Grey Highlands Public Library Digital Collections

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 8 Apr 1886, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

 Ui U ,u 1 ;â-  f t m Jii 5«'P? i^^ii ^:,. 4MI; ;r)i- 'â- m *•"•â- ; THE FA±tM. Maipe Socvr Katten- A good many are tidnUog tii»t poailbljr (Ae run of sap U not lo mnoh Some BOW apwud Uken It flow M wt â-  â- appoMd. to a preunre of aap from all lidei, then to be a retorvoir of up, eo to epeyc. In the wood aod when we eever the porua of the weed, the pnaBore from all ride* oanaee the ran. U this be eo, then a verj small hole, andpoedblya very ehallow one, to beat. When I wae a boy a three qoartar bit waa oaed for tapping trtu, the nolo made deep, and aeon a second hole bored cloae by. Now we are down to threeelghtii inoh bits and inoh deep holes, and no â- eoondipont, and we seem to be getting the tatoe amonnt ef lyrnp and sngar. That the qoallty is better to nndtopat-'d bnt at the same time we are uing Uetter and costiior ntensils, and far leu wood to diKolor aap and lyrnp. Frequent collection of sap and rapid boiling sre the^rst requisites of success in maple angering. S ip quickly begins to lone quality if not boUed at once, and it should be the aim of the maker to ' have large boil- ing capacity, so there shall be no large ac- cumulations of aap on hand. A few doUars inveeted in an extra pan for the arch, so that the aap may be aooner boiled, and last neoeraity extot for night balling would be judiciously expended. It loeks as though with metal utensito and eyaporatcrs, with continuous flow, some makers had pused tha limit of actual perfection and were sacrificing color and flavor both. Water-white syrup will not sell without a suapicion that it haa been ' atuffed " with wliite sugar, aa onr makcra found out last season. A beautiful amber tint to wanted, and it should be the makers' aim to keen as close aa possible to natural tints and flavors, and not attempt improye- menta upon Nature and her gifts. The plan cf canning syrup ii alwaye np for dtoouarion, and both bet and cold plana are advocated. If it were not for a slight deposit in the cans, I should favor oanning hot at the evaporator. I never saw aymp that bad become cold and waa then re- heated but hid lost a per cent, of ita fine flavor and had ita color darkened. Fw home uae, when a little ailica aand in the bottom of the can is not to bring the charge of 'aanding," there to no other way ao nice. The syrup can be thoroughly atrain- ed through double thlokneaaea of flannel,' and will be striotiy pure. If cans are filled abaolntely full, cold filled will keep all right eapedally if the temperature be uniform at about 45 The wholeiale adulteration praotiaedby city dealera, uaing a good deal of glu- cose syrup with a very little fine maple syrup as a flavor, should be otrcumvented in some way, for it weakens the market to the farmers' disadvantage. If makers would deal aa much aa poasible with con- anmers, and as nearly as they can with commission houses who will not deal in adulterated goods, a great gain would be made, for this would tend to restore con- fidence in the purity of the syrup and bring more staisfaotory prices^ Manaeemeirtof Toims; Lambs The sooner the young lambs are docked, and the malea are emasculated, the easier the operations may be performed. We have been in the habit ef going through the flock once a week with a pair cf sharp sheep shears, and clipping the tails and castrating by one single clip. The lamb to hell under the left arm, and the akin of the tail is slipped up toward the root with the fingers ef thto hand the tail to then clipped off with the sheers. A pinch of powdeied blu9-stone (lalphate of oppai), is put on the wound, and the wool is drawn down and matted together with the little blood which escapes. Nothing more is required, and the wound heals quickly, the lamb evincing no indications of auffering. It to lioatto out the tall about two inches from the root, ao as to leave auffioient of it to eacape injury if the atump doea not heal favorably, and the joint next to the out alengha off this, however, rarely happena â-  If the aheaxa are clean, and at the time aharp. Liye Stock in April- Bathe the horaea, ahonldera with oold water or brine aa quick aathe collara oeme off. before the aweat begina to dry, and rub eff the collars and saddle pieces with a molat dotii. Thto will prevent acre ahonld- era. All ohangea of food ahonid be gradu- al, but in proportion to the work. Heavily taxed mnaclea make demands on the stomach hence, inoreaae the feed after work begins â€" ^never In anticipation. A hone fed np beforo he to called to work ^eta soft and fat. Be careful to protect horaea from drafta when warm rub down, blan- ket, or let them ataad in cloae atablea. Cowa at calvfaig reed littie care, the less the better if in a loose box or the open field. " Foaaing " over them to always prc- veoative of injury. (Hve no grain, bnt a loeaesiog diet of bnn and roots for aome day*, aad gradually innre a ae feed aa feveiiah avmptoma pan away. Keep calvea grow- ing tiirlftOy aUm-ndlk with a littie Ibueed meal acalded uid added to It aa a snbttitnte for cream, to jnit aagood for them as whole itillfc fed from the paiL S^eep must be kept in dry yards or tiien will be danger to tiieir feet £ wea with lamfae should have ' grain dally, at leaat until they oome to pasture. Swine.â€" Those who buy young 5ga for feeding should bny none but half- bloods by the Berkshire, Yorkshire, Poland orotiierpnnstre. Th^f «"*^ '*â- *" *°° fatten with len feed. Ponltry.-Rednos the stock of fewto aa toon aa thto year's hatoh to well provided fw, bnt hold on to eld torkeya and old geeae, th«y get used to the ways of the farm and an worth mnoh mon aa breedwa than yo«ng ooM. Duoka •tooangoodtiUtiirM yean eld. A tar- key to in her prime at five, and a geoae at twent y. A reoafng »pp«Jâ€" ** Xhne togrt up f F«lhwtownsma» to (â€" wfaotoer): «• Hollo, Jaekaonw I Yep w ataa ienaT Howe that T I -*"*â- ?? f^J ^JJ^ but oar 'andatoek; «â- Â»Â»Â«â€¢*« ":^S^»*' Anecdwtei of Oiat Men. BY IH« BBV. W. S BLACK8T0CK. Df. Samuel Johnson, thoogh a lover of aneodotee, did not set a high vafaae apen many of the telee whtoh an told abont great men. He doubted the atUity of a stery, the only effeot of whtoh to to make theaabjeotef It appear ridloaloni. ICvwi whan theee numtives were atrtotiy true he oould not aee that It wa. wwrUi whito to put them on record. " I know net weD, said he. In an assay written la defence ef aneodotee, " what advantage posterity esn reodve from the one dicumstanoa by which Ttoknell haa dtotiogubhad Addison from the rest of mankindâ€" the irregularity it hto pulse nor cui I think myself overpaid for the time spent in nading tiie lite of Malherbe by beiog enabled to r^late, after the learned biogr«pher, that Malherbe had two predominant ofdnions one that the looeeness of a single weman might destroy all her boast of anoient desoent the other that the Fnnoh beggan made nse very im- properly and btrbaroualy of the phrase noble gentleman, beoanse^ either word in- cludeu the sense of both." It to probable that he waili have be«n even severer in hii strictnrea on thete coU leoton of anecdoiee, if be could have for jw seen what Would be made of some of the incidents of his own life. Without thew anecdotes, however, posterity wonld not have had a complete fdcture of the man; and, on the whole, even those who have most respect for hto memory do not ngret that they have been preserved and handed down to succeeding generations. Happily he had great qualities enough to nnder it nnneceasafy for hto weaknesses and faults to be overlooked and forgotten. A leaa bril- liant luminary than the ann would ha dim- med and dit figured by the roots which he beara upon the anrfaoe bat hto tranaoend- ent effulgence mdkea na unoenacieua of their preaence. Macaulay pralaet Boawell'a biegnphyof Johnaon, but he doea it at the expenn of the judgment of ita anther. He appean to have been of the ofdnion that with a aound- er and mon vigorona nndentandiog he would not have done aa good work. Indeed he seema to have oeme to the oonolnalon that In order to be a first rate biognpher a man must be a half -fool. But if the aim of the biographer shruld be to produoe a true pictnn of the subject which he undertekes to delintote, as well as of the principal eventa ef his life, one would think to suc- ceed in thto sort of work would requin the very highest qualitlee oi anthonhip and the man who, oenfenedly, haa produced the very beat biography which haa been written In modem timea deserves a mon favourable verdict from mankind than that which haa been pronounoed upon him by the great eaaaytot and historian. I confeaa I do not altogether like the ac- count that Boawell gives of Johnson's eat- ing and yet withontathat Inimitable piece ef desoiiption we would not have been able to see him as he really was. Those protrud- ing, near-sighted eyes broughtdown to with in two or three inches of hto plate those veins standing out like whipcords upon hfs brow gllstonugwith prapiration; and the silent and ooncentntod energy with whl h he devoted himaelf to the faualneaa in hana until the onvinga of the inner man were fully aatiafied, though they do not, taken together, form one of the moat delicate and refined i^otorea imaginable, an too oharao- tertotic of the man tor them to have been omitted without the picture of him loalng something of ita truthfulness and reality. We should not have fully known the great- est Engltohman of hto time if thto descrip- tion hM been left out. I do not know how the Scotch people like the ill natnred aaylnga of Johnaon reapest- ing themaelves and their country whish have been preaerved. He appeara to have, for some occult reason that, so far as I am aware, has never been explained, formed an inveterate prejudice against Scotland ai d the Scotch. He could, apparently, see nothing either in " the land of mountain and td flood," or hi the people who live in It at all worthy of his admiration. The coun- try itself he pronounced ** detestable," and the only ground upon which he found himself able to justify the ways of Providence in producing such a countoy waa that ' It was made for S3otcbmen." Sidney Smith confessed that he wonld like to roast a Quaker â€" metaphorically I sup- pose, of courseâ€" and evidently it would have been j oat as agreeable a pas^e to Johnaon to nast a Scotehman in the same sense. Even in hia dfcUonary he finds ocoaaion to void hto bile upon the North Briton. Hto defioitiou of ocUs to well known " A grain commonly fed to horses In England, but used as food for men in Scotland." He ad- mitted to a Scotch gentlemui that Ood made hto country, bat he took can to mod- ify the adndssioh by raminding him that the same great Being had made heU. And yet it la a nmarkable fact, that ought to be mentioned to the oredit of tiie grace and good sense of the Saoteh, that among no other nationality hai he mon ar- dent admlran than among those peo- ple whom he would have us believe are brought up en horaefeed. To aay nothing of MaoauUy anl Main, both of whom an Scotchmen, Thomaa Carlyle to perhapa the only man in the last generation that has fully understood Johnson, or who haa been capable of duly eatimating hto character and worth. The rugged elemento of essential manhood, the great heart, the great nndentanding, the iron will, and the fierce and terrible eamestoeas snd Independ- enoe which he found In thto strange and wonderful man, made the modem Diogenes forget hto fanlta and foiblea. He doea not healtate, thenfore, to give him a permanent place among the heroea whom he recoom- menda to the worahI]^ng attention of man- kind. Then to juat one acene in the life ot John- aon, whtoh, aa It appean to me, might bettor have been forgotten. Hto nuf ortunato nn- cenntn with Adam Smith, the aocount of whtoh haa bean preaerved by Sir Walter Soett, waa aoarcely oreditahto to either eae or the other of these worthies. Jolinna «m lM Smith a liar, and Smith naponded by call- ing Johnaon aaonof aâ€" waUnot of aMBact- abto woman. On maiAi *»•.. •• .IZVo,- Hlehly reprehenalble aa the oondnot of thbo ttL g^ men 'toq»-*"*^'?!S?!^ oomri-T. It to not oonoelvablothat l» â„¢"*^ 111 LiainrtrT part of the ohamotar of f^mme one mtiie otiier of tiiom, or that It waa In anyaanaa aeoeasary in order to cemplato the plotnreof either of ^^^ Orth* whole, the PW»f»^|r "«" |» "• tiiatontoa Mr. Aator •»^*/^«JSSLr hand, even the aldifany of mcdem ortUctam will never be abto to make • fine gentlMsan of Johoaoa. But after i^at baa lieea done for Lucntia Borgto tiiere to •»??•£•* ^^ hto fpfodty of manner, and Ua aoUed linen. whl gave ao mnoh ofbeoeto heracoa tf faetidieu taate, may after all.be naolved into mytha. Then to in tiieneaadmeenragh in tiie sreataeaa of theeonl ttak waa In him, the ki^eaa of hto heart, aad tiie eabatui- tlal aervice which he hae nndeied to toe litentun of hto ooantryâ€" the aohleBt In the worldâ€" to eeoan for him tiie respect of thoee. who think mon of the aabatanoe than of the accidento of hanaa oharaoter. womaa. " On audi terma." aavaSIr Wrftor «dMtii«e twolS5 uSSiS meet and part aad aooli waa the "i'-^â€" ' ofmenlity. Thto n v«ry and indeed, aad â- Â«w»^»e«rt of K waa wrlliaa, Oat Hke Stoned rsoordmg aagol, hohad drwpsda toerapon It aad Uottod It o«» ftSiver' JIJMBO AlTD HIS SEELETOF. He Has Been Hnffe* and WUt Join the Clr cas JgalB. When Jumbn tried to Imook out a fnight locomotive at Sk. Thomas, Ont., last Sep- tember, he not only made a faUnn of It, bnt got ao badly mangled that he died tiiree minutee later. If thto bad happened In Engtond, the ohancea an that Jambo wonld have been buried, the Prinoe ef Watoa would have wom orape oh hto arm for a while and a ton tombatane wonld have held him down. Bnt Phlneaa Taylor Bamum knew that tii'« American people would never forgive him If he let Jumbo allp out of sight inth«t;way. He wrote to Profeaaor Henry A. Ward of Boahestor and asked him If he would set the big elephant np in such shape that everybody who had ever aeen him boaa- ing thinga in a oircnaproceaslon wonld Imew him at onoe. So ainoe October last Profes- sor Ward and four of hto men have been at work on the nprodaction. It to new fin- ished. A tawny haired poet named Tody Hamil- ton gnided six yonng New York dtiaens to Rocheator to aee the elepbaut. They drove tiuroni^ blizstrda to Prateaaor Ward's big mnaeum m top of a high hUl to take a look at it. Profeaaor Ward met the elephant hnnten half way and led them toward a big yellow Iraflding that looked like a locomotive round honae. He thnw open a wide door, andatanding on a Ihtok oaken track, and filling up half the honae, with a j ovial emUe wreathing hto tnmendona trunk into a gi- gantic hook, then waa Jumbo aa natural looking aa oonld be. When the Canadian locomotive got through having fun with Jumbo, he waa not mnoh mon than a heap of poker ohipa and cold meat. Then wen 1,538 pounds of elephant hide around the wreck, and It was with thto that the Profeaaor aet abont build- ing np a new Jumbo. After the akin had baen thoroughly tanned by two month'a soaking in arsenic and corrorive aablimato of lime, it waa ready for a mounting. When the hide arrived at Rooheater Prof. Ward began to make a model to mount it on. On a foundation ot nine-inch oak beama he planted eight atandidrda of two- inch wrought iron. Two of these were to form the core of each leg, which was then built out with wood. With the aid of a life photograph and an elaborate aoale of measurement, made long befon Jumbo's death, the builder was able faithfully to reproduce Jumbo's giant form in wood. Thto frame he hammered and chiseled and planed until it looked like an elephant with hto coat cff on a hot day. Then began the task of tosring on the skin. Every wrinkle waa nplaoed exaotiy aa it used to be when Jumbo wore it, and all the omel rente made by the locomUve wen ao carefully mended that hto own mother couldnt have found them. It took 74 480 Swedtoh iron naOa to faaten it all en, and it new fita him better than it ever did be- fon. The way in which Jumbo'a mild brown eyes an Imitated in glaaa wonld delight a poet'a heart and make him tone up hto lyn for all it waa worth. C. A. Akeley and W. J. Critohldy, two young men who knew all abont building elephanta, gave Ftofeaaor Ward lota of valuable help. As It atonda on ita platform the new ele- phant weigha over 6,000 ponnda add It aa aolldaaarook. Ittoaolraced that all the travel and knocking aronnd In the world oannot damage it. DorIng drcna boon Jumbo redivivna will be aaddled and chil- dran will ride around the ring on hto back like they uaed to when he waa alive. Be- tween the performancea he will ride from town to town in a apeoUUy oonstraoted car. Ha to the biggest job a taxidermist ever worked on. The ohalk white skeleton of Jambo atood a few feet away. The mounting of It was the biggeat problem in articulation that Profeaaor Ward ever tackled. Emy bone in ita oolooaal framework haa not only been made to keep ita proper ptoce, bat:the whole is made so strong that It will be abto to bear M the knocking abont and rough hand- ling, by land and sea, that falto to the lot cf a skeleton in the drcns busineaa. Pn- !f"f '.^" " Mtiiority for the atatement that It la the only mounted akeleton of an adnlt African elephant In thto country, and at the aame time the largaat akeleton, ef a modem terreatrial mammal In the world. Staffed JumlM and Jumbo'a akeleton an V^*, °irt^8l8antfc apedmena of the natural- tot a art that the American pobUo haa ever had a chanoo to gan on. SoTud to Froserre Hii Health. Barkeeperâ€" Whafs yoon CaoUooa Cutcmerâ€" I wae thinking of ta king a glMa of ice water, hot I read the ot her day tiiat nearly aU thto aeaaon'a crop of ice had werma In Ith ^Barkeeper (aUfflyjâ€"Havea'l heard that, Coatomerâ€" Fta a faet, I aamn yoo. TU *JJP*" «; loe water If yoo'U pot la aometoing poboaoaa to kffl the wor£i. Barkeeperâ€" What ahaU I pot la t Coalomer (after tafleolfon)-Whkky wfll da A hoeband who had iaeorfed tiio aaoer afUi«Ue,a taRiUa vingo, aeoka nfue aagofagto ahew yaatlMtl ateUde mI FEB80VAL FOnTTS. EJag Theebaw to aa expert poker l^layer. 8b Charles DUke Uvea ia the eld borne of Chartoe Reade* eaUed by the latter ••Naboth'a Viaeyaod." Thenae Csrlyle'e honae la Cheyaerow, Cheiaea, b the property of a proprietor of qoaok m o dioine Iroayh, the ohembt whoee azp«rimeata led to tho dieoovary of the modera natofa, haa just died at Peelh. The eaataaary of tte fafarlh ef Lvdwig L of Btvaiia will be oalebratad elaborately at Moaich on Jaly 8, 9 aad 10. The Uto Priace Tortoaia left a fortoae ef 120 000.000, to be divided equally between hto ealy child aad ber eldeat eoa. Althoogh Koeaath to eighty-foar yean old, it to aidd that he ontored with spirit into the reoent carnival f eetivitioa at Naplee. Lord Wantage haa given twenty |aoraa ol land at Btowbory, near WlUlngford, Eng- land, for the alto of the Gordon Manorial Induatrtol Schoola. Mra. Mary Grant Cramer, alator of Gen. Grant, to lectnring in Masaachnaetta nnder the antplcea of the Woman'a Chriatian Tem- perance Union. Dan Bice, the oae-time famooa Shakea- peareaa oirooa down, ia leotoring In Texaa aad is said to receive $500 a week for hto oratorical groand and lefty tombliog. Qoeon VictorU'a recent attendance of a performanoe of "Men ot Vita" at Albert Hall, Lsnden, waa to a day ton yean aftw her laat prevtoaa visit to that boilding. Grace Hubbard, a civil engineering gradu- ate of the Iowa S^te Univenity, to em- ployed by the United Scates Government Survey in Montana to make maps. The Uto Gov. Ssymoor aaid " I never yet made or prooored an appointment for a young man for a olerkahip wUch did not in the end prove to be a greatinjory to him." Cepe Whitehoaae, the Amerloan expert' In Egyptian lore, haa toft Naplee for the Nile. He daima to have dlacovered in Centaral Egypt the baain of ancient Lake Meeria. Mr. Eraataa Wbaoiax has entered the lec- tun field and haa hoaa entortaining hto f el- low-dtisena on Statsn Island with a dto- oeorae on ' Rapid Trandt on Staten laland and Ita EfEitct In Now kork on Salrarlwn Development and Harbor Enlargement." Profeaaor J. H. SIddona, a grandaon of the great Sarah Slddoni, died In Waahlng- ton recentty. He waa bi»m In Oatoatta fai 1800, and built aod maoaged the fint theatn in that citiy. He waa at one time editor of the Lmden Armif and Navy Oazett^ Prince Lonto Napoleon to having a good time in India. On tiie 13th of .January he went into the jungto and ahot hto firat tiger. The next day nto contriimtion to the bag waa a rhinooerea, and a few daya^tor. In a hunt after wild elephanta, he brought down afineold«taaker." Preddont Cleveland denlea that he haa the marvelons memory hto fiattenn have ascribed to him. He aaya hto memory is very capricious, often ntainlng trifling de- tails ngardlng some creaa-roada poatoffioe while letting alip matten ot the firat im- pirtance. Counteaa Irene Taaffe, wife of the Auatri- an Pnmier, reoentiy told a friend that ahe wonld be obliged to aell her wardrobe to pive a marriage dowry to her eldeat daughter. There to a qneetien whether ahe to alQ^htly deranged or waa merdy giving her friend a littie taffy. Mr. Henry Ir^ng'a eldest son, having been ancceanul In amateur dramatic per- formances, to determined to go upon the pro- feaaionai atage, Imt hiM father, although anxionato do ao, deolarea himaelf unable to aaatot him bi doing ao, en aocount of the pre- aent ayatem of organizing theatrical oom- paniee. A wonderful Chineae boy to mentlened in thenportof a'miadonary atPekin. At a recent examination he npeated the entin New Teatament without miss^ a aingle word or making one mlatake. He is now committing to memory Dr. Martin's "Evl- dencea of Chrlatianity," a taak which he will aeon accompltoh. Alexander H. Stephena' grave to atiU un- marked, bnt above the grave of Harry Stevena, hto colored aervant, a stone haa been erected bearins the legend: "Ha waa for many yean the faithful, trasted and be- loved liody servant of Alexander H. Ste- l^ens. Like him he was distinguished for kindneaa. uprightneaa and benevolence. Aa a man he waa honeat and true. As a Chria- tian he waa humble and trusting." It to sdd that the head of a great dry- goods ston in Parto. M. Jaluzot, was about to marry reoentiy a lady of high position and noble family. He requested the head of the Orleana family, the Oomto do Parto, to aerve as a witaoMb The aniwer returned by the aeeretary of the Prince waa Monaeigneur cannot render auch a aervtoo except to a ti- tled peraon." Thto answer to about the mast unpopular atatement that the Gemte do Pane, who pretenda to lie aomethbg of a democrat, could have aent to a Frencnman. Prinoaas Ypailanti, whoae bankraptcy haa excited ao muoh goarip in Vienna, and, in fact, thoughout Earope, b a daughter of the oeldHwted banker Baron Sinn, and widow oftheUtoGredanMiniater. Prince Ypdl- antt waa an incorrigible gambler, and befon hto deatii had apent aBvoral fortunea, mort- gaged hia eetatae, and induced hto wife to Bign heavy Ulto guaruiteed by her pereonal propertry. At the death of the Prinoe hto credlton Immodlatdy bedegod ttie unfor- tnnato Prinoeaa, who, to protect heradf obliged to decUure herself a banknpt. ^oungIJ An ocean channel ii. «. '"' jnagmettelc,;j£?f«»0^ home to be acme tn^ ** » Vi «" Thenfath!;Ki!*M number of large drt^ wiUnothaveave^THVi an arctic channel ef i.!^."!!^ â- now.AuCuJ^^WaN taberanoea. whioffi,*i'M2i anM.tlngthen»Ci*^P«ii!S anti,elce-blcck.f«,;a^';j did not melt durinr t^ a ** got froaen in whwthTilHr'L' formed in,the b»iJ^' JB floating hlther's.'fS^TMili "ice packs" and "la.fl ,7?'Nkl njdin%olarlltiatS."2f"i!S| oddenap of comhw^t** •"x^kf Itfronhithe'Jfl^JJjjM the winter and break udJS*' mer. ' â- t* ij. In the sprinff of the »,„ f^^ ' Juiwtothel.tofJaly,lS,5;^* oalty^thesnowontlS^^ht mdts, and the worst ttSI.^ hM in crouton It isthaftSilS ,la»«s and pond, on tip oZ^' Thto lasta but a few dn. A^T^ tiie tidecrack. andseSiSSji water loe to exposed to thanSS.* setting sun. Wherever thsi!?^ toker color, or near ihoia y,Z,ll Idly. IhaveseenakelpitookduJi out down turough the loe m»Si fore the ice broke up. the ohuSSf being bnt two or three Inchaiil dtoappeand. Thus the gmtiheJJi ice melta unequaUy, sndirtieniZJ storm springs np abont thbpaMJ?] totoDce, it to broken bto £011 1 J drifting around u loe-piS^rJ! Adds. v^mi Oa the 24aid July, 1879. „,i,4l ing on the ice of Viotorii Qaai hi Anti(r Sea. It wai very totta ai ii combed with seams hen and thsiu was evident that it wonld g« ttSal firat storm. The sledge roia miUs! rough surf see like a sUp in tiu tgmi when the day's work wai ot« Iw to Bee my Eaqdmau dog-driTw, U get In to the shore safely with tbiiiii] aledge, for a storm was oomiigiphi well-known bad qnarter, sUtaha the ice when it broke] np, |ud li â-  cakea commenced relUng over aik 1 waa certain death toe pony ms si' anch a fearful predicament We our little tent and crawled into it noon of that day, the water ci te onr tent, I ran oat to view ti) ation, and found that my i oi i wen realized. Every when tkt h erona blocks ef the broken ioe, meil aa houses, were to tenible motioi, m and falling, tumbling and gtiodif i| each other in a thundering mr ipoii that made the londest oommaodiisa at a f e w f a ^es. Great fieldi of lee, aJ â- ing acres in extent, would be Ufledti^l the dr by the drivtog man, ud bnlif by ita own weight send blocks of iasi as cabins spinning ever the viiitned,!d surface, ornshing every thing in tUtf while the terrible splashing of tis ri sending geyser spouts aloft, vai diin fine spray bdfore the shiieking gil^ 1. " " Tarrinjj forces ot atej Her health Inroke down under thto strain. Mias Bradden and her hoeband, Mr. Max- well, aaya a oorraependent^ are ftunOiarfig- IK? f*-** Pfhioeaa rnd alao the Lyceun Theataeonthefint :hta. Thetodyb in "• J?â„¢n«»f maturirf womanhood. Her hair Haa token on a partial boat. Herface to a raddy one, laggeating a oomfortabto BngUah mateen, aether of a numerona fam- ^Nratiiar than aDoof the meet preliflo *«"»•» •he day. She weara a pretty lace oap andcarriae anoad with her a decidedly Mmfflrtrida. goad hMuewiie atanoapher^ vtJP^Jf ^n«M Md of tradfiional Baglhh baad. Sha ii «a| a fctttiSieme 2Mitoito^whmithatol£l,aad 1b^ her wTt' â-  ping all these warring; forces ot utD weird light that added amfiteiioai Ity to the appalling scene beftnu Perched high on a newly m«d« lai at If it bai oUmbsd there to W I means cf escape, was the half IommN in imminent danger of btinx m\ hands turned out to a twinkliij! "J aeronautical carrtoge wusoonirieiT'ra Thus ended sledging, on the 2«b '1 until the coming winter 1 iw omn or about the middle of S8ptemlw,iai two months. Could not Help Thiiiki«' Then wai once a little girl wk«J tind ef tiitoktog her ow" *«";*. went out of doors and sat «" ' .ndsddtoher«»lf.«NowI^f any mon. HI Jn^stoP *W-tl But.tohargreatsurprto.d-a thinkteg harder and harder "» a NotiiingShe could do woald.t.^y sang, she skipped, she ohssrt w fltoSshe"»dedb the brook. J«J while tiie tiitoktog went onjhij^l brook or tiie bntteifl as, never wm j a sfaigto instant. ... j^M he began ta«jyJjSa less she was, and that sM w« tiiinkUig, whether she ««W»j,i, But that did no good eWwr. » CO laugh. .â- ..-aitkapl' ItwasaefunnyJWilwJJ^^* ingaslongassheUved.AJl.J^I her own tiiooghto »«»• '»'2,p k, 1* any mon than she ceuldrtoP»" from bloomfaig to June, ^ji, Since neither she nor a»y»g^ 4 help thinkteg ahe oouW "Tj^l and pleasant tboughto. ^^f, tiito was tiie o«»ly„P»»*jrBotp^» owntiieughts. She«)»15^,rf^ totiiem. ButsheoonW0W-„J should be Uke, whether ii»- nerry or sad. p Customer (taresW^M findtiitopieoe «* "• (j, â- ^Proprietor-Shoe J**Jii ter)-en. y'Vltii.V'i? ptoteofaoupendW^tt^^, (To customer, »f2Stfcii**/ haa atrtet orders to*g^^ii«« fonaerving,butsoinj»^ tiien to always diu^J^^^ woman. Shel-jSB*' J ^tB,andherthii»»" ^1 â- ^Vuatr-Hcwioyo.^ J Wi-Hcwd.lgj;*" I rortiienhalftto" It' dear Wife-Howo?;^! ovar then half *«"

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy