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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1906-10-04, Page 6mormorrommummimm, l'esiiM,P2a.11111111111111402 60 Years Experience in stove building is con- centrated in the Souvenir Steel Range. It has. no equal amongst modern' cooking stove's.. Added to its compact—, ness, is every advantage to' be found in any SOUVENIR RANGE Its Aerated Oven, changing the air thtreiti comPletely, without lessening the heat a degree, gives it an immense ad- vantage over all other ranges. . Its deep fire -box holds the fire easily over night -7 --no ashes can accumulate to choke the draft. . Its 'grates .can be removed 'without loosening a Single. bott, , .Every desirable improvement for effecting a saying in labor,' time and fuel is found in the Souvenir. ' THE GURNEY-TILDEN CO., Limit6d' '' . lli.A.IVIiI.T3N; i/INNIPZCi, MDNTREAL, VANCOUVER: 4cj„6 • ' • i;etry Souvenir is absolutely guarantee() by the timicer,s.. •NORUIPIROM41.10.0.1.5...0.11.1MUNIMPONOMPROoNTM•911.0611/ ir dependent upon good air ts in heating your house hich carries the fresh air of y room. 9s mace e made. Its grate is of the pit is deep and roomy. Its is of steel throughout, the most effective and rapid mown. Its joints are ab - air and gas-tight, and its — onstructi.5n is substantial sive. That's why We can e it to last a lifetime. s for our Furnace Cata- It contains many valuable lug system. ited eu TON nig Benefits at London Theaters. Bettertou, in 1709, when his salary vvas fa a week, had a benefit and. re - !eyed £76 as his share of the receipts Ind £450 in .the shape of donations. he biggest benefit performances of odern times have taken place at rury Lane. That for Ben Webster. eld in March, 187.1, realized £2,000; the profit on the Buckstoue celebra- tion, in June, 1876, was 11,200; for the Nellie Farren benefit performance, in !larch, 1898, there was obtained E7,200, though half of this amount was secured from private donations, which Elowed in when it was known that the Messrs. Rothschild 'had volunteered Lo invest what SULU was realized, give the popular comedienne an annuity and, oe her death. grant the theatrical charities half of the capital.—Lontloa hronicle. To Inanre Privary of Mail. All private and confidential corre- pondence, aceording to a postoffice in- pector, should either be sealed with ax or else addressed and stamped on he back instead of the front.' Sealing with wax is an excellent insurance of privacy, .but it is a difficult and awk- ward operation, and wax and a match, candle and seal are not always at hand. The other method is much the better. After fastening down the flap of the envelope firmly. affix the statup across the flap's junction and write the address across it as well. Theii it is absolutely impossible to steam open the letter and close it again in such a way as to escape detection. T-4111er" The ClintcA News.Recor THE TABLES OF STONE. A Curlew( Calleniation Prom the TaMauel stud the Bilge. Did you ever figure on the proha- ble Size aud inuttense strength Of Moses, haeing yoUr Calculations on• the dimensions OP the tables of stone,. as given by the Talmudic WrItere? In the Talmud (folio 38, Column 8) it is said that the tables et stone Upon which the comMandmeats 1,1rerct writ, ten were six ells long, siX ells broad, and three ells Melt. In the Bible. Azodus xuU, 1, we are told that "Moses went down from the mount, and the two tables of the testilnollY were in his hand." "Hand," mind you, not hands, though It must be admitted that It would have taken a strong pair of hands to per- form the task of carrying them, even 'on the level. Nhw, we will put the Talmudic and the Biblical a.ceounts to- gether and apply the inathematleal rule. The Hebrew ell or cubit was, at its least estimate, a measure of eight- een inches, which would have made each of the tables a stone block nine feet long, nine feet wide and four and one -halt feel thick. If common stone weighed as much to the square foot then as it does now the tables would tip the beam at about twenty-eight tons! Was Moses one of the ;tante of those days or bus some one made a mistake in calculations or in the state- ment of supposed facts?—klxclutuge, The Creole. A pure creole is a person born in Louisiana of Preneh or Spanish par- ents. It is a mistakeu idea...1,o suppose that a creole has negro blood In his veins. A creole negro is one whose orefathers were owned by the early .rench and Spanish settlers and wha po'ke a corruption of those languages nown as "gumbo." Their descend. uts are the creole negroes and should tever be conflicted with creoles in the rue sense of the term. Why, Indeed? At an examination of Sunday school hildren the following was one of the luestions put upon the blackboard: 'Why did your godfathers and god - others promise these things for ou?" The answer of a bright girl, ritten neatly on the slate, was, 'Why, indeed?' She got marks. October 4th1900 Dear Mother* LOST AND FOUND. - Your little osi-e's are a coostat.tt care sn Englund :to teen Cent Its the nee. 1 # . Fall and Winter weether. [hey will catch cold. Do you know about Shslols'r Consumption Cure, the Lang Tonic., no whet it hu dont for so many? It is old to be the only tellable remedy for Al diseases of the air passages in cLil It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to lake. his guaranteed to cute or your mon '7 is returned. The rice is 25c. per hotel% and all dealers in medicine sell HILOkiL This seatedy should be in every household. SARp I N ES. • The Way They Are Coolted and fire. pared For Market. Sardines are caught in nets, and after being well washed the heads are cut off and the fish are sprinkled lightly with salt. After lying for a few hours they are placed on grids itt rows ainiost perpendicular. The frumes are thou placed in pans coutainiug boiling olive oil. The oil is eliauged as soon as It becomes too black and dirty for com. flatting the cooking process. As soon as the tish are considered sufficiently cooked, they are withdrawn from the pans of oil and the grids are placed on the tables covered with zinc, the surface of the table inclining 'to- ward a groove in the center. The oil Is thus carried to n vessel prepared to receive it. Round the table stand the women whose business it is to peek tlie fish closely and uniformly in boxes. The boxes being full, the fish are cov- ered with fresh oil and the lids are.then sotdered down.- Thus hermetically sealed they are placed in .iron baskets and immersed in boiling water,. The smaller boxes are thus boiled for half ' an hour and the larger ones, somewhat longer, in proportion to •size of box. The fish are then ready for the market. The Wearing, of Hats. More or less of a. inodern habit is the constant wearing of hats. Even as late as 1759 Horace Walpole mentions is a matter of course that he never wears a hat. "Remember," he says, writing to a friend notoriously careless about his , dress, who -was expected home trona Holland, "everybody that cornea from abroad is supposed to come from France, and whatever they wear at their first reappearance immediately grows the fashion. Now if, as is very likely, you should throughinadver- tence change hats with the master of a Dutch smack in a week's time we shall all be equipped like Dutch skippers. You see, I speak very disinterestedly, for, as I never wear a hat myself, it is indifferent to me what sort of a hat I don't wear." Plot to Blaine. Father (sternly)—Now, Sophia, some. hing must be done to reduce your ex. enses. You are actually spending ore than your allowance. Daughter—It isn't my fault, father. 've done my best to get you to in. cease it. Doubt ful. Lady (in dry goods storey—And ig this color also genuine? Salesman— As. genuine as the roses on your cheeks, miss. Lady—Wm! Show me a collier one.—K lei nes Witzbin tt. Just Badness. Faiher—That kid ought to have a spend:1nel He's altogether too preeo eiotis: knows more than i .10: Moth er—iiitt. dear, I wouldn't call that pre covions. 0ely ihe illiterate and the sooial eleci cnv, afford to trent the language reek Bratnerd. FOR TENN'YSON'S MOODS. Eccentric asaussee In which the Poet lEteeePret1 Softie Visitors. It was an eccentric reception that Sir Henry Bosco was given when be Visited Lord Tennyson, The former bad been .unwillIng to intrude on the poet, but consented to accompany a friend, William Summers, whO had a note of Introduction from Sir Lewis Morris. They found Tennyson at lunch. Sir Irony writes of it: "Ten- nyson at once asked me to sit by him, while Mr. Summers was held in con- versation at the other side a the room by Lady Tennyson, The old Man be- gan with the Words, 'Your name has been before me at every meal,' at which I 'expressed great nstonishraent, not thinking that he hart aver heard of me. "And thereupon he produced a small vial containlug saccharin, On the out- side Of which was au advertisement containing a few lines of some appre- clatory remarks respecting saccharin which I had made in a lecture at the Royal Institute. This notice I had never seen, antl. on my return home I wrote to. the proprietors requesting them to stop issuing such notices, as I 'could not have my time used for ad- vertising purposes, aud this they did. "In a few minutes, without further converaatIon, Tennyson rose and said: 'Well, I must bid you goodby, for I must now lie down, lain going to smoke a cigar and go to sleep.' Upon which he walked out of the rebut, giv- ing a distunt nod to my disconsolate friend, Will Summers, who had come on purpose to interview the poet, but With whom he had not exchanged a single Word." • Dangerous. A contributor to the "TransactionS of • the Devonshire association" says that when he came to a certain pi/Me AO vicur he asked whether there were, any sick to be visited- - • - "Oh, no, sir:" was the answer. "Nobody is ever id in Berrynarhor. There is au old man, to e •sute, v ninety. who has taken lately to his. -Bed, but there hain't much the matter with.: him that I know of." "I thought to myself." added. the• vicar, "of the story of the. Sketchinan who said to his doctor: , pte a vara long face, doctor.. D'ye think I'm damnmrously• ill?' `"Na, nn,' was the reply. .11 don't think•ye're dangerously 111. but I thiuk ye're dangerously old.' " • The Missing Key. One telegraph operator Was, telfing another of a quarrel he had had. with another at the other end of a wire. "I gave him tits over the Wire 'for' about two minutes." •,. - "What did he say?". "Did not give him it chance to say anything. I just opened the key and • he could not -come hack at zne." "Goodness." put in -a bystander: - "wouldn't it be line if we could work a scheme like that ill matrimony? JUst open the key a nd that would be: the end of it." (LONDON) Undnebtedly the beat brewed ott the continent. Preyed to be so by analysis of four chemists, and by awards of the world's great Exhi- bitions, especially Cittcwo 1893. where it received ninety-six points out of a possible hundred, much ',tether than any other Porter in the States or Canada, ' silIelemlineamareanalligeilleolsaaa MATCHES ON MAIL, BOXES, The Scratcher May Afterward Get es Liebt on Prison Bars. alr. Smoker, see to it that your Un- cle Samuel doesn't catch you striking a Matcli on one of his mail boxeS. He'll surely make trouble for you if he can prove that a certain scratch on the metal of one of those gray boxes on the corners wiles made by your draw - lug the tip of a Lucifer across That's about what. the mail carrier told the fellow who is handing you this advice. It was given juit after the adalser bad stopped, feeling 4.tenoky" after coming out of, an office where they wouldn't let him puff the stogie he had in his pocket, to Scratch a match on the. Mail box. He wag rather surprised -When the mail carrier, comingup to unloeit the box, said: 'Don't do that:" ' "Why .not?" he mieried. "I've he* doing' it for years. It doesn't hurt the box. Other fellows and myself have scratched matches .on Alia top of this mail box for years, and there is only a little worn vetch on the metal to show for it." • "'Well, go ahead if you want to," Sighed Ithe mail Carrier,. "But remem- ber that, tf the .inspector ;sees yoe, up you go on a:charge of defacing govern- ment property.And you know :that if the inspector' ever sets you it's you for scratching matches .on the prison bars for a day or so. IlY-hy." Trees. Authorities Ott forestry say that • seventy-five years are required for the oak to reach maturity; for- theasit.. larch and elm. about the sante length of time; for the spruce and fir, about ,eighty yeara. Atter titia time'. their growth remains stationary for -SOTe. years, and then decay begins. There are, however. some ezeoptions , to this,. for. oaks are still living • which are. known to be 1,000 years old.• iteesinvil tier.. • "But." protested the first deer girl, "I haven't got the face to tisk a favor of him." -Well," rejoined dear girl No. 2, "you might visit a complexion speehtliSt and have your face remodeled." To smile at the jest. which plants a thorn in another'a breast is to become a principal in the iniseltief.—Sheridan. ognizea lieward. "It you lest a want worth $10 what reward would you give the tindor for Its returo.r "Oh, ten or twelve dollars." !`Tell per eent, .ell? Well, that is about right" said the detective. "It Is more, though, than the average per- son would give. Mere In America in lost and found cases there is no ree. oguized percentage of reward, but In Euglaud there Is swat a percentage, namely, half a crown to It pound; that Is to say4. about 10 per Mt. Ten per Cent Is what the finder attest be paid la TAIngland provided lie takes his find to a police station or to Scotland Yard. .1Ie always does so, as otherwise the owner is apt to give hint less than the legal 10 peecent. I lost In a Londou cab a kit bag worth $20. The kit bag was returned by the cabby to Scotland. Yard and I left there for him gladly a reward of ' $2. If the bag had been worth *2,000 I'd have been charier of handing out $200, but that is what I'd • have to do before the Scotland Yard folks would have given inc my prop- erty, When you lose anything be pre- pared to give at least 10 per cent IQ the Ander, Ten per cent is the reeog- nixed reward in loat and found eases abroad, and it Should be the recognized reward' here. To my mind it is little enough, and they who give less are to my mind dishonest, ' THE GAME or CHESS. yineet Mental Erlllmaster tl e world Eats Ever Known.' When the Romans placed ver the door of the temple of Janus Fix Ori- ente Lux et Ludus Scacchorum" (Out of the East Came Light and the Game of Chess) they spoke of the two great- est bequests that the storied east had ever made to the young and aggressive west—the light of •religion and, the greatest mental achievement of man_ since he came through Eden's frown- ing portals. ••• In the middle ages, when the monks and abbots watched from afar the bru- tal soldiery of Christendom swooping down like a pestilence on the sunny' plains of the south, they chanted "A. furore Normanorum 'there nos, 0' Dom- ine" (From the fury of the North - Moir the Greet Penguin litttehe4.' It may interest you to -know that the. great penguin of the southern cir- cle standing vilth its head as high as omen's waist, batches its eggs in a pe- culiar manner. These are not laid upon the greeted and brooded 011 .after • the manner of most birds' eggs. The female lays two large eggs.The first aher. hands Over to the male. bird, the other she keeps. The egg is held on 'the Upper surface of the large fiat feet, and is pushed up under the iveisteoat of thick feathers. It is there held close to the body, Whose warmth gradually vitalizesthe youlag bird. So tenacious are the parent blicla Of this grip that If you knoek one of them over it will fail on its back with its feet stuck stiffly out stilt clutchitig.the egg to its body.' • to orrsa Stern Father—You want to marry my daughter, do you? Young Man -4 do. Stern rather—l•Viutt's your salaryl.• Young Man—Oh, I'm nOt particular. Just give me a trial of three months, and if I fail to give satisfaction as a son-in-law you need not pay me any salam Matte Vita10. Man bellevea himself irresistibleat all ages, and e* be,that the older he grows ths more fascinating he thinks Itittirelf.—London World,. Tointny and His rets. The British soldier is inordinately fondof: his animal pets atid has also the reputation of coveting those of his neighbors, particularly dogs and mon- poses. Parrots he siniply adores, ensi. it- is calculated that their strength. In the seriiee is in the proportion of at least six birds a Tommy. Ite is sup- posed to teach them to be:personal in their language, but as a matter. of- fact Tenn:ay io for seine unaccountable reit- son a very emotional Man. and his birds as often as not have to submit to a sound musicial education, hymns being as often taught them as the Comte songs of the day. men deliver us, 0 God) and returned, to chessrall that- was lett a noble soul in a vain and turbulent world. •• Chess is the Anest mental drillmaster the world has ever known. As a mind trainer it ranks above Greek and dia- lectics. • But, above all, it is the science of bat- tle; it is -war without bloodshed; it is strife on equal terms, which all the race loves and to which from the Cradle to the grave all mortality is subject. 4 "is- good - tee It has that "Bich Fruity Flavor" whiott belongs to Red Rose Tea alone, Prices -25, 301 35e 401 50 and 6o cts. g•er lb. in lead paCketS T. H. ESTABFlOOKS, GT, Jolite, N. IS. , Weessisege. TORONTO. a WitleNatON St., E. • 10111111111/1111011/11/1111.11111/11.11111111.111.11101111. • The 1Print Dutch cars. The etiquette of Hollandis exceeding- ly strict in all classes. The young girl is inost carefully chaperoned; and she nevell goes anywhere, even to church, - unless accompanied • by her pitrents, sOme male relatiVe or other equally trusted attendant. At a clan.ee the parents sit round the wells sipping their coffee or wine, and tlaeyoung men moat make the best of their charkees in the opportunities afforded by .the dance, for when it pleases the guardians to depart there is no hell./ for it, thegirls must go ton. An uns Married girl al -nays takes the right • arm of her escort, While the matron, takesthe-left, perhaps because it is• nearer the heart, , • , The Saline 0111 Dhabi. Two thousand years ago the chafing dish was used by the Greeks and Ito.' mans. It was' so popular that it Was Used for a table ornathent, just .es flOral pieces ate used noW. Pliny re- lates that the tragle actor, Atlacipus, had a dish worth 1,000 sestereil. NO doubt then, as at the present time, the actor enjoyed his hot midnight meal tilled With grateful appreciation of the chaf- ing 'dish. • An Inspiration. "Of coarse," skid the new rector, "yetf .hope eventually to reside in a heavenly mansion' where"— "Oh, yes," Interrupted Miss Uppiseh, "and I do hope it won't be too close to the heavenly huts of the poor." An Example. • One of :the Most intanate friends of Dumas filS -was a refirednaval ofq, ficer vvho lived in a distant corner of Normandy. As soon, as the author of "Canaille" died the officer went over all the letters. which he had received from Dunaas and destroyed every one .which referred to any private 'affairs of the -author. Where letters also con- tained literary and philosophical 'ffis- cuesions he carefully blotted out the personal parts tin order that nothing Of a personal •nature might ever reach a publisher. This is an example not often followed. A Good Example. Oentroue racie—I will make yea 61 'monthly alloWaucel huts . Me, 1 will pay no debts: understand right, uncle. Neither will 1. Believe that every 101;41,111g t 7011r Noui coetalus its own proPheeY ot fulk Minion t.----Itradbut/. .tt .Avoiding the Doctor. Dr. Sanderson, an old, Scotch phy- sician, was a queer character, but a clever doctor. .S6 rotighly did he handle his patients that the ignorant were chiefly anxious to escape hint, The story gees that as he was pasSing alopg the street one day a sweep roiled from the top to the bottom of a...staircase outside one of the,houses. • "Are you liurt?" called the docthr, running forWard. , -'• "Not a bit, doctor—net a bit," replied the tnan in haste.. "Indeed, I feel 'a' the better." i' • DlaSnomden knicker—My wife says Site feels like an old rag. Bocker—Then the only cure Is to buy .ber some new ones,—New York Sun, - ATest for the Kidneys eatesteneezzeriattle' DAVIS 8c. ROWLAND AGENTS CLINTON '41mersa • Goethea Last *Murata. The story of the deathbed of Goethe reveals ft•strikiug. picture -of fortitude, artistic:, calmand intellectual activity tender the cliillingt.deves of death. .The • infornatileris zillthered from letV • vvrith on .March 2g..t; 183.2, the4'.aY 11^- 'or' Goethe's death, by • Fretilein' Louise - Seidler, an art student and Clew, 'friend of the poet's faintly. On. the.' es ening before .nia dissolutionwith ap icy 'coldness taking possession ot bius and the • death 'rattle begiuniegto be. . audible, Goethe, with his charthing daughter-in-law by his side, would talk of nothing but his -per theory ,of color. »of the treat,/ of Basle, or Isis deslre 'that the children should go to the thee- , ter, or his plans f.'er -dee near future., As sleep 'diat. net emelt. with the It Ight. It'e•ctilled•for. a..uewly voitime- of , history, cLild vei'ed. • his in; tb to 'read it With le joke. Lven si s o'eltiek the 'next Intes ning. just thre4 and it nail hour -s. 'before he...died, he sent for a. pertfollo, epticia lead was setting, hintaelf to classify. Simie• papers .whert the last agony seized' Ile then laY motintiess.notwithstand., ing. its violeuce, till respiration ceased and. the . heart ' stood . Globe. . - • . ilaw to 'Handle Your Dowse.: , TiCeiS1011 81101,11d ueVer 111 handiing horses he confounded Witle unwise de• termination to have things your way. In this 'epplicatiOn it means the facility` of 'dOing the right thing et the riglit,in stint and may be cultivated .by -fre- quent practice with all sorts of horses, and of course no hands were ever cle- veloped by handling any one anthill): or any one kind of a horse. It is decialon that .gives the hand themonier-i the horse yielde; that uses the ronghest methOdS: at a pinch, for hands are by no Means always delicate of tench; that frustrates thentost determined at; tempts of kicker, rearer or bolter; that Picks the best road; that makes the animai carry himself' to the best ad- - vantage. for the pttepose of the moment 'Decision is very' .close to intuition in effect. Decision deminates. the ',situ- ation at many critical moments, and the horse is quick to discern and to pre - same upon its: abaence.•• . There 'is, no such thing as a safe partnerehip with a horse. You must'be the master or be will be, to your certain future discora,,, Atsare.—W. M. Ware. in Outing Maga- zine. A NYONE who is at all troubled 1-1 . with backache, urinary dis- orders or any of the symptoms of kidney disease, should make the fol- lowing test to find out if the kidneys are diseased :—Put some urine in a bottle or tumbler and let it stand for twenty-four hours; if there is sedi- ment like brick dust, or if the urine is discolored, milky, cloudy or stringy, your kidneys are cent of order. These are Certain indications that you need just such help as is best supplied by Dr. Chase's Kidney - Liver Pills, the most reliable and most thoroughly tested kidney med., icine extant. Dr. Chase's Xidney-Liver Pills, one pill a dose, 26 cents a box, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Portrait and signa- ture of Dr. A. W. Chase, the famous receipt book atithoro Oxl every box. mami.attiremasalisi • 1.• 'Creaking It dentri, "Laura,” • said. Mr.. 1 ergasora.4elb buttered 0. biscuit pnd oased ii,ifapocaunisit.fhoiinsa, bseuctsYsa,stl,,t1111C tt. osne tt lest night, about 11;" found -leis n into. - Sothele. • body had spaa ed a pane Of 'glais xih a • basenaent.w.indow,- crawled inside and • Made his way up the Stairs to the'firet floor. There hasn't been. Anything 'dia. turbed in the pantry, the china cleset' or :the sideboard; has there?' "No," answered MS: Ferguson: "But, mercy,. Who eattld it have, heel. find what do yeti suppose he wanted'?" "I suspect," he rejoined, clearing his throat, "that I—er—did it myself, and,: • that I wanted to get . inside vvithout, distarbing.anyhotly. .YOtt had tilt gonel to bed, and 1 hftd left any latchkey MI: my other treuser'., It will ,cost. about, cent:;; to repair tiie` basement Wint dow. 'The weather' man, t• see, Pre., ''dicts possible: showers for today." .• . An Exception. Peagreen—Ii3. la. always an lucky number'( ' • Not when, you ?Old all Of the trumps let a game of whest MS WIFE'S LUNGS BOTEI AFFECTED But the Great Consumptive' tireven- tative brought Health and Bap* ness to hi,s Home • "Our dottor said there was ao tIl•b" for sty wife as both her lungs were affected," says Mr. L 11. Walter, of Pearl Street, Brockville, Ont. "It Was a sad» disae,- pointment to us both, just starting out us life, only married a short titne. But before she had finished the first bottle of Psychinet the pain in her lune quickly went away, and sifter taking six bottles Mrs., Walter: was a new creature and perfectly' well a " That is just one of the many famlliei into which Psyltine has brought hope, health And happeness. It is a living prook that Psychine cures Consemption, But • don't wait for Consumption. Cure yoise. ItGrippe) your Cough, your Bronchitis, A. M. and P. at, your Cetera', or your Pneumonia with the Here is an excellent catch: Ingenu remedy that never fails'— ask any friend or aequaintance the moulting of a. m. and p. 113. Yoe , fore dinner and after dinner," Or Mt E will receive some stIcit answer ea "Why, morning and afternoon," or "Be to 12 &deck high noon, and after V/ airoesOuttcdd ,-keen) , high noon," or "From midnight to floor , and from noon to midnight," or "Anti meridian and post meridian; before and after noon." It is a Conservative wagei that every one to Whom the qUestIon if Larger einem SI and,1112—alt druggieta put Will stake his happtnese on tin OR T. A. SLOCUM, Liniited, Toronto, word meridian, while the correct, wore Is Meridiem. Ante meridiem and poSt merldieni are abbreviated to a. M. an m, • 0. Per Bottle raying Him 11 aelr. "VIII yen please pull the bell?" Sale an elderly woman in a ear to it not% c011ege looking fellow hanging to strap in front of her. "No, madant, but I shall be glad ti will the cord which rings the bell," hi answered. "Oh, ileVet Mind," she said. "Thi cord is connected with two bells—front and Welt—and you might OOP th: wrong end of the car." --r#1011111/1113111 ':4,1111111ftairomajlittrAw-1- ' filA nummalleo. w mommummig1000•;;;;;;Hme -1m.!ol10oattc,ormegriso-Aprrsoy‘o:, mEAis i0oIm0m0or,, ,..., 1wIAatA V:, I.it. !name eilLOIR.STAY Mental 10 1, lit titAtOntOttli111411144 0.44e1i No. 0 strand 11.1; attength teuty.tsres Minato( mat. 01 1 0( .11.v0116.1 *Ira. 111,11 elf 04 tit1 rt411-.11,6 rut Wintoe, AltlatilLtri F C.N LC 0 LA MITZI, V/ IP Irt 14114.i 4w1, ' v.