Ontario Community Newspapers

Milverton Sun, 15 Apr 1897, p. 2

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CHAPTER Te enone ) in | On Mr. Dottleson considered “Mrs. aa back bee the so-| usual next morning ; i a tiew Valera d Journey ‘of Johu: Sweetweed In all its beari made up > is mind | fa cushions, he ghost of @ smile | ade being questioned ‘about the letter Mountains— Miraculous ieee: te Say tere a thcuahe | rotate ecteeeoniieic to ties peat SIS in 01 care! i i Sorte ne cr scribe until nearly “cloven o'clock. Then’ be A Bellefontaine coerce of the botany he watched for a suitable ge a o ‘he ‘sue | malady both both i the Prine det felt epaitts he Se are vee at- | Philadelphia Times says: In these days | consci tunity to join in the he paessenicasel” sf ae it eel- | temp! make capital out of of modern pliances an d perfected y fiahe the od Tac [conte , and had gained remon- had been a le at sos (2 ction De ie th End. and Mr. Dottleson saw |strate mildly with Mrs. Lamshed upon {e208 of travel by steam and_electri- best receive ae elgg 3% that J eee int was gained. did not | the absurdity of her ideas. It occurred | city, at the rate Takeworth was sure fnake ang attempt to further his plans | to him i during the day |a mite a minute, or even more, is he heard nothing about it. The young | thin fxd of the wedze, pete ye ne i ‘ive made pal ey and ses quite aware that hardly be gr! gratifying found ie a to me. ‘Consultation with Mrs. Lamshed ng and Mr. suppose that his guest had utterly for- | 20 gotten the distinction. he had receiv-| ty. ed. It was a trifle in itself, but it gave | Alfred i to ald Ba any one who apetpan to ae with his self-love. as not 1 before he saw 0/4 which settled aie a chest and de- bs “t had taken fied all efforts to dislodge it. ceworth came in pice day, and no} les Lal doubt did his best for her, tors frequently find, he had tend with the patient as well pe the ma! “TI never been ill,” ae an a stinate old Be Hiab not and I'm going t So Mrs wwing-room, shivering and cough-| Fa ing, whilst Kate and her maid “pdded mm own satisfacti it's your obvious duty,” said be to bim- self, “to put Mr. re case in the hands of some one y‘ “ust. You can’t honestly say you viraat seus Lakeworth, for sbe him; so you must summoi me Doitleson averse and Te- seis ea a bor hes a, get idiot co te Mina as. ‘he have looked quite so comp! lacently on ity, as it will be i Charley!” ase lor by every’ Kate was she was love, and that q ing ; ee mother ala ais teak with Kate sees a Mr. Dottleson’s tly than 1 Is o caleniated, (on. ay doot rated in the hter, hem, he would not + really very kind and ht- Mia ate we bee a splei «if it becomes msulta- that . jon with one of the Court phssicians, doleh une will ihe w esta wl fully, 5 Dested ‘by. bis daughter in the | tuma he day before the old lady | the ‘body rather sanguine, but self to him: o- the thir~ emma had. eaves ested, Sit Bl t | poll sam than’ ‘un- iat hey be Ma hooked a ath ao lineas for ee which the ladies were plan- aptly ‘By, a2 ineipie son via a Mi ‘The old lady tes acdsee eat att tor’s aaa had been com = meet the are ; tr instead ing it in the Ae f be asked {BS he, took the Tet nee a Mra, tamshed patticular- ean It was to take it myself,” replied tres rAsaeh al said so?” a Yes, sir. Miss eeu undertool worth’s. | may tell your mistress that I! ok to leave the note at Dr-Lake- | stead of putting them in the postbag? He had a right to know what it meant, and he i: yea me eee bee ae en- ri taps without d difficult ity. peg eniiied the enclosure etl ee his lips with chag-| son, Mahe a4 he er see —Come and m Alfed ‘Blodget Te in Caan at eer thing if was for the wom- - | be iid opportun- | confrant i ouse sworth, happily hate of the bey ment ; had ‘ity enced his rel ub ient to bed, ch eign injunctions to remain | trod is titre re until he called at noon the, day drawing-room is oie than my room, glanced at the address. | Mr. thing: I observed it in the Post this | mained uite account- ore ‘is watch anc Weriends ia five minutes pa: vee Be Med Bl s loaget who had once been despatched to-day. ae per- | or that she would ucing Mr. Dottleson acme Submited | well after hearing thats Fae. as the cei severe (A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE, > | PLUNGING ee pote Lam SIDE , he must ived a summons . Dottk from the hand.’ ing amc pillows ‘Banting for the fray rong Some the Beer was not quite | i, E rt, if that up, it was tok a tant cropped up, s . 2 lead fail- | thereof participated in by John Sweet- il bec seo y Moun! manoeu- |!y, corners the market on. fast FORE ling. me he came m felt his own attitude in the matter to |of this and had he found it necessary to | j, at once he| °° would have made out a poor case for | With himself. ’ ai Tt chanced, however, that she wi in Her customary afternoon ei was and up his hat, ma tie remarks about the ey man-/Shanies from what it is to-day. ners adopted by. strageling prac vu FORESTS . Dottleson heard this he ood misunderstanding. #4 the lum! ‘Jes Takeworth ek of minor ee eu 0 time to force. x promis- of in- st. Pa eg each | other-i in- | ii five, law almost eet aad ater Kate had seh he wav- nothing rapid transit and the modi a lumberman ‘in the wilds tains, one day young man about 22 He athe Som of a far- of emplayment, experience great deal, a and the ig alive wats in w fied “along - oolbya ative ely easy, Senile turning, end never once Geet a eras Substance. Down, fe only reason that he is Una Breet grg was te ta expanse of (te S wobec ithong Gne hasty giance towards the chat and noted the fact that it was Cope aetna - ant ‘ie ost pest leak feet o Water Colter ste his ex crushed” to Meee eae mctinae are ie eee ing sensation of the sty ie ride and the shook sudden of tho Prag, int te When he strugk the water he was etill on top ofthe Hoe and went under with e surface he alone ee w yards opposite shore. With woe Hers Giitiontty he pulled bimselt out of the water, and after recovering to ex: tent th euse of his facuities,viewed with wonderment the scene of his 7 shudderingly thought of HIS NARROW EP In his descent he sg oe the entire trail of 100 logs goo Gu pratety, doo: r r past twel a he Kate entered the Seen ae ro ‘oat af able of performing the wo! an old Sain nen eae im detaining bim until nearly twenty- | hour, but. still en Bi "Pitteen and twenty years ago } | at the business, and so are gene-} Jase ae at work ‘on something more | indifferent in the ae Then | ing’ was vastly in actition- | ‘covered the entire range of mountains had only to select earest to some stream, oF Sh ting of the iogs to water is one of the fronting the lumb-. here hice e, what are ives” é me for log: aslo mply constructed by laying ce ietcea lous camp to the Pere eight or a These drives are usually ome early in the autumn and whe ail i ‘of sno ‘tion for use b; ee low tee att ithe Gi oe them, which Nps down the has been telli leson,; ** ane so fact of y ai was worth a to Bre ykewort! Dottleson wrote it) sionally. ‘© Sire ras Ww stands towards Kate, you o1 ae sti deprived him of gigs to-day.’ 80; om the co Se yund eet That es ‘Montague ; most important— | trough of ice, * sai ine ina to Charley itai poured and al- ‘lowed to freeze, the Tele t being a rude ice, over which the logs glide iat down grade with startling swiftness. ee ‘But these drives are not ail down grade. a half the distance will bé ‘Alfred profes- | t#in teams of 2S SECs of the inc! As ne | Ghallogs are oiled into the drive a team | opted it. ht to Te is hitched to 2 log with chance’ shead of i, according incline aud in this way the whole vet, but their sinuon to the steepness » he “while Bele in ay on Psa a oe ‘The woman surrendered ee letter. erotting it, but did not ne ial ad- ‘string is pushed ig | 2nd returned to oN house. isable ‘you haste aS me is 5. “You. oun a have weighed fae aaa thrill ing. Sononrae rail out from'| in perhaps 100 | Diana was drives eetwood met with the following al anos to Br tog next to the ote sas on which pean hae aa ieee y snagged of on ig ek sed te acl Steing of peed ning in oe romiscuous heap on the mountain side, breaking the drive ‘and tearing "email trees out by the root, CAREER OF THE CORSET. Fashion and science have joined hands safely meas- oe Fa by time-honored corset was ©) tanily being sent into semi-di y and various are the different ter course, deeper breathing. But aati 2 sar compromises: between stays are winning. wide tant it Pie not follow by any means that the eS of the corset, pure and ie ere als ar nacceke anoles tine appeared in Italy during fe ex- travagant Speen t sance. Cai edi Medicis ane it Seid hee a gartoe hey trousdean elie UP | she went to France to wed: H jgrade, and to’get the-iogs.up the moun- ‘After ary and, in spite of ita crude maine most of the fashionable ladies in Paris ad- Queen of foe and of Poitiers refused to don the tortuous combinations of iron et vel- yas aaa ns eed ter wit usua nthook he was to follow the | most of the fair dames bravely box you asked ‘that young fellow, ‘who is | first log as a sort of steerer, whose duty | themselves up in i Sh Bliza- ly more than a student, to meet | Ss ‘was to see that ail was well. If the than belle in her ff xoff and end- such a man as Sit Alfred in consulta~ i caught fast on any protruding ice, | pethan belle im her siitt to hips ofas tion. Sir Alfred would, I am sure, have ‘snow or wood, wi hook he would | oor co very different. from fhe fashion felt grossly insulted isd ‘he seen the | loosen it, 20, tha the trail would | ae es past tae c4 ener. to int im 2 ‘ive is in i- eeeh cane | Sick te atsrecceleraye finde; RIante bo Sahat on aa the inventive ‘artisans af ee an a unhey ‘ly worded Teanites ate to keep him busy, but if there is|coid iron wath (ey the backchanded allusion tots of snow and cold weather the slide | i> ones of the hour; the d: sense,” the 5 3 that Sir a Al ined jis usually all that, can be desired, and | ry. " would have steerer invariabiy has-only the mo- | {57 which pleased ‘hat pouBicns more through (oat instrumentally, oan ‘i st iG ALONGS! ek, es vyateing the logs glide mite This as the case during the late cold weath- ally t ‘Shs turoed ference to with rising temper. ‘engaged to Kate, and won't | top of the incline and be, Ell be cas eatiet ng the old lady to the qui upon him sharply and spoke to the “pi |notony of “You're jea careful of Sir_Al-|so' much tramping, dete oon tomorrow: ‘he 1 60 fred’s oats, Montague. You | the logs as a means of mo Yours sincere! don’t see the advantage of iy san tho ting 'up the mountain. With the driv- | 202 Mi Dnhtlessa glace at jf, and a fen few ae Set foam sway back ont of sient, |stitt red | emphatic words escaped him: | What | "™"T ‘gave : if “in-law pide is eetouiting sivng An. iis. cade To ask a arsed ras itis “Or to ee it “site, ‘doubt ; vou | snow. i Josed as or, and vee evidentiy tired with re eerenite get of the Oeil de In this‘ pleasant mood he either for- t that when the. logs reached the got eo decent waist line was entirely conceal aa form in posture and move- MGynt when Louis XV. arrived Boucher hinovite ‘painter, introduced the dames Boeuf as coy shepherd- Beauties, and fora time fete; but Bou- and rural if eam awa! f Sweetwood climbed on the rece jog b congratua! ted. Hit 1] aS Sa Sed =o the teaanidie corset. Mai Mario Antoinstte maiden at Little re Tri in vogue Dur pees brought the waist immediately id to hineelf; Pabd TH int take rey eae ieee i with fond the od the esponsibility of ‘posting’ this rebel and be [om steel wittlebone and satin corset t t ; 5 came ip wi century, to ee ee Bats ais be began ee smdisputed fa¥ir, until this is atest move- eee Repos Fe fo hie Doe oree re {oe ons ae en produced he card) sbs | at sunli's epsed Hint th even-try to eet mens tine a ta history the bff mean Snotber doctor, Montae ssi | looked upon as a, mean attempt to take me erie et someinSiw bo | "tn this deme all hat could be sa es inst it ‘re atiied “by ti “Dve you times with- ime it failed utter! was joid_ on grim dea km : cit gumber that Takewood ia good en: tones get te oe abe u Ehat There's still|and await the worst, which to ail in- and it may i that i final doom has Fy dear -" sadam, I don't mean to| before; how he had urged bis dutiful | oe cor aepen aes tents: seemed Jn 2 ae ae asperse Dr. Lakeworth’s | profesional anxiety for her health as the re 2 have. no control over your inten-| deat “tae of. express 4 Stilton sin proof of this I have not sent | for ca in Sir Alfred Bi 32nd | tions, madam ; dam ; you | Gity or rapid transit my otis va for an ordinary on, then, in sorte, of himeelt, be reulled | my daughter ‘Kate ae pon | ice uae mregee are vit tae = ee thas been 99 ¢ dur-| supplant Dr. Lakeworth; and now, in-| Drcsess” imately all I) way that log {yall went down the mou ing few days, Tam Be red oe doing loan Soyerine. in that Se Tt was a very sedge that if he | west branch of the juehanna, where ing to asi you to © allow Sir Altre Blod. Was made use of aie were cut out of in favour of |the drive ended, and was at least, Beartening, and enough to Paveeey tet ie eel es, elvecte Gnome scot ee Sante me wae 2 sufferer; but its ef entum wit ier a Jrrinkled conntenance | 227 one. 3° wonder that Mr. tie Sas baated. pat ag et of iis descent tbe log with The rooms of a Korean woman ae caer me of the new | Som ¢ Cee aoe et ar bine | easton kbink Kate would lose much. | Swestwood aif as sacred to ber as a shrine is to i ea eee BO | Scone int pacyents snake or fants] see eee Sa caet See ne T have | shoes as they waited upon him at din-| Spart, in your po doubt, that be wil take your ur case on'| fer. Breryin way ot ee ee eg thwart "Sinderstand be te be now in daly at-| little > tempers get the Better of us: the | of whom 1 can. approve.” L = Denied tee git aone te cae, ‘Thea you don't approve of Charles ‘The vision conjured up this adroit ‘the joint as tough as leather. Kate: | raxeuorti renark tog an untmediate who was skilled in reading the pater-) “No, Mrs. Lamshed; Ido not. As) ike Mrs. veered Lightly: to | al barometer, took little time to dis-| tinge stand now, I most emphatically |im bis ri the social altitude of Sir Alfred's august | cover Si ae ee disapprove of "him ; and there's an end | strea id a Pree) ot seat: * Sree rsa actbing infectious et Marl- | ¢ cs iene re was a dead silence for five min- Is Jonks @ man you can t trust, papat ithe fa fair danght expect to aie your money. * of 50 contrary a caring ee which the his Pages Fat ia January 8, hed it merri ead knots ado FHE COUOS ISLAND BOD. sh Se ae AN EXPEDITION TO SEEK BURIED TREASURE IN THE PACIFIC. mh. to < Brack- h since his es with P minster, by appointment, to meet with | ¢rerP,% Seer, ago last Mari Pe the bishop, who hath given me the liv- rh was little love betwixt the | Capt. Gould Kuows Where a Famous Hoard ing of Sternax, newly ited. son had been peice: Hiddeu and Mas Persnaded some His lordship v urteous and did ma Se aot ee wee be- < diubbers to Advance the Money He seud snaiiee toe ocepag obs falng ULE TN a But ons Lan's Day | F a aakey (yee sul fe ss we us for Dorothy, at the ont ' 4 9 alone, and think of it the more|Sir Ralph did not aes thereat, for |sail the Pacific Ocean and the ad that ‘tis now two years to that very | t2¢ discourse was ed full at | turous folk who go with them or tists my unceasing sorrow. Yet the good bishop would have me, at the least, dine with him and. did rae me, 2, of fe and behavior, albeit of good Gieune and ames Sea, Sir Ralph Brant, whom Mr. , the former parson, now dead am ey “jaun- dice, did ever regard as a thorn in his flesh On my asking wherein he did more particularly offend, ae. that,” quoth recisely tell. a Minas, was I wasalittle downcast at the thought hand “Be of good cheer!” said he.. ‘What, though the man bean odd fish? ‘Iwill to land by virtme of your office!” Thence, parting from the bishop with his blessi m, being originally from id ly sor he, “I have eS but have heard strange ings of would fill a book. beens he, being a merry man | and ofa pretty enough wit, did, to my great content, fall to beguile the way with this Sir Ralph. briefly set down one or two things he did tell me. a @ three years ago, Sir Ralph be- e ing but newly come to Sternax, a (ee? couple of footpads, bold knaves, did mecting. “At length the raseals did to stripa wealthy Gennen tiie sks oudiinen eatin likea fowl toa stake passed under his bent thighs, and was found next morn- Mier it, did disguise him im shite: boats aut bower ite! shoulders ae be Heres 3 himself as an aged man, an ing on a crutch did je that way at jim ‘the two jee were for im like the rest, when he out cloak, and, being a qustvellous strong ae trounce them both and: tie pens to back. Ss the end“ ed in Brackminster jail, MagB> peered carn sat and were both hanged. Hore be another ‘ale, Sir Ralph aia ing through Sternax village one ay, when. he heard words ant © “ihe 2 was entreat- ing her son to turn the dung-heap aside rn door lest she ec mills hands oh the bees ork “otled ths ‘cia the. y lout D steps Sir “Yes, my quoth he quietly, & ery not oa 50, bat the stones for th rhon all is done.’ pla th of Sir role now for ies pay,” Ralph, with @ quosr eulle, “follow eae asa 3 know: i nny till thy Ae out Has Sight a fe ae into the heart of x CGommor pe ners Sir f Ralph dia | teste Mint cig bee tily, we Alay be ottiaak bela asodieha: to your mother, or there'll be another pa ‘And from that day no saint conld | bad keep. the fi than did ‘Tob; _ commandment better Nor will he sound as | weather, I wilt an was ble beyond ienearen And all ia 90 point draw with folded Png! like toa stone figur: But Be Se or weak on 0 did come meet him, wage! Es ‘stump of tail. The wrathful man raise did pat it on aon iT ectaid Lage lore to: have coed it alll” T could not help but join Mr. Thrupton’s pee yet was ae inly rieved as well for Mr. 0b; He only one another's defects. 1 ter of the dog thei feud. January 9. Frit arrive. shpeoe ie round my joy, health and of ay eure aad did rally na a Seerenatge od t] iA ory as heat ed ‘wi wi nal April 10.—We are arrived at our new beet and ai 2 the house but a sorry mart upon ne en Sie Ralph did sit a been with ebuchadnezzar, | it, artven J for Bs Sins toa ‘ional oa far | pedition to go in search of buried treas- ee 5 ee meat), Pe got and was w: Of the church holding himself as talked, it to lie on the steps of the |peditions have scome f in act, to Kick, but | ag ; did of a sudden. change ‘his mind and joing to aiaté, trolley ptoriay Bi Oo; 1 di |search of it, and is pledged not to re- def t= |men or should have healed their | the’ expedition. He has r Aur to their tales ashore baye talked and Pete cast Past with oa vit spirit, and hurling javelins of despite at the ed and dreamed about the thers David ‘of he uipit who would fain |Isiand and its buried treasure: ve harped to him the soothing mel- ody of true doctrine and sound ‘adv: sea all know, and ery we inted a man: Jandlubber: ides, = Rever, to eat butcher's /next morning, pS See cash | st into the scheme. sea fo.lr have the land- itbers with aaa have listened and believed, and the ex- to naught, = the treasure = waits in Cocos nd. ext week an uurora, and will take with im several other sea captains whose faith in the buried treasure of Cocos good faré Island is as dauntless as his own. They note, ‘than grins ave as have no doubt that thes will be able But J, too, was in pl mood, and|to find it at once, because they have pade ahswer that they dined off fish CHARTS AND MAPS Brackminst at; which” was a tit bit |of the island which show exactly where ht of, whereat she did break into |the treasure is buried and how to reach merry latighte which music to |it—cbarts made by n who the has ever Sy im the island and found the treasure a sea Captain from Cape Bre- fina, who owned a little trading schoon- of his trips Yet. Tn on preter, 9 with y uyen-tree Lee ene he heard oft ihe t treasure and after Dorothy and I be already drawing plots of {alterations in the house which, ks, will be fr ae a and, doubtless’ more to. a ‘a li lng, Mr. Thorp having ia ‘inmarciga jorocay ta fe ve me forget but hath. herself to eee 12.—] appearance the neglect it April 29—'Tis strange ye comes. not to church. “It cannot be that he hath heard my ill reported of, for the people, and notably the younger men, do flock to the cnurch every Lord's Day.» And . Bullamy, ae cacech erie tells “twas. but a on in Baton Thorp's igo tha mest bd wenbent andl aR dren, and for the and But Sir Ralph I have not yet nog bath ibe mde me welcome, content, show me i ered civility—vension t runlet of his Shristnas 90 that Bir Ralphs rat walt tact judge him hastil; erchance he eae % dads of some trou- common. May 3—Dorothy, God bless her! be into much favor in the reason of her kind heart and win- penne! aSsi: <i AGL amiiTtberaiuie oe anereree a “Mayl5—Am hewl ning Ways, and fecaloeats7 keane, and my ing. sooth the Be bs $ HH Eee aH Bee JeRe heathenish engines ‘woods, which ioe loth to credit ands be Borat. writing | bi cumgs’ 50 firange have befall befallen that, oa the telling gies more fulness a1 wont. Oe nninp/ofclock st aie 19, when, after wi a eae pets kno cloak for fe The messenger, a Taw coun ‘Gd guide me to the farm, eee ‘to (Zo Be Continued.) eee SeNehe QUEEN. the Queen = seh ast a {its “Gul to knit he: of silk mittens for her ee i ie, tipee ioe this waters ‘A pair of beautifully worked mittens arrived on the Queen’s birthday. The little girl, received in return another many tears. Papa took aittons with the mousy; my: broth fad the bonbons.” ge the hiss his little vice best fwine |° ad pre than | he precio hi . nooks: Abertay over the matter for a voyage ostensibly ge a See voyage, but soon as he out of sight of land ict, the bowie ipa bsoner toma the eee alee of his dreams. after .d. and sailed far down tor ese he fees he found the gold- en island and the golden treasure, too. it man, was the Cape Breton sea Captain, and he knew Ste was none too figured the matter out that if he Ton a little of the treas- > 5 a gentle Tiley ar oye night from Cocos Island there came a. suddi storm so furious, ‘that the a driven course. And in the "imi of the night he heard the of breakers and | Pao s through the rotten hull SS Ge ship AIL sight long the and the waves aanty over S = which the natives s small boats and Fook th the Capiain yee] his two comrades as] THEY LOOTED Sie al ware had left on the schooner and rom the men everything they pos- died after a few weeks, and the Cap- tain, pte final desperation, stole a ani boat night and sete alone out fter ten and he soto egw heat and brain-with- sea in an open boat. Bui were picked. gE. and Be Se. BY: by and mee inute in their details and dir- ectione),of Cocos Island and its buried .. Capt. Gould. Fre with him in cio ae went thei days of thirst ‘and hunger | whi what they going for, the expe i “Tat least settle the most ae: - believed tale of buried treasure that tacked about in all the regions wash- by the Pacific Ocean. AN ARABIAN WEDDING. ‘The Sterner Sex Excluded from the House a med Brige—a Pretty and interesting Even The TaGtie extract from the let- ter of a gir in Cairo describes an in bian wedding which the writer was permitted to witness wae of a small party of favored gues Ats pat in the Se our Ara- gonian, who, by the fi ating sage picturesque supplied with letters of recomm: tion from many famous people, mi at the door of our hotel with thse enormous a Be were our sides of the houses were seal - for the:men, as none of the sterner sex were all room or house of the brid mount- ed three flights of stairs, and found r rge room filled with Arabian women of various classes, also e Grecian and en. stuffs, combinations I cannot. begin to: pa fe The women ee around id us to the divan arranged for a bride, seating the oldest in the party in the middle, while the rest of mn either side. bee Re ‘asthe per tunsleal We n, our seats of honor in exphict the bode aia es a but she insisted that w ais cise ide oe Bets seis ete es pied the middle seat just vacated by one of the party, and so we sat through all the howling and banging, the push- spoke a little English, some rina ene net evant a, Pinally 3 very intelligent Greek woman took us in charge; she ce 3 linguist, and wi bled to appreciate |} ad seen after her explana- ents, EAR a oes cat little cakes and big cakes, all shapes and flavors, and last one awful altar of some Kind co wine. dof the bride's part ‘of fe “entertainment, We went wn ae party; and there’mat a very jolly old riest, ‘who hed been in London and a nt yet seen, but se were soon presented io him, ‘with his at- tendants, 6 parading up and down this inclosed street, preceded by an Egyptian band, We presented bim with out two remai 5, Wedding Enpdeane one, Raclatetemeaia Jaot ally itielttyr the old priest, and went home by morning 2. Airough it it all “hey ah re tia be gir 4 the following day, Frid: : lowing day, Friday, we the famous Whirl- Briday, one must bear mmedan Sunday, bo court sur- ing in mind is the Mohai sy pols ts. md and sround for was new ey re > must ‘uunpleasa: PSrhich one the “ fereepe 7g ‘ng old fellow, Tee is oh up pepo oe hysterics and frot Dept ar uneanny si : sights reach- | saw this beautiful day in January with _ wr al as blue as turquoi: as June. in arg mir dragoenass took us to the Isle of Rio, near where Moses was found haraoh’s daughter; then to Old 0.9 ih is indeed quaint a ey tic, nick i, Is iS butt upon the. spot e er for the Virgin seer eagi illo they wers a Meee the men of our |j, ity whirled fintil it seemed to us to |@ark hor: a n $ ~ [A SHEATHING PROPELLER, 1T MAY BE VALUABLE FOR ese AND OTHER SM SMALL CRA ‘The Inventtan of a Fachtamnn of Scottand Ma; at Will or Thrown and owner er ronilla, has invented a propeller which be utilized to give the vessel’ speed ‘The principle vention is jonuay valuable to large and small craft, whether it fly the yacht ub pennant or the company emblem that floats ~ the masthead of a trans- tiantie line! cos ne great) diffiolty with which operation of the propeiler has been contrentea from its ea is that sible to change the position of the pro- peiler or withdraw it from the water, it i This with the sheathing propeller, as it is cailed, were ca: out on a fishing t of about seven tons, yacht meas- urement. When not in pro- peller is invisible, as it is housed in a are fixed through the stern post of he vessel. A movement of an extend- ir, |ing rod, or rather rods, brought et by the select of a et in the engi room, brings ropeller, in pane outside of Ce ee. still feathered—that is, they ed ee The Hats Ue a second lever ‘unfolds the blades and places them in position. “Now let ee Jered wives the propetler motion be pulled and the vessel will at once receive that impetus which forces ugh a ee mae we tres “the en- tion is wsdostel bie to craft of eats seize, it Js more particwarly “applicable to Yachts and: other yess tively small ee “Nol on draw| it. on foe yen fwhen be placed at tee ee Hesired point. in, it ity to operate these propellers by means of steam; electri of some sort may be utilized to equal ad- vantage. ‘This is one smail id efited, for it DAINTY ELECTRICAL ENGINE oe that whieh Ane soli to ber its. agent lon men who have d aboard steam craft is that the slower a propeller moves, the re difficwit shi con- trol. It ‘someti: hat el wi Ferguson’s invention renders it pos- sible for one of these propellers to be ide of a boat, as well a position some ers could ae be utilized. eas at Cael pane seal Ww cried. ‘by th the I istter as well as. as the form er, it gives the owners of sailing yachts a chance to have ail Abe benefits which result from proceeding unde most altogether and a: the same time having sheathed in the huil, a pro- peller, that in of a calm’ will! en- able the vessel to proceed without the Toss of ti ‘hich must oi fol- low. prices it upon ‘the unpleasant ot en- FINE HORSES. Renperee Wi ite mae) us Fy a Bay ray. The boys ee of “Baverer William of valuable blood- ich: he color, the other let, ant eer bea it splendid davai: fot te te the ie the Binsosor selects te yuently. to mene the “attention vat feature of the be is ‘the = i 4 i ne iy i a i ih ie feet tere teed Dr the governs ae y charger is a_finely- bred vith oe magnificent His manners SEE ge te ies: z i

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