Ontario Community Newspapers

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 29 Oct 1897, p. 6

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ill lllli l l ll Sllll the vain site"STFRom ALL THE WORLD oven. ~â€" lnuruflng items About Our Own Country. Great Britain. All Parts of the Globe. Condensed and Med for Buy Reading. CANADA. '1‘ Rich 1' . Com ny Lady Beatrix. the youngest M e um 4nd onmtio pa to ter of the of Lansdowne. intimd adding two new steamers their route. . The report of the Assessment Com' missioner of Ottawa shows an increase in the city population of 23.157- Sir Wilfred Laurier has arranged with a firm of London publishers ‘0 write a history of the Hudson Bay Company. The Canadian Bankers’ Associatlbn has cabled to England a resoiuLon op‘ 9051118 any departure from the 801‘!- standard Mr. Grenier, who was sentenced to six months' imprisonment for libelling 311" Tarte will be treated as a first-class. misdemeanant. The result of the recent trial ship- ments of Canadian fruit to. England has Proved satisfactory, especially With regard to grapes. The Dominion Government will re- Serve the heavy timber belts between the western boundar of Manitoba and the summit of the kiss. Mayor Wilma-Smith of Montrealon behalf Of 8- numbcr of Canadian ca iâ€" ta-‘JSLS. has cabled to London an of or for £250,000 of the new Canadian loan. . MP- Mal/00k has not abandoned the idea of exacting postage upon“ news- Pa-Pers carried thr h the mans. and ‘:3 fdllecting statistics on the sub- .)ec . I . At Antigonish, N. 8., Henry Band-- 3011 was found guilty of the murder “.‘l’il'liam Bowman at Tracadie. The grunel Was committed in a. drunken raw l. Mrs. Lang has been awarded $220,000 damages against the City of Victoria for the death of her husband. Dr- Lanc. at the Point since Bridge dis- aster on May 25, 1896. The Canadian Pacific railway freight hand.ers and elevator men. who were on strike rt Fortâ€" WiLliam, have return- ed. to work, their demand for a slight more-use of pay being granted. Hon. Frederick Peters, the Premier Of I’iince Edward Island. is about ’L_0 retire from the Government. and it_18 Sta-led on good authority that‘lie inâ€" tends to remove to British Columbia. .At the sale of the Royal Hotel fur- niture the bedroom suite used by the Prince of \Vales during his visit to Hamilton was sold to Mrs. J. S. Hen- drie for 347. Its original cost was 3700. Senator Scott, Secretary of State. has I‘ffceived. a letter from the Governor of Inorida, asking him to send Canadian representatives to the International Lisbet'ios Conference. which will take place there next month. Lord Aberdeen has received from the Colonial Secretary a message which in- tunates that the members of the Cana- dian Jubilee contingent must Wear the meda.s presented by the Queen when- ever they are on parade. VMr. Hays has offmed the City of Montreal. to move t-L Grand Trunk offices from Point St. Charles to Vic- toria square in the centre of the city if granted exemption from taxation for twenty years. Dr._Borden, the Dominion Minister of Militia. says that the order providing for the retirement of commanding 01“ ficers after four years' service applies to the whole service, both permanent and volunteers. Dr. Laberge. Medical Health Officer of MOlltl‘eaL states that so far fifty thousand People have been vaccinated. but as that is only one-fifth of the pop- UIRHOI} 0f the city, he advises that the cllmmugn should be kept up. Lieut.â€"Coi. Bliss was out driving at Ottawa with his three children and nurse. The horse ran away and the rig upset. Col. Fills. was seriously injured. and it is doubtful if he or the nurse \vill recover from their injuries. Mr. It. W. Scott. Dominion Secretary of State. is very sanguine as to the de- VOlOl-lment of Canadian trade with Great l‘ritain. He expects that before long 'the country can sell annually fif- ty million dollars' worth of butter and cheese to Great Britain. Some unknown party. claiming to be the brother of Nod Hzmlan. the oars- man. has been making repeated re- quests to him for the loan of $4100. wiring for the some from Rochester! and 'l‘oniiwandu. The police of these places are looking for the mam “After a ‘trial lasting several days. }\. H. l-‘o-nton, teller in the Domin- ion. Bank at Napanoc. which was rob- bed of $32,000 last Aiigiist, who was charged with the nubliery,\\as brought ton. conclusion on Saturday, when the prisoner was discharged from cus- tody. The British exports to Canada declin- ed_ four per cent. in September. and thirteen yer cent. in the first nine months of the year. as compared with the same period last year. The imports from Canada increased thirty-two per cent. in September. and twenty-four per cent. for the nine months, as com- pared with the previous year. GREAT BRITAIN. A heavy fall of snow is reported in England over the Westmoreianil Hills. A man named Pollock made a sue oessful trip across the English Channel in a balloon. ’l‘hc jubilee gifts and addresses to the Queen are on exhibition at the Imperial Institute. London General Booth .0! the Salvation Arm. has gone to Germany. He talks of converting Emperor Wil- i i'il Air. Gladstone has declined to accede to .i request that he intervene to bring about a settlement of the engineers strike. Lord Salisburv's retirement the office of [5 eased as a possibility by The Daily Chronicle Edward Lnngtry. the husband if Lily 1W. died on Friday in the from M”..â€" thc United States. and net great rim Minister is disâ€"i lunxtic asylum to which he was com- mitted last week. Tenders for the new Canadian loan. ,opened in London. showed that double 'the amount asked for had been sub- scribed at an average price of £91 103. 5d. The London press is adverse to any tampering with the silver question.,and until some decision is given by the Cabiâ€" uneasiness will prevail in business circles. At St. George's church. Hanover square, London. on Saturday, the Marquis of \Vaterford. was married go dang â€" A meeting of the British Cabinet was held on Saturdai'. which was attended by all the Ministers except three. _It is understood that the Government Will not depart in any way from its present .gold standard. " It is understood that the next Im- ,perial budget will propose an extra ; grant of £1,500,000 to provide 11,000 ad- iditionai men for the army. and some amelioration of the soldier’s lot, with a view to attracting recruits. At the semi-annual meeting of the Grand Trunk shareholders. held on Thursday in London. the preSident an- nounced that there was a; surplus of thirteen thousand dohlars. and that the outlook ahead was very favourable. The Canadian horse suspected of glanders, which was landed in England on September 9. has been. subjected to a post-mortem examination by avat- orinary expert. who reported that the disease was contracted after the amâ€" Imat landed. James Kier Hardy. chairman of the EngliSh Independent Labour party. PIO- POSeS, with the view of supporting the striking engineers. to pool all the ends of all the trades unions as a fighting fluid. and then to proclaim a general strike. thus bringing. the trade of the nation to a standstill. l The St. James’ Gazette. referring to the recent correspondence on the pro- posed Sealing Conference calls_Secre- titty Sherman the trans-Atlantic Pol- onius. and says he ought to be allow- ed- tO play the fool only at home. and that foreign diplomacy ought to be placed in more competent. hands. UNITED STATES. The Milwaukee Diocesan Council is in favour of calling the Protestant Church in America simply: "The Church." Mr. 'Charles A. Dana, editor of the New iork Sun, died on Sunday after- noon at his residence on Long Island. ’Dr. David Starr Jordan” the United States expert, says the Americans are themselves to blame for the destruction of the seal herds. Over 60 vessels loaded with wheat :have left San Francisco for England A company has been formed at T8.â€" coma. \Vash., to build a tramway through the Chilkoot Pass. Louise Ripp, aged 16, who was abt lductedfrom Corbeil, near Paris. 1135 been discovered in Chicago. Burglars at Camden, N. J., on Tues- day morning shot and killed Mrs. Vance. aged 65, and her daughter, Mrs. Sarah M. Shaw. Benjamin Hyde Benton. a sporting Writer. well known in England and the States is charged by the British auth- orities at Ne wYork with perjury. -Commencing at the end of this month a new steamship service will be in- augurated from Portland. (lire, to Yo~ kohama and Shanghai and liong Kong. China. Travel is blocked in Texas owing to the yellow fever. Most of the towns have organized shot gun quarantines, so that trains can stop only at the big cities. Andrew Carnegie of Pittsburg. has secured the Tilden mine from Mil- waukee people and has now control of the largest iron producing combination in the world. John Carson, a school boy, at Lansing Mic-h” invited a. boy to strike him in the chest when he expanded. The lad did so, and Carson fell dead from PM“ alySLs of the heart. Baron Kontsky, of South America. who advertised some time ago. that he would suicide if he did not Sat Work tried to carry out the threat in New York by turning on the gas jet- George Burns, until recently a fire- man on the revenue cutter Grant, at Seattle, receiving a salary of $25 per month has just learned that he is one of the four heirs to an estate valued at 351,000,000. “V 11118111 Harold and Sheriff Radford were shot andkillied and Deputy Sher- lff Stewart, probably fatally injured, at Delta: Cilia on Friday while the officers were attempting to arrest Harold. Charged with robbery. At asession of the Civic Philanthropic Congress, held in Battle Creek, Mich. it stated that the American peo- ple were fast becoming degenerates through. the use of beer and tobawo and eating too much meat. It is announced in New York that John Armstrong Chauler. the former husband of Amelie Rives, the authoress, is hopelessly insane in the Blooming- ton asylum. while Amelie Rives, now Princess 'i‘rouletskoy is a mental wreck in a Philadelphia sanitarium. Secretary Sherman has written areâ€" ,ply to Lord Salisbury on the Bering Sea conference question. in which ':':c gaziggests aconfercnce in accordnn'c g‘Vlth the terms of Lord Saiisbury's :agreement. to be held presumably after the one which Russia and Japan have been invited to attend. According to the trade reports of Messrs. Dun and Bradstreet. the condi- tion of business in the United States a is good. but shows no marked increase. l'l‘he exports of wheat have expanded. and for the past week have been the largest on record. The payments thr h the clearing house are stated tobet e lnrgestever known. and thisof course. is a satisfactory indication of a substantial trade movement. The de~ mend. for labour is also good. and an- pesxs to be augmenting. The demand for cotton is increasing. Prices of pig liron are steady. Ore shipments on the ;lakes are very large. and prices of fin- , ished products are rising. 5 GENERAL. 5 Argentina's when! for export ism‘ Ttimated at one million tons The Chiliau Senate is discussing the bill for retaliatory tariff against the Unitezi Stated . i The W'omen‘s Eguai Suffrg-ge Club ,at St. Innis. M0,, Ls demanding the fappointment of women street inspecâ€" . tors. l The Budget Committee of the French lC-hamber of Deputies has voted to 3 increase the standing army by 12,000 ! men. l The new Liberal Spanish Cal‘inet ap- lproves of the idea of employing native .volunteers against the insurgents in ‘ Cuba. ! Bishop McKim, the Episcopal pre- 'late to Tokio, says that out of the l150.000 converts in Japan 50.000 are Catholics. The troops forming the Mamund ,punitive expedition have destroyed 26 fortified villages and have killed many of the insurgent natives. ‘ A shepherd named Vacher has been arrested at Belley. near Lyons, France, charged with committing aseries of Jack the Ripper murders. The Jirga tribesmen in India. have and have surrendered their rifles . ddrive sworn to maintain the peace an out Umra Khan’s followers. The foundation stone, of what is in- tended to be the great i, commercial port 0‘. Russia in Asia was laid on Fri- day With great ceremony. , It is stated that all the prelim- inaries have been agreed upon for and offen- an alliance, defensive and Tur- BWB. between Bulgaria key. The coasting steamer Triton sunk off the coast of Havana with 200 passen- gers. midi-“rs and civilians, and a large amount of Spanish treasure and mum- tions of war. MI. Martens, of the Russian Foreign Office has been selected as umpllje “1 the International Court of Arbitra- tion which is to pass upon the Brit- ish-Venezuelan boundary. The National Council of Switzerland has adopted a bill making accident- msurance compulsory in the case of all persons not having independent means of existence. Official returns published in Paris show that French exports for the third Quarter of 1897 increased $42,000,000, 8111 imports nearly $8,000.000. 0091931" (13(8196with the corresponding period of The International Leprosy Conference, which has closed its sitting in Berlin, has come to the conclusion that man is the only animal in which the leprosy bacillus exists, and: that the disease is contagious, but not hereditary. KILLED IN THE ELEVATOR. ---i A Man Drawn Into a “'hvnt Bin and Suffo- catcd :1! Stevens & Campbell‘s ('imilinm Elevator. A despatch from Chatham says;â€" A terrible fatality occurred at 20’clock on Friday afternoon at the Stevens~ Campbell elevators, Wm. Green, who resides on Kent. street, losing his life by suffocation in a. wheat bin. It. appears that Green and W'im. Paulucci had been working during the mornâ€" ins in emptying wheat from one floor to another and had cleaned the bin out five or six times. Friday after- dfiy afternoon they cleaned it out once and were working on it the second time when the accident occurred. Green tllousghuessiy stuck his foot into the wheat over the chute and the suction pulled him in. He slowly sank out of Sight. despite the heroic efforts of his mate to drag him- up to safety. He nearly lost his own life in the attempt to save his luckiess comrade: There are) two outlets to the bin, one in the centre and the other in one corner. hn the remote corner from these are the bars, so that when Green found himself slowly sinking to his death he was too far away from the bars to grasp them). As soon as. Paulucci realized the terrible situation he seiz- ed a shovel and began an effort to dig away the wheat which was draw- ing Green down. By this time, how- ever, Green was completely engulfed. and Paulucc'i saw immediately the hopelessness of his task. He hastened to the floor below. where several of the hands were at. work. Physicians were summoned. and the workmen downstairs relinquished all thought of digging the man out and transferred the chute, so that all 'the wheat fell on the floor of the first storey. \Vheu several hundred bush- els had come down through the hole thus made the lifeless body of the un- fortunate victim was seen to appear. Immediate steps were taken to resus- citate him in vain. Green had been under the wheat for fully fifteen min- utes. and although the phySK'lCIIS lab- ored for a considerable time there came no signs of life. It is only about: three or four months alrce Green obta ned work at the mill. He was a steady. in- dustrious man and was well liked by all. (He. however. had been in the bin dozens of times ‘nfore. and must have understood the gmrils attachedio such work, and that extreme caution had to be exercised. It seems to be the .general opinion amen: the mill hands 2that there was n O‘Brt'lili amount of ic‘areiessn as in Green's nethn there. ‘I’aulucci himself says that he would not do what Green did. Th: deceas- l ed lived or“ Rent street with his wife and two or three children. He was about forty yeirs of age. M ANY I'BliNG BU'I‘ THAT. A poor mun 19:: hint. and his good wife v3.5. tending hizn with homely but affectionate car-i -I)mi‘:‘ you think you rmi'd “11. n. laii of sozru'n pg, John? New Wha‘ run I get for 5.,33 \Viili a ‘.'~' in Suzi“: be answered. feeb- lly, \Vrâ€"ll. I seem in smell a ham a-cook- i115! somewhere; l think I rmi'li do With a “ti-i8 til n? that. Oh. n0. .luhn, dear. she answered. motion you «at have that. That‘s r the funeral. ' _â€" FROST. White frost is the ordinary frozen dew or hmz' frat. llZa‘ : frost occurs lichen he cold it so int-psi; as to freeze vegetation sud . .c it to turn black without tn for... Mon liorir frost. THEY LIFT TONS UF on: GREAT PLATES MOVED BY MEANS OF THE MAGNET. The .‘lcinl (‘un Br lliimllcd “‘nlle It In Red 1! l â€"- Magnets so Denture! That It Is Impouibic for Workman to Receive Electrical shocks. Think of a magnet that will lift. five tons of red hot steer. Not only that. but a magnet that willil pick up half a dozen steel plates and drop them one at a time with as great regularity as the farmer smvs his corn. This is not what might be, but what actu- allyis. audpany one whet-ares to visit the plaiemill of (the Illinois Steel Com- pany at Chicago, can see this electric marvel exwuxed hour by hour. The magnets almost seem endowed with human intelligence. so cleverly. so quickly: so quietly do they conduct themselves. No Machinery could be more regular. and certainly more sat- infectory. [it almost seems that the very attraction of gravitation itself is hardly more wonderful than the light- ness and swiftness with which these great pieces of magnetized steel, .pick up the steel. plates that would re- quireaderrick to’hoist under any othâ€" er circumstances. The mag'n‘ts in use at the plate- mills are of the double: pole type. The first one was designed for Bonding four by four inch billets from. a pile in the stock yards upon cars for shipment. It was found, however, upon putting till-is magnet into use that it did not. operate on acooutmt of the billets be- img so thoroughby entangled in the pile. The magnets were then attached to a crane in the pfa'teimill and used for handling plates as stated. Several other large concerns have followed the fife-11113119 of the steel company and With very satisfactory resufints. Magnets- for this work in- connection with an electric travelling crane are specially lwell adapted for handling palates. as the connections to the magâ€" nets are placed on the bridge of the crane in the same manner as the con- nections for the operating motors. After the magnet is ptuced on the mates to be lifted, the electric conâ€" nection is made by men" is of an ordi~ nary switch placed in a convenient position in the opera'tor'ls cage. The magnets are so designed that" they are practically water proof, and can be used FOR HlANDlLiNG PLATES And other materiats out of doors. The: dowble pole magnets in use by the steel company can, as stated, handle with. safety five tons of match, and for this onij require about. four amperes with a 240â€"vodt. current. One of the greatest difficulties thill? confronted the steel company when it- first began to operate these magnets was the task of halndliimg the plates one at a'tilme. Of course it was not deâ€" Sil‘a'lLB to pick up half a dozen plates With the magnet and throw them down in a heap somewhere. The sysâ€" tem of :hiindilnagr plates required that one plate at a time be taken care of. There was no principle or precedent to go by in bringing aboulfl the desired reâ€" s'ulL‘t, and. so it was left to a keen-wit- ted electrhnan to solve the problem. It M’as not very [long after the in~ troduh'tion of electricity for this pur- pose before this electrician became very expert in mieraiting the switch. It came to him one day just what ought to be done to bring the magnet up to the one lhllll‘. standard. So. after the magnet ' ad been lowered on to the pain of plates, and several taken up, the operator pullled the switch out. thereby breaking the current for an instant. [Hie found that. by this operâ€" a‘tiion' one or two Mute-s. coulld be drop- ped off at each; breal'xiin'g of the cur- rent, the pfhtes next to the magnet retaining sufficient magnetism to hold them to the steel of the magnet LiSC.‘f until the current was again su'itched on. {this operation was reâ€" peated urn'lif (xniyone plate remained attached to the magnet, and it was tlhre'n an e matter to deposit. it inl the desired location. 4 The concentric. poi-o magnet. as one of these in use is termed. was especi- afiy designed [or handling the bot; p.utes- and ingots of steel. There has been no diffiitufmy Whatever in hand- drug a 0,000 or 8.000â€" ullid ingot at a Jew red heat. 'ivlifi): flatter feature seems one of the most wonderful to those who visit the mill and see this marvebus accomplishment of electriâ€" CLty. we have all been taught that magnets altrtwtcd coLd steel. but it is certain-25' a novelty to see one of! these magnets lifting the red-hot metal Just 38.68.811.5' as lit would that bar, which. if you. placed your tongue on it on a frosty morning. would stick coser than a brother then-i0. As a labor-saving apparatus 'l‘I-I-‘l'l HUGE MAGNETS Are leycnd compare. They work sWift- ly and silently, and save an immense amount of time. The limit of their speed of action has never yet been disâ€" covered. because it has never been con- sxdered wise to test them- to the ir fu..lâ€" est i'apaoit , the ordinary everyâ€"day mte of spi being considered sufficient to fulfill all requirements. Previous to the introduction of the magnet the work which it accomplished required a far greater expenditure of time, both of men and machinery. and on no oc- casion was the work done so effiiirnt.‘y. I The effective use of eleotrinz magnets in this manner has been .iinited. But â€"_.â€"-â€"â€"â€" -â€"â€".. a. once the «annuity nipplying m... , nets does not know of a singa cm “hem any one has been injured byi the material dropping. and it firmly liaieves that it is the stirst way poen airs on? handling certain clams of Iron and steel products. "the magnets are so designed that it is un )ossilxb for the men who are pitting idiem to recoivd a shock. Elwtficians who have studied this matter say that this is the beginan u‘.‘ a new era in the zippilanui of elecâ€" tricity to mechanical pin-poms. In- ventive genius is making it mom and more "ch every day to utilize this powe in‘. factor. and at the same time lilacs it beyond the power of persons who are working about it. to rmeive even the slightest injury. Whom this fact has been thormmhly demon- strated it is beLieved that electricity will find fields of usefulness in direc- tions that are seemingily barred to it at: present. FIVE. THOUSAND MEN Arc at Work on the Crow‘s Nest Railway - Only One percent. Grades. M. H. McLean. assistant chief engi- neer. in the construction of the Crow's Nest road. was a visitor to Nelson last Sunday. says the Tribune. Speaking of the work on the grade, Mr. McLean said that 5,000 men will be at work by the end of the week and will have out- fits working on the grade, 35 miles this side of the summit of Crow's Nest Pass. In all there are 86 engineers employed on the line. and one remarkable and gratifying feature of the construction is that in no place along the entire line will the grade exceed one per cent. 0n the main line, two per cent. grades are common and even four per cent. is reached in some places. A number of Ottawa river bushmen are employed in cutting the right of May and their work impede the admiration of all. '1 he work is being rushed as fast as men and money can do it and trains are exâ€" pected to be running next foul. A wag- gon road from Moyie Lake to Fort Mo- Leod will be completed by the end Uf- this week. Mr. McLean says that itis hard foconceive the extent of mineral wealth in the new country. )articuliirly coal. One coal mine five mi esfrom the lfine isbeing extensively opened up and aspur is to be buill‘t for it. The rob- abii'ities are that. it will have a urge quantity of its product ready for ‘ship- mentassoon as the road is compacted. It. is proposed to rum trains over the road assoon as the construction reaches the foor of Kootenay lake. where trans- fers by steamers wihl be made for all lake points. The construction. however. is to be steadilly )ushed until the road is completed to elson. MURDERZD BY THOUSANDS. â€"â€" Rebels In China Put a City to the Sword. The city of Kuung Yang. in Burton province, has been captured and its iii- habitants massacred by a haul of re- bels. forming part of a rebel army which is devastating Human and Kuang provinces in Southern China. On August 27 the bandits scaled the walls of Kuang Yang. with the intenâ€" tion of capturing the provincial prison and releasing three Off their members there imprisoned. One hand tore down the prison. settling free several hun- dred murderers. thieves. and imprison- ed debtors. Another gang attacked the central part. of the city, f-irst mur- dering the magistrate who had sent the three bandits to prison._ His en- tire family. numbering 32, including servants, was killed. The entire night was spent in slaying and plundering. All mandarins and every civil and mili- tary officer in the city was beaten. The number killed and injured exceeded 14.000. The insurgents numbered 15,000 men, half of them armed. The” avowed object is to destroy the existing Government in Southern China. 'ihe Government is greatly alarmed. but his V no adequate means of suppressing the insurrection. W DARING CRIMES. Turning Ont Counterfeit Money From Within the “'iills of ii Penitentiary. \Vardeinl (E. S. \Vright, of the RivI-r- side penitentiary, .irittsburg, Penn. has discovered thwt a admirer of tho convicts confined in the in~.tiLution have been manufacturing counterfeit 50â€"0an pieces. [Io has umcarthed the metal from which the "queer"money was made. the moulds'in which it was cost. and the names of several con- v‘icts who were connected with the matter. ‘But an yet he has hon." unâ€" able to find the mom who uri'zinutetl and (hurried out the scheme. The town- terfe'iis are magnificent B’lf’ljliliiinhi.l)[ the ooiner's art. The iiie_fru.'n which they were mmie is a. most; pox-furl. one, and. the million; of the COInfi, which "I the GWI'I‘IIH'IIHN'S chief pretax-tin“ of metal money from those who tapith imitate in. i1 .13 near pi'rfiy‘t an it Is pissiblc for human ingenuny to main; and that such col-us could be made within the walls of the Riverside [willv tr-ntiary. with the crude ilii|:li'.nl‘.'lil‘i to ho. f)l)l.'li.‘ll.:‘ll by him prisoner-i. Hi the startling; feature of ti.» rinse, 'iiio (nitrite-rfeitiei‘s l‘ill :ilrI-ziiiy scoured a connection '“lill outside p‘irticmzind sum" of tbn ln-l monuy is now in (11'- crulziiinn. ' ._ -__.__._â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_.- I’OLI'I'F'A'FRS ()l“ 'I‘Hll‘} SWEDES. In Sweden, if you address the [.mp' est person. in the street, you must tilt your hat. The suite courtesy is insist.- ed upon. if you pass a lkuly on tho. Blair- way. To anti-r a nmdmg rum: or a pliers the iron or steel is to in: handled l tank withone's hat on is reamllefl 8-8 in such shape that it is puss-lulu to get impolite. ‘ a good contact there iii no doubt whatâ€" ever that it is the most (armomi-srii and rapid maxim-l of handing. A great! many concerns have been afraid to pull magnets into use on acrount of the ap- parent danger of dropping the: mate-rial:~ and thus endangering the mi-n in mi might be at work. In years of experi? M*â€"â€"â€" -- HIS ONLY I-‘A U L'I‘ lie an alderman. yo. ire-ow. Yes. I know. but. i never heard .-.nyth-ing else to his disc-cat. “an”- -n. ...- -M"-mâ€" mm.-.‘ 5 ,

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