Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 21 May 1891, p. 6

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M I I < BEAST* AT SHLLBI K!SE, OYMKIO Ih WaBSMd and Ikr rlpll... ..( I ... ..I >|.. . in,, it. IX Be hold ' in.* liehcm >th. the im.i-to.loni. which 1 m,1c with Hi- MI gra-,-, like n on. !&. Hit* IK>II>-- ;- 1 .- a--tronfcr piece* of bra.* ; }' bone- itu-k-l .ir. like I>H; of mm. ID. H- istbe chief of tin- w.i>- (lord of the littfhwal-i nf liixl ; In- Ilia: ni.i'lc I, mi can make his word to approach unu, him. to. Hurel) Ihf mountain-. In. nit liiin forth fiHxi. whi-rr nil the I., a-t- i,f !h>- nclil pluy. 11. He llelh under llir -hail) tree., in the covert of The reed and fn,-. tL Thr sha.lv tret rover him with their xbadow : the willow uf the brook riunpa-- him about. O. Behold. In- ilnnkclh up a r.v.-r. and liwtrth no:: he .-11-1.-! h he fan ,lrav up .Ionian (through h>- U-uiiki in'.o hi- in, MI- I, 'U. He uketa il with hi- ,>-. hll DOM (tr.mki pierccth through nure-.. Such is a d"--ripti<'ii to be found in chap. XL of the book of .lob, which may be rea- I lions on ihe surface like ihose of living ele- phants, 'hat the mastodon is distinguished Some mastodons have been found with four tusks, two projecting upwards and two downwards, but the lower tusks never reach- h m.l. In point of time the niamiiiotn be '"' *">' '* 1 le "8 l11 and were generally she,! l-.ng* exclusively to 'be post- Tertiary or , wrlym "le, those of the female especially rieiitoncene epoch of geologist*, and it wa* I - 1 hl one w '-videnlly MOJOMOd of only undoubtedly contemporaneous with man in lwo - These are some of the bone measure- r's,,,,., ami probably elsewhere. Then is ments : Hm.Meg, from the thlh to the . M.I. n .- to show thai il existed in Britain Itefore, during, and after the glacial period. It-main* of the mammoth (Klephas primo- genius) u-ere frequently found during the last century in \.iiious p iris of Siberia, and about the close of the century one was dix , overed frozen in tho eituary of the river Lena, wilh bones, flesh, and sliaggy hair complete. Is is said that some of the He*h j " wai eaten by the men who dug it out of the ' l ij 1 '- and knee joint, 47 inches; circumference, 3-*> n,,i,es; two fore leg bones the hunu-rus from the shoulder l.lad to the knee joint, .'! feel 4 inches in length and .'i feet four in' I,. < in circumference. The atlas joint upon which the head is set has a breadth ot IN inches. The shoulder blade meas- ures .'i feel 'i inches by two feel I W I.I. st nearly art. the ribs long- have The natives, from suitenuitious /eel- ing, refused K, |mrt w,th it until l.ear. , wokes, and foxen tore it to pieces, and then Adams waa permitted to save the wreck U'fAI. I.\D* API 0> THE MIIH KNK the characteristic* of the elephant, or per hap* even of the mastodon, both wonderful and feanome trails to those who beheld them for the tirst time. When the writer paid hi* visit to the aliove village he truly did not ;ind that many taken as a graphic account of and convey it to St. Petersburg, where in the Imperial museum the monster skeleton may now lie seen, as it wan sel up in juxta position to that of one of the largest speci- mens of modern elephants, in order thai by conliufcl Us giganlii; dimensions mighl l- fully reali/ed by the be). older. Kxisling of the villager* of llns day -,'-p mammotlis elephants have sliorl seamy hair ov.-r their or mastodons in their backyards or pad- rough skin. Tile mammoth had long brown dock*, but he was afforded the opportunity hair, sometimes ten inches in length, with of inspecting one ol the moit complete sets , longer black bristles intei mingling, and a of bcneis belonging to an extinc'. tnonarch of shaggy mane. The existing s|x-,-iesaie , the forests of by-gone years that have ever fined to the tropics ; but ihe Indian elephant been uiieui tlie.1 in a good sla.e of preserva nometimes lives, in company with monkeys, lion. In fact, il may be sunl lo \x parlicu- near the snows of the Himalaya .Mountains, larly complete, as scarce anything is want- The mammoth, on the other hand, tenanted ing to make ip u perl- !. ;>'.. n of th" the temperate and northern part* of lioth , I M ^ nun. hit i. There H...I.1C, which are the property of Mr. .lohn .lelly, may shortly l>e on exhibition in On lario, and therefore an extended ,|.---r.pti.,n will I.... lie deemed inopportune. This, however, is nol tin first specimen of one ol the largest of ihe extinct anin.al* that ban 1 si mj; re worlds, its re'iiams having Ine i found in iin.e into that gentleman's pos lew than two year* ago he secure liritinh Jules, France, Central and Norllu-rn Kurope, Siberia, Alaska, and 'lirleient parts of America so far south us the county ol Ki in in this I'roMii.e ut Canada, us well as in the --.,!. of Oregon. Jn si/e, uenerul loiin. and pi in>-i|ial osteo isession, for logical ch.ii actei i-ti.-s, the iiiastmlon lesetn i years ago he secured a remark hied ihe elephants of our day. Il is by ihe ably good skeleton of u mammoth from u teeth ilone that the tun Blimps are distin- farm in the township of Amaranth, i|iiiu- j guished by naturaliits. The range ol tin- close to Shelbnrne. Most of our readers nre genus in time was fiom the middle ot the > U-rably familiar with the appeaian--e tif ! Miocene period to the end ol t h<- I'lux-en. in thin variety, owing to the repreeenU! ions the Old World, when the\ be.-aine extinct ; Ihereof having been so fre<|uently publishes! in Ibe advertisements of Messrs. Tlios. Thompson ft Son, the enterprising dry gmnls firm of Toronto, who have adopted it as a trade mark. This particular specimen but in America several s|M the II.-H; km, HII, owing to the ieH, especially al,'in,l.ince ot its remains, survived <|iiile to n late I'ltitto cene perioil. The habitat of the iiiatodon WHS very extensive, even Iwuij; sup|Kisrd to been found is .*>! inches long, and hatacir cumference of 10 inches. 'Ihe lower jaw; the inferior maxilliary bone, which is in a splendid slate of preservation, measures ti feet round froti. the one condyle process to the other, aud the width of the jaw n'-'J 1 . inches. One of the nasal bones, which i* tolerably well preserved, is 2 feet I inch long, and the ulefactory channel is 11 inche* by .. The joints of the vertebiv are like the hoofs of a draught horse, and the chan- nel of the spinal column would form a bed for a three-mch water pipe. The length of the animal gauged by the measurements of the bones already found, and allowing for | those thai have not yet been discovered, is from the point of the nostril to the root of I Ihe tail about -_V feet. This is greater than than that of the celebrated ./iu-'o'/.</, /,ya;i- 1 '- discovered near New burgh, New York, I in the summer of IH4~>, and the skejeton as a i whole i* larger and mo.-e complete than any ! thai has been found in Kentucky, Ohio, Missouri, California 01 Oregon, where the remains have beau in greatest,, abundance. What led to' the extinction of the mastodon is one of the unsolved problem* of nature. It could hardly bave heeu the climate, for it lived through cilmalic change* grealer than any thai now exisl, and all lhal can be said with truth is that it succumbed to some imperceptible hoHiile influence which tirst made it rare and then finally extermi- nated it. The mastodon and the elephant have been known to live through two epoch* of the world's history before thi mammoth with Ins hairy, shaggy coat became theii ontemporary. An American scientist, Mr. J. P. M< Ix-an, author of a Manual of the Aiiti'|iiity of Man, say*, in a work relating to Ihe mastodon, that " it lived for untold ages, an-! it hs DOOMM extinct. In Km ope it ci'Ksml to exis: long l<efore the historical period probably :*Nl,<HIO or 4.Vi,O(jO years. In \iin-ii--a it survived until a compniiiiive. ly i.- ent period." How the elephant trilies found their way lo the American continent is not i|uite certain. Th-y possibly .migrated from Kurope 01 Asia to North America, and thence to South A'II.-II a. The mastodons began soin-wii.it eailier, and piolwhly remained lo new world than the elephants, having per- haps found a refuge in marshy ic^ioni alter Ihe elephants hail )>een exterminated liom the f-.rej.ts by bij .arnivora. The advent of tiger* and Of man, the most predacious of annnils, and the deforest ing of many region ,, ah.n.- with alterations of climate, doubtless coin "ibuted to secure llieir extermination. KV.-TI I lie At, lean elephants are now extinct in ih southern colonies of lhal c.iniiuen:, an 1 l'ie Asiatic specirs Is prole -ted only foi t he p 'i i pose of lieni*: enslaved liy dominant m i : but the pmsii-l .,:' r.orv in the out- country and the advent of steam iiiai-hmeiy in the othei promises noon to terminate their existen.-e, until, like the bison if the . pi tins of North America, tliey vvill shortly UK- bill in the niemoi y ol the oldest m h.bitant." The slow increase ct the race, the - malliif** of their families, and then on spicii >us bulk all combine to cnsuie then annihilation. They were al one iruc the lords of the herbwooil, continuous, an. I e\ en ,h, mm. int over boll, worlds. Now they ,!> only a few survivors in the battle ol III., aud these are driven to inac- cessible lurking places hy thai more domi- nant pinnate who exterminates every heact w Inch In- iloen not deigu to enslave. 'Ihe lioiie- which are now to be seen al Shelhurne weiedug out of a farm Monging lo Mr. John Keycraft, in the south-easterly part of l-ol s. Con ti ,,l the Township of Oiford in the coiintv ot Kent, a locality near the village ut rlighgate and rather.. MI toity mile- \vet of S|. Thomas on the Michigan Central Railway. When Mr. Jelly ban them on exhibition last > ear he waioflbrod 95,000 a-l, lor them by an American showman, but -oiild not pan with them without breaking eitain engagement* aliea.ly made, ll i* possible they may lie shown ut the Imlustrial Kxhibitioii next tail. THK IIONKH OF A MAsTnnoN i;l<iANTsr. wa* disposed of by Mr. Jelly, for a large lumcf money to. Means. Horlou and H.u rikon, of Owen Sound, Out reacl '*' 1 ^ Austiulia, where no L'ngu | lalu mammal has ever I wen proved to exisl J The number of the varieties of the maito- ilon has been v HI ions! y put down al from 4 lo .'Ml, these differed ,, IH-JI^' Imsed iipon semie slight oioditii-ations of the teeth. 'Hie whole of the te.eth of this monster, owne.l b\ Mi -lelly, eik-lit in iiunilx-r, four in the' upper jaw and lour in the lower, have Iwen found complete, with t|,| M exception that the great conical tulierositieHorroiinded procMScshave. i HI ii vk or i N..I t >i. !(.... .i lu Ikr Hoary *!! ,.,i.l im... ..onii... Wealth. The automatic bodyguard now shows som animation, says the London //<''/. Pro- ducing a hand lantern from another myster ious receu he bids us follow. We walk in narrow alleys formed of pile* of boxes, wher not a ray of light penetrates, and find our selves making a rapid descent, with the Ian tern ahead, like some guardian angel. Wde scend a steeper incline than the others, witt Ihe defunct bank notes in 'heir urcophag all around us, when a chill air striking proves that we are well underground. Then ihe figure in front lurns and on nouncei to us in a tone calculated to strik '-iii.i into nervous penons " We are now in the labyrinth." I begin to feel like anoihe l!uy Kawke* going 'o blow up the whol place. But the sudden twiits and turns w lake always in lhat bewildering maze o piled-up vases are becoming moil trying t< ihe banker, who i* not accustomed lo dodg ing a will o'- the- wisp in a catacomb. I begin lo entertain fear* that he is lead ing us to s.ime dungeon fastness when he turns again and solemnly remarks, wiih a wave ot his hand, " All hank notes." Som, idea can be gained of the quantity when i is sai I thai ihey are 77, 74."., ism in number and lhal ihey till l.'i,4' IKJXIS, which, placed side by side, would reach lwo and a half miles. If the notes were placet! in a pil they would reach a height of live and a hal miles, or if joined end lo end would form a ilion l?,4."i miles long. Their superticia event i* a little less than lhal of Hydi park ; their original value was over tl,*-Vj, I, and their weight over !*i; tons. Along another passage we enter a larg< room really a vault which is surroundet from Moor lo ceiling by iron doors of safe* which al their opening might be five fee liigh by five feet wide. One of these n opened and shows rows upon rows of gol< Mm. in bags ot *J,'si ea.-h. One is handed to me to hold, and afte doing for a moment I decide 1 will no carry it home. The dead weight is enor Hums. Yet these officials handle the slip ping, sliding mas* a* though it were a book Another door is opened and we obeerve a stack of bank notes. I remark lhat 1 have seen a lot already. For answer the manager takes out a parcel of 1,000 t'l.OOO notes ant a*ys: Take bold." 1 do so, and am told I an holding il.issi.ism. J .hould have wished to hold it longer, but ihey want il, sol put u luck. Tun small safe ooiitaini t'SislO.lsX on- nine, I the polite manager, "and youarc in the n -hest vault ol the Bunk of Knglam. and of the world. This small room at pres ' " *! I > - I. I br -..,,. " I am delighted to see you. Mi** Tickle well," exclaimed the visitor, warmly. " You haven't changed a particle in ten years." " N ou mistake, Mr. Westerley," said the Boston maiden, wiping her spectacle* thoughtfully " Kxternally I may appear the same, but scince demount lu'.es irretrag- ably thai ihe hum-in physical organism, even to its ultimate particle*, is entirely itcon- slru.-ted every seven years" >hcga\e him her hand in a slow dreamy, pin, cupie-1 kind of way, and a cold chill ent up and down his back Cfticai/o Tri- enl iiol.ls By this time my appetite for wealth is nearly gone. I am nauseated with the at mospiiere ot Iwnk notes. My sense* are lulled with the oppressing spectacle and ] in the | | la ,| wlt |, dehght the merry plashing foun tain in the court-yard. Here are the ,|iiar ters of th tinny-four guardsmen who night ly patrol ihe establishment. A double sen- try l* posted at each gate, and as they loa.l with ball cartridges it is not a safe place foi an enterprising burglar to tackle. The offi- cer of the giurd has a liedroom m t'.ie bank, and is provide.) with a dinner and a liottl t tin tines-, old port, and I understand' ha: the guards are also liberally in tc.l. The I- 1., n,i r Stalin. Knglish it-.- i;>4ii > of Malta dates from the year I sou. Two years before thai, Napo Icon, on his way lo F.gypl, hail taken tl.e island and, afler a sojourn of a few davs, hud left mailer* in charge ot Yailhois al \ alette, the capital. Bui the Maltese s, .on revolted againsl French tyranny and Uid siege to Valetta, U-ini; aided in their enter- prise by Portuguese, Neapolitan, and Knglisb allies. After a siege of two years Vauboi* nun einle, ed, whereupon the .Maltese, having lost -.I),!)!"! n-.en in recovering their capital, voluntarily placed themselves under the pro- tection of Kiigland, nn arrangement after- ward confirmed (in IHI4I by the Treats ot Pans. Since then the islands have prosper- ed under Britiih rule. In I KNO the population was l.>4,s'fj. not including British soldier* or their families. Of this numl>er 'J4.i"si w.-ie Kuglish and other foreigners. On a. count of the gaiety of Valelta and its attraclivenet* in other ways, as a winter residence, the alien population ha* of late liee rapidly increasing. Th* island has a good university, and lower schools modeled alter those of Kugland. In the school* until lately Italian was the prevailing Ian guage, though ll. e population is rather of Arabic than Italian stock. Ijitely, how ever, effort* have been made to extend the use of Kuglish, and uo doubt the lapse of time will see the Maltese people pretty ff.ctually Anglicized. [The Chautaiii|uan. I . HI. II., I I.,.. ,,,!.' Karly in January ol ihe present year a woods- man, engaged in chopping some ot the n,on ster oaks in the noitliein part of the great ' Itlack Forest," Germany, and who had limit a tire against a large dead oak piepara- toiy to pai taking of his midday meal, was worn off. They are coiiip.'wi-d of <len tine and enamel, and (he lower purls are as fresh look ing as thow of any livnu; uunnal. I hey are eignt inches long, and rallier more ( than three inches and a half broad, structure of the teeth indicate.* that Thi they ^. have MM-yed admirably f.,r the grinding and inaKtiuition of tough" har.l \egelable~sul. sian.-es. The |KIIIS are of n brownish color like th,-e oia ie, eut human iikelelon A brokl n pie. e ,,t ,, I1C of the tusks , - tisnni* IIIVWUIOT is a nsmc -oininonly given to one of the about nine fei>t eight inches. In incomplete iniiiii r,,i, iMin.i IMIU-S of the elephsnt .' m*t have been from twelve to fonr- I- .i.ically known as l'iol,os. , I, .,ns. '..ni... |t ,, , lightly cm-.-ed, and The geofraphical rang* ifthi* animal was its en- umtei.n.c.it t|,,. tin -i.-si |iart'iJ4 very extensive. There iltoaroek oonotfla mch. It is partly by the t i-ks, wwoilM i > .-, its renuuns have i...: l^.n l\v ,- i which bT* nongh mi A formidable list of objections to Italian immigration is drawn up hy The New York Sun. Nine tenths of ih* immigrants are men, and although many of the men are married few bring then wives, children or sisters. The leason il thai the Italians, like the Chinese, do not desire to make the Unites! States their permanent home, hut to male as much money a* they can and ihcn iiiinn and spend it in Italy. They do nol help tolill up the thinly settled parl* of Ihe ' ountiy, bul crowd inlo the cities. They come armed with deadly weapons which ihey are not slow lo use. For these reasons Ihe stun regards them as undesirable iiiiin- grant*. The United States Consul at Vancouver bus not reaped the glory which be evidently expected as the result of his recent insult to her Majesty. His action is very generally condemned by the press of his own country, which appear* to lie thoroughly ashamed of him. One paper, which calls him an "un- mitigated ass," says lhat the dignity of the Tinted Statei is "offended and outraged whenever one of our repiravntativesmakesit his business t,, uv us n taste of the days when hob nailed boots were a necessary n .- comiMtnimenl of democracy, and when the line iK-twce.n independence and (ringing was mipposed to coincide with the line hetween courtesy and bnorMinesi." Mr. Ktvinii'n use- fulness is gout-. nil o portion* crawl from the log as soon as the rotten wood had got well wurmcd through. The .lay was bitter cold, and the snake only made a few yards over the frozen ground when his convolutions U- .me smaller and smaller, and he rinally ceased to wriggle, and ,|iiietly coiled up near a large pile of brush. The sturdy lierman chop|r, who had Iwen more surprised than soured, waited until the creature hail become thoroughly be- numbed with the cold, and then approached and dispatched him withanaxr. Measure- ment* snowed the slimy creature to be twen- ly seven feel six inches in length, and nearly fifteen inches through the body in t!ie middle. Ins: back of ihe immense head, which was eleven inches in length and almost as broad, little gold ring had been put through the skin. It was in the form of two rings rather than one, being shaped not unlike tne figure S. One part of the ting was through the kin, v. lule the other was through a hole in a small ,-npper coin bearing date of 17li I >ne side of the coin waa perfectly smooth, with the exception of these letters and fig- ure*, which had evidently been cut on it with a pocket knife, the workmanship In-ing very rough, "Louis Krut/.er, I 1 ., (i. (>., 17*1. ' Sonic i,l the older inhabitants of tho " liUuk Forest" reim-mlnu- healing their parents tell of Krutxer, the sor|H-nt harmer, ' and they all unite in declaring thin this gigantic *er|iiii was toimtrly t lie opf'ty nl t'ic old " i-hariiicr," and liutl it wa at least 1 1.") years old wVu kill. 'lie woi-,lch, |.| ei on that cold Januuty -):iy f I-SM. IIKII tlx ox III! IMIKII N I 4IMIM > i lrj.lll vlmiKtkriiinx all brr lrl i I-.. I nl. In Ikr N. .., I ,| (Quietly but busily and steadily (treat Britain is slrenglhenini; her strategic points in ihe New World. Two twelve inch guns from Woolwich have recently )>eeii mounted m one of the new fort* at Halifax, and a third i* on the way llulher. The capacious aud admirable harbor that ha* caused H il fax to lie chosen a* the principal BritUh naval station in America is now defer.ded by nine fort* and batterie*. which command the entrance* on either side of M. -Nub's Isl in,!. At York redoubt and Ives Poinl, as well a* elsewhere-, are very heavy gtinn, and from ihe creit of ihe hill the citidel can deliver a plunging fire. A good garrison of regulars is kept there, and undoubtedly wilh it- famous dockyard and it* coaling facil it would be the base of any naval operations on the North Atlantic coast. Looking further south, we find that Loc don and Bermuda can now talk with each other by telegraph. The latter, with is veil defended harl>or and fine dockyard for repairing ships, il a valuable naval stat.i.r, and for a fast cruiser only about lwo ti ivs distant from the Caiolma coast. It h&n a well-equipped marine arsenal, is difficult of approach through tortuous channels, and, being completely fortified with powerful modern ordnance, i* considered practically secure from attack. Il is al once a btMii of supplies for war ships and a refuge for merchant fleets. Nor wi'.l Kngland neglect the Baha-i .-. within a single day'* steaming of I-'lot ' .. ihe importance of whioh was shown by the operation* of the Confederate blockade run- ners. A* for Jamaica, wilh ilt comniauiiing pocition in relation lo(iulf commerce, at the oulhemapprottch to the Windward Passage, we find that <ireal Britain ha* been ue ly inlrenching Kingston, wilh a view to tl'.e protection of it* tine harbor. It must I* noted also lhat Jamaica and Bali/e are at the extremities of a line sirelching ai-roas the route belween ihe Gulf and the Carib- bean Sea by the Yucatan channel. To the southeast lie* the chain of the Lea- ser Antilles, with St. Lucia and Karbexioes prominent among them. Port Castries, in in the former, i* one of the leading Bi ' naval stations in the New World, and bait a million dollar* ha* lately lieen laid out on the improvements of itshirhor, and the tm penal i .I.-, eminent has fortified it slroi ^ v K-iilw.l.xs is the headquarters of theBrtt sr. forces in the West Indies. Ot) the Sot th American coast is the island of Trini<la,i which, with British Cuiitna on the ott.e- ide, dominates the mouth of the Orinoco. On the Pacific -oat (ireat Blitainand t! t Dominion have jointly expended more a million dollars on the large graving at r's.|iiimaiilt, wh-rc the heaviest v ewe Is may be r>*|iaiied. and a system of defe foi Ks.(uimault, Vancouver Citv . and Victo na has been pUnne-l. As the oulv > station of importance for (ireat Britain on llu- N'ortb Pacific coast, she i* amply '..-I in protecting it. Indeed, the general <x>nc!u*ion to be reach- ed is lhat the lorliried |x,ints of I ; real I t.un in the N'ew World are not looked upon primarily by her as base* for aggreui r operations. Il is true that the proble, preparation for atla.-k and defence ale ,ery distinctly separated, but Knglan.l I - loug sim-t- abandoneil the idea of any tut :! ti on,|iiesl on llns continent*, and is anxious lo hold w hal she lias. Ibe lot lug >. To move, or nol to move ; ilia: is thet|i.;-:- lion : Ahethei 'tis U-st another yea. to suffei The stingy meanness of our grasping 1 -i lord, or to lake arms againsl a sea ol tn.ulile- And by moving end them * To pack ; to move net- more, and by ur niovini; say we ei.<! The sewer gas and thousand vile am. -v ances This place is heir to 'Us a consummation Devoutly to U- wished. To p*>ck, ion, : t'o move, to a worse place, perchance : \e ihere's the rub ; I oi in that move what woen may come When we have lelt tins dear old Hat, Vlust gixe us pause ; there is '.lie fear That makes calamity of so long least : Kc,r who would liear the sight* and MIV.HU* aud smells. The duty hulls, the janitor's contumely. The wibl tin pan piano just n>-xt door, I i..- neighbor's childi en shrieking nigh' > day ; I he tiomUine player in the room M : .,v .- And all the temper trying nuisances. When lie might pack his good* and ski)' With a Mtrong drayman. Who would eve- live In this run down, dilapidated flat, flul thut the .lii-ad ot something < worse, I he undivcoveivd wois we're cure to tin . Alter a lease is signed, pu/./.len us still And make I\H i at her keep the flat we have Than Hy to landlords that we know not of * iix experience does make coward* of n- II. And thus the mad, rash vows of other t:: -. Are sicklied o'er uhe.n moving day arrive-. And then the perfect home we swore ire d rent Ve i|inte forget, and in the same old flai iiain another year. Miteriei of Wealth- Mr. 1'iuchpt-niiy "1 worked and lae,l lany a long year for my money, only ' ru<i tllast tbat weallh does not bring happineo Mr Sliinpurte " Doesn't it''' Mr. Fuichpenny "No, I can't spend a lollur without pulling money into someone Ise's pocket."

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