Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 1 Mar 1883, p. 6

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 li ' m NEWS IN A NUTSHELL. FrV£ BUmTTKS BXIiSCT KEJiDING. Smnmaryot Foreign, Iome*tle and War Items. -Cknoise. Pithy, and Pointed. DOMBSnC. umnarried A married hotel clerk and an pri have eloped from Trenton. The widow of the late Chief Joseph, •f Oka, has been married to Francois Fret. The Salvation Army at Kingston now Qombers about 290, and there are converts erary night. Montreal firms are joining in pooling their Winnipeg consignments and chartering spe •U trains. Mr. D. Barry, advocate, of Montreal, has entered an action for libel against the Pont Newspaper Company. Rvl. Green, supposed to have been drown- ed in Burlington Bay, on Sunday, August 21 st, has turned up in Hamilton. A man named Conecy, missed from St. Anne la Pocatiere a day or two ago has been found frozen to death in the woods. Dr. Abel Mann, an American, was arrest- ed in Brantford recintly for threatenicg to â- hoot A. Yonge at (JainsviUe. Some 120 men have quit work in the Ca- nadian Pacific Railway machine shops at Winnipeg on account of the new check eys- The Dominion Artillery Association re- «ently hold its annual meeting at Ottawa, when the Governor-General delivered an address. In the House of Assembly at Halifax, a bill giving the Government the sole power •f appointing sheriflF* passed its second read- ing. Mary Ann Sinnot has been sentenced to ibc months' imprisonment at Montreal for writtinK a threatening letter to a gentleman named Edwards. Nazaire Hair, while working in I'inker- ton'a stove factory, Montreal, had his right arm seized in the machine and torn away. rMTED STATKJ?. At Havana, 111., the river La six miles wide, and the approaches to the bridge are â- wept away. At Lewiaville, N. H., a French-Canadian â- amed Willey, shot a rival whom he found with his lady love. At a Michigan lumber camp, a man chop- ped off another's head with an axe. The ainrderer was lynched. The schooner Willie Joyce, of Portland, •n a Newfoundland herring voyage, is given â- p ae lost with her crew of seven. Chief of Police Graves, of Port Huron, has been reinstated, the cbarges made against him not having been pro\ed. At Milford, Mass., thirteen school-chil- dren, thrown from a large sltigh, struck a tree, and nearly all were picked up uncon- Kcsious. Patrick Cunningham, from New Bruns- wick, aged about thirty-eight, was found dead in hi.s bed at the Sch-.ndehette House, Bay City, Mich. One of the professors at Dartmouth, N. H. College, lias been serenaded with horns aod his windou .s broken and fence pulled dovn. George Burk, at Buffalo, in a quanel with a widow named Finster, snatched up a •law hammer and striking her two heavy Wows on the head fractured her akjll. There is great excitement over a remark- able silver discovery on property owned by a Methodist parson twenty miles south ef Tucson, in the Santa Rita Mountains. GKNF.KAL. Hambuig has consented to enter the Ito:- Bum Custom Union. Washington's birthday was L'olebruted at Rome by the Americans. The Melbourne general election has ii;- lulted in the defeat of the Ministry. The steamer Heckla, which went as-hoio near Lourvig im the ISth, has broken up. Edwin Booth w.as presented with a silvei- laurel wreath at Hamburg. The British (^ioverninont has again ile- manded from Spain the release ct tiie CrJjaii refugees. The law agaia.^t Amtricau hog products ?oe8 into citeot in Gonnany a month after it is published^ Chinese authorities ha\'e witliilrawu tlie fibricatcd ehargcis against the cierk of the American unn at Slianghai. The Chinese Government :i eijei£;etitally pushing on rcinforccmoi-.ts to its western frontier, threatened by iiusaia. A scnfation has l)een caused in llngland by the tierce denunciation of Mr. I'arnell and the Lind League by Mr. Forster in a speech delivered in the Imperial Commoiij. A Simple Fire-Escape. The hoiTOis of the Milwaukee and other rcceut fires are deepened by the reflection that so many of the victims might have been saved, had they i)eeu provided with the simple appliance of a rope, a pulley, and a hook; the hook to be fast-ened to the window till, the rope to be looped atound the body, under the arms of the person ising it, who will then let himself down on the outside, by the rope, which plays freely throueh the pulley. Nothing could be simpler, or more certain. A contrivance like this would occupy but a small place in the ti-aveller's hand ba?. There are strong small wires Miclosed in wrappings that can be made available tor this purpose, and which are not larger than one's little dnger. They are quite large enough to sustain the weight of a man, and their value in saving life would he priceless. Hotels and eimilar buildings should be supplied with these fixtures, one for each room in the house, and there should be a permanent staple under the window sill, to which to attach the hook of tbe safety rope. There is quite as mach reason for keeping these ropes and pulleys at hand, as there is lor providing steam veasela with life preservers, and the law which makes the latter obligatory, might properly extend its mandatory provisiotis to 1^ former, and require more aafegnards for ii§p security of the pablic frcm the dangers feyVhich they are meaaoed. me rrontlers of Ma d neii a. Such ia the title of an interesting lecture recently delivered by Dr. Ball in hia coarse at the Paris Faculty of Medicine. The ge- nerally received opinion that folly and rea- son are separated by a strictly drawn ma- thematical line is, according to Dr. Ball, quite erroneous. There is a broad frontier, he says, between sanity and insanity, which is peopled by millions of inhabitants. Dr, Ball holds that the number of persons per- fectly reasonable on all points throughout the entire peried of their existence form but a minority of mankind. The world abounds with people, he tells na, whem a strict sci- entific diagnosis would condemn as mad, or more or leas "touched " yet at no time of their life would it be permissible to put them under restraint. Such people are to be seen occupying honorably and successful- ly every position in life and society we see them in the mirror which reflects our- selves Dr. Ball was recently consulted by a young man who was engaged to be married, but who found it impossible to visit his in- tended bride because it would involve a journey of some length in a railway car- riage, and he could never enter one without feeling a desire to jump out as soon as the train was in motion. He was advised to ac- custom himself gradually to this mode of travelling by taking short journeys on the snrburbam hne, but he could never get be- yond Anteuil: there he had to leave the car- riage for fea-T of accidents. Homicidal im- pulse ia likewise met with. Tfaouviot's case is the oftenest quoted. For years this un- pleasant person was tortured with a burn- ing desire to kill some woman or other, bat he never felt the slightest wish to take the life of a man. He battled with the impulse for years, but at length it got the better of him. One day he murdered a young girl, a perfect stranger to him, whom unfortunate chance threw in his way in the kitchen of a restaurant. Dr. Ball was consulted some time ago by a painter of considerable talent, who was a prey to these murderous impulses. He uad married early in life, his family was large and his cares and anxieties large in preportion. At about eight and thirty, with- out physical ailment of any kind, or any specially unfavorable turn iu his affairs, hi* mind began to be affected. If he saw a mirror he experienced a desire to smash it near a window he felt a temptation to jump out he never got a bank note in his hand that he did not feel inclined to tear it in pieces. These morbid promptings presently assumed a more formidable shape he be- gan to be assailed with a temptation to strangle his children. His little daughter was dying of croup, anl he spent night after night by her bedside nurssins; her with the utmost tenderness. "Yet," said he to the physician, "at the moment when I was praying, with tears in my eyes, that the child's life might be spared, 1 was torment- ed with a horrible desire to take her out of the cradle and throw her into the fire. Even now," he added, " as I speak to you I feel a most intense desire to strangle you but I check myself." The doctor never saw this patieut again a circumstance which he has perhaps no reason to r. gret, for as he was a man of powerful build he would have been an exceedingly "ugly customer " had his saaguiuary impulse proved beyond his control. Bn: up t) that time, as the doctor remarks, he had kept them success- fully ia check. His nearest friends did not even suspect that he was subject to them. He fulfilled all the duties of life in a cor- rect and exemplary manner. No doctor could have certified to his being insane. Yet assuredly he was on the " borderland " of insanity. â€" S'/. James Gazelt-f. Tbe Probable Exclosiveness of Heaven. Do you not sometimes wish the way were broad But the fact still remains that the way is narrow, and if one would enter he must strive with his might. But why, you may ask, did not God make the way broad Why, indeed Would 5-0U have heaven a place like unto earth You might as well ask whether Heaven would be Heaven if it were no Letter than earth. If the gate, the way, were broad, all would go there. Do you think it would be conductive to hap- piness to CO where the good and evil are living to;;ether ' Iu your daily business relations you are thrown in contact with bad men at every .step. Would you %vish such a state of aiiairs all through eternity No the heaven we hope for and look foJward to must be a pure, happy, and blessed place. There must tever be one ripple of trouble or shadow of sorrow to d sturb the repose of tiiat holy place. Now, in order to .secure such a Iieaven nothing must be permitted to enter the gate that will defile. Tne gate is not narrow of itaelf, it is simply too narrow for sin to enter. Can there be any just complaint because sin is shut out As well might one complain that a drunkard ii not permitted to join a temperance or- ganization, or an ignoramus a scientific as- sociation. The church is likewise exclusive. None can enter its straight crate without the credentials of morality. â€" k'w.T. /•" Manh, Gil ""n 'JO. LATE NEWS NOTES. allow Tinned Salmon. The principle seat of the Amei iuau tinned salmon industry is on the Columbia River, Oregor. Upon this river, during the year 1S81, there were employed in salmon-catch- ing no fewer than 1,7G0 boats, manned by 4,000 men, chiefly Scandinavians and Itali- ans. The hauls are made by gill -nets and sieves, and each boat, it is said, will take on an average 2,000 tish during the season, which lasts from the beginning or M ay to tbe end of July. The work of canning the fish is performed by Chinamen, who are re- markably expert in the various processes of cleaning and cutting up the fish into suit- able pie;:es, filling the cans, and sealiag them hermetically. A pound of salmon is put into every can, and in packing for market the cans are made up into cases of 48 each. The industry is rapidly growing. In 186C the product of the Columbia River fisheries was 4,000 salmon in 1881 it was 530,000. During the latter year it is estimated that the quantity of salmon packed by the 32 canneries on the river was 19,000 tons, and toward the close of the season there was- such an enormous catch that hundreds of tons had to be thrown away so that the industry is evidently capable of further de- relopmeat to a very considerable extent. river is now low enough to to use their landings at Cincm- been opened by the floods The teamers natti. Subscriptions have Berlin, for the suffers America. Two well-known Nationalists, implicated in the storage of arms at Clerkenwell, have left for America. It is stated in St. Petersburg that no con- stitution nor amnesty will be aranted on the occasion of the Czar's coronation. All the temperance and prohibiting measures introduced in the New Jersey legislature this session were killed. A meeting of the Irish National Land League recently condemned the presence of "eaves dropping police' at its meeting. The Porte has instructed the Governor of Tripoli to personally apoligise to the Italian Consul for the insult ofifered the latter. The German Bnndesrath has approved unanimously of the bill prohibiting the importation of American pigs, pork, or saus- ages. A bill has be*n introduced into the Ohio Legislature giving justices of the peace original and final jurisdiction in all liquor questions. At the session sf the Grand Lodge of United Workmen, Guelph was selected as the place for the holding of the next an- nual meeting. The German Ambassador to the Vatican, replying to Cardinal Jacobini's letter, in- sists on the submittal of all ecclesiastical appointments to the German Government. Since the publication of Carey's dis- closures a number of Irish-Americans and farmers' sons in the -counties of Armagh, Monaghau and Louth have been secretly leaving for America. The Quebec citizens' meeting, anont the watersupply was largely attended, the Mayor presidmg. A resolution was adopted aver- ring that a second pipe.or other means of in- creasing ths water supply was an absolute necessity. The first annual meeting of the British American Short Horn Association has been held at Toronto. Mr. J. Drynan, M. P. P., presided. In his opening address he com- plained of the large number of spurious pedigrees which had been registered with the Agricultural and Arts Association. The Danubian Gonference has approved of the proposal for a mixed commission to control the Danube from Galatz to thd Iron Gates. Austria, Bulgaria, Roumania and Servia to be permanently represented on the Cdmmision, and the others Powers appoint- ing members in rotation. Servia will not be represented on the European Commission to have jurisdiction below Galatz. The surveyor of the Port of San Fran Cisco has seized on the steamer "City of Tokio" opium valued at §15,000 It was concealed in the water tank, the only ac- cess to which was by the shaft well. It isconaidered impossible that opium could have been concealed there without the con- nivance of some of the officers of the ship. Others seizures are expected. It is believed that if Mr. Parnell speaks on Mr. Gorst's amendment it will be briefly, as he thinks the debate on the Phoenix Park murders prematuie while the trial is pending. The Pamellitea are greatly dis- satisfied with Mr. Parnell's intention to move an amendment to the address, ar- raigning the E.xecutive of Ireland for its ad- ministration of the Crimes Act. The Coxheath Mining Company on Wed- nesday took out a silver license at the Mines Department at Halifax, N. S. cover- ing their entire copper areas in Gape Bre- ton, owing to the ore showing a larger per- centage of the richer metal as greater depth was attained. It is said these recent developments add considerably to the value of the property, and are ar-ousing some excitement amongst mining speculators. A Washington despatch says The steam- er " Asheulot" reported lost in China, was a laughing stock among naval ofhcers.' She was a paddle wheel, thin plated iron ship cf 1,370 tons displacement and double eu- ' der. She was built in 1863 for purposes of river navigation during the war and wag used iu the blockade. A number of simi- ilar vessels were built at the same time Two or three were lost and the rest were sold, except the "Monocacy" now on the Asiatic station and the "Tallapoosa" .Great- ly altered from the original plan. '"" Michael Doyle, of St. Louis, a bi-otuer-m- !aw of (ieneral Macadaraa.suspocted of being "Number 1," says Macadaraa has not been connected with any Irish movement since tho ienian fiasco of 1865. Doyle is in constant correspondence with Macadaras. The latter la an invalid, and consta-itly travelUng with his wife. There is no secrecy in h movements. Macadaras waa in Egypt dur ing the whole time covered by the PhcenLx Park murder conspiracy, and while the plottmg was going on against Mr. Forster he was at a mountain resort in France. M. Jules Ferry the Premier submitted to President Grevy the following list of mem- bers of the new Cabmet and their respective portfoh,^: Ferry, Prime Minister and Min ister of Pubhc Instruction; Challemel Lacour, I-oreign Affairs; Waldeck Rousseau Interio.-^ Martin FeuiUee, Justice; cS BruD. Marine; Melme, Agriculture: Heni son, Commerce; Cochery, Posts and Tele graphs: Raynal, Public W^orks • TirarT fWe; Thibaudin, War. It is statid that M. hen-y has requested the President to sign decrees placing all the pnnces /ertin^ in the army on the retired lis.. ""^^'Qg AnUqnlty of the Doll. Dolls arc of greater antiquity than man v may .magme They are \raced l^cL °^ their '• probable- first appearance nn^ pet shows. The practice^^of sSug tffa, from France to foreign countries was very early date. In the royal ex pe^^ f" lo»l figure so manv ' Iiviph" tn.-^ „ 1 i. totheQ^eenof Eo'gland • !.. 1496 anLT* sent to the Q.een'of Spa^n,'2'in^5 ^l' third sent to the Ducheal of BaV^ia Sg7to^Mar^illi^Vr^^Ft^^^^^^^ L loSthe lady or ladies mg placed in fronted the stiersman sitting behmd The I^Lggan having been P^jjon ^he^e^rge of twn'wi E her tt'fgUt^a stretcher, or Ts^oLed in the curve and her skirt tuck- S Snd her. aad her escort "its down be- Snrhaving a short stick in each hand with which to steer. The steersman lets his Sd8 trail on either side, and dig; one stic^ or the other into tho snow, according to the direction in which he wi.hea to turn the accursed craft. It is the oorreot thing to turn out in a blanket coat and leggins, with moccassins. an.l upon your hewi a red or blue tuqut-a^ Phrygian cap of worsted. Having bidden adieu to your friends, you aently push your frail sled over the brow of the hill and launch yourself into etermty. Such of your readers as has ever fallen out of a balloon will have a good idea of the sensation of the amateur toboagamst dur- ing his first slide. There is a sense of gone- ness in the head and in the pit of the sto- mach, and the nether world rises up and hits you all over very hard. A sUppery and elastic board with 300 pounds weight upon it, launched down a hill of ice or snow a quarter of a mile long or thereabouts, with an inclination cf say seventy degrees, gath- ers a tremendous headway in the course of a few seconds; tho crisp diamond-dusty par- ticles fly at your eyes like spindrift at sea before a hurricane, and a spray of shrieking silver is ground up by either steering stick, in a few seconds you reach the glacis, and change the plane on which you move, the sled giving a bound that makes you think of riding a frisky dolphin; then away it careers for hundreds of yards above the level, till finally it stops perhaps a mile away from the starting place, allowing an admir- able opportunity for flirting with your fair fare during the return walk. Of a bright, moonlight night, with the air keen and the heavens overflowing with stars, there can be no more glorious sport. But it has its perils. If you lose your head and fail to keep that of the toboggan straight the sled will broach-to and spill you and your fare down the hill, with a display of ground and lofty tumbling such as Greenwich never witnessed on tho jolliest of fair days. Fortunate will you be if, while you and your Dulcinea are for the moment standing on your respective heads, another toboggan does not sweep down and take you in your respective mid- driffa with a force of say 144-foot tons. Or, still worse, in a long course, where there are trees to thread and maybe a gate or two to piss through, you may tilt head-on into a post or a stately maple. Hot until you have been into such an accident do you fair- ly understand what is meant by " match- wood" and "a dull thud." Luckily as the lady is in front she acts as u vjrt of buffer, but her *lot under auch circumstances is not a happy one, as before she has i airly realized that she has been hurled against u tree she receives you in the back with no less crush- ing emphasis. Cblt-Cbat. It is now fashionable to speak of the uiglit ^obe as a nap sack. The best fire-escape is when your wife gets up in the morningand makes it. Mr. Nettle was recently married to Miss Thorn. That's what yon might call a prick- ly pair." David Fender, "popping the question," in a letter, concluded thus "And should you say 'yea,' dear Mary, I will truly be your D. Fender.'" Sloughterby says liis wife hasn't done very much shopping this winter, although she did go downto^v^l the other day to buy a muff "just to keep her hand in." Abouncmg_ big wild cat was killed in the SLburba of Cincinnati the other day. and several thousand men of Cin-innati staid at home the next eveniug for the first time in years. A faihiou item says that the favorite color of undressed kids forstieet wearia dark tan. The fashion originated in Africi, where all the undressed kids seen in the streets are dai'k tan color, A girl in New York was recently arrested, being disguised as au old woman. If all the old women who appear in the disf^uise of giris were arrested tho jail would liave the appearance of sardine-boxes. Passionate love: " I tell you," ei- claimed Brown, " that Charley "is wholly unselhah m his affection he Ioes the very ground that she walks on "' "Yes " re- plied Fogg, "when she i* walkinc' on 'her tathers estate." When a California man sees "no cards '" at the end of a marriage notice of" a friend, he remarks that "that girl has put some of her pious notions into Jim's head, but he'll get GTer them after he ha« been uiarried a while. "How can I leave you, my t^at ling:' ' mur- mured a lover m tones of distressing tender- neas, as he observed both hands of the clock approach a perpendicutor on the dial. "Well John, responded the girl with wicked in- nocence, "you can take your choice. If you go through the hall you will he liable to wake up iathcr, and if you leave by way of the oack shed you'll be likely to wake up'the Improvea Sleeplas Cars. Tw., now sleeping cars are being coastruet- called the English pattera. These c-u- nagos differ from those at present iruse'Tn llKf "i "'T^^' the^reby dispensing with the cud platforms, and in bein- divid ed into four compartments, so as to ^oribine the comfort, and, to a certain extent the nri vacy of an- English first-class Sa'ewUh the convemenceof the sleepinrVaT^ Each compaitment contains cusSed seate as well as berths and beds for four J^ns ofTe clr tTf^T' P,^^« frooiC end tendant bnt .^°*"-f ^°" ^^" " " *he at- " wl)„„ ,r^^\y' ""d have bgen named Balmoral ' and "Culross." "'"'ea rZAATDfO PAltASx *â- â- Â«Â« P^rfo°r'n,Si Augustus Harris, lesgoj Tlieatre. uave a free per,of, pantomine "Sinbad," on th j^re^than 4,000 of the po,;;,;^, While the attacks upon T. iiu« kuc i»i,uk;k.b upon the I gary are at their height (l '» Christian merchant of S^Qot'^A astonishment far andwideb l his entire property to the J eL^" the town. " ' -J«»uh; A new inyentiDu lor \:^^. machinery from any part of ttlh pressing an electric button with the engine valve, will d,„ many lives. ""Sbt^l They say now that if you j^^ I into^your pipe the tobaoco Zr^ injure your nerves. We fcU °" ourselves â€" and also leave out tl which is a still greater impi'oveit' The public, who used to iuT"' â-  crowds in the Cattle Yaid T)^^^ neas the arrivals at the Lord D'l levee, were for the first time ulu\ month. The yard wa. kept b?^l of the Coldstream Gaards' w,\' uniform lined the hall, aud detect ** ed the stairs leading to the ThroneR? ThsSpectaUyr says that the late tt Seaver got a seat among the Gennadi, at the Passion Play by tellino the .3 was an Elector of N.vr York ' Si minds us of the United States Mat^J consorted for a time on equal te^J the Marshals of France, as a felloe l One of those dreadful scientific uJ won't let UB eat anything for fei,j,l poisoned ia on the rampage a^au, '1 Bulphuric acid in our sugariTtlif most liver and kidney °:iii-;^^^ honey-comb is made artiiicialiy aj fed en glucose, and cv,., c-c; Bhells) are manufactured °" Dr. PL^bert, in the Edumtih^l Journal, gives the uicrcdible mcnil four^ hundred in a thousand as the Madrid, and over a hundred for Oriia other places. Cauae, insatScient iiod shocking filth, great numbers neven themselves in their lives Where b| Chinese now In the three of the principal hw J Paris is the Sisters ol Charity, c4 about a hundred, are at once tohetsJ by ordinary male and female atej This step has ben inforced upon ij ministnition of Public Assistance .J Paris Municipal Council, who hav-T the continuation of their annual eciiij of seventeen millions of franc; co:oi; upon its execution. Gas of unprecendented oneapntssil made, if the promises of a chicaso aj kept. Hia proctf s of mimufactBreii up all the u:jual by-productsâ€" cokf.sl ammonia and fixed carbcnâ€" in tht'J tion of gas. Nothing v/il! be lc!tt::| liqucs:;ent slag. Every atom c: ijj aud carbon in the coal M'il! k \i7at gas. Instead of ten or tv.-elve thoisa, of gas from a ton of coal, he ivillobs: 000 fe et. Test wori;s are tu be Elgin. The Jjcoiiomi^t justly says '.hi;:i.n drawil of fract ouaJ L-urrency great numbers c f pcDple n' 1 to send small sums by mail ail the objection to its usually patchu condition can be easily overcoEety:^ ing it with new when it istorncrm.is is a nuisance to eud silver in kv.i'.ii age stamps won't always answer, 'ri-u doesn't want to draw a money 0:0.: f quarter. ODDS AND ESDi. At a recent 'ei-;noi;i teama of eiLchtcrii r.ieu counted 13,0U;.) to t!ie When you I:t ar ills of life, reineui'i which go rouu 1 withuu est. It it stato'l that, wi; of Irishmen m ii.e '.... erly above 70 per ^eut.. â- 1 ea; lO50 ..I â- ' 11 ii: fil- ch cf ti i-s" 5'j:i '.niiat tiKit uukiiv .\r.-iy' "I wish to state,' \v;i:es .-.riuv:^'-i istcr, "that 1 have prucii-eil u.i that will waKe up tlic et'ii5t":;i'----| as the service is over. " 'How Fcldom it hiij.pen-i t;:it 'â- " 1 \\,lt' 'â- 'â-  'nrre :i tors bred to the bus:n-,;s.-, ^i"" another. ' • N ' ery, and in ve y^i' ' ed how .=ehk'm "the l);:sin..-s is t' tors?" replied the othtv. â- UioKCiicj, rmaiu:; t!;.' bath dirty, asked "' and wash on coming ^^iit ' aftera swioiin the 6e;i, al\va}= â-  rinsed themselves in a ireih-va-^ to preserve the smoothness u. â- - The Turk and llie man who iK QTinge skin have much in comEi^ stance, they both sit down witho: for a chair. The motions of t^^^^^J ever, lock encri^y and enterprise '^,'^, with those of the man v.bo r.--'« " skin. Gie:it nuiulieis ui the nM"" on the West CoaAt ot l-iaiic' green crabs, whicii. with tnf their kind, pop, while yel t.HV _^^^ are soft, inside the shells "â- â- ";-;â-  ^-j they are open for I'eodins, "'â- "' 'ji.'ii board aud lodging, for Ui^y^-^"' their host. "My wife,'uys Vi,2j;lf"or^' .^^^ edly, lifting a handful or l'""'-;;;* bo.x, "is one of the most ecouOB-^,. I over saw Whenever I smo.^^ the house she malces mo Wo' ' her plants to kill tbe ^^i^^^â- i^ ready to catch the .ish^s for ;^ whib the stump t'iiat is "" .j.jil water and treats thg iljw^rP" ish bath with it. Longfellow was gifted iv.i.'^^ ^i into character, and always word to the right person. " ^^ dnoed to the late Nicho.n ^^ ^^ Cincinnati, a quick-witted ,^f who dearly loved a joke, '"^,,a,\9 to the similarity of the s)' names. "'Worth' ^j^-^^r.^iU^ want of it, the 'fellow,' r^P" j juf quoting Pope's famous hne, of the best repartee 3 cu recor â- 

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