Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 11 Mar 1886, p. 6

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apd light. Optarining it and some amum tion, Tatarted ofl, afld once more took up the trail. “ I suppogo I followed that track for an hour hcfoxe the foot marks showed thrzt the dear, for some reason, md suddenly scatterâ€" ed and hrnken up fur a. run. Then I cut across a vullty, in hopau ’m get a. shot M; two that I could sea on a hill hall a mile away. Tnere, too: I was Imauocaasful. " Almul: dusk I found myself standing, futlgued and Oisgzmted, withmy buck against a. tree, studying the lay of the lam} for the short/sat our; to camp. Wolves, I knew, were too numerrua in that townuhip to make night; walks pedectly enjoyable. Feellug fresher after a. little: rest, and having made up my mind about the route home, I deser- mlned to go a lit/(.10 further on the Well-de- fined ‘pad,’ that I had for some time been following. ‘ Just to the top of this knoll,’ said 1, 9nd walliqd carelessly forward. “ Somehcw the deer untamed unusually wary_._ “ Suddenly I dropped to my knows and cocked both barrels I N 0!; twenty-five yards ahead were three deer. 1 had caught a gllmpae of them in a little hollow beyond just as my eye was above the summit. Two were lying down ; the other was browsing. The moment was a. nervous one, I had been in the woods for years, but seldom have had time for hunting. Dld you ever hear of ‘buok fever ‘2’ It is a trembling eagerness to shoot, born of a fear or fancy that; the deer might be far away berore one can take cool, aure aim. I had a touch of it ; still I managed to shoot the biggest of the deer. Away went the othom like the wind 1 “ Now it was. dintluctly getting dusk, and I was at 163M. four miles. 8.0mm country from camp. To leave the venisonâ€"very fat, though out of season, J confess,-~»to the wolves was not to be thought of, So I dia- embowel‘ied him, to reduce the weight, dragged him a quarter of a mile to a large lake where he could easily be found, and lifted him into a tzee high above the beat jumyring of wolves. “I was hungry for venison, as we had not haul any in camp; so I turned and hur- ried back to camp for our only weapon of efficiency. It was adoubIe-barrelled fow- ling-pioce, of number ten bore, very long “ For some little distance I walked slow- ly along the ‘pad,’ but could see nothing of the animals. A fog that had been drifting about the high rldges all the morning now lifted a bit, endlooking across the spruce, and cedars of the deep valleys on either side, I made out three deer on the southern heights. There they stood, placidly idle, or poking there noses in the soft snow, all un- conscious of the human eye. “ Drawing the small revolver that 1 car- ried to shoot partridgea, I fired three shows as they ran, but followed their tracks to the top of a, henflock ridge near, I could not see that I had wounded either of them. On the ridge the deer had jumped into a clearly de- fined ‘ pad,’ or path. which had certainly been tracked by a deer herd within a. short time. “ Th6 head being 8- veryfiue one, though “ At the distance of perhaps half a mi'le from camp a slight noise to the left attracted my attention, and there stood two istartled deer at gaze, not twenty yards away. “ Nowolves left in thecountry !" cried the weather-beaten lama-:¢urv:yorr echoing my remark. “ Why, don’t you know that they are still to he found in the backwoods of Ontario anrl Q, lobes? Wherever deer are plenty, wolves are. It’s only last winter that I was Working around the head-waters of the Madnwaaka and llmneohere, where I had a lively time with the ugly brutes one evening” “ How was that 2” I inquired. “Well,” said be, after 8. pause to collect his thoughts, “ It was on a soft day in Feb- ruary last. A night’s steady drizzle had made surveying Impossible, because thersin, clinging to the spruces and balsams and hemlooks and cedars, came down with every stroke of the axe in drenching showers, on the men cutting out the line. My French- Cmadinm had gone to work cheerfully, but after a quarter of an hour were wet to the skin. So I knocked off, and sent them to camp, leaving th<â€"mstretchod there, chatter- ing and steaming before 3 huge fire. After dinner I tramped away on an old brushed- out rosd,tha.tled too distant lumber shanty. UANADIAN WOLVES. A SURVEYOR'S STORY. â€" “ Instantly I turned Ind ran for a. well- branched dead hemlock that I remembered a few yards inland on the back track. Now the pack were in full cry ; they had caught sight of me. To run straight at their mouth: was about the lonesomest kind of thing that I ever tried. With every step I became more certain that they would be first at the hemlock. Still I ran my best, buton reach- ing the tree, could hear their gallop and panting amid the yells of their onset. “ There was but one Way of escape left now, and as I ran, I looked anxiously from side to side for a favorable tree, when aud- denly I saw through the wood, a wide, clean expanse of snowâ€"the surface of Lake Wis- lemkoom. With loud abouts for my men, I ran out, looking to either side for some fa- miliar point. Hearing my cries so near, the demons behind broke into 9, chorus of equ- tation. “ All at once. looking ahead, I perceived that this was not Lake \Vlslemkoum, but a lang beaver meadow on the further side of which a low unwooded shore rose about two hundred yards away. Beyond that doubt- less was the lake, but before I could get across the meadow the wolves would of 8. certainty have pulled me down. The posi- tion was an appalling one. To regal]: the shore I had left and climb a. tree was a des- perate but thg only hope. “ Thank God, who had put the mind into me not to throw away my gun 1 Standing at the foot of the tree and twisting my feet out of my snow-shoes, I rallied the weapon and fired into the demons at ten yards’ dis- tance. At the flash there was a mad yell frnm the wounded, and a. dismayed howl from the pack. Instantly I fired the other barrel into them, thrcw the gun among them, and, springing upward, mught firm hold of a branch. But before I could get out of reach several had dashed at me, one coming so close that Iklcked my footdown- ward violently againat his jaw, 50 that he yelped with pain as he fell. Then I went up higher, and fall? safe from the wolves, utant I expected them to break into the cry of full view. “ Suddenly a. furinua yelling broke out on the hill high up behind me. The pack had rushed over and halted and stopped at the buck’s head. I was not so far .away but that I could hear the separate snarls and yelps of the brutea as they struggled with each other for the mutual. But that was for a few moments only, Again they were silent and swift upon my track, Every in- "I reckoned, however, on soon getting wlthln hell of my men ; the tent, I thought, could not be more than a. third of a mile away. Certainly the lake was at the foot of the long slope before me, for I had seen from the summit th18 Its broad ex« pause stretched away under the nowbrlght- enlng moon. Could I get within heerlng of camp before the demon wolves could overtake me, all wonld be well. But the snow-shoeing was still very bad, though the night was getting colder, and I often went crashing down hecauae the slowly forming crust gave way at the edge of some huge prone log or covered bush. “ Somewhat tired, I reached the summit of the long hill and stood still to breathe and listen, Not a sound. \Vhat, none? Yes, directly behind, and unmistakably the confused, eager, intermittent yell and yelp of pursuit. I broke into rapid flight, leav- ing the head of the deer Where 1 had been standing; “As I hurried on, it seemed to me all of 8. auddemthat I reeked and smelied of blood in the most astonishing way. The dripping head that Icarried had on it red, half-frozen pendants from the raw and jagged neck. Perhaps It was mere exclted fancy, but the head reemed so redolent of blood that the most distant wolves could not fail to get the strong scent. “ Up the long slope I strode to my best pace. It was, I believed, the assent on the other side of which the ground aloped down to Lake Wislsmkoom, by whose shore my tent was pitched. “ More than half the distance to the exam must have been left bx hind me, when 8. cry came to my 68.!‘3 that was anything but pleasant. Very far and faint I heard} a long, strange cry. Then, as I sped on, the singu- lar and melancholy howl was again borne on the Wind through the murmurlng of the trees. This time it seemed to come from another quarter. without horns at that season, I determined to carry it; to camp, that it might be sent for stuffing to the settlement. So I out it ofi" and started. The night was beginning to get. dim. --r-â€"-â€"-â€"-m~.»mâ€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"- ‘, Never speak unkindly of anyone. There 1 may be a. time when you may want to hor- ’ row ten dollars from your bittemst enemy. Bob Ingerzoll recently gave the following illustration of his views regarding religion : “I am very much like an 015. Indian of whom I have heard. An enterprising min alonary with the tribe was bent upon the conversion of this, particular gauge. One day out on the plaino the good man plied the aubject vigorouelyu till finally the red meng picking up aetick, bent down and drew in the send a small circle. ‘That’s what Indian know,’ he said. Then he drew a larger circle around the first, and, point- ing to it, said: ‘That'a what white men know; but outside of that Indian know much as white men -know nothing.’ The Indian’s doctrine in my doctrine," ended the orator. In the village of Mount Pleasant, in the potteries in Staffordshire, England, is to be found a child whoseextraordinary grawth ex- cites great wonder. Little Alice, as she is humorously called, in but 4 years of age, yet turns the scale at 150 pounds, the air- cumference of her waist being no less than five feet, while her height is four feet, so that literally she is hroader than she is long. She is bright, intelligent, and remarkably pretty, her head being crowned with 9. mess of golden hair, Her xcize does not interfere in the least with her activity, as she may often be seen playing with the other child- ren of the village or wandering in their company through the country lanes. Her appetite is enormous. Lord Aylcsiord was a. well-known English peer of more than convivial habits, who some years since went to Texas on a cattle ranch, near Big Spring. 8. station on the western division of the Texas Pacific. His death was reported abnut two ye ~ra ago. Now, Lord Alyeaford had but litfln money or property. but there was a. $1,000,000 in- surance on his life. it is whispered that perhaps Lord. Aylcsford. still liven. Mrs. Gen. Grant has surrendered bor dower right to the property made over for the purpose of paying the debt of Mr. Van- derbilt, and it is about being converted into money. It Is sufficient to pay only two~ thirds of the amount borrowed by the Gen- eral, and she will pay the other $50,000 from the book. The Queen of Italy has recently presented.Y to the Roman Museum a. necklace in silvari gilt, a bracelet in massive gold, 400 grammes-‘1 ln weightâ€"both presents from the Shah ofl Persia to her Majestyâ€"and also a. series of ' plates representing the costumes of Bolivia, i given to her by the italinn M (uh-jet at L'ma. i Tno maximum assessment of Gen. Robert Toombs' estate, made a few days ago, is only $60000. It was generally thought that the General was worth at least $250,- 000. Gen. Toomba. by power of attorney, is on $287,000 of Kimball House notes. if; Cincinnati has some citizen: who are classical in name if in nothing else. It is reported that Julius Cmsar, Augustus Caesar and another Caesar, who are partners in business there, recently brought a suit in one of the courts to recover a bill of $109. When a fair maid was wed by Col. Gongh of the Husanrs in London the other day, his deep-voiced, hearty “Iwill” made the bride jump so noticeably that everybody smiled. He was a man of Mars who talked in tones of thunder. To every caller who requests rm interview Arabi Pasha sends out one of his own cards with a line written on it saying he him much pleasure in granting the request, but begs the visitor not to mention politics. Prof. Huxley says it would require nearly amillion barrels of herriuga to supply the cod on the Norwegian coast with one break- fasfi. No wonder some restaurants do not give bread with one fish-ball. The Princess Amelie d’Orleans, daughter ofnthe Comte de Paris, on her marriage with the Duke of Braganza will receive a dowry of $2 000,000 from her uncle, the Duo (1’ Aumale. “A woman is a good deal like an accord- ion,” says Lawrence O'I‘vllley. “You can draw her out all right, but the music begins when you try to shut her up.” Ex-Queen Isabella, of Spain, has recently met and made friends with her husband, Don Fernando, from whom she has been separated seventeen years. Pittowkahanapywiyn, alias Poundmaker chief of the rzbel Green, has been baptized In the Mauituba penitentiary, with twenty- aight of his companion. F? Mrs. Polk has never visited Washington since she Iefn it the wife of a. retiring Presiâ€" dent, nearly forty yearn ago. Baron Adolphe Rothschild, of Paris, has a collection of rare postal and other stamps which is valued at $60,000. Ex King Theebaw should be happy, for his nominal prison is right next; door to a large distillery. “You did, dia you? so did I. But nhle experience of mine gave me another View offline matter, Not a wounded wo}f was attacked by his companions while they were howling and doing their best to get at me while 1 eat in the tree.” “ Swinging bright brands offirp, mv men came running into view. Away went the wolves with frlghtened howls into theIdepths of the forest, and I was saved. “ How many had you killed?" I asked. " Nine lay arouudthe tree,” answered the surveyor. “ I'thought wounded wolves were always dexogred 13y_thq_p&ck,” said I. h “ Perhaps; I might have killed most of the pack and scared the rest away, but that a loud shouting across the beaver meadow attracted their attenion. “ My clothes were wet with sweat, the weather was every minute growing calaer, and to freeze to death W s not a pleasant 3.1. temntive to being eaten. Remembering that I still had my revolver at my belt and car- tridge in plenty, I secured. myse‘fby my saeh to the trunk of the tree, and drawing the weapon, fired rapidly Into the gnaehing and leaping pack. With each shot I shouted. The wolves broke apmt and howled. The wounded drew aside and yelled and licked their hurts. Again the brutea drew to gather and leaping with loud, wild fury, fel! beck in struggling messes under me,â€" never was such a pandemonium ! but was so used upthat I could hardly cling to the tree. A Child Wonder. PEOPLE. Sodom and Gomorrah. BY FRANKLIN I. DENTON. i Two cities there stood in the midat o! the pl sin, And great was their glory and wide was their reign, But sin was the path that their populace trod, And down on their heads fell the vengeance of God. 2 In an instant the Pyeur wheeled his hers" and had his own bow drawn. For some I momenta than they pirountted around each ‘ other in beautiful style. But I saw at once I that the smaller Pyeur was the better horse- man, and knew boat how to protect himself and his steed. l The Sioux, when he saw the Pyeur prepar- : log to go, made like preparations ; and the i; two left the bluff together, riding up in com- ‘ puny past where I lay hidden, until they 1 were three or four hundred yards from the i sacred reek. The Sioux then fell behind vthe other 9. little, as: if to part company, I and when the distance was increased to 1‘ about twenty yards, he suddenly snatched ibis bow and shot an arrow et the Pyeur, 5 quick as lightning! The {wines with his wine the Flaw: with hi1 crust. «11, all who dwelt2 in themâ€"those mansifins (If lustâ€" From revels amuqed from plumbers awoke, To cwmble to ashes, to mtlh into smoke ! Ah, “title they fihought, as they itowered in their pr da 01 the wrhth and the ruin an econ ho batlde ; Ah. lime they dreamed, as the red morning out Its beams o'er their temples, than day was their last. The heavens were darkened. and forth from them came A tempest; of brimstone, a whirlwind of fiama, And tpqfiowexa of their might] and the halls ottheir mirth Were utterly swept from the {ace of the earth I Never once did hie home stop awerving and sidling. always with his head to the other. It was a rare spectacle I Each In- dian had his bow and anew ready draWn, as they almont flew around each other. Then whir! whirl went both their feather» ed shafts, But again the Sioux miased Hs mark, while the Pyeur's arrow buried itself half its length in the breast of the Sioux’a horse. With a. pitiful cry the beautiful animal fell to the ground; a.an before his rider ceuld spring to his feet‘ smother arrow from the Pyeur’s bow struck him, too, through the heart, stretching him lifeless on the turf. It was 0.11 the work of a moment or two ; and in even less time tlmn that, the war- like Pyeur had taken the scalp of his fallen adversary, and galloped away. I cannot say that I felt muoh pity for the Sioux ; his treachery found its punishment. 0h, dreadful the doom of the cities of sin I The nonn saw no trace that. their splendor had been I For nannibut the good ahnll inhnrir. the earth. The wicked shall weep o'er the day of their birth I ‘ But; he Ifiisaad 131m. The ahaft flew far ahead and stuck in the sod. They seemed by their actions to be on the bent of terms; but as I did not see them speak together, I at length became a little auupioloue of their true feelings to- wards each other. ‘And I was not long kept in doubt ; for the last fellow, having knock- ed ofl as much stone as he wanted, caught his horse and prepared to depart He was not nearly so large as the Sioux; but he was even more splendidly dressed, after the manner of a Pyeur, or Chippewa chief, and he had a certain fine style about him that bet wkened an Indian of note. Presently be filled his pipe, and than walking along where the first was hammer- ing at his pipe‘bowla, took a seat quietly at his side. Having lighted the pipe, he drew A few whifi's and handed it to the first In- dian, who received fit, pufl’ed at It for a moment or two, then handed it back. The new-comer advance& at a gallop till he drew up at the foot of the. same blufl' where the first had halted. Here he, too, turned his horse iooae, then walked out on the rock, scattering tobacco and muttering his prayeru as the first; had done. I had~ju9t made up. my mind to show my- self and make his acquaintance,â€"for I (o 2- cludcd tha‘: we should not quarrsl,â€"When I saw another Indian coming rapidly on horseback from another direction. Anxinuu to see how the two would greet; each other, I lay still. Hg was a powerful fallow, armed with a short but heavy bow, shield and quiver of large arrows ; and his horse was a. handsome proud-atepplngantmal. This ceremony finished be filled his OW}! pipe and sat down for a. good smoke, fitar which he began hammering with stones and his hatchet, until he had knocked. ofi‘ & large piece of the rock. This he began to break up into smaller pieces, each of about the preper size far a pipebowl. p’ When he ari'ived at the base of the bluff‘ he turned his horse loose, and then walked about upon the rook'in silence for some mo‘ manta, his lips moving and working as if en- gaged in prayers. Then dmwing forth a qnantity of tobacco, he broke it up, and acnttored it upon the rook. I found the place, and soon discovered the large rock, by the color and chippings round it. Being tired with my long tramp, Isat down behind a. bush. under one of the bluffs near by, to rest ; while laying there, I saw an Indian coming up on horseback. Drawing back a. little more out of sight, I kept hidden. that I might watch his mo< tiona : for I could see by his rigging of feathers, paints and weapons, that he was a. chief of some tribe, which I judged to be the Sioux. From Pnrtage we journeyed across to the Mississippi» I had heard a great deal about the “painted rock ;" and so, while my two partners, McKenzie and Cadott, were look- ing for good places to set our traps, I went up to 858 it. Among all these \Vestern tribes a oalnmet pipe bncame a peace offering and a token of friendly intentions; and on their visits to the rock, or at least While near it. the bit- tnreat foes aedulouliy restrained ail exhibi- tions of enemity. Thnt celebrafied nioneer of early \Visoonsin, John '1'. De la Ronda, Whose life and adventures form so large a lhare of the folk-lore of the northwest coun- try, thus descride a chance visit which he made to the Painted Rock, in the year 1828 2 On the Misslaaipwi. about twenty miles shove the mouth of Blsok River, Wiecansin, there is a somewhat singular out-cropping of a. pvculiar red rock, interesting from a geo- logical point of View. but atlil more so from its historic associations. It in the famous Calumet, or l’flnted Rock of the Indians, prized by them for their pipe-bnwls, and as a symbol of the annitou. Hither came warriors, for hundreds of milaa, from up or down the great river, or from far acroas the prairies, for bits of this covetcd rad atone, painted as they thought by the Grea"? Spirit. THE TREACHEROUS SIOUX. An Incident of [1m “Paluled Rock." Aglass of soda, water is the thing that will prevent a construction of mucous. It is all that l: necessary, except to open a. closed pore if it la not opened, and it in cup able of curlng a cough, and preventing a cold continuing. Let our patrans try it. The gas disoh urged from a bad stomach passm through the nostrils uni mouth. When a breath is inspired some of the gas is drawn into the Wind and all the pipes of the chest and mixed with water in the pipes. If the gas is discharged for a great length of time it will create 9. sore nose and What are called (maker or 0 11d sores on the mouth 3an lips, These mores are only a poi: Boned tissue. A cough will sometimes con- tinue as “A result 0‘ “ :old or closing of the pores of the b0 ' for months. or weeks, and ' {live :5. corrosion to this bronchial any. When, "this is the charac' an, a (whatnot dl‘sorganimtlou of the p}:;,»c.<::;s of rligrstlon is pnsecsso'l. Just the Mine Condition 0t disordered dl icr a: :1, e ingu, a cuminqu dismrganimtiou nf the pruuuss of digrstinn is pnsecssc'i. Just the: {HIRE Candi-Siam 0t disordered di gestiou as was film‘s mméuned by the 0014. Anopeuim! of pores is Btillwsuzflmdg and it muat be performw. Anything that will stop the gensratinn of gas in the stomach will stop a. cough. “710811 a. person is sick with a cold the stomach is sure to ba out of order. ' he had stomach permifi: 1»: gas tn be created. It: can always be smelled. No mugh in posmible without a mucous in a pipe, or pus, and a mucous is impofialbhâ€"r in a p‘pe witko'fl; a gaafrom a atomneh E rery cflugh other than that pro- duced by a decompmition of lung, or bron- chial pipe, is only a tickling of gas and wa- tar on a Wind pipe. What is 013.155.1316 of shipping the creation of gas? A good. condition of stomach ls Iur_e t9 stop _it. Mucous ia a saturation of the water of a pipe by a gas from the atomach. It is but gas under water. A chum-n is; oifared in this underatanding of the substance to ob~ mm a. remedy fur a cough. A thousand doctortt would we the remedy If it was known W‘smt mucous was. The brain is not operatyd in this work. It often attmnpts to stop it, but it is a. poor attempt, for 1!: will most always fail” \Ve are a] win-ya in our senaes when a brnin is op- erated for an intelligent work. A cough is performed far a minute and sometimes for hours wi‘ahovlt consoiousm-ws on our part. A cough is a work of lntel!igenoe of a cur- rent of electricity in & wlndplpe. We don’t want any mistake made about what we mean; an intelligent work of a. current of electricity is performed in a. cough. A cough is actually an attempt of a current of thla almightv (Influence to cast off a gathering ef gas and water on the surface of the Wind pxpe. The cough is only a epurtlng of a. current of an almighty out of a chest with such violence as to throw out all the unnat urel encumbrance on the wind pipe. When a cough is made a. contraction of the whole chest is madeâ€"just to the extent that a cur- rent of this worker is discharged by the earth. “To sum up What has been stated, pul- monary phthisis is auntie in all its stages. This is the prolific notion that presides over the Whole history of the disease, and which should unocasinglv inspire and direct all medical action. The incumbility proclaim- ed by Laennec and his immediate succes: sore, is dirproved by pathological anatomy and clinical observation. N-me should, therefore. allow themselves to be influenc- ‘ ed by such a condemnati'n which ii but a historical souvenir. When the existence of tul::ercles in the lungs is recognized, it should not be inferred from that moment that he who has them is dziomed to death in consequence of thcir presence. Should it be found that the tubcriles soften and a cavern forms, it should not be believed on this account that all is lost. It has been shown that this is not the case. and the natural tendency which tubercle has to fib- rous trmmfs)rmation,, that is to recovery, should not be forgotten. Before being dis- couraged. the physiiian shoul l march ard examine incessantly whether the patient is in the requisite conditions for such favor- able evolution to occur. If all hope of ab- solute recovery must be abandoned, a relaâ€" tive cure should be wrought, and every ex- ertion be made to place the patient in such conditions that he can live notwithstanding the lesions which are noW irreparable ;in a word, the plan adopted should be to strive and strive always, with the unshalren con- fidence which may be drawn from the no- tion that recovery is possible. The enemy can be conquered. This is the idea that shou'd engender and sustain every effort It is certlin that this conviction is the first condition of success ; since it is absence oi faith in the possibility of cure which pre‘ vents the adoption of all therapeutic treat. ment. " It ls wel‘ to romamber that the disease called consumption i not always a fatal disease, that many persons have recovered when wry far gone In “last stages” of this usually fatal disease, yet the change of cli- mate, or the gutting possession of some par- ticul ET food, and the r: jacting of old medi- cines have caused many who have almost given up in despair to recover. These are facts which every physician and almost every family have ser-n. In a review of the English translation of a. work by the justly celebrated professor of Medical Path: ology tothe Faculty of Paris, M. Jaccond, entitled Curablllty of Phthlsis, etc.‘ it is announced that, “the curabillty of phthisls is now a well-established fact.” The same author then continues : A RANDLY GROWING HEALTH EVIL. It is not generally known that 0031 oil and gasoline shoves rspiily vitiata the air of a room for breathing purposes my the devel» opment oflar‘ge quantities of carbonic di- oxide. How much longer mth this con" tivue before manufacturo's of such goods will obviate fihis new dangw by inventing some form of hood {sud pipe for conveying this paismmua gas to the outside atmo- sphere ‘1 Valumas have been written con~ earning the ventilation of homes, and the injury that arises, especially to children and the iniirm. from crowding too many people together in closed apartments, an now, with the introduction of oil and gas- oline stoves in the household, 9. new diffi- culty presents itself, which is not easily remedied in tho endeavor to provide for health and comfnrt. These shoves are fre- quently found with several large burners in full blast, in small kitchens hardly large enough to contain air to supply the healthful n quirements of one person. WHAT WILL CURE A COUCH. NEVER SURRENDER. HEALTH.

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