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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1891-08-14, Page 6eateSsarsemee,easeasearaeaeweeessareararees.a44,Seseavessee • , • rut •••••• - - ----. --YOE 111014ifEt 41411-11 TITLE. ' ---,– END OF A...._VENDETTA. —_ DOWN ON FERDINAND. 414OW1fork Paper Says That is Why We A Noted Texas. Nitrate/ter Expiate* MB Ellitlisk Senlillie liallurt the PrePesed us --1 • . ' . , . . — . .• I Have Citizen Vanllorne. Crimea on the Gallows. Royal Match New York despatch gives the follow -'A Roosters, Tex., despatch Bays': fug: The Herald saya.—It is a. fact not Caldwll, weaaha‘nged ;to -day ,in the voonty Lenerally known that President W. C. Van- jail. He -die&without making a atatement, XJ..9Xne, of the Canadian Pacific Railway, but expressed the belief that he would go to 2.70eently. renounced -allegiauce- to- the heaven, Hip neck waa broken. Caldweirs •United $taat.!3§ 9f41_Tharica Nati fketlaateclad thttlip4.44,1Antwiwpoitably • '•- • • - become a leyalaillajee ,of toterie Qneenel d he wished, have told more about atamand 4gm_presu of • India. ' Origin of the fearbil strife whiCh raged ' :•1444:ferne Was moved to do this'. becauee an between the Jaybird and Woodpecker •• Alfgreannot hold- thUpeation Freeidehis faction/Sin Fort 'BendCounty than any other - of the Canadian Pacific roads, end. steamship pripener, He wee a negro far above the aellich,-hy-special-proclamationeewere-'-uanalantandaacia=of-hitrracestritatelligelice.- tionm tinte ago declared to be an "Imperial The warfare which existed for a couple of highways" of the Kingdom of Great Britain years between these two political spud the Empire of India.• This entitles the factions exterminated whole families, • company ta„a small subsidy annually from :araid scores of men were murdered . during the gush& Government, in return for its reign, but Caldwell is the only which, in case of war, the Government may person who' met a judicial death on liaise the railway without notice for the • account of it. • He killed Dr. J. M. Sham- trausportation of troops and stores. or its bleu on the night of July 31st, 1888. This needs in any perticular? of coairse.,paysiegfer,. .weat.heah,w,:AsAarsdera.eninaaajaapla-basssasietat, t . side ox he---V-e--naiiefa. 1)r. Sitamblen was a knowing ones that Mr. VanHorne will at prominent Jaybird or Democrat. He was an early date he elevated to a barouetcy The Canadian Pacific clique is ausact. the Canadian Dominion Government, and regarded as the leader of the Opposition to those who were controling the political destinies of Fort Bend county at that time. Mr. VanHorne has won his wayinto a strong Caldwell was a Woodpecker or Republican. position in this combination, albeit it is less On the night of the assassination Dr. Shem- than ten yeare since he resigned the position • bleu was sitting at the table in his home of neral seperintendent of the Chicago, with his wife and family surroundincr biro managership of the Canadian 'acific, which, at that time, was principally de- scribed by the expression "under construc- tion." BANK CLERK FORGER. The Deutsche Bank Victimed to the Tune Or At2oNtuke, A Berlin cable says: A sensation has been caused hero by a discovery of forgeries on the Deutche Bank to a large amount. One of the clerks of the bank who was allowed to draw bills forged some bills, and purchased therewith Russian roubles through a broker in the bank's name. The auditors 'of the bank, owing to the cleverness of the forgeries and the tam- pering with the books, did not detect the frauds until the bank was requested to meet its liabilities. A warrant was issued for the arrest of the forger, but he had A later despateh Pays: The sensation caused by the fact that forgeries to a large amount on the Deutsche Bank had been discovered is gradually disappearing as the facts in the case are made public. A clerk named Franck, in the employ of the \ bank, and a stockbroker named Schwieger are nowbeing hunted for by the police. Warrants for, their_ ------- - ---iitteat were issued to -day at the request of • the directors .of the Deutsche Bank on • charges of forgery. ' The Deutsche Bank will make good the loss incurred through the criminality of its clerk. Franck, it ap- • pears, who was allowed to draw bills of ex- change forged some bills and' with them purchased Russian Roubles through Schwie- is gers--The-total-loss-ineurrettbrthirbank estimated at $295,000. • A CHILI) SLAVE. Pledged as Security for a Loan She is Freed by the Courts. A ,Minneapolis . despatch says : Judge Corrigan heard ,the petition of Agent Tatro for an order to send 6 -year-old. May Scholle to the State school at Owatonna. Officer Tatro rescuedthe little girl on Saturday just as she was about to be taken on board the train for Chicago by a woman named Blisters The little girl's dot is a peculiar one. She was serving as collateral for a loan made to her parents by the Sister woman when she was taken by. the • officers. Her parents were very poor, and last fall they moved to Chicago. • They had no money; and the Kister woman offered to advance their fares if they would leave little May as collateral. 'The bargain, was struck, although, with reluctance on the • part of the parents. They have not beep - heard from, and for nearly a year little May • has been atthe mercy of the Kister tyrant. She'has been forced to beg on the 'streets and in saloons, and if she didn't get a certain amount it meant a beating. bi'the winter the Kister woman while drunk fell on the little one and broke her left arm. It was set, and two weeks later while punish- ing -her she broke the arm again, so that it is now crooked. The child was sent to the State school. LOOKS LIKE A FARCE. • • 'Vancouver Vastness Refuse to Detain Seized Behring Sealers. . A Victoria despatch says: The captain of the schooner Marvin went to the custom house yesterday and told ' Collector Milne that, isecotding to instructions received by him from Commander Turner of H. M. S. Nymph, in Bering Sea, he has to turn over his schooner to the Custom House as a seized and confiscated vessel, and that was what he was there to do. Collector Milne replied that he knew nothing whatever about the Marvin, that he had no orders as to what to do and distinctly refufied to take a vessel into custody. The collector gives the captain to understand that as far as the • customs authorities were concerned he was free to leave Victoria in his schooner and go • where he pleased. The whole affair seems to be nothing but a stupid farce, as it iseer- tain no British vessel can be seized and held here in any way whatever. The •British Government has done absolutely nothing toward enforcing the la,w after seizure. Admiral Hotham frankly admitted that he could do nothing. ' The Cars Left the Track. A Bellaire, 0., despatch says: At about 10 o'clock this morning pasSenger train No. 4 on the Bellaire, Zaneville & Cincinnati Narrow Gauge Railroad left the track three miles south of Bellaire, two cars being over- , turned arid dragged some distance by the engine. The seriously injured are : John Morris, baggage master, hurt internally, badly bruised and will probably die ; Chas. ItleElroy, leg broken and Otherwise bruised ; Wirt. *Elroy, head hurt and internal in- juries ; John Irwin, of Bethel, Ohio, head crushed and scalp injured ; G. P. Wilcox, of York, Pa., head badly injured. To -night all except Morris are reported to be in a fair way of recovery. It is rarely°, man hegira the pursuit of his health in earnest till he finds it is run awn. • r. u .en.y ere was a report of,a gun, and a load of buckshot crashed through the window close to where he was sitting. The doctor dropped from the chair in which he had been sitting, and with a groan expired. He held cloeely the Bible from which he had. been reading. No one saw Caldwell when he shot Dr. Shamblen. The evidence upon which he was tried and convicted Was purely drown- stantial. CROWDS AT TUE FFNERAL. Sad Scenes at the Interment ef the St. Maude Victims. ' A Paris cable says : Immense crowds of people, estimated at 25,00Q, gathered this afternoon at St. Mande to witness the fune- rals of the victims of the railroad disaster on Sunday last. There wee 24 hearses in the line, which led from the Town Hall to the cemetery, and thousands of mourners followed -the bodies -to the grave. Every man, woman and child in the vicinity seemed to have turned out in mourniug attire for the occasion. All the houses of St. Maude were draped with crape em- blems, half -masted flags and other signs of general mourning. Tho scene was harrowing in the extreme. The air was filled with theb •_wailing...and crying- ofathe—relatives -and friends of the dead, many of the women reaching such a pitch of excitement' that they went into hysterics, while others fainted with emotion. The widowed and fatherless were the objects of the utmost sympathy upon the part of all present, and an effort is to be made to raise a fund for the assistance , of those. who have been plungedinto the deepest distress. A letter from the Archbishop of Perla, expressing sympathy with the bereraed, was read by the Mayor, who, with the Prefect of the Seine,. had charge of the funeral arrange- ments. • AN UNWORKABLE LAW. John Chilmman a Point Ahead of the, Yankee Exclusion Aet. A Washington despateh says: Special Agent Moore has made a report to the Treasury Department in regard to the case Of three Chinamen recently arrested at Ogdensburg, N. Y., for illegally entering the United. States from Canada, and who were discharged by order of United States Commissioner Strong on the ground that there was no proof of their ever being in Canada. The special agent says this action of the commissioner will make it very hard to convict any other Chinamen who may be found at suspicious times and places in the vicinity of the St. Lawrence River unless they are actually seen to land. He adds, however, that he will continue to arrest them as fast as found and to secure all evi- dence possible against them. Assistant Secretatsy. Spalding has commended Mr. Moore for his activity in this matter, and has instructed him to continue to arrest all Chinamen believed to be illegally in the United States, notwithstanding the action of the commissioner. SUBLIME FAITH. A Company Organized to Lend Unabrellas to Subscribers. • • A New York despatch says: The United States Umbrella Providing Company has filed articles of incorporation. The object of the company is -to lend umbrellas to sub- scribers at a- moderate cost. The subscriber can take an umbrella with him wherever he goes, and is responsible for its safekeeping. The capital stock is 1,500 shares et $100 each. The incorporators are LouialCohen, Samuel Ramesfeltler,' Emil Weiger, George H. Weigert and Samuel Bauer..The com- pany will have offices in ',all the principal cities of the United States. A .subiscribei can go to any office of the company, present his subscription eard, and get, an umbrella. If a travellieg man • he can get an umbrella in JeraeV City, and 'turn it in to the corn- piny's office in Chicago if he has no further use for, it. A RELIGIOUS MANIAC • Rimini a Fireman And '41erlies To Put he Body into a Furnace. An Elgin, Ill., despatch says: the, Northern Illinois Asylum forsthe pane, in this city, Fireman George' Lindsay had for a helper John Anderson, a quiet -patient. While they were in the coal -house to -day, no others being present, the lunatic suddenly attacked Lindsay with a heavy hammer and killed him. Anderson was eaught in the act of thrusting theuncon- scious and dying mart into the furnance. Anderson's mania is of a religious nature. He had never before shown •hornicidal tendencies. Da nuagin g Test ins ony Eporh : Attorney (to witness)—You know this man ? Witness—Yes, sir. Attorney—What is his reputation for truth and veracity ? Witness—Well, he writes obituary verses. —The sluggard usually prefers going to he dogs rather than the ant w;c1ss.1,1"'sin-41;N0r P,,,t4;',R. • '• ' A London cable says: The rumored in -tendon to marry Crown Prince Ferdinand of Roumania into the British Royal family Ilea aroused such caustic and unfriendly comment in England that it is possible that tht.schenut will faitthrsiugholithOgh 4 4 caid the Queen has not re ed the propes sition unfavorably. , Ihe throne .of Roumania, wealth. and resources the - leading Balkan, State,'would be a comforta- ble addition to the Royal seats occupied jy diarairdaiitaiiif the Queen, -btit -harsh criti- cisms of the desertion by the Prince of Mlle. Vacarescoare yet too prevalent for the arrangement to lae popular at this time. The English people hate a jilt. It is said that a hint of the situation has been given to King Charles of Roumania, and that his love-sick nephew will not be led to the sac- rifice until a more convenient season. In „.43.frawar.Ms194==‘,-Fli-4th.-,,,ay.zwatti.rte " Carmen Sylva," who encouraged the Crown Prince's, attentions to her maid of honor, is recovering from the illness caused by the family jar to which it led, and Mlle. Vacaresco has been sent to Rome. RIOTOUS FRENCH STRIKERS. They Detroy Pro i ert an arge. A Paris.. despatch says : The strike of employes of the horse car railroads in Toulouse has assumed serious proportions. The strikers to -day demolished the kiosks on the principal thoroughfares, and tried to destroy the tracks of the horse car roads. Then the strikers gathered large quantities of wreckage into heaps and set fire to them, making huge bonfires, around which they danced and shouted in triumph. Finally the situation became so alarming that the municipal. authorities called upon the general in command of the military division of Toulouse to send troops to their assist- ance.. The general promptly sent a strong force of dragoons, which quickly cleared the streets of the rioters and others. . During the charge made i)ar the cavalry many people were injured and a number of arrests were made. The cavalry now occupy all points of vantage along the boulevards, while infantry and police are guarding the other main thoroughfares -and the pus buildings.' Here's DOES YOUR MORSE 134.1414.? HIS PEDIGREE. Some APProved Rules to Make Ilhu The Whalebaek Builder a Canny Scotch - Start. man.• Following are six rules for the treatment of balky horses, which are recommended by the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, says the Weeleo Sport. Persons who are unfortunate enough to own much eadmele are recommended to give one or more of these rides a trial-: 1. Pat the horse upon the neck; examine the harness carefully, first on one aide and then on the other, Speaking encouragingly while doing so ; tranaturap into the waggen4 and give the word go ; generally he will obey. 2. A teamster in Maine says he can start , the worst balky' horse by taking him out of the ahafta and making idea go around in a . . The. success of the whalebaok class of steamer e has justly made Mr. McDougald, the ihventor, fan:soup, and as usual all the Yankee newspapers claim him as a brilliant American. As a matter of fact, the great • whelebacker was hem. in the Scotch town of Leith,: 'feinted trade first class I boiler maker under Mr. Napier, in his ship- yard on the Clyde. When a . ming roan f he helped to build some of Sir H. .AJlan's Montreal li n ere ap.(1 .......finalissaacanses _ America, as a second engineer. He also. worked in a Detroit shltipt-yard, is crank o started - his big ship yards in Superior City. `Mac," as he is familiarly called, is now worth about a million of dollars, and will double it M few years. He is about 50,years of age aasaa Lesasesemsgseouagzy_aa-od-am-.1-9utgwegeae.:-m9".aeaa knows all•about iron ships, and our inform- ant, now 'an engine driver on the G. T. R., says he has a bad ,teinper and a burr on his tongue like a Highlander. When anything • appears- wrong Is is 'Worse, and like old Napier, wig often pull off his coat, crawl in through a manhole and fix a rivet or screw in a workmanlike / ' . ' as WP n To • • circle untilhe is giddy. If the first doesn't cure him the second will. To cure a balky horse simply place your hand over the horse's nose and shut oft his araindaannitaiiesarealgrtelii,,aalleaAllaighWEITs' go. 4. The brain of the horse teems to eater- tain but oneidea at a time ; therefore, con- tinued whipping only confirms his stubborn reseive I o can b a new subject.to think of, you willgener- ally have no trouble in starting him. A simply remedy is tp take a couple of tu • 11, y any means give him the knee, tight enough for the horse to feel, and tie a bow knot. At the first cluck he will generally go dancing off, and after going a short distance you can get out and remove the string to prevent injury to the tendon in your further drive. 5. Take the tail of the horse between the hind legs and tie it by a cord to the saddle girth. 6. Tie a string around the horse's ear close the horse's head. • Better Than Blacksnelthing. In his day, the blacksmith was a useful and with what was thought' ideas of round top and fie iron boats, interested capitalists w emven or whalebacks and the master mind of Amer- ican shipbuilders. —St. Catharines Journal. 0 class Distinctions in America. ' No one will ever pretend to deny that certain individuals are supe ior to certain other individuals in acquirer ant, in intel- lect, in goodness; but when it comes to planting whole classes on platforms and stages of eminence, the idea is constantly to be reprobated, and no American mother can allow her children to make such distinctions, uncorrected. Such classification of our citizensinto upper and middle and lower man. In its old form, the trade only sur - tiers, once well esta.blished in the popular vives hi rural districts ; articles turned out Mind, would help to Make it easy for the in great machine shops are largely super- next step—a monarchy upheld among these seding the products of even the country classes by the oppression and taxation and smithy. There are still blacksmiths in the restriction and resulting ignorance of city, but they are merely journeymen in a the•people. The children of the shop. Forty years ago it was different? even ordinary mother in America may in in New York, and hence it is not remark- such an order of things by possibility -be found - near- the throne;'they may, by more probability, be found with the peas- antry, or with the armies that will keep the peasantry crushed so close. to earth as to be no more than clods -anywhere but where • they can share or help the progress of hu, manity upward; as to -day, it j to be hoped having a chance to do so, tIjlo. And in a country founded -upon -it -doctrine-of- a - equality in rights, a country whose institu- tions have raised to personal sovereignty those who would be serfs and peasants had their grandfathers of one or two remoyes re-, mained in the old lands, a country whose institutions have lifted women to an alti- tude that is allowing her to display and use the best there is in her, ILLIIL becomes -any woman or the 'daughter of any woman to • able that one Charles _Beck- , who died. blic twenty years ago, as a blacksmith working for himself and probably employing a num- ber Of helpers, should have left his widow a snug little fortune and a number of city lots. Mr. Beck was wise in his investment. When he died he had to quit working for his wife, but in leaving her a number of city lots he practically so arranged matters that a Large number ef other people should continue to work for her. The result has recently been made public. Mrs. Beck died four years ago, and her real estate has just been sold for the benefit of her heirs. The total sum realized was $219,750. This is doubtless very pleasant for the heirs, but who earned that money? Itawassnot-the-blaeksmitleafor-heavras-dea-d during the time that the greater part of this value was- growing- through—competition among living men for the use of that land. It from the n w was not the widow, for it does not appear A PEER OF THE REALM. Question Settled as to the Heir t� an Earldom. A London cable says : The House of Lords to -day decided thatRandall Mowbray Thoinas Berkeley had established li-fs'clairn to the honors and dignities of the Earl of Berkeley and Viscount Dursley. The claim- ant alleged that the male legitimate issue of the fifth Earl Berkeley, who died in 1810, wag extinct, and that he, being the eldest male heir of the fourth Earl, was entitled to the peerage. Opposed tothis claim was the elairnof-Francis-%i Berlff- ley,Baron Fitzhardinge, who asserted that the fifth Earle of Berkeleyhad married- a woman named Mary Cole in 1785, but, acting under advice, a further marriage. ceremony'svas .perforLied in .1796. Subsequent to the death of the fifth Earl a question arose as to the legitimacy ' of the issue born prior to 1796, and the House of Lords in 1811 de- cided that the eldest son, who was born in 1786, was not entitled to the succession. The decision given to -day upholds, the de- eisiontiven in 1811, and. consequently Mr.. Berkeley will •hereafter be a peer of the realm. The House-- directed -that .Baron Fitzhardinge be non -suited. Ontario Liquor License Act. Chapter 194 of the Revised Statutes of Ontario, 1887, as amended by 51 Victoria, chapter 30; 52 Victoria, chapter 41, and 53 Victoria, chapter 56 ; and the Act passed 54 Victoriaa, Intituled "An Act Respecting Loc I Option iriethe Matter of Liquor Selhngs" This work, which has just been issued from the press of the TIMELS Printing Com- panyawilllse found to be invaluable to, all magistrates, justices of the peace and others interested in the intetprettstion and application of the license laws ; hotel - keepers, saloon -keepers, as well as the temperance portion Of th.e community will also find it to their advantage to become possessed of a copy of the volume. As the title page states, it is "a full and careful annotation of the Statutes respecting the keeping and selling of intoxicating liquors, including- notes of cases, en the Temperance Act of 1864, the Canada Temperance Act, 1878, and decisions re- garding the duties and liabilities of inn- eepers and license -holders generally, and the duties and powers of all officers charged with the administration and enforcement of the Licensing Laws, with an. appendix of forms."' Judge Sinclair, of this City, a legal authority of great weight in Canada, and an author of much repute, several• of whose works are now recognized by the legal fraternity as standards on the subjects with which they deal, is the author and compiler of the book. Associated with him in its preparation', which entailed an immense amount of labor and research, Was Mr. Edwin Ernest Seeger, a gentleman with an encyclopedic knowledge of all temper- ance legislation. The authors have popti- larized the work by eschewing all technicali- ties and legal phraseology as far as possible, so that any layman can grasp at a moment the meaning intended to beasere veyed. A number of forme in addition those provided fol. in the statute have heen added, ' including forms of Procsealirepa certiorari, objections to the granting (if licenses, notices under' the clansea r earpesst • ing the . sale of liquor to miners, inelariatea and others. So thoroughly and. plainly i. every clause of the License Act s.nd1.11 is amendments explained,and so ample are the notes and references that he who runs may read. The volume Containg 394 pages, is printed in clear, distinct type, aral strongly bound in sheepskin, and should be in the hands of every hotel -keeper, lawyer and, magistrate in Ontario. Operalarg' Wages Cit Down. despatch from Montreal says: The operators and other officials in the employ ,of the Great Northwestern Telegraph Cone pany in this city are greatly exercised just now over a well authenticated report that a further reduction of ten per cent. in salaries will be made in the very near future. They hear that the reduction hart already taken place in Toronto and Hamilton, and that There 18 a difference worth studying when • the economical blast—one man . called it a man .affectionately speaks of the " little treal. " blasted economy "—will soon strike Mon- woman at home and the woman little ad •• • home. e spaper reports that she a ded anything to the area or value of • the land bequeathed by her husband. All she did was to hold on. If she had been an idiot or an imbecile she could have done as much, or it could easily have been done for her. , We, do not refer to this case as one in- volving any blame to any of iini.parties con- cerned. They simply took what the law, sustained and upheld -by the people of this city and State, awarded to thein; and .they doubtless accept -the 'common opinion as to the propriety of the system under which they have fared so well. It would be folly to blame them for this. The incident, how- ever is one of many that ought to cause people- to consider serioutly the wisdom and justice of a system that thus transfers to a 'few people the whole valbe that . has, in the course of twenty years, been given to the land held by that blacksmith when he died. All the other blacksmiths who have lived in .New York during that period have, as members of the community, contributed to the creation of this value. What share of it do they get ? Let them go and do likewise, say the de- fenders of the existing system. Yes, let thein? How many lots could a ' journey- man blacksmith of to -day buy out of his savings? But it would not matter if all of them could do so. That ,,wcnild not affect the question of principle involved. That question is, Ought we to maintain a system of land tenure that thus distributes among a few values created by all, and does it by actually offering a premium to people to hold land out of use ?—New York ,S•taraciard., How to Advertise. Detroit News: " People mho kick about advertising not paying," said he, while the steaks were sizzling, " are those who don't know how to do it. The first requisite is to have a good thing to sell; then tell people about it so that they will believe it. The having of • the saleable stuff is not advertising, ef 'course, but if you don't have rt the ' will be a *failure. The secret of the business ill to have "art air of truth about yeur ads. Co' Evince the pseple that:you are telling the truth. Don't let them think an ad is merely a trap,' but a ;iv/4 tomcat invitation to buy some- thirs of Sake. Those 'rade' that start out , ea an entertainiog bit of reading matter aryl end rip with recommendation to use Unde Sarn'm .shinPleaters for pecuniary debt I ty raa k t he reader marl. She Died. Phi lad 611 p h ia. Record : Mrs. Hop k ins - Sea r lea , whose recent death has been Much talk"ed' of beeareie she was reputed to be the riahpRt, woman in the United States, left be- hind her a testimony of her wealth in a palace built for her to live in at Great Bar- rington, Maim„ which cost $2,000,000. To go from that magnificent establishment into a (Alin and a grave was a repulsive change. But. the mistress of many millions could not put off the journey. After all, the pleasure of great riches is but momentary, and there is no assurance that the possessor of a fine house in the United States will seourc fine quarters in the undiscovered country. Ma re h of Progress. The church doesn't. roast heretics now, but it fires them. ,Vir."17.1•,4?'"nr. speak of any of her peuntrymen or country- women ,as of the middle class.—HarpeP's Bazar. , Would Die Rather. • Epoch : "Miss Hijee didn't sing to -day," remarked a friend to the leader of the choir of the Church of the Offertory. " No, she has resigned." " I thought she had a good place. What was the trouble ?" " She was offended about the selection of an anthem which she had to lead off last Sunday, and vowed she'd resign sooner than sing it, and she did." "That's odd. What was the anthem ?" " It began : I have been young and now am old.'" The First Step. New York Weekly: Groom—Ah! None of that I • Minister—I was only going to kiss the bride. Groom—Oh, I know that's customary; but I won't have it, and that's all there is about it ! Bride—Why my dear, what harm is it ? Groom—None at all. But you are a married woman now, and I don't want you to contract the habit of kissing min- , isters. • • Made the Moon Blush. Washington Star : " Do you know," he' said -in a low tone, " that I feel very narrow- minded when I come to see you?" • " Why ?" She breathed the question very, very gently. •• " Because then I am a man of ono nigh dear." And the good, sensible old moon, who has seen so much of that sort of thing, made callol uprible haste to retire behind the nearest Whereat There Are Alany Tears. New York Herald : She (after the engagement) -0h, but George! Do you n k ? He (surprised and embarrassed)—Well— thank. you, I don't care if I do take' lee - thing. • , Jo, a -The man that never oommitted a folly - never appreciated wisdorn. ' um"'".'!'"!•s_elralossr.".'"‘"'?""a*• ss". ThAt Helpa to Cure The r',old. The disagreeable taste of the COD LIVER En is dissipated in OfPure Cod Liver• Oil with HYPOPHOSPHITES on' Lm..dE.A.1\TID sor).A.. ' The patient suffering from ' C ON SU MPTIO N. COUGH, Com), on WASTING 1,V,4114 ES, takes tiro, rnmody as bewouid take milk. A per* filet ern inside? and 4 Wonderful flesh producer. ) rake no *then AU Dr4irmi,g1n, IJOe., 2.00. SCOT2tj BOW:VA a a- r.,e0a„ set', s • ,:esas W