HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-04-03, Page 31
P
melee you wanter pet 'em,
a ,our;
g,y t
eyes an' Yet `om
Do what they dog gone 'Please, for, recollect,
their little troubles
To them air bigger'n meetin' houses ; ours an't
more nor bubbles
That float along the river Life, and we are only
ripples
A runnin' to the shore and.dyin'—ripples ehasin'
ripples,
There's sumpen in man's tears that ohokea up
All the formd and speeches
ILIv sympathy. Your dumb heart aches and
vainly it heRe :chef;
Tears, Idle Tears,
There's suropen In woman's tears that makes
Colne close up to her like, and—thio' perhaps you
hadn't orter
And lest you're gray and married, better not,
here to tell yo—
Jnst1 pus your Sr around her waist and tech
her chin, au —well—you—
Yoii dare the at ma uv cryln' up with little
chunks uv see,
For women fol they live on love, both mis-
tree,es and misses.
There's suinpen in ..the children's tears that
stand! and liateni
That sob unstrung a chord that can't be mended.
Teardrops glisten?
The light uv Joy is fiickerin' out. Don't speak.
There's no uee tryin'
To comfort him. He'd ruther be alone with God
and oryin'.
_Ciar'er N. Quslep in Dallas News.
v:
et }Is' Names.
Frances is "unstained and free";
Bertha, "pellucid, purely bright " ;
Clara. " clear " as the crystal sea ;
Lucy, a star of radiant "light " ;
Catharine le pure " as the mountain air ;
Henrietta, a soft, sweet "star";
Felicia is a " happy girl" ;
Matilda is " lady true ;
Margaret is a shining "pearl" ;
Rebecca, "with the faithful few" ;
Susan is a "lily white " ;
Jane has the willow's curve and " grace " ;
Cecilia, dear, " is dim of sight " ;
Sophia shows "wisdom on her face"
Constance is firm and "resolute
Grace, delicious " favor meet " ;
Charlotte, "noble. good repute";.
Harriet, a fine "odor sweet";
Isabella is a " lady rare ";
Lucinda, " constant as the day"
Marie means "a lady fair ";
Abigail, `° j: yful" as a May ;
Elizabeth, " an oath of trust" ;
Adelia, "nice princess, proud";
*gstha "is my good and just";
Letitia,' ' -"avowed";- . •- .
Jemima, gpft,eoand-in-air
Caroline Pa sweet spirit hale" ;
Cornelia, ` harmonious and fair ";
Selina, " a sweet nightingale " ;
Lydia, "a refreshing well ";
Judith, '"a song of sacred praise"
Julia, "• a jewel none excel";
Priscilla, "ancient of days."
Man and His Shoes.
(Txauslated-from-the;Japanese )
Sow 'ranch a man is like his shoes !
For instance, both a soul may lose ;
Both have been tanned ; both are made tight
By, cobblers ; both get left and right.
Both need a mate to be complete ;
And both are made to go on feet.
They both need heo'ing ; oft are sold, -
And both in time will tura. to mould.
With shoes the last is first ; with men
The first shall be last, and when
The shoes wear out they're mended new ;
When men wear out they're men dead too
They both are trod upon, and both
Will tread on others; nothing loth.
Both have their ties, and both incline,
When polished, in the world to shine ;
And both Deg out, now would you choose -
Tobeamanorbebisshoes?
TO BE MAGJIFLOUT•
THIS SPLENDID WORLD'S FJIB
BUILDINGS.
To Visitors the Columbia Exposition's
Superb Grounds and. Great, Imposing
Structures •will Present a bpeotadle of
Surpassing Beauty.,
Many thonsande, no doubt, have begun
they will partially enclose a circular har-
bor, from the °entre of which will dee, on
tl .g> eaE _ P-i�d@l:ll�►1,�l. Q9)1311 4.1411P& . statue of.
Columbus or of the Republic. On the
embraoing porliona of the piers will stand
44 exquisite, isolated columna, represenh
ing the 44 States, each one bearing over its
capital the coat of arms of the State it
symbolizes. ,Beyond the harbor, the north
or main pier will extend out into the lake
to a total distance of. 1,500 feet, taking
there a deflection several hundred Leet to
the southward, and havingi
n at its extremity,
RIGHT UP LABOR.
1[aniregto of the Canadian League.
The following manifesto has peen issued
by 'the Eight Hour League. of Camels :
The immense increase of machinery has a
tendenoy to displace msnual labor. It hoe
been estimated that 10,000 workingmen
are thrown out of employment every year
by improvements in machinery. While
improved facilities in production bave
added enormously to the wealth of
countries in the aggregate, still the amount
' A TALE OF litORROIt♦
a chat the Dark Places of the Earth Could
. _ _Beareollz plaroh.
A sew Weeks ago some ot the good people
of Collingwood undertook to raise money
auffioient to remove part of the Wonob
family from the den.bt filth and iniquity in
wbioh they lived out in the township of
Collingwood, a few milee from the town.
In a wretohed hovel there lived one John
Wonoh, his mother, an old deorepid,
wretched oreasure and her daughter,
0.
mother of
:.:� •as"-�*�. ,�+ psi 'i-+�'i.".oi" �''.i`1i •us'�sialln"�ro�i.-. �e.'icZL i'C4r a15�u` i•�U'4[i.' > "�'•' `�''�'i �.=''YZ{'cYL'�y-'1-ids.=1'1 .'Y..+,E7rl^t'. +`^� 4,.,• 9. 1T ` fri';=_ m�..�R1�A� ee �prr:Jiad YO �m�^+7_,., ..^. x ,ti.:0,7
n zr"'ITti';em, ,' � --6•t w i I co Lme y�E y, mit T f
11 a �Del I i:'�'i613�111c—', rr^"x.^.•»..T
groanile of the Columbian•Ezpoeitfon will
appear—what Bort of a epeotaole they will
present. A. bird'e•eye view of the site and
ouildinge, and a aeries of outs or drawings
showing the elevatione of the several strait -
tures and their ground plane will soon he
leaned. Without waiting for these, how-
ever, a general idea can be given.
CHICAGO A .BIGHT IN ITSELF.
>•ThiofiI.M-,sig2} .,•,. .
map n '' w • o- wu`i'ne�
of the city itself—of ite great, wide, baey
thoroughfares and its magaifioent build-
ings, ten, fourteen, and eleven, eighteen and
twentya':epries high. To see this great,
throbbing' commercial heart of America,
the marvelous young giant among the
°hies oitiee of the world, even though he
does not spend the time neoeesary to
inspect it thoroagbly, will • alone amply
repay the visitor for going. But a seeond
surprise will await him when he catches
hie first glimpse of Jackson and Washing-
ton Parke and the magnifioent array -p><e-
eented by the Exposition buildings.
Beaatifol as was the site—the Champs de
Mare -and its approaches, and captivating
to the admiration as were the graceful and
imposing edifices at the Paris Expoeitione
of 1878 and 1889, it is believed that they
will be surpassed by those of the Colum-
bian Exposition. The Chicago rite is four
times as large and has a frontage of two
miles on Lake Michigan, she 'second largest
body of fresh water ' on the globe. The
bnildinge. will cover twioe the area and cost
twine as mnoh as did those at Paris in 1889.
Alone they will coat nearly. fifty per gent.
more' than the total expense attending the
:Paris Fair. The_ best._arcbiteoe in thie_
country- have prepared the plans for the
several bnildioge and the straoturee they
have designed will exhibit ;the highest
aohievements.ot Amerioan arohiteotnre.
A MAGNIFICENT SITE.
More. than 1$4,000,000, exclusive, of the
Dost of the land, has been spent on Jaok-
-eon-and-Washington-Parkesin-laying-them
out and beautifying them. Another Mil-
lion will be spot in improving the former,
which will be the chief location of the Ex-
position. Additional lawns, terraces,
flower -beds, rustic, seats, walks, drives and
fountains will be constructed ; statuary
will. be planed at completions pointe : the
lagoon will be enlarged by sinuous branches
and the lake beaoh will be made a. charm-
ing resort for visitors. .
tion,In immense Greek pavilion, `200 feet
in diameter, gaily colored and 'adorned.
Here visitors may sit and enjoy the cooling
fake breezes, listen tothe finest music, and
obtain a magnifioent view of the great
Ezpoeition building() and other shore
attractions.°
A VISTA OF SPLENDOR.
From the pier, extending westward aoroea
TEA TABLE GOSSIP
HE COULD NOT MAKE MONEY.
Said Jones to Smith, " I'm not over wise,
Because I never advertise;
I've been in business many a year,
And I've not enough to buy good cheer."
Said Smith to Jones, "I am no fool;
To advertise is my constant rule,
And customers I turn away-
Just try it ; I am sure 'twill pay."
—Indiana women have wreoked &.saloon
and threaten to destroy every one in the
town.
—There are about six hand' women
typesetters in New York. They are em-
ployed chiefly in the publishing honsea and
on the afternoon pipers. -
The darling little baby boy presented me of late,
I love with all a father's fond delight;
And yet the little rebel, quite unnatural to state,
Is up in arms against me every night.
—Lord Grimshorpe, England's noble
olookmaker, has just completed a chick
for the poesoffioe of Sydney, New South
Wales, which is said to be the largest
timepiece ever sent out from England:
-It is proposed to build en open-air
theatre at the Crystal Palace. London,.with
seating oapaoity for 5,000 persons.
-It is stated es a foot that women grow
taller in England and men grow shorter.
Toba000 end other habits are blamed for
this emneieg elate of affairs.
—A novel advertising medium is a large
white shirt collar projecting up under the
ears on wbioh is printed the suggestive
" Take the side whisker route for
Montt be and the Groat Northwest.
—It's a great mistake that a middle-aged
man ahonld eit down in the chimney oorner
and doze upon the peat. St. Patrick was
42 years old when he entered on his work
of converting Ireland, and, though he was
an enormous worker, ho is said to have
been 95 wh'eri he died.
—Boston has seventy millionaires.
Among the first oepiteliste of the town are
the Ames family, who reside at North
Easton. August Hemenwaye, one of Boa-
ton's greatest merchants, left the largest
estate ever administered upon in that oity.
It amounted to $22,000,000. Frederick L.
Ames and Benjamin Piero() Cheney aro the
two richest men in New England, either
one being worth over $20,000,000., Gen.
Butler ranks well up among the rich men
/f the Hub.
Minnie Palmer will shortly' return to
London, and, under the management of
Charles Abnd, appear in oomio opera.
Mise Minerva Parker, the Philadelphia
women architect, is but 28 years old. She
!tae a deoided talent for her ,profession, and
her bneiriess reputation is well establiehod,
she having designed, among other notable
buildings, the New York Century Club
House, in Philadelphia. She ie a brunette
and a pleasant adnversor.
Judge "Upper of Paterson, New'Jereoy,
was call upon to settle a neighborhood
quarrel one day lest week; and he did it,
by sentencing a young men and woman to
marry. He ordered a oonstableto escort
the young couple to a . magistrate and see
that the sentence was carried out, which
was done, in epite of the opposition of the
girl's mother.
Probably the le rgei los-6/6F rec'eived' by
a lawyer in tbia country was that paid to
JohneE.- Pareonbs of: New Yorke who is seta
to have received $400,000 for services ren-
dered in organizing the Anger trust.
BY THE WATER ROUTE.
The most deligbtfal, probably, though
not the speediest means by which the
visitor may reetoh the Exposition grounds,
will be by steamboat on Lake Michigan. A
ride of six miles from the embarking point
at the Lake Front park, with the towers
and gilded domes of the fair buildings
constantly in eight, will take him there.
When abreast of the sight a grand spectacle
of enrpaseing magnificence will be before
him—she vast extent of the beentiful park;
the windings of the lagoon ; the superb
array of scores of great buildings, elegant
and imposing intheir arohiteotnre and gay
with myriads cf, flags and etreemere float-
ing from their pinnacles and towers, end
to6vering above them all, the lofty Proctor
tower. - In the northern portion .of the
grounds he 'will 'see a picturesque group of
buildings, perhaps forty or fifty of them,
constituting a veritable village of palaces.
Here, on a hundred &ores or more, beauti-
fully laid out, will stand the buildings of
foreign nations, and of a number of the
States of the Union, surrounded by lawns,
walks and bede of flowers and shrubbery.
How many of them there will be cannot bs
stated yet, but it ispertain that they will
be numerous and will very greatly in size
and etyle ot architecture.
UNCLE SAM'S EXHIBIT.
severe • un • ee w ue, a g,
Burnham says, " a spectacle unparalleled
in the world—e marvel of arebiteotural
grape and sublimity, an exposition in
itself." To the right, at the entrance of
this grand avenue, will be the great manu-
factures building, and farther back the
other attractions already referred to.
To the left . will be the agrioultaral
building, •measuring 800z500 feet, de-
signed by Architect MoKim, of New
York. Thia, Chief Burnham says, will
be a " dream." It will be severely
rectangular in form, but made elaborately
ornate with statues and other relief work.
Its coat will be halt a million. Between
*hie end the huge manufactures building
jute a branch of the lagoon. All down this
grand avenue, encompassing a beautiful
eheet of water, will stand imposing build-
ings, along the majeetio facades of which"
will sweep the gaze of the visitor until it
rests upon the administration building of
the Exposition, whioh terminates the vista
nearly a mile dietent. Upon traversing.
this " Long Walk," as it may be called,
after the famous way from Windeor. Castle
to Ascot, the visitor will find it a veritable
•Bois do Boulogne or Versailles, in paint of
.beenty...pf- effects .. pxoii_noed._ en _landeoao
arohiteoture and gardening.
Peesing the agricultural building the vie-
itor will come to the great Maohinery Hall,
which lies to the westward of it and which
is oonneoted with it by a horseehoe arcade
doubling a branoh of the lagoon. It will be
nearly identical with it in size and cost,
but will differ from it considerably in ap-
pearance, being " serious, impressive and
rich in architectural line and detail,"
Chief Burnham says, " and the best work
of its designers,' Peabody -& Stearns, of
Boston."
Opposite Machinery Hall and north of it,
in the center of the "Long Walk," will
eland the Exposition Administration build-
ing. To the northward of the 'Administra-
tion building, on either side and facing the
grand avenue, will be two more immense.
bnildinge, one for the electrical and the
other for the mining exhibit. These will
be about equal in size, covering each a
little more than five acres and a half. Both
will be of French renaiesanoe.
PRIDE OF THE LADIES.
re
A little farther Booth, across an area of
the lagoon, will be the IT. 8. Government•
building, measuring 350 x 420 feet and hav-
ing a dome 120 fees in diameter and 150
feet,high.—It wiLI_be aojletr-aoted_of_-stone,
iron and glass, olaesio i'n etyle, cover four
sores and coat $400,000. In it will be a
very oomplete exhibit from the several
federal departments, etc.—war, treasury,
agriculture, interior, post -office, navy,
Smithsonian Institute and National
mueeeim. On the lake ehoreeast of ite build.
ing and in part in the intervening apace,
the Government will have a gun battery,
life-saving station complete with apparatus,
a lighthouse, war hellbent' and a full size
model of a $3,000,000 battleship of the firet
class. This will be oonstrnoted on piling
alongeide a pier, being thus enrronnded by
water and apparently moored at a wharf.
The " ship " will be built of brink and
coated with cement. It will be 348 feet
long, 69 feet wide amidehips, and will have
all she fittings and apparatus that belong
to the moat approved war vessel, mole as
guns, turrets, torpedo tubes, torpedo nets
and booms, boate, anobore, military mast,
etc., and a full complement of seamen and
marines detailed from the navy depart-
ment.
THE GREATEST OF ALB.
steaming by the Government exhibits'
the visitor will oome abreast of the largest
building of the expoeiden—that of manu-
factures and liberal arts. IIs will measure
1,700 x 800 feet, with two interior courts
and at its centre a great dome 350 feet in
diameter. Seirronnding it on all aides will
be porch two stories in height, affording a
delightfnl promenade, and a view of the
other buildings, of the lagoon, alive with
row boats, gondolas, and pleesnre erafk
propelled by electricity, .and of the ground°
generally, This' building will be of Frenoh
renafeaance, is designed by` George S. Poet,
of New York.
After' passing this immense strnotnre,
which will be three times se large as the
largest building et the Paris Exposition,
being nearly 400 feet longer and twice se
Wide, and covering more than 81 aoroe, the
etetimboat will. drop alongside the pier.
Ti ie,_ae;deoigned by Anguetnio-St Gendene;
of Feris, will be a thing of lseauty and s'
scarce of,mnoh enjoyment to visitore. Two
parallel piers Will extend from the those°
about 400 feet where, taking out -curves,
Still . farther north and directly opposite
the park entrance of Midway Plaiseanoe
will' stand ..the . Women'e..building,_.which,,it.
is expected, will be one of the chief objeots
of interest on the grounds. It is to be
400 x 200 feet in dimensions, two stories
high, and will cost $200,000. The exterior
design will be furnished by a woman
architect. Here the lady managers will
have their headquarters, and here will be
collected a doubtless wonderful exhibit
illustrating_the progress and attainments
of women in the various branches ot in-
dustry. -
HIGHER THAN THE EIFFEL TOWER.
Pawing -the Woman's building the visitor
can turn towarde the northeast and inspect
the foreign and State, buildings in the
northern portion of the perk, of which he
is supposed to have °aught a general, view
from the steamboat deck, or he can turn
sharply to the west into Midway Plaiesanoe
and second the Proctor Tower. This will
be constructed of steel and be 1,050 feet
high, or about 100 feet higher than .the
Eiffel. From its sop the view obtainable
of the Exposition grounds and the great
city lying to the northward will be meg.
nifioent beyond all desoription.
the workers is out of all p opertion to shat
wbioh goes to the non-produoer or owners
of the instruments of production. Ever-
inoreaeing competition among the die.
posseeeed for opportunities of labor
inevitably tends to cheapen labor and to
reduce wages, thus deoreasing the oon-
eumptive powers of the people. If there
were one million of unemployed men in the
United States (and it is estimated there is
oriminale "' this means a lose of three
million dol lar() a day tothe oonenmptive
power of the country.
Increased consumptive powers are a
necessity in order that -capital, maohinery
and produotive oapaoity may be profitably
employed.
That all may work who are willing to
work, a general shortening of the hours of
labor has become an absolute necessity
This ie aoknowledged ou all hands and in
all civilized oountriee.
What ie known as the eight-hour move -
went is feat assuming vast proportion° the
world over.
Is Canada to lag behind in this move-
ment ?
We think not. It is the movement of
enlightened intelligence against brute force
and ignorance. Believing , that there is a
wide-epreed feeling in this country,
as in all other countries, in favor of
an eight-hour working , day, not only
among the working Masses, but among
all classes of the community, the
Eight Hour League; has been formed,
in order to bring together into one organ-
ization the oombined force of this growing
conviction. This ie'the more neoeesary, ae
-we- believe- that this partionlar-reform- ie
one of the very firet importance, in ite
bearings on the vast social problems of the
day, and a neoeesary firet ate in the direc-
tion of an ultimate solution of those
problems.
The object of the league is to dissemi-
nate literature dealing especially with this
-question,- and-in--every-legitimatesevay to
promote the growth .of an enlightened
publio opinion in favor of this much-needed
reform.
Continuing, ' the manifesto gives the
conditions of membership and of organiza-
tion.
GNUS FV.K coxtPLEX•IONS..
sig olli assn. A o� o
years been rife as to the kind ot lite that
was, led by the miserable beings, bat few,
it any, of the aotaal feats ever reached the
.ears of benevolence and virtue. Enough,
however, did transpire to awaken enff tient
horror at the recital to lead to the break-
ing up of thie vile abode of poverty and
crime.
As reported a few weeks ago, Jenny, the
How Women Determine What Jewels are
Most Becoming.
A woman who has a red face will not
wear emeralds, even if an arbitrary man -
milliner sends her home e dress that
emeralds would embellish. A woman with
a poor complexion does not improve it by
pearls. These lovely and innocuous orna-
ments really derive their chief lustre from
a_traneparent akin, as they depend largely
on reflected light°. The irridesoent colors
on pearls attract notice' to the whiteness of
a white ground, but on . 'an ' ill -
colored -ground they are decidedly
vindictive. A" woman whose face, how-
ever beautiful, takes verdatres tints in
the shadows should avoid rubies, eepeoially
pink ones, andseate topazes. A face
may have thee&greenish tints without
damage to beauty, remember. I am not
selecting all the most unfortunate women I
can think of to threaten and warn. 'Every
face hie a great deal of green in it, es a
portrait painter will tell yon. Giotto (who
painted the loveliest angels conceivable)
and all his pupils made the ebadowe on
girls' faces startlingly green, and the eyes
green, too, sometimes, and yet we receive
the impression of exquisite delicacy and
brilliancy. Still, red is the complementary
of green, and it the dress should be pink,
and no help for it, the jewels nearer the
face ought to counteract it.—Contemporary
Review. '
She Wanted the Dress.
Cloak Review : Husband—I won enough
money last night at poker to get yon a new
dress.
Wife (sobbing) --,I think yon might stop
playing those horrid cards, John. Yoa
know what it may lead to in the end, and
to think that I should ever ,be the wife of a
gambler. Thie is t.t-too mnoh. What kind
of a dress shall I get. '
No Ashes.
Puck t Mr. Donny—Are yon wearing the
traditional sackcloth and ashes daring
Lent, Mies Findlay ?
Miss Findley—Well, partly, Mr. Donny.
The eaokoloth goes ; but I live in a natural
gas town in Ohio, and, yon know, we don't
have ashes.
For a Consideration.
Hawkine—I thought Jones gave the
minister an extraordinary large fee.
Miller—It was large, but yon must re-
member the old gentlemen bad to kiss the
bride.
A Bad Boy.
New York Herald : Judge—Yon are an
incorrigible young aoonndrel. Yon stole
from your parents, and then left a good
home ; why did yon do that ?
Penitent—Your Honor, it was impossi.
ble for me to Bake it with me.
The Kind That Know.
New' York Press : "So ehe'e going to
lecture on how to manage a husband,• is
she ? How many husbands has she had'
herselL?"
" Why, she's never been married."
Mb -
Sol. Smith Raven bas been aoting for
twenty.eight years and yet he is only 42.
He wee a drummer boy in war times and
found himself in Cairo, 111., where be
joined the stook company of theDefiance
''r'heia% e in 1862 Ht •play oil `ntiliky paw,
sa eopgs between. Rote and • played tbo
g
in the 'isicheetra—all far Six
dollars a week.
cent ems a °ing we aen J o
ser, while three other children, two boys and
a girl all under 13, are still left with
neighbors in the vicinity. lap a day this
week a couple of kind ladiedsfrom town
drove out to see how the children were ter-
ing. They saw the little boy and girl, the
latter is about 11 yeare old. Both were
still poorly clad, and going barefooted in
this rigorous weather ; but what was meet
distreeeing and horrifying was the dreadful
details of the death of one young girl last
fall. Tho story told by this child, and cor-
roborated by some of the neighbors, rune, so
far as it maybe told, something like this:,:
One night last fall when the unfortunate girl
now deceased was lying on the hearth she
oronohed too near the fire. Her rags caught
the theme and before they were extingdished
her body was dreadfully burned. What
she suffered no tongue oan tell, but one clay
a neighbor women who suspected some-
thing was wrong, torsed her way into the
hovel. ` She foundthis poor girl in a most
deplorable condition ; the terrible state of
the burned flesh was rapidly bringing death
to her release. But what is -most dreadful
to relate is that this girl who lived for
three or -four days after she wee burned,
gave-.birthto an infants day or two before
she expired. The child that opened its
eyes on infamy did so only to close them in
a few hours, and then be huddled into the
same, box se ite unhappy mother and buried
out of eight forever.
The rest of the story about the frequent -
ere of this dreadful den, about the conduct°
of the woman Jenny, and the treatment to
which ebe subjected the deceased girl -are
too horribly diegueting to be told. Names.
too, are given, and surely if correct, snob.
monetere should be held up to eternal rep.
robation.—Collingwood Bulletin.
A Dainty Easter Bonnet.
A bonnet that is a very dream in violet•
has a orown of open gold lace that is out-
lined, about the face and aroand the top
with small violets, the gold lace showing
plainly between 'the two rows of violets.
Just in front are two tiny, white love birds,
that seem to nestle among the pale blos-
soms, while at the bank are loops of white
ribbon from among whioh comes up a white
aigrette. The ties, descending from under
theee loops, are also of white ribbon, and
ere fastened in a prim little bow just' in
front. A bonnet of . thie design made of
lane efenw, the very-y-ellow-ehade`-will bo in
vogue, and oan, ofcourse, be trimmed to
suit one's fancy as well as to look well with
one's gowns. -The Ladies' Some Journal,
Simple Remedies.
Wet tobacco will relieve bee or weep
etiuge.
For nausea lays little, pounded ice on the
back of the neck.:
For nearalgia brnipe horse radish and
apply as a. poultice to the wrist.
A oonple of figs eaten before breakfaet
are an excellent laxative, eepeoially for
children. '
When suffering from overstrained and
tired eyes, bathe them in hot water several,
times a day.—Housekeeper's Weekly.
Explaining the Item.
New York Sun : Client—Yon have an
item in your bill, " Advice, January 8th;
$5." That wee a day before I retained you.
Lawyer-er know it. But don't yon
remember, on the 8th I told you you'd
better let me take the case ,for you ?
Client—Yes.
Lawyer -Well, that'a advice.
The Right to Shoot.
Detroit Free Press : The average citizen
firmly believes that he has a legal right ,to
shoot any one discovered robbing hie hen-
house or olothee-line, but in the leek year
five citizens of different Status have been
sent to prison for banging away at such
visitors. They are not shootable °ffencee
in any State. '.
Just Like Kingston. "
Rochester Herald: Elmira is laboring
with a deadlock in its City Connell, eight
Republicans fighting against seven Demo -
orate and the' Mayor. - The famous old
vote of 8 to 7 is revived, and the Council is
holding all night eeesione in taking votes.
on adjournment, tabling motions and so on.
One's Nose -Power Measured.
Tho olfaotometer recently exhibited to
the Academy of Seiencee in Maris is a'little
apparatne for testing the smelling powers
of individuals. It determines the weight
of odorous vapor in a cnbio centimeter of
air which le, perceptible by- the olfactory
sena() of a pdredn. -
There i° now a probability of the groat
Manohester ship canal being finished, the
corporation of . thrt city having voted over
$10,000,000 for that purpose. Althongh.
comparatively 'short in. length, it is one of
the greatest -engineering Works of the world.
Victorien Sardon, whose latest drama,
" Th'ermidor," was euppreneed by the,.
Frenoh Government, is 59 years of egs,
rioh and famous, though hie firet literary
effort° were failures.
A woman may gain something by pray.
ing for a man, but she wastes time if she
etternpte to pray with him.
Antungtlro gifts which the -Empress tit
Germany received at the recent christening
ha babe wt1 °':iani
as N $16,�O
ek ri$ d o'nds
from the Empror of Austria.
Too Many Negatives.
Life : "No, Mr. Van Dneen," said the
proud young Boston beauty, as she flaehed
her glorious orbe upon him ; " I shall never
allow no man to hug me."
And Mr. Van Duren promptly folded her
in hie 'arms.
A Mean Remark. -
unsey's IVeekiy : 'Mand—They tell tie
that niatcbee are sometimes made in
heaven.. .
Ethel =-There ie a -chance for you yet,
then, isn't there, dear ?
6HEFFIELD, England, has been making
eXperimente in street paving. The latest
experiment is with steel and wood. Pave-
ments of somewhat similar design were
laid in the sumo city three years ego, using
oast iron and wood, but the advantages of
steel over oast -iron wore so great that the
former material has been decided upon for
see in the future. The steel and wood
pavement has been in nee forsoven months,
while the cast -'iron and wood has been: laid
for three years at a point whore the traffic
ie heavy, and es yet has shown little or no
sign of wear.'
New York girle, not to be outdone by
their English rivele, have an extremely
good. " ladies' eleven " of their own, who
play en excellent game of 'cricket in the
privaoy of the Berkeley Oval. The athletic
young women of Gotham ere addicted to
hockey oleo, es well as Bedminton,''gnoite
and archery, While their capacity for tennis
is illnetrated by such habitual victors as
Mies Helen Read. Mise Merton Read, Mise
Mallin and Mrs. Saliebury.
James Lane Allen, the Kentucky novelist,
livor ,set Lexington, where the scenes of
some of his stories have been laid. He is a
professor of Latin in Bethany College and
an earnent student of comp,irativepbilnlogy.
Speaker Reedy declared that the McKie.
ley Aot has for its objeot " the aiding of
the poor by raising their wages." If this
bp true the knowledge of it hue not yet
niched the workingmen or their employ-
ers. On the other hand, many thoneande
of workingmen in-verione protected indite.
Wee throughout ;the country are now
striking againet a reduction of their wages.
Workingriien may well distrust a system
which, under pretence of protecting them
tigeinat foreign labor, heavily inoreasee the
ttsae on their"" nocossaliell of 'living -and.
invitee- the: foreignJabororft horo.til4ompet4.
with them on their own gronnd.--Philadel-
phia Record,
r y.
Pi
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