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The Herald, 1903-05-01, Page 5
Tho storm diagram, • illustrating thee May forecasts, -shows that a. regular Vulean storm period is eels- tralon the let, extending to the 4th, The opening stages of this period fell inethe lest days of April, that is, change -to warmer, falling barometer and southerly winds set in on those days in western sections of the country. From the 1st to 3rd inclusive, these changes to growing storm conditions will it - crease as they advance eastward across the country„ resulting in wide cloud areas, with. active storms of rain, wind and thunder on and touching the 2nd and 3rd. In the nature- of things, rising barometer, change of winds to westerly and northerly, and much cooler Weather will follow close on the rear of thee° etorms, giving Many northern to central sections touches of chill and frostduring seine of the nights in the first week in May. See if this does not prove tO be trite. On and touching the Gth and 7th look for decided and rapid (Mange to falling bierotneter and quite warns, resulting in sharp electrical storms on the 0th and 7th. Moon crosses the celestial equator on the Gth in a reactionary storm periled, and heavy thunder storms will be most natural on and next to that day. As these storms pass ..east - *ward across the country, change to rising barometer and much cooler will follow from the west, giving possible frosts in sections north- ward. on the nights between the 7th and. 10th inclesive. See ! Through an oversight the Venus brace in the Sterna diagram is made to begin about the 21st, whereas it should begin about the 10th, thus combining with Mercury and the regular sterna period covering the loth to lith. This is cam of the May periods we will venture to put down as dangerous. By this time the focus of the. Sun's magnetic and elentricel energy will lie along parallels covering the central states, or the sections most, snbject to violent, term die storms. As we enter this period, say about the 10th, the barometer will begin fall- ing ni the west, a decided. change to summer temperature will begin in the same section, vast cloud areas will begin to move eustward across the country, and from the 1 th to about the 14th, storms of rain, hail and. thunder—some of them furious and. tornadic—will visit many states in their sweep to the Atlantic seabeard. Storms at this and. the remaining periods in May, ere apt, to repeat themselves in daily cycles, or at about tho same time of day for several sue- eessive (lays. A decided rise of the barometer, change of wind to the west aud eooler, will mark the end of the series of storms, and. be followed by nights cola enough for frost in northern to central states. We must not be understood as say- ing that tornadoes must occur at this time, but We (lo affirm that the astronofilic outlook is such its to make such storms decidedly proletble. The center of the Mercury period falls on the 18 and the reactionary storm period is central on the 17th 18th. About these days storm conditions will reach another maxi- mum, even if the daily cycle whieb set in at the preceding period should not subside up to this time —a thing very probable in a coin- bined Venus and Mercury distur- bance. After storms about the 17th and 18th look for change to very mucli cooler for two or three days. The last regular storm period for May reaches from the 22nd to 28th, merging really with the reaction- ary disturbances due nn the last three days of the month. This is another period in which heavy and dangerous storms are entirely prob- able. Monday the 2:511). to Thurs- day the 29th will be the time Of greatest violence and probable danger, although general daily disturbances may continue to end of the month. The moon is at new on the 20th, at greatest declination north on the 27th, and in perigee on the 28th. These facts, added to other existing causes, load us to say that storms of wic1e and dangerous proportions are very probable on and touching the 28th, 27th and i:8th. Phenom- enally high temperature, high humidity and very low barometer will precede the storms, serving effectually As premonitions and warnings of &ming storms. Many parts of the country will get heavy, Venus downpours of rain and hail at this end other May periods. Narrow outlets ancl channels shonld be kept free of all obstreetione, so as not to torture and retard the outflow of sudden floods. Builders and contractors might save them- selves and othersmuch, loss and embarrassment by heeding* these suggestions, and by bracing. and securing unfinished stractnres against other phases of elemental perturbations. • May and June- are the. Months. this year in which te eollect and store supplies of water. Those depending on rains for.snet supply Will do well to heed this warning. As we close this last form of May Word and Works, harrowing let- ters, describing death and ruin in recent tornodoos, are pouring into our office. ...•••• • . All kinds of good loge Wanted at Once, for Which highest pieceswill be paid Cash on delivery. J, O. Net...Moen/soil. liaggage,',' Temper-. ance blowy, "Only tWo and half,'" Jacob began cleverly. .And there's to iel1irig. what's in it. emember her"Mort Thompson out at Wale, arese, two yeare ago bought a trunk at en *anclainied Baggage sale, and only paid seiventy-five for it, and it had -over a hundred ilol- lars in bills in it. S'pose this trunk — "Suppose nothin' 1 Mort Thompson owns his farm. He eau afford risking being a fool once in it wbile. We're 'mortgaged out of sight.and the hot wind e got the corn this year and you „go • end: spend the last cent on a fool bar- gain, • The woman stopped sudden - as if afraid her hard voice would tremble and show her emotion, Jacob raised his hatchet and struck file frail lock. His wife tarne.d, and went hack into the room, while her husband pounded on the lock until some partof it hreke and he could lift the lid. Be threw it back and the things were so frail that the weight of the lid as it fell, broke off; and the liti. Went over the floor, But Jacob was already eagerly throwing things out of the trunk. examining. different articles hastily, He tonched a bundle of letters tiocl with a string. There was a photograph of a baby. The articles of clothing were for the most part a woman's and child's. Ile opened the packet of letters and began to read. He only read a little way, when his hands began to tremble violently. Ho . kneeling in front of the trunk, the different articles piled tip about hins. His face worked eetraneely His lips Were dry and hot. He moietened them. and called out: '•Martha! Cottle herb !' 1 -lis voice was strange that the women in the robin instantly rose and came to the door wey. "Whet is it?" she said. without going nearer to him. The linin had the baby's photograph in his hand and was gazing, at it. "Annie s Our Annie : Mir t la! This is her trunk! Her letters - 1).4r baby." The woman's face paled through its burnt tanned color. They were m-arried, thank God! Martha! react the letters—" She was kneeling by hs side in front of the open trunk. "Give the the picture! Let me see it ! Jacob picked different. garments which he had carelessly flung on the floor, and. stroked them gently with his rough fingers "Give me the letters," his wife exclaimed. . Still kneeling there, she read them through. They were for the most part passionate promises of reform from a drunken, gambling, wreck of a man to a woman who in desperation had left, and then as the two kneeling by the trunk soon learned, had gone back to him to try once more. ''We were hard on her," Jacob said stuldenly. He looked up just as his wifo finished the letters and their eyes met For a moment the woman shrug- ged her shoulders and then she burst into weeping. "Don't !" 'Taco% put his hand en her shoulder, It was the near- est approach to a caress he had shown in years, and she shrank from it as if it. had. been a blow. But her sobbing was lee,s violent. When it cetteed, she caught up the baby's photograph, and kissed it eagerly. They were married ! thank God !" she said. as Jacob had. Yes, but where is she now? Why should her trunk be here? Unclaimed baguage stays a year after it comes in before it is sold. A year— ",Jac))) you must go to Chicago That was her ho-tue. Thet is where the letters were sent. You inust find her. "1 will go ; he said simply ; but hadn't we better write first?' No, no, I cannot wait. We have wronged her, our ways wetharsh and nnjust. And else hos suffered. If 1o,sible—she must be started homeatie something has happened. Pray God that you find her." "Let us begin here ;" and side by side they kneeled down by the trunk, and silently offered up a most sincere petition to the Father in heaven that their experience had ever recorded. Two days later the freight depot agent, who was crossing the track in front of the passenger station of the A. T. and S. F. saw .Jacob with an old vete() in his hand, waiting for No. 5, due east at 4.40. The agent recognized him. "Hello, young man: Bo yonr off on your wedding trip. eh? Geed haul in that steamer trunk? Well, good luck to you !" - The 4.40 was on trine and Jacob got on and started east. At that hour e. hard -featured woman in the little house which was fronted by the dusty section road and the barbed wire fence fringed with sun -flowers, came to thedoor and looked out across the prairie to- wards the State Hoase. It's demo :shone in the hot afternoon Sun, "Pray God be, will find otr little girl l" She said and then went buck into the house, • • (To he continued.) Press Supt. • DR. A. W. CHASE'S CATARRH CURE ... Lis Is sent direct• to the diseased parts by the Improved mower. Heals the ulcers, clears the sit 4,0* passages, stops droppings In the 'Nil Catarrh and -lay I, ever, Blower throat and ermanantly cures \s, free. M1 dealers, or Dr, A ‘,v c11,010 Medicine Co.. Toronto and ilufaio, A Traveller's Woacler. "This," observed Wu, aS he lifted o, bosslike- affair limo his trunk, "is one of the greatest wonders of Ameriess" "It doesn't look very wonderful," corn-. mated Tsi Ann, tucking one foot u1,. where.she could sit on it and the throne at the Same time, "No, but even itt America no: Oiae Can Mid erste nd it. Listen," "Don't ,put that thing, .to any ear," (stationed Tsi Ann. "Ie this another of those telephones?" "0, no. This is worse than the tele- phone, It is a gas meter." **A gas meterl What does it doe "The oilstones." "How does it work?". "That is a mystery. It is only known that it works always and untiringly. It works While you sleep and While you. wake. It never stops. It is constructed after the Newtonian theory of creation. It has something in it that just keeps it whirling on nod:on, at so much per re- volution, and nobody knows what keeps it .moving, and nobody can stop it," "That's funny." "Funny, yes. But very sad in Ameri- ca. Listen to it. Hear it running right along. Thank Confucius and the '900 gods of the Pale Green Mountains! The gas company neverqwill get the chance to read what this meter has recorded." "But," said the ]daupress, "is there no escape from this in America?" "None." "It must be worse than manifest des- tiny." . "It is." -"Wu," remarked Tsi Ann, with that intelligent smile which has enshrined her in the hearts of curio collectors. "Wu, I am glad you were sent to America. At one time I almost had decided to be- come civilized." "So bud L" acknowledged Wu, "but the bite of the dog, as the foreign devils put it, will cure the hair."—Chicago "Tribune." A Queen's Thoughts on Love. The Queen. of Roumania's latest liter- ary production is entitled "Whispered Words." The theme site touches on is love and marriage, and here are a few of her reflections: The moment tho thcinght of patience flits through the mind itt marriage, the marriage has, strictly speaking, ceased to exist, because love has vanished, on which alone this relationship can be built up and preserved. For that which we fully fathom stands not in need .of patience; it comes to us as it thing of course, natural, simple and clear. Unto love every little foible and pe- culiarity is dear. Every sacrifice is wel- come to love, which never feels it as such. In presence of the world. no doubt it is proper that forbearance Should be ex- ercised, and it is meet that the eyes of outsiders should not catch a glimpse of the misery of an unhappy union.- Marstage lrasbut one sole end, to bring children Into the world, and to .shield them until they can protect themselves. If we could. bring .ourselves to look upon marriage as a holy sacrifice, an act of perfect self-abnegation, we should make nitieh greater progress. In marriage people fancy they can throw off all restraint, heedless of the fact that when they act thus their short- comings assume colossal dimensions, and their good qualities dwindle to nothing- ness. In marriage, more- than in any other form of relationship, one should never throw the reins aside, but always keep a Jilin hand upon one's will. An unsensonable yawn is sometimes enough to produce a whole drams. She Had an Aim in Life. "Penelope, have you any plans for the future?" The father, a distinguished physician, looked sternly at his thirteen -year-old daughthr as be asked this question. "Yes, sir," she answered. "You say it makes you homesick to stay away from home, Penelope. That is a consideration hardly worth mention- ing. Homesickness soon passes away. Your sister is in her last year at the college to whith I wished to send you,. and you will not be alone, at least for a, year, and at the end of that time you ought to be able to get along nicely by. yourself." Penelope tapped the floor impatiently with her foot. "I won't go, papa," she declared.' "There is no use talking about it. I'd' rather die!" "You are ''arowing up, Penelope," sighed. the good doctor, "apparently with- out any idea of the value of time or the earnestness and reality of life. You don't care for useful books; you do noth- ing to improve .your .mind; you spend your hours in frivolity; you seem to float idly along as if there was ni . seri- ous end or anti in living except 1.10 get what selfieh pleasure you can get out of. it. Yet you say you have plans for the future. What are they?" "I am going to be a society lady," said Penelope. A Drum From the Emperor. The "Era" tells on interesting story of Madame Minnie Hank, the celebrated prime donna, and the Emperor .4-Villiam 1, of Germany. She was singing at the Berlin Court Opera, :in Donizetti's `'Daughter of the Eegintent." The Em- peror, a f ter the opera, :called her into his presence and told her she had sung very nicely, but that her drumming—as the Daughter of the Regiment she had to play the drum—was very 'had. Next morning a drum -major of the last Grenadier Regiment called at her hotel and said .he had come to give her a drum lesson The diva was bound to accept the instruction, and learned the whole art.of drummieg in a couple of dozen les- sons. Then the, Kaiser sent to ask how she was getting on, and, hearing that she Intil made excellent progress, he eons mended a performance of --"A Daughter of the Regiment." Madame Hank ac- quitted herself exeetlently in the drum- ming Saone, and the Kaiser complimented her Warmly, sending her next day a real .officinl military drum with a silver plate and inscription. . ;t7 a reat.gstate /000ler. umisvme, pApor$ aro authority for the statement --that "Mrs, Wird of the ()abbage Pateh" notonly bienight to Cebbege Patch re,sidente • the gladdest, richest Chriiten as their pinched lives .11ad ever %nom, but has steeled 0, tide of inenigration . toward this suburb of Louisville. Before Mise mice Caldwell Regan, now Mrs. Cale young Rice, introduced Mrs. 'Wiggs to her thousands of friends, the Cabbage Patch was held as undesirable a living' spot as h..enttickY eould show. Now, all ldouisville takes its guests to see the Cabbage l'atoh and to discover, if pos- sible, Mrs. Wiggs, Miss . Hazy, LoveY Mary, and all the rest; while .every tra: veler through. Kentucky stops off at Louisville os the Same errand, 'and ko- dak enthusiasts haunt the region at all 1).hrsautorsl. lvaNs obro etlisf a sahliLonatei iseillibabrEldf; the Word,—popular among the lower cir- deg Of Louisville's people--; and one land. Omer. has let contracts ler twenty-two new cottages to meet the &mods of Would-be Cabbage Patehites. These, new cottages will be ready to accommodate the spring. rush, Which the appearance of "Lovey Mary" IA book -form is expect- ed to,inerease. This' new picture of life among the lowly promises to bare as great a ane - cess as its predecessor, for those who smiled at the ,quaint sayings, of the widowed Mrs, Wiggs and the amusing antics of her children will be glad to get another glimpse of them. The new story, by the way, is not a sequel, al- though several other familiar characters again appear in its pages. Here is a characteristic bit, of advice taken at ran - which shows that the sympathetic Cabbage Patch philosopher has lost none of her original charm: "If you want to be cheerful, jus set yer mind on. it an' do it. Can't none of us help what- traits we start out in life with, but we kin help What we end up with. 'When things first got to gain' wrong with me, 1 says: '0 Lord. what- ever comes, keep me from gratin' so it wasn't fer my own sake 1 est it—some people 'pears to enjoy bein' low-sperrited —it was fer the ehildern an' Mr. Wiggs. Since then I've made it a. practice to Pin all any worries down in the bottom of any heart, then set on the lid an' smile. . . . The way to'sit cheerful is to mile when you feel head,. to think about somebody else's headache when yer own is 'most .hustin', to keep on believire the sun is a-shinin' when the clouds is Chick enough to cut. Nothin' help you to it like thinkin' more about other folks than about yerseli." A Rapid (Fire) Calculator. Teacher—NM Johnny, if it missionary can convert five heathen in one year hose long will it take to convert a, thou- sand? Johnny — Two , years, ma'am. Teacher -0h, no, JOlintly. Johnny—Oh,' yes, ma'am. The second year his govern- ment would eend te gunboat an some sok ee. Not Adapted to Melons. An army .officer .sends the "Youth's Companion" MI account of an experi- 'once he' had when he 'WU s un duty along the Rio Graode. He pat ue one night at a small town itt Cameron County at a time when a:session of the court had filled the town with.strangers. Some of the visitors were sitting on the piazza of the boarding-hciuse after sup- per, and conversation turned open the fertility of soils. A stranger from Starr County, which is netts Cameron, mailed bis turn and then said: ' 'Well, I reckon the most fertile piece 0' ground in Texas is up on Ed Jones' ranch in old 1Starr. The first time Ed • plants .potatoes they lerows•like you trees. Ed coleulates on how there is a sight oe vegetable energy .soles to waste So he sends .off fer sometomato plants and grafts 'em on to the potato stock and grows the finest lot o' tomatoths above and potatoes below you ever see.' The Starr 'County man had thrown. down the gauntlet, and a Cameron mai! took it up. "Well," he said, "that reminds me Bill Duty's ranch down on the arroyo. Bill is looking his ground over one day when. the. idea, comes to him that it is just the spot to raise watermelons. Sc he gets some of the very best seed from the Agricultural Department, and fertil- izes all round pernuscueus. "He plants five or six seeds to each mound. When they come up he pulls us all but the healthiest one in each mound When this one puts out runners .he cute off all but the likeliest. Did any o' you gents ever hear o' watermelons p..,ettinp. a better start than that? The vines kep' growler). bigger 'n' bigger. The young stalks was the size 0' yer Wrier an' kep' growing. But, gentlemen, Bill never got any Melons off them' vines. The trouble was this: lie hadn't figured oe the natural 'fertility of old Cameron ,County.eHis fertilizing caused the toe. m "Them vines got to growing so fast and powerful they kep' a -dragging the young melons over the ground an' wore '•eri out, plumb wore 'em to a frazzle. The vines dragged some o' the melons against stumps end cracked 'cm, an' one night some o' the likeliest ones was busted by the vines a--climbin' a fence an' dropping the =foes' kerplunk, on the other side. Theo Billgive up." The teller of the first story drew itis six-shooter from his hip-poeket, tvalked over to the teller of the second story,. handed him. the "gun" in token of stir-. render, and said, "And so do I." Advice to Young Writers. --- Dr. Edward Everett Hale says in his remieiseences: "1 think nothing is more sure to drive an office editor crezy than to have some 'young enthusiast say, threw this off last night,' or 'I send you fresh from the pen' this or thet. People who print magazines for a million read- ers do not want to give them that which has .been thrown efr. It is muolt better to send them something which hes sea- soned in the back of your table drawer for one, two or three yam's," An Esquimau Epesode.. "You ere the light of My life," sighed the lover, edging a trifle -Closer 011 the hand-earved ice:settee. "You only Say that bemuse yon know I drink so much train -oil," she blubbered. However, it resulted in a. inateb. Euclid had:just propounded one of ids Imperative. The Bride (weeping) -01i, 3 -Jack, we've —we've got to, j -just got to, give ups) h-boardieg, and g -go to li.botise-k-keep- ing-ss Hubby—Why, lovey, what's the mat- ter? The Bride—Mrs. Wort -its has been tell- ing me all afternoon about the troebles . . she has weekcO�lti, iand I dein t tsavd Anything to tell ihet.-'Baser," Guaranteed Watches and Clocks. The Latest in Jewelery. If in need of a good. Violin or Hamonica, 1 can supply yOTI. Prices Right. Fine Watch and Clock Repairin F. W HESS, THE JEWELER. • .44.1 • ii4,1c4 ' • Chance to join 55,0,..lob Notre and Otiose Ittlicklley tot. a 0111. ft Everybody sh ouldjo the Mutual Literary Xn. sle Olub of America. There is nothing else like it allYwhero. It costs almost nOthitig to Join and the pb leproenliatss el tbgollesilaanrde twieraaabnl oestpyuouictuoi instruments at spews!, Cut prices. It aseurea re" rimed rates at many hotels. It aturivers questions freeof charge. It offers scholarships tool valua- ble cash prizes to members. 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CANADIANS EVERYWHERE INTERESTED. —Tlie New Free Consumptive Hospital, built under the auspices of the National Sanitarizon Association, will be ready—so soon as the money to equip and furnish is secured—to receive 50 patients absolutely without charge. —Over BOO out of 500 patients admitted to the Muskoka Cottage' Sanatorium — the property of the National Sanitarium Association — have returned home either cured or greatly improved. —The Free Consumptive Hospital is .situated in the same clelightfialy healthfia locality, bringing the same ad- vantages to the poorer patients as to the rich. WIONINWIMISINO.•••...1.111•1, --;1--4-.! :,;'''..,, • ... '17.047011 ,.... t . s, 44111i, ..01 ._.et.g.ggl F7g1.1/441111(4i ...ett,o, • id• vi F. 7°141 AIIIIPM ti.L • kqt FIRST'FREE HOSPITAL FOR 'CONSUMPTIVES IN AMERICA The gift of W J. Page, Esq., and the Executors Hart A. Mosel/ Estate —Think of the sorrow and suffering the New Free Consump- tive Hospital will alleviate and indeed entirely remove. —Will you not send a dollar—or $2.00, ,p.00, $5.00, $10.00— or more, for this most pressing of all charities? —'The victims. of the White Plague aro found all over Canada. $50 WILL FURNISH A BED. • in at 1.1 a., ex on Is CONTIZZEITTION$ MAY STINT TO - SIR W. It. 1.111111i,'nDITII, Xt., Chief trustier.. Viee-PreS. Nat. san..A.ssoen., Toronto. W. J. GAGE, Chairman Ex. Calm, Toronto. NATIONAL TrtusT 00. Limited, Treasure P. Toren tO, 0111110010011WiringniaMaMMINA alaWL9EV=2"3.1=0