Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 5 May 1898, p. 3

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runlshment Hotel out to :n'._ student by Society and en. young` man who xope.su_p_w1th 5 Not nu-mum: Ancoooaonu; V ` "Talking about poker, '.f~ jd. ;` (no aged man _to a coterie at.Ohaiin`;g;-. lin s, reminds me of something that occurred about 20 years ago at the Uni. versity of Virsinia. Thatwas about the liveliest epoch in the historyof the university since the war, or for-_fti'; matter of that before it, when the life led by the students is taken into con- sideration. There was a big crowd or devil may care young men there, most of them with plenty of money, -and \ they made Charlottesville and sur-; rounding Albemarle fairly hum. These kindred spirits formed a society which took the name of `Eli Bananas. " -r~r,__ LL- .._....I--.. -...:I-J -4. -_2.I___4|_, ADVANCE N0. 5 DUNLDP ST.. TOP FLOUR. PROPRIETOR. BINDERY sons and two daughters survive him. They are Mrs. Chas. Braniff, of Collingwood; James, of Toronto; and Mrs. Thos. Not. etinghan, Will, and Harry, of Midland.- Midland Free Press. -`The deceased was a brother of Mr. M. Shanacy, inland revenue oicer, of this town. yIUVUll IILIU Ill-IIULI Vb Ul-lllll There was a consultation over what should be done with Lurk, who stood with head hung down, overwhelmed with the proof againsthim. It was de- cided that he was not worth calling out, as he was not a gentleman, and the ver- dict was that he should make restitu- tion ot all the money he had won since his participation in the game and suex ostracism in the university. He V was compelled to sit "down and write out a check for all the money he had won, the memorandum books of the other players showing the amounts they had lost at various times, and he was kept under surveillance until the Oharlottes- ville bank, in which he kept a heavy account, opened next morning. One 01 the party rode down to Oharlotteeville and cashed the check, and then, thesen- tence of ostracism went into eect. ' H I. A , _ ___.L_-_..'l `J -` Frank Bemrose in Orillia. Onthe eve of his departure for the Old Country, where he will study music, Mr. E. C. Mainwright, choirmaster "of the Metho- dist church, Orillia. was given $109 in gold, accompanied by an illuminated address. At the farewell concert in connection with the presentation'Mr. Frank Bemrose, of Barrie, sang. The Times speaks of him as follows : Mr. Bemrose sang Arise, He calleth thee, and.` `The Good Shepherd, and in response to an encore, Thy will be done. This was the first appearance of this gentleman; before an_ Orillia audience as a soloist, and all present were very much pleased with his ne voice and choice rendering of his dier- ent selections. In the duet with Mr. Main- wriaht, Excelsior, his voice was also -heard to advantage, and they were compel- led to repeat in response to a vociferous }Cr Saws It BUILD|NG_LDT FOR SALE.- .em"a.uuy ` `A 1 c swn; XnvAxc:0nicn. 't' . " 36-u. . [L7t McQuARRY's LARGEST CIRCULATION, MOST NEWS---MOST ADS. % B.UlLDING_LOT I-_on siu.: . -AA 1" Vofntho .lIu"pu]t. Always ` tn. _oi'. Careful]? Gummed and T1-nod ut . .. V ....., .` ,.. w (ye-v `. .,n: ' n-`thy 2% `y _. y :m_;v-K '. I ` 'k,:_;,:v:: V I I . . ` ' V I `l cHEArrEn%M`mTxm g; m ' o .. ' " 1' f"`*'* *4. .- 11;; ..`;`.~ ' - ' BlVacksHn\ith.an,d.Gcnera`l snap. 'BARRIE. - - 43-tf ONE ISSUE A WEEK, ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. VVI-IUD UL UEIILKIUIDLLI YVUI-III IIIUU Ill-lv\l That fellow ha the unheard}! of- trontery to remain at the university un- til the nals were completed. He was there six weeks.` No student or professor. or servant or townsman, no man or- wo- A man. white or -black, spoke to him or took any notice of him. He attended the anal balls, and no one recognized him. He was not quizzedin a lecture room` or addressed by a girofessor. ' Still he re- mained until the7unive`rsity closed to: the season, but he might `aswell have been in the middle of `the'Saha ra'deser|` so far as intercourse with` peoplawa-.I" concerned. -Washington' Star. - *""`|'l I129 UUQ HDTV KICK VIQIII 0 And over. " ilavaha the wealthy Ou- ban who was smoking turned to a 1:-lend and remarked `ecstatloally: "Th1! ll; what I call a good algal`. It'll! Florida product. `I .iini'porHtmyde "L-.-'-Plli ~ - delphla Notth AnIer.i094B- H ` . _ . Jnn`'.'- \ b10k " on 'l7p:,`;,1gs,gs.oV!9' `m' .` f, . ` - `V I `3 WI huhd, and Uncle Eben.` .f0h ; " .mI;In` 5 ~bp;.!9h;r'bQin ._f,w .300lil_lI;nti318 yeamob mam 'g3=yvhh. .-:u_ `_ ..v- ---. Ah, " said tB:Jaoksonvu1o man; .. he sat in his luxurious library, "rthQI,!_8.'i';: nothing like` a good Havana. cigar!" Ana ......... 3.. .-...-s.. 1.1.- .......lLI... n- lmjportod. [gun Illav -auun-w vn nun: a-n-Uuill Here the speaker smiled at evidently . amusing reminiscences. There is no telling what the `Eli Bananas _didn t do. For the quintessence of mischief and devilment they took the laurels. There was nothing downright had about. them, but their antics were awful. Fan- tastic were the tricks they played and grotesque their jokes. Between freaks the Elis were prone,to poker, and it was customary down there for the players to assemble at this or that student's room. That brings me to my story. One ccterie of poker players comprised sons of some of the best known and wealthi- est men in the south, and into it was introduced a young Virginianwh_o- was gifted with many attractive traits appar- ently, but whose antecedents were not particularly brilliant. I'll call him Dick Lurk, but that wasn t his name. 1lIl-..L -1 4.1.- ..s.L.... a..i1-_... :_ LL- -- ii;o fhe.-1:3`;-iw<;h.:nTo.o.;; ornm`wub'i: t Bo.-`hello ! -who loves the now ' `wins and: --nI-ml-_ `.0 tlnohildron You tholnow. and thingy. V` '1'!I'umb1oovoritl ` " ` Old winter but in h ` ' . . and tlI`!:I.)lp:.avm- Lam `up. I `O. can WIIIUUI IIIIFQ K` II M Wlfll I119) end tumble on: It. ' In 1! lanshigas Jolly lnmblo. - ` .'.l'h:-ouch `efenowdrltt that they stumble. `rhea a snow men. like e dough men-_ V. Though he_ really look: like no men-- Thqy frccsti as any Roman, Ercjhe halt chance to crumble. E ll,-1'IAl\" imen lung. LL-` ....-- uu.- nuum -nno IOVBI no Let: h1m_aI_1,1_n-playing col _ 4 , On the road it makes`: cushion Io tho whouhv nan: cuatfla ncvgn ls VEUIIUIUCKII IIIISUUIUIIIIIIUII TUIIUWIIXE: can't rattle over it. . - Butallthe boys in merry whirl: the)` ten)` and battle over it. . Then the girls, both high and humble. Bring their sleds without a grumble. And I-coasting. cheeks 3-roasting. Every one 0! speed e-boasting. Down the hill they all go coasting. "With a jounee and bounce and tumble. So. hello! Who loves the snow TAO his-n` nub, ._nIn-{-... ..-l nu, uuuul , vino 1078! me IIIOW Let h1m` out a-playing oi -M;u_~tha Burr in St. mcholuy One Man Who`Wl11 Never forgot the la- -....__ I'u-'.-L-_ I suppose that allot us who felt the living, frenzied force of that awful on shore hurricane .will dream `about occasionally as long as we live, ea an ex-bluejaoket of the United Stat navynow _living in Washington. wh was among the Vandalia _ahip s com- pany at the time of the great naval dis- aster in `Apia harbor, Samoa, in revert- ing to that experience. For three or vfouriyeare after I got out of that men all safe and sound the r'nem'ory of it used to get tangled up inmy head when I was asleep; and I would `wake in a tremble and be unable to sleep for the remainder of the night. ' But time has softened -the oraggier. edges of the re-; rnembranoe of that horrifying black. wind,` and once in a spell -' nowadays I forget all about it for two or three days" V at a time. - _ Mcst of the other fellows in the co- terie had roommates `who were boning up for the nal examinations. It was well along in the spring, and Lurk had quarters to himself on East Lawn. Con- sequently the poker beganto be played exclusively in his room. - When the evening seemed propitious, the word would be passed around at supper that `three Kentuck' would be in order, and at 8 o clock or thereabout the players would assemble at Lurk s. Lurk s luck was stupendous. He won steadily, and as the game was pretty stiff his win nings were substantial. It-was noticed after awhile that he always passed out when somebody had a particularly big band on somebody else s deal, but that he always held a top hand when there were big ones out against each other on his own deal. Then somebody noticed that the seals were always broken on the half dozen new decks of cards pro- vided each night before the game began and that Lurk in dealing always closely scrutinized the cards as he gave them out. -,.'n,. 4|, , .,,_, -1 _ A- Cv U! A-we There was one man in my mess on the Vandalia who was never quite right after we went on the reef. ' I was ship- mate with him for two years" afterward, and his occasional wildness was plain` to all hands, and men-who've been ship- mates with him since-for he's-' till in the outte-tell me that he's `net as bad- ly haunted by the memory 0 the disas-,1 tar as he was. when `last I saw him. This man was a shipwright, and his name was Turley. `Before we had that bad blow Turley was as cheerful and as chipper a- man around decks _as I ever: swapped yarns with. but when he get well of his broken arms down in Apia he was a changed man. I never saw` him crack a grin after the blow, and ircm a stout,-husky fellow he became thin and haggard looking. He recovered all right physically from thething, you see, but it sort of twisted his head and prayed upon him. He swung his hm. mock alongside of me on the Alert for two years after we were sent up to duty ` on the west coast again, and it was a common thing for Turley to hop onto! ; his hammock in a frenzy in the middle 1 of the night in port or at sea, yelling ` like a madman: `All hands abandon ship! She's going to strike! He created - a lot of excitement up forward by doin this, but after awhile the men got use to it and only turned over when they heard Turley howling. IITL -..... LL- -4..-.-Inn LI-slung. `An LL-..- XUUIQIQ 3|-0 -vs .., - _.. It was the regular thing for theoor- poral of the marine guard at the gang- way to prod the poor chap awake when he had these crazy somnambullstio spells and put him back in his hammock. for he d come out of them as weak as a kitten and trembling. all over.` There were a number of us on the Alert who were washed up in the Samoan disaster, and naturally once in awhile we'd get to talking about it. But it didn't take us long tond out that we couldn't talk about it while Turley was around. The mention of the thing in his hearing would bring an insane gleam into his eyes, and he would suddenly begin to talk. incoherently and at the top of his voice about reefs and dragging anchors l and all that, so that we learned to] knock oi! Samoan hurricane talk when he was around. I don't wonder much either. It was an evil enough blow to ` nigh .tnrn any man's headgear tcpsy tnrvy. -Washington Star. - `r 1 lcanbite The Cache In Alaska. The settlements along the Yukon are few and far between and consist, for the most- part, of the same elements. There are the company s store; the huts and tents of the natives; the crowd of howling. dogs; salmon hanging in red strips, burnished with copper tinges in the sun; little tots of children; chatter-g i ing women oifering baskets. moccasins 1 and trinkets for `sale, and here and there 1 perhaps asquad of uniformed children; i marking the work of some missicn--- \ good lookin. `clean looking` children. but, whether Ghristianized or not. spoiled for living like natives aga { The `problem is, What is to become . them? Along the banks are occasionally met the rude huts and tents: of small parties of Indians come hither` to out wood for the boats or to ilsh, but. how- ever simple the .ha,bitation_; it must al-` ways `have. the (cache, or storehouse. propped upon posts to l:eep`the supplies out `oi. reach ot_' _'the dogs,` for these dogs through Va" tin` can and almost climb agreased pole in search-ct food- The cache should have .a place on the coat "of arms of Alaska. It is `universal. nu- _' n:..;.. no.2- 1. LL. lrI.....I.- H UUID UL DL'lIII.UI nauuuuo 5- up uuovv--- -`.`T'.'|? e Rivgr Trip to the Klondike." by Jqhn S1dnyy`Webb. in VIIIU5 Gilli. \IrIIID.v `up -1`: cu phiul ma gojan 1.11 gm d,,hlnok_rn'-!?.;- only a hint radiosrsph. hudlx visible, A minu'te"'g in nmouiu to tell - A.__- .l_-... - Jglnn nbnnn i IIIIIUV I in-ivv--u-v` -- -.. :t::o I; gain _|tqno._ , cuts: -qv--r ~ radiograph-" -that lo, the hint- 4 an r-y"phoeomph"--!- an -reel!-nti `goat -fpr gems.`Di.u.nondI. , pearls. rubiel. a 1 L c ' .`.L2i..$'S. 3.';`i.`. .?.?. 2.3:: HAUNTED BY M EMORY. A PAGE FROM 1'!-IE ulnwmrren rue:-F5 TORY or A UNIVERSITY. % % ` 1f:he_.ot ml -Island,` hi the Am V `j.est.'took place: M- as run as th had at the my. 8bo.ut_four,mi1I;I from the sea. This `bay,eat its mouth, is three _miles wide.- On the west side of the `bay is Point Rubal Gaye, -and on the east side Point Maya. These points have a very slight elevation Lahore the sea, but the con- guration of the harbour is such as to give the batteries on them a command- ing position. Stretchinglbaok from the sea batteries are hills, and it was be- lieved - the` guns had been mounted "somewhere there, concealed by the shrubbery. _ bD\a....'a,:.`:,.< ,- ._ .~_..J-___) _, :_-l , `V. ,> _,_ ` ` > ` .. - . , . FR` 4'. - . _ , . . ._f. .-2 .` ?._3} K. L `f : ~mmm@f& War At 9. few minutes before 1 o'clock there was a puff 7 of smoke from the east shore, and an 8'-`inch shell whizzed toward the New York and fell short. Scaroely. had the report died` away than another puff of smoke oated upon the Point Mays side, and easily blew away. This shell else fell short. I ' The range of the east battery was nearly seven thousand yards, but the agship promptly opened re, and with one of her 8-inch guns. The engage- ment` in a few minutes became general. The shore and bay were covered with the wind-blown smoke, while hollow between the hills roared with the can- nonsding. . Continuing to cut loose with her guns, starboard and port as well as fore and aft, the New York steamedquickly in, and circled around to the westward toward Point Rubal Caya, `while the Puritan swung to star- board to engage the Maya batteries. The Maya battery was the most for- midable, and the re from it was more frequent, but the shells fell short. _ The .bembafdment is well tolii by a press oorteepondenten board the New York: The New York ignored this battery after a. minute, and proceeded to pay all her attention to the battery on Rubal Gays, which was being pushed to completion. ' ' UKU- At last one night the son of a fa- ous Confederate general who now ives in Baltimore became convinced that Lurk was cheating. Picking up the deck that Lurk had just dealt and out of which he had got a hand with tour queens against an ace full held by I young Kentuckian the young man said quietly: (C 661...... Ag.` 3:: 4I`\4\n`I.i|lI n` n`n nun-mg The eye, following the direction of the short, would see an instant later a great cloud of dust and fragments of concrete and mortar yhigh in the air." Then would come the roar of the piece. sullen and heavv. The New York had soon reduced the range from 7,000 to 3,000 yards. and shortly was tossing shells into Rubay Caya at the rate of about three a minute with wonderful precision and apparently with `great de- structiveness. 0 no into the air would go is cloud of dust--atoms of the Spanish fort-looking for all the world-like the `explosion of a magazine of brown pris- matic powder when viewed from the deck `of_ the Summers N. Smith; In the meantime the Puritan was taking care of Point Maya. V It was a long shot to that battery. It was so wellmasked that the only target was the frequent smoke from the battery. But when the Puritan got the range her shells burst every time within the fortication, and great was the explo- sion thereof. - V The `Neiv York wee just giving the signal to retiife, when '_ one deant shot was red ftbm Rebel Oeye. It was `the last ehotthet battery "was ever to The _1 uritan was doihg fn11yVas_ much harm on the east side of the buy as the New York was doing on the west side. am an this time the i-Jincinnati had re- mained out of action. One can hardly imagine the distress and impatience of Captain Chester and his enthusiastic crew at not being allowed to take a hand in this, the rst battle of the war. Captain Chester himself signalled for permission to engage. and it was grant- ed by'the agship. ,, .I__A.. L2..- AL-_:L "' `J '-' ""`'f' The Cincinnati, in less time than it takes to write it, steamed up to within 2,000-yards, broadside on, and began to let i with her guns at the batteries. _,!__!_ _. 4.`. - On Thuroduy 8,000 men of. thel United`_'_States jmny ware ordeied to :.pg,epare:i::itn`e`!ii.t'el_y` to lsvg fog Oqbo. 0wuei0wi11 Pr`5%W 0 9' wioinity ihoir ulanding The Q}:- to e-6-wsh00a~1-as ~`-`rt. , 3 -. ` 7$ .v- ';. ---~-I-~-11-:-2/T Ann.` hui HI 9. '.One of`_th,e"v big gqm on the Puritan follbvyd hack, r. you the bpstphot of the day. It atpuk the battery just where I:ho.gun~' hora. cits .w{gy"into zthe eu-thw'orlVr_s, and explodd, doing amon- UUVUL UIIVIIIVIV-uv yvv ......_ -:t)f.'v<>_;)_:ert`|tI'i5_!1i',"` 'apil mi 7.nbei$i; . vvih'th6 Qnbtn "at-my. Many "of the I`$I\}UlJ a `Some one is cheating at this game, and, Lurk, I think it's you. u\'f-_. -4. LL- TT...:........:A.... -1 1'78-.-I-.8- ; _T'<>nnn-nun T0 cum. many of the W .%..f... ,,..V.p_`;y M go-aomenhmgmaiung ~....T.,5-e .lff.$Vn1' aanrar ` Pun. a"[`l!..;!-s The parser published .-na Al-rim iitshility f<.>1lovi:=-, l9` is patiently; awaiting the at- liak-1Iich7 America is noisily threat- ening to make simultaneously on Cuba, Porto Rico and the Philippine 'lIs_1ands her undisciplined forces, while her preachers and merchants, nding the task more diicult than they had calcu- lated, are already quoting , the Bible to prove that peace is a good thing for civilized nations. On the American side are hodge-podge, brag, bluster, hy- pocrisy and funk ; on the Spanish side are complete unanimity and readiness to die for the country, trusting in Potatoes for Seed. All the large growers of potatoes used seed that had been out init-wo or A more pieces. This is done not alone to economize seed,7_but because the whole i potatoe contains so `many eyes that will grow that the shoots! will crowd each other, with the result ot an immense number of very- small and nnsaleable potatoes. "Mr. T. B. Terry, ot Ohio, cuts potatoes to single eyes. But he chooses a few of those that uappearto be strongest, and gets a good-sized piece of potato with it. `Yet under the very best conditions, as where potatoes are started in the rich soil of hothouses, the single eye with scarcely any potato attached may be propagated, and each sheet may then be subdivided, making .a much greater number of hills from a potato than there are eyes or buds on it. This was done` by the more en- thusiastic growers" of the Early Rose potato when that variety was intro- duced. One nurseryman, who received three small tubers of the new notato, subdivided the buds until, when he was readyto plant in early spring, he had enough shoots to plant several square rods, and he had more than two bar- rels of fine potatoes` in the fall. But ordinary potato outtmg does not require. such care as this. it is too often left to unskilled and unthinking operators, and we have heard of farm- ers who used machines for slicing the potato into pieces nearly uniform in size, and they claimed that the crop thus grown was quite as good as if the greatest care had been taken Yet we believe the sliced potato does not give the best form of sets with eyes. ` If we cut open a potato carefully, it will be found that at the base of each bud there is a more or lsss distinct streak extending to the centre of the potato. It is from this portion of the potato that the shoot draws nutriment, until` it can put forth roots into the soil to supply material for. further growth. If the soil be poor or the planting is so early that the roots grow slowly, this` supply of material in the potato set itself is a matter of much importance. In all cases the potato set having a large chunk of the potato with it will at rst"put forth stronger shoots than that which has only the bud. . But the rapid growth of potatoes after planting is greatly helped by hav- ing the seed out several days in advance, and allowing the cut pieces to callous over by the, drying out of moisture. lf freshly cut potatoes are piled in heaps or in harrels,so that air does not circu- late through them, the seed will quick- ly rot. `So they will if at_ once planted in cold,` wet soil. If .the out potatoes are spread thinly and exposed to light, the seed will come up a week earlier than if it is planted soon after it is out. Not only will the `crop be earlier, but the stalks will be more vigorous, and the yield of potatoes will be greatly in- CIA, Janna, -D VA-Jonas: av Now, at the Univzns; of Virginia such a declaration, if improved, meant , somebody s death to a certainty, and in an instant te party was on its feet. ux1_.... __...:L _ ...:.._L.. .......Ll.._.......l tieued.` I 7"-T-7l'.ao;1don Press: ` Reections of 9. Bachelor. Women never apologize to each other. They only cry end then kiss and make up. "iEv-e"r;fgi"r|1ionght to be ahdt up some- where ghe in 30 and than mun-ied befoxje alga is let out; UIUIVIV SI-luv ow Av Piobubly D;l;l;; had an idea that -.aho:oonld save money by cutting Sam- *aon haii-Lhe4raelf. ' "-W:'!_1;n "a-` her husband forfaoine money to: go ghopping with, .8116 alwnys ldoks Aaurppiaedho gives her more tbali-'3;-dollu-. - ` - .'n1,9 o1;_ % Women vibe `about their rightl, but none _of them want. to do` gay? Zigihp, [Ir th_e`n_a' ya 3 war, 5 {gm of: .thm'.'." ou].d. no at _nr_I- % Nobody `ghogbdhnurigg.-.:e .- , .. ." Sal. eii wanti to V kins . gin; he has once seen her hold 9 uiokgl Cll ILJIIDIA-Ill I-I-IV rub UJ Iv uli VI-I ave: svvv `Just wait a minute, gentlemen, said the accuser qnietly.' `I've been watching this man. Let some one exam- ine the backs of these cards with this magnifying glass. IITTILA I"Au.6-uanhcznun Lam`, `kt; 1'15:-n QIIA `I'd Gloar Out, wlll sell Balance of Baby Gar- ` rlags at cost Price, % 1 Our Stock `of .ScribbIe'rs and Exercise Books Cannot be Equalled for Value. . All `Sizes in Dierent Bindings of their new Presbyterian . Book of Praise with or without Music. _ [snows BOOKSTORE, BARBIE.` All kinds of Blenk Books ruled to any pattern and bound at reasonable rates. Magazines and Music bound in splendid style and cheaper than city prices. Let us quote prices on your work before sending it out of town. Death" of John Shanacy. John Shsnsoy died on` Saturday, April 23, after 3 week's illness from pneumonia. His remains were interred in `the R. C. ceme- tery on` Monday. morning, and a. large num- `ber of his friends accompanied the funeral oortege. He was one of the prominent men `in Midlsnd --industrious, active for his years, end very sociable. As `contractor and shipper, his presence wssfsmllisr to the "yvorkers along the water front in thebusy lesson; sndst meetings of `lovers of good `horses he was among 3 the foremost. .for he was on srdent admirer , of _s handsome and sagas horse. 3 He in born in Albsny. N. Y., `While qu_ite young. his mov- `. ,township_ of. West Gvwllllmbtu-7, end Vesprs _to_wn- 1" ,LIn;Jthel he `married. ` He ' mo'v;ed Elm-i8 and in `s ' eoiitrsetor " there ' ` 5" =71`-*'~;-_93-_i 3.. 11.1 the iconduchor has given her` for change between her teeth while she gets her purse open. No woman who has evertaokled the job of reforming a man ever hankera to reform society} Whenever a man meets another man he owes money to they both try to see whloh can be the first to talkebout the weather. U IIQIIIV CIIV WU`. (of Eve Y0i;:'.&ih shad` been a. , n '.Li._ -__._ 1.. 4321.-.... ..'.'.-m 'I"In-an . am-.1 irhansrIa."..5.?a?7-n `@313 CAIIIQIIICJ II-la allllli The Kentuokian took the glass V and closely scanned the geometrical design! on the backs of the cards. II I__ _-____I-A..-j lI'1|_.-: No mahi would ever say a baby was healthy looking if he wasn't afraid of the women. ' ~ Any man would a lot rather have his wife believe something about him than inst to suspect it and not know. -Preas Siftinge. T I i I{'o'z '1.'3u$.?o}'a"Fe.}n3>e.n. - - Boo? %c`oM'PLr:'r:% STOCK, or scHooL aooxs AND SUPPLIES. ROBT. CRISTOE, BARR|E'S LEADING JOB PRINTING OFFICE. S|MCOE'S PIONEER NEWSPAPER. `By Gaaar! he ejaculated. `Every court card is distinctly marked! Exam- ination by the other players quickly proved the trutlfot this. urnr. -.... .._.... .. ..A-an-u'l6-nflnn nag-n (III-uh`

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