The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
t I l I ;J ; I I was open again. He was meeting thou sands of carriers collected in large car avans, who wore bearing a great quan tity of ivory to the coast The other day a dispatch announced that Ttppoo T ib had started for Zanzibar with 7,000 porters loaded with ivory. This is un doubtedly the largest caravan that baa ever traveled to the sea in the equator ial regions. For years Tlppoo Tib’s caravans have been the largest on tho road between Central Africa and the doast, but bis present expedition is at least, twico as large as any be has h' therto dispatched from his ivory col lecting grounds. Tho .British trader, Sir, Stokes, awhile ago piloted a cara van of over 2,000 carriers to tho coast , The increasing trade between Central . A fx‘ ca and Zanzibar is dearly shown by the fact that suoh caravans as these were unknown until within the. last few years. - new testimony regarding the density ol population in some parts of Africa. Captain Kllng,. who has boon exploring tho country behind the German pro tectorate of Togo on the coast of tho Gulf of Guinea, haB just reported his visit to Jerrapa, a hitherto unknown town, ,Suddenly coming within sight >ho ascended a hill he says he THE BATTLE FIELD. BY T H E M O RN ING LIGHT. Oh, dad sod red, the tight of moru across the Held of buwc broke. And showed tho wasteof trampled corn, And smouldering farmsteads wrnppodTn smoke; And cold and stark the soldier lay, Shot down bosiilohl* shuttered guns And grimly splashed with blood nnd clay, Ills face looked ghastly In the sun. Oh, glad and ml, the morning-shone In happy England far away. Where knelt a bright -haired little one > Hesido her mother's knee to pray. And prompting each fond, faltering word, Tho soldier's wife was glad and smiled; - She knew pot'i was a widow heard 1 The pruttlo'of an orphanchild. Oh. glad and red, ol), glad and red The morning light p owed everywhoroi And one beam touched the father dead, Andone tho child who knell in prayer; And from the trampled com and clay A skylorlt sprangwith joyous breast, For shot and shell had spared that day Its four hrowa eggs and little nest, —William Canton, InWashington Post. NARROW ESCAPE . The Appalling .Situation or a Careless Artll- ■‘ lerytnkn. In the winter of U5d:i, the Otli Massa chusetts batfery'jCaptain John Bigelow,, wns stationed at Fort Itnmsny, on I’ p- j ton's Jill], Va. This was one of the chain of forts in tho outer defense of l Washington, and a sketch made at the time shows it' to have been a well built, circular earthwork 150 feet in diameter, with embrasures for eleven guns. Part of these were empty. 'Che others were occupied by the brass ‘'Napoleons’ ’ of our. battery. Besides these, there were within its walls the tents of our Captain, and first officers, with guard, tents, etc. In ad dition to these was the structure com mon to nil large forts, the powder mug- |azine. in tills case of special importance niahed to soo the huts stretch- m> st5lr>\ LSk? most magazines, it y in straight lines as far as the [ wa» “ df P I-v *'mk<‘n ^H a rn o a r the eye could reach. During bis stay ho : ,fort- ' vel\ »• am ascertained that tho t o w contained at • mwJ w,th P,a” k roof WM least 4,000 large huts, representing 1 '“ W oak lo- s- thoso cf>vc'red probably a population of 25,000 people, j in two or three days’ steaming up tho j Tobuapa river Grenfell and Von Fran- < cols counted in that remarkable region. with a mound of solid earth many feet thick, and rising high above the walls of ! the fort. The entrance, to the magazine was through two doors—the outer oue Wtft"W't'rmw’iywy i"*■^ ¥ . .,»< j. Burning burden beyond the inner doer i it might iv.plode comparatively harm -. less in the blind alley, and the service j would lose only a few pounds of paw* j der and a reckless artilleryman. j With this decision made, the distance I to the inner door was scipn passed; and j I sprung up the steps and through it, I kicking it shut as I went; then, with all the vigor of my arms I threw the blazing mass far up the-dark alley, ex pecting nothing but that the shock would explode the whole,- To my sur prise no explosion followed, and feel ing that a chance might even be left for me, I- sprung over the smoking heap with a bound that would .have done very well in 1any athletic club, IN WOMAN’S. BEHALF. ‘TH EN AND NOW. Im- llnw the Cimdif inn nr, Woinuii Ji»» prnvrjt Ina Hundred Yrnn, Jf. any creature on earth lias reason for exultant, cheerful, heavenward-ris ing thatikfulness, it is the modern wom an. Never in all the world's history has she been so free, from burdens, so exalted in privileges as to-day. This Nineteenth I'entury is the era of her coronation. To-day she stands queen of herself and of the world. J r the'pal- m iestdnysof the “ good old times" the only woman who was allowed any priv- and <ileges dr culture was the courtesan. Tile placed myself at a safe distance on tpa floor of the fort. Here I waited a mo ment for the explosion, but none came. After a few moments I went to the mouth of the alley, and saw nothing but a mass of blackened cartridges shells. The fire? had all gone out. Growing bolder, I stepped over it,and Shut the outer door: then I looked at the singed cartridges in wonder to see. by what chance they had been kept from exploding.. These were, it may be ex- plaind to those who have not handled cannon cartridges, made of very thin,, “ slcazcy” flannel, each bag containing between two and three poutids'of coarse . powder. These hags, tightly filled.were ; all blackened and’ charred, anil some of j them fell to pieces in my hands. How ! they escaped exploding amid all the tho flame- and heat around them is' a question l myself have fled away with out an answer, 'faking the sergeant's candle, i went out to call this 'officer in order to get the lost ammunition re-, placed. To my surprise the entire camp wa„s deserted. ■ . The sergeant, in his flight, had cried out that tiie magazine was on fire, and all my comrades, flanked by most of the adjacent brigades,were standing on the surrounding hills, waiting to see the fort go up. Waving niy-cap to the boys, in token that all was safe-, I was going bacli through the. gate, when my cap tain met-me. Flo had been aroused by the stir in camp and-came from his tent to sec what was the matter. As I dis covered later, my looks bad suffered in the adventure, for my hair was burned off close to my cap, and my eyebrows wife’s home was a prison, and her hands alone were of value. Whether or. not she bad uny brains, she was not per mitted to discover, and this has held substantially, true the world over, until' and J-the Just hundred years, and the most convincing proof o f this is the character o f the books o f the best society.- You would not dare to read aloud in- mixed society any book of the - last century. Books were not made for women, and so whether they were decent or not was a small, consideration. along river. On tho Mobangi rivor, north of ( the Congo, along the east and . west routes farther south whioh Wissmann and Wolf followed, and in not a four other localities, equally remarkable re ports of -the density of population have been made. Very wild estimates have been given 1-y some explorers o f tho, population of Afnca: In the opinion o f suoh con servative writers as Mr, Bavenstoln, who does not accept' the figures given 1>Y some travelers, the continont must conr.n*n at least 127,000,000 inhabitants. Biriing© as it seems, the population of A 'n c a to tho square mils is nearly as j rent as tbat of North America, and 1 uvassour, the , Fronob statistician, maces itovongreater. Nearly half of * 'ii- continont is practically uninhabtt* ah e, while almost the wbolo of Africa, which is much larger than North Amer ica Hi ahabited, even the Sahara desert huv ug many thousands of residents. Owing to intertribal wars and the slava chase, it is believed the population of A fvca is increasing very slowly, ,f at a he fact that Equatorial Afrloa is, 1 >*a torr.d country, quite thickly peo pled, seems to bear out the statements o f many travelers, that its climate Is more endurable than tbat of most equator al regions' The millions who 1 ve there are 2n striking contrast with the exceedingly' sparse population of the great Amazon valley. The reason o f this larger population is undoubted ly-tho fact that Equatorial Africa is for the most part an elevated plateau, while the Amazon valley lies .only a few hundred feet above the level of the sea, until the foothills ol the Cordil leras are reached.—N. Y. Sun. M A K IN G R O M E HOWL. ta tillc speaking la Easy and Very Fascinat ing B iu I dcm . “ There is no more fascinating busl- mrss," said a speech-maker the other! day, “ than that of speech-making, for the fort was cut a passageway, not in straight line, but zigzag, making what, is known as u blind alley. The form Will easily he seen to give the greatest safety against fires or an attack by shot or shell. . This magazine contained at the time between seven and eight tons of ammu nition. T o the description it may lie added that it was built on the lawn in front of Mr. Upton’s plantation resir Even the old- preachers indulged in j coarseness of language that w ouk fS o t' ltmv bo permitted'‘ in. a political ha- j |rnugue. Some of Murtiu Luther's ser-; i rnons could not -be yend in a modern i 1school. Swearing in the drawing-room-j and in the “ best Society" was no tin- j common tiling ninety years ago. Even -.the .ladies •themselves not rarely- in -1 dulged in :t. Lean Ramsey tells an t anecdote that will illustrate how it teas [ regarded. A sister vi as speaking .of her I brother as much addicted to the habit,-< ; and slie said: "Our John swears awin', j and we try to correct him for it: but.'’ i She added, apologetically, "nae doubt i it is a great set-off to conversation.'’ .] . The "doublc-intendre" and indelicate ! 'illusions, such as now no respectable, ; company would endure; were then quite common in mixed society. Eighty years ago eminent lawyers wojild use language in the court-room, in, the presence of ladies, for which they would nmv he arrested by the sheriff. Then women were punished by being public ly whipped on the bare back. Prison ers in pillories'were pelted with eggs, and jeered and taunted by the bystand ers. The whipping post, tho stocks, cropping and branding were common. Ft wns no-very rare sight'.to see a man and ltis wife, from the first society, sit ting on tho. gallows for an hour, with ropes round their necks. And those who-favor the harsher forms of punish ment might profitably take notice 'o f deneo, which at the time was the head- lost, however,Jupon cither tlu*sergeant or |than tor quarters o f General William Gurney o f , myself, and we neither dver went again ‘ “ sold" i the Pennsylvania reserves, whose camp into a powder magazine with an open ’ M partly surrounded the fort, l)ur. own camp lay in front of the gate, with our pack o f wagons and stables; containing over one hundred and fifty horses. .Wo had been firing a little by way o f practice the day before, and tins morn ing the clicstsr of our guns needed refill ing. . Fwas in charge o f the ammuni tion of one piece, and, armed with a list o f wliat was needed, sought the pres ence o f the ordnance sergeant, who held the keys to the muguzine. This told him, putting as good a face upon; the matter as truth would 'allow. He ; was a strict disciplinarian, but a bravej and kind officer, and though he couk f, not but censure me for being even s e c -. ond in so great a breach of the, rules o f : safety, lie forgave me in consideration ; the fact that milder counsels, fewer o f the fact that of the two. offenders I ' crimes and the general elevation of had suffered the most, and had also , society are invariably acci mpaniments done what I could to save the magazine. ' of each other. The warning of this escape was n o t1 To be poor and insane then was worse- ture or death. Tho poor were at public auction,' their hoard <“ w* keeping knocked down to the low- lighted candle.—-N. Y. Press. ' est bidder, who was left to treat them vdry much as lie pleased. Alms-houses were almost unknown. The insane wife o f u prosperous man was sometimes fastened in a room in the house, amt kept tliere for years, her screams milk ing hideous the public road on which lie. lived. The* common school girl of to-day Is better off, in all that makes, life desirable than was -any queen o f SOU years ago. More comfort, more, purity, more intelligence, more refinement, things worth having—these' mark the advance o f our social life. Never were houses so good, never was furniture so An FUN FOR SO LD IER S . Incident o l tlin Iliittln o f («ettyi»- m * liiirf. We have heard different versions of what constituted fun, but we heard a new one the other day from an old sol dier. At Gettysburg, about the time o f Pick ett's charge, the relator was stationed officer" had'bcerT unumta*Uy"bwy th a t: t,ov™ towart! the edge of the whcatfield, morning nnd was now taking a lute i uud ho was sent out in charge of a breakfast with tlu* .quartermaster. { KT ,ad to rt‘,u’vo «»» P'cket in 11«°P“ oi Like most hungry men. he wns n o t} W^J9< I convenient and abundunt, never was j ovcrpleased to be disturbed, but my er-1 j i l t i n g ,c he was. about to j dross so comfortable and healthful, nev-1 no delay, so he rose, j r™ cV<> asked him what‘ his orders ■er manners so simple and sensible, nev- i Hnd, taking his keys and an open can -! . <vas. lnformcd, and, among; er j|u. m,.u,)f, „ f all enjoyment and de- j die, stick, led the way to the door of the ; er tlnnffs- the pickets were not to |vchipment so common and so univer- ] magazine. The. regulations of his office . . I sally accessible as to-day. And yet. in l •Mliy, said Uic relieving sergeant, : bpiu. of thpBC facts, Uiere are large nuin-1 they'are firing right now. Why don t i,ers of people-perpetually bemoaning: you stop them.’ : . . i our degeneracy and sigldng over the j departure o f the “ good old times" o f { required him to change his heavy rid ing-hoots for stiF>iK‘rs arid also place the candle in a lantern, but, w ithout; ,, . . , , doing cither, he lighted the candle. • , C,,h’ Jvplk tl,p*v * ht‘ threw open the inner door, and bidding' ^ p fun in there. I lie rebels have got me follow, this also against the rules, * s^reteh of stone wall strode into the death-stored vault with an,d oar ^ »wcar theytare going to no more precaution thdn a fanner would i tak<‘ ,^°Jvay ^rom them, use in going into his root cellar. I ; ««r.*nf»»nnant went in and soon be went with him, amazed slightly, put suud Ins men were as deep in the “ fun without demur. <as their predecessors, notwithstanding My reonisition called for a nutnher of i their oruers not to fire. They kept it cartrid. supply fifty m our early American life. 'i'he reason o f Hie present distressing j state of affairs 1 heard explained n o t ! long ago. One man thought it was b e -, cause the “ good old doc femes" were ; nowadays not preached at all, and tlie j other was equally sure that it was he*» cause thev were nreaehcd all the time i t s easy to Speechify, and anybody can » packing tow do it by a little practice, away. That’s mjr style. Just And i used rattle i Taking the candle time you do it you’ll grow fonder of it When your hearers cheer you at. the Opening, you’ll feel proud, When they Tear with laughter at your funhy 6 lories, yon feel happy. When their faces are tgnast at you describe a bar- tor, in f scene, or when their eyes are tin i>t as you grow pathetic, you'll show yo.ir supor.ority,' When they appreciate tin* fine points you will smile with Satr fs/act on. When they are tbr.lied by f h 1ebsing burstof eloquence and break i no thundetous applause, you’ ll stand <n tha platform like a conquering horo, and feiiro amid the sweet strains o f th* bc./ss li;,nd that are overpowered by the general racket. It is a b g thing to V a tip- (op speeeblflar and make Home lu-w.itr-Uiiicago Evening Journal. —A young lady residing in the far Earn baa developed a meet peouliar af- HoHon for kerosene oil., its odor is ts rluiiic to her, its taite delieiouft She diiitus one of two oups of it a day, l utiies tn it, and steeps little rolls of puficr Jii It to thrust in her work* •?■ jnir.i.H't” would he dangerous busl* to hi for ihis girl o f phenomenal appe* i t - , l o t it is doubtful if a lover be ton a i Mifllciently fond o f her to endure ‘4h«f latrlumoahe retela la. in transportation, from the top of a ©very j box of ammunition, where it hud rested during our stay, the sergeant hastily, and. 1 fear, unduly moved by thoughts o f breakfast, started before me to the magazine door. As lie opened this a draught of air caught the Flame of the' candle, and, though 1 was fully two yards behind him, it streamed back, nnd some, o f the flying filaments o f flax fell in its blaze, In an instant the whole mass in my arms whs in flames, and the sudden and awful glare lit up the dark vault as though lightning had pierced the roof, With his .hand on the door, the sergeant turned his head: but ali be could sec was a mass o f swirling fire. With a cry o f horror he Flung open the door and was out o f sight. I was left to my Own resources, with littft time to utilize them, My first impulse was to throw the blazing mass on the floor. But my second thought decided against it. The whole floor ivasstrewnitvith inflammable flax and paper cartridges, while around the stacks o f 13ammunition boxes the ground was black with powder. My fiery burden would no sooner touch the floor than Its flames would flash to every corner o f the magazine, in it would not do Uncle Sam its proper service. On the other hand, could i but get my eomplislied their (Pa.) Kecord. object.—Westchester S C R A P S FOR SO LD IER S , A sot,Mens’ monument is to be built at Orono, Ale.,, by the local Grand Army post and Woman’s Relief Corps. GexKr.AT, Fnm, who has just been elected a member of the Federal Coun cil of Switzerland, was formerly a pri vate in an Illinois regiment nnd spent many months in Libby prison. T he members o f Sturtcvant Corps, W» It. G.» Concord, N. II.» arc bushy en gaged in furnishing a library for tho Soldiers* Home a t Tilton, N, H. Tho corpse has already received several creditable contributions. C at - tain J ohn A noerson , who was buried recently in Brooklyn, was the master during the war o f the Well- known clipper, “ Davy Crockett."- It was nnder his command, it is said, that she established -the record o f 160 days between New York and San Francisco. S enat OR- et . ect GI ordon at the battle o f .Seven Pines received three bullet wounds, and at Antietam he got two bullets in the leg, One in the arm, one in the shoulder, and one In the tight cheek, He also had! ahorse killed under him, the bntt o f his pistol smashed, his canteen pierced, and his coat torn With bullets. times. Never Was tlje church so bright and fair as now, and never did the sky o f the future redden with a mme glori ous promise o f the coming day. In , those good old times men lived under ’ the horrid shadows o f frightful super stitions. Now it is to intxtefn science only that we owe our emancipation from the yoke o f this awful tyranny.1 Scientific explorers have licen over the ! earth, and finding no mouth o f hell. J that is gone. Science lius explained earthquakes and volcanoes, and now devils fight no longer in the bowels of the earth, ditna and Vesuvius are no longer vent-holes of the pit. Astronomy has shattered the follies of astrology;; and people: have found out thatthe stars; are minding their own business instead J o f meddling with theirs; nnd eclipses, no longer moon swallowing monsters, are only very natural and well-behaved shadows. S'ihcc psychology is studied, we know that witchcraft Is folly, and insanity is only a disease to be treat and cured. Thus science—like a mother going up stairs to bed with her frightened boy— has been with her candle Into all the old dark corners that used to make us zreep and cringe and shiver with terror, "makers always have had a special fac ulty for seeing “ breakers ahead" and unpoth water behind, But the sober facts o f history justify the slnu tbat never was the ship .,f human ln,ue in stancher trim, and neverwahufairer, broader sea ahead. IVlijit then? \SLy’ this: Fu spite o f present fils, -ai.d Jiflj’ eulties, and corruptions, and discour agements. learn to see things as tinw are. How m an y -a curse lias this -t-r- vile, unreasoning worship o f the past fastened upon us’. As if an ex i) that has stood a thousand years w i„-,t m ' abominable as one sprung up Pwladl We ought, indeed. infr ehm-h. society and State, to reverence the past as fa ther o f tho present. But not so"blindly as to lceep,errors and fallacious .-yst, mg simply because our ancestors endtuvd them. - Minot J. Savage, in Arena. M U S T D EC ID E FOR HERSELF. IVJiut Women Slmll tun) .Shall Not Study Can Not He Arbitrarily lletermlaed. In some future age it may become possible to.map out the 'whole field of human knowledge, and to say what part of it should he cultivated by one sex and what part by the other, writes .1. G. Fitch in the I'ontempovnry Ife- view. But at present the materials for a decision do not exist.' and anyussump- tion that we are in a position to decide Will serve only to'make the future solu tion of the problem in a wise and .satis factory way more difficult. Meanwhile, women have a right to sav, to all in authority: "Make your own sehcme.s of instruction and your tests o f scholarship for men as perfect as you can. , llevise as many ,, new and effective forms Of mental discipline and •courses of in struction as you think can lie wistdy offered, to men of various attitudes :md careers: and then permit us, if we ,fql-' fill . the. same preliminary conditions, .to exercise tlie same choice, and to avail' ourselves o f jutjt so much of your system ,as we feel will be helpful to us. Ale do riot want your ideal of a liberal educa tion to be lowered or modi fied to suit us. But we want to know how far our own aims and achievements correspond to that ideal, and we ask leave to'be measured by tlie recognized tests. Men will be helped in giving a wise and generous response to thisap peal in just the-proportion in which they view it in the light of tlieir own person al history and experience. If a man who is destined, for-exainple, to the law or tlie church, were to take up some subject, such as botany or chemistry, were to write a treatise on Grimm’s law or on the fourth dimension, and any public authority were to interpose with a- reminder that, such studies had no relation to tlie proper business of his life, and ought therefore not to be pur sued. In: would regard such interference as impertinent. He would claim to bo the best judge of .his own interests. - In like manner we arc not entitled to affirm respecting any one -department o f intellectual effort that it is unstated to. the nature or to the probable destiny - of, a woman. There is no kind o f knowl edge. if honestly acquired, which may not be available in unexpected ways for the enrichmerit and adornment of life, whether the life be that o f a man or a woman. And even- though tlie knowl edge or power wliicli is tlie product ota liberal education may seem to have nth bearing at all upon the special business'* or definite duties o f a woman, yet if it be felt by its possessor to •make life more full, more varied, and more inter esting. and better worth living, no oth er justification is needed for placing the largest opportunities within her reach. She lias a right to exercise a free choice and to solve the problem for herself. NO TES FOR' WOMEN READERS. M rs . H enry D raper -, now in 1’eruiis her husband's constant assistant in all his astronomical researches. She spends much of her time among the telescopes nnd photographic apparatus Of tlie ob servatory. T he Ball Mall Gazette has the first woman attached Us a general journal ist to a London paper in the person of ' Miss Fredrielis. German by extraction and birth. Hie is a good linguist and invaluable on foreign service. She was the special correspondent for the paper at Berlin during the time o f I’rince Bis marck's resignation, and has only just returned from Heligoland. Is it not about time we ceased to ap ply to woman that misnomer of the ■•weaker sex." at least so far as then sibilitv to take care o f themselves is concerned? In Germany o.ftOO,000wom en earn their living by industrial pur suits: in England, -i.OOli.OOO: in France. 3.7.*)0,000; in Austro-Hungary, about the same, andin this country, including all occupations, over 2,700,000. Fii.\r S ophie H aevanu ' s lias written a treatise making a forcible appeal to German women to resist the tendency o f woman's education to treat girls ex clusively as future, house-keepers and mothers. The writer nrgUcs that this is an injustice, since no one thinks of educating boys simply to be future householders and fathers. She insists that til© modern system o f edmuting women results in cramping women’s individuality and in lowering the ideals o f life. N ot ail society girls eat the bread of idleness. Miss Mildred Conway, only daughter o f that favorite author. Ahm- curc D. Conway, assists lier father in his liloraiy work, plays the piano like a professional performer, has so much dramatic ability as to have procured her good offers from the theatrical nuiie agofs, nhd is one o f the most faithful and zealous workers in th© successful “ College Settlement" in Uivington street, while, in addition to her gift oi cleverness, her fairy godmother gavt her a gypsy-like beauty and a charming voice, TEMPER,’ HIGHLY-SE p i t Danger Thai Spices and e<>' Sag o f food also the cultivation ,> hot, smarting m :- a craving for m digested, uud fu- ’’Cons who do not < to make tlieir using' spices anil ' fects. Good com, Ing the digcstibi palatableness ■ * ignores tlie nj.t?? adds a variety of render it still-mo unskilled prepay out them. The why high seasor temperance is in •( f] of ‘VI t a t 'lit th irse shij s ij ,vai .nnu f i l l - t) u ti dlu ice *. ii 1 NT I.V • it ■ TV ml •tiv to us-to :uld to i - .the for the practical \n\t instance, the sei he useful-,but enahli * aih without doing m >sit of music and ' a *th may come to u-s a v hearing. But tl alt. given to distingu .to and unwholesi m uV, used for raerejy its ( without debase) von gross tiling. A ‘ itVt mands enjoyme-. i c the sense of tast ■ ik is coming down •UK belOw it, for th- lit "i creation, teaehe* tnai How widesprr. ‘ ■.c nous gratifieati ist call upon a nek . 4 v freshments, as t t y- ings o f life earn low petite. This e\ ve,i education whit xrul When Johnnie .leal the mother say: >y t you like?” in: elpi wholesome foot ‘SpO him to eat it an ' tiou child t o tliinki thei what he likes v nvu or not. ft is n< nm] tite pampered i to becomes unco; urv and the step fi *.r e oi toxicants is m xom people imngim to i verted taste of acii eat that whiel H>r 1 « f how can we , form when the them such bad o f eating and d The cultivat is a degradatib Nature never should be d:\ effects o f grill i differ materia ing the high, hearing. VVlni same is true which may rea But what we b stomach, and * brief pleasure o f the palate alimentary eai fore it is final1 News. __ RESTRICT The Gootl A, Ktrl Mr. Joseph way, once llo restrictive Je pent efforts years, red-ice head, of in t o half, and tliei tian in int.cn Sweden, ton. ry ago with 1 pressed lioust such local np municipalitie burgh town drink shop' them, enact week-day clo ing to season through a "1 all surplus benefit, as Christiania, municipal it t spirits, save day, at 7 p. : and are-no© limit the Denmark, t dozen year*- in spirits: tl consumpltoi which they by ennetinr cease at u should be - that public.. tc convey i ot to tho po Scandinuvii total nbstii least an ; Templars “ Bla Band and, latter Unions ah- Iceland, i s ; effort, its < having hoc: House.--Ni • l.IV sue won IVVll are r on that * pri n o ] lirei exp •dor .at i .hou is tl y ae ■esp i wo SSOI il. a rth led witl :rcis icm flEN ER, at a> arch ing mra1 :ett< a gi * in nan i goi i ser dent time ami dam' te we mil at si of nany by imn.oi lung untry '00,00 VANl fori reuif n to hou e r rit e no mply faflu- ysten cram iowc T he cm •gainst cm Ing liimscl benefiting ■ the growth eventually lejn.~-.Tole iris e. ;dred .vorit ssist* plkys otjne! to lift1 the t f the •» in *nt" idltio «*y » »uty *
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