Star of the Cape, 24 December 1873 IIIF issue link — Page 1

■AERTIXfl WELL. "And (o, bit den." add Mrs.Waring to bar beartifnl niece, Fanny IjoTering, "TOO ere about becoming r briiie.' 1 The aunt spoke tenderly, and with a Manner that inatantly broke down all

ling girl, aa si A of her annl

•'Pray Hearen. Fanny. Mrs. Wa.

"f shall make no errsr, Annt Mary," ertod the lomly girt "EdvdrdAllen is cae of the beet of young men ; and he lores me as purely and tenderly aa any maiden ooold wish to be lored. Oh, I want you to see him eo mnoh I" " I will hare that pleasure soon, no doubt." *' Tea, rary noon. Ho is here almost *'“fe!5"ll&ai^I | urideritsiid. thinks is quite a pet of father's, "relied Fanny, He's in bualneea, then, I suppose f" “Tea. He keeps a fancy dry goods store, and is doing eioecduigly rreUMrs. Waling sat silent for some time, lost ms train of reflection, suddenly aMarih has mind. "Ton look serious, aunt. What are you Hdnking about f" said Fanny, a alight shadow flitting over her counte'"StaL Waring muled, as she answered: "People at my age are easily led into serious thoughts. Indeed, I nerer consuch thoaghto into my mind. I bare

toe fair young giri,^"! knowtost life, js ^n~ jV ulSedfrue i to rest. I will beliere TOUT ohoioe a wise one, and that' a *^eu ean^t“he^"''bellering this, when you see Bdwsrd. He will be here lo-niigd^ tom yon will be able to eatioallad la ^ter tea, when irfm^aring waa in trod need. Allen responded to tha intrododtion aotoewbst ooldly. In fact, he was too mnoh iutereeted in Fanny heraalf, to think mneh. or ean few woeda with Mrs. Wanng, that lady waa observing him closely and noting

STAR OF

CAPE.

V OL. VI.

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1873.

. In rain had she

instructed t must be nishod with tests of qnelity.” , On the day following, Mrs Waring went out alone. Without seeming to hare any purpose in bar mind, she had asked toe number of Mr. Allen's store, whither she went with the design of making a few pnrehaeee As she bed hoped it weald be, toe young men did not recognise her es too sunt of his hstoatost A

d quality.

"What is toe price of this?" she

ted.

I prompt. First, consulted; then

a thoughtful ps g storekeeper aa

ty, did you “Ye—yea, ma'am," quickly replied Alien. “A dollar thirty. And it'a a ' ' at that, I do assure yon." Waring raised her eyes and looked eteedily, for e moment or into the young man's face. " A dollar and thirty cents," sin ■ted. " Yes, ma'am. A dollar thirty,' e now assured answer. “ How i rds shell I measure off for yon ?' " I want abont twelve yards." " There lint e cheeper piece of goods market," acid toe young man, as he r at his scissors into the silk—•' not a cheaper piece, I do assure yon. I had a large atoek of tbsae ailka at toe opening of the season, and sold two thirds of them at s dollar and a half. Bnt aa they ere nearly dosed ont, I am selling '' remainder at a trifle above cast. jsiasress-'ssS'K: ting, m she look ont her parse, ow mneh does it come to ?" Twelve yards it one dollar and ty cents—jost fifteen dollars and rixty cents," said Allen. " Shall I send it home for you ?" he iked. " No—I will take it myself,'' said Mrs. faring, ooldly. “ What havs youbaaa buying, aunt r inquired Fanny, when Mrs. Waring returned home with her purchase. "A silk drees. And 1 want to know what yon think of my bargain?" The silk was opened, end Fanny and bar mother examined and admired it. "Wind did yon pay for it, suterr “Ado: ”^Nol a dollar thirty?" Marked nr use wee indicated. "Yes. Donl yon think it cheep?" “Cheapr said Fanny. "It in' -seth over a dollar, at toe outside Mr. Allen bee been selling the sum nlySJta " , toe posit re did yon get tl A indefinite am

And so saying, Mrs. Waring paaae _om the room, end left toe parents « Fanny alone with their weeping chilli ”-rw words were spoken by either Mi Mrs. Lovoring. Something in th it remarks of Mrs. Waring had atai id their minds into new oonvietiom i for-toe daughter, she soon retired t. r own apartment, and did not join the family again until toe next morning, "hen, her sad eyes and oolorlesi ' x> plainly evidenced e night of i leaneea and suffering. By a kind of taeit consent on the pert f each member of toe family, no minion whatever was made to toe ooonrmoes of too day previous. Evening use, bnt not es nsnal came Edward Ben. The next day, end the next ent by, without his accustomed appearance For e whole week his visite irons was toe change whic . isast had become risible in Fanny Levering. The very light of her life seemed u> s*c ont enddenlv: aud for while, she had groped about in thio

ot expert _ unobtrn- - during this period o! gloom and distress, oast high truths into the mind of her suffering

I only wish we had known your in-“-‘"-r would here gone • store. It is too

rho sold you to downright swi faring! cahaly, ^heta^'no'

h Mpgsnf^f mm

for himself some personal t

■,■■■..ftitiim. forget whet is doe t~ —. tender, oonfuing wife who has pieced all that la dear to bet in his gnardian- '*'• Brother, depend upon it, the who deliberately wrongs another

’ to himself, wSl

The tallowing circular from George Sprague, Secretary of the State Grange of Patrons of Husbandry, has been is- ! Formers and JtbrrtcutturtsU of

truly

happy. This I speak nd solemnl; ■> T

ic fuHaess of

and grace of. maani which is acquired by others who go into society more. Many of our farmers enjoy ell these advantages ; others do not to bo great sir extent. By car order we establish n social organisewhich extends for miles around, e the sdvantagee of society ere obtained, where by mingling in social enjoyment we wear off mnoh of the diffl-

flrmamsnt of though), same the rare by which she was able to aee e path opening before her. When, at tha and of tha tenth day of nneertainty, came a note from Allen, in these brief words : -If it is Mias Lomring-a wish to be -ee from her engagement, a word will' anal tha contract —she replied, with--t ton minutes, " Let toe oontrect be annulled; yon ere free." m *- ’‘'er, and Mr. Lovering tha intelligence that carried in a few < Irniotd, A—gfct— an reputed wealthy. "To Miaa Jerrold I It caan< lid Miaa Lovering, in surprise, “l^win^not bafoTei^ftaher.'^__, ' Who iaMna Jerrold?" asked Mrs. wing. ■A coarse, vulgsr-minded girl, of whom many little things her- ' ssid," replied Mrs. Lovering, wsntly. " But her father la rich, and aba is an only ehild." " Ha never loved yon, dear,” s Mrs. Waring to Fanny, about a » later, as the yet auffbnng girl laid *—face on her bosom. The »

id she replied,— I wished to be It an escape I have i n the fearful gulf on toe very which my fast were arrested.

u purity si Ah I bow oonld so at fault?"

dnrlngtheir hole Uf ti The tidote for all this is supplied by the so- ■ ■ I grange. Besides pleasure end enjoy* ours* of the grange. "Tie not aU of life to live. ’ Intellectually, it is the aim of this order to educate toe farmer np to e fall end perfect understanding of the reeponaibility tost rests upon him aa a arisen, keep him posted npon el] matters at affect his business. It requires " knowledge.

rioaltnre „ , other business. To perform ell Jas of a arisen end a farmer intelligently, the farmer should be thoroughly posted In political economy, science of government, and science of —Iture. It is a feature of this order .. brings op for discussion every question bearing upon his profession or which may enlighten him ea to his dntioe ss a arisen. The diversity of soil sad climate, and te great variety of productions and their relative value, give s wide range

'hip-cracker every time ehe

d the letter " K.

tioulsted the Icttei

miasmatic influence in

' in edgewise, but 1 ! He had written: '

was boantifnlly arrayed i ' silk dree* with s whit

[ skirt," and the p '

irt," and the printer, proof-n nebody hadn't corrected the

Christmas 187*.

... do it.

McFlia Stoso l-readi

| Santiago de Gnh

Mlm^Sfiliaa”' 1 and again Christmas comes ted, and others led with its holiday goods, es- oua punishment ng the compliments of the sea- j j——

- it yesterday that s holly, we clasped hands in - ofTSTS. What wee then « i future is now the known pest. Like a , panorama It has slowly, yet how swiftly, - Deed unfolded to ns, and, though now i hidden from sight, our good and bad . deeds alike are indelibly engraven upon 1 it and visible ever when memory calls, i To bow many is the canvas bright ? and i to how many ia it darkened by pictures i tour would give half their lives to et- > face ? But as it is it must stand, and, ) bright or dark- the lessons It teaches . , -■ their

in the Order of

rone in,mines I being daily re

ly received by m

'» and to

a derived, therefrom, :

ib other.eseeptinverytaljkly-ssrilad tricta. It requires not lees than nine n and four women end not men id an anty men and ten women ee ehsrtor libers, to organise s grange. Parties wishing to organise s grange will please send me e Bstof toe names proposed for charter members, and I will place the matter in toe bands of the proper officers, who will at once Institute the grange for them. The fees for charter members are fB for men and cents tor women. Initiation fees isabers after toe organisation of u — ' and *2

iformathmof

A I p-

fit the a^rirmHnrist—socially, s fact that people who mingle ith the world and go little in

dp.

, „ toe New York te Grange will bo held in Albany on third Wednesday of March, and it „ desirable that every town should be fully organised by that rime, 'as the officers then to be elected will bold their offices for the term of two yean. ’Hie press of this State will confer a favor by giving this letter toe benefit of their Smuocs, Secretary.

» Past.

daya of old Romo, at the Saturnalia, or festival in honor of Hat‘teld in tho middle of December, avee engaged with their mss tors perfect freedom in all games, sments end festivals. The festival sort of harvest home, when all the

fruit* of tor

r’waited’npon them’at tnV.lc~" The , icl kept, kicked itival was intended to call to mind the i blocks one mornin happy times—toe Golden Age spoken of | ered sufficiently to by the poeto-wben in very smu'ent sges I J-** to. charge w Saturn reigned and there was perfect ' toat night equality and nnanoyedhappinces amonfj | ^rio^eegm* ^" the I heard there was tr

investigations, > a snooeaefnl fatmBy an interchange of experience in . ASgncnlturel operations in the grange, we gain much valuable information, which would be difficult to be acquired any other manner. In this way I acquire not merely the theory of nning, but the practical experience of r beet farmers who are operating in _e same climate and noon toe same kind of soil, and who have the same obstacles to overcome. To become good end intelligent ciriaens it is necessary that we should have a thorough understanding of our system of government, ■nd to* principle* upon which it ia foundsd. Also s thorough knowledge of political Monomy. These are proper auDjocta for disenseton “-g So, also, would be any i

•- *- ’d it Holy month, m

uf Christmas, in wn of the birth of OhrisL . am is month. In the old |

„ r down toward onrlay, the greet Chirstmss festival made

tempt to pledge toe order'to any politi- — 1 1 ndid«tes would be highly oould not be tolerated it in toe grange. ■ net be distinctly under•order it not s political orgsnisaUon, and politics! discussions will not be tolerated in the grange, vet it will undoubtedly exert a powerful Infiaaooe upon polltioal parties by ednthtoksr taSteU 1 jSSSRuttas. present rime, the politician is of the people, bnt through the w of this order ‘ we hope to set, people again master of the polim. TJiii will be aooompUshsd by

re ins tr noted in toe work.

B.who ere e eligible

\ W perio!fitnl

! all kinds was suspended. The law inrta and achools were closed. The svee were exempted from ordinary

The Lively “ LeeeL” Few men appreciate the delicate duties of an editor, and especially of a local editor of a newspaper. They have a great many obstacles to contend with,

a great many and once in a wl death. Jenkins

while they a

Hew,

prroarions the papers.

fighting bravely the battle of ^He. Me lived Id a Western town, and earned a

ioc by writing for irked early and late, and instruct people,

young and old, by hie chronicles of

dilu’tothis'm infill ust ration

onioled his de , and in this to

little local editor

dy, and the next day ho wonlj’ meet the rongh and get all battered up, and go to bod for a week or two till the swelling came out of his nose and tho cuts in his face healed up. One time he told

Bella Times. The feeling of insecurity with regard to financial matters which lor the put few months has clogged the bnsinees

rapidly di

_s becoming . and people are bo-

le realise that after all the line

mainly dno to their own imagination. It wu. in fact, a gigantic acare. a veritable panic, u basoleaa ns the frantic rush of a crowd in a building on the shout of “ five," while ite victims may bo likened to sueh of the hapless bystanders u are trampled beneath the feet of the surging mnltitnde. : Like all great storms, this one has felt for somo'rimc to come; but in the

very prospect o object hu been freely diBetuwsd, th

xtday

the country, and tonkey king came mte local through i hovered between

herefure,having rs. cool-headed

Triple Murder In Barton.

It only remains for your ootret ent to fnrnish too detail! of the or ot tho Kimball family, says a

li'eiJy.^'T^eT^ly ^i,«?s‘ D. Kimball, his wife i daughter, the daughter .

ursr.

land.

m hoard e terrible

Legisletare.

iln dated “dflO."

-five mioers were killed by an in a colliery at Wigan, Engin paper has discovered a law ou proven te a man from marrying his he number of lettere sent lo tho

. ~rl Letter :Office at Washington in

It I 18711, is already i.402,348.

Silver fox is too most delicate and vu I expensive fur worn by fashionable la1 ■ dies. A muff sad bos alone cost aa high

A.ujaOO.

A landlord in Austin, Minn., offers to , furnish board and lodging for a bushel

S SS i SWSSKf t&SttfSiTrtS? boarders That period of tho year hu arrived i thought when tho sight ot a twenty-ponnd dog

B replied, "You had b

r j pound .sled u

3 remark that Squire Tompkins, who ■

luaily endo.'

the county and bniit his barn out of exhibited bridge timbers. ThenNqaire Tompkins quartern ol waited on the local and gave him a cow- from the hiding, eo that he eould neither walk, suspennior Four times thev pat the local in jail i hall or tt E tc Led into the police, they arrested ing wages in when bo wu on his way home at away from night, pot him in the calaboose, and | generally <

lew England States, '/oti

id employment sr :r,"S™ SiJi

chamber opened, in his night drees and What wu Intended with a terrible guh in his throat, from rj ^ ( . . Fond a,, j which the blood wu streaming, while ! i, M be en f onn ,| to b< in his right hand ho held an open razor. p ^ r are I Mr. Kimball, on seeing his boarders, , t ron i,le aliont it.

id boy on a thirty1 ’P*°-

r a mock mar- - evening party i Ifigal one. and

bankruptcy is largely j tnrm

se wu not i The mines of Peunsylvsnis have been ' jjaze. Upon the floor, in a pool of blood, i a* —I b“ve been reduced. The iron masters. ! dud, for as Officer Pearson stopped np

i to him ho attempted to get up, ol the » some time exolaiining, " Damn^yen |et

The expense Italy is enormous. Every ton of ooal is bought in England, coating *10 (gold) per ton, and transported at an enormous cost to Italy, The crowd In Paris warmly cheered when the verdict of degradation and death against Marshal Bazins wu rendered. The sentence includes payment of costa and expulsion from toe Legion

of Honor. The edito a buffalo ro

of | erty of the 1

blood, but I scalps, and other trophies

would iiavi

means lo frighten delinqu

fine prospect for in explosion and a , trouble is pul, and we note that re- i|, r officers arrived be wu dead. lUrine, of Francs, terrible loss of life, he went along for snmptions of Imsiness are extensively . On entering tho sitting room the offi- con 7Kied to death, and to bo an item, and the explosion took place | in progress, although in many cases il ^ r „ n „t 10 ed that Mrs. Kimball was ; (ronl | liB nmg proton, to hhre and the little local wu on hand, and. hu been found necessary to continue ! „ti]) in bed, apparently uleep, bnt, up- - ■ - - - - ... •

although he had one ol his eyes blown redactions uptime and wages. „„ investigation, she was fonnd to be ont. he saw enough with the other to The wu contingency, while serving ' dead There were no murks about her give his readers a fear column and a lo divert the popnlar mind from the fi to sliow in what manner she had

Al another time he climbed to the top of supplying work for large numbers of uni „ 0I1 ft hout the thront. Prom this Dwin uu |as ,, auc nc<! wu oom1 Salon reigned, and ell the oarilc ws. of a now Oonrt Honac they ware build- men. ,! it is supposed that she was strangled to | , . e -|,. n ,ted and ho rose to go fun ing. and the soffolding 100 feel from We regre! lo notio. rednelton, of Jcl,. ^The body lay in a nature] po.i- J^rtu^rd,sh* L^pwiSd yens people," the ground, gave way from tile care- wages on some of Uie rstlroada W e tion. with the hands crossed upon tl.e ; him '^ tho ., j ,t home io eulier Saxons caUcd Leeember lessneas of those she built it. Mid pro- hardly think that the best interests of breast, and the orderly appearance of Sunday evening." "So shall I," >ly winter month; bnt the Chris- eipitated them tothe ground. Jenkins, these great and ^ weallhy corporations the bedclothes showed thaUhe murder-j )(i v

.. .no judgment the mi —. rt unanimously signed an appeal for ev. which was conveyed to Marshal

iMahon.

e died with k found by I r

ol system in that the extravagance

December the most cherished — in toe hearts and minds of

Christian man and

making and feasting among all classes of people, from the -stonarsb. to too peasant. English literature, in prose and vorse, is full of descriptions of the scenes of the festival, when friends and neighbors gathered at the board, and partook of good cheer of every sort. The spirit of tho rime was shadowed in

A Chill and Fever Destroyer. .. ormmnmcwrion, which might ve a special interest for chill sad fe-1 r 'oadjlies, hu lately been addressed

had written something about n laiW ot . an abundant dcmamWor onr prodnrta. bedroom, a very sroaft apartment open i Joaquin Miller, In his booh about slitoi, and with a polite bow the length of time required for the ex tin- stoutest heart among them to quail. I to him a leather Bag. ^Tiile he tapwas. She then said nhe wu 1 dtement completely to die sway before I The body of th* girl wu found lying ped it lighter with his bowio knife too flimacy. •' In the paper this [ trade will he resumed, with even an in- | across the bed with her throat cat from blood oozed through the shams. Lookin your sooonnt of‘the party crossed vigor.—Ycicnftyfr American, j car to car the bead being nearly sev-| ing at Joaqnin the old Modoc said.

the local oditoi Flore McFlii

fally'srrayed in a'pink silk droi a white Swiss overshirt.' Now body hu been ridiculing the my being cither in an overshirt

ight. for his deeds wi ieu ^ He had to r

ig of hims

rk- n _"!t

fiea,'being known at the timk of oapri

£ ™ again ^

" property of a dofaultinff Treasx

or. Being fpnm

trnggled to u

avail. This completed

[ . Bradford, and upon his , uotce fonnd by the polio , centre table were handed to . give a olew to the whole l Mt°noto, whidT wu writ

, ( klood:

impletcd ,( r i, ( ,k |,ini. Wltat does yonr father 'Pt.hoing ,ay? Beeond Yonng Lady—Oh ho i the life don't say mnoh ; yon know pa is so

slow that I don't believe hoTniesr tho panic is in town till it bus most gone

e fori

( j offered for sab ’ I ten. She was

i for

" Tills tronbel wi

aud 8 my wife

iidTg 1 ':

led by

by Rindy

s, and was finally sold ,

Navy-yard in \Vaslmig-! <h"t * -as near nc,. aco

then taken to Now York,

| mntocL^'Thc ^Virginias ulied* from I davi/ Now. airatent the

7°, ! Kingston, Ji '

ntimlier abont eighty ; one-third isles, and two-thirds are females, joiety wu organized in 1790, si "

Fud?

a few

'-c. 1 tempted to land at sway by Spanish vaeaela. 11 she wu pursned by th md finally captured in whs 1

u October The girl

; the captives, after a

years crops are abundant and low. With rich, deop-plowed inth need not bo feared, and

s bottom of all this. 1 average crops can bo grown, which will so C Kaniu.i. " bring two prices. It is th> good farmbe married in the I m oul X 'k 0 OTBr n,ake ” mor,0 Ymeroifnl verdict of i The question whether a man can talk

asr%

I is evidence that there wu method i affirmative. The Lancet describes a madnesa. It ia not meet that we i esse to the point, occurring in the id only Ihy»l Free Hospital in London. In

op are seldom kept in moloaed fields in Northern California, bnt run * large in the mountain ranges, winter d summer, guarded by n shepherd, protect them from the coyotes, rcry night they are driven in and placed within a strong wattled or bruah3 corral, situated herd by the ahepshot for security. A man receives twenty-five or thirty doll an a month, in coin, for herding, and he ean ge a Seek of two thousand alone, t in toe lambing season, when he

- tbs (Fring; after that only once a year. _i The wool is sold unwashed ; and this -, ——, ... it- -fact, together with toe ontrageona - ing among toe homesteaders in Osseols frauds practiced by some growers, who - county. Hay and seed grau is the only pack stones and dung in the fleece, [ foal that nine-tenths of the people keeps California wool at a lower u. fignre in toe Boston market than any other ; lower even than Texas or Colorado wool. Growers who can command wbsat-fial ds generally pnttheir yearling wethers nto them after harvest, “stubble' .nem until fall, then drive them to toe shamhtes, when they have been eighteen montos on the hoof, in which tuns t sheep win do about tbs hart that is ia him.

Benedict Arnold,

tenediet Arnold, after his escape to British, wu allowed to retain in the tish army the rank of brigadier-, - - icral, which he had Reid in that of tho | ited States. He afterward wu sent l “* ...-h an expedition into Virginia, where ho committed groat devutation. After ‘‘ •'■1, he made a stiB more destructive xrsion into Connocticnt, his native te. Having taken Fort Trtunbnli, r New London, he barbelnsly^pnt ho sword, M§*Bet*°tho town on fire. He served afterward in Nova Scotia ' also in tho West Indies, where he taken prisoner by tho Frenh, from m, however, be made his escape. After the conclusion of the war, he took np his residence in England. In July, 1784, a duel ws* fought near Kiln urn Wells, between Gen. Arnold ' _ r! of^Lan^derdsle, in cenae-

nsed at spublio meeting,

retract. Arnold was attended by Lord Hawke, and Lord Lsn3 —*— Mr. Fox. His lordship de-

rtnrn his adversary's fire, bnt

if he wu not satisfied he might fire on until he wu. On this both parties separated. Arnold died ' ancestor Plaee, London, in 1801.

id. there are strangt mong the bo-- 1 -—

ion to the fat rs. KimbaU.

the boarders , she wu ui

fatal result already chronicled

reached.

Mrs. Kimball wuan unreasonable noma sometimes. Although she wu e widow when she took Mr. Kimball fora com! husband, she took no advantage her previons expert*-

the blast of jealousy wu fanned by the itep-danghter. Miranda Wells. She alsays cherished on ill-feeling towards Mr. Kimball, and Imsied herself in

jurying stories from op“ *0

ve too fire th .

e quenched itself. :

The Pennsylvania Special Eleetles. In the Bopreme Court of Philadelphia Judge Aguew delivered r-

In which all toe judges “ce> straining the election

family

e in married

Constitutional Convention hod not toe tensive powers it had attempted to icrt, and that it hod been gtulty of „ sot of attempted neurpation of *nthority in setting maids the election system prescribed for this city and insngerating a new one under which the election for the adoption

which had not been given to the bars of that Convention whan they were delegated u the agent* of the people to amend and revise tha constitution

A.man with a pistol bullet side, on inch above his heart, cut on his bead, and * frad called al a Bangor doctor's offlo* to get fixed up, tha other morning. He laid thsy baj bets hav' to*way," truth*

isr, the patient's

id wu wnouv out out, leaving toe of the mouth entire. Within n he wss heard to UT distinctly, lonld like some more beef tea." The libel suit brought by William Murphy to recover *25,000 frt " publishers of the Cincinnati At was decided in favor of th by default, the plaintiff n< whereupon the Enquirer rotaataa ; — * no objection to libel suits, . man uks tot damages he » thing is getting entirely too

operations of the stnristissl division of the Agrienltorol Department are box ing, year by year, more accurate

regular correspondence hu been established with 1,600 eonntics, which in-

nearly all of m prod action. "The importance of foreign agrienltnral statistics," uys the Commissioner, “is indicated aj tile constantly inoreasing value of onr agricultural exports, which, in the fiscal

• "tobsoeo 1!

Dim *f Bawhlde. The akin of sfl animal, whether Dow, calf, colt, or hoaaitiia* dims on toe * | til more at homo than at , Alnt it into narrow strips, and shave off the hairwith a sharp krufe fire, or in roar workdays and eveniuga. atrsp, an toohwlds! will hold a horse bettor and last longer than an inch rope. It it stronger than hoop iron and more durable, and may be used lo hoop dry casks and boxes, and for hinge*. Try it on 1 broken thill, or any woodwork that has baan split. Put it on wet and nail fast. Thin skins make the beat bag-strings in tha world. A —us. rope is a good zubstitat* for It is valuable to mend abroken

posse it is best to