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The Signal, 1894-3-15, Page 6
T$a SIGNAL: ©ODIRTCII. ONT., THURSDAY, MARCH 14. 1894. A FEW FLORAL TYPES It has teen worn"u•• blooming Is'/'k, h. Kerr * 1. *eel L..or. T.. be Iles, a110 rueal•Srtanu *It 1. r •uac defrn.e- Ie-• tearer; 1I.•.;arden •n.1 the wl4etweas, i:,�,a,MAneee •rid the teem 11e., h:..•a rtae.ackei ural .N411110ntr 1 f••r 1?.-ai ..nolle+ A ,..t o... r was fliers lover rel, e....eeriest. "1"' 414.,.'1 think his sweetheart very like unto • neat.. ether .lays. the works- halitlil Ilse rent!.•. Ilq.ld aunt, Who ewer *ail by 1Mtwnaa's auk.. ..t w i. keen men afraid; Who t• .•r►r 1 uta tnn.v "vamp:era•" sad rah" to w'1.e 14•,4.,..1 t,hei:.u.-rtit ,.en t ., ages jolw..a if 'yn•rhe.1. of C And yfl ,.• I.s a n l: .:g •r<• t.c rpr�itale,Loae to isle.,. :an•1.• t4c •..; .1 • . .... Ler Anal Profit' tele. 6,..•u and a '•h.•s.,..:rve There d,•- rhino t:., •r...t o -rat, of •Tual,t> N Guest. 1 .1I.. Lw/ ..f limb. wird. t.nead; low brew, argil tinrlyeehi ahnle4e• e, That shoes its owner is the daarhler of $ rd araner rise; Cold, roles. the er.s jed . y sooner of pear plebe. lane) r► Hue s,•ll Ler r. s1 ale the stately ll!)' te-p1Aea how, wrest ---herr conies, the modern mall, who's ••..poejsy hH&! ,•! .. .. The hustling senor sennnisli et) le end Mai beef hiyv!ep"dite, -- The girl of hint: and •tri 1e, T voice, and spa= mer, utour elrids. Who d..rea mah'..-.wt, 111. 0(•.ar-in-hied. ' 4414 roiLer weal WIo.,d•wi rine. site&«, a ti.tarrtle. *Dot .i..ra •4 aff owe.. iron ; Tor Iwo the ti»r.- u,. -i (a,tarea tis terse ea to bemu,n. Front In.11tinnpd;• THE l'li-ANT(IM T,R.11, . ,eI it was the summer of lite'. kn:iwu as the wet sear Ole It rained cuatinuallr from the l.t .1 April dill Jalj , ami -on every third or f.•urth lay the drizzle chane;' -1 t. a heavy "hcw.r. R:nda were iinpiasseblt•. an.1 .•veli railway traf & euur Sou standstill. 1 was t r i.1. •y.•.1 by the'!:«eat Western Road. ani ' atatione•1 at Welegete a beautiful town not vert- large. lint the centreof s piece tit 1100vifi.rut scenery. . To the north. a majestic grove.f skis towererilarfrom the banks of the Rig Stowe Enver whichdowed.saUeal; gene on its 'south westerly coarse. leaving the little city R .b..rt distance`fe the east. A hlac•ksmith shop. twq or three stores. a reesttnrat.t an 1 boteW a church- and a ..eboel house which was lighted up by the pleasant fa. a of the poettwaste•r•s &only (laughter Stall r-uinelr rap the pnlli. buildings of the place. with the addition i.f thedrpat aril strain warehouse where but little bn*intes was trantaacted during the fleet Ai..nt a milt. northward the railway Midge spanned ills. 11 g :It..wr Muhl 1 ha been rope -stet tee the bridge fireman to make a trip ont teethe structure every slay just before dark tome th•tt the ap- prostates were safe. as in every severe storm the river, already swollen te full banks, won!.( lap theeeni of the long bridge and whirl fiercely around the I'Icr*- e i slept in -my oeiec: as duty compelled rite to main there quite late at eight. and it but little tr.uble to change lily dun into a bed. Lhaal ale, a .•ur- Dcr men/ 1 by s. ponv'lnstrument on which at ca . moments thr,n;;lt the day d• instructed young student in the art of telegraphy. feeling thankful for some thing t, help a to pas away time in ant+ dull a •rat er ( Me sultry evening after • few honrs . of clear sky. 1 idacea my railway tricycle un tau tra••k preparatory to making my evening; trip to the bridge Heavy 'spanks et clouds could be seen in - the west. and there was an ominous stillness in the air that made tneauxione to make a speedy trip. It was a toilsome journey. and the perispiration gathered on my forehead. and my breath became abort, before 1 'finished it . lint although .1 found the star higher thio it bed -been. it was more dangerons to the bridge ittx>o my retnna I took care te hair my tch lights triwmee and placed out ea*iicr than usual, and hastily par stook (trimmer. for already the low mut tering of distant thunder furetol•l a heavy /deem and a bad night. When it broke at lakt 1 • was alone in sty office, and the crieeking of the telegraph in- struments. as the lightning played emend them, resembled the firing of a small pistol The rain :.''t in torrents, and the wind blew as if it would demol esti evert -thine .••• ore it ant listening to the efforts of the des twitcher to make his tridn orders plain, And when his continned•etitions made me nrrvene, fell track on'Iny guitar for consolation After placing every mourn ful melody i could think of. !spread nut any bed and dropped on it, to rest. if not to sleep. For some time i beard the rain beating against the windenr and the wind rushing under the cornice of 1 h depot and creeping along the rafters with mote like those of • child : then 1 dozed off to sleep and nothing tronhled me. I awoke smldenly to find myself sit- ting np in eel. Anil to hear the pony in- atrnmeut working clearly, as if handled l.y masterly fingers 1 was spellhonnd, for the apparatus was connected with again line, and there was no one in the room . bat it cli. ketl distinctly. and inc blond curdled as 1 reeognizee the call that ie need on the wires only for these me•ssnges that are always sent to An (.tr'mt..r . ear - the "death aitrted - Who was sending it. I sprang out of bed1, turned my Leaps higher. seised ley fountain ten and made ready to copy The int -wage ran es follows "From Austin to ('. W. 4i , (*legates. Number Four Night Limited went down at Big Stowe bridge. Fifth and sixth treacle wash out Seventy three killed, R. (' " ! read and re read this till my own writing looked strange to sae as it lay on the Jerk, and then glanced at the clock (t WAS a quarter t, one Number Four was due at Westgate at half past two. tie Hie message was sent an hoar and a •►Itar'ter before the train would reach the place of the wreck' At that :Monte. the piercing whistle .4 a i.sxunoUve broke upon the night air 1 glanced from the window an4 saw the red light /1f an appy oohing train some fifty vardi away Throwing cwt my (nst an71 picking rap my lantern I ,ieafe neat way to the platf..rm. saying amid "The .ridge was all right last night 1t is merely all right now. 1 Mend • long time waiting for the train to lass by Number--l.isaitsd stepped at Westgate brit it came no warm and it made no sound. Thee 1 saw that it was going at full speed itwoemh a country with wbich i was net faisitnew The faithful engineer Mom! ea hes oak with his hand on the throttle, altddialt Ma a & the darkness the Manan freight that was trusted to his to safe delivery and the fireman. in the shadow, looked out with w-Iwtl►ld falx They crowned streams and halted at a statism: the bell rang and tine whistle echoed, Inn three was m(t rumble of wheelie tit- and by 1 begat: to recognize the atati eieris theyy calm. to them There war ter New Hampton depte. with the lots«. -ogres crowding about the etcp.. :Ind fl•iteith meeting and parting at the .i.. r ..f the car. ' Next ,•ame Fredericksburg. then Sum tier islet then -le terrible fate' -1 could herr t!.• hntiin*ng rear and the panting of the tropine 1 Could DS. Ilse tnrbnkeat erallV admitted by all °aturaltsts, but waters of the lbw :sem. lashing( the a{, in what centre Anil at what time 1t pre, Me 1 the Wog tweet... The train Ula" Jutryefteat..1 sod modified lute its :ss ,.'.Wino• tip to Le... it. 1 hold rate Jet form i* not known. All t ...�no :yptE o PYLE GAME. YtIrI. iiiAlso stare MA the Dovrl..p ...t m 'l .1 tale ,'.ets. T()aunt origin of the (:awfowl, as such, is involved iu mystery!'. That it is a tie s -endeut of the ()Altus bankiva is gen l reiatii It was in the centre of the IOWA is Hiatt 11 has A long history, and great strncfun . Thr engineer was call tsar eery uiauy „teals su very an tent u:g fir brakes 1 could It ar the eR••ap tunes bn.l and [ought (lame rex ka The Ivo' mg shunt and the mixt iuetant it hal 11au• the Persians, the Roman's, plunge.'heaolb,ntg lulu the b:,u k, meththe• (:n, sepia, And prutably the early Ing water beneath ' *nous. %1.re &amines of the l:anio I dripped on my knees am! nut 't1 I. But the exhibitiuu type of the a ,wreath. tut the wildest yell that ever I fowl it of mom recent production. and came from mortal lips -A moment ber.n brought «sant siure the 1 Irtrr, 1 was fully Awake, lyitur nn the alw.lahwrnt of tin n. k pit office•' t1..or. where 1 had falleu tiering `' t -fowl as *hurter ow the 1 neat nighttuare. l•euger And setter in plumage. wit Senn time elalwrl before 1 could de• I Linger and more h:u.hy tail than the sedate, that at wee all A dream ( btbitiva gatoe. Th. change that turue•d nl, my lamps, c1awiurd the Utile ' been wr'°ght hy hncirn is A war trnnient that hid licked off the one testimony to their skill. and to Wruwg ryrsms`e, 1•.,k.d for A copy of plasticity ,f the fowl. How this ).yin slit ahc.nt has mot ttee•u it oft enc deck, and at last relk'h I that. , is 1 hg.l ample time, ('Frieda go •tit to 1 Betel by written record, probably Mower .41.1- examihe the bridge he•fore 1 infn,i,u ,f malty mood. wuhld .• au cis tit to as count for the change., Number Fuer wadi dues If everything was right, no oar on the trip flora ever probably it was in this wanner that know of my dreatu + cbrauge Ula.. pnsltuad. The modern ex It was but the work of a moment to biti.w game has a very long head. 1 get ..at my !tri • .le cad light rap 'the slrfld,er, quaky looking leek b h• n•l•tan: p. and 1 was soon whirling *houl.len prentinent wing fronts'. a away towanl the river. back that slants downward iu a straight As I dit•w nearer, the hears vutx of lin- ti site tail, alt.( 1r datiruu 1Itapetl- the Big Stowe betiuu. a rear, and I as it is, broad at the shedders, taperI Centel tic. track. euve•gtd with water. d m appexr.ta10... the tail. a breast t The t,-i,•yele IuJ to tip alaadonevl, and I arae u d intrad levy e if any. beyond t wing frauds: a yrs ::arrow tail, cam atrar cats, 41 trey are allowed to run with their chickens Nut whous a the Rae can be kept as a profitable fowl. it is kept almost rictus tyely as au ornamental bird. Add upon no one of the desx•eudauts of the wild ()millet has more .kill, more tint«, and morn money levee expended 11n Kng- Irul the hundred dollen have been re prate.11y peed for a winning e,a•k, and though in this country ewes pricer have not been reached, I.ur hundred. awl in case ..on o ca,hundred and fifty denary las been paid. 1 remember .1 sr.•iug scold It an exhibition held in Indiana - 1141" a few years •,.s., two ie eke and one Indiana - 1141" tor three hundred dollars. These were Black breasted Reda which usual( hat ha 1.wd in price, but Revd Pyles couuusw very high figures, ap).ruaching quite drawly to threw nslirra1 hy the. Black k breasted Reds. And certainly they ought to, for they are nearly. or quite as perfect in shape, which is the Ulan) thing in game fowl, while iu color they art less or more beautiful ac. oiling to one a iudivtdual Halite. -H. S. Babc.a-k, in American Agriculturist. 1°e MAKE THE ORCHARDS PAY. h a Trees Apt to 0. Dying of *tartans* ex I Mather Than 01.1 Age. has (►n the rare of orchards • writer in Vel the Sto.•kman says 'That uu ray of way de•ayiva fruit trees are dying of star - Ju ration Mettle! of old age cannot be questioned b .ay one who Ina. a_fuir knowledge of the ', .n : dee average a until. .) . t the oscharbs. A tow lives and grows and anti bears by the nourishment it obtains. the c..nvertinbt the materials the roots find hi in the eel into leaves and wood and u�� frnit. The trees is stationary: the root., it is true. branch out but -their alvaut•., ei slow. An auivaal fastened in one e I`lace, after it wee the supply ai l in must have its feed and 6s' water bionght to it if it is to (von he tint,' iia SO o with the tree. In time ad there it a zone( up, more or less eom• continued my way •.n foie tbroagh atilt (leper waters till 1 reached ;Midge. I peered casile over the first font trestles, anal was angry to find that 1 had such faith in the mrsteriuna message that I we.. ,expecting 'Mutter in the fifth and sixth When 1 Hopped and .w•uug my lantern out ahead of hie, its gleaneaidcd by tie- tuouulight. showed me thirty- tw fee of rail vil.retingtoani fno over. a eawultlg chasms. where the mad waters laile;li and le•up and shriek as if a dem: •n controlled thrum. The fifth and sixth tr.etlevl were washed away- end 1 knew by.aer inttag se•meet of the lonrmo etre that Number Four had jest left Sunnier. There was no help for it : I must (TOSS that gap en the rail and flag the train that ores. coming through the darkness' to death and dcstruetien. I crouched d,wu and bxgain spy passage for life. takitlg my lantern between enc teeth. that I might have the °seof both lauds. The least dizziue•s. ..r weakness the teight.t t lose of balance, wei°hd phrnge me int.. the waves below. and the train would be bat. 1 craw1.1 carefully along. now 1 was miring successfully, now i was treu.b ling-uow the swaying of the rail was turning ter head' 1 wa.. two -thiel•, of the way across when 1 heard the train ermine. a few seise more, and the head- light of old Number Four came swiftly around a curve and lore down the long grade i was like a madman. in my excite mint my teeth stint thetnwlces tightly on the wire handle of sty lantern. *Yid l crept like a beast of prey to the firm feeing that lay before tee. where 1 moppet long enough to take Huy light in my !tared and ware the danger signal As 1 rum lightly up the track, I waved it in a dozen shapes and .hontrd at the top of my t••.ice, thoterh 1 knew no one would hear me. The terrible strain eu my nerves gave way when I chatted rap on the engine and.tried to explain that tern to the eugineer, who had halted three hundred feet freta the bribee. I gnrtlir,ugh with an incoherent sentence in which ' message- and phantom train repeated themselves, and then 1 believe I creed -at least the boys tray 1 .lid. but they never called it babyish, and the whole crew called my dream a PAIR • 'F- RFD PYI.t: I..(ME Fvtc1_. int al.we the horizontal line. ion thighs :cud long ohanka. The male a female can be described, in respectshape, in alment identical wo The male, however, is exhibit without comb. wattles', or ear lubes thief' having been carefully remov with a pair of dubbing meters Th im female is shown dubbel, and has tpr• small. tight. single rune), rath s, einall wattlesud ear lobes to core pond. Among the several varieties of gam the shape nsame vinired is the sae for al the 'merest aporeaeli 1, the standard (nirennemts brtneexhabited by the Blas breastwl Hod and the Red Pyle Th Rel Pyle game cock has the plumage the head varying in color from brig orange to chestnut hackle of the (•odor. back crimson. breast white. tzar rowdy laced wits chestnut, the shafts the feathers -showing the same colon body white, wing$ -bow ctimboa, wi bar'white. wing bay crim..,u. making criml. sn wing trensver+eat with a wbi bar. tail with sickles and coni wine. The hen has a chevttnt bead. white hackle edged with yello white ba. k. sale: -n breast, white chestnnt tinge'.! wines. and white tai The shanks and feet of berth sexes willow or yellow. Personally I pre tis latter color Wh.0 the rad un t ruck is rich in hue the markings are ex- won.lerful coincidence. tremely striking. and the fowl is justly regarded as eery beautiful. It will be Colasstd Medals noticed that a Iced Pyle (name is marked The rn.rneas or perfection of coins very similarly to a Black Breasted Red, and medal* furnish testimony of the white being substitute! for black. Thio ehera,-ter and initree of the pet'lods of fact deity 114, tto nnderstand bow the p{ree their pro.luction. This is equally true culler markings were produced, for of that rarest specimen of humanity, the when a fowl of the Black -red type isSyracnsat. silver medal -the o{ideatt crossed with a white one, the blaaek dis- kuuwrn to collectors -and the latest tre appears in the progeny. while the red menph of the «racer's art in gukl, the remains. And it was, undoubbtteetttly, by aletu medal. breeding Black breasted Red and White It is net generally known that the (lames together that the Red Pyle was rarest portraits of femora heroes arepr•odneel Even to this .lay, in order to found upon ruins and medals The keep np the brilliancy of the coloring in historian. especially the historic artist. the male. an occasional Black -red zeroes is indebted to this s.anrre Rhine ter the ei resorted to with these fowls. Games portraits of Alexaueler. Ptolemy. 1'leu are net very hardy fowl.. for toppTnoail1nee p.atr• Mark Antony, (Sesar, and many their fine points tri color toreedinghas other celebrities been re Hertel to But inasmuch as the Perhaps the valuation of a rare coin or Ree! Pyle is the proeinet of a cross of two medal may be entinuted by reference to varieties, and i.. frequently recrossed to one pie•e in the Philadelphia mint. It keep up the richness of color, it is roe. is an I prtian eoin, as large as a half minable to suppose that 1t Is the hardiest eagle, and has on the °hyeree the head game varieties, and certainly inferior to of the wife of Ptolemy-Areinoe---the none in size and practical qualities. If only portrait of her yet discovered. one wishes to select a variety of the ex- Incelenta ,f history are nut alone re hibition game fon practical use, he will corded . and as an example of a veru snake ne mistake in chanting the different natnre may be cited. the medals Real Pyle. cisme fowls, despite their ern nmem,rating thedestrnrtio n of Jere -lung legs and necks, are really ex- igible. and the whole eerie; marking cel e•nt fowls for the table, being partie that episode, •'specially those classed nearly plump and well developed in • .in late septa " breast and hotly. Some imagine that to They tell sally of a peoples humilis have a good breast development it is tion the tied or thinnredd captive. the neeeesery for the breast to be carried ns. eking gudiless of victory. all tirade forward prominently. (lirg, is thns more real by reaason of the introduction, atilt mistaken for breast. Tb. fact is, rn the reverse of each piece, of • Jewess tete breast meat lies along the keel bone weeping bitterly, and though she sits and that is carried under the fowl and under a palm tree, the national lanteitt a portion of it between the legs Then, of another captivity is forcibly recalled. too. the carriage of • fowl snakes An interesting specimen of the eerie, some differences. tis one with an above mentioned was recentlyy, found in uptight carriage, like the game, the ..doth of Frane., called .hilar Na di riusing legs of the forward prattle villas, valuable particularly because it encs of the breast than one which carries strengthens J,rephrs aaeertion which its body horizontally. Although game ha.l provoked some comment --vis , the fowls, (twine to the shortness of the fact it the wtcape of a large rebutter of Ninnies., leek small, they are really of .leere from the Romans by mein. of grad ease. and it is not difle-dt to get ohne. at Jolgac rocks that weigh frau six to eight Coins and medals mark the intraluc ppaaned. among Black breasted Red and tion .d laws for example, an old Por Rel Pyles' Even ha.vier weights are Tian rein g(i1M the date of the • law of 'sometimes repel -eel. appvt under which, two centuries and The 01.1 fashioned game WAS an excel a half later. Paul appealed to Cesar lent layer. high records having been re An.-ther relic 'hetes the iutes1ncth,n ,f .*t.vlly reported, but the modern Ex - the ballet hex . and a fact interestingo indention game has not fnilv kept up the the agriculturist is estaldish.d by an old reputation of the breed. Neill, the herd silver roan of Ptolemy. raps* which a are fairly good layers of medinin sized man is represented cutting millet is ata eggs The edges ore excellent in quality; riete of Indian cornt with a scythe. Re novae Atte superior. The hese are tergal =au have heel. pronmlg•ted by coins. otters, cad extremely- easeful mothers. Ll.utiaun ••y'a 'Men a g,111 spin. " 10 They are iodine(' to be somewhat g,•1 lett (toil. Ncehaanwpct is the pro wrote to the broods of other Mee and dine'" /hasten apostle Per hone, and therefore a Rome Isom with Rion coins in mystic characters symbol chicken• wheelie not be Ise the dri,lfnl sacrifice of the rima brood. roe thei(oalKad verytheir 1. rshiptwrs Henry VIiI. shows his o another r ehsrseteri'stir ewe ct(Alameinin with they will Ash! aajtiiyp; and Lupon egotism in Hebrew. (brTrk Tbey o a medal. O. a O. parte, of th. rl slur ed in the soil through the ages for its benefit : then if it in to bre sustained in a healtbfnl con- dition n more must be br,nght to it. This is especially true of a fruit tree, fur the production of large crops of choice fruit is a heavy draft ou its vitality. Amount special manures, ruse is more easily ,ht•ineet•end few are better than wood aalae.. They contain potash and some other ingredients in stunnerroportion of orcltar,t tris The as •. h., leve hen or tmir:whe 1, 'bandit be spread over the entire surface, • the latter more thinly all the formate. No ashes should ever be wasted but saved for such purpose. if not wanted for soap-utakiog . and even when used for soap there is alwayic something left that is worth turtling onte'the orchard - The great stand b1•, howeeer, is stab(. manure: just as good for the orchard.111.1 for the field or the garden, lbinle.l out g ; in open winter weather (toward, spring, nd when the har•lrat fleeting is y sad to spree.' tinder the trees. the will els. carry meet of the strength down • the ed netts, Many heap fluorin. wenn(' trunk, where it is not u. ss oh, as the eel are few or n.4 fee. ding roods there. They e are out front the etme truck some of a1 extending even farther than the branch - or ea. It is beet to tike mit the tuannre es when the gronnd u open. ' `11 frozen a,Uti. Irfore it can thaw ont uuu•h tit •• the best part of the immure is likely to 1, be washed ort into the rams --n condition re- of which there is hie much alr•eadv ori k- mail- farms. as an exatilivati.0 of the • barnj ods will show." of - - ht mattaatine for it Pmres NUN • While traveling among the farmers I have oboes d that tbuse who take of paper- and magazines are always mak- ; tltg o,un.tking to lessen lober and make.g-, hone mote attractive. A wide awake . net:else la's jest fitted up his pump to platen -an in a eonvenicnt way, as tern its is the engraving. A galvanised iron It eau hfteen inches acnes and eight tv, nnehee .le ep, of • semi circular shape so or as to fit sungly agaiuet the pump, with 1. an inch pile to convey the water. is are plee d direct) under the spout. into fir this trans all the drippings and water he that elope over fall. and are conveyed by the pipe to a flower ganlen when the ground Is irrigate.!. by filling a small trough. into which the pipe ernp e trot«. • rat to a hawk are quite seeable of dtkefendi IMPROVED mese Pt_i?t•',aw. ties to sane the anpply for the ditches. Brbind the pnntp a trap door. fitted with *trap hinges and a hasp, staple and padlock. open* into a convenient receptacle in which hatter, create, v.g stables to be warmed neer. and meats can he kept quite Y well Y In a retrig ember, and without the expense for it.. The platform im made of a frame -work of two by He inch joists. with a floor of matched flooring nailed en both melee, the intervening a(ace being filled with «lean.swdest This keeps ont frost in winter and heat in slimmer. and with the provision for carrying off the drip pings, it is always clean and healthful. -J. L. Townshend, in American Agri cnitutist. PrS,I .ase Tawe Toereetf. Trust in Providence. but prepare the beat .on know bow for a crop. The man who has failed to put up a greetimppl♦ of fodder or to grow a Drop of roots for hs* cow will he slow making the end* meet. Instead of wasting time bemoaning the low price of wheat, we know some farmers who have wtasly taken the drop in values to mouth that they should give more attention to stock. Thie is light, bowsaw it will help toward growing better (tops cwt whatever yon may then nndertake. Maim Yale Mage Cotton balm title now sold very cheap. 1 bet the should have lege. The net of the bag is Dot •o Y the waste that NOShis hen wig hams through which Wm hale boa worn 1 t is not pea /Eaike to borrow or head terga Ranh Strome Moonlit have his own supply, and he independ.ut la Mkt matter if is as other A borrowed bag is seldom well teed. aad if returned is we to cost its ewes( amens 1w wasted grain than 1t would cost to purchase 1 ng theiryoaagajahst new bate The reputation of the maker ought to go far to recommend a trial of a new article. Our thirty years of: public. • record aJ maherti of leading brands ot tobaccos, 1.5 offered as a reason for your testing M A .5-r I r PLUG CUT J. Y.?ACAS Tsbre v Co.. Riehine.d, tea Ind Montreal, Ca.. 01E0 AT LAST Jess Carberry /laser Illeresaulue ■bark! le ete.ta. NAM Voice, March 4, -After 13 weeks 0 *ad two days of ntermitteat spume of ht c'uvhieg. John Carberry, of No. 2, Webster street, Newark, died from eahattetsoa at three u'ck.ek yesterday afternoon. Car- berry was 32 years old sod uunarried. fie was employe( ss • bar keeper by J J. leiter, of Belleville avenue. He noticed • doges years ago that when the barber in Weaving him pressed upon • certain spot wider his chin with his thumb or Kneen, hiccoughing was likely to follow. This did we alarm hien because the spasm. were neither violent of long duratioe, and it was not unto this winter that they c•.med him ae distress. One erening alter being shared the hk- cou.tggbe did not suucumb to any o-Jin•ry n - medics and kept him awake all night. He went to work next day, but had at short io tcrtals, attacks of hicoouehs which kept him busy trying the remediessu ,ted by h customers and others that he •d heard .1 He stood on his head and drank gallons of water in the various ways recomtaended no bin, but getting On relief, gate up work rad went home. He suffered for a day or tee longer before seeding for a physic • . M 44e than • dorm other medial mea we e mite mussily either 'Aged in or were led I y p-. Jealous' interest is the case to pay him visits. It w,s not until the hiccoughing had oeatinrel fur ten weeks that publicity WY trivia to ,'. Since then over 2,000 letters Lave been receis e 1 1.y (arberry's mother. They all contained suggestions for trestssese or re- medies which bad been heneficiel :o other •.11erete. Nearly 50 percept of Ui to were Fgestioas of physical curer, eel of the bai•uce a large percentage preaerit.•- l amyl - nitrate, which bad been tutfectuatly treed by rte physicians in wield/ince. Two weeks ago Dr. (rude, ci this city, performed an npeteunn, at he. mg been agreed that ('arberry's case wa• one . f next 0 A origin. 11 rat h : he ssautan. c of I tr. Towle, the attending physician, 1'r. 4 -rude cut and removed • part o1 the teener mar eery aerve, and for a day or ten it yrs hoped that the of *revue would acomplr h its purf•we Carberry- seemed to rally, and los par- oxysms were much miller• The sore pre duced by the cutting', however, wooled Carberry dense he waking hours, and seemed to aggravate hu malady toward the last. Since 'Morley he had slept bet little and taken scarcely any nourishment. Braden ice and ice ,ream seemed to give him more relief than anything else. He weir, ed 117 pound. when first attacked, and his estimated weight when be died Wer less than 90 pounds. He had wasted awe se that he foamed a skeleton covered with skim, A year or no re sgo Carberry had an at- tack of poeun•o.tis, winch Dearly carried him off, .rad left him with pl.-eregsetrttis, from which he wen never entirely cured. H. drank !stair regularly, bet not to expo e The secret of the greet sem of Ifseljay's Liver Lorerees is is the fact of their not :electing. (rtg•er I.**live med.c.nes destroy the normal powers of the digest's* syattm They build it op. Th y are sol 1 at 25c. • box, or $2.50 a dote° boast. Ys,..*s ate vat camases setatyiess or T.t aowru, *IDNtes use tomtit. ta.eve.a ser asa.eauv, CITWOVT et Iwa Tet oyeTIN, ant iseye,reee ane regia hemi... AT Ter same ries CONNECT. INN ACIDITY or Tat *TONACH, Curse E tLlOUSRtee, OYSPtPSIA, HEAD- ACHE*. Dizziness, HEARTSURN, CON$TIPaTIOR. ■HCVYATIar, DROPSY, *NIH DISEASE*, JAUNDICE. SALT *1.405, ENYSIP5IAS. SC NO. rue*. r urrea1N* OF THE H Nrevou•iisu, AND 0EN(RAL DEStIITT . Temm awe •/l, eeelaa. 00.,..•.,. e.N{IT Trete To Toe euaa- T.Te i4Ke(Nlet or •VNOOOI SLOOD • ITTEM. �YSTR LRBNOY�TOR arab OTSp TYTS. arraasea Specific and Antidote for Laporte weak sad imeemerbeed beset, dee arae,. n asemory'selases. pitp1 it ler of aearsy1. stems,Mendiee, Wray anal 7 At. Visas' 4anes, Isla . irng- uhartates .ad resin' d-Mlkl. II OOR/TORT, LOOLRIIY, OIT/SIO NeLIOD, ps Proprietor W IbmitOrarelik aid I�Iwasssa Olt« sea t FRASER & PORTER'S Fine Writing Papers, Boxed and Padded. Collegiate Institute Tablets, at a Bargain, for two weeks. These Tablets 5 its are sellers, with their Bright and Effective Colors. We are still selling 25c. Novels for IOc. NEW BOOKS : Dodo, by Benson, 26c. A Third Person, by Mrs. Croker, 6Oc. A Terrible Family, by Florence Warden, 60c. To Bedlan and Back Again, by Frank Houghton, 30 cts. FRASER & PORTER, Booksellers and Stationers, Loral naaagers welt rale hese ('w What is a Sponge ? Some say it is the Fran ework of s submarine animal, others rs, it u . species of vegetation, hut all must agree that we Irate .. 1'E1:1 FINE ASSORTMENT OF SPONGES ALL rums •Siell MUHL file ire! Tex% let*. OUR CONDITION POWDER ENGLIIBH . HEALING . OIL, 4OR NOI2SF4 AN/, 1'.1TT/.h: Use 'greatest healer known Repays many t1111410 it, pr', on Nan or it s•' 'rove your kers.. Al Wm.) m sprigs woe& , SHOULD • Sk: LEI'? - o.t n . W. 0. GSE, Chemist. • Ileta,iful WINDOW SHADE. 1s the moat attractive sad sinking tee• urs in the house. Its about the nr.t thing you nem*. Tben its import•c- to lave good ones. and best styles \ et en un the cities car you find • gres:s, range of designs or quality than a: mush's. We make up os' the premixes all t, o latest styles as iriage, lace and embr .id ery•, sesrtioas, etc , to ht any site win doe, amid bays now en route a dire,: importation ai Eaglet. aad Sew shade - trimmings and upho:sters, braes good% for our spring trade, ever shown au the county. l tut Large stock and faculties for cutting, making and tnmmiog, et. abler Y to sell at wholesale prices tl e have fringe shades with smug roller alt complete from e0c. op, sad in decorated shades, as immense Ise of heaut,fw de aigaa When you want the best yual,ly.'1' hated design, the greatest assort no -n!. sad lowest prices . n window shade., pSMITH'S FURNITURE STORE. Seasonable Goods Best Brands of Canned Salmon Mackerel, Lob- sters, Sardines, Fresh Herring, Kippered Herring, Herring in Tomato Sauce. OYSTERS : SELECTS AND STANDARDS. Finnan Haddie, Oodflah, Pickled Salt water Saluda aad Herring. "Olam Bouilon " Burnham,. OE.AS. A. NAIRN. It isnot Sawdust We use in making INDURATED FIBRE WARN. Some people think it is, but they are mistaken. We use nothing but the longest and strongest Wood Fibre, pressed into shape without swim or joint of any kind, and Indurate it by a patent pro- cess which renders it impervious to heat, cold and liquids. INDURATED FIBRE WARE imparts 110 taste or amell to its contents, and is the'lightest, tightest, sweetest and most durable ware ever made. Ask for EDDY'S. UN DERTA KERS. J. ROI' E Y' all± BON Hare added to their promo. belim a one of R. J. Nasb'a Last Style of Oity HNTaN, also *be finest See of funeral fhrniebiase is the °minty, cad aro now prepared to ooedues funerals at pilaw reasonable This department will be @trimly attended to by his * Wifha , who bail` la the Employ of the lata D. Gordonfoe se.o r e peat w ye re. hoe a tlia'aall• kwwlsd/�ra_0[ lbs bsainwp a , red by prompt atteatime hoto ale part of ahs publie pG!sm**. Remember the p -Nester., a rear way to the poi ha a Mil J. BROPHBY & SON.