If a sudden suowstorm comes on the Yorkshire moors it may bury many sheep before tho shepherd can get to them. How severe thu storms are in theso high altitudes nono but those who live there can realise, says a land agent in "Farm and Home." Thero aro no friendly trees behind which to shelter, and the "gnylls," which intersect the moor, aro too often the most fatal places for sheep to shelter iu, foi tho snow drives and drifts into these small watorcourses, making them veritable death-traps. :
The tailor was ill with a dangerous chill, And his breath came in fluttering "pants." His life, so they said,, just hung by a "thread," . '• For the 'dootor had murmured'] "no
. chance.", , . No words can cx-"press" his awful dis-
tress. But it "seams" that he put up a fight; He took the thing sure, Woods' Peppermint Cure, "Sew," "needless" to soy, he eot right.-Ad.vt, 3
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Dominion, Volume 3, Issue 798, 22 April 1910, Page 4
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153Untitled Dominion, Volume 3, Issue 798, 22 April 1910, Page 4
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