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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 5 Jun 1884, p. 6

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 i: ft' m 1 1 '/•"I ' if! â-  l;:i^^ M SUKDAFS DINHEB. wttto Saod»y' diniMr] • We kamr wba% that mMni here at tke Wert, â- â- nw^^the rieli end the irell to do Batâ€" img the gg^r. thevery poor, whoer«ipdnt^f^peiiatlbeutiBoet twelve or foaiteeii riiiniiige Awadi:; the ton- ing helote ute live ia oae mom in the alone â€"do 70a kmam irbaik aoct of • fnet their Sanday*! dimMr it! The Sandal's dinner of many of theae peo- neti^alM^of no dinner at all. Bat ri! t\ miii% p« there are thniMidi ofaMB wbo, by hook m by crook, will oa thk cat day of the week have a little meal tiiat dose not iHiolly oon* sietof breadand fantter. Of coane, tf th^ are going to have meat or fiah, the first thmg is to get it. Even the hare, as worthy Mnu OlawM reawbided her readera, had to be oaoght first. Now, tiiere are many reneons wb^ the poor do not ahop on Saturday night. In Idle first plaoe, many of them are employed themselvee ti'l the last momenk in the straeta, either aelling their own stock, or aaaiating a wealthier neighbor. The men who get their poor wage on the Saturday, too, do not as a rale come home eariy with it. When tbey do, there are other tbin^ be^dee marketing to be thought of. If possible, a few trifling ar- ticlea are redeemea from the pawnbroker; and then there is generally a vitit to the pabliohooaej entafled by the neoeasity of payiog up the week'a aoore, and aterting a mmh one. It ia not peibapi generally known tliat the local pnblioaaa often troat the f(dk who live in their neqghborbdod for drink from Monday till Sati^day, and find that it pays to do so. In the pnbliohouses perhape more of Saturday evening is spent than is good for either pooket or health. But apart 'from these thinga there ia one great reaaon why the very poor leare buy- ing Snnday'a dinner un^ Sundey morn- ing. On Saturday the aristocracy of the work- ins; claaaes pick and choose, and pay the bMt prices for the privilege. On Sunday what is left is ' SOLD AT A CONSIDISABLX BKDUCnON. It mnat be got rid of before one o'clock on Sunday â€" thia periahable atock. The ven- dor'a necessity ia the vendee's ooportunit}. In the great Sunday markets of the New Cut, the Seven Dials, Briok-laae, Spital- fields, and £ut atreet, Walworth, bnainesa is in full swing from nine a. h. until one. There the poor housewife, with just the remnants of the week's earnings to spend, can get fish and meat and vegetables at an "alarming sacrifice." Decent mutton fetches from 7d. to S^d. per lb. Beef from 8d. to 9d. Inferior and doubtful atufi can be obtained for conaiderably lei s; but the poor are generally experts in the matter of quality. They handle and examine fiah and meat before they buy in a mana«-r which would ahock the atately fishmongers, and butchers who have the Royal Arcns over their shop doors. The criticisms passed oa the food offered is sometimes distinctly dan- deroua, and it is couched in langnaga that scarcely barmoniaes with the Sabbath belts chiming from the neighboring steepUs, and calling the faithful unto prayer. When the haggling and bargaining are over, and one by one the atalla wneel off, then the Sunday dinner qfuestion ba« easanri' ed a new phase. It has to be cooked. Those who are lucky enough ta be ia iiaie for the bakehouae^ bear their precious bar- den there. Those who cannot afford the ex- pense, or who have not enough to send to the shop, do the best they can at heme; and here the terrible deficiency of all induce- ments to thrift and cleanliness in the homes of the poor becomes painfully apparent. Ovens, boilers, coppers, there are none, and various are the devicea resorted to to cook Sunday's dinner. An old battered gridiroa is routed out or borrowed â€" aometimea a dilapidated frying pan does duty, but the "chet" has a difficult task at best. I have aeen Sand ay 'a dinner cooked on the end of a bit of atick at the fire by mother, while the eldeat boy cautrbt the gravy in a aaucer. Father does not as a rule take part in the culinary rites. He is out GSITOO AN APPETITS, or waiting for the public to open, and pass- ing the interval in discussing whatever jnay be the objects of mutual interest with his neighbors. Sometimes even when the dinner has been cooked there is a slip 'twixt diah and lip. Father baa been known to come in the worse for liquor at two o'clock, and becauae dinner ia nor resdy seize the "joint" and throw it at mother. Sometimes when the diiA re- tuma from the bakehonae^ Klly, the eldeat boy, ia observed to be holding hia head high as he beara it along. It ia nOt wicked pride at the aiza oithe beef, or the numbw ot the potatoes that causes Billy's loftiness. Alas, uol The family, with one nose, discovers the bitter truth in a moment. Perhaps father baa been to market instead of mother, and bis lack of expwience has been traded upon. The m£ at that looked so we 1 is unfit for consumption. These aie dark sides, however, to Sun- day's dinner; there is a brighter, snd it is one which had I space I could txemplify with many a true and touching story. Often and often these wretched one-room family dinner parties are brightened by the pres- ence of a guest â€" some poor creature woisa off than the family, who is invited *o share the Uttle that there is. The little boy and girl upstairs, whose mother is ia the hospital are sued, perhaps; or the pom old cbap with the rheumatics, whose daughter, in service, has forgotten to send tbe promiiied the bit of paper in whieh the fish octhe â- M«t was wnppid is rwortsd to. iJobn tho kud words oiit MMl tn^" aabjwit 9ad Uipau. Qh. tiM iaroltbmfamijd tho torn halt sheet ooa- Witosa mndCT^ork battle. Oh.th«lon|{ horn that thsypallif after Jehaayhaa scrogdod with words be aover mot. with be- fineTttk disooverad that "the leadia'^li all about the prioa (rf Aoisrioaa nils, oris frag- â- ant ef VpwliaiBwtHy debate. Batit â- uatoot be iaia«iaa4 that in theae poor Ml- Oias tiie Sonday afternoon ie sivea ap to porely brtdlaetaid diverakaa. Oftsn AVOtHUt WOBK DAT OOMMBf OTS wb» dinar ia dona. Ifother and tiie jtin* have to be off with the "wa ieiui aaisp." and the boys go oat with craagas, aad fatbsr does Usty bitiiat atation (rf Ufemto whiohhehaabeen eeUed. with a taaket of periwiaklai and shrimps. The "prases." purchased at six m the moraing in the ma^ ket, are takeafrom under the bed; ai^ washed in such watsr aa oaa be obtained, the orangea and the winkles ars shoaldered, andoff go ti»e family to try and earn enough to pay the rent to-morrow and buy more stock to 1(0 on with. The aristooraoy of the working olaasea have a Sunday dmner that is a feast of Lu- culluB hr the aide of the poor little repasts I have tried to sketch. Tbe wild straggle for tbe Sunday meal, the shifts, the disappoint- mants and the diaaatera attending it, only the very poor â€" ^thoee eaminK preoariona livelihoodsâ€" know. Butâ€" and here the great law of oompansation oomas in â€" with all the troubles and all the shifts, and finohinir, and strucgle, and disappointment, questioi if on the day of reet, when rich folks sit at groaning tables, and well-to do families gather together to eat, drink, and be decorously merry, there are any of them who so thoroughly enjoy the "Sunday's din- ner" as the one-roOmM teastors in the mel- ancholy dnma of London. SCIENTIFIC. The addition of a small quantity of oar- bolic acid or oil of doves whue making flour paAe 'will prevent iu becoming aour. The composition of bell-metal varies; it is generAlly aboat eight per cent, copper and twenty tin. Small quantities of ulver are sometimee added. A patent for castimr oil upon the troubled waters hss betn issued. By this machine, oil ii forced through the pijpes under the water surfaoe, and rising quickly seems to calm the commotion in it strog{le to the top. Paper spokes for wheels are aitiOiu; the latest appliancea for that ever-increaaing ar- ticle. The paper pulp ia forced into iron molda under heavy preuure, where' it driea and hardena; and tbe apokea thua produced are aaid to be maeh auperior to wood, 'Paper ia fast anppl*nting wood in many naeful waya. It is aaid that waterproof paper and paate- board can be produced by treat in k tbe aur- face of ordinary paper with an ammoniacal solutioa ol copper, ao aa partially to diaaolra tbe aurface, which ia then let dry. Paper thua prepared is said to be equal in strength to parchment. A teat baa been made at St, Louia of uaing fire brick for paving pnrpoaes. The teit was aiade in tbe busiest atreeta. A com- mittee of engineera and othera have j oak re- ported that "firebricks show all the endur- ance of granite, and that they make a smoother, cleaner, and less noiay street, and are more easily repaired and give a better foothold to hordes; that neither frost nor fire affecta them, aad that they can be used at less thai half the cost of grsnitis." A human akall, aingularly like the famoua Neanderthal sknll which ao engrossed the attention of arcbseolcgiats and ethcologiata a few ears ago, has recently been exhumed Irom a day deposit near Podbabi, in the neighborhood 01 Prague, Bohemia. It ia notable for the great flatness of the fore- head, the thickened eyebrows, and a re- markably small facile angle, apparently anr- paasmg in this laat respect the aknll above mentioned. A mammoth's task waa obtain- ed from the same locality. Bird-lime is made by boiling the middle bark of the holly sev en or eight hours in water; drain it and lay it in heaps in the ground) covered with stones, for two or three weeks, till reduced to a macUage. Beat this in a mortar, wash it in ramwater, and knead until free from extraneous matter. Put it into earthem pots, and in four or five days it will be fit for use. An infericr kii^d is made by boiling linseed* oil for some hcun, until it becomes a viscid REAOMLE rumim- With re8]^t to waters for steam-raisug, Mr. W. Ivicon Maoadam saysâ€" "No at- tempt ahoold be made to soften water or employ anti-incrastators without first mak- ing a searching inquiry as to the nature of the waters available anid the scale they, may form. No special iaw can be laid doini for the softening of wattr w the use of anti-in- c ru sto tors; the oause of the disease must first be learned, and then tiie remedy must be safe and rare. To limit the materials used by laying down a hard-and-fast law would be to osaseinjory and lots to the steam user. The bess results are obtained by the emptoyment of a man of skill and the rigid workup Oat if his soggestions." fflBguIar Di^nte The Basnan psperi are disoassing a rather singala.- dispute which haa arisen between The Wiirt is TnufiAv 1* me fMttiMl •â- â€¢ BMlMii' INiiM* ittetaaas pven* 1^ i^ ii,p«*to ««â- Â«â€¢Â» atlWe^ nfleotioaia evanrp^* â-  ^-^ y^ r- AnewpobUoirtionofreoiipesgiyni pw»m- ia,w» »oM»*%sth»-spreemixtaMk- and tolls people bow to repave draakaaMai. M. Coiaon, in the .«»-n«»l i'AewwcK. says that a piece of borax weighing two or three grains will, if aUowed to H"Ol! •^®»- ly in the month of a 8i»gtr, iwnoTeall traces The petition to Qaeen Vjetorla in f*n* »| theieatnatkm ol Vslentie Baker to the Britiah army has already been signedby o^er 12.000 persons, indnding seveial peers add msmbas of the Commons. Lovers of so-caUed "blood 9ruj(««" w.ll be interested to hear that, tBb supply of their favcrtto frait hav»{; fallen shore, cer- tain dealers now pritA the skins of ordinary orangss and then subject the latter to a bath of oowred.liqaid. Savaayu Jo*ai, a Hungarian hiriiwaymaa, who has for some time past leviod a regular blaok mail trom farmers, and tat i^iose head a large sum had been offered, has been cqitored. He ossd to live like a gentleman at fashionable bathing placea, and nobody dared to denounce him. Oat of a total area of nearly 21,000,000 acres the wco Is and oopats of Ireland are now lera than 330 000 acres. In Great Brit- ain out of nearly 57,000.000 aorts 2,50^000 acres hre now thus returned. The foreHU of Europe are estimated to cover 600 000 000 acres, or nearly 20 percent, of the surfaoe of the Continent. In the palace of Fountainebleau, that great rambling edifice of the style of ^e Boiais- anoe, the aoartmeats of the First N^oleon, next tha g*Uery of Francis L are still pointed out. Hisbedohamberremaiiisexactlwsheleft it and in his official cabinet a smiall round table is shown ss that on whicb his hand signed away its hut nominal fragment of power. It is reported that there is an agreement to the emot that Fred Archer, the firat of English jockejB, sball give his services to Mr. Manton alter the ciaima of the Duke of Portland, Lord Haatinga, and the Duke of Weatminiater. The term of agreement ex- tends over three years, and has been bound by payment betorehand of a check for, it is said, £6.000. Mme. Auban Moot, wife of the great champagne producer, has left her husmnd, her personality, amonntiog to the enermoua sum of $12,000,000, with the extraordinary condition that shoold he refuse it the monay ia to go to young Prince Victor Napoleon. Mr. Moot preferred keeping the money. The profita of champagne making mnat be satis- lactory, Midhat Pasha, recently Grand Vizier, was a man of Eurcpaan education, whose ac- quamtance with Occidental cuatoma led him him to grant many civil rights to the Coristains of the Turkish Empire, but his- tory will never find out tp woat extent he was implicated in the assassination of bis sovereigu the Sultan Abdul -Aziz A new outdoor game for ladies and gentle* mem, called enobaatment, ia becoming fwdi- ionable in England. It ia played witn small light hoops, thrown with wands, aomething after the manner of grace hoops, though the wand ia of a novel conatruction, involving a peculiar method of caatintr the hoop. A moderately large piece of ground is suitable. A famous mollah at Cabul liaving declared the the use of tobacco to be contrary to the Mohammedan law, the Ameera have submit- ted the question to a counsel of moUaha from all parte of the country. If their deciaion be againat the indulgence in tobacco, ita uae in Afghaniatan will be prohibited, but if they pronounce it lawful the anti-tobacco prophet ia promiaed impriaonment at Cin- dabar. ' There Iseema to be a good deal pf difference between jtbe autboritiee in England aa to how much a ramokable" cigar coats. Sir Henry Wolff tofd the Hoose of Commona the other night toit " decent" cigars might be had for 9«. 6d. per hundredâ€" 'that is to say, for a little more than two cento a piece. The L-ndon'T'tnKA, on the other hand, asanrea its readera that a "fair" cigar can be had for ninepenoe or a shillmgâ€" equal to twenty-f oar cento. I A woman or man who treata a ohiM orael- Ij in Japan is an object of n. «Tir .^i ooiror. Coar-women will not auu- p oatployment there unless they can bring the little ones where they work with them on their backs. It it the same with factory women. It is fanny to see the mothers in the fan manu- faotmy at Oaato, with a pair of aharp, merry observant, and oblique Uttle eyes peering ovw their shoulders, and while they work they are constantly taming round to ohirrap at the young ones and talk to them. niebero of the hour at Berlin at presant IS Dr. Kotoh. the President of the dierman Cholera Comnussion. who has just retaraed from India, where he has diMdvered the cholera germ. He stadied medicine at Got- tingen, and afterwards parsned his microe- «ipwatadieaof hMtoria at Breslao under ?rof, Gohn. Dr. Kooh haa been known to the Boentifio world for some time aa a con- smentious Md aocnrato observer, but to the non-adentific world hU nam waT on! known untU hia discovery of tha cholera hi. itoot *M«* ««^ a«|«m »t.t|vi Gaelfoa, BJflg-. ^^"^^^J^SL^ nrisonol Anooni wb«|re h« M-^ " ESX^*^«ty-H«bt yean^ Ha waa fdplif* in J858 f* H-i waa .ine of the mo^ darw»t ap«P*ioo« 3p*ssat«,toet«oroftheB?mWtotT .ed«.gp. 'Aawng ttoe *kplo.b. :by_wM oh notoriooa waa tbe fcllomngt One njjht they entered the dity of Porlunwpo^ wMe a performanee waa going on at ,«»^7* Twy wept bebipd tbe aoenea, and. leveHinj their oarbinei at the audiewie. »»"?»" that every doot waa oloeed snd goarded by a brigand, aad that the w^M bad bettor Rive up at j^noe all their val«»bl«a. One of 5ie siotf ^ent round with a bag oollaoting jewala and moneys and the band then leiaar- dy retired. The faot that photographio portraita are so rardy good likenesses is attnbnted by a writer M Chamber»'» Journal to the wrcam- stance tiat by phttjgraphy it haa hitherto been found impjaiinle to give cdIom their tiue shade value. What is memt ^,.*'»»» is that yeaow to the eye is a briUiaat light tint, bat in a photograph it is reprodnood al- moat blaok red. inatsad of givii« tlM idea of fire aad light craics out blaok, and blue photograpba perfect'y white;; such ofaaiges. of course, playing aad havoo with'oomplex- iona and oontrasto of color generally. Ac- cording to a recent French process, however, tie trbnble or drawbaok io qnestion can be obviated, the pUn consisting simply in the addition to the luual ingrediento of the sen- sative photographic snrnoe of one per cent of eotine. A modifioatioa of tbe orystot- eum pro3eos is not being introdnced. The photograph, printed in the ncual manner on paper, is init of all immeised in a niixtare of naphtha, parafiide, maatie drops, ether, .and vmegar:;^tfau trea^ent mi^ea it qnito traiuparont, so that body colors, in oil if kid broadly oa thefar plaoes m the baok,'of pfctare the show tiirough with good effect. A LMUBotiTe Eight Indies Lmg. Mr. Henry Gate, of Oiiaty. Pa., who re- oently moved to Gloveraville, N. Y., ba% just completed the amalleat locomotive -ever made, it beiBg bat dght inohee long and weighing bat a pound and a half. Three years, counting ten hours as a day's labor, have .been devoted to ito construdtion. There aire 585 screws in the engine. The Steam gauge is but one-fonrth of an inch in diameier; the' pump throws but • one drop of water every stroke; the check valves in the pump are bnci-sixteenth of an inch in diane- ter; the headlight is only half an inch in width, seven eighths of ai inch high, snd three eighths of an inch long. The space in the lamp is so small that it wa^ almMt im- possible to get enough oxygen in it to sup- port the oombdstion. Toe fire is kindled by using a gill of alcohol, which rnni the en- gine for half an hour, Tbe stroke of ttie cylinder is one inob, bore five-sixteenths; toe heater pip) is only the thirty-second Sart of an inoh m diametor. There are ssven ues in the boiler. The width of the track is one and five-eighths inches, and it makes four and three-quarters inches distance each revolution. Tue valve seat is but one sixty- fourth of a 1 inch wide. The driving wheels are one and one-half 'nches in diameter;.the front truck wheels one-half inoh, sni thoae of the tender are the same sizs. The tender is but three and three-quarters inches long, two and one-e ghth lu.hes wide, and two inches 'sigh. The metali used in its con- etruction are brass, s lid silver, £old, a id steeL â€" New York PoU. Playing Chess Blindfold. There is nothing very remarkable ia play- ing a game of cbess withoat seeing the board. When once mastered, the trick is ro-; only fairly easy of performance, bat the fact that the process is purely mental rather facilitates than impedes the action ^of the mind. To the bl udfol'led chess-player, there is present a mental picture of the board with the pieces ^n position. He can cLaige the position of tbe men as easily as he can tiink, and after he ba onca master- ed the difficulty o( fixing the mental picture, it is distinctly betore him. Some pkyer«, who do not in their common process of memory use pictare pbaatoms, work out the moves aa alMbraical propoeitions are 00. a- aienilly worked, by phantoms of eounl; but. *s • "fle, ohoEs pUyora are mental-piotnra- reaiers, and can at pleasure call up any one of several pictures of boards as they Ian con-mved them, Tbe most diffioolt frat, and one which very few mental chees.p ay- era can aooompliah, is to play two o* tares games simnltaueoudy, the moves male by their opponents being told them in dose a :qaenoe and their own movea being direet- ed after all the repute of the proceedings m. » opponents have been received. Thus, if there be seveial p'ayers aga nitthe oie mental pliyar, he must be to d anl re- member whateaih of his alver-anes hai done before he begins to give the in- eteuctiois /o: his aeveial countor no/es. lo this exploit the moit parfeot development o the mental faoalty of distinct pieturins snd the displaeemeat and recall ot mmtaT pic- torea a^ wiU ia exhibitod. The prodigioaa dUfioultyo tw font can only be realizldin M • U J '^l *? P^rm it. Bven the expert bltnd-foldEddiest-p'afwr ern jtareiy sjoMed m»o9ompUahing the per'o.iaanoe we have attempted to describe. chit-ceat. It: I "itodelighted to ;B.nijpee; I knew ,, me tMi her livmg i^ rttbflMedtiebefArk.. the base-ball s e a s o n tne hmb^J ^Jl^ beterhia;., whole family. A BarUa^n girl has a diarr 1,.^ tirely to b tng down the TidtT!?! She cilia it ner conit docket. ' Tk^ eaprte of AuBtria o^a m t.,^ I the «mpr«ak of au American tarii^l hen. Caatoma aifkt in differ^t «!*" *-Mr.^Bii«h«rater, how iaitllgji^ on yoar milk " Milkmui \^J?* I expect the oows are holdiur it vll strawberry time." "*« » m The bridesm^ds now ^e prank brid^grjom, instead of tbe oppot^i merly. Tliis insures the groom « fgn"' of 25 cent neckties before starting. An old firmer who wrote to aa « ing bow to sot rid of moles, aaj the reply, "Piow them out," answayS ••Can't do it. It's, on my gal'i nou," 1 Mr, Jenkins Maaher, having aeat h. oard and reodved word that Mtt, v\ be down in a moment, steals a kiai pretty maid. Mra, B., entering g. edly "Jane, how often have I ^^ recdve your visitors in the kitchta!" â-  I â-  â- â-  â-  â€" â-  Sight Life of Yoni^ i^ One night often destroys a whole lif,j leakage of the night keeps the day J Night is sm's Imrvtst time. Moni and Sin is oommitsed in one night 1 tlie 4btye of the week, Thia u g piiati0ally tme of the city than of t.^^ try. The street lampj, bkj a fiieotnl^ widi tordl in hand, Nitreteh. awayy linea on dther sidewalk the gij tranapaienaiea are ablaze wiih at the saloons and billiard balls are L illaminatod muaic sends forth ita i menti the gay company begins tog the haanta and houses of pleasnii;!. bling plaoea are ablaza with paUtJili (w; tie tlieatresare wide open;th] of destrnotioi are grinding health, i happiness, hopsb out of thousaoda di^ The dty nn^r the gaalight U m same aa under God'a aunlight. The/ mento and perils and pitfdls of nighti hundredfold deeper and darker aaii deetfuctive. Night life in oar dtJa] dark problem, whose depths and 1 make us start baok with horror. Alia tears are falling, blcol ia (t-eaming. Young men, idl me hoiv and wtui!^ spend your eveninga, and I wi out t^e chart of your chaiactij final deetiny. with blaaks to inist] nagies. It seems to me ai ipp ate text would be, 'WAtchnuB of the night V* Policeman, pacing the k what of the night What are the men of the city doing at night? Whei t ley spend their evenings Who an ll af SMiatM What are their habits? Wl do they go in, and what tioie do the;{ out 7 Policeman, would tha tig,ht li young men commend t!iem to their 1 ers Wonld it le to their credit! Mrfke a re card of the nights of onei Put in the Homing papers the nuneiil| the young men, tieir habit 1 aid I that are on toe streets fcr siafal Would there net be shame and Some would not dare to go to tneir; buainess, some would leave the cit;, I would commit suicide, llemember, men, t lat in the retina of the AU-i there is nothiag hid but shall be rera tie list day. Bismarck's Political £iieini» The Berlin correspondent of the gives au account ot Bismarjk'i ret Berlin after the Liskeriocidant, "laej oallor," he writes, '-hates his g)oiei? Biriin. and never goss there unless H uompelied to. As public opioion vuj busy with Lasker's death, and as thels can presa Jiad auatained the action of J American oouiirese in the matter, it bfl neceasary for the chancellor to expliil podtion to the reichstag. Hs didio il ge»itl«t maimer, tr^iog no; to treidoj tail of anybody's coat and payings t^ of delicate complimento to tbe UniwdS^ the liberal party, and even, to the '" of Lasker. to wt on he cancedea evi but gre-tiess. ...hat he reserves fot self. Lwker has been more ttlted." ainoe his death than he ev^r wi^in ^i time. That is because behind tbiJI L isker there is tie living Bimberger ial daageroody eloquent Bicnter, beddei el an 1 Virohard, to measure swordi ' not J o mention t'le chief of the nev "'1 pirto, the Cjunt do S^aoffinberg. ohano.1 or aeea that his enemies ar^f ons and ariued to the teeth; hence bi eyod words imd soothing speech m floral tributeon poor Liaker's ccffii- Bunberger's speech at Liskeri t addi t le correapmdent, "was rt*'" of Antony over Cae ar's bodv. 'S* friend, waa trae to me end jast; bat 1^ â- dysbe waa ambitiousâ€" and BrptnsM honcr able man.' Brutua on tiis o" was Bisma-ok. and when B»nbei8' •Tnough the poUtical woil 1 is keen «f it allows itaeU to be led by eerV^ wbo^^jMity^c^siffht^n^w'|Vj

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