Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Flesherton Advance, 3 Dec 1896, p. 3

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je PRAQICAL FARMING, ! " orta " from tbe cattle's cribs, not re- : tlectiixg, apparently thai this refuse ' (rom tbip cribs \a often full of weeda EARLY PLOWING. We always) make ic a point to plow *a early aa possible for all cropsâ€" for spring, crops as soon as tbe frost is out of the ground and it is dry enough, , writes O. J. Viae, in Ohio Farmer. In our well-tiled fields we can begin very ; early. We frequently have our fields half plowed or more Ijefore the neigh- bors begin. Last spring we cummeuc- i ed plowing a clover sod for ensilage i corn on March li>. After plowing sev- 1 eral days, a severe blizzard stopped us. j The high winds blew the snow all from tbe highest parts, and the cold follow- ing froze so deeply that we were unable to plow again until Marcb 31. Tbe part plowed fLrst was quae compact, just as 1 desired the remainder to be before pxeparatiun for planting begins. ' that the cattle would not eat, and chaff that is filled with we«<laee>d, and hay- seed. Such bedding is one of the fruit- ful sources of we«»d-sowing, and should not be used on any account whatever. The kind of bedding that one may lay in tor use in winter will, of course, de- pend somewhat upon tbe materials that are at hand, but the materials are so many, and, withal, so very common, that no one need fail to secure as mucb as may be needed. Siwamp hay is abundant in many localities, and makes splendid bedding. Dry leaves aj:e also very cMniuon and very serviceable. Kspeciaily good, also, is dry road dust, and dry ioam. and these are accessible to every one. A few shovelfuls of this thrown down be- hind the cattle when tbe stalls have been cleaned will make everyth ng dry and sweet about the stable, while as The freezing will make it more friable j ^ ^^f'l^^lj"'. """"^ '^ '^"'^ '"* ^â- Â«^- &nd we can get it in good shape for planting with, much less labor than if the plowing bad been delayed until just before planting, as many farmers ad- vocate and practice. By be:ng plowed early, tae rain will settle and compact it and it will withstand drouth belter, and tbe teams can get over it much easier. Plowed thus early it will usu- ally be suXfioiently firmed without the uae of tbe roilei', which will save us sev- eral days' extra work durimg the busy season. By beginning early we can take our leisure and need not crowd the teajnsâ€" a fact which we as well as the teams appreciate. It is also cooler early than it is likely to be about the Isi of May, and tbe teams can do tbe work easier than later. Another advantage in early plowing lies in the fact that by tbe time that preporatioa for p'anting begins, thou- sands of weeda will have germinated and will be destroyed by the necessary tillage. With the first crop destroyed there is usually but little difficulty in keeping ahead of the others. I'oe manure is applied direct from the stables during tho winter, the meet of it with a K«m() manure spreader, tbe remainder with a sled wnen the ground is covered tvith snow. In the latter case it is spread from^ the sled. One advantage in soilin£ ls manifest- ed in the field in which 1 plowed thus early last spilog. A crop ul' clover buy and seed was taken fruu it the year before, but a was not pastured, and I found it so mellow that it was dif- ficult to plow : unless 1 kept tbe team walking rapidly the plow would not scour. Thie soil was well filled with clover roots, which diii a good work in lucaening it, but their good effects would have been lost had it been pastured much especially with cattle or horses. We gradually drifted mio the soiling This kind c^ beading should be stor- ed before the heavy fall rains, for when once these have begun it will be wt»ii- nigh Lmpoesible to secure any that will not be filled with moisture. Dry loam may be secured almost anywhere. Some- pasture knoll ploughed to furnish it ABOUT SOME RIC3 BABIES UTILE FOLKS WITH SLATHERS OF GOOD BONEY. rr*ai «3,M* (• ST.SM Per Wrar Seemary â€" TiM-rc Are •then Wllk a Vcw Bsllaro Per Week oimI Jut an lAvaUe. How much money is necessary for the support of a Utt'^e child i It alil depends on whose child it ia, and, incidentally, on bow much money its guardians can get. There are cases on record in this country, where whole families of beauti- Uu'.. children are supported cm a small proportion of from 910 to $'25 per week. The fathers of thse nurslings are so weU satisfied with the sum total of their weeikly salaries, aud so sure that if they get their pay promptly on Sat- urday nights the ittle ones will not suffer and they watcb their jobs with commendable zeal and are reasonably grateful for all they receive. Bat then, tbeix chijdreo are only com- m.;n, every-day youngsters. What the public wants to know is what is a suit- able ailowoiaoe for a mtiltimillionaire will result ia the " killing of two birds cbi.d f with one stone " â€" the levelling of rough Happily, it is iLot hard to answer the pasture land and the gaining of a use- question, for several imporUnt cases ful absorbent, good alike for stable and N: ' , , u « â-  i « v i. poultry-hou.-*. have recentliy been before the New lork In many localities it is possible to 'Courts, which throw considerable light obtain sawdust simply at the cost of ' on the subject, hauling it, and sawdust certainly makes very excellent bedding, so far as the stable is concerned, but it ia very gen- erally confessed by those who have looked into tbe matter that sawdust is pretty near worthless as far as its ultimate manur: il value ia concerned, while in some coses it ia a positive in- jury to the land, owing to acids con- tained in the wood. In any case, it takes a long time to rot it after it is applied to the soil, and where swamp hay, leaves, rood dust, etc., can be ol> Archibald Henry Macdonald Sinclair was bom on October 2, 1890, and is now but lAttle more tham 6 years old. He is a son of the '.ate Clarence Granville Sinclair,' of London, and a grandson of Sir John George ToUemoche Sinclair, who is the owner of Thurso Castle, Scotjuid. His father was formerly a member of the Scots Guards, and Tuught against the Arabs at Suakim. The HERE'S TO BEAUttT. There are many domestic women who have the hair and complexion to make them profeosional beauties, but they don't bathe and brush with sufficient energy and they achieve only transient results. When Lily Langtry stepped into professional life from society ranks she told a friend that it was all rub- bish, this talk about her marvelous beauty. "It is because I understood so much better than the women around me the art of keeping my compLt_uoa and my figure. Now if i could onJy leam to actl" In those days creams were less abund- LUMBERING ON THE OTTAWA A LIFE OF GB£AT OARDSHIP AND EXP«Bl'aK.' River Drivers Often W'aiat Deep i» Icf Watersâ€" Pain-Racked Botliea the Fre- quent Outcomeâ€" Only Che Kbet Bo- bust Con Stand This W«ary Bound Of Toil From the Ottawa Free Preau. I Only those who have engaged in the I arduous occupation of hunbering know ! how dearly earned is their livelihood, I for among the many vocations of men that ot lumberman ranks among the ant than now. But Langtry kept her i L?*' f "^-^rm^a rania amxwg in" complexion with lailk and niaaaa^and most <langeroua and difficult. There la her white hands with soa* a^lemon • ^® ^'^''>' chanty labor froni earlieat juice, and her figure with cold water â-  ^*T '" "^'ei""* =*.'ar. when the tMleri baths. Home women shudder at the : tor half tie year is remc.te from boms thought of the cold -lip. They aje deli- ! f*"^ fri*n<ls, and whose daily round ifl cate from coddling and sitting and ' ^ ^** *"'' work and sleep, only get- worry and pie. But let them cycle and : ^^'^^ ^ occasional glimpse of the out- side world throiujh a long looked for letter from some loved one far away. Then tbe days lengthen, the frozen lake bivaks up. and comet) the driving of logs and hewn timber down the tortv- uous sMrifl running stream, when n^ cessity often calls the driver to wada Jbody deep in the swift flowing, icy w»- Bheumatism Cured in » Day -South I ^"- • None but the strong can en- American ^uioiac Cure for Eheu- ! «^^ "" such tu.avy lalior, onTy the mort matism and N^l^^^Sically cures , f'>''<^^ are abL. to stand th« ten hour. :_ 1 . o , *'=•",<»â- Â»"».•'»"*»-" 'J ^jjg ot daily toil, with hut a mid-days hour a patronise the cold dip and they will soon be strong auid handsome. Beauty liea so close to the akin that women are f i nd in g out every day how easy it is to be na-ndaome, and that is why there ore twenty "beia.uties" now to one of twenty years ago. tained it will proabbly be best to avoid Uyjis fathei was married to Miss Mab- tbe use of sawdust. â-  o j â- -> i lo loun There is another reason is favor of |»- ^anda on December 18, lUiiS. tbe use of such materials as swamp hay and dry leaves for bedding, for their use in liberal quantities, insures the adding to the soil of a goodly amount of vegetable humus, which ia very beneficial to the growth of crops, ej^cially on soil that is heavy and in- clined to pack. Coarse manure light- ens up such soil wonderfully, and makes it much more retentive of moisture. The same result Is obtained where mulch ia used about the crops and work- ed into the soil after it haa served its purpose as mulch. system several years ago, and at no tune have we beeia sorry or wiahed to retui-u to pasturing and fencing. 1 a<m quite certain we can keep our stock cneaper and easier than by maintaining fences that are but shortlived at best, always out of repair and demanding attention. It is but a matter of time â€" and a comparatively short time, tooâ€" when the majority of farmers in Stark county will have adopted the soiling system. It is difficult for many to get out of the old ruts, but when once out, they will be out to slay. The land that is wasted in fence rows will, if piroper- ly managed, nearly ur quite support the stuck oo an ordinary farm, during the sumuier or pasturing season. Much of this land can be mude to grow two srops each year. By growing the soli- ng crops near tbe barn, the labor of 'ceding is reduced to a minimum. Tbe ireatest difficulty is in getting farm- ers to try it, and continue in it until accustomed to it. There is a great deal in being accustomed to anything. It takes a few years to get the full bene- fit from soiling. When farmers see that by soiling, their land never gets so hard that it cannot easily be plowed, no difference how dry it may be, they will begin to think its advanta^jes have not been overestimated. \\ ben we plowed our clover sod in June. 1895, there seemed not a particle of mois- ture in it, but two horses plowed it •s easily as three would have done un- der ordinary oircumstances. Not only was the plowing easier, but tbe prepar- ation for planting also. It did not break up rough and cloddy. On the contrary it was fine and friable. THE BEDDING SUPPLY. In knany sections of tbe west one is surprised to see great piles of straw in tbe fields and tbe oowa and other stock standing about tbe barn-yard or other quarters shivering and hunched back if the weather is cold, all plas- tered with manure, giving evidence that they have no adequate bedding. Tbe farmer who neglects to supply beddioig in liberal quantities with straw going to waste lacks humanity and business sagacity. To such a man tbe following by Webb Ouunel would be am idle tale for all be has to do to reach the emd suggested is to draw in a load ot straw now and then if he bas not the accommodation to have a good pile threshed into the yard in the fall : Before winter closes in an abun- dant supply of bedding should be s«- lured for use when the stock must be cept stabled. Such a supply will add lot a little to the comfort of the stock, M»d therefore to its thrift and profit uhI not a little to tbie value of the manure heap, for while bedding in it- self does not add a very great deal of plant food to tbe manure pile, yet it assists in preserving valuable fertiliz- ing material that otherwise would go to waste, since tbe mujoriity of cattle stalls are not sufficiently tight to keep tbe liquid, dressing from running to waste through cracks in the floor. A great many farmers depend for bed- ding (or burses, pigs, etc.. upon the WILL HELP YOU TO KEEP AWAKE. I>r*w>y Wcnklypcrs Krjalee Vver a STew VcatUatlBs Braicr. The ventilation of a larg« numbec ot churches ia notoriously bad, and bad ventilation has frequently more to do with sleepy congregations than even the dullness or the length of the sermon. Wide interest has been created by the description of a new departure in the system of combined warming and ven- tilation introduced by Prof. Fischer in the new memorial church, at Berlin. Germany, which in its general plan re- sembles St. Paul's Cathedral in Lon- don. To the height of 80 feet from the floor the walls are traversed by hot air chambers, so that from the ground to the galleries, 22 feet above, theu-e is no perceptible diffekrence of temperature, tbe air being kept constantly at 15 de- grees C. (16 degrees K.) The aim of the engineer has been the removal from the space occupied by tbe congregation of the paths followed by the currents of air conveying tbe warmth from the sources of heat to the radiating surfaces by placing tbe heating apparatus high up in tbe neighbourhood of tbe cool- ing surfaces, maintaining, in reversal of thepuaual prot^-clure, a faighfr temper- ature in tbe upper portion of the building and intercepting and reheat- ing the cooled air in the descent toward tbe lower part occupied by the con- gregation. There are thus four strata of air of different temptralures. Prof. Fischer maintaina that the system of beating the upper more than the lower regions of the air. is tbe only proper course in such lofty buildings aa churches, for whereas with the ordin- ary tnetfaod the air heated uo or be- }ow the ground level ia cooled on reach- ing the root, and fouled by the pro- duets of respiration, deticends again on th? heads m the congregation, unles-s withdrawn by an exhauster. In his system â-  the fresh aiir is warmed to an agreeable temperature in its passage through the channels in the walls. Fur- thermore, its ascent is encouraged hy its being led through two sets of heat- ing coils. In the dome there ia a third set of coils, which, although they do not contribute to the wanning of the parts occupied by tbe wor8hippers,serve effectually to preveut the descent of tbe foul air by promoting its continued ascent toward, and escape through, the apertures in tbe lantern that crowns tbe edifice. PROMISES FOB HIS SUPPORT. In contemplation of this marriage an anteuuptiok agreement was entered in- to between the contracting parties and Mr.Pbilip JuaticeSaindavby which about half a million dollars was set apart in trust for their benefit, and from this Mr. Sinclair was to be entitled to a consideraUle income. Mrs. Sincair died in London, Engjand, a fe wdays after the birth of her child. Mr. Sinclair died at Great Marlow, Bericshire, Eng- land, on November 16, 1895. He left a fortune, and by bis wiX appointed Wil- liam llacdonaid Sinclair, of London; John Henry FuJlerton Uduy, of Uduy Castie, ^Scotland, and Horace Edward Golding, of LL-ndon, guardians of tbe person and estate of bis son. Since the death of bis father the little fellow has been living with bis aunt, Mrs. Owen Williams, at Temtile Hoiuk, Great Mar- low, Hucks, EnglxLud. Phil p Jus'.ite Sands, who L.ves in Lenn- ox, Mass., IS thu Trustee of tbe trust esiaie held for tb« child, and it yields an income of aL>oui 9:24,1)00 onnualliy. In addition to this the boy is entitled to a fortume left bim by bis father, from which a/n income of-alM>ut 97,500 is de- rived. This is in the hands of the child's guardians in England. GIVEN 95,000 A YEAB. After tbe death of the chiiid's mother a petition was presented to tbe Supreme Court by Mr. Sands in 1891 for an al- lowance for the little one, and the Court then directed, that, in view of the iarge income that was accumulating for the child 95,000 a year would not be too exorbitant a sum to expend for its care, maintenance and education. This bas been paid yearly since. The ohiJd's aunt, Mrs. Williams, has made an arrangement with the Eng- lish guardians to care for the boy at ber home for 93,000 a year. One half of this amount is to l« taken from the income which conies from tbe Eng!i«b fortune held for the boy, and it is in- tended that tbe other half shall be paid from the income of tbe trtist estate held in this country. Mr. Sanils has therefore applied to the Supreme Court to reduce tbe a,l!owanc« of 95.000 a year, granted in 1881, so that but 91.^00 annually, shall be taken from the income for the child's support a')road. I'he referee is to (iosh upi>n these questions and to decide if $;).U00 wi:i be a sufficient sum for the main- tenance of tbe boy, pui-suant to th<> agreement made with his aunt. .\ referee his just made a report that 97,500 shouild l.v granted for the support of DurothBa Kdgarita Crouae, who has an income of 9:25,000 a year, and an appMcation i.'< now pending for au allowance of 97,.')00 annually for the maintenance of Francis Marion 'A'hair ey, who has an income of 915,000. Both of these children are about 9 years of age. u» 1 to 3 days. Its action upon system is remarkable and mysterious. It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. 75 cents. Sold by W. E. Richardson. AN OBLIGING LADY. Mrs. Mackay â€" An' so ye have no mo- ther now ? Jinmiy- No, mum. Mrs. Mackayâ€" Wellt my boy, when- ever ye feal the want of a good licking come to me, and I'll be a mother to ye. Heart Disease Relieved in SO Blinntes. â€"Dr. Agnew's Cure for the Heart gives perfect relief in all cases of Or- K*""2 or Sympathetic Heart Disea'<e in 90 minutes, and speedily effects a cure. It ia a peerless remedy for Pal- pitation. Shortness of Breath. Smother- ing Spells. Pain in Left Side and all symptoms of a Diseased Heart. One dose convinces. Sold by W. E. Richardson. Fully one-third of the land in Great Britain is owned by members of tbe House of Lords. ,„Hay Fever and Catarrh Relieved In 10 to 80 Minutes â€"One Short Puff of the breath through the Blower, sup- plied with each bottle of Dr. .Agnew's Catarrhal Powder, diffuses this Powder over the surface of the nasal pasaatres Painless and delightful to use. It tr»- lieves instantly, and permanently cures Catarrh. Hay Fever. Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tonsilitis, and Deafness. Sold by W. E. Richardson. Queen Elizabeth had the reputation of being tbe most accomplisheu eques- trienne of ber time. Relief in Six Hours.â€" Distressing Kid- ney and Bladder Diseases relieved in six hours by tbe "South American Kid- ney Cure." This new remedy is a great surprise and delight on account of its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in che bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the ruinary passage in male or female. It relieves retention of water and pain in pacing it <\!most immed- iately. It you want quick relief and cure this is your remedy. Sold by W. E. Richardson. Horse bones make, it is said, an even better grade of button' than tbe bones of the ox. respite. Such in brief, ia the life a< many thousands of laborers in the Otv tawa valley, and among the many \M Thomas Dobie, of 130 Head street, Chau- diere, who for twelve long years has wrought for the great lumber king, J. R. Booths shantying in tbe snowy nor- thern forests, aniilifting three incJb dea.1 during the summer heata. It ia not to be wondered at that in his lon0 experience and great exposure ha should contract a severe cold that ia time took permanent Lodging in the re- gion of his loins and kidneys. Like many others be thougiit to work it off, but in vain. Soon tbe pains in the r^ gioo of the kiiiaeys becanke so intense that tabor was a> torture to him, and it was only the indomitable coura^^ borni <^ a kAowVe<ige that otb- era. were dependent upon him, that urged turn to pursue hia weary round oi daily toil. Every sudden movement of the body was as a thorny goad chat made him wince beneath its sting. Added to tbs was an unusual and excessive sweating which aecessi- tated frequent changes of clothing, and which weak(\ned h.m to such an ex- tent that his appetite was almost en- tirely gone, and eventually but little food and much water was hia daily fare. Many vain efforts were made by 5Ir. Dobie to free himaelf from the painJ which had fastened themselves upoQ him. and one medicine after another was uaed, but without effect. Life be- came a burden, and existence a tbin^ almost undesirable, .\fter many fruit- less efforts he was induced to tiry D». Williams' Pink Pills. When three boxes were token the change in his condi- tion was marvelous, and bis own words are, " when I bad taken six boxes I was a new man and conaider the cure „, ^ J . .. » „.. , „ i worth hundreds of dollars." Mr. Dobie. Plies Cured m 8 to 6 Nights.â€" Or. although completely cured, oontmues Agnew's Ointment wUl cure all cases of Itching Piles in from S to 6 nights. One application brings comfort. For Blind and Bleeding Piles it is peerless. Also cures Tetter, Salt lUieum, Eczema, Barber's Itch, and all eruptions of tbe skin. 35 ots. Sold bv W. E. Richardson. TOMBS OF ICE. Awmi Fal* SeaeUaMS Xel by Travcllem In HMNcar;. 'A skeleton baa been found in one ot tbe fissures of the Ademello glacier, in the Southern Tyrol^ which is thoughd to bo llhat of an Alnerican tourist of the name ot Ruth, who disappeared in 1890. These fissures Weave glaciers aC all angles, and it is easy to slii> into one of thecn. When once in it is hardly IKissiWe to escape without help from abovo, and tbe warmth of the body melts the i<-e around, so tliat tbe vic- tim slowly descends by hU own weight into the (lepths ot the glacier, and gen- erally starvf-s to death. On looking in- to tbeee fissures tbe most beautiful play of liglht in blue and green and rain- bow colors is seen. But these are best enjoyed from the safe vantage ground of the upper, outside world, rather than down in llho depths and dose at baud, In some instaiu'es, it is said, bodies have lieen preserved in these fissares in the ice for years^ W.\SPS DEFEND COWS. A correspondent of the Irish Natur- ailist describes a curious scene whichi be witnessed whiC<<! walcbing bis cows io the field. He noticed many waspa buzzing around the cows, and upon stopping to observe what tb«y werti about, he found that they* were catch- ing and killing flies. A wlhite cuw in partii-ular attracted tbe wasps ap- porentCy because tlhey could so easily see the flies that alighted upon it. They invariably bit off the wings, sometimes the tegs, and occasimially the beads of the r.ies and carried ihe bodies away. prol>al>Ty to feed their larvatv Three or four hundred Plies were thits caught in about twenty minutes from th-.> backs ot two cows. The horse in the an of the Roman Catacombs is an emblr-m of the swift- ness of life. 10 cts. Cures Constipation and Liver Ills. â€" 'Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills are the most perfect made, and cure like magic. Sick Headache, Coostipatioa, Bilious- ness, Indigestion and au< Liver Ilia. 10 cents s vialâ€" 40 doses. Sold by W. E. Richardson. PRECIOUS METALS IN BRIT.AIN. Great Britain is not usually looked on as a gold or silver mining country. In 1895, e.fiOO ounces of gold and 280,- 431 ounces of silver were produced from British mines. GERMANY'S SNAIL FARMS. Tbe edible white snail ia acientifieally cultivated un small farina in Germany. Tbe snails after being gathered dur- ing the month oif August in the sur- rounding forests are put into a pen and fed newly mown grass and leaves. After staying in tibe yten ttlwut a month the mouths of tbe Nikuls are covered with a bard membrane whith indicate to the snail farmer that the snail is as fat OS it wHl ever be. because its closed mouth prevent.* it eating. The snails are th*'n gatht^red and iiacked and Htoipped to tbe markets of France, •Bd Germaajr. Cures Provs Um merit of Hood's SarsaparlUaâ€"posl. Ut», perfect, permanent Cures. Cures of Scrofula In severest forms. Salt Rheum, with Intense ItclUng and born icald bead, boils, pimples, etc. Cur«a of Dysnepsia, Rheumatism, ratarrh, b; toiling and making rich, red blood. Cures ot Nerroiisness auJ That Tired Keellni; t>7 feeding iirrYCs. musi^les and Ussu(>> an pur« blood. For book ol cures b; Hoods Sarsaparilla Send address to C. I. Hood St Co.. Lowell, Mas' « « ., rtjii are the best after-diiine. nOOU S Kills p.iiH. nid diR.-stiou. -iJa. rOH TWKNTX-SIX TKAUBL DUNNS BAKING POWDER THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND LahocstSalk in Canada. taking Pink Pills occasionally and is very enthusiastic in his praiaes of what the pills have done for him. Many of has fellow workmen seeing the great cbamge wrought in him by these fam- ous ptlla have been led to give ihont a trial for other ailniiints and are un- animous in pronouncing them superior to all other medicines. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills act directly on -the blood and nerves, building them anew and thus driving disease from the system. There is no trouble due to either of these causes which Pink Pills will not cure, and in hundreds ot cases tbey have restored persons to health after all other remedies had tailed. Ask for Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and take nothing else. Tbe genuine are always enclosed in boxes the wrapper around which bears tbe full trade mark. " Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People." May be had fru^m all dealers or sent or six boxes tor 8:2.50 by addressing tbs fiost paid on recon»t of 50 ceniii a box Jr. Williams' Medicine Co., BrookvUle, Ont. THE TIRED OLD WOMJVN. There was an old woman who always was tired. She lived in a house where no help .vaa hired. Her loat words on earth were, "Dear friends, I ana going. Where sweeping ain't doae. nor cburn- ing. nor sewing; And everything there wiU be just to my wishes. For where tbey can't eat, there's no washing of dishes; And though there the anthems are con- stantly ringing, I, bavuig no voice, will get rid of tbs singing. Don't mourn for me now, don't mourn for me never. For I'm going to do nothing forever and ever." LONDON'S UNDERGROLND STREETS The tunnel under the River Thames at BUickwall is now an lU'complished fact, the first pei'soii to pass through it hav- ing been Lady Pearson, the wife of the contractor. Thus another is added to ihe many underground thurouj^bfai-esL known respectively as Dean .sinn^t. and Weston street, each of these subter- ranean streets is over 100 yards ia length, and is ligbleil by a doulde row of gas lamps kept burning day and night, . I til ITE -A DISTINCTION. What is the difference lietween i»tI(k it and .1. visitation ? Well, when your pretty young sister comes to see u.s, thnt i.t a visit. Wheo your mamma comes ami stays a moutl^ that is a visitation. MsMMilttI

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