hasan enviable recofd otftcrty `yegris in the public service. -.D_ur4_n'g that long` time `_he was never ;je?minnte"Tlate. at his post, and he 1m'tV~ot!:-._-duty;-_ve minutes` on ao- -.r .. ;;:nj;?*;iriness- Mr. John. Cow:a.rV1 of `t:;e' Toronto`! to . It. 18-20 L pt, 5-13 * E` . 14-15 T V Discovery of a. "Zone of Silence in the Alps is. said to have been made] by workmen employed in the constuc- tlon of the` highest . section ofn-`.'he_ 'ungfr_a.u Railway. ` Heavy charges of ynainite were set off, and, according to a.cc6unt,- with surprising results. The vdetonatlons were heard within a. radius : of` thirty miles.` then within 9. "solid ofithe _-next: fourteen miles there 'ws_h;__s1lenee, but-further up to a. con-. V-eeigtg-gchcirele. of fifty miles. the noise 1.13`Tdj"5"`-` ,.. av. van nu uvuauu `.15 B116 JHUUALUPLIULI. . 'l vy_o_`oi,j_h.e_w_orst ices of the moun- tain operator are the forest re and the avalanche. Again and again their depredations sweep away poles and wires, demanding heroic service of the linemen to restore normal conditions. .A',n`eyewitness' of one of these storms described it as an avalanche of "ice and snow that had swept greatrocks and giant trees like matchwood be; fore it down the*m'ounta_in side. The slide measured 1,200 feet across and 30 feet deep. It could `have buried out -9; sight 9, good sized-town. _Yet when _lt.`was=-necessary- to reestablish the _wxr` ,`;..and poles- ripped to shreds in gitg underous course, the linemen itoolt it as `?a `little incident scarce worth writing about to headquarters. ! In some districts winter departs` for only two. months in the twe1ve,j so that _day and night, month by} month, the deadening loneliness ofi perpetual snow threatens to drive at man into melancholia. It is a heavy test of human endurance, not so much i `in the times of `activity as when the ! monotony of existence turns a week; into an eternity. Twice a year the supplies of food are packed in, and then the _,operator and his visi-tors ex- haust the possibilities of conversation. I For the rest of the time it is only a break in the line that gives a man achance to meet his comrades. When that signicant accident occmrs, he loads his tools on his back and marches forth in search of the interruption- 'pIlvt\ l\' &`\n tun-at `Ann. .E 4.1.. ._.---__ ltwintervals of from .17 to 50 miles I the operators live out their lonely and 1 dangerous lives in their roughly built I cabins. _pTha_t_, each operator should; be an expert -lineman. is a necessity; of the task, and those with the long sections located on at lands are given 1 a horse to assist in_'the inspections. i _In the mountain districts much shor- , ter sections are in an operator's care, and in the depth of winter he is called upon not infrequently to tramp on` snowshoespacross treacherous areas- to repair wires. . 1 The route `of the line is almost parallel to that weird and abandoned _ survey `of the Western Union half a! century ago, when that company after . the breaking of the Atlanttlc cablei in 1859 decided to lay a land line} I ___thi'ough Alaska and Sib'e ria'to Europe.` Over $3,000,000 was spent on the line when the company recalled the plans I having in the meantime picked up its ! Atlantic cable` again. Some of its engineers and line men were then so far inland that" it was nine months from the time the order was sent until ] it'"co'uld be delivered to them. For` many miles portions of the Western; Union wire are now being worked as ' -an. auxiliary by the Dominion Govern- ment. DI-IIU ' VII? IC fIlLIJ L D`, L IUVLUULIUU. - To-day. when tffe reckless gloriesof that wickedest camp on earth, have given away to a standard of respect- ability anda: rm obedience to law and. order, the little Yukon telegraph tirelessly fullls fits>duties. Now, however, it ashes {new code of suc- 'cess,"_the, code of thepioneer farmer` whose {cottages are fast trailing up the northern x:iI1eys`,;_ searching out` the lastiehoice spotsiiin Canada where the speculator has not stuck his sign I board; "In_ a_year the Dominion Gov-1 ernment__1oses abotit` $80_,Q\.J on thel line, but `as aneold,nort.hernAtrave1ler_ .says: it; is the best `$80,000 ever in- vested." _ kg: , ' . I `Ir `nun! In $\lL\I0lL\I VI. aunt. / {The Yukon telegraph was born in ,.th"Ieverish days of 1890, when it. seemed that "half the country was turned northwvard to wrestle with the little god of: Chance; In those days it had two kinds of stories to deliver, `one ot"th,e lucky strike, transform-| `Inger penniless tramp` into a million- aire; the other of_ some mute tragedy ofthei wayside, wherein a discouraged adventurerfwrapped himself and his hopes in the snows by the trailside and left the rein-1ainde,r.-to Providence. ` Hi- .1-.. _.1.-._ 4.11`- ___-v_-I--- ._1-__.-__ -g _ .0`! V ` W $I FIIQSWJKO ` "4 g'The visitor; trailing his goods - into the-`lone north land seeking` a` gold claim -in the bed of 9. rivuletj or stak- i lug` his future on a tree farm a.nd\a muscular back, may jee_r at the low straggling poles with the wire sag-i glng down like the domestic clothes-! I 1 [line back home. But when he tastes } for a monsth or two the supreme isola- ?tion or `that innite silent wilderness, gthat pitiful strand of wire will size up -`as a'st1;and of gold. TIVRA `7..I_-_ J...`I.....-.....`I. _-_.. 1.....- 1... `_ 7 T -*A_B,1Icicf,t. on ~ th'e ' om Caribou t;`0.{"B1'it isAh`* N Cblumbia, Swinding rnjorthwardifpri 2,500, miles, runs ` the 1 Yukqn teigraph, '`_the most remark-1 iahle;aIId\IroInni.ic~teIegraph line on~ the _continent;V Its" origin was like no } ether; its cperation never had and lparhaps. never will have an analogy; its service to mankind `has certainly neveribeen surpassed. FBI... ..:..:4..'... .s....:1x.... 1..:.. .......a.. {men `?..~' -'...`. ~,"'3-;..;- '7`l.'[/ el 'gr'p`h]c W65- '|V< in te_:F`.a_ ;.;4s.> .'x%!3.-!\,4.uh ;.H?".d? 1913 on SE3 u3vwAsn3 ' .}JI!0_TVl`ihlfi`ig T 8ia(c';1'fWelgVht%n A14`. .'__ _>.._1_.__ '.;.A - _ .,, "5 _AlplnTe( iones of Silence Forty _LY ear-sf ehlce Links wii the` Worfd T Lived of Isolation the ,E',af. . .1 ..'.n. u`-'_'_r " _ augjaorsvijaspan . T ,3-_;C}hg.rlottenburg, Germany. has , a 5 `four-s~`t_ory hotel for horses _-whim win A.nj9c93mnoaate. an1ma.la_.- _ {Ii-onjs-hips` Lighten} _ _A.`_'sh1n'_ huil_t, of iron w_igjh3' t'DQEt" .c n,e`44tth[ less than..9ne_ of`-`ti !-: saint. i ""i_r.gp,g":j3na;2e .ci.f(' .-._v(oc.' - . Musicians Run to Hair . According to the statement of 3 pfofessor in a German university the percentage of baldness among intel- lectual` men` is o1y`2 for mustcatzmen 16Zfor writers and others. $1 25-26 :3. ;=25-2 act. 7-9 i'.. 18-19' Sept. 16 Oct; 7-9 51;. _24~26 v_t. 24-25 it. 23-24: 7' yt. 25-26 `

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