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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 6 Jan 1887, p. 6

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 f^gBFTF?^ v'fjimi^^mtii^i-i.^mij.f^j.fmemi +w HEALTH. CatairL C^jt^xrhs abQald receiv|^^iwr«{ol eo9uidar- ation,' msteadi of the neglect which they generalfy meet with until they l»vfe fasten- ed 09 ;tbe part affected ao much iEui to ejM^te- the attention, and perhaps alarm, of the sufiFerer. Here, however, w« propose to say a few worda about the causes af-chills. Ap«rdon'in good heaUh, with fedr play, easily resists cold. But when the health flags a little, and liberties are taken with the stomach or the nervofaa^ystem, a chill is easily t^en, and accordingly to tixe weak spot of the individual assumes the form of a cold, or pneumonia, or, it may be, jaun- dice. Of all causes of " cold," probably fatigue is one of the most efficient. A jaded man coming home at night from a long day's work, a growing youth losing two hour's sleep over evening parties two or three times a week, a young lady " heavily doing the season," and young children at this fes- tive season overfed, and with a short allow- ance of sleep, are common instances of victims of "cold." Luxury is favorable to chill taking. Very hot rooms, soft chairs, and feather beds create a sensitiveness that leads to catarrhs. It is not, after all, the "cold" that is so much to be feared as the antecedent con- ditions that give the attack a chance of doing harm. Some of the worst colds hap- pen to those who do not leave the house, or even their beds and those who are most ex- posed to changes of temperature, and who, by good sleep, cold bathing, and regular habits preserve the tone of their nervous system and circulation. Probably a good many chills are contract- ed at night or at the fag end of the day, when tired people get the equilibrium of their circulation disturbed by either over- heated sitting-rooms or underheated bed- rooms and beds. This is especially the case with elderly people. In such cases, the mischief is not done instantaneously, or in a single night. It often takes places in- sidiously, extending over days or even weeks. It thus appears that " taking cold" is not by any means a simple result of a lower temperature, but depends largely on personal conditions and habits affecting especially the nervous and muscular energy of the body. â€" LondonLancet. This discussion of catarrh and its causes in this high medical authority is a fair sam- ple of medical opinion on this vexed qiies- tion. It would certainly be difficult to avoid a c Id on any specific Avisdom contain- ed in the article Colds are superinduced by a superabun- dance of carbon in the circulation. Those persons who are members of the English vegetarian society are scarcely troubled with colds or catarrh. Fruits and grains are as much superior to tlie vegetarian diet as it is to the commonly accep'.ed one. Good building material, with care as to quantity, and a daily bath with the usual exercise, will relegate these diseases to re- mote parts. We must learn to live, then we shall be exempt from all illness. An Avalanche. ' How are they brought into desolation as in a moment." â€" Pfalmis' Alpine tourists covet the sight of a de- scending avalanche. High up the slope of the Wengem Alps, facingtheloftyjMna/rM, with its crown of perpetual snow, is a little inn for the purpose of accommodating those who desire to see the mid-summer aval- anches crashing down all before it on the opposite side. • The silky, floss-like snowflakes which fall upon this mountain are as harmless as they are beautif al in moderate quantities. But when they fall in such excess of the quantity required for useful purposes, they form the basis for dangerous, death-dealing •onsequences. So with our food-supply.- If we eat in â- ufficient moderation of properly selected food, it is capable of being changed into the highest form of vitalized tissues, affording energy for the muscles- and mental force for the nerves. But, if the food be taken in too large quantity, it is, not only insufh- ciently endowed with vitality derived from the vital fluids while sleeping in the stom- ach and the oxygen of the air taken into the lungs, but the vicious excess clogs up the minute capillaries and loads the blood with impurities which endanger not only the health, but the life of the individual thus becoming an avalanche of destraiction to all of the possibilities of life. Our health, our enjoyments, our power to help our friends, to help ourselves, and, ultimately, our very lives. ' Too much food" should be written down as emphatically the course of ill health and " abstemiousness" the proper remedy for all the diseases to which weak and erring humanity is heir â€" a simple and inexpensive, though most efficient reinedy. Pure Ail at Uight. The season of the year is now here in which doors and windows are usually clos- ed, and the matter of pure air becomes one of serious importance. During the day, the air of living-rooms is pretty certain to be changed more or less by the frequent open- ing of outside doors. During the night, however, not infrequently all outside open- ings are tightly closed, and the occupants of sleeping-rooms might almost as well place themselves for the eight or ten sleep- ing hours of night in tm air-tight box. In the morning, persona who thus deprive themselves of li^-giving oxygen, the great necessity of life, awake unrefreshed and dis- pirited, languid, pale and weak, with head- ache, giddiness, no appetite, and many other symptoms of the foul air poisoning to which the system has been subjected. This accounts for a very large part of the colds and other forms of physical wretchednees of which a good many domplain at this season of the year, and which is ordinarily ascrib- ed to the change of seetson. The system is filled with impurities as a result of defici- ent oxygenation of the blood, eind so the body becomes in a high degree susceptible to all causes of vital disturbance. The re- ception of a few fever germs is all-sufficient to bring on a violent illness, by setting fire to the fever-feeding material with which the tissues are filled as the result of deficient air cleansing. Ventilation of living-rooms is of great importance at all times, but the supply of an ample amount of fresh aiz to sleeping- rooms is doubly important during the hours of sleep. Onre fot Sheiunatiam. A gentleman who was the victim of an acute attack of rhemnatkm sends as the fol- lowing, which he declwres effectually sored him. If so simple a remedy will eradicate this dreadful disease, it should be known. Will our readers who, with success, try this nraitira .x^^eipy |deaaftnX!gHnn]Mn«lw-tiie *««*rfi to ^B^ vS^^^ so that we may recommend it to rheumatic "" sufferers everywhraw? =,f^-\ ',.2 ounces mustirjl I^ f)otoces sulphur. Mix i|» one pint of.gin. Doseâ€" «Ttkke onewine'^MJfnll three timea. no longer hostile to a day. ,; ;1 i; -; j. vk l^ ' sees noTcason tofear ' Bifl of Fare for a OonsmnptiTe. On waking. â€" One half pint equal parta. hot milk and Vichy, taken at intervals through half an hour. 8 A. M. â€" Oat raeal with vbtdidaiice df cream, little sugar rare steak or lamb chops with fat, cream potatoes.; soft boiled eggs, cream tost small cup of coffee, two glasses of milk. 9. A. M. â€" Half ounce cod liver oil, or one ounce peptonized cod liver oil and milk. 10 A. M. â€" Half pint raw meat sbup thin slice stale bread. 11-12.â€" Sleep. 12.30 P. M. â€" Some white fish very little rice broiled or stewed chicken caufi- fiower stale bread and plenty of butter baked apples and cream milk. 2 p. M. â€" Half oimce cod liver oil, or one ounce peptonized cod liver oil and milk. 4 p. M. Raw scraped beef sandwich. 5.30-6 p. M. â€" Rest or sleep. G p. M. â€" Some thick meat or fish soup rare roast beef or mutton spinach slice stale bread with custard pudding, and ice cream. 8 p. M. â€" Half ounce cod liver oil, or one ounce peptonized cod liver. oU and milk. 9-10 p. M. â€" Pint ice milk cup meat soup. 1-2 A. M. â€" Glass milk, if awake. Health Notes. A Maine doctor says bilious fever is a mild yellow fever. The best promoters of health are, fresh air and sunlight. Bran poultice is said to be an infallible cure for poison-ivy. A simple remedy for neuralgic headache is the juice of a lemon taken in a cup of black coffee. Changes of dress from thick to thin should alwaj's be made in the morning, as then all the vital forces are in full play. It is not always necessary to have teeth extracted when they ache. The nerve may ht diseased and the tooth still perfectly sound. In a case of slight sore throat, let a little powdered borax be placed on the tongue, and allowed to dissolve and run down the throat. "Enough is as good as a feast." Remem- ber that it is better to leave the table a little huugry than to suffer the pangs of indiges- tion after eating heartily. The habit of continual spitting which at- tends the chewing of tobacco and gimis, in- duces debility, not only .of the salivary but of the system generally. "lands. Kussia's Ambition. There can be little doubt that the disturb- ances which have marked events in Bul- garia during the past weeks are an incident of the ancient ambition of of Russia to get pos'r ssion of Constantinople. Those who read the history of Russia during the past forty years will perceive that she has been almost continuously, in one way or another, aiming at this prize. It is a Russian tradition that the Czar, Peter the Great, who really built up the present empire, and made it a European, instead of an Asiatic State, left in his will an injunction upon his successors, to at- tempt by every means to acquire the Turk- ish capital. Many poeple doubt if Peter ever made such a will but it is quite cer- tain that his successors have acted as. if it ex- isted, and as if they were resolved to obey its command. The ambition of Russia to make Constan- tinople a Russian city, is the key, probably, to all her foreign policy and military move- ments. She entered upon the Crimean War, and then upon the war of 1877, with tho resolute purpose of cosquering the Turk, and rais- ing aloft the Russian doubled-headed eagle on the banks of the Bosphorus. In both cases she failed, owing to the opposition, mainly, of Great Britain. There are many persons who think that the Russian advance in Central Asia towards India is really meant to overawe and checkmate the Eng- lish, and by threatening the English empire in the East, to make England powerless to resist the conquest of Constantinople. It is this ambition of Russia to obtain the ancient seat of the eastern Roman em- pire which leads her to interfere so often and so persistently, in the affairs of the littie States which lie WBtwecn'the Russian front- ier and thedomimdn»kf fhfe Sultan. She asserts that she freed the Bulgarians from Turkish tyranny eight years ago and this she regards as entitling her to say how and by whom Bulgaria shall be ruled. The Bulgarian Prince, Alexander, showed signs of wishing to make his principality a reSly independent State and Russia, fearing to love her hold there, caused Alexander to abandon his throne. Now that he hai abdicated, Russia seems determined to decide in fact, â€" though under the trestty of Berlin she cannot do so except in concert w^h the other Powers,â€" who shall be his successor. The Czar even op- posed the selection of Prince Waldemar, of Denmark, the Czarina's own brother, for the place, apparently more because he was the choice of the Bulgarian Parliament tban because the Czar distrusted the Prince. The other small kingdoms, Roumania, Servia and Greece, were formerly very friendly to Russia. But the events of the past ten years have arroused in them all am- bitions which are inconsistent with those of the Czar. They now look with dread upon the prospect of the extension of the great, despotic empire of Russia to' the Bosporus and the .-Egean and feel that their own ej istence as independent kingdoms wouldoi endangered by such an event. Meanwhile, we cannot doubt that Russia purpose is always and resolutely the sam« as it has been for two hundred years. As the Sultan's power becomes more and more feeble, as he sinks more hopelessly in debt, as his Grovemment becomei more corrupt and incapable, the impatience of Russia to ab- sorb £uropean Turkey becomes evidently greater. It is certain that what^ has prevented Russia during the last thr^e month* fedm^ once more pushing her lemons actosa tbe Prath, aad speeding ihem towards the Bal- kans in a march of conqaest, has been the restraining inflnence of Germany, added to the fear that another great alliance in op- Russia watches and waits for a g^de%x|r pt^rtnnity ltme. When she hts mOn^ a^d men. enoligli,. wlien matters .-^ve 'rigs aiaong tke Balkan States, when Germaiiy is her design, ^^ea she the arms of j^^nd or of Aiistria, then, we may be sure, the errand which failed in 1854, and again in 1877, will be once m(»-e entered ugpn, Lariat Binâ€" The £ngiiiee£'s Stoiy. Well, strangrer, 'twas somewhar in 'sixty-nine Lwere ruimin' the Frisco fast express An* from Murder Creek to Ulasted Pine, Were nigh onto eighteen mile, I guew. The road irere a down-grade all tbe way. An' we puHed out of Hurder a little Utte, So I opened the throttle wide that day. And a mile a minute was 'bout our gait. My fireman's name were Lariat Bill, A quiet man with an easy way. Who could rope a steer with a cowboy's sidll, Which he'd learned in Texas, I've heard him say The coil were strong as tempered steel. An' it went like a bolt from a crossbow flung. An' arter Bill changed from saddle to wheel. Just over his head in the cab it hung. "Well, as I weresayin" we fairlyly flew As we struck the curve at Buffalo Spring, An' I gave her full steam an' put her through. An' the engine rocked like a living thing When all of a sudden I got a scare â€" For thar on the track were a little child An' right in the path of the enpne there She held out her little hand and smiled " I jerked he lever, and whistled for brakes, The wheels threw sparks like a shower of gold But I knew the trouble a down grade makes. An' I set my teeth an' my flesh grew cold. Then Lariat Bill yanked his long lassoo. An' out on the front of the engine crept â€" He balanced a moment before he threw. Then out in the air his lariat swept " He paused. There were tears in his honest eyes The stranger listened with bated breath. " I know the rest of the tale," he cries " He snatched the child from the jaws of death I Twaa the deed of a hero, from heroes bred, Whose praises the very angels sing " The eng^eer shook his grizzled head. And growled " He didn't do no sich thing. He aimed at the stump of a big pine tree, An' the lariat caught with a double hitch, An' in less than a second the train an' we Were yanked off the track an' inter the ditch 'Twere an awful smash, an' it laid me out, I ain't forgot it, and never shall " Were the passengers hurt'r" Lemme see â€" aboutâ€" Yes, it killed about fortyâ€" but saved the gal " Don't Be too Positive. Boys, don't be too certain. Remember that nothing is easier than to be mistaken and if you permit yourself to be so very pos- itive in your mistakes a great many times, everybody will lose confidence in what you say. Never make a positive statement un- less you know it is as you say. -If you have any tioubts, or if there is room for any, re- move tht possibility by examination before speaking, or speak cautiously. Don't be too certain. "John, where is the hammer?" "It is in the corn crib." "No, it is not there I have just been looking there. " " Well, I know it is I saw it there not half an hour ago." "If you saw it there, it must be there, of course but suppose you go and fetch it." John goes to the corn-crib, and presently returns with a small axe in his hand. " Oh, it was the axe I sav.- tne handle was sticking out from a half-bushel measure I thought it was the hammei-. " But you said positively that you did see the hammer, not that you thought you saw it. There is a great differ mce between the two answers. Do not permit yourself to make a positive statement even about a small mat- ter unless you are quite sure for if you do you will find the hf 'jit growing upon you, and by-and-by you pill begin to make loose replies to questions of groat importance. Don't be to certain. Boined bT Strikers. The failure the other day in Boston of pne ortiM:illiQpsfe.:MMr As^nd foot and shoe mrnufacturersis calculated to make thought- ful people pause and reflect. The failure is siguidcant because it was due not to specu- lation or defalcation, but simply to the in- ability of a thoroughly competent and con- scientious bnsinesi man to conduct his large factory at the dictation of his employees. For three years, previous the proprietor had been Idbcmng under greait disailvantages, being compelled to pay larger, wages than the business would warrant, but which he was unable to reduce owing to the fact of his. workmen being under the oontrol of the labor agitators of the country. Mr. Martin has, according to unprejudiced report, been one of the most liberal employ- ers of labor, and always manifested a con- scientious concern for the welfare of his men. On several occasions, when trade was dull, rather than close down the factory or reduce the men, he had made up stock ahead. There was, of course, considerable risk in doing this, as prices might have de- creased and a serious loss been entailed. It appears that the causes leading to the failure were really the result of the efforts of the firm to give employment to all their men during the months of last winter. Mr. Martin states that a year ago he had an interview with the foreman of his largest factory, which is in the town of Hudson, v/here he has been manufacturing about 3,500 pairs of shoes a day, giving employ- ment to between 400 and 5(W persons. He asked his foreman to call together the men who were idle and ask them if they would consent to return to work at 10 per cent, less than they had been receiving. The men declined the offer and Mr. Martin, after consideration, from motives of humanity, said that he would make another effort and would put the men to work at the former prices rather than let them suffer during the winter months. He stocked up in his store at No. 12 High-st., Boston, 150,000 pairs of boots and shoes, and waited for the spring trade to enable him to dispose of this large stock. When trade opened he made a con- tract to deliver 5,000 cases of shoes in the West, but as soon as his men learned of it, they demanded another increase. This com- pelled him to fill the contract at a loss. " It is simple folly," he says, " for a man to attempt to run his business at the dicta- tion of others, and the laboring classes will learn by and by that the demagogues who urge tlicm on to demand more than the manufacturers can afford to pay are not their friends. The fact is, I believe that a crisis is near at. hand when this bad system will be br^cn up, and men will see that if they woulaconsult their o^vn interests, they must have some respect for the interest of their employers." New Tear's, 1887. BY L. A. MORRISON, TORONTO. " He giveth the years." The years are His gifts for our using, They are ours by the grace of His love. And !ire blessings to us by our choosing. To live for the crowning above. The years are for us what we make them, For each da.v has a blessing in store, And carh hour has its gifts if we take them, And Heaven has eternally more. The yearn are our days of probation, Let lis then in the name of the Lord, With full faith and with glad adoration, Live always as taught by Hia Word. Little Wifey â€" "Then there were two great painters and two great authnra and an eminent tragedian and â€" you What a gathering together of congenial souls " Jle â€" " Yes rather too many of us, I thought, when there was only dinner enough for four. " Ee Was the One Green Spot. Edith â€" " What a lonesome spot a social gatliering is where one is such a stranger " llHiold â€" " It is indeed, 'pon honor, don- cher know." Edith â€" " I don't know what I should have done but for you. Your are the oasi^ of the evening's desert." Han/Id-â€"" Really I am beholden to you, Miss Edith." I Edith â€" " Yes, dear Harold, you are the i evening's oas!s â€" the one green spot in all the I dreary waste." FARM. t)ne of the beneflts of manual training the makmg ^f m^mal Wbor honorah'e ° " all tiie past, even to the present, maira^^ labor has been regarded as servile n- r" therefore degrading and many a youth who migbt have' been a useful cit'zen -^ some skilled employment has led a relative ly worthless life on the outskirts of profession, or niercantile occupation, for which he iad neither taste nor fitness. Some horses appear to be born with th kicking propensity largely developed^ others acquire the habit, and do not readi'v part with it. To prevent tucb horses from doing injuiy to other animals, or to persons passmg behmd them m the stable somp guard is required which will act as' a nro tection without injuring the horse Th kicking raU is a pole of about four 'inche^ in diameter, and as long as the width of tC stall. It is best to have it swudr by two ropes, one at each end, rather than bva single rope attached to the middle Th ropes by which the pole is swung fcJiould be passed through and not around it, so as to always present a smooth surface, and be entirely free from knots then the horse can hammer away at it to his heart s content without injuring anything or any one. The latest novelty in plows is at present being used in Spain. It works the land to a depth of thirty inches, and turns a furrow two feet wide. It is drawn by two sixteen horse power engines. The implement is cca- structed on the patent balance plow prin- ciple, but of very strong proportions. It is a one furrow plow, but fitted with two skifers, the first turning a furrow sixteen inches wide and fourteen inches deep, the second following to a depth of thirty inches and turning over a furrow twenty-four inches wide, leaving the land completely loosened to a depth of two feet six inches. Drawn by the steam-engines, the account iu a foreign exchange says it is possible with this plow to turn over four acres per day. In cases where it is not necessary to turn up the land to this great depth, but simply to stir up the under-soil, all that is required is to take off the last skife, and in its place fix a subsoil tyne, which will go to the depth of twenty -four or thirty inches. Guernseys are yearly becoming more pop- ular among butter dairymen and farmers, and their merits make them worthy of at- tention. The grade Guernsey cows" have produced records which are hard to excel, showing that this breed of cattle can trant. mit their sterling qualities to their offspring whether through full bloods or through the so-called native or common cows of the country. One of the best grade cows we ever had was the daughter of a son of the imported Guernsey bull. Sir, Champion, and of a good native cow. Soon after her sec- ond calf, in June, on grass alone, she made a weekly record of sixteen and three-quar- ter pounds of butter, which was excellent iu flavor and rich in color. This was without any forcing whatever in the way of feeding, showing that, had she been pushed with suitable food in addition to the grass sup- ply, we might have considerably increased the record. We had other fine heifers from this Guernsey bull, but did not have their capacity tested, being fully satisfied with the total performances of the herd under ordinary good management. A good many people drink disease and death by having out-houses too near the well. The " Annals of Hygiene" gives some timely advice on the subject, which we quote â€" Let us remember that a well will drain an area, with a diameter equal to twice its depth. Therefore, a well twelve feet deep will drain an areia the diameter of which is twenty -four feet, that is to say, that it will drain the surrounding soil for twelve feet in every direction. Obviously, then, the privy should be more than the depth of the well away from it, and more than this again, if it is proposed to place it on a higher level, which, however, should never be done. The well should be lined inside thoroughly with mortar, so that percolation cannot occur between the crev- ices of tbe bricks, and it^hould be well cov- ered so that the surface drainage cannot get into it, for you want to drink water that has come into the well from the bottom, after it has been purified by filteration through the earth. Thus, then, these are the precautions to be observed in locating and building your well in the country. How about the city Well water in the city should never be used the sources of contamination are too numerous and too hidden to be avoided. f--^ ^^' CLOVISCOAT. ;;, The size fpr fourteen years wUl reqnise rayirdiiMidfive-eighttis of goods ,twenty- *?'«;"«*« wide, or three yards and five- eightha of goods forty^ighi wbes wide. Oiieyard of contrastii^'^materia twenty- four inches in width, or one-hiJf yard of go*i8 forty-eight inches in width, will trim fl« Ulnstrated. Patterns in sizes for from twelve to sixteen years. Price twenty-five cents each. ' The Time Piend. On one of the recent cold nights a man was hastening across the common with his overcoat buttoned up to his neck. He was rather anxious to know what time it was, but he was too lazy to^^unbutton his coat in order to get at his watch. Just then he saw a man of well-dressed appearance coming in the distance, and remarked to himself "Go to! I will e'en ask yon genteel stranger what time it is, and he will unbut- ton his coat, pull out his watch and eke in- form me of the hour of the night. " He perceived that the stranger was but- toned up just as he was. When he came up, the man who Wanted to know the time touched his hat politely and said " Sir, do you know what time it is?" The stranger paused, removed lus right glove, tmbuttoned his overcoat from top to bottom, unbuttoned his under 'oat, and finally pulled out his watch, while the cold wind beat against his nnprotected breast. Holning up the watch so that the light would shine on it, he scrutinzed it an instant and said "Yes!" And then he passed on'without word. Too Smart for Her. Teacher (to small boy)â€"" Johnny, if you had eight amles in your desk, ^d you should give three of them to your seat mate how many would you have left " ' Johnnyâ€"" I won't tell yon." ' Teacher â€" " Do you know " Johnnyâ€" "Yes'm but I ain't goin' to tell yon, feref I did you'd take 'em away from me an' eat 'em f er yer lnneh.'» 1. ^m*9mâ€"mm,. "My ma is keepin' boarders, and among em u the queerest kind qf a man. He just goes out in the pasture an' sits down on a log. Ml takes out a piece of paper and some pencils ^mdmarks^^ over it. He had an awful tune the dther day when ' « ' What was he sketehingr' "Be wjant catching anything but our old bhM* ram caucS him, andthatwas where th»ftm came in, mister." ' Ri: LOVE A W Thk .y. CaAPTERXL Stotiv of There wjis unive ind Djlau wasstil iwhen he heard a -; " Gerald ' Gera ♦Id Oh, s,eak iyou 'â- " "' Stamling like « little nicne of 1 the water, and w surface by some, other direotiou of first introduced haunts of thj sniu fight drew and be; in a pjffy kiiKl of the side* of the ea a. strain of music, and w.n dedicCil the inland sen. " (ierald Gsra =ald •:' "Silence!" roart do you do he:e *. er ?â- ' " For Gerald ' " Away with yo " Noâ€" no, Gera! will tell riie of him «peak to me T" " All right. Mis "Gerald, do yo do not see him " "Take the gir work here " cri away, some of yoi " Noâ€" no You you liave. I am You, Dolan, you ' Grace uttered tl tears and shrieks savagely "Is that the wa "Father? Fath â€" no â€" no father has no father. O something so kind tion and gentlene you â€" you Dolanâ€" wicked â€" but you i have killed poor G There was a sue dark waters of the Dolan, and a sere the plunge into tl the cabin window. " Stop him Fir «« I will " "No, you woi struck up the ar pistol exploded ar piece of rock fro there was a murm the crew. Gerald swam to' to where (J race wa ran down them, si were, and with lit him and helped hi " Gerald, dear, killed Oh, I an Oerald and he w even. Oh, it is sc not our father â€" he father, Gerald " Grace clung to 1 aid with frantic 1 boy turned and fa "Coward!" he s ' Ah. You dai "Yes, I dare. me now â€" you fain are a coward, Doli A suppressed k crew, and then D( "As regards si such intention whom he would h to the authoritie merits your good take into favor th who has learned 1 tray youo.ll, I an way. ' "There is no shoot the boy." "The pistol w Martin had let have done so." " That may be "And as for sh Ian â€" and the da over his face in shooting the boy by doing so for a and profit of all safe with me." Gerald and G top of the little e tiiere was some 1 part of Grace, in ment to say some Stopped. " No, dear, no " I will not saj " That is well. you, dear." " And you are Gerald You wi " Noâ€" no B place, dear. Tc "Oh joyâ€" joy " We must to- " Not alone, G " No, not alo dear, there is an love â€" one who wi dear Grace. Thi We will go into i way." " \es, Geralc Who will love m " Oh, Grace, d itory to tell " f " Once for all 'mi, tbis moment, ^« once for all, I iSihat if you let 1 lace, your lives purs' purchase, port admiral hese words ^on, and the obiaunand wa •^â- eouple*^' a., Jakes, and f*Aye, aye " W who holds *• Andrews.* ;-^*' â- UMMiiiliM

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