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Kane Weekly Leader

   Kane Weekly Leader, The (Newspaper) - March 1, 1888, Kane, Pennsylvania                                VOLUME 36 KANE THURSDAY MARCH PER ANNUM 15 ADVANCE BUSINESS CARDS V si OKU STREET KANB PA Dim os KANE 1A V JONES JUSTICE OF THE PEACE OFFICE ix BLOCK PA HOUSE MRS C W Kiso Proprietress per Day WARREN 1EXSA ARTISTICAL PHOTOGRAPHER WARREN THOS L KANE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office tn Store Bell at right side of front door HARRIETA KANE AT KANE PA Receives Children only for mil and treatment EVAN ON KANE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office nt Drug Store Burgeon to If US E L AND DRESSMAKER and Street A stock of Millinery Goods GBO II Proprietor per Hum pie J PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON KANK over Sto HOTEL A K E Knnr Warm nnd a for or those having Stenm Drill 1 HEWER Proprietor ami In nnd m i ILS U ITTI K SKA 111 M I N Kit V A K I N 5 A N I J NOTIONS KANE II SI r R it ANI r A it KANK IENNA onim Pharmacy from of tiy at of office dour T NO A NOTARY IX AND KANE Mrt nnd will attention at ATTORNEYS AXI O SMETHPORT PA o front on second Ml s to KEYSTONE BILLIARD PARLOR AND SHOP k 1A P O Box CO and nrc nil now r n A came of or pool Rive hint n cull life rad A gents On wn 1Airrs SMETHPORT PENNA Will h on or about the 1itli of KANK ThU room newly A line new of Inlost hat been and lie Pool and and added Any one who rolling the can do with pleasure thin Parlor A SHOP Is run In with the you ft Rood or cut they will nnd not take Them from homes ana The lire wire for have are nnw making n month It Is easy for any one to and upwards per day who U willing to work Hex young or old needed wo Hurt you required yon fln II well an any one Write to once for which FRANK MAREN BARBER AND HAIRDRESSER an A share of the of respect so OQ P H H hi hi l 0 Pk tt e u 0 P CJ H 0 U If CJ PIONEER HARDWARE STORE SMITH WELKER Proprietors With our keep the front with the Greatest Stock of HARDWARE Ever Brought to Kane Our stocK of COOK aud Heating Stoves Beggars Description GENERAL HARDWARE everything in Tin Copper and Sheet Iron Ware And General Job Work done in a and Workman like Manner at Reasonable Rates Satisfaction Guaranteed Competition Defied T J C WEI 1SS1 A If 1 STRUTHERS IRON WORKS In are marreM of wlw item CM Awe 1 i T In nte Yrm STRUTHERS WELLS A Proprietors ENGINE BUILDERS BOILER MAKERS And of Saw Mitt Oil Well and Tannery Machinery CHAMPION ENGINES AND BOILERS REPAIR TO JOB WOOD AND WED east wind blattered In licr car daisy shuddering drooped her bead pinched nor heart with fear her eye and sold true would think to barm bit thing like modest me ma dowa and keep me warm ner acts mo through ber hair blushing coyly smiled to say How do you daref T thoughts beguiled crown and crimson lips trembled on his crest stained her petal tips o him week The bloom of autumn heart She daisy gave her heart away Such love as true Joys Impart Their life was golden day Ko thought how long such lova could test Ivan his upon her breast to lie Her matron hopes no shadow cost That love vould ever die John II Harper LABORERS OF JAPAN Great Poverty Among the Lower Classes Booses and Consul Jemigan of Osaka report as follows to tho department of state It may be emphatically that there la great poverty among the lower classes in Japan the inheritance of long centuries of superstition and despotism a population of living on an area of square miles twothirds of which are mountains and blUs for agricultural purposes labor will con for a long time to bo cheap and abundant A good laborer can be hired for 15 to 25 cents per day and he will work from 8 a m to 9 p m and board himself The laborer dont wear many clothes and often appears In a suit that wonld excite the envy of the stanchest dude A laborers home is mostly one story and contains not note than two or three rooms in addition to a small room each for cooking and bathing purposes The floor of the rooms is about ono foot from the ground and covered with soft thick straw mats which are kept very clean for the Japanese always takeoff their san dals or clogs when entering the house Furniture is not used at all in a real Japanese house except a small table about a foot high and fifteen inches square which is only called into tion nt meal time the family sitting on the like tailors on their benches The bedding consists of soft thick cotton quilts spread on the mats A laborers bouse including everything connected with It will not cost more than In gold In such houses ventilation warmth never to bo considered for the proper partitions nnd slides are only pro in cold and stormy weather by strong wooden shutters fitting badly and through which the wind and rain find lit tle difficulty In entering And there are neither stoves nor grates In such houses for tin materials employed In building are so inflammable that It would bo danger ous to use them In tho place of stoves and grates there are braziers filled with charcoal and at night the brazier when the weather is cold Is covered with kind of earthenware nnd placed under the quilt the latter being protected from the Arc nnd heat by a wooden grating Though labor is cheap in Japan and Its reward though the laborer Is unfamiliar with the comforts which surround tho home of In my own country I believe that the Japanese laborer In tha happiest and best contented being t aaw Tf his pan and cnp arc filled with rice and tea he ap the very embodiment of happiness and all tho Ills of life The Implements as well machinery of almost every description In use by tho Japanese are of the most primitive origin is now be ginning to tic directed to the of modern Inventions though labor Is still eo cheap and abundant In Japan that such Inventions have not yet been received with remuneration In the markets and there is not any sufficient demand to stimulate shipments of machinery and agricultural Implements to this country except to fill special American Late Ideas of Breakfast 7 The old adage No breakfast no is perhaps as true in some form today as when first formulated although of tau years the Ideas of people concerning break fast have undergone a radical change For the laboring man and for the man of much physical exercise a heavy breakfast Is necessary but for the man or woman of sedentary habits a light breakfast ia doubtless much better Tn any ease should always be found at break fast Many prefer it after the meat hut It Is not only more digestible but assists the digestion more surely If used at the beginning of the meal For a light breakfast the fruit should be followed by ono of tho cereals In some form with cream which Is more nourishing than milk and by many as easily digested This followed by delicate dry toast or rolls with coffee tea or and perhaps eggs in some form makes a breakfast so easily digested that many persons can do far more work on it than en heavier Talk United States In the Future The center of population of the United States according to tho last census Is near Louisville Ky It has steadily moved westward for a century Baltimore having been about the center at the bo ginning of tho century No donUt the next census will show that it has moved considerably further west probably to some point in Illinois At this rate It will not be long before this point will be to the west of the Mississippi river When nil of the territories are admitted there will be twentyone states westof the Mississippi nnd twentysix to the cast so that no matter what may bo the increase in population of the west the east will al ways have a majority in the change In Drawers Heres a space economizing device To keep several kinds of paper in n drawer ono above the other so that any layer shall be as quickly accessible as the top one 1 put large cardboard sheets between the different kinds or sizes leaving at one side whichever side is handiest a project ing margin an inch longer on each than on tho one OT the principle of tho lettered edge index Which so expedites our use of the directory This I nso to raise Instantly all that lies tho particular paper I am S In The Writer Thn Italian new vessels of tho Italian Re Sicilia nnd each to be provided with engines to de the enormous force of indi horse power Previous to 1881 the greatest power pat into one ocean vessel was abont indicated horse power but the Italians now have two of indicated horse power Arkansaw Traveler A LOUISIANA CUSTOM CELEBRATING THE CUTTING OF THE LAST STALK OF CANE Work at the Lost Envied of All tong of Happy Negro A time honored custom among the hands on a sugar plantation ia the celebration of the day when the last load of cane is from the fields to the sugar house There are few planters who object to this festival nnd there arc not many who assist personally in its observance An account of one of these celebrations will be an almost faithful picture of all for there Is little variety about them It is A clear sunny winter day nnd the work vigorously at the last acre of cane Cane knives glitter in and out of the rustling green tons there is a swift gleam of bright along the stalks a quick stroke near the ground and the pilers lift the clean in piles ready for the leaders to toss in great to the men waiting in the carts Cane is heavy and it requires a marvelous sleight of hand and some muscular power a bundle of cane flying into tho grasp of another person Mingled with crackling tit stalks and the rushing sound of falling cane tops comes the even melody of tho negroes as they chant jubilee songs There is only a little cane left The men hold back making a desperate appearance of haste but not cutting more than they can help Each man tries to deceive his neighbor but the overseer is looking on and the cane must be cut Swish crack last stalk is almost reached and who will have the glory of cutting itr The men are eager and excited the over seer hurries them up one after another the stalks hurrah the envied man cuts the last and waves it triumph antly above his head As the last loud Is piled on a cart cheers loud and long an the beginning of the celebration BANNERS OF ALL SORTS The planter has supplied the negroes with of all The cane arc decorated with anil tlie three or four mules in every cart have a rosette surmounted by a small United StalcK flag placed each long ear these there are from one to three great flags supported In every wagon by a proud darkey Malay or white man ns case nmy lie the Hue is formed it has it very imposing Iwk First the leaders carl in which stands the man with the last sulk heM upright and or two bif tho ladies of the planters household are solicited cacti year to manufacture and much envied is the man to whom they are pre sented for they arc as attractive as yards of flannel ribbons and gill de vices can make There also ban ners by the colored vels In the way of nt reamers and gaudy patchwork The long procession the last ml of cane surmounted by Its gay decorations and moves toward the sugar mill loud for the plainer ami overseer AH whistles nrc blowing and the respected arc left in the power of the to Iw rung until the arms of tlic nre worn out Tho is greeted nt the with great speeches in and tlie women and children stream from the quarters atul clamber into tlie carts There Is a great shrieking of roaring of machinery mulling of cane mingled with tho of none cheering ara drunk In every of u 1ml Amid ail this din minor nre unheard After leaving Hie sugar the troop of files the mansion of the planter the family who ancs to make their appearance and tie nt Addresses nre to the planter who of course lins to return for if there is anything dear to the of tlie darkey il is and tho mul brothers of planter It lie has any come in for their full of negro oratory CROWD Money Is given to tlic lenders to treat the and the planter has to use every excuse in his power to prevent him self upon the shoulders of the Joyous negroes This ceremony over nre thrown into the tho lenders return to their wagons nnd rattle around tho two or three times with of drum squeaking of fifes cheering and other tions Then off they go to get their sec ond installment whisky at tie where the storekeepers receive their of attention The procession joes to ns many plantations ns possible mid In the dusk as the fog comes rolling in from the river sweeping across the empty nnd winding in and out of the border of the woods almost a mile one hears the sound of a beautiful negro melody Wo waiting on do rising mul falling sweet and clear on the night iir And then the come lum bering home holding a half intoxicated wholly happy crowd There is a grand supper waiting for them nnd nobody thinks of the depredations committed be upon other mens goods in the way of and poultry More liquor is drunk more speeches made and the planters entire fence is serenaded by the j untiring crowd a late hour the rising rings the too sweeps in eddying folds while nnd pale golden into the blue oak woods and dis closes the quarters silent for the very dogs nrc sleeping Here and there gray smike curls up above the cabins the bell quavers its summons There is n long waking howl from the dogs and sharp calls of negro women Soon a large part of the previous days proceedings will be enacted with unabated Ruth in Sew Orleans Times Democrat Tito Wo look upon 30 to 40 degs below zero which our northern neighbors oc nee ns a temperature that is about the limit of human endurance with any degree of comfort and probably it Is with even our best methods of combatting nnd so we stand when we hear of the Eskimo out sledging nnd hunting 50 GO and even 70 dogs below zero forgetting all the lime that these people have a clothing which is proportionately warmer than their lowest tempera ture Is colder than ours and this too with equal if not lees weight than ia our I clothing They are therefore better prc I to endure it than wo can possibly Schwatka Ivory tlM Congo Region De Brazza African explorer upper Congo regton tewn with ivory Be found large of tasks in some of villages and they were often offered to him for small of bands White fce river he SAW in eight 103 elephants i Ait Inveterata I An English historian while writing it said smokes cot only one cigar but To manage this he bad to invent a new cigar holder This has the ordinary I month piece but Branches off so to speak i at sight at the other end There I are in OMM Into which cigars are placed aa many as fonr at a time being a Kewa RAILROAD TRAVEL IN RUSSIA Cheap aad United Time and Railroad travel In Russia reminds ono pf that in certain sections of the United States where the roads ore very new the equipments cheap the employes and all kinds of very limited It was only since the late rebellion in America that Russia has figured at all in railroad circles The Hues built by Wimans of Baltimore were well built but they were not well equipped and have been poorly maintained The arbitrary direction of the czar that all the lines should be perfectly straight from one large city to the other or from the beginning to the termini regardless of tho lesser points on the way will be a great drawback to the country for many years The strangers attention Is directly attracted to the large number of small cities and important villages he sees from one to miles off the railroad lines These marts of trade ore more or less sub stantial and generations Will come and go before the stations are as plentiful along the railroad lines as they would at first have been mode hat for the inter of the czar It is very seldom that a house is pro vided for locomotives or there is a shed for any class of material or equipment notwithstanding the fact that the nine months of rain or snow in each year make them more necessary than in other coun tries Locomotives resting and falling to pieces although but a few years old and tools of every character are seen strewn about everywhere Tho stations however are commodious and comfort able The fastest express trains which make about twenty miles an hour stop M every station from to forty mm utes The guard comes to your carriage door when the train stops opens It nml tells how long the stop will be He also points to the restaurant hard by and tells yon what can be purchased and further that there Is ample time it Is probable that there Is n commission arrangement or all the railroad restaurants are run by the company Few passenger trains that have not some freight cars The trains are long the rails heavy and good the ballasting fair but the equipments are so inferior that the employes refuse to make any speed But one passenger train a day even on the principal lines and very seldom is a sleeping car or a carriage that can be utilized as a sleeper encountered For a run between two cities distant like New York and Washington or New York and which occupy five aud a half or six hours In America a day or night of to fourteen hours is consumed There are seldom closets or drinking water or similar accommodations At every station day or night old women or children visit the carriages sad cell drink ing water There Is one comfort however on a Russian railway train There are no cinders The old fashion wood burning locomotives are used and as they have spark and cinder protectors and burn pine or poplar or there la freedom front both or smoke Tho roads are too new for dust too when there la a period dry enough to mako dost Moscow Cor Cleveland Leader Form of A very singular form of neuralgia Is that affecting the of limbs tt not rarely happens that an stump has healed the nerves of the stump being compressed In the scar become exceedingly painful Curi the pain is not felt in the stump but la the extremity of tho limb which has been amputated In ono coming under the notice of the writer a man whose arm hod been amputated above the elbow re ferred the exquisite pain he felt to the little finger of the hand years after the operation An old one legged soldier applying for au Increase of pen sion said Ho had more pain In the foot which aint than tn the foot which This was a terao way of saying that bo continued to have a pain In the foot which he had lost on the battlo field many years before The explanation of this consists In the fact that the terminal of a nerve are sensitive parts they arc tha the points from which the sen sations start on course to the brain Where they give notice that something U wrong with the outlying When the nerve is Injured in iu continuity the Is often referred to the terminal ends Every one who has struck his crazy point above the elbow where the nerve is very superficial and easily have noticed how much tho sensation was affected In the little finger the pain being often greater there than at the point whero the blow was H Robe M In u Shock Tlic explosion of a water reservoir or boiler in the kitchen of the house Milwaukee recently was perfectly re corded in the vibrations given by the shock to a ruling machine in the bindery of Tho Sentinel The machine Is directly opposite ono of tho windows of the bind ery and was in full motion when the ex plosion took place drawing straight lines The first Impulse of the shock carried the pen nearly half an inch from the true line then for some distance it approached the trne lino again wavering when It suddenly drew wavering lines for the final reactionary vibrations The lines are just such as are mode by tho seis in an earthquake Orleans Picayune of Log There Is a log of yellow color standing Just outside of Chl Una Gate of Peking where it has been since the fall of tho Ming dynasty commanding tho respect of all classes of people It is in perfect condition The insects have not made any raids upon it as they do on other logs The people believe that tho log must be the residence of eome god so they annually worship it On the 1st of October the emperor commanded tho board of ceremonies to appoint a few of to pay respects to tjio deified Chicago Herald Be Liked how did you like my ser mon V New ports of it I liked very For Well you started off with blessed are the pnra in heart and a lot of other Oh that was my Hm I think on the whole I like the port yon call your better than what yon eall sermon Why dont yon make your texts Tran script Perfumers now the scent of the encumber KNOTTS FUNNY SPEECH THE KENTUCKY CONGRESSMAN THE STORY OF HIS INSPIRATION A Serious Oration Prepared but Lobbyists Wonderful i of to Brilliant of The red which mns from tha Capitol to the White House full the other day and a stocky portly abort USD I hung oa by the sirup He cold aud his round heml was well wrapped in i green woolen comforter and his plug lint j waa pulled well down over bis brow face only shoue but it looked like piece of rare china The color was as rosy ns the most florid of Rubens paintings and the eyes shone out through white winkers as blue as a midsummer rity A short moustache of silver was the only sign of and the face was AS round nnd as tell as that of the moon He smiled as I asked him whether the day was as cold as those of Duluth Procter Knott of Kentucky whose funny speech on Lm loth some fifteen years ago mode him famous and who Is now visiting Wash ington and with his old con gressional friends I am told his speech still sells and 1 saw some of these Duluth speeches recently at a second hand hook store and was told they were worth a quarter apiece Proctor Knott hud no idea at tho time that this speech was going to make his reputation and it was an inspiration which only once in a life time Ha told me the story He said It was near the close of the session nnd I was asked to speak on the land subsidy In tha house I prepared a sober oration with no more Inn in its points than In the moral law and It was nearly as long t tried to get the speakers eye and when the about pausing was preferred before me I asked him to give me his right to the floor or a part of his time He told me he could not do it At last I spoke to the speaker and he said lie thought he could arrange to give me hearing KO IDEA OF This was several days before tho speech was made and I had no Idea of humor as yet A day or so later a lobby ist called upon me and told me that a wonld soon come up to improve the hnr bor of I asked him to tell me where was I know of course its situation but I wanted him to under stand that 1 thought but little of his and be thus able to refuse his Ho did not see my Irony but ho put hand in his breast pocket and polled ont a map Here was the whole world drawn la circles aud these circles grew smaller and smaller until at lost they terminated in a dot at tlie center and on that dot was printed the word These were hundred mile circles and the distances of all the great cities of the coun try were noticed and their small dots looked like hamlets compared with To look at that map you wonld suppose t hat if yon wanted to go to Liverpool London or Constantinople youd have first to go to for Mart and on the map were printed showing that there were square miles about that point all tributary to Duluth The bland yonng man delivered his eulogy of this mighty embryonic city and I saw ns he did eo the chance for some fun In tho house I asked him the map and mid that 1 lived on a little creek In Kentucky nod that most of my people had never seen a ship He did this and he suspected nothing saying Mr Knott I hope yon Will study that map mid po for our I replied will go but 1 him again As I thought more over the i matter the fan grew upon me and I found I that 1 could make my speech on the bind and bring In Duluth t went to tho library and prepared some of the best parts of the humor and I Intended it as au Introduction to my more speech When I got the floor I found the house with me and when my time was extended I conld not go np from tha ridiculous to the sublime I went on with tlie and dropped the serious oration and the speech over which I had spent days of labor was never delivered The part of tlic humorous was tho result of the of moment and while I made It I never thought that It would put country upon a brood grin I the next day to every ono talking it and that all my friends nt the Capitol congratulated me upon O Carpenter in New York World A REMARKABLE TEAM 4 of Biz Army War From nn account given by Riley formerly in charge el the quarter musters depot at Washington we are enabled to give a sketch of one remark able team Early in the spring of a certain group of six met officially com rades They hod been associated before in the somewhat mixed society of the quartermasters corral but now they were regularly mustered Into the service of the United States by afterward and were hitched up together for the first time at Berry and one Ed ward Wesley Williams a colored teamster united fortunes wlU theirs He was a good teamster and at once established those amicable and confidential his animals which are of the highest sequence to the successful negro driver His trace chains were never so short that the singletrees banged about the heels His hits were always of the regu lation size inches round and full five inches between tho rings His broad harness straps were properly adjusted so that there should bo no reasonable ground for the laying back of ears or the letting fly of heels Tho authorities deemed it Important that Williams and hb mules should be in Washington on the oay of Lincolns In auguration and they started for the na tional capital on March 1 but history to record the exact date of their arrival Inasmuch as the ceremonies passed off successfully and without Interference from tho confederates we may infer that the whole six added the music of their voices to the cheers that went up from In front of the Capitol on that memorable They remained on duty in and about the defenses of Washington until May 14 1863 when they were transferred to Fortress Monroe and reported to Gen McClellon or his They marched up the Peninsula pated In the siege of Yorktown the battle of and the mnd marches of the At the seven days fight all six were present for and with Indiscriminate efficiency hauled army supplies or ghastly loads of dead and wounded until they reached Harrisons Landing with the Army of tho Potomac Thence Williams drove back to Fort Monroe nnd was shipped to Washington with his team In time to haul ammunition out to Junction ami take part In what an Irish soldier lad called our annual They saw the tables turned at and turned at where they were in the ammunition train Under Oen Hooker the team followed the fortunes of war through the and Chantilly campaigns and was with Grant in front of Petersburg But there sad to relate tho faithful saddle mule on whose back Williams ridden so many weary miles was killed by artillery Ore from the Her surviving bore np under this affliction and admitted a new bent with their usual grace Tho Intro duction of n stranger was not to interfere with regular duties and the team worked right along until the fall of Richmond In June following hostilities bait ceased and the team was ordered back to Washington where It waa transferred back to the regular army and was oa therewith In There Is no evidence forthcoming to show that the faithful Williams is not stilt cracking his black snake over the of his team at some remote frontier post bnt In the nature of things the four footed members of the association most long since have been honorably re tired or perhaps shot for such Is the method of dealing with the super government mulo None of these animals waa more than fourteen and a half hands high nor weighed more than MO pounds They frequently went without bay or groin for fonr or days subsisting oa wayside and several times they were without water for Adrian in American Magasine tho Then the next thing will bo the dis covery of a perfect something that will be absolutely safe without unpleasant after People are experimenting ami studying for it now U wilt lie found before long Then yon will think no more about having teeth filled than yon do now about hav ing your hair cut Yon will drop into dentists office nnd have a nerve and a tooth filled while you mkc a com dose In an easy chair Mirny dentists thought cocaine was Uic long wanted drug when it first appeared but it doesnt work well in practice It will not penetrate dentine and so It ia of no use in filling sensitive teeth It Ia all right for local use in ulcers Chloroform and ether are loo and few dentists will use them if they can help It York Commercial User Mahone Is fond of buckwheat cakes but always sends back the first pinto Once when the waiter brought him some j most savory cakes browned to a turn ha tamed up his nose at them ami snid What kind of leather is tlint I ordered cakes snd I want them of buck wheat Go back M the cook and tell him that I want a fresh plate of cakes and they must be clone brown The waiter then carried the cakes ont of the room And picking np n cold plate he slid them off on to it then put them on the stove to keep warm A few minutes later he brought this plate into Mahone and looked nt it critically and then gave the waiter n dol lar saying My boy this looks like imsi ness and these cakes are flt for n G Carpenter in World I an acquaintance who earns a handsome living with money to span by Inventing new devices of all kinds likely to catch the capricious public fancy He Invented toys bats Inks pens pencils and I know not what else and is now concentrating ate energies upon a novelty In stationery The de mand for new styles and shapes In fancy stationery Is constant Any oddity how ever eccentric In color site er form that be Is certain to go What he pro poses isto put upon the market block paper and envelopes to ho written on with a Ink Ha per his device he avers and expects to reap a handsome fortune by tt For per sons In very deep mourning especially those who have lost wealthy relatives who have remembered them In their wills it should certainly possess attractions As we have had every other color in stationery hut black nothing I suppose remain after U but tor to invent some substitute for paper to write in New York In The discovery of paralysis as the orig inal cause of so many forms of mental alienation is the most Important of the century hi psychiatric and it may be called the chief of the new school Since this discovery the insane are no longer considered beyond the domain of science and the belief dally in a between mental and physical disturbances cardiac and hepatic insanity have been in their turn and the modern movement tends to the that there is not a point of the human economy which If wounded cannot a psychlo trouble especially In those subjects pet pared by an hereditary talat picturesque expression of Dr the celebrated alienist the physician no longer to be the secretary of Ma patients to write droll stories dictation Instead he searches the phys ical structure to find where an Cor Now York Post In Partially successful experiments by means of electric lights flashed on clouds have been made by cers at Singapore A message of I words was read from an vessel at a distance of sixty knots lint iho r escaped notice Arkansas Traveler The British nervier women Competitors for have to be over 18 and under 20 yenrs ait nee The Old Judge Samuel lately sent to the writer a half dozen from his private smokehouse of the vintage that are simply in ashes Any self re pig would have died gladly to have been eo idealised In these yon catch flavor of the smoke of halt smothered oak chips above they drifted with the seasons into perfec tion And red gravy excuse drooling clear consistent flavorous is aneh ae yon to on Mothers table when yon eame from a long days hunt ia the December wind I tad rather have a smoke emotions but are ft Oat of of Babn Uttie mamma Are Mamma wno might be 35 ont 3T0 dear Only Mred Mamma hae beta shopping afl My I know what they can Lam poon 8t are von doing np heraf to how I can j go Cant I higher than thh Noy j yon cant Who arc yon am Ike Price of Journal with loamy floor Its darkened rafters its red pepper pods Its of of arfn 140 sneli na between earth and roof live If than a cellar of dost of Madeira Out art ot ife became hat Snail gravy go into of tto for a are to oot oC A of Hi c I WaTO HO Of Iti i Mfr fe HHV w  

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