Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 27, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 30 January 1885 — Page 3

, , mTTT TT nATTDTPD MedWmi Hat" u wa in .iaHary, WTi KKLY 00 U JbCJJtlXW) th thermometer wm about v de-

the rate of thirtv mile h hour. I wa . l l . 5.1 I

JASVKH,

INDIANA.

A WOMAN WHO NEVER GOSSIPS. I vw wwM kop. , Thjjm a wh.h

Hwvwr whiW 1hj , , rA. it mM Into me ear and out of the otwr. AWtthi OmV'I Khow if they waltl for To tetter nnm wtal I ; , wy I'm h hihmh who never count Kwp. wy dtmr. - INt, Mr. wM 1 " ,Mrt a1'1 lpn

Ml' Auhh Maria. ( vnmliw hnm moH

Fmm h vim w wary i"" uur ,M

traveling with a half-breed guide and

dog aleigk. We upset tlw sleigh, got the kgs niul tmraelve under k w wall h-4 we couht, wrapped th fur aroaad us, and kt it blow away. The wow oou piled over us twill w had an irregular wall h quarter of a mile long urn! ten fet high oh each idde of iw mt monthi? when the blizzard abated.

This may surprise you, but m iuouhi! six incite hlsrh is enough to enable th

mow to lodge and pile up until it

form h blockade live mile king on the prairies. As for the dog we fed them

mi Hli. Wit rave each dor H fifth Ht

the end of a day's journey.

ton;

n, . .. ... i. oil

8h) MIVA tWHt tH WWM HHH l iwn

Que ihw W Iwmmi there; now ain't

lint Mary's a slattern ly Mature and nawe.

4 when Harry Hrown married I wM Iwm aa lakma wtwrtt, h,''rB loor

Awl the !llmwiMi are forehanded, you inlKht I wwTmihn tefarehand, but whH thanks

ittt Uuit

For avlW your neighbors.

I've fouail

Ttioy're suio to resent It whatever you do. Knw wouM you hritevo HltaatietH Cawcron A SSadhwiHO hvu, wion I tokl her the TbatB'he LlrU?dtoi much with the young Who JinUt her Tivothcr'a? How whs I to They weie frieiwls of tier brother?, hikI oh was her beau 44 1M sou uotlce JtlM Whitt wore a bluedre

For a laaWv" of forty don't that look rath ft r fcTKV ? And Mhw 'IVoker told we-but doa't my tht I wild m r- trying to marry oWIr. I . Nu Itjot a like hii old fool,' o may hi It's Sho'llSVvato niH-nt It, totweer me and you. "Tlie OrvenH havehwt money, and, pray do m)t tmuitloti It. Hut M wir ami his mother eau never lIctoWrieo yiMiTdayln htrletet eotHutl don''t want H toht hi comliw fnm me. I don't call It scMliMiwr Ju4 tellltiK 'oh. 1 wuHt ko now; come over real wkhi, irteae. d0'" -x r. uhrr.

REALLY COLD. Talk with a Canadian About the Weather in Manitoba.

Fish are

Hifht to earrv. Hint the doirs lfk Umjib.

W can, too, if near tlie lake, alwayg frL a fresh Slionlv bv CUttitllf thmilX"

the ieo and nut'tiiisr a Iwit down the

. , . . - bole "Yes, it is cold; but it is not the cob we ohjeet to fio inueli h the length o the winters. The, show is on the xroum

for seven niontlia in our Nortlment.

Knrtiinatclv there is not much of it

Vn never 'have more than a foot o

inn iv duriiitr tlje winter, or iiwt enousl

tn niHkH mod leii'hin. At tlie liase

nf the KoeKY AlOUIUaiUS UKJ Krcwmi j

clear of now for the ;reater part of the

Heasou. J he climate there is h itsni- i perate as it U in New York. This H ! owlnjr to tlie Chluook winds.' Tliese winds come from tin! Pacific Ocean through the Chinook l'ass. Tliey affect the temjerature of the adjoining country. Ont there 1 have wen cattle feeding on the plains in January and February. Hut tlie region tl m affected k small, and we hav no other inmlifying influences in our climate. "The absence of great bodies of water is, in my opinion, the chief cause nf the intense cold in our Canadian

Northwest. One of tlie la.st proois i can give you of tlie severity of tln climate IS found in the fact that you may

travel for hundreds of miles on the J

ko4r m WiaalM thaa it in NeK

York. JMt iwre, too, w an awwm ih vou rtmAf in ao thirigx. As we 'dww for the winter in fan, we drM

for the fiiitainer in a oeeomiHg way.

hjWH here a man w wiptMaMHl to wilver . . I ,. i t ..i..,.. : ..

in a tan wiacK. nai wau aai nw m winter with a pair of eariajwi akUtg

him hhkoua. whik in jumner he ta exr.eettnl lo change the coUr of tk hat only, while he roat under an overcoat

which ne cans a mier. v ferentwlth us. in summer we wear

thick helmets with goOU ventilation, and we keep the n off our heads

while we have plenty of air. e an wear light clothes, wilted to the season, and flannel Mrts with flannel collar

attached are general even among tnc wealthy. When theHJ are white thej are lieeoming, and notliing eise is sc cKl. Then we wear white canvaa .shoea,

ami if we dress for comfort we aisc drejsw;th taste. Hut we are worriec with flkw. They come in million There are black flies, mosquitoes, bull dogs aiui sand flies or bits, unl can't se

OONTRACTOHS.

.iii.1 H.s the Indians call them.

"As for the Indians, they never Wither us. Hut do not fancy that the IncUans in the Canadian Northwest are quiet lK-catiM of the paternal jMy of the

Canadian Govcrnmeat. That w a jw-

utttr ilebwlon. The Indians are quiet

limn Vu.n lNcnue tlie Hudson lta

Comnanv. which had-judicial and com

merclal control of the country for nearly twn t!ntories. treatetl them well. It

to thn Interest of the lllHlson la

Company to be on good terms with tlie

Indians, ami the laci inai in uieir urns intercourse with tlie Indians the company had onlv one of their numlKsr killed is sufficient proof of the friendly relations which existed between the, redskins and the whitemen all over the Canadian Northwest. 1 have heard factors, as the managers of the Hudson Hav posts are called, say that they always gave trust to the Indian in the old days, and that the Indians always

paid their inteoteunc.w; inai iiu-ie nv verv few disjmtes, and tlios that did

How ta Farmer Droswcu-Wlmt He Kat IlUlially I.trr-The Intnn Hwt ot the " i HHWWcr-KrPHl"SC Wrw Ih Winter. "Cold!" said a Canadian from W't nipeg to a representative of tlie New York Sum, during the cold snap a few davs ago. ' Cold! Why surely you don't call this cold. Up in my country it la occasionally so cold at this season

of the year that the cows give ice-cream when they are milked. I tell yon that there can lm no frilling with the cold up there. Look at the way we dre. In winter we all wear furs. Tlie policemen at Winnipeg have buffalo coats down to their heels, and every man. rick or poor, in the Northwest must waar si fur cap. I have known the cold to penetrate the hkull of a man who wont out one day with an ordinary felt hat, and brain-fever carried him off in three days. Tlie streets of Winnipeg just now are full of men who move about like animals in menagerie-cages. Ynn see. nothinsr but lieaver and otter,

uml IVrsian lamb and seal, and mink

and raccoon, and marten and muskrat. ami nil the furs that ever adorned the

(Joths or Ostro-Ooths, who first brought

tl hoieo furs of the North to bomhern

ami Central Europe. And the sleighs

re covered with black and brown Dear,

unit frrizlv skins and buffalo rolies,

while an occasional Astrakhan gives

Avidonce of luxury and costly lurs.

Without furs we could not live in win

ter mi in that country. We not only

use tliem as articles of luxury, as the Chinoae use the ermine, sable or U:e tierv fox. but wo are obliged to u.e

tlmm us articles of necessity. And ev

rv niece of sk n Is utilized. The hardy

vovKB-ciirs anil eoureurs du bois dress

themselves inbuelcsin with head-dresses nf wolf. lvnx. badr er or wildcat hides.

while silver and blue-fox furs may bo

Hoen on the heads of the rich. A man

mast be very kard tip in Winnipeg who iln not own a fur coat, can and gloves

or mittens. A walk through the street nmv lie turned into a lesson in natural

history bv those who read as they run

In fact a great many people buy more

expensive xurs tnaa mey can anoru

Whiter is our season of extravagance

and in our attempt to uosse. costly

furs wo often go ruinously lieyond our

means.

"As for the cold." he continued, "it

is severe, but wo do not feel it as much

as vou mlirht fancv. We sin? dressed

for it, and our houses are built to resist It All our houses have double doors

and double windows. Fires arc, of

course, kept going night and day. We are not much out of doors in winter, and yet nearly ercrybody gets frostbitten at times. When we see a man on

the ttreet with a white spot on his cheek or nose wo atop and point to the

afflicted part. He will understand at once. If the weather is very cold we

can't sno. k to each other very well,

for our mustaches freeze to our boards

and form a crust of fee over our mouths.

AVo must thaw this off before we can talk. On the nlains. somet rats, a man

is froacn to death, but, this does not oft

en happen. It i no joke to be caught in a. hluWril nu tha nralrles. It k an

no a pd tn ma once little ftorth of

u-it limit s!!inr a bowlder or a

stone. The frost pulverizes them. They burst asunder as though blown apart with gunpowder, and wlid materials have thus bein converted into soil. The worst of it is that the cold comes so early and fctays so late. Wre can ra'se neither apple, pcHrs, nor peaches up there. Nor can we raiso Indian corn, and for that reason our Canad'an Northwest can never be a great pork country. Small fruits, cherries, rasp

berries, currants and strawberries, howI ... a.... linl.lt 4n

ever, win ripen, out we uu uui make fruit abundant. The cold is too severe to enable us to raise anything but the hardiest kinds of fruit and corn those which ripen early. "We who livo in the cities do not Miffer from the cold half as much as the fanners. Woo'd is ocarce all over the country, and the fanner is obliged to economize his fuel. This ks oue of life

greatest hard.-diqw. Along mo line oi

railway lie can get com. ywhuh i.- i, found in great abundance on the

Saskatchewan, but when the tanner nas

to depend on wood for luel lie na a

hanl time of it in winter, tie some

times makes fuel out ot ins manure heap in the autumn, after the manner of the Mennonites by mixing it with

straw an.l working it iut j the consistence of tieat. This Intra well, but iti

the end it will be found expensive, tie

must let his lire go out every night ana

lMitit next morning when tne tner-

nioin tcrtnav Ih twenty, thirty, or lorty

degr

let

thing

R!tlS

i u-nr wire xlwavs settled by the

author ties, and m conformity w.tn tne methods of the Indian as well as tlioie of the white man. You see the Hudson Hav Company wanted nothing from the Indian but his tun. and so long as the Indian was not robbed of his land he looked on the HmUon Hay Company as a benefactor, and it was to his interest to earrv out his obligations and preserve iMiace "and order. 'We never had auy trrtiiiil.. with the Indians until the Can

adian Government bought the Northwestern territories from the Hudson Hay

Companv for 1,500,000, the cheapen purchase ever made. Now a few of the Indians are uneasy liecanse we are taking their lands. Hut it does not amount to anything. "A'Ikhu imm'gratkm well, we have lieeu disappointed, I confess, and tlie country will not 1h peopled as fast as we anticipated. But as we grow the dillkulties in our way w'.ll bo removed, iut as they have been in every other

countrv. l am nor airaiu oi uui lure." , With this the Canadian buttoned ht coat and deimrted. A'. 1.

Tn maav iwotde Hie word ooatraetor

repeats the idea of a person ooiMWniHg

the salkfwt ckaracteriatHja of a political

"bow" and th eotliaa of a trut fund; a maa whose poekete are lined with money gotten by ways that are dark and triek that are by no mean wain as far a aeoowidkhiHg the gath-

----- . .

ring in of shekel k concerned. Hut

so far from being a mmjmU outeasi ami a moral excrescence on the community, tha contractor k an extremely active

and important factor In modern oivill-

aauon, xor imj iih n h v every work of public or private im

portance that is undertaKon. ne w osientiallv a modern institution. Among the ancients he appears in but one restricted sphere. Those Interesting old .i.w.tj wlirww Kolit end and aim in life

ihwm tin. last nennv out of

their subiccts. usel to farm out the rev

euues, delegating the wpieezlng proceas fr. tliBt nn nf their beloved and trusted

subjects who would pay tho mot for tr.wL Furtlier than this, how

ever, the system does not -em to have w.i.n anulied. Tliere is no record of the

i..it!ir ,f fntitracts for briek-work on

nf Halxd. Noali did not ad-

v.rtirii fnr nroiMwals to build the Ark.

And we have every reason for Iwlieving,

that the stone which t'i w i Croat Pyramid was bought in open

market.' for, it lurnisiieu oy coniraci, it Would have been a Mgger job than the Philadelphia city buildings. Dating from the hrst building of railroads m England, when the eider Hrassev and his comiieers on tlie continent laid tlie foundations of their colossal fortunes, the modem contract system has developed until now everything, from putting up a country school-house or furnishing the inmate of the city s charitable institutions with Thanksgiving dinnets, up to building a twenty-milKon-do'.lar State House which threatens to slide down hill into the river, is .I.,,,., iiv- .nn tract. Some well cdiiipped

journals devote their columns entirely tn the discussing and advertising of

contracts, and every daih has its corner reserved for tlie latter. In this

country contracting receiveu a gistimulus during the civil war, when the

major portion of three Uiliions oi uoi Jars went out of the Government Treds

rv hitn the nnckets of a host of army

a.a.v ' - " ruin! tuf'tnrs.

There are three great classes of

American contractors-tluo engageu uixin internal improvements, those doing railroad and municipal work, and liul'au contractors. Tho tirst class includes a number of lirnt throughout ti f.nnnin- who are entrcd in nn-

PERSONAL AND LITERARY. U takes twenty-six large tnwk a4f a hat-box to hold Adelina J?at's trarellng wardrobe. N J There are 8S aewiipapewi and rkMlkala publWhed In fHa languagee in thkt eoantry. Of these, 488 are ia German. The newsiHiper bu'me in fexae muat. ba vaod. Theelitor f the La-

ling H'iMf offers to imy j50,000 for the arrest of the trson who stole hU hand

proving the National waterways, Their brosueritv fluctuates with the varying

THE LOCOMOTIVE. It TakM Cenatderalde f Mw tn Kmh

Oar. When a locomotive rolled up to an early East Tenneeo town, and the en- . - - r It ........v

arineer, who was a maiioi u s,muu,

iam iM'fore he lisrhts the Are his Tun

stick to it and the skin peels on iiore

he can reltiase them, it ins ceuar i

not good he will find everything be na, in tlie way of eatables, frozen. He

never wears boots. If lie did hw teet would freeze. He puts on three or four pairs of stockings and a pair of moccasins. If he wants to visit a neighbor.

who nrobablv lives miles away, ne

juiiht travel on snowshoes. The air is so

rrii5...l that his comin? can be iiearu a

mil.. a-v. As he beats down uiesnow

!,, u'ait-incr tlin nnUti will make a dog

bark at the distance of half a mile.

The stillness is depressing, lie never

binl all t hrousrh the winter, ana

the sight of a covote is always welcome. The 'caw, caw'" of a crow to him is a

inanmr nf inv. for it nreciiiue.s i no

That 'caw. caw' is the North-

. . , .....I

west Canadian larmers ojwi. nuu 1nvir nf music ever listened to the queen

of the operatic stage witli more pleasure

than he doe to tne crow as n i

its caw' over the. bleak plains of Man

itoba. Allicrta, or Asnaboid. ie Mas.

indeed, tlie aurora to look at in winter, Un,i li.. ibuiM tint tiro of it soon ettker.

The great streamors of tremulous light

are nis oniyouiaiuesiiinn-"""'-Menu, more than once, these streamers

'n no from every point of tlie compass

am! meet at the zenith, where a meteor ef great brillialiCV was formed. Ihis occurred at Prince Albert, which, with

Edmonton, is Ce mo.H northerly ecuiement in ti e Canadian northwest.

..n,i. 'nri livitern Canadian kt not

a visiting ican. He sjwnds all his timo

in winter netwoen nis nouse ami m

ofiices, if ho has any. He looks forr r,i in liiilimilid tiolds of wheat and

oats to compensate him for the hard

.d.'na lu. nmllinw. Hilt IlC II11IH 00 CafC

frit --- - - . . . .f 1.1. uill

fill, 'i hrtsft lAtvo viuiu? piri nviu

k'como cm every year unless tlie farmnra ni'illliro their lands. In Minnesota

and Iowa thirty-live bushels ot wneat to

tho acre were not uncommon wuen u

lands in those States Were first broKCU,

and now I suppose that they do npt av-

xrnri. mnrn than SlXlCCB. lire nmvi-

. --. t . t i

imm f artnera naif icol w ii in

aPy, and worked tie land for all it wan

worth. It hi just the same with us.

'VUm bum ran m am sbort ana MOC M M

big thing," but as one of them sized up tho little enciueer. he remarked: "It

don't take much of a man to ntn her, does it, Jim?"

But he didn't knowit does look easy a bov might stand on the foot-board,

open and shut the throttle; but, Jim. it

does take a good deal of a man to sianti

there all through the hours of day and niriit. tn know all tho irrades of the

road, wncre ne -musi iuhnu ni thot and pull her wide open" to get to the top of the hill, and where to "shut her off and let her roll;" it does take

much of a man to read the gauge, ami

know if the water is low or it there is plenty; to know when she is working easily or laboring hard; to feel her pulse,

as it were, as ne siasm his pijwji-, tell whether all is well; and then, if she

lets down," it does take much ot a lan to know just what to do to discon

nect and block her up.

It does take much ot a man wuen tliere is a strutch of track to take a long

look ahead or lieer around curves, to

watch the track for anything that may

proportions ot the niver ana unruui bill. .. .

To the second class our railroads aao city improvements owe their existence. The typical contractor is the jolly, large-"

limbe'd Irishman who has himself swung the pick and handled the shovel. In the citv he is something of a politician and has a "cou.-in" or two in or near the City Hall, who gives him "pointers on coming jobs, and lets him into the ring. On railroad work he must make himself "solid" with the engineer in

charge, for las fate is entirety in inu lattefs hands. By means of his estimates of work upon which all bids are based, it is in the power of the engineer to make or break tins contractor. A liberal estimate makes glad the heart anil fat tho pocket-book of the contractor, while with a close or scant estimate the completion of tlie contract leaves

him on tne raggeu cage ui Tho labor employed varies in nationality. Up to 1870 Ireland furnished nearly all of it Since then Italians and

axe. . . ,

Waahlneton I'. Gregg, the clerk of

tlie Boston Common Council, has re

signed. Mr. Gregg is e gal y-uw year

of age. and he has held ir.s poiiiion iw

forty-two years. mmvn iom

The following thrilling sentence M taken from a recently-published ooiety,

novel: 'For a whole quarter oi h hour the young man gazed thoughtfully in the flame of the extinguished candle," , , Captain J. P. Holm, who died lu Denmark a few weeks ago, became well known to the American public tnroitgh his confinement in a Masaoliusette insane asylum at the request of hi wife and son. In his will the old man ignored his family and left 5,Q00 for a free library in Maldon, Mas. -George W. Staiubonli, a loading merchant of Nashville, Tenn., was married recently, and tho Cumberland Club, of which he was a member, pretwred to give him a grand reception.

The reception was an elegant auair, and attended by the elite of the city, but the bride and groom to whom it was given ere absent. The executive

committee naa iorgouou iu mm woum

Chicago Inter ucean.

Thomas Van Valin, a pensioner of

the war of 1812, died at byracuse, a. V December 26. January 12 he cele

brated his 101th birthday, anu uorh, consequently, within a few davs of being 10, years old. Mr. Van Valin was

son of Abel Van Valin, who was accidentally killed at the age of 105 years. His grandfather lived to be 115, and a brother of his grandfather lived to the ac of 112 years. The lattor left three sons, each of whom was also a centenarian; John Van Valin lived to be 109 years old; Isaac, 110, and Joseph, 100. Syracuse Journal. A new man has taken editorial charge of tlie I-ockhart (Tex.) llffiter, and makes the following unique announcement: "1 wish to state that I have not done this with a view of amassing a colossal fortune, for, having been engaged in teaching school for

the last sixteen years, i ue pile, most of which I have invested tn iversoual property in the shape of a one hundred and forty pouudlexancee. I have been for a long time undecided whether to become a mule-drivor or an editor, and, having at last made the important decision, I shall endeavor to convince even one that I would make a good M. D.1

Hungarians in the feast. Sweues in mo West and Chinese upon the Pacitic coast have largely supplanted Patrick. A. 1.

Trlhune.

SOME SMOKE.

A CalcHUtkm Which KSlblt Startling CfHtcltln.

Few people ever stop to count the cost of luxuries. If they should they might sometime hesitate in their expenditures. A wealthy octogenarian of Hartford, who has indulged in smoking during all his life, or at least during all his manhood years, has made an estimate. Iwsed upon data kept, as to the cost of his cigars for sixty-seven years. He knows the amount he has expended, and calculating the sum invested in cigars every six months, and placing it

at COmpounu uuervst i.i.-6...

HUMOROUS. Powerful steel knlvos which will cut cold iron have been invented. They will be usoful ia railway rostaurauts. Detroit ifrd. Ah, Miss Do Smith, are you going to have goose at dinner to-day? "Yes, I hope so; you'll come, won't you? But somehow neither of them felt very comfortable after that Texas Sttings.

" Masther," said a little trash rogne one day to a gardeuer, " are not plants great sluggarus?" No, certainly not." Anit.w1 tiTT. .rardenor. "Why. ooh, I

thowt they were, as it's so "O0" goes 'cm out of their beds."--A. X. Ledger. .t . ami Tnvniir ear a minute, re

marked Mrs. Brown to her husband the other evening. "Will, you give it back to me?" he inquired with mock anxiety. Of course I wUl, you Idiot! Do yon suppose I want to start a tanaeryP She got the car. N. Y. Graphic. A young man entered an illustrated newspaper office the other day and applied for a position. "Can you draw well?" asked the pnblisher. 'No,' said .the young man. " Bet if I had the well l could draw water." He didn't nsethe elevator going down Mairs. Williamsport Breakfast Tabie.

-"Johnnie, you have been fighting?" velv inquired Mrs. Jarphly. , 4 'No,

ii.n iwsU nf tho savings bank calcu-

be in the way, and if there should boTa ljition;Jf hL, fimis that the total sum now

tree, a rock, or a oroaen ran, ur una- amounu to -'w.wu,

placed switch then tliere must be a wrtH at the throttle, one who has the

nerve to do any act quickly; one who.

has brains to think with, and a s-trong arm to act; one who loses sight of himself and think of those behind 1dm, all

unconscious of any,danger. It will take a man then, Jim, to apply the brake, to

"tnrow ncr over ami gnu m-i ""' rhor., U ilm trsusn; to watch and tho

water; the track must lie watched and

the signals see U tney are reu r green. It is watch, watch, all the time, think and remember every figure on the

time-card and the mile-post and tne sta

tion, and the yellow tissue paper tne telegraph man gave him at the last sta-

Hon verity, cicrnai unu " " price of his lifel Vos. Jim, it does take much of a man to run her. lhc

iWafcr.

mum Quill pens are again in fashion.

Itiev are well adaiited for the large,

angular penmanship now in wvor among ladles.-CAtcee rW.

1 ult wnmWiTM of the wceu WOUKl

keep an account of tho cost of this luxury, and calculate their investments in cigars and tobacco, with compound interest added, they would be astonished at the sums wasted by them in smoke. The large sum found by the gentleman who had smoked for sixty-seven j years was of course greatly increased in the last twenty, aud especially in the last ten years, as money compounded every six months at the rate of six per cent.

double in a little over ten years. We frequently hear of intemperate persons drinking up tlie value of a farm r riir nrnnertv. But it is not often

thrtnnn as S200.000 is con

sumed in smoke by one person. If this Hartford gentleman is not an exceptional smoker, then tho aggregate eot of smoking is simply enormous. ItHjale

Times. m A boy's school ont West has only

.tiABtiaiite. The mumps aae re-

Mtlv swelled that number somewhat.

main, promimj unoi the Jarphlys. "John Scliermerhorn. how dare you tell me an natruth!" exclaimed his mother. "Where did yon got that black eye, sir?" "I traded another boy two front teetk and a broken nose for it," replied Johnnie, as km crossed the wood-pile. Pttltbttrgh Chronictc. "That's a good gun of yours, stranger," said a backwoodsman; "bnfc Uncle Dave hore has one that beats it "Ah! how far will it kill a hawk with a charge of No. C shot?" "I don't e ui,7ir iill nither." answered Uncle

Dave for himself. "Then what do you use. Undo Dave?" "I shoot salt altogether. I kill my game so far with my gun, that without salt the game would spile before I could get it" There are about as many ways of pronouncing depot as there are eccentric ways of pronouncing' "creamery. Hmtnre." etc As a road out of the

difficulty wo give the following suggeafion: Utsbutartep-oH Down to the aepoh. The way hi ne HtejMh TkHt leads to the deep oh. f kIIwhvI onaKrape-h .iHrt hy the day-poh. . Ih a More near taa dee-ae I bought this small t pet ferhiHW, to end th Nrltatkw. We'd letter IwaeefertTieall Jjf.