The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
HIS FROFWMHON, o o d 044 BiKMMka (•*M* tQ■>«■)). !S* “**k*attb •ha t>»u bidod V>«^r.4ftTiI i»l!*M**ana ijitapraotto* th* blood and !l inpttrttle*.* larilla 'ropurea<5aly a l l a r 9 9 id tw o o* 31 letters, from pa- an S y r u p ergen cies l it th ese, 3 od (>sifib- i f in d in g —a ip e d - g ,w h i c h rxth con- in th e ir and su re u g h . iW.Knuc, ' c o i ^ ; f ■Ky. i roed upon a o f Croup :t!edftugi£ a it aa in* aiedy, istom ers ie’s O v r - hildren . w ith d ie ment for of child* ip, d iph- Bamtna* tin g s , $ t t l l . S . c s jwr— . f c M . , ur— * OOP*. IM t t r ' A . Wr» «wwi <Tl But soon the duet flewlit I Attd heavy grew fall heed. <1wouldn't to ju>engineer For ell the world,” he gold, 11; boy wag et a Maport town Asd tew the rolling sea. * “Mamma,” he said, one evonfar, ■ *Asailor Xahelltol" 1 - '' We took himto a yacht race— Ho bud to go to tod! “I wouldn'tto a nallor, now, For oil the worldI” ho said. * We readhimstirring stories ' Oi soldiers and theirtame. "I’ll go and fight," cried Freddie, *‘A»dput them ell to ahamet” We told Ulmot k soldier’s Ills; Ho shookhis little head, “»Iwouldn't be a soldier, now, For ell theworld!" he sold. AndthUs to eaehvnrfeseloh ' • He first Bald ’-‘yea.” then "no.’*; “To melee a.eholcels hard," he eatd, "At least, / find it so." "But what, .then, wlll you be?’1! asked, "When you ore grow’ ,up, Fredt" "I really think I’ll only e A gentleman," be said. , —Or. Malcolm McLeod, in St. Nicholas. A B A G O F D I A M O N D S . ...^ .. >x ‘ ' The TT agedjf T h a t W a s E n a c te d in th e O ld M ise r’s B e d ro om , ’j£ 4 l f Many times he had thought of it, and finally had serewed^is courage to the (sticking- point. ,> After all, what good to the old-man was that hag of gems? What good ex cept to count over, mark their twink ling facets, gloat over their;value, and laugh at thos^ tyhp might covet .them.. Palsied huger* .wojild shake as the. strings o f th e chamois-skin treasury were rapturously untied, and a mo* ment’s life and energy flash into •pinched cheek and faded eye, as every evening jtfle rftjelation.of untol^ wealth woke in ^ withered heart its only sur-; yiving passion. But what gOodto the world or tp thp man vyrm tha t brief ' minute of^ecsta^y? W asif not phid lor a hundredfold by nights’of fear and forbodings of robbery that made life a perpetual horror? t„Howofjsen had Pant heard his uncle wake ftomhjfluflontide nap with a dreaming dry: ’ -‘ My dia monds, my diamonds!, Is th a t you, Paul? J thought It Was a robber.” Bis thoughts were to come;:true to- . night. ,«Paul; tried to persuade'' himself thattliei ttetomre w bad n e t -Ills heart- on belonged to hitaf!as hutch"is? if they ;had b ^ 'M |g ^ * ! |i i * e ; '.i th e .-^rize, o f thefltj»tfu3dr.‘ -1' 1 Then come another thought.. His own poverty pnd his grelrclove. * Hisundli'* ward was as,, pool aa himftif—pQpr*- prCud and beautiful. Bach flowiersondiy grow in hard and solitary places,' in the nipping ak , and unorowded evettby*tiHs unobtruslveneta of /*‘Jpye. Siridgnt, slender and fut^L-hu^d' a* a rose, w ith fl big soul bteatning in hdr face and eyes, with •meeh, ailent ways, and bearing1 unflinchingly therblowSof i n oldoum’a brutal tongue, this girl had primented 'to the poet’s mind the image of power, -of profound passion, of untiring cod’ •staney, such aa had enchanted him and transformed;: his life* She , had been; flttfctb *hy him,.thefl wistfully tender aa she pjftiedhifaiv ftjwfl* lfl the a rbo t at the tio tp i, «tte‘'g*t»ehl|ViCMhe waf; ■dated now* * :itiifc tt» Jte taao f clipped yav' that she nestled cloeein his arma, and they had known the first moment of happiness in their de#e|fe(NW|iij|fr ’■« “We must be patient, Patient did she say? They had been so long enough, r fiUs ’plana w en ripe now, and he was watching the,, light h t his unde's oTh* ; inah; would -alddp.wMl-^si Sad tafcwthire (M. that—to-ta%lit, IS S* iawohwfj We% that wad provided for: Old men are not hard to smother. The flight, dark ■saddamp, suited dark thoughts. ’ 'Mad the sling of long oppression, the blind feeling after revenge fo r ydam of cruel .alightsand insults, bad long eqgeadenad ■ each thought*, iiodnow eeafe aviskm of an earthly beams* the hope of anew life beyond the seas, “Yes, I will fly with you a t any time , you ask," the gk l had add , roeolutely. “We shall 6e happy, rich or poor.” No, not, poor. He w e d d provide •against that. The lights la the window* of the enaskm h id gone ou t. Bren the win dow* on the ground floor, which open oa the piaasa, ere dark. This ia hie uelek tomn . Nani rkee from ids pett, 'The drip^hg 3«eftttfle*Aray Ckflt strOeee his cheek toU lk* tU tBw likk ’e«Bwme*-, house mtflfto k is heaU^'step'fle rn !*»*> meat. He fears even the M a t orunoh •«( his footsteps eu the g r am l.: Tkeee U a dog bsying in the distanoe, as if conscious ttofl^hteMB flbout. ’\ He steak ftaa| weJHjf flplWtree i t tk* •cornerof thf*%miet aat& trim p lm g ln the sofenwhi o f ttc ftesvergsrdes.'Wber* her JonquH*aM ttuips gxew« heereepe’ WestMeeeiy to the beiek yemfc. Wkes outer door k qnfeklv opened. He Hurusfe eu»Ms U * dtt<n«Wd t U h ^ of the hoste d from kite At the end o l the hall h to m , ThehoM eiseilen i He has reached hia uncle’s door. ’E* jf-’^ V d ^ p r a i u o e e ’admrk tasflpm "v., ’ T“ -,wing up iligUfiytSfAhfeflfcli the^stairci I t lights np for a moment oaken wains coting, crowded hat-rack, the antlers Overhead,'and the statue of Cupid,pallid *s a ghost, and then falls on the stair- oasc. As it does so he snaps down the Slide, and all is^&rkhlss sgalm " >Yes, all is flhflk anfl quiet. ” There i | no witness to his crime. What would Bhe say or think if .she saw him cowering and crouching a t his uncle's door? The thought of her rises llke a phantom in his mind; she is all in white,’ y e t” cialm, resolute, and beautiful—an angel in contrast with the inferno of . his own troubled thoughts—and yet it deepens his reso lution, He.is the martyr aeelflg the' ipiirtyr’s crown, the sqldierw ith the re ward of Jbiisvalor before hia eyes. In her purity, her strength, her peace, it seems to him he would find an escape even from the torture and shame of his guilty, mind. He would bathe himself in her presence as in a flood of cleans ing whter, a second baptism. Her smile, -her trustfulness, the music of her voice wfO«ld be a heaven in which he might.bask and rest,"and;forget his fraudrryd^, even his b lo o d ^ ilU n ^ j^ 'l' ’ He tu rn s , the handle of t h f dlk>r quietly, gradually, and enters, A delicate scent, as from the folds of silken garments, strikes his senses. But he does not hear a single rustle from hi* uncle’s bed. The old man sleeps soundly indeed. ,> i %' A/. '.Then he "draws up the slide of his lantern. h -S o violently, with such trembling agitation does he close i t again, the lustan t after, t l ^ t the wholn thing falls ’'clattering to the ground and Paul turns and rushes through the room. - What has he seen to overcome him .so? ■ . A woman, tall .and supple aa a Greek,. Stem eyed a* a Clytemneatria and twen ty times as* fair, with black h d r and marble arms, eyes of fringed violet, bosom, of . ivory—how. often' h*d he doted'on them! How often had he felt his heart swell with pity, with admira tion, with unspeakable love, as the soft ' S fW vpica tremulously re*uonstrated e must be patient, Paul." ^Andnqw this sain t df his. life, *this virgin flower of woman, this one who was to be. thehalt and salve to M b sad, vflMaded,:6tftraged tmdTrabelfloashesrt -rfcereBheaUuds, her fightbadfl waAte ■the pillow of the unconodtoi^ ale#p ||, her left arm tdi. strikeimm flbym y i*k awake! Panl.paasefl stealthily Into the garden agate..' ;He Want with '.bounds; across the florcely trampBng the flowers and borders, cursing mean- While,"In Kis heart; with bitter rage and eieatratiOn, the wiifel> forsooth, who wia th ief and Murderess. , ■. Then.he laughed a wild* trembling laugh, such aa only grief that borders on frenzy finds utterance, . v .T ^ a t'n ^ h t.w h e 'te t tUldaWn tindte the moaning poplar* and over and over again repeated to his mind the hideous incident th a t ho half believed to be a dream, love turned to hate, as .fuel, ta lashea, *a a,JfloW#r:.td ^tib)0od‘fed’floi| iron- M $ r . V :* ' i f , “I t was terlqv* ofmel^he manauted, Iffor love o f ■ |h a t ! k ]th«bl«m fhat outs dBeptotl ' Thdtlovb of hers is loathsome tome.” “That wss forty yeara ago,” saidMiss P e r r y i ' w w | n a only yraterday.” S l^kwhcd frcWi the gray area of the casino a t Nsrragan*ett oat over the bluer dimpling sea, where* yacht was just coming to anchor. .. .. . -A w fal 2wg« »Mt galieTj, wiped a tear from her glass eye. I t was a telling gesture, -though the tea r was not a tea r e f *en*iblHty. “Hut how did yon find out that it was h i?” he inquired, softly. “Hand me th a t fan and I will tell you. PhaA: oome dn testtairv hearing a noise sad thinking p f bwglsra. 1Wee brave in thOee days, jtodammd a heavy pair of aciseor*, which ! csrried dagger-wlae. I went to my ancle’s room, felt under his pillow, and was relieved to find his bag of diamonds safe. Then there wa%* mementsry flarii of light, the eistterlrf a lantern dropped in darkness, and the sound of reesding footsteps. i r saw Paul again to this day. “ t neve i ilantern wa*identified a* hie. I felt ■ didha hear a . heety feotfell tbkk earpat aad ■ Ha had never bate** rambling dwelling h i i fdwfeystohimaaed aa h|3s«eo# faded! ■ few taetekea krike^hMte-; dpU In thirfr in n tlm t i ,%mm that eflheed <te toaef a d te d ftoe. h k m u tefe B n | haekl ItW so te f e e i ..................... nAevedad Ifls 'fi$£ltt a t the teoment,’ Httt, general, yon and f a r e old petqde, aadfermypMFt l oan la te ohly onee, aad-yo* mast not apeak to wa aiRdn as yon have done to -day .IC pocS. ” ' ' mh * i ipatte** The lore for games of ebsnee seemato bhieka and what-nots that, adem the eitgr streets. -The yonagdor w ho k fletefoely hip-high to the ordinary man OW*aM*4teed«ipte*a»ifl*tfteted into the Yonteiiri ' ...........id»fe«rj^ atpeaaAta are a s e m p t y s e a n e w They seem to f o r g tt h an g e r and k b o ra* a* aaaOy m Stena of th* lad* ara roegh; tew lier^k i httenedfor that; hi n e tn Ami k k a nwtti ------------ S S “ »roaghi AMONG .'Afi THE LONDON POLICE. ofjtKeJghU ,».s4»rWt 1 . greatihetropol Is is to be fejun Inst annual report (that for 1889) of tl commissioner .of police for London. The metropolitan area guarded by the force was 700square miles, and for the pro- tcetioa p f person and property 15,000 men were .po, i | e vplk. Gf the men, however, owing to reasons not detailed, several thousand were continually un available. At the head of the list of crimes com mitted in spite of the public guurdiuns stand seventeen homicides, the most of which were plainly deliberate murder, bu t not a single capital conviction is re corded against the names of the crimi nals. fn four cases the criminals could not be found, one of; the four being “Jack the Ripper^**of Whiteohipeh In other coses'1 the assailant was insane, some committed suicide, and jn a few cases conviction for , manslaughter was obtained. On/the whole it was fairly safe to kill a man in London; quite os safe os in Kentucky or any of the Amer ican states where 'a feeling that the. .criminal “done had to” commonly in fluences the jury to acquit. It is likely tha t no state shpws so serionjk * failure o f'justice as .this report show*' tor London. In the raport on crimes against prop erty it is told plainly that stealing does not pay. Even leaving out of eofisider- ation the avrards of punishment meted 1 but to the. thieves, they would scarce have'been the wages of honest labor, Thus, there were hut 499burglaries and 8,000pounds worth of property gathered In—about *6 pounds' a job on the average.. But of ;this a great part was recovered, while to 124 cates nof a farthing was obtained by the burglar. Moreover, these figures represent the loss to the owners, not the gate to the thief. No statement of the actual cash .receipts of. the thieves can he mhde, but when on* considers the prices at'which the thieves must sell their plunder to 'the fences, it is reasonable to suppose th a t had they all got oft scot free ofim- prisonment, suffering only from the loss of the. property which, was recovered fipm teem ,.they would not h%ve made flfl a job on the average^ perhaps pot S3, There were about fifteen hundred cases, of hpnsebroakteg, , and hete th° same story Is told. The thieves go t property of a n eetffeifed valiie df jtrtt,-- 000 (the owneira^alwsyaestimating their' losses as high as possible), but much Warrecaptured <Evenon the basis, of the estimated kiss, to over half the cases the. value was less than £5, while in only thlrty-ttvo paaop out, p f .the 1,500 did the value exceed £50. . ^ The cases of shop-breakinghumberba 51", or seventy-three loss than in 1888. The number of burglaries, too, wasleas ^tasn to 1888, and so, too, were the houstt-braakiuga and pooket-pickings. ' ,, Sir ISdwaVd Bradford, Who writes the report, says ttie decrease would be still greater were it not fpflthe leniencywith Which habitual wid well-known crimin als are treated by judges. On. an average, however,. crimps ngain&t property were Iflper cent, less numerous in 1880 than In 1888. , . ; The portion of ihe report referring to the hoalth of the force-show* th a t 879 members werd invalided, of whom 230 ’qbthiiiecl' pensions and the other* re ceived gratuities only. The latter had been in the service le u than fifteen years, .Of ;thOMj put on< penlion *Uty- thrfle hM! xbmunatlsm .and forty ’Wiwd retired because of, “age, lopg service and debility.” ' There were nineteen eases of phthisis and dresses; of thq< lung* , eighteen w art • aflacted with’ brotthltfaiaJid tr|dflty had tojwte»tlj)st rendered^thsm u&fli for flutj. 4 J '■ The toll of honor gives 9,000 names of m ta sp ecU d ly .js rm y n a ^ ^h vm a ^ s- tratea duetto of these Of toe fikdotefso. m Mte'^loet peapocty n h . ^ S & X ^ TliO Silty Told depatoiiasay’ I* psriiirfi . eating in the report For Instance, 1,100 purses were deposited in this depart ment,' btSldes 190 deposits of coins found to public carriages. Twelve de posits were of bank notes, one deposit atone amounting to £990, while the number of watches valuable pieces of jetfelty, etc., le ft there were 1,909. I t is true that rewards ,amounting to £9,3*8 wete paid to feoas Wfco brought in the artloles, but it is a vary good showing for British honesty. ; In the deportment of aomdeuts J t ap pears tgat 14f peoplewave rrotor*r and killed By Various kiteEs of vekieies, white the number of maimed and in jured was 6,969.! toudowdy snoagh, fi9 of th ese asses were due to talm ^aiia riders. The British driver appears to TEMPERANCE N 0 TE& A STRANGE STQRY, How a Coutrivod to B in b l * |ltrM f : ■ " Cruvlujt lor i.lquor. For ten o r two "weeks a Well- dressed',' rcuflbstable appearing uiau, apparently thirty-five to thirty-eight years old. attracted considerable atten tion and aroused,not a little curiosity in ceriain circles, by hovering aroilnd the entrance to the Woodbridge street police station every afternoon and evening,. uud regularly attending the early morning sessions of the pottos court. Neither a t the station or at the court has he ever been known to speak to anyone, he hasn’t been a t all obtrusive in his demeanor, and even the most cynical old policemen have been obliged to admit that he doesn’t bear the slightest resemblance to a man con sumed by morbid curiosity, or look like; one planning how to smuggle anything to persons in .custody. Various theories were advanced from day to day, as to his purpose and motives, hut as one grizzled “copper” pertinently remarked,* none of them would “wash” well. De termined, if-possible, to solve the mys tery, a representative of the Free Press approached the enigmatical individual and urged him, in the;' flame of a thor oughly mystified'coterie of - fellow mor tals, to explain, what occult fascination there was to him in spending so much- of his time in localities where he was obviously out of his element. Closely scrutinizing his questioner a minute or two the strange’man smiled slightly and then said: *‘Really I don’t know as my ^movements are of the slightest concern to anyone else so long as I behave myself, but inasmuoh as my core is about completed, I have no objection to enlightening yok as to my somewhat peculiar actions recently. Ah, X noticed your eye-brows ele vated themselves somewhat quizzical ly when I used the word ‘cure.’ Liston a minute and you will understand alt. I am a reformed, or reclaimed if you ' prefer, .'drunkard, that is to say, I began as a mere boy to drink alcohol in all its various forms, whisky, gin, rurn, wine, ale, beer, any thing, and everything that contained the fiery spirits’. The habit grew upon me until I became a common drunkard. I was about as low as men ever descend in the scale of life, w ith .a paralyzed will a n d ; an unsatiable appetite that was fast dragging me toward the bot- towleas'pit: ■ 'And' ye t a ll the- time my- soul rebelled against me1and cried out for help. I loathed myself and my con-: dition and despised the besetting weak ness that- had caused my downfall.. To make a Jong story abort,-* faithful friend sought me out, .took me to hia couptry home,, clothed me, fed me *nourishing food, gave mo tobies to build up my shattered system and kept liquor out of my reach for eight months. Then I went to sea aud was gone almost two years, never once In all that time tasting alcohol. I r e - turned and went into business and have prospered beyond my moat sang uine expectation* But there is a skeleton in my closet, a Inrkingdemon, ever a t my heels tha t I must constantly kefep an eye on, or u tter rain would be my speedy fate. / 1“About twice every year an overpow ering desire to drink seizes nie, and i t teems, aa though 1, muat saturate my* aejf with liquor, t fight it off and do kveiythiflg possible to banish the tot" meat, but" naUght avails much until 1 pnt myself in a position where, for a atenber of days, sometimes more, some times less, I can ace With my own eye* jn tt what whisky will do’.to men. I plaoe myself, therefore, where I can be hold human being* in all stages of drunkenness, from the unconscious stage when they are lfloked up in a po lice station te ih* nervous, trembling agonised stage which follows the next morning when they are arraigned in a ta ri. I force myself to recall the day* when I was in like condition and grad- ta tty the tight of each beestlineee and suffering affects my moral nature a* an antidote for the craving within, and I ■lowly regain my normal condition, oeaae to long for stimulants and am able to again give ray affairs the atten tion they demand until another attack Comes upon me. To-morrow, or next day a t the outside, will find me hack a t my business with a clear head and steady nerve* and my most intimate friends will know nothing of the ordeal I hare just passed through."—Detroit Firee P ress W. TOBACCO POISON, Frogs sacrificed In th e Interest* o f Nodi cal Science. While lecturing In the Battle Creek (Mich.) sanitarium recently, Dr. J. H. Kellogg experimented upon tofife frogs evert feme reckless of the safety of. pedestrteh* than the drivers of W * L 3 & £ 3 L £ ! effects of tobacco. A lively, sniggling ’frog, which evidently had no taste f o r ' (tobacco, was forced to take one-toflth * 2 * 1 ^ p~of the nicotine distilled from a cigar. * * * * Htabtod (on ^ *tei»etes!tttrtS died quicker than if Wffer** - ______ Htab*ad*>“Nobody. X thetallainhttttofl th*6 [Bqy-i*,)ifr, shral* * „ !Th« p te*Cfratttrt it bad Itad it* head t a t off. The tame quantity Vrss injected under the skin of ' t a i f ld i t instantly produced a tawtabfl, dvring to the paralytiflg afiheateotine. i t also die! Jn a •todiidii. ' .' Diflbte this q ta» tity giltetk^fithiteffemrauril its h ta ft ed^tb Irititt jitifttef f a ^ t i y / A .ph te tw ta tao te fl ' m r-tiirae fto fs h k th* *1 qaan tU g gD iifl b a ft fatal- dose for a man if adminiatered so that ita full effect* Would b a fe lt Dr. Kellogg, continued; “Why, then, do not cigSte prove more fatal? Un doubtedly thousands of peraou* are killed every year from the uae of to- baocoflnd 'th e raison more immediate effects are not seefl is tha t probably half the nicotine contained In each cigar passes off from-the end that Is on fire. Another reason is th*t the ftnoker be comes accustomed to it by degrees ju st as the opium eater gets so that he can take habitually what would iprove a >’ fatal dose at. the outset. .Notice the effect upon a young smmter," He Is 1 pale, with a feeble, flagging pulse. Nicotine has partially paralyzed tort ac tion of his h ea rt He nearly- always vomits. The tracings of the pulse of a young smoker by means of a aphygmo- graph shows merely a faint, irregular^ line. In on old smoker the ttne ia still irregular and ragged, but the heart having become accustomed to the poisoq. is ’able to make some strong upward ’ strokes. The tracing made by a person j in health shows regular, well defined curves. “Tobacco taken into,the system par- ; tially pivralyzes all the vital functions and lessens nervous sensibility and * heart action. I t overworks ail th* eliminative organs Thnt*ls why the skin of an old smoker always has such a bad smell. After awhile he'finds that tobacco ’hangs ;‘on Ms breath,* ' which means that his system has be-, come so completely saturated that the akin and kidneys have JoBfctheir ability ■ ' to eliminate the poison as/fast as it’tis taken in. This is always, acondition of danger. He is threatened", with some gfnve disease, usually of the kidneys,-, for those organs suffer mqBt from the tobaccohabit, A Scotch physologist hta'-v been making some, investigations and"' he finds that all old smokers Rave some trace of diseased kidneys Albumen ia always present in smell quantities and also sugar. ■ .Tv ■■ . ’ “Chewing has the same effect only in less degree. The a rea of the alimentary canfll through which the poison -enters the system of the person who chews to bacco ia so much lew than the area of the lungs with their two thousand square feet of surface, that the effect* of smok ing are much more manifest."—Report ed by Helen D. Manning. NOTES, AND GLEANINGS. I k appearance the beer drinker may be the picture of health,’ hut, In reality, he is most incapable of resisting dis ease. ___ . / ' ’ ' AfaciibKAcoir F arra * recentlf~said, when preaching ip . Westminster: “Drink still remains-toe-greatest curse in.England.” *' .■.* A saioqk in-Cumberland Gap, east Tenn., has the following inscription: “Sunny Side Saloon —Polytix and ’ other trix diskused a t all ours.” As the law 'require* a keeper of auch a place to be of “a good moral Character,“ hilt aay* nothing of the degree of educa tion to which he Shall attain, this criu- Clammay be considered out of placed ' T h * Missouri court of appeal*, bas rendered a decision that private clubs tatting liquor to members must have** lfoftnae. I t fc thought this'will close up a hundred or moro such institutions in S t Louis alone; most of them wera organized expressly to evade the license, as the general belief has bften tha t snob clubs could sett liquors to members without license, - V Sm WitrUBD L awsox says: “White the whole Irish rant roll Is fifi.OQO.OQO, the amount paid to the venders of strong drink approximates £19,000,000." In his opinion them -oan be no permanent improvement In Ireland while drink so debauches the people. Favorable re ports of temperance work come from th* south and west.—Baansr and Herald. •—*. O n ikM (sM lm . Gen, Sofltewis In ooaunand a t Bock Island when the cholera broke out there, and after various Injunction* In this order as to sobriety and steantte ness he adds this curious paragraph: •‘In addition to the forsgolng, the senior surgeon present recommends the ns* of'flannel shirts, flannel drawers and woolen stockings; but the command ing general, who has seen much of dis ease, knows that it la intemporaase, which, in the present state of th e a t mosphere. generates and spreads th* calamity, and that, when onto spread, good and temperate men are likely to take the infection. He, therefore, peremptorily command* that every soldier or ranger who shall be found drank or Sensibly intoxicated after the puhlltotion of till* ortler be compelled, as soon as his strength will permit, to dig a grave a t a suitable burying place large enough for his oWn reception, aa each grave cannot fell soon to be wanted for the drunken man himself o r some drunkett companion. ,Thls order is given as well to serve for the punishment Of drunkenness as to spare good and temperate men the labor of digging graves for thair worthless eompankma.”—Magazine of American History. . ^ * ‘ ' ' m i n x M i f a Mm*i Haiti, In making *P *r*etpe to r “flow to beoom* a g rea t riagfift”1 throws in this wholesome ingredient: “Alcoholic stiwmlauteof any kind tead to,Irritate ttottooatTand shouldbe eu- tofjty fibfitMfiffl fetal. M m t l%hi vritiM ata no extoptieei to thto twte. v Mtot people are fettltof with the voice «! the herd&riafoe, a«4 it eeldo* atahtat todtottMitoal : burised hia -ihtaat.wilhdrWk,- a moderate nee of -aleehri seay* - . tend to vwriMt ita' v^ee a % 0* Buttetin. . ‘J 0 1’/ ■ \ . tv ’ S * m: t ■Vrt-o d h '• \r - « A i i %
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