Whitchurch-Stouffville Newspaper Index

Stouffville Tribune (Stouffville, ON), June 9, 1904, p. 2

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clfaptkn xvii been to tea nt the parsons ex claimed jimmy med way with a pro longed staro of astonishment at the unmoved face of his elder brother well i nm i had no idea that ingleby was such a good fellow his brother said tranquilly t wish 1 had looked him up before ayhnt was there to do claude lady gertrude asked from the depth of her chair with her usual air of unwilling interest xo thing there lay the charm miss ingleby is a crack pianist and can talk one listens ingleby is keen on cricket wants me to set the village boys on to play one must i suppose certainly sir arthur added looking up front his morning post that kind of thing is expected of one and the ingleby s are very good people you may rely upon it that i should never give the living to a man whom i could not sec at iny table with pleasure but claude just fancy claude going to tea with the parson con tinued jimmy who was sixteen and looked up to his eldest brother as a prince of fast men i always said murmured lady gertrude suppressing a yawn that claude would develop into a model squire in time he will soon be ait fait in topdressings and shorthorns excited by turnips and depressed by cattle disease you know the kind of man stout and beefy there is no knowing to what heights we may reach by dint of energy and lofty aspiration replied claudo looking before him vith a curious little smile even jim now jim might become a bishop or a judge cotne jim you arc the last and one of us ought to be in the church all of a sudden a light seemed to flash upon jim and he began to chuckle quietly to himself is jessie meade a crack piano player he asked demurely or is she keen on cricket claude looked up with an angry frown that only half subdued jim who had passed jessie at the rectory gate that afternon jessie meade what about jessie meade asked sir arthur who had lost the thread of the conversation in his paper a very quiet wellconducted young person lady gertrude remarked i really think her quite a godsend for pocvdear ethel 1 dont know what poor miss sfoiae has done to be called a young person exclaimed claude with sud den heat claude is right my lady said his father it is very dreadful to be called a person especially a young person unless one is a young per son itut what on earth is jessie meade cried jim isnt a rough fanners daughter n young person no jim- replied sir arthur miss meade though a millers dau ghter is not a mere young person she has every qualification for as cending the social scale beauty much as that young ladys is a dis tinction in itself even without such a manner as hers surely sir objected jim a woman takes her fathers rank her husbands interrupted claude and miss meade is as good as married to a gentleman added sir arthur oh an officer and a gentleman 1 daresay but randal is only rank er jim urged he is a gcntlemacvby birth his father rcplieovvfth emphasis and its lie fipoutshe caught claudes eye onvrtm with a look of surprise and caution oh i thought ho was n foundling brought up by some fgrmer and rose from the ranks returned jim well he is engaged lo a confoundedly goodlooking girl thats nil after all what is birth to a woman claude added with a son- tentiousnesa that highly amused his mother rank und name descend by the male side the son of a dukes daughter may bo only mr smith mr smith with a difference a dukes grandson sir arthur inter jected still plain smith or smith-swel- lington at most sir but as you said beauty and manner are the on ly needful things for a woman her name and rank come from her hus band sir arthur was not sufficiently in terested in the question to point out that this wns not precisely the pur port of his words bid i say so he returned with a gentle smile re tiring into the seclusion of his morn ing post i hope you will go to no more tea parties claude his mother said plaintively they make you ponderous i wish clara would come one docs get so bored at marwell didnt somebody say something about having a letter from her by the wv i heard from her today here is the letter claude repliod you dont care to read it mother well its co about nothing stupid dinner parties very slow bulla gar den party at chiswick royalties gra cious and boring love to aunt gertrude and uncle arthur weather melting season over nothing more i believe claude reflected when he was alone that the governor is half in love with her himself who could have fancied him solemnly giv ing out that her beauty was distinc tion of admiring the manner of a girl so born but who could ima gine that i ah jessie what princess ever moved with so sweet a dignity philip knndal indeed a clown by her by jove ive lost my head that i should live to be so hard hit it seemed so easy at first the old story rustic beauty vanity ignorance of life and so on i won der if any man knows how great a fool he can make of himself for a womans sake i never thought there were such women if my mother had been such a woman or clara or if i had had such a sister i might have been a better fellow i might at least heaven only knows a hard heavy sigh almost a groan broke from him his fnce set tled into a frowning rigidity his eyes darkened his mouth lost its genial curve he turned to the open window gazing over the starlit summer night i must lay my parallel with cau tion he thought a slight silo twiehing his lips how in the j world can i keep clara in town if she brings her heavy artillery to bear upon me what is the good of all these gradual saps and welllaid trains why wont she marry bar- dexter and help me to marry jessie i know she would like to be a duch ess she winds the governor round her finger and my mother sees with her eyes she is clever flier know ledge of life is extensive mid pecu liar i am so utterly alone jessie mused as she passed ajlong in the sunny morning through the fielhs next day and so absolutely helpless i cannot be sure of what is right i can only try to do what i think is right if they would but let me if 1 could sec philip face to face i might inave him understand poor boy lyjrt he is so far away and let ters jfnvk so different he thinks himself so wise about me in his mans arrogance lie a man is a human being i a woman am a sort of weak attempt at one if a man could once look into a womans heart how surprised he would be she had reached the edge of a hay field which wuw divided from the next by n tiny wooded gorge nt the bot tom of which gurgled nnd rippled n bright brown thread of a stream crossed by a wooden footbridge sho descended the slope with easy lightfoot grace nnd pausing ut the bridge nnd leaning against the slight handrail looked down arrested by the fascination of flowing water into czema which torture children are soon entirely cured by the use of dr chases ointment especially during the teething iorjorcst ont lod children are subject to eczema n scald head nnd various forms of skin disease which cause the keenest suf fering to themselves as well as anx iety to their parents there is no treatment so successful as br chases ointment and as ecz ema always tends to become chronic and last for years prompt cure is of the utmost importance mr c wiley who is employed ns cooper lv the kennedy bavis mill ing company lindsay ont states 1 used iv chases ointment for eczema on my little girl some few years ago and soon brought about n thorough and permanent cure she had frittered for considerable time and though we trirrf n great nv remedies ihv chnses oinv wn the only preparation tq festive i cannov too highly of dr ch t states i find that lr chaws ointment is the beat thing i ever used for chafing itching skin and burns and sores of all kinds jt heals them up very quickly and i believe that there is no better ointment to be obtained than dr chnscs avc have found it invalu able and always keep it in the hot tho brown shallow stream dappled by leaf shadows and sunlight she had not waited long before she heard a firm quick step descending from the opposite field and looked up into the handsome goodtemper ed face of mr ingleby at which her own brightened and said with a pretty eagerness as he approached her i am so glad mr ingleby i hope you are not in a hurry i was on my way to see you hurry my dear jess miss meado is anybody or anything ever in a hurry in tho country look at this lazy loitering stream it seems as if it would never get to the sea but it will replied jessie look ing thoughtfully dawn into it it keeps on you see it does the best it can books in tho running brooks what little sermon are you extract ing from tho water miss meade she looked up with a smile and ho noticed the strained serious set of her face the blue shadows beneath her eyes tho general fatigued aspect which emphasized both her youth and her beauty i have so few friends she said and such confidence in you and i wanted you were going to consult me he added gently i only hope i pet kitten shall prove worthy of the trust and if i am too stupid perhaps my sisr ter no returned jessie i dont think miss ingleby would understand oh mr ingleby- she added it is so hard to know what to do so very hard i should have thought my dear child he replied gravely that your life was marked out so clearly before you that you had no need to consider that question that is the trouble of it others mark out my life for me i am not a free agent i am obliged to do what i know to bo wrong surely not no ono who has charge of you would wish you to do what you know to be wrong he re plied with a gentle rebuke i know them all they all treat me as a them all jessie they are all up right true people have yoxi spoken to them but of course you would do so before turning to a compara tive stranger like myself yes sho replied with a wearied air i have spoken to them each and all they all treat me as a child an irresponsible being philip forgets what a difference nearly two years makes in a girl besides ho has been through such stirring scenes that he can scarcely be expected to give much thought to my small con- corns my life is not in perpetual peril you see she is going to break with that poor fellow mr ingleby thought hard linos for philip but what could he expect of such a babe and yet she cannot have asked to be set free no man would bind a girl against her will jessie he said aloud we can none of us take our lives in our hands and say wo will do this and that with them our lines arc cast for us often before we are born hu man beings are so linked and inter twined by ties of kinship duty and mutual service that no man can say i will go this way rogardlcss of others how much less a woman marriage could not take place yet for some time that marriage would place her in a position above that in which sho was born she needed some education for it she wished mr ingleby to persuade her guardians that redwoods was no place for her und that it was only fitting for her to go out into tho world in some honest capacity to teach in a good school for instance nnd receive lessons at tho same time you know mr ingleby she said in con clusion that people always get in to mischief if they have nothing to do and i know that people never need bo idle unless they choose he returned especially women what have you to do with art tho only great artists are men or learning your duty jessie- is to be a wife and mother oh cried jessie with a little impatient scornful turn of her head for sho was sick- of the wife and mother cant is it absolutely neces sary for wives nnd mothers to be idle and dunces men arc not told to loaf about in idleness because they are tojbe husbands and fathers some day philip was not kept from the war on that account mr ingleby smiled indulgently as ono smiles at the mischief of a pretty and gently patted her hand you shall have plenty to do he said you know how glad 1 should bo if you would teach in tho sunday school then i want to start a lending library and a host of parish ihtajsi in which help like yours would ivhalf the battle if you like i w sfsuggcst to your cou sin that you sjtould help in the house hold work and have more drawing lessons as well thank you she replied with an air so faultlessly inexpressive that ho could not detect the sarcasm you mean well she sat with her hands on one of which mr ingleby had laid his own caressingly clasped on her knee looking before her at the brown flow ing stream in a sort of hopeless sil ence for some moments revolving things in iier mind nnd wondering ir sho dared trust him with the truth and if even in that case he would help her to what she knew to be her only saro course he in the meantime was thinking serious ly of her and pondering what the key to her discontent might be how account for the fatigued worn look in the sweet young face had he not seen her only the night before at his own table as happy and plea sant and unconscious of self as any wellconditioned young girl could hope to be and those irrational fears of his respecting the danger of her frequent contact with claude med way hud all been laid to rest there was neither coquetry nor van ity in jessie it was evident that sho and medwny wore able to meet however frequently on such distant terms as excluded any possibility of touching each others hearts her position was high enough to insure respect and too low to admit or in timacy but there wns a depth of sorrowful meaning in jessies face und a gentle patient endurance in tho slightly irooping attitude that went to irfs heart redwoods must be after all a most uncongenial home for such a girl philips dis tance and danger must be a heavy how much less indeed she broke sorrow and then mrs plummers out with a bitterness which startled tongue philip had been alluded to him we wonder at turks who i in a manner which indicated that he keep their women in cages and at was not held the most faultless of chinese who deliberately cripple lovers perhaps there was some iov- them but englishmen are quite as its quarrel hard to bear at such a bad though they do leave their bod- distance and by the girl who was ies comparatively free they cage left behind there was an evident nnd cripplo their souls desire to leave redwoods at the bot- tell me all about it he said loin of it all a desire due perhaps after a brief pause of astonishment partly to the restlessness of a long let us rost upon this felled timber engagement perhaps it was only in the shade and not excite our- n temporary rebellion against cir- solvcs and you shall tell me if you cum stances brought on by a fit of can or- will all about this caging and crippling what you wish to do and what your good friends think of it i am an old friend i knew you as a very little girl a good little girl though spoilt i am the parson of the parish and an old man in comparison with you i ought to know more of life nnd its duties than temper an unsntisfacttory letter from india cousin janes tongue or some sudden disgust at the men plummers rough ways mingled with the discontent of a spoiled child but tho look in jessies face touched him deeply reason as ho would dur ing the long silence in which he stu died it a silence emphasized by the miss jessie meade and few things murmur of tho stream upon its uios- any mother who once becomes ac quainted with the merits of dr clinses ointment would not think of being without it in the house where there is n baby or small children it is of daily value ns n means of cur ing skin irritations nnd eruptions ckuffnjp and all sorts of burns and sores fflgl mr wiu- ixtrfeto farmer it dr chases ointment 00 cenls a box nt all dealers or ednnnson kates company toronto to pro- cerjlect yoj against imitation- the por- 4y au- inlv effected a pmi flniian- trait and signature of dr a thor are on every box would give me greater plcasuro than to do her service yes replied jessie as she took tho place ho indicated on the pros trate treetrunk in tho wood shadow and speaking with a seriousness that rather look him aback it is not like speaking to a young man if people arc not wise at your age they nover will be hr ingleby ruefully passed his hand over his crisp black hair wondering if ho had suddenly turned gray nnd if crows foot had gathered round his eyes since the morning wisdom and gray hnirs he muttered seating himself at her side and yet sho pursued you arc but a man after all true i was never taken for a do- migod to my knowledge or a bear even in youth mr ingleby she continued rais ing her serious sweet eyes scnrchlng- ly to his is not idleness a kin then why must i live in idleness i hnvo talents ought i to bury them in a napkin good gracious i hopo she isnt stagestruck he thought you need never iks idle he replied with books your needle your pencil nnd household tanks all these things will prepare you for your approaching marriage my sister will tell you bolur than 1 can what n busy use ful life you may lend tho old story returned jessie sadly xo one wants my needle or my pencil nt redwoods there are no books no means of improving ones self as to household tasks my cousin has not enough for her- stones the gentle sigh of tho summer wind through the leafy boughs the twitter and persistent chirp of chaffinch and stnrling the hum of insects nnd the rustic of small creatures among dead leaves and iwlgh they were so quiet that a butterfly poised on a beech- spray almost touching jessies head and a bee hummed about n spike of woodbctony which rustled against her skirts to be continued eye exercise how you may improve the sight with practice why milk keeps or spoils in an experiment on the relation of temperature to the keeping property ot milk at tho connecticut storrs station tho bacteria in milk multi plied fivefold in twentyfour hours when the temperature was 30 de grees p and too fold in the same timo when the temperalura was 70 degrees milk kept nt 95 curdled in eighteen hours at 70 in fortyeight hours and at 50 in 143 hours so far as tho keeping property of milk is con cerned low temperature is consider ed of more importance than cleanli ness in milk kept at 95 tho species de veloping most rapidly is the undesir able one known as bacillus luctis uerogencs at a temperature of 70 this specie develops relatively loss rapidly in the majority of cases than bacillus lac- tis acidi which latter is vcryjdesir- able in both cream and cheese ripeu- ing the bacteria in milk kepfavso 1 crease slowly and later consist very few lactic organisms but miscellaneous types including man forms that render the milk unwhoh some these bacteria continue to gro slowly day after day but the mil keeps sweet because tho lactic ganisms do not develop abundantly such milk in the course of tin bocomes far more unwholesome th sour milk since it is filled with gnnisms that tend to produce putr faction although the temperature of 50 d grces is to bo emphatically reco mended to the dairyman for the pu poso of keeping his milk sweet anl in proper condition for market h must especially guard against ihj feeling that milk which is seven days old is proper for market eyci though it is still sweet and has no curdled quito the reverse is the case oh milk is never wholesome even thougl it has been kept at a temperature o 5q degrees and still remains swec and uncurdlcd this very considerably modifiei somo of our previous ideas concern ing milk for it has been gcnerallfc believed that so long as the milk re mains sweet it is in good condition for use quite the contrary in tnis case if it has been kept at a tem perature of 50 degrees orin this vicinity it is not unlike that it is this fact that leads to some of the cases of ico cream poisoning so common in summer tho cream is kept at a low tempcr- aturo for several days until a consi derable quantity has accumulated or a demand has come for ice cream and when made into ice cream it is filled with bacteria in great numbers nnd of a suspicious character pasture for swine i believe that greater returns- for the amount invested can be obtained from grazing any other kind af live stock writes mr t y jones there must be sown the right kind of grasses to get the best rosults first and foremost as a hog pasture is clover i keep a plot coming on all of the time for tho hogs do not wait until one set of clover hnh per ished before sowing another these fields need not be very large if they arc judiciously managed the hogs should have access only to a siuall part at a time two years ago i purchased so hogs averaging about 90 pounds each hi he early spring i gave them no- cess to clover pasture with a slight mixture of other grasses september t these hogs were weighed before lie- ing put in the feed pen they had gained about 75 pounds each on grass alone that summer stock hogs being worth 7 cents per pound that year it will readily bo seen that they made a gain of 525 per head with no feed other than grass on the same farm and during tho some period was grazed 20 head of short twoyearold cuttle they made a gain of 300 pounds per head that season which sold at 1 cents per lb or a gain of 512 per head one hog costing about g gained about onehalf ns much as a steer that cost 28 in other words one hog gained 2 to where the steer gained si some may contend that these were exceptional values for stock hogs it was also an excep tionally good year in the cattle trade count the gains made by tho hogs even at 4 cents nnd one will readily sec that the balance is- in favor of tho hog taken one year with another i believe that decided ly greater gains will be made by live stock j no doubt a liltlo grain mixed with mm the wor clover would give botlrr results than those obtained from clover alone cowpeus und soy beans are of harrowed and leveled if possible choose a well drained location and give a liberal application of well rot- led manure tho seed may be p it in with an ordinary garde scgrt- drill gauged to sow rather thickly in tho row to insure a good stand i prefer to have the rows about 20 inches or 2 feet apart as thlops soon fall over and shade tho ground between discouraging weed growth as soon as the young plants can be seen go along tho rows and pull out all the weeds giving the young plants a chance to get a good start in a week take the hoe and cultivate the ground between the rows thin ning out tho plants as you go along this may be done by taking the hoe and skimming oft the unnecessary plants near the top of the ground using care not to disturb those you wish to save six inches apart in the row is as close as they should stand and if the soil is in good con dition and rich 8 to 10 inches is better use shallow cultivation throughout tho season or until the plants spread out and cover the space lo- tweeh tho rows when they may be left to secure their growth they should not be harvested until octo ber or november when they may be stored in hills like turnips and cab bage des tho wonderltiuy that sanfc warships o it is a cigarshaped thlm times as long as yourself and lv in diameter and wo call it bat but a touch of its nose will send five million dollar battleship and tho best part of a ousand men to tho bottom of tho sea in these homely words a torpedo lieutenant described the weapon that has been playing such havoc with russias navy says london titbits never ho continued has the ingen uity of man devised an instrument of war so innocentlooking and yet so deadly tho whitehead torpedo is realty a thing of beauty with its graceful lines and its polishedsilver appearanco just the kind of thing if it were small enough you would liko to use as n pendant to your watchchain it is shaped like a very long and slender cigar is mado of jteel highly polished and is in fact a miniature ship full of tho most delicate and complex machin ery and carrying destruction in its head with the velocity of an express train wonderful mechanism but now that we have gone so far let mo describe it in detail and i promise that you will admit when have finished that tho torpedo 3 ie of the most wonderful things iven in a century of wonders y that you have formed a meutalpic- turo of the whitehead torpedo you can di its length into sections head oithis aye a charge compressed y and a nose comes the sight can be educated nnd exer cised just as truly as tho heylnsj thnn other the sense or touch or oven tho log a utnn nrt and arm muscles can which can be oasily converted i piny should be begun very early in life much socalled colorblindness fattening hogs these is not a radical defect of virion at j h all but a lack of traming inu m ch from c tion and recognition and could t have fcd n m r jc been avoided by any form of simph ml f d to n u0 nii1 hnlfplny halflesson with colored balls or skeins of silk in early child- hood matching colors is nn excel ltupe also has ninny friends swine raisers who make great claims as to results obtained from feeding it i do not think wlin sliks woois paper or uny j w c other material in which it is lioss fof wintcr u should bc start here arc lent lesson it can bo carried on j with silks wools paper or any i bio to get many shades with very cnrl nn a small gradations of color among f rtfts n tho them kapidity of vision can be enormously developed moat per sons know the story of the conjuror whoso father made him while self if she hnd she could have extra email boy play the game of naming maids i cannot live at redwoods i nm fretting myself away there and doing no oncjmy good nh per haps perhaps i nm doing harm at icist to invsclf so she spoke unfolding her plans lo him her wish to support herself by soino sultuble occupation or at tier income which she sadly feared she coifcsscd was partly mado up by lliilip as would enable her to procure firsiclass instruct ion parii- tho objects in some shop window passed at n quick walk if one will try this ho will bo astounded at the way the number of objects seen in the glimpse will grow with practice aa with other forms of exercise tt of the eye should be taken only un der proper conditions a tired wornout eye should not bc forced to new tasks any more than a tired wornout body tills is why tho process cannot c started too foon rulnrly in painting for which iho that the eye may 10 insensibly train- was aspired rfic bad talent her ed to good habitfi of perception times when it is not the best policy to let swine have access to rye an occasional run on this forage how ever will bring good returns culture op the mangel of alltho foot crops the mangel- wurzel or stock beet is perhaps tho most important both as to feeding value nnd amount of yield per acre turnips make n valuable catch crop but the mangel must bo sown early in this season and cultivated to euro a satisfactory yield the freer the ground from weed seeds the less arduous will be the work of cultiva tion tho soil should bo well stirred an english tourist one hiy last summer wns travelling by rasil in the north of scotland and at onct of the stations at which the train stopped four farmers entered they wwo all big burly men and completely tsjied up the seat on one side of tho comv pnrtment at the next station the door open ed to admit a tall individual with a girth something like a lamppost ho endeavored to wedge himself in between two of the farmers but finding it a difficult operation he said to one of them excuse me sir you must sit up a bit each boat is intended to ac commodate five persons and accord ing to act of rarliamenl you are only entitled to eighteen inches of space ayo aye my frceml replied the farmer thats very guid for you thats been built that way but ye canna blame me if i hacna been construckit according to act o par liament an illuminating crab ono of the marine curiosities fished some time ago from the bottom of the indian ocean was a mammoth sea crab which continually emitted a bright white light similar to that seen in the spasmodic flashes of phos phorescent luminosity emitted by the common glowworm the crab was captured in the daytime and placed in a large tank containing specimens of fish nothing peculiar except its immense size being notice able in tho broad glare of the tropi cal sun at night howver when all was pitchy darkness the crab lit up the tauk so that the other creatures in it could be plainly seen setting the example tommy had been quiet for fully tvo minutes he seemed to be en gaged with some deep problem papa ho said- well do unto others as you would have others do unto you thats the golden rule isnt it yes my son tommy rose went to tho cupboard and returned with a knife and a large cake tho latter he placed be fore his astonished ire and said with great solemnity ent it papa how it happened aunt maria dont deny it mar tha i saw you your lips and his- met just us i came into the room martha yes nuntie but it was all an accident t started to whis per something into charleys ear at the same moment that ho tried to whisper something into my ear and that is how it happed charley felt as bad ubout it as i did im sure njt nrssecj beautiful nioi of 200 lbs guncotton with pointed rod the weapon when in contact with a hard body such as tho hull of a ship it is driven in and strikes the dotonator which in turn explodes the guncotton immediately behind the explosive compartment is a chamber over flvo feet long full of compressed air th motive power of the machine so compressed is this air that it exerts a pressure of more than half a ton jon every square inch of its compart- tment behind this chamber comes another called the balancechamber containing the delicate apparatus which automatically keeps the tor pedo at the right depth in the watei checking instantly any inclination to rise or drop then comes chamber no 4- in witfehnre three small cyl mdcengiucs whicnttnr weyer of thirty horsepower and intonyhick tho air- passes from the chamber front througli n pipe fitted with gov erning valves discharging it next comes tho buoyancy chain ber the object of which is tohkeejt tho torpedo buoyant and in it thj requisite ballast is placed and fini ally for now we have worked bacir to tho tail of our torpedo com the propellers which drive n rudders whehguide ickerettcheu wo have a marvellouslyconstructed machine full of terriblo potentiality but how is it sent on its errand o destruction well in every battleship cruiser and torpedo boat thoro arc tubes like so many large gunbarrels tuill into the ship some above but most ly below tho water nnd from thesa tubes the tiyjjetlojs are discharged at the cnopiys shipx a small charge of cordite or compitosscd air at a pressure of 500 lbs 6 more to tho square inch shoots thjorpcdo out of tho tube along bsjhpg bar whicli directs it until the ship avhen it leu ing bar the projectile is ns a bullet to the target it has been aimed accurate aim tho original avhtehond torpccul a speed of eighi an outside rfiiijjeor quarter of mile the torpedo of today and i am describing the very weapon tho japaneso aro using with such deadly effect will run ns straight asa dart for n mile thanks to the gyro scope at a speed of pretty iwell 40 j miles an liour tt can be aimed accurately as n rifle and what most wonderful is tht it can be adj justed from the conning tower of ship and discharged by simply prcssj ing an electric key when the torpedo strikes a shtf it docs not ns some folks thinj blow her sk high there is heavy quivering shock a column water is sent high above the dej there is a sickly smell of explosij and that is all that is seen or but below water tho steel platiul tiie ship is rent nnd twisted mx much paper there is n gaping j through which an omnibus lw driven nnd in most cases i nimi power can save the shipf going to the bottom edroom in trees a remarkable hotel is in cj on tho road between santa sun lose california posf kind old mansee here didnt 1 give you ten cents this morning be- shroul hotelkeeper wor cause you told- mb you were blind and now i find you reading a news paper beggar thais right im color blind have lions noo i any rival in your lie demanded fierce ed hft8 iie idea of utilizing ns hostelry a group of these ujij uiussaving himself tho iufif or rent the hollow lj tt tree whose clrcuinforeriof room ana ihc sunomi i tlilulc of anybody elsa i regard vrfth equal indifference ho could you inarry n ntfan who was your inferior she noso i ahnll have to- to prow to rfaa ttint tw chaut olntmjhit uncertain and abolate euro for cacv nod eery farn of itchloc bdl3onyi5rotnnilnkpllw ia oannfctareni have rurcantemu scotev 6i iomo ticcupted replied the lovely blrlflsssgas v ihsn o at east i ennt se air nnd smokingroom nm other smaller hollow f comfortable bedrooms the most approved km trees nt a utile riisiiiif bxithe hotel staff rimcc com- a secrctnry of a wllo pnny tells of nn o f called on on ngenl f wiranco on her liafr f wo havent hnd fivo years at providence soys internal in tho llr prtm aftd vie jonrnelth- nrswhatuloy think of it yqu can uco ft and ft yoir rooner back if not euoed noe a box at ji dttleni or edmixsosditiai cotorona i 9r chases olijitmentlv s 7fi

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