The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, June 09, 1881, Image 1

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    English Gypsy Song.
A pretty face 7°
Burely, and uursly, mother mine |”
“ But see, there's no mirror, not one in all th
place,
8o how do you know it, danghtar mins?"
** Oh, up the road and down,
«ho fair folk and brown,
They tell m
all the town.
** And how do they talk to you?
and answer this
And tell me no ibs, daughter mine
D) they speak the Gorgio® language, or good
old Romanis
' Oh, they needn't gay a word, mother mine;
They need only smile so bland,
And I'm quick to understand
Thre isn’t such a beauty as myself in
land 1?
all the
Ja sel Toke ¥
A June Day,
Aud what is so rare asa day in Juno ?
Than, if over, come perfect days:
Then Heaven trios the carth if it be in tune,
And over it softly her warm ear lays;
Wheth look
aer we }
We hear life murmur, or see it glisten;
or whether we listen,
vory elo 1 iv of mioht
Every olod feels a stir of might,
An instinet within it that reaches and towers
) 2 foc Aiud
vindiy above it for lght,
And, groping 1
Climbs to a soul in grass and 8
Wes;
The flush of life may well be seen
Thrilling back over s and valleys
The cow slip staril
The buttercu;
And there's never a loaf por
ygome happy creature’
x
te bind sit
s at his door in t
Atilt Hike al
And lot
With t
His np &
And th
the egas Ix
is the
nto every bare inlet and oreek and bay
Now th
We ar
No matter how barren the past way bave 1
y Fwy varfiil t
heart is s0 fall that a drop overtills it
havey now because God wills iy
Hen
We si }
How the sap orecp
We may
Know
shut
That skies are ¢lo
bry
The
That dande
That ¥
flowing,
That the riveris |
sirealils are
daer thaw the sky,
i by;
house han
wows hack,
low ing
14d
in
ned w
THE MUTINEERS.
“ Good-morning, Mrs. Herbert!” said
the captain's nepbew, Malcolm Sher-
wood, who was also first officer on board
the Albatross,
Helen stepped out of the cabin on the
main-deck, and the young man-—who
could boast a certain kind of good looks,
but whose assurance and self-conceit
were too apparent for a gentleman—
came toward her, cap in hand, bowing
gallantly.
She avoided his glance of bold admir-
ation while returning his greeting, aud |
looking out over the ship's side at the
smooth and shining waves, exclaimed :
“Oh, how lovely the sea looks this
morning I”
“I wish it were a garden, where I
could gather you a bouquet.” said Mal-
colm. “Beautiful women like you, |
should alwars be surrounded with tlow-
ers. But isn't there something I can
offer you? Al, yes, a nantilus! I saw
some a few moments ago, and remem- |
bered your wish.” i
He turped quickly. Only two men |
were in sight on the leeward-side of the
galley. One was coiling rope in front |
of a locker, the other was tarring the
bung of a water-cask.
“ Drop that, you Inbber, and swing
a bucket over the side, d've hear ¥" cried
Mr. Malcolm Sherwood, first mate of
the A No. 1 government-built elipper |
Albatross, among whose graceful accom- |
plishments the art of addressing his
men as if they were brutes was pre-emi- |
nent. “Secop me a good specimen
nautilus, and don't spoil it with your!
bungling either.”
As he had not spoken to either of the
sailors by name, it would have been |
difficult to tell which he meant. Only |
one turned rounds fine-looking sea- |
man, fair-skinned, ruddy, blue-eyed and
flaxen-haired. He dropped his calk- |
ing-pot, caught up a wooden bucket, |
made its rope-handle fast to another |
rope by a running-knot, and throwing |
back his broad shoulders with a lithe |
motion of his shapely figure, he prepared |
tn launch it over the guonwale, when the |
nate roared out with a gush of oaths |
that he didn’t mean him.
““ You're too ready with your desire |
to show off,” he muttered between his |
teeth ; and, seeing that the other sailor |
continued to quietly pursue his labor, |
as if unconscious of his existence, the |
brutal tempered officer rushed on him |
in a rage, and with a violent blow felled |
him to the deck, where he lay without a
motion.
* You've struck a sick man, Mr. Sher-
wood,” said the fair and brawny sailor, |
who was & Dane, and bore the soubii-
qnet of Neptune among his fellows, |
“ Poor lad ! he fell on his marlingspike |
off the Plata, and he hasn't been him- |
self since. He's deaf, too, and didn't |
hear yon.” i
Helen bad uttered a cry of horror as |
the mate's clenched fist descended on |
the slender rope-coiler. She knew him |
by his pale face and painful cough ; and |
although her father's illness had hereto-
fore allowed her little time forany duty
except waiting on him, she hal sent
many delicacies to the forecasile by
Zillah, her maid, for this same sick
sailor. As he fell, she ran to his side.
Neptune stood with his arms folded,
with a strange expression on his dead-
white face.
“Don’t fret yourself, miss,” he said, |
ina cold and bitter tone; “if poor
Pierre has got his discharge he’s in
Inck. There's plenty more willing to
leave this service the same way. for want
of a better.”
A gleaming smile, full of contempt
and suppressed anger, played round his
thin lips, and he looked steadily in Mal-
colm’s face, as if defying him,
Snch daring could not pass with im-
punity. If the mate was silent a mo-
ment, it was because his fury mastered
his ntferance.
*“ My. Shelton—Mzr. Frero !” he ejacu-
lated, as soon as he could speak.
An elderly man, whose originally fine
face was marred by signs of habitual
intemperance, sauntered out of the cabin,
and a slight and youthful fellow, with
flashing, black eyes and a quick, nerv-
ous movement of the body, seemed to
dropfrom the shrouds on deck.
Both made an inclination of the head
in reply to the savage mate's call, and
addressing first the younger of the two,
by the name of Frero, he ordered him.
at once to put the sailor Neptune in
irons.
For a moment the young man, who
was third mate and also ship’s carpen-
ter, stood silent; the next, he flatly re-
fused to obey.
Meantime, the frightened girl had
helped the young Frenchman to rise
from the deck, and was gently support-
ing him toward the forecastle when two
Norwegians, called Christian and Oddo,
relieved her of her charge, and lifting
him in their arms bore him away.
She stood looking till his poor, droop-
ing head disappeared down the gang-
way, and then, hurrying around the
windward sides of the galley, tried to
gain the cabin without encountering
th
83
FRED KURTZ, lIiditor and Propri
VOLUME XIV. (
Won.
'ENTRE HALL,
PA.,
THURSDAY,
What in the flash of wit, the salon's glow ?
The wine may shine, end loop snd sparkle u
From marble tables white ax purest snow,
And brim blood-red the gold inerusted |
Advance. ho air may languish filled with perfumowwest,
a Year, in
0, L. NUMBER 22.
;
188
hile he gave himself up, day after day,
mare and more completely to the bale
ful in
|
the man whose brutality made him |w
lodions in her eves; but just as she
| ronched the main deck she saw Sher
{ wood with his own hands snap the irons
{ on Neptune's wrist,
| assistant did the same for Frero
| Her heart beat high; trembled
from head to foot; and, clinging to the
| water casks as she passed ak
| gained the eabin-door,
The cabin was fitted up with unusual
| elegance. Sofas of blue damask, blue
i silken hangings, handsome mirrors and
| well-oushioned faunteuils, rendered a
| really luxurious apartment.
At its upper end were two very large
staterooms, in which every appliance
for comfort ard pleasure were armyed, lisl
and where taste, ingenuity and wealth land Ma Sherwood was, as
had united to foil the exhaustion and | have sean, a man of narrow mind and
tedinm of a leng VOVage, { brutal passions,
This unwonted splendor “You look pale and appear nervous,
The sh elonged to a | Helen,” said |
very wealthy merchs who, with his | aneasiiy.
only child, took this on 1 voy Doet
n the full conviction that it would | youn would
roughly establish his health.
As vet it had been unsuccessful in
this most important item. Mr, Herbert
was 80 entirely an invalid that his af
fectionate and unselfish daughter hid
all the painful and alarming scenes
which was exposed,
peared in his presence wi
on her fair
fluence of intemperance
nes past the captain
while his maudlin | an excellent and accomplished
Such
Mr. Herbert's experi
+ and it was owing to hi
1 3
QHIee:
she
th
VAY
18 Nic
him as oom
ye 1de d to Lim
he crew,
ad the unfortunate captain
and reliable assistant officer,
; 1 }
own failings might have
ip, hn
¥ 3 #8 439% ‘
tire selection of
. \
secured
3.1
an ane
it his been oon
aled, or, at least, productive of no
but he was entirely ruled
\ contrived to
ig \
establish a strang nfluence over him;
8
land
COM we
dor was readily |
i werving |
Ww hie re
y
do wish
her father, ol
“Is anything wrong ?
: id? |
more agreeable t
He is of
to me, and 1 can't get on wi
It would make
if you were
ad at ease with each other.
Mr. Herbert, like all sick people,
id impatient
is
¥ that
age, 1 0 that
3 x
Li young man, infinite
Service
thout his at-
i il }
n friends
to
she
tone on this cocasion;
iter was a loving, unselfish
far
fade
3
more of nm
her
lo Yaa y hy
y 10 explain wi
|
understand
uired not only a
ture, but a con
ous one, and Helen Herbert's was
» the heart a i nl offal
¥ Lhe heart and soul ola in
T hi n
T'o achieve this re 1
igi 3 LE {
nost disinterested ns annoyance of
it al
namely
Sintering the cabin, her first the eoldne y Clon
was directed toward her
rovs manner
)
slumber had been pro
rejoiced at the evi
¢
It gave her tim
dence of needed rest.
@ to quiet her own
nt, and also to think of tl
»
+h sailor.
0
¥
Cis
»
ree
hen,
Once or twice she called her maid's
name, in a low voice; but no one re-
sponded, and she concluded that Zil-
lab, a pretty quadroon girl and a tire
less flirt, was showing off her graces as
nsual for the benefit of the steward, a | why, if
mulatto from the Isle of France. ing. Contrary
“1 cannot let the poor fellow sufl
she said, by way of encouragement
herself, and immediately walked up { ironing of the ship's fs
one of the small doors opening out quick, flashing spirited mate
the cabin, and tappe d lightly. handsome ve Wg Dane.
It opened instantly, and a dark, han “I've got
some young gentleman stood before her,
who bowed profoundly.
“Oh, Dr. Conroy, pray excuse me
3
she said,
quietly away.
® ® ® ®
There was an
i dee
ip all day
OImMiEous
Helen §
ferry
n fo
word of comment,
dination, |
sh
il
as some
3 vs}
insub
tabléMwith a bull
he stipper
‘here was a couple of sa
” “Th
becoming confused the mo-
found face
with the silent young physics
am sorry to trouble you, I am sure, bu
poor Pierre is ill again, and I will be so
glad if you will go to him.”
Perey Conroy, the
bowed again to Miss Herbert, anc
her presence he was always stra
reticent; but be strove to prove, by
extreme readiness of his movemen
serving her, the deep respect whic
already expressed in his every lool
action.
She and he
In
Hain s door at tour x
“]
.
ment she herse to
uno
2 53 Sud
RIP 8s AOCWO
rit in
gudaaen
¥. “ 1
IN Al 8} TRAC
simply murderous, and
1:t 3.
like a basil In:
Repel
eOmed
bad not been
jeeting on shipboa
an of excellent jy
in society, and they had met oceasion-
ally in fashionable life, when he had i
spired her w a decided admiration
for his manner and abilities.
But, to her pain and surprise, he re-
turned her outburst of cordial pleasure at
discovering him to be their fellow-voy-
ager with a distant and reserved respect | she 1 1
which had conti ed despite his devotion [
to her father, whose untiring nurse, as
Ww
nstituted
strangers
rd. He
rd. 8.
100
before their 15K
Was a young ms sit
was unusually
than ord:
it
walling
PB DOR eful dos
saving Zillah to
stepped ont
anxious to learn poor
tion from one
Was
nn
HL
well as physician, he had co
himself.
This ceremonious treatm
poor Helen's heart. She
herselfs abashed at his de
lence, and often sought her ow:
room, after one of his distant but
found bows, with a heartache, eage
hide her bitter, burning tears.
She did not note how, do as he mi, ht
to conceal it, his color changed a
: 4} foun
chilled of the sail
: fav)
' GQArs.
ly, wrapped in
wched mainmast
wo sailors, who
sn
av Iv
A gray 1!
ti 5
Lait
one after {i
yO
ng. :
t sigh
only pre
i118 emotion
served the secret of hi
presence.
“He avoids I am actually dis-
agreeable to him,” she often exclaimed,
in a burst of tears; and then added,
with a heavy sigh: “And yet
kind—so very kind—to my dear father.
I am grateful to him. I canaot help
that, I am sure.”
On this morning he was in such haste
to obey her that he started at once,
even without waiting +t
room door.
As he left the cabin it blew back and
lodged against the wall, leaving, fort
first time, open to Helen's inspection
the little room in which he had spent
the greater part of their long voyage.
It was neat and pretty as the cham- | ¥¢
ber of a young girl. Everything was ir
f
f
S in Aer
Wer
ne,
” an ¥ \ ¥
kneel IR posture, -
leaned ¢
fy . ” |
two n wh
agerly Ove
he is so moved stealthily
them.
Helen Ii in breathless
1 ¥I an 3 father's safety
er words, for a growing dreaq
her soul had taken form, and was
now either to be dispelled or realized.
Coming within the shadow of the
almost windless sail, her ear strained to
{ agony lest she should lose a word, and
her eyes fixed with a fearful fascination
on the coarse forms that seemed to de
le her destiny, she waited, dreading,
't eager to hear.
wh an er
3
0 ¢lose the state-
he
Cl el
» two bound men spoke i
ive tones; the two free ones
id agreed.
awful compact had been made and
{ fow hours would
Ab, true, too true,
n sharp,
listened
books to his still
medicines.
A few small pictures were fastened to
the wall. One was a erayon sketch of 1.
a fair, girlish face, with fluffy, golden Her had forewarned
curls, and a broad-brimmed hat, just I wl her wor were
such an one as she wore on deek to pro- y verified,
tect her from the sun. She pressed one hand on her |
There was a familiar look about the other over her eves, and called her
Had she seen the original anywhere ? cournge and cunning to her aid;
The thought made her unhappy. She | Helen Herbert was in the midst of mu
dismissed it quickly, and cast her eyes | tineers. She had heard their plans dis-
on the stationary desk before which his cussed, and knew that in five hours law
arm-chair was placed. madness would reign aboard the
It was covered with books and chemi- | Albatross, as a fitting successor to
cal apparatus; but on its top stood-— months of brutal tyranny, and that her
Could it be? No, no! ber eves deceived | maid was in the plot, and the willing
her; and yet it really was her own dis- | conquest of Francois, the Mauritian
carded slipper! steward, while she was to fall to the
Its mate had slipped off her foot on of Manuel Frero, the young
deck, and been carried through a flow- | Spaniard, the future commander of the
ing scupper into the ses. While she
nore compact case
soo it
1 Was
instincts
h
h it fi
Ars about
wart,
it
ne
DE
for
1
1688
on | share
! Albatross,
stood merrily laughing at the mishap | 8he stood so long in the cool, silent
Zillah had brought out another pair, | darkness, gathering her frightened wits,
which she put on, forgetting the odd | that it was well her form wns
one until after it had disappeared. She | and her cloak gray, or she
recalled how she had searched for it, | been discovered.
merely from idle curiosity as to its fate; »
and here it was, Dr. Perey Conroy had visited the
“ What could have induced him-—" | captain that evening, and finding a
she began, but did not complete the | threatened attack of fever, persuaded
question. | him to abate his libations and join him
A footstep sounded without, and she | in the cabin at a game of cards.
sprang up and shut the room door be- It was thus engaged that Helen found
fore any eye but hers should rest on its | them both, and though her manner was
simple treasures, a little nervous, she looked so charming
Mr. Sherwood came into the eabin. when she said she had a boon to beg,
The angry cloud was gone from his | that old Sherwood, once famed for gal-
brow, and he stood beaming on Helen | lantry, yielded at once,
most amiably, It was the freedom of the two prison
“J am afraid our timid dove was! ers whom Malcolm had, she said, for-
alarmed at our harsh sea discipline,” be | gotten.
said, with a caressing gesture that his While the captain gave orders for
daring did not quite earry to her shrink- ' their liberation, she went to her father's
ing form. ‘But, my sweet friend, it is | stateroom and filled two glasses with
necessary. We cannot sail without it. | wine. Into each of these she poured a
It is a8 needful to a ship as a fair wind.” | strong sleeping potion, and quietly
“Helen!” slipped out with them to meet the muti-
“Yes, papa!” exclaimed the indig- neers.
pant girl; and, delighted to escape from | Every pretty woman knows her power,
Malcolm’s unwelcome presence, she Helen calculated largely on hers;
hastened to join her father. | with gentle words of sympathy and
She found him very much shaken by kindness she soothed the savage mood
a painful dream, from which he had not | of Manuel and Neptune, and with grate-
been quite able to arouse himself. ful respect they drank her health in the
“Where's the captain, Helen?” he in- glasses they drained, allowing her to
quired. ** Where's John Sherwood, the | fill them again and again.
sailing-master of the Albatross? I hope | When they retired, and she returned
he doesn’t leave his work to boobies and | to the cabin, she quickly locked the
land-lubbers, bnt does his duty like a door behind her, and, first of all ex-
man, and watches his ehip as if it were torting from the captain a signed par-
a human life! Eh, child—eh ?” { don for the offenders, she told the story
“ Yes, yes, papa—certainly!” Helen of their wrongs, as only a roused woman
tried to say calmly, while in her heart can.
she knew that Captain Sherwood in-| Day by day she had endured to see |
trusted the vessel and all it held to the her father's ship the scene of basest
slender
would
LAYEe
* * * * ® *
management of his nephew, Malcolm,
3
by hour she had shrank me
from the ungoverned coarseness
sl nea of Maleolm Sher Win id
‘My father in il and
5a
and in
mine in
ul, b
urstine
» Was very pale ; its
ion betraved many
troneest
SM TONEeS
1H Oat
reserve,
one of the
and
with a sudden
powal ful emotions,
being a sensitive pride
which at last gave way
barst of elhing :
“ Miss Herbert, if I dared—if 1 might
prosun I would be only too happy to
y whole iif o you,” he
ned to
with a
it
devote cried
She
but
bow spanned her tears,
“ Oh, Dr, Conroy, help Captain Sher
it
mn JL,
i with streaming
like a
him
eves, light that rain
wood to gain his command of his men
s and nn
nm and
yas all in
kissed it fondly.
' irs hese two, Fi
' he
i,” Helen
she narrated the way
sudden and
leaders de
SteamsPower by Horse-Power,
A few days ago as we pass
I, Away down in
{ rake d
vid ¥
+ Up,
ushin
OTe d
in the raw with
lash
“ Nis,
nery E11
entler, the lath
the butter-churner
the cooper
i¢ by ¢§
do von
urns the
y shops below, for the
maker, the carpenter,
box-maker and
“And yon sell this power
y the horse, as yon would sell
y power from shafts and belting?”
imed Patrick, “and
1 have
for twinty
his whip
}
H
BAY
tho
s LI
intion
it was my
street and
Wall stree
al Have
ty 9
POWs Tr
and
“ How do he steed np here
Pat? “On the lift, Johnny, We hist
him up once, and here he stays for life.
When he is foolish enough to die, be
jabers we lower him down upon the
same lift and present him to the mayor
and corporation,”
“Then he
ground under his feet at an
years “ Niver, but he
house under him, and a
there, upon the same iligant rool. A
blacksmith iim when necessary
convanient, He all the na
tional holidays ating Oonts, and very
Sunday the swate church bells remind
him that it’s a day of rest, and he's av
the highest blood in New York. Billy
is the twelfth horse, my friend, that has
divided me solitude, and me altitude,
too, at No. — Gold street,
I turned to Marvantha and said:
“How did vou ever come to climb to
the top of this house, my belle soeur 7"
“ Paid for it,” exclaimed Maryantha,
automatically, *“ A gentleman with an
electric light wanted to get what he
called the census, or senses, of this dis-
trict, to know how many little shops
and people used power, He supposed
You get
never feels the solid
y time for
has a good
stable beyant
shoes |
or takes
belts and shafts up and discovered
Billy, and Patrick, snd lots of other
hora 8" Johnny Doviuet, mn Ne in } ork
Tribune, :
——————
A Story of Yaecination,
Apropos of vaccination, says the Lone
don 7yuth, some members of a certain
noble English household were desirad
to submit themselves to the ordeal of
revaccination, The lymph was to be
extracted from the arm of the infant
gon of the house. All to whom tho
operation was considered needful un-
derwent the process quietly enough,
until it came to the cook's turn. This
cook, who was a brawny Scotch wo-
man, steadily and positively refused on
the ground that “no English blood
should enter her veins After much
expostulation and delay she was vae-
Scotch calf.
those revaceinated, and with much tri-
the unmistakable superiority of a * wee
Scotch beastie” over a noble English
HE MIDNIGHT SUN,
tie tn the Avetle ReglonnSunbeams and
Hlinduesse-Beantiial ShoricLived
Viewers,
Muow
Avot
It is diftienlt, indeed, for one who has
not witnessed it himself to understand
the full meaning of the * midnight
sun.” The idea of the long Aretie night
seems to be much more generally com
prehended. Nearly all writers upon the
subject, whether those who have them
selves experienced its effects , Or W hether
their knowledge is derived from study,
dwell with great force on the terribly
depressing effect upon the physical or
ganization of the natives of the median
ones caused by the long Aretie night
whenever brought within its influence.
Though much less has been written or
said concerning the interminable day
its effects are almost as deleterious upon
the stranger as the prolonged night.
Indeed, to the sojourner in high lati
tudes the day is much more appreciable,
for at no point vet visited by man is the
darkness the total darkness of night
throughout the entire day, while the
“ midnight sun" makes the night like
noonday. Even when the sun passes
below the horizon at its upper culmin
ation the daylight is as intense as at
noon in lower latitudes when the sun's
disk is obscured by thin clouds. The
long twilight in the north, where
the sun's apparent path around the
earth varies so little in altitude as its
upper lower eulminations, takes
1 edge off of the prolonged
highest latitude ever at-
he Arctic explorer, but there
is nothing to relieve the long, long
weary day of its full power upon the
system.
" In this latitude tha sun goes down at
night and we retire to our conches and
sleep. In the morning the sun returns
and we arise to the pursuit of our van
ans daily avocations, Bat there in the
spring the sun never seta, There is no
mors ing and no night. It is one con.
nous day for months. At first it
seems very difficult to understand this
strange thing in nature. Une never
knows when to sleep. The world seems
to be entirely wrong, and man grows
as and Sleep is driven
ym his very eyelids, his appetite fails
i disagreeable results of pro
gils are apparent. But grad.
omes used to this state of
fairs, devises means to darken histent
and once moreenjoys his hour of rest,
In fact, he learns how lo take advantage
new arrangement, and when trav.
eling pu at night, or
when the sun is lowest, because then he
finds the frost that hardens the snow a
great assistance in sledging.
he sun's rays then, falling more ob
nely, less powerful, and
somewhat the evils that
pathway at noontime. He is not so
nuch sunburn or snow
It may sound strange Iy to
speak of sunburn in the frigid zone, |
perhaps nowhere on earth is the trav.
more annoved by that great ill
Ary exercise compels
row back the hood of his fur
hat the cool mornings and even
s precludes his discarding, and
becomes blised t
especially, if he fashionable
1c to wear his hair t upon the
head, his entire scalp is af
out as severely as if a bucket
ding water had been poured over
s head, This is not an exaggeration
During the spring of 1880 Lieutenant
Schiwatka's entire party, while upon
from Marble Island to
Camp Daly, were so severely burned
that not only their faces but their en
tire heads were swollen to twice their
tural A fine loo g party they
were Some had their faces so swollen
that their eyes were comple tely el
upon awake DIbg from sle« Pp. When one
could see the others he could not refrain
from laughing, the
spectacle. All dignity was lost. Even
the angust commander of the party was
wghing sic ck, and though he knew
] aughed at each other he could
3 he should excils
he saw his
tin
ih
rd
&
rost loss,
of the
reves his journey
lig
AVON
are he
baset
x i posed io
3
blindness,
at
4
lies Os
1
AL
to th
not
hits entire face
is
ain
ils
3
Sidige journey
11
riz, Ail}
osed
go ludicrous was
why
face int
, and then he too tried to smile,
s lips were so thoroughly swollen
0 effect was entirely lost, and it
impossible to tell whether his ex
gion denoted amusement, anger or
torture resulting from these
burns was govore that it was almost
Tm to sleep. The fur bedding,
which also served the purpose of a pil
low, irritated the burn, like applying a
mustard plaster to a blister, Then it
was that the night was turned into day
for the rest of the journey, and during
» heat of the day the party were com-
aratively comfortable in the shelter of
heir tent, Straw hats would have been
he proper style of headdress, but they
had been omitted from the outfit, as was
so another very important source of
fort, mosquito net It is in the
summer, however, that the necessity for
the latter luxury is encountered,
While the sun's rays pour down with
| their force upon the devoted head of
the traveler the reflection from the snow
is almost as intense and still more dis-
agreeable, for there is no possible es-
cape from it, Not satisfied with pro-
ducing its share of sunburn it acts upon
the eyes in a manner that produces that
terrible scourge of the Arctic spring--
snow-blindness, It is a curious fact,
persons who are near-sighted are gener-
ally exempt from the evils of snow
blindness, while it appears to be more
malignant with those who are far
sighted in direct ratio to the superior
quality of their vision. Lieutenant
Schwatks, and his companion, the cor-
respondent of the Herald, are both near
sighted, and during the two seasons
that they were exposed to the disease
were neither at any time affected by
snow-blindness, while the other mem-
bers of the party, and especially the
natives, who have most powerful visual
organs, were almost constantly martyrs
to the disease whenever exposed to its
attacks.
It seems to be the only method of
guarding against it to wear what we
called snow goggles all the time one is
out of doors, "The natives ase those of
home manufacture—that is, a piece of
wood with a noteh to fit over the bridge
of the nose, and a narrow, horizontal
glit opposite each eve. This rude
spectacle, called by them igearktoo, is
made to fit close to tho eves, and is
held in place by strings passing behind
and over the top of the head.
to shelter the eves from the direct and
reflected rays of the sun, but also inter
the vision
80
sible
comion ing.
Hi
that no amount of adverse experience is
degrees of excellence. Some are male
varions shades of smoked glass to blue
and green of varying degrees of opacity;
some are of glass surrounded with wire
terfere very little with the vision and |
yet furnish a perfect protection for the
eves. Glass of any pattern or shade
subjects the wearer to constant annoy
ance by fogging from the breath, which
congenls very rapidly upon the surface
of the glass and, apparently always at
the most inconvenient time, as when
the hunter is stalking a deer by crawl
ing a long distance upon his hands and
knees, and just as he raises his rifle for
a shot his goggles are like pieces of
groand glass, The native spectacles
give such limited field of vision
that it is impossible to use them in
hunting, but the wire gauge seems to be
free from all these objections. A well
supplied expedition 1s provided with
every kind of snow goggles, as they are
absolutely essential to the well being
of the party. The superiority of the
wire gauze pattern seemed to have been
appreciated by the Franklin expedi
tion, for many of them were found at
the various burial places and at other
points where rel were obtained. If
said that painting around the
\ upon the upper and lower lids
with burned cork or some other dark
pigment is a protection against snow-
blindness, but it doubtful if this
method has been sufficiently tested to
admit of its being relied upon. The
symptoms of snow-blindness are in-
flammation of the inner coating of the
lids, accompanied by intense pain and
impairment of the vision so as tod
able the sufferer from the performance
of his duties. A wash of diluted tind
ture of opium probably best
remedy and gives almost immediate re-
Lief
1
Li
“
Als
18 also
CYes
is
is
in he
The patient should remain within
ra for two or three days, by which
time he will nsuully be sufficiently enred
to resume his out-door lal
It mi hit be supposed that in the
niter barrennpess of the Arctic landscape
flowers never grew there, T would
be a great The dweller in
that desolate after passing a
long, dreary winter, with nothi for
the eye {
panse of snow and ice, isin a condition
to appreciate beyond the i of an
inhabitant of warmer cli
MOTH,
his
¥ taba
msinsae,
region,
O rest upon but the vast ex
little
flowerets that peep up almost through
the snow when the spring sunlight be. |
gins to exercise power upon the |
white mant of the earth. In little!
patches here and there, where the dark
colored moss absorbs the warm rays of
the sun and the melted from
the surface, the delicate flowers
spring up at orce to gladden the eye of
the Weary traveler, t neads not the
technical skill of tl 1 ad-
mire these I vely tokens of approaching
summer. Thoughts of home, in
warmer and more hospitable climate,
fill his heart with joy and longing as
meadows filled with daisies and butter
cups spread out before him as he stands
upon the crest of a granite hill that
knows no footste Pp other than the tread |
of the stately musk ox or the antlered
mas in single file upon
Te whose
ae how)
cordant
a Ix
its
i
ENOw
15
most
16 botanist to
jet
reindeer, as they}
their migratory
CAYEeInS
IOUrnevs
4
eCi0 10 ng
3 +
Lie
sound save
, ;
f
g ol
wolves of al
raven. He i
and in ly plucks the
dandelion and » we time of day by
ts stem,
blowing the puffy edge from ils
i" 5
wao
the
hour
leaves |
Tiny
of
black or dark green moss, adorn the
hillsides, and many flowers unknown to
WArImor ones oc bravely forth to
flourish for a few weeksonly and wither
in the Angust win Very few of these
flowers, so refreshing and charming to
have ary perinme. Nearly all
k moss that forms their
{oral
BE « r the
CAWID the 8
¥Y
Rain
again,
Or {osis one
is dearer to Li this
of separation, by picking the
from the 1 daisy.
little violets, set in a background
yellow hea
me
3
a8,
the eve,
smell of e dan
bed, — Neu VV i
re ————
The Feel,
bane of
from the wear.
not fit comfort.
for the
oints of the
which are
actual
or bursa
mia.
ng of any i
ably aud all
proper movements of
eel Bld the
feet and
painfal t
1
il
WN kl ae
the
bunions
L008 | '
umors formed by an
of a small
the int of
inflammation saC
situated over
weak ankles,
prod reed by
made i in
with a relax
and tendons
nails, which are not
but also take some time to be
int of each great toe;
which are very commonly
the fashionably
, together
» mnscles
woeanng
th
1 i
cured, and necessitate actual operative
interference ; which, al
though they may and do take place in
those who do not wear tight boots, are
still invariably the outcomes of them,
from interrupted cirenlation ; cold feet,
from th and last, but by
far the all, actual diseased
eondity & Or more
of tl
these, then, ma
fo pay
ple a ig
1a ¥
chilblains,
& SRE cause
worst of
f
on OF On
eithes
itself, All
wo have
ly small
1 possossed
ioinis
16 1O0E Or tii ol
WHRLes
AAI
1
Gert
ior
3 it } no reaso
vou should go to the other extreme and
wear the hideous unshaped things that
are often seen ; all I wish to insist on is
that you shonld be satisfied with the
size and shape of the foot Providence
MAY have ordained you to be the pos.
gessor of, and do your best to mainta
it in its natural and healthy condition.
How, then, can this be done but by
having vour boots made exactly and
comfortably to fit you; by never al
lowing your bootmaker to measure your
foot while raised from the ground, re-
membering that the foot expands quite
one twelfth of its length, and laterally
still more, when the weight of the body
is upon it ; by having a last made of
the exact shape of your foot, and always
having your boots made upon it; by
never wearing those abominable high
and narrow-pointed heels, which are
positively dangerous, ungainly, and ces
tain to lead to bad results; and, finally,
by having the soles of vour boots made
of fairly substantial thickness, and of
not too soft or porous leather,
By these means, then, you will be ena-
bled to take the exercise absolutely
necessary for your bodily health, to
venture upon the longest walks with no
dreaded prospect of discomfort, and to
retain for your feet inyour old age their
normal shape and condition ; and the
price you will have to pay for this much-
covoted end the mere loss of the
18
iad
is
the lips of thoughtless men or ignorant
fools, ** What a pretty foot I"— Harper's
Weekly
* TOI S—-5
A Lizard or a Lie,
An astonishing story has been brought |
to light by the sagious illness of a man
on, living in Detroit, to
the effect that two years ago he gWals
lowed a small lizard in a glass of water, |
and that it has lived and continued to
tained large dimensions, and can be felt |
bunting hanging from tne peak of the
cap. Of all the various kinds the gen-
eral experience seems to be in favor of
i
pain and profuse vomiting. TLemen can |
only rest when the lizard is still and by |
When the accident occurred the weight
of the man was 175 pounds ; now seventy-
an —
SHOOTING IN SPORT, | A FEARFUL HALE-HOUR,
Sr ———.
Far more, far more we prize » gentle tonch-
The mute caress of fingers on the hair
A kind word spoken —oh, how very much
These little tokens do to lowsin eure,
matters little if the home be bare
Of Juxury, and what the world calls good,
If we have only one true spirit there
ems
Recent Cases Which Were Lives of Cineiuuat] Msitgnatres in Im |
A recent English trial will be in.| In the early days of the Cincinnati | It
structive to American * target-shoot- | Southern, before it had attained its |
ists,” Three young Englishmen visited | present system, sod immediately after
a vacant field for amateur rifle shooting. the road had been opened for traffic io}
They placed a bit of board in the | Bomerset, occurred an event the reco *
branches of & tree for a mark, and com- | lection of which even to this day Sorves | Y
menced firing, without any special pre- | to bring out goose flesh on those who | With whom
cautions as to who or what might be in | at the time were cognizant of the im- | one,
the distance beyond. They fired in | pending disaster, i
turn, but before they had gone twice | Within a few days after paSHCRger |
around people came running fiom travel began the officers of the Southern |
the rear of the target to tell them | sent invitations for A trip over the road |
that they had killed a little boy. And | to all of Cincinnati's wealthiest men and |
it was. The rifles were able to | heaviest taxpayers, and on the morning | ;
carry a bullet nearly s mile. In a gar | of the excursion dozens of carriages 1 with the shell on? Did you say
den, far beyond the target, two chil- | the Burnet house, the place of meeting, | gut?
dren were at play, The little boy and conveyed them Across fhe sive is | Melted butter is like a bold militia
climbed into a low apple tree. Just | Ludlow, where the **special,” bh man only when it is dropped from the
then these balls came whistling by, rolls, :
and | by No. 1, the erack engine, with Jat. |
he fell from the tree, dead, at his sister's | Coombs at the lever, was in ting. | : -
feet. The three young men were tried Miles N. Beatty, now superintendent of | Bald the aera] fo th sje: What
for manslaughter, Now, it was not pos- TAY. ae sy i | :
the southern division, was conductor, |
sible to ascertain with certainty whose There bei This "
When all the excursionists were on
bullet did the mischief. But the judges | board the engineer and conduetor went unto Bat the dot
. . » y 3.
said that all three must be punished | into Train Dispatcher Cooledge's office,
alike. It was not necessary to detect | where they read and signed the follow- :
the individual. Rifle shooting under ng cada, and placed copies in their
such arrangements, and with no preean- | poe : :
tions to per doing in al * Meet and pass No. : north-bound
dangerous and unlawfnl practice. The | passenger train, at Williamstown. =
killing of the little child was manslaugh- | To Williamstown for delivery to the |
ter, and as all three of the young men | north-bound passenger train on arrival, |
had participated in the shooting they | Was sent the following order:
were all liable to the punishment. # — Conductor: A
A curious shooting case is related " Meet and pass south-bound special |
from Illinois. A young man had lately | at Williamstown, :
married and had brought his| So that the situation stood thus —
wife home to his father's house. Appar. sithes yraln reaching Yiu plase indicated ]
ently—although history does not say so | first Was 0 go on ihe Si i " p oe
ath words ~the mateh was ‘dis- | there until the one coming from the op- The saying Shat bitty 1s bu skin
leasing to the neighbors. At allevents, posite direction had arrived and gone deep B to ; theta
the house was visited late one evening, shead on the cleared track. Of the ; anything striking
soon after the w edding, by a“ chari- wait eg load SOI Wore deal i me
vari.” Now, a charivari is a serenade | ed chatting, olhers Were : ;
Tool wrong side ont ward. It consists the platforms, and still others on the : tises that he has anv chasm” for an ap-
of a great crowd surrounding the house, Summer car, when, glancing vu and prentice. Be Lad looked up the word
hooting, shouting derisively, beat. | down his train, the conduetor, finding | “ opening the dictionary.—Alla
ino burlesque drums and tooting mock | everything in good order and readiness, California.
ing burlesque drums and tooling mock yihing in g : . L .
instruments, firing guns, and the like, | waved his hand to the watching engi-| A lady who had quarreled with ber
he father and he ad of the household | heer, and the special pulied out, slowly : bald-headed lover said, in dismissing
! in- him: *“ What is delightful about you,
commenced chasing the riotous creased until it went out of sight around | my friend, is that I have not the trouble
the curve a-flying, snd a jittle later a of sending you back any locks of hair.”
rambling sound told of its crossing the | Chicago Tribune.
nesses said. Now, it is a well-estab- | trestle, and that it was well and arly | The very latest, nicest little ides is
lished rule in the courts that nothing in started on the way south. It was un- | for a young lady to decorate a miniature
he nature of mere words, threats, | derstood that extra fast time was to be | bellows and send it to ber best gentle-
" 3 t mind
A Number of
Decided by the Couris.
HUMOR OF THE DAY.
Bo
pl
4
ty
Dg aaa ms
Banguo's g
earth hath bubbles as the water hath.”
- Boston Courier -
* Pinafore" and the smallpox reached
Honolulu aud Japan on the same boat.
T didn’t mind the smallpox very
much.— Boston Post,
be on
i1
3
i
and
visitors, and in the melee one of the
latter was shot by him, as several wit
WW
in retaliation.
they thought the charivari might fairly
buse or ridicule will justify shooting | made, sand to offer no obstacle the ifies: *
But the judges said that | track had been cleared of everything | i
| save the passenger train referred to. |
One half bour after the start from |
Ludlow, No. 2, fifteen minutes behind |
As the constitutions generally say | time, reached Williamstown, at which |
{bat the right of the people to bear | place the standing rule was imperative | a
arms shall not be infringed, it seems to that conductors should at all limes stop she should refuse fo
established that laws cannot be | and inquire for orders. Stopping only clothes, would her
passed to fortnd men from carrying fire- | long ehough to vajoud De | ) don’t understand
Penh the S WW i ¢ In > ys g |
arms, But most of the States proba br win ie ne rh IDI | eS business ‘and that :
bly have laws declared that these | of making up 10st me, signal loosen back
weapons shall not be carried concealed; | engineer, and the train went on. | button on the shirt so it will
hoover wears a pistol m 2511" "The horrified operator from his win- | at the last minute and give 8
whoever wears a pistol must wear it © hor! pera : | oh
openly, so that his neighbors can see | dow saw No. 2 flashing northward to | cuse for being late at
that he goes armed and may take care | What seemed inevitable destruction, as! most of them are thoughtfal
accordingly, Alabama has a stringent | the tele graph line between his room and | do it.— Boston Post.
law of this kind. One man lately at- | Ludlow was unbroken bya single in-| If is only fair, we suppose, and
tempted to evade it by carrying in his | strument, and st that moment two trains | keeping with the eternal
pocket & pistol which could be |at high rates of speed were rapidly less- | things, that the lady
taken apart and put together; the emng the distance between each other | house plants out into
evlinder would unscrew from the bar- | on the single track. He telegraphed at now lay for the ben that
rel, He carried the pieces separate, | once to Ludlow that No. 2had passed | ing for her sll winter and sunumer.—
but they were sll in readiness and | without stopping for orders. | Somerville Jowrnal.
could be screwsd together and put| All color left the face of train dis-| «80 you enjoyed your visit to the me-
in order for use at short notice, He | patcher Cooledge as he received the | pagerie, did you?” inquired a young
said the pieces of the pistol were not a | message and as he communicated the | man of his one’s little sister.
weapon. But the court decided against dire intelligence to Jack Redmond, {#0Oh, yes! And do you know, we saw
him. An unloaded pistol cannot be | master of transportation, that individ- | § came] there that screwed its mouth
fired, but would any one saythat carry- | Bal's countenance assumed @ similar and eyes around awfully ; and sister
ing an unloaded pistol in the pocket | bua ‘With him to think was to ack | ig it looks exactly as you do when you
jot carrving a concealed weapon ? | Stepping to the station door he quiet- | are reciting poetry at evening parties™
Unless some essential part of the pistol | I¥ beckoned several men to him | « Maggie, dear, if I should
wholly wanting, so that it cannot be | and composedly gave instructions to | to spell Cupid, why could I not be-
de nseful, it is a weapon. each. One-half dozen of them went | 1 the first syllable?” ge ve
The courts continue to take the ut- |on the double-quick in diflerent | it up, where, nm William ssid: “Be
most pains to discourage the pernicious directions for physicians. Toe store ' cause when | come to ¢ u, of conrse I
practice of brandishing pistols or point | keeper went into the ware ouse capnot go farther.” Maggie said she
ing guns, whether loaded or unloaded. gathered together sponges, baskets, ma- | thought that was the nicest conundrum
In Mississippi two men ** loafing” in a terials for splints and soft musiin for | she had ever heard. — Buffalo Erpress.
country store were drawn into a petty bandages. Meanwhile other employes |
quarrel arising from the rudeness of | had run up to the engine-house, and AX EXPLAXAYION.
one, who was eating nuts, in scattering | starting a fire under an idle locomotive ! Hur HS WHC So Haat Xie}
the shells about so that they hit the! had hitched on to a caboose and backed | You'll be angry, 1 fear—
other. When the quarrel grew some- | down in front of the station where the Well, T can’t make it clear,
what serious, the other ran forth from | Car Was transformed at once into a _hos- Or explain it to you,
the store into the street. The shell | pital coach. To all save Redmond and Botner lips were so near
corer tolicrwed, and in the race dis- | Cooledge these preparations were mys- | That—wint else could | do? :
charged 3 pistol. It was quite plain | terions. The relief train was soon in | : —Soribmer’ tmer's Magazing
all circumstances that he did not readiness, but did not start. | Redmond, “Charles, she said, ss she brushed
end to hurt the runaway, or even hit | seated at the desk and estimating the the hair back from when
a: but meant only to alarm him, or | rate of speed at which the tmins were he sat reading the paper yesterday
demonstrate his own prowess. There moving, calculated about where the | morning, “ why is a wa ~Aog smaller
fore his lawvers argued that there was | collision would take place. Some ofthe | in the _morni than he is at night #*
no criminal assault, for, they said, | PASSengers would escape unhurt, and | “He ain't. _ es he is. D’you give it
an intent to hurt is part of the very idea | One of them would hasten at once on gp? Yes. “ Because he has to be
hn \ { horseback to Williamstown, the nearest let out at night and taken in in the
is a difficult question: shall shooting in | point for medical aid. Eran the Sper | morning.”
sport be judged by the intention of the tor would learn the ie h y L 1. -
“ghootist” or by the apprehension of accident and send a ispatch to Lu "1 A Texas Apiary. .
the *shootee?” The true rule is that | low. Possessed of this information| xp; John W. Fry, of Texas, has a
no assault is committed when the per- Redmond could send his waiting engine | model apiary and vegetable garden on
son at whom the gun or pistol is aimed and car, with its corps of physicians si M creek, which suggests on &
knows that is empty, and that the RUrses, to the spot at the rate © bear miniature scale the “happy valley of
assailant does not intend to injure him, | 8 mile a minute. The other and ef ' Rastelas, if you connect th it rs
but is acting only in fun. But when he | plan would be to have let the © reliel” | ou yherries and general thrift and pros
does not know these facts—when the | start out and cautiously find its way itv The farm of a hundred or so
cireumstances are such as may reason. | around the many onrves. He chose | Loc is at the base, or rather spn the
, the wiser course. The scene in| gone of one of the mountains. . Fry
the train dispatcher's office Was |p. of present only about forty hives,
painful. Cooledge, leaning over the ' ov 3 conld keep hundreds, bat z sells
silent instrument, watched it with go 0 off Last season Mr. Fry robbed
feverish eyes as if to read its secret be- | oo gum five time, realizing 125 pounds
fore transmission. On another chair | oy hav. gnother three times, realizing
| was Redmond, with big globes of per | oo ntv five The net proceeds
spiration coming from the pores of his | ¢ o single hive was $41.25, the hos
face snd rolling down unheeded. | (ling readily st fifteen cents a ponnd.
Neither man spoke. Five, ten, twenty, | myo vegetable garden is an arti-
Costly Bookbinding. thirty minutes that seemed like 8g0S | goal one, having been cut out of a hill-
Mr. Joseph Sabin, in a conversation | nest when came a sharp click. It was | 3. terrace fashion. It is i
with a New York Evening Pot reporter, | Williamstown calling Ludlow. Cool- from the spring by means of a light but
gave the following information in regard | odge’s hair rose up on end as he gave | {ange wheel, at least twenty feet in
to the binding of books, which is to be | the response. Redmond stood up and diameter, which is turned by two trained
classed among the fine arts : _ | placed a hand on the door-knob. The wy » laced Ee al
The finest modern binders are in| next moment Cooledge fairly yelled, | fashion. The revolution of this wheel
Paris. David is at their head. He does | « No collision. No. 2 has just backed ! works a pump, which conducts water
not bind probably more than a thousand | jute Williamstown,” The two men | 11 iver the! garden.— Baltimore Amers-
volumes a year. But he charges his ghook hands with the same vigor as if| .
own prices and works only for a certain | they were twin brothers and hadn't met .
set of Heh men who put Bothing in Shel: for a thousand years. aan
libraries that is not perfect, Lortic is It was then ascertained that, by the |
is another Frenchman who does exquisite | most fortunate circumstances, the trains | Thomas Scott that once, about ten years
work. Two years ago I saw two volumes | 3d simultaneously entered from op- , when making one of the swift trips
of Lafontaine's Tales bound by him at a | posite ends npen the longest piece of | w ich he was in the habit of ‘making
cost of one thousand dollars for each | giraight track between the two tele- | over the lines under his control, his
volume, and they were octavos at that. | gruph stations, and instantaneous appli- train was stopped by the wreck of &
If the covers had been In solid gold | cation of brakes had brought them ton freight train. There wera a dozen
they would not have costso much. But | stop within twenty feet of each other. heavily loaded box cars piled up on the
ench volume represented more than a | No. 2, recognizing the “ gpecial’s” right road, and it would take a long time to
voar's labor by a first-class workman, | of way, backed to Williamstown, where | get succor from the nearest accessible
who used more than ten thousand dif-! ji went in on the siding, and Cinein- point, and probably hours more to get
ferent tools in the work. Zahnsdorf is | pati's millionaires and ‘capitalists pro- | the track cleared by. mere fo i
an Austrian who has made Paris his | seeded unhurt on their journey.— Cin- | labor. He surveyed the difficulty °
home and who does excellent work. | unati Commercial, 'a rough calculation of the cost of a
Some of the unique bindings that may nn | total destruction of the freight, -and
be found in the great private libraries Harvest Figures, : promptly made up his mind to burn the
of Enrope show how little advance the | 1 v curious calculations | Yoad clear. By the time the relief train
world has made in the art of bookbind- |, & 800d IDADY on : : | came the flames had done their work
id re al Taam have been made in connection with the | ] ty
ing in the last two hundred years. One| ormous crop of wheat produced by} and nothing remained but to patch up
of the finest bindings I ever saw is in | ben Dal t y i in Dabota A cor 8 few injuries done to the track so as to
{he library of the Earl of Ashburnham | the Un Iymp © 1am | enable him to pursue his way.
a prayer-book given by Henry VIIL
to Anne Boleyn, the covers being of |
‘respondent of the Chicago Inter-Ocaan |
has been indulging in some new ones
| relative to the last harvest. From the,
jon fretted gold. Some of the volumes | ; Sor h |
in this o otsian would cost $3,500 to | speed of the harvester ad fhe Jength | a ol a ile,
i .day, if such work ean be done. | of the cutting-bar he calenlafe suffered from a hus s neglect,
bind to-day, if : = there would be 900 bundles to i aie, traced him to a barroom where he was
to amid San | Or seventy-five shooks of twelve bun- | playing cards with several companions.
1 Ibis Jaton fb ® ues ia | dles each. As there were 18,000 acres Jotine a covered dish the held in her
last January shot a whale that was tray- | in the field the shooks numbered 1,350,- | hands down u the table, she said:
ing south and struck him with a har- | 000, and the bundles 16,200,000. Allow- | « Presuming, husband, that yom wer
Se but the rope had to be cut snd | ing thirty inches of wire to the bundle, | too busy to come home to r, I have
the whale escaped. A short time since | O¥er 7,670 miles of wire were needed | brought jou ours,” and departed.
the same . aptain shot and captured a | for binding the crop—almost enough to With a forced laugh he invited his
whale going north, which proved to be | reach through the earth. friends to dine with him, but on re-
) i e—— ee moving the cover from the dish
A sensation of chilliness foretells only a slip of paper, on which wis
-— | rain, because the increased moisture in | wri : #1 hope you will enjoy
Mr. Beecher is steadily at work onthe | the air bears away the heat of the body, | meal; it is the same your family
second volume of his Life of Christ, | canging depression and shivering. at home.
exempt the father from punishment.
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of an assault The judges said that this
f
ably lead him to believe that he is in
danger— his rights are just as truly vio- |
lated as if the intent were serious and
the danger actual. Also the effect of
such conduct to disturb the public
peace is equally objectionable. There-
fore they pronounced the make-believe
shooter guilty.
IA 1
It is related of the late Colonel
Served Him Right, L
A woman at Cape Giradean, Mo, who
es —