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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1902-07-04, Page 7it 1902 8898989111•1___... fact. Thiele the working men of Dns, oaateeeee "° '`') With the est:Ince, as lame or who are out e. The spirit of f°r a job f'rft Pater - idling and lounge Or nor at play. eery the reform et dee and Skin nes _even disgust- iortifying to the an evidence of lid lowered vital._ ne. which can be Perrozone after e the blood at all ees it rich in red themselves in a To have a tmalexion nply Price 50c. per , at Druggists-. or Co Ringetone mdrake eat tr Money. !invents hem net a hat i finds the ,1ExPentea and put great measure to arisen. Hie ljttle Is well known to -too- well known a. my not long ago. ,ding persistently ion, but in vain. a, I will give yea 3 —," said the pro - yon never coma I aek you to do --, I agree to , promptly, and th a cheque for a broker heard a me in," he called, on. Ee had the he said ; little with this) teen," the broker that last thousand express condition to my office agate the provost, "I terstanding. But Just now when I ,hiti time was for Rhein attest take very little , keep away from andantiy, and al- e quick reliever a ive timea stronger Nerviiae's power belief. It cures. i.euraigia and all external. Large y LY. Feandrug- ad Jost $40, - mayor's boot - hg shoes in front New York Her- iarly a year, dur- on and lost a for _ verty,. his rise and int in a shower of 1 lives somewhere :ver told anybody ."1 wOret disgrace !day," In me hour !eat June he had a city hall perk, Van Wyck areoog 'tee. ion of his fortune e walls. With a 5 laboriously ac - an uptown garrib- lay he went to the tn he Raid; tt I was when the semen away in eicl shoeit, he refrigerator at ty ever went into ght 1 was- still at tieing the old bus- i,000- in my pocket, with the kit ma- ny pride iu check, ailing to build a airena row, along- ade a few bets in re. 1 opened the My Irak changed 11 began to run animosity et 4 to - beaten a block by oat aie $12,000, man, mournfully. ent wrong. Last ad put the dollar was the lase of a is tearsand made he was time lea,v- yor Low was in ntermants chief tfe had not ao- iag through hie ppropriating the :her he would note D WIFE. e 30th.—(See- d hie good wife o say! for Dodd's eve both been 'het he was unable troubie, whioh. ilar trouble some. caompletely cured and when Mr. he thought- s wife had found e well and alibi to ey Pills on hand, ty if we feel the• IOWS. -hurch ?". asked a, who had applied he reply. "Tb 'as to wear. My so long I've run :ow, me and ray t views, I'd have .and my tune ere Kaighte ed Ham. see what he he has a cork Oa" dear ; you know hankering after. JUrlik 42 1902d ABSOL iTE SE UITV Cenuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See isioanimilo Wrapper Below. Ter: small and as easy to take as sugar. ngte, 'FOR HEADACHE* no FOR DIZZINESS,: Feremousmas, FOR TORPID LINER: FOR.CONSTIPATION: FOR SALLOW SKIN., FOR ME COMPLEXION WER PILLS. einc elamierarvegetabsTe= rreirkra. CURE sicK HEADACHE. • 'rETERIN.A.RY a 1.111111184.1 TORN GRIEVE, V. S., honor graduate of Ontario J Veterinary College. A .1diseases of Domesti mlnials treated. Calle promptly attended to an chews moderate. Veterinary Dentetry a sponialty. Offiee and residence on Goderioh street, one door ofDr sleet% office, Sertforth. 11124f JAMES L. KILLORANI sinister solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary TOW°. Honey to loan. Oftioe over Pickard'e store enen Street, Seeforth. 1528 R. S. HAYS, waster, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. ;Solicitor for the Dominion Bank. Offioe—in rear of Dominion, Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. 1285 IL BEST,. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyanaer, • Notary Public. °Sloes up stairs, over 0. W, PapeVe booketem, Main Street, Seaforth, Onta.rio. , 1627 • enoENELY BEATTIE, Barrister, Solicitor, ito, Money to loan. Office—Oedy's Block, Sea. oet• h. 167941 ft ARROW d ()ARROW, Barristers, Solicitors, &a'. Cor. Haleffitorr St. and Square, Goderiah, Ont, •1 J. T. ,43.3.aeow, Q. C. 1676 1 Cullum Geaaow, L. L. B. HOLMESTED, successor to the late flrm of McGaughey & Holmested, Barrister, Soliclior -erraveyaneer,, and Notary Solicitor for the Can evelartBank of:Commerce. Money to lend. Farm for aleOIea in Soott'it Block, Maio Street Seaforth. DENTISTRY. Raising the Skirt. Lifting the skirt with both hands Ghoul be avoided. It is always clumsy, a d give one the feeling that you ate going to Wade across a marshy road in the rainy eeeso -It is never neceesary to- reach loie down • lifting your :skirt, and when yondt it is a ways awkward. Reach as far beie as pc) sible and then, instead of raising !, p, bri the hand around toward the front TI movement lifts the ekirt any desire heig and is always neat and effeatfve. If one has pretty feet, nicely boo ed, t skirt should be raised in front abov the in• atep, but not to the edge of the upi re. T feet should be suggested rather t t hibited. When they are aI1owe 0 e out it is Coquettish ; when they are hown is brutal. In sitting, especially in public aces r crowded rooms, always draw the kire a Iti- tle forward. This prevents ti hteni &arose the knees and unsightly ores ing bulging, so unplecreant a feature of t wearing apparel of careless women; Lift the skirt always with the gle ed a d ' not the ungloved hand. A glotie s in rit and does not effeot the fine thinner ; but t e hand, especially in warm weather' or a wa room, is covered by an invieible ql of p spiration, which disoolers aod often stain delidate tissue. 'When the paand it u glov a careful wearer will nae the chief between the finger tips and: k eeki • Evidently a Landsnian. The boy who can use his eyes es slier as dM the hero of the following torySfr the Chicago Post, and oat make as reas e luo Aons,fneed:not mind if his teao r nails nim obtuse. The teacher in this case thought her pu I very stupid and finally asked "Do you know whether Georget Wa h- ington was a eoldier or a sailor ?" "He was a soldier," replied t • promptly. "How do you know ?" P 'Catnip 1 eaw a picture of hirn eros the Delaware, an' any sailor'd knraj eno L h not to stand up in the boat." F. W. TWEDDLEI 1 DENTIST, Ors:dude of Royal College a Dental Surgeons of On- lario, post graduete couree in crown and bridge work et flaskell'e Sehoul, Chicago. Local anesthetic -3 Mk painless extraction of teeth. Office over Dominion 'Bank, !Worth, formerly occupied by G. F. Belden. ' 1764 nit. F. A. SELLERY, Dentist, graduate of th'e In Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto, also bonorgraduate of Department of Dentistry, Toronto Univerlity. Office in the Patty block, Rennin. Will visit Zurieh every Monday, comneeneing Mons der, june let. 1587 DB.R. R. ROSS, Dentist (successor to F. W. Tweddle), graduate of Royal College of Dinkel Surgeons of Ontario ; Brat class honor graduate of Toronto University ; crown and bridge work, ago .gold work in all its forms. All the moat modern methods for inless filling and painless extraction Of teeth. All ojerattons carefully perfonxned J flicie Tweddle's old stand, over Dill's grocery, Seaforth. 1640' 111.1D10.6.1e, Di. John McGinnis • on. Greduaie London Western University, member at Ontario College of Physioians and Surgeons. Office and Reeldence—Pormerly ocoupied byleir. Wm. etched, Victoria Street, next to the Catholic Church lellight Gallia attended promptly. 1453x12 DR. H. H. ROSS, M. B. Oce over Greig & Stewart's Store, Seaforth. Night calla attended to at the office. • BABY'S OWN TABL S. Cure All Minor Ills, and Bri • and Comfort to Baby. 18021— DR. F. J. BURROWS, sant resident Physioian and Surgeon, Toronto. Gen- a• tai Hospital. Honor graduate Trinity University, lasmber ot the College of Physicdans and Surgeons Ontario. Coroner for the County of Huron. 'Otto and Itesidence—Goderich Street, Beat of the -rietteedist Church. Telephone 46. 1 1886 DRS., SCOTT & MacKAY, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, •Gaileriah street, opposite Methodist churoh,Seaforili -J. G. soarr, graduate Victoria and Ann Arbor, and member Ontario Colle-e of Physicians slid :Burgeons. Coroner for bounty of Huron. , MeoKAY„ honor graduate Trinity University, gold reedaliet Trinity Medical College. Member College -of Physlciane and Surgeons). Ontario. 1488 RED CEDAR SHINGLES. i Thla e undersigned wiebes to announce o the public that having ',aught a lerge quantity of t three best branch of red cedar ehing1es. and by ree Wig a. liberal discount for caek, is prepared to sell hem. to cus- tomers at pr ces tbet defy competithim • S. LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. HEMLOCK LUMBER. Having in dock at the Seaferth Lumber Yard. a 'very larp quantity of ail the different lengtha and elithe, is prepared to fill any bill that is presented of tha very best 'quality of Hemlock. S. LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth.. - • NNE. Having bought- a large quantity of pine from a large firm in Muskoka. I ani getting pine dressed bot side pladneks cr one side, for siding, flooring. ceiling; fot Water troughs •, epnwe and balaeui ter gravel boxeSlIght and eurahte. Also white cedar shinglee XXXX and XXX and XX ot beet make in Muskoka. Large stock always on hand. S. LAMB'S Lumber Yard, Seaforth. • 177 CookiCotton Root Compound tis successfully used monthly by oyer 0,000LadieS. Safe, effectual. Ladles ask your druggist for Cook's Cotton Root Coto - Pawl. Take no other, as ill Mixtures, pins and mitations are dangerous. Price, No. 1, r box; 2, 111 degrees atronger.ta per o. 1 or ;mailed on receipt of price and two 1 -cent stamps. The Cook Company Windsor, Ont. lialrelloa. 1 and 2 sol and recommended by all responsible Druggists in. Canada. Sold in Seatorth by Alex,. Wilson, J. S. Roberta and 1. V. Pear, druggists. Xother. gJ.5r „ Disease attacks the little ones thro h the digestive organs. Baby's Own Tab ts are the beet things in the wor1c for tl bowel and stomach titroubles of ild . They act quickly and gently, and! alw ys cure indigestion, colic, constipation d diarrhoea. They are also, a greet help to teething children. Mrs. Gabrielle Bar es, Six Mile Lake, Oat, Bays :—" Bab 's Uwn Tablets reached me just in time, as inybby was very ill :with indigestion anil b el trouble, and I am happy to say the Ta iea relieved him after a few doses. He is i)lcv doing aplendidly, with just a Tab et eliv and then when he is testleste 1 am the mother of eight children-. and have t ied nearly all the old remedies, but Ilia e n ver found a medicine equal to Baby's!.Own ab , lets." The Tablets are guaranteed to hoptai o opiate or harmful drug, and, crushed «! a powder, they can be given to the 4mat est, oo re- mit Aka Th Dr. 0 —On Wednesday, June llth, at high aeon, a very pretty weddieg took place in " Cedar Springs,' North Eesthope, the home of Mr. and Mrs. George McCallum, When their second daughter, Miss Annie E., trea married to Mr. Allan R. G. Smith, of Wilmot. The ceremony was performed:1V Rat. Mr. Ward, he the presence of the ini. mediate relatives and a few intimate friends of the bride and groom. feeblest child.wieh a cetrainty faults. Sh1c1 by all druggilats,or sent 26 cents a box by writing direct to Williams' Medicine Co., Brach:elle Banana Salad. Slice bananas; arrange on let aoe le add a few nuts and a salad dreseingma follows : Beet three eggs until ',very Add one cup of sweet cream, one-half spoon of salt. Mix thoroughly. Add half cup of sharp vinegar, one.half t spoon mustard, one-hallt cup melted b and a dessertapoon of auger. Beat oughly. Set the bowl in a kettle of water until the dreesing thicken. Mi mustard in a little vinegar, so se to lumps. • Meaning of Barber's Pole The sign ofthebarber's pole Is a my to most people. In olden times the fession of a surgeon was practised in men with the art of a barber, and i th who practised thus was tleaignated as her Burgeon. A company under this titre was found early as 1308, and the London com en incorporated in 1461, in the firat ye Edward IV. ' This profestional union wag dist. olv the mien of Henry VIII, 1540, when i declared that "No person using ent, sh or barbery in _London shall occupy an gery, letting of blood or other matte cept only drawing of teeth!: These barber surgeone exhilitted their doors a pole, which was var colored with runniug bands of red and or, in some eases, red, White and blue. red and white bands would, no climb resent the white bandage stained,wtf blood of the patient, while it has bee gested that thou, bearing three c lora oats the veins, arteries and nerves, red and white beine used, reaps:disci this purpoae, as is the case in Moder. books in anatomy. In Austria the sign is a golden pate above the shop, in which one may pa discover the bleeding bowl used 10 I blood, an operation so commonly perf on our annestors. 1 Lives are lengthenin. People are growing • healthier, ;all are becoming longer, if medicelh st can be relied on. According to/ he recently published life has been 1 Ilg by an average of 41 years in the i cade. t In 1890 the average latigth oi li 313 years. In 1900 this thean avera risen to 35.2 years, chi i fly by reason decrease • ia mortality among th young. . The three deseases that have eaus moat deaths in recent yearteare, pfieu eornsumption and heart disease, in the named. Deaths from,he first :ceue slightly increased, and medicel, seien made comparatively little prgrese i ing a specific; treatment for it. Pneumonia is an infectious disea tuberculosis. Although it is tot rio c ious as many other dareasea, the loan of houses, schools, shops, factooieS, pl business ' and amusement, in • opinion, undoubtedly determines to extent the vulnerability of tile eyst Neglect of the ordinary lewd of he responsible for many ceses of &ea Among personal measures suggested prevention are the avoidance ef !un posure to inclement wether and of c and ill ventilated gatherings.' tern* eating and drinking, daily bathing a ular exeroise in the open air wihh reference to complete respiration. There is nothing better than syst deep breathing while briskly wanting doors. • . • 1 Morrisounci 11) as The court of revision met per a ment, alt the members resent. D. was entered tenant lot 3, Belgraore ; ard Brown'entered M. F. lots 53 a concession 1 ; E. MossM. F. Dort 21, concession 7; D. Calvert, M. F. lot 9, concession 2. Od motion of Co Taylor the court of revision was then and the assessment roll as r viae corrected was established as the zjoll f present year. Moved by Taylor se • by Jackson, that $12 be granted to. • pettcled in grading on centre ei elin VI # Pa t ea- cote- ble- iter her- ,ihot the told 1 I eit•tr pro- dian. One a as was ' of 11 in was aing lour- r - 1 oeseiiin 6. rried. Moved ended by 8 aw, that $25 be gra4lling n sideline between concession —Carried. Moe seconded b Jackson, that granted $3 for underbruehi J.; bruit and is go at west side of sion 6.—Ca ried. Moved by ended by 0 de that this coh action in re ard to opening aid Iota 25 and 26, honoession 7, u ties /uteri)* watet.—Ca for gravel, Council th 4th, at 10 er quay 'Otte :The •a rep- --the seg. adi- Nee, for et- luing bans, tting rated "Uncle betty who Vermont tj He was never at a of expressi; One mor gerwie ab bill, Uncle blandly sai "Mister book betw ber you di ed give a proper ried. A numb to.; were passed adjourned to in cloak. , • entle Remind 'Peter Bates wars kept the tavern the old staging d oted for his dry cos fora retort or g his ideas. lug after breakfest, as a str ut a) depart witho b paying Pet! r waikeI up to him- a Je on should los your pock ere and Mont eller, reme ake it out her ' Code, New expended in ote 5 and 6, d by Sheer, es Hall be and ,piling t 224 eonees. &Orson, sw- ell take no line between til the par- tb3t far the of ;accounts or payment. on August) r. a local oe n Rapdol g. mor and for i met ews Note. t —Mr. T om s Lockhart, f Tavisto has a bay horse, 84 year o which att act some attention. the teresting fe tures • about this ho are its ear , w ioh are four it number.. course onl tw are fully d' eloped. 'other two re ttachen to th op or bac the develo ed are. The an al'a eats h down all t e me in a pee liar Man Otherwisehe orse is like ot er animal the same r ce, eing a good rker. —A qut w dding took pla .° at the r denim of Mr. T omas Steele; Steele, bre , in Stratford 1 Mies Evel stele, eecond d Thomas , was marrie ander Abr. , formerly mechanioa of the St The careni ny as perform° Williams: M. A., rector church, in ha city. Only relatives a d. friends were pre Mitchell, who are among 4 —Mr. nd Mrs, Lawne most respe ted settlers of th brated the r Olcien wedding ter, 'Mrs. ?red Tuesday eveni mired guest& this was the 'rat deliver° tistics g,ures hened cle de - e was e has of the very d the hnia, order I h eve 4 Alma find- , e' like ntag- tation ces of edieal great m, to Ith is onia. for its tie ex- wcied nee in d reg. peeial matie out of of Devlin e at week,w O S ughtee of ' eel to ME Al ha ployed on sta tford Her. by Rev. f St. . Ja Vieent.iinfmedi e Golinilz, he oldest t town, e t the Imre Horn, Hu on g, June 1 4 were tires s by ' Rev. gal rat gather ever held in oonn otion, with n. Mr. and Mrd. ollniti ree atly and valuable ifts. 1 ho as Worden di.d on Tires une 17th, at the f mily reside and a half Miles p the Hu Rebell. The ft.•• ily have about forty year:. Mre.. i en ill more than o years, not unexpected. 'he had a en. 8, who will b sorry to h. She was a ember of oh roh. Besideher sorro gr wn up family of three a aurghters are lef to mourn other. attempt was made on, Satur it I to ransack ' e reaidene , of Stratford. bout - 6 otil is took the eveni paper and t of the house to wait her i ing. Little R Harris, ; on the lawn, beer. a screen ' he house, a repeated. to it, and er and Bald ack door. k, and o door. Se e b upto 1 ti ahee Is t got trio their daug toad, Best Nearly on An- addl.° Thun, wh of the kin oongregati ed many lourn- ddes Leon - 51, 5- lot orth 5 e and Olosed and r the ended ex- 0011 - —Mrs. morning, about two road from sided they den had death was cirele of fr of her des Methodist hueband, and three loss of a --A bol evening 1 Mr. Saari Mrs. Ha,r at the fro band's co Was lying open and hut at the rear of minute later the noise wee called his Cloti er's at•3ntion, then a neighb r's boy ran o two men liact, one in at tbe Harris ran roend to the be the men escaped by the free was made through the hout managed to slip out too. T sent for, but have not as y the men. ! , • —The Mitchell Ainoce e of last I says : ' The Cedars," tha beatitiful -home of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Oreighte Blanshard, was the scene of a, happy wedding, veirn theiraughter Eleanor, ,became the lilt e -of Mr. White, °Gun+ counoilloa q Hibbert. t ceremony Was performed- at high noon Weduesdey, 8th inst., by Iv. Mr. ' dentin, broth r4n-law of th grootn, awn by Rev. tare art, in the resent° of guests. The bride was ery beomni attired in a teavelling costa, e of lawn c iat with trirmnings to inatO . Little 4 Coppin and Hveyline Girshe _ seta as of honor, , After the n u ;3 ti i iukonorea knothad tied the Iwo ding party d large dinning room, where flowers in fusion adorned the pleat, nd parte? ore of the meat elaborate ;adding din imaginable. The presents were simplY quisite, and, beyond a dole a tar eitip' to the average array, and nly rarer a small degree the high es em in whit bride and goin are held. Mr. andi White are ending thei honeymoh New York 4i$v, and Rite a sojourn few days in IYankee town, will retp Hibbert, w re the .groom 'a extensive] gaged in fa/Ming. ; eh.- 55 od n - is t- n - se Of he of ng r. of sit en r. he id. ld. es; te nd -le- on th. r. ng his • iv- ay ce, on re- or- nd rge eat the ing ns the ay of ok gat 115 - ho oor d He roat hat rs. e of rch her ere of t I I i I ir GOOD HEAfII IS IMPOSSI] LE without r action of the bowels. Milbu 'e Laxe Liver regulate' the (b wela cure cons niption, dysp bilieugness, tit* headaehe, and 11 atteetione organs ot digestion. Price , 25 e nts. All drug i For Choler Colic, Diarrh Dr.;Fowlerfs safe and sure 1Morbus, Cheler Infanturn, Cr Dysentery,an Summer Come tract of Wild St awberry is a pr ure that has bee a popular fa for nearly 60 leers. British TroorrOi Liniment 1 the most easet vo remedy for C Open Sores, Rheumatism. Bite sects, etc. A 1ar.e bottle 25 Drug gist'e. There is ne ache &men to NEY PILLS If you are t plaint, use D I , without exec; te, Wounded and Stings , Got one t trni of kidney tr richt's Mimeo, ' not relieve or eubled with a v an's Kidney .P1113. /me xxposnioRe it to 'Tommy to hammer his iittle tacks into the boor& but he had !no teeny for it, and oi think he fungit linnet the bed. , Yre, num,. - •there it is, avOay over lathe far corner. - Mrs. Beacham glanced under the bed. The rivolyer Was there, Let it stateuntil Mr. Baseborn comes home," she said faintly. it take Tommy into my room and look up the warmly." • Record Harvesting won him. his 13ride• • • , lig of fla of brakes Partner James Woolsey, of Wichita, Kan - 058 , auceeeded in having his five hundred 1"` n't "n— acre wheat field cut before the yellow grain iwind an grew musty, but ib cOsb him his daughter. ' He gave her as a prize to the yoting bar- , vester doiug the greatest amount of work fir a speoifieq time, Willis Rodway, a young !mechanic from Illinens, won, and he and Anna VVolsely were married. at Pratt the other day. : t , The Wolsey feral is one of the largest in Pratt county, and the scarcity of harvest workers in that section weighed heavily on `thefarmer's mind. His wheat grew dead ripe and there was no one to belp 'him to oub it. Then he decided upon offering as a bribe to the harvest itrorhet s his nineteen - year old daughter. She was as dutiful as gond looking. The nen •came by the score. • FAS lisIP$TINP DANGER. The Perils That BeSet the Builders of Big Bridges. The deSign of a long bridge span is ne of the most elaborate mathemat- lcal problems that ariee in constructive work. The stresses produced by its wn weiht, by the ;weight of traffic, y locomotive drivers, by the hammer- ened ;wheels, by the action on an express train, by the on a curved track, by the by the expansion and con - f the steel in summer and e al accurately calculated. tion of the loaded and un- dge s determined, and com- ings are made of every mem- Thel bars of steel are tested es which will pull in two a or a steel bar strong enough f a score of the heaviest lo - at once, and which will eggShell or a steel column, ately measure the stress in Thei diff irent kinds of mem- forged, riveted, bored, or perhaps half a dozen remote , althoueh usually not fitted here, are earahaed and meas- ecialists to see that they are d are th n shipped by scores s to the si e of the proposed where st an derricks unload pile thern many feet high In ering act es of ground. eek ew , of 81130 lies m. h on en - ted 120 gly ev- ene aids gen the ro- of ere ex- rior t in the re. in f n to all - L guar Pins pea, f the gists. nips, lein 5, mpt, °rite tion, Imre, f In - your uble, from ti back. hat DOAN'S Kip. ure. Ind of kidne com. TO MAKE 410NEY it is necessary to bevel tright brain, a,cool head free from pain. and I vigorous nerves. Mil ourn's Heart and Nen' invigorate •and brighten the brain, etrengt nerves, end -remove alt h,bart, nerve an troubles. 1 BURDO K 1 LOOD BITt ootubinatio , e that In a nate 13 upon the rEL4, LIVER, oleansisig t eient:re eystem humoneen otetructions th create dise e. She was given the pr of the contestants s and many were thue The (=test was op ritod. It lasted three days, during which tlime' Redway, working ten hours a day, cut • ne hundred acres, an,d wore mit three god teams. vilege of rejecting any e personally disliked, uled out. Only once. . , A beadle at a parish church not far from Dumfries was busy one day digging'a grave when a Wenger walking through theohurch- yard thought he would go over and have a crack with him. He found io no easy mat- ter to cliaw old John into conversation. Fiest he tried remarks on the weather, then expressed his admiration of the fine country side, by " Ay" and " No" were ell the i. stranger ciould get ou of him until he asked the question—" Do eople die often here ?" John streightened iis back for the first time, andleaning on hia spade, looked up in the stranger's face atld solemnly replied— " Weel,..Crenerally ; uist eines.," 1 (Isar trong, Pills n the brain RS is a puLly v dab] e nd • n atu re ireetly K (pNEYS and r B E40‘)D, of : all imPuritie foul t poison the bio d aud , Pat, a An empl yer the oth among hisanen was la the weather. " Well Ain• r day movin eeling bitter never saw an like it; it's nothing but hail, sno rain." - Turning round tit a soniof pint the question—" Pate did you e weather like -this ?" Troth and that semen,' "When din you see a s like it t" Last winter, .yeur honeur,' the quick °sponge. ommy's ha mer. The Benehem family ivr s a happy- o -luck one, and rostecheeked IBrdget, just week over from he ould co nt er, seemed most appropriat ! handmaid. For the m t part her mistake amused niI delighted them, bat on on occasion a iraistake cam near making serious trouble. She had been with the family two days, and wes in the nursery w th three -y ar-old Top,Brnreidge called Mrs. Beacham, as she rushed nt4 the nursery, Mr. Beach m has just tel4phOned me- that; e left his r volyer on his dr 'string -table by mistake, ad it isieb there Have you se n it ?" " t gave bout over thing and in, he er see have mmer earn° • • HF.GOT HE GOODS. traction _winter a he defle loaded br plete dra ber of it. 111 machit horsehair to lift ha comotive crush an and accu each case bers are planed in shops, an together tired by s correct, a of carloa structuxe them an stacks co A• Busietens Deni Between Potter Pitimor rind A. 1. Stewart. "At the time of the. civil war," said tin old merchant, "Pottea Palmer was ' In the dry goods business in Chicago, atal Lei ._I•eiter and Marehali Field weee Werking forhina... Palmer wasn't so well, knewn, but he had a good rep- utation ha the trade, and he clidn't have to introduce himself when he called on old A. P. Stewart to buy some goods. After sem° dickering they agreed upon the priCe, and Palmer calmly said that he won!ld take about $100,000 worth, It was 'a. little larger bill than Stewart exactly cared to sell young Palmer on credit, but he conclad.ed to make the deal and told him to eome in the next morning and arrange some final de- teils. That night some big wir neeas came, end it didn't require any decla- ration by the ,government to inform ev- ery der geode matt in the country that the price of goods -Would take a big spurt up. 8tewart recognized it as soon as he had the news, and he immediate- ly thought of Palmer.. He also thought of the big bill of goods Palmer had bought -of him. It didn't particularly tickle tewart, that thought didn't. But it required only a few scratches - of his red head to fix things to his sat7 lefaction. He weuld simply tell Pai- nter that he was sorry, but that he didn't feel that he could self such a big bili oti credit, and as he knew that Palmer cOuldn't raise the cash imme- diately, Why, that would end it: and the sale Would be off. • Well, young Patine)" called early, and Stewart greeted him in his very abauptest man- reer, telling him how sorry he was, etc., but really he didn't think it wise busi- ness to extend credit for such an amount. •. "'Just how much does the bill conte to?' said young Palmer, seemingly sor- rowful -like. " `Just 4110,000,' Stewart replied, and then lie straightway gulped. for breath as yoting . Palmer dre-wan immense pocketbook from his inside vest pocket and, opening it, counted out 110 thou - Sand dollar bills and, laying them -quiet- ly on 'Stewart's desk, said: 'If you will kindly- count theni and give me a re- ceipt, I'll be obliged, as I must take the next train home. Ship the goods soon as you can, and. wlien you're .out our Way drop in. Always glad to see our friends.' " The bri ge piers may rise above the water h ndreds at'feet ' apart. It re- mains to i lace them on a thousand. ton structure high above a savage chasm, over an mpassable currant or roaring re the water is deep, the bot- agged ,rocks or treacherous , or where an old bridge must ed and the new one :built in without interrupting traffic , idge, To; accomplish this the has timber, belts and ropes, engines, derricks and a band d builders who. have perhaps him ,for years .through more and :danger than fall to the nost any other calling. mplieated fraluewor& of a n is a skeletonwith many joints and thoosa ntls of steel (' bones, each r, which must ctly the right ilace in exact - to tle trusses pieces larger, Ind far more Inflexible than i I en trunks, iswiftly hOist and em to place hundreds of feet together the massive girders forged bars wrth watchmak- Tracy, support the unwieldy ntil they are keyed together -sustaining, aad under mil - pounds or stress must adjust - dizzy' heights to mathematical is he may need to do not de- bit in , deng4rous emergen- tmost speed. putting forth his trength on Inarrow, springing n a furious i tempest, in bitter _ in blazing heat. He may be art ot an African desert, men - bloodthirsty fapatics„ or in a the Andes, hundreds of miles •ls or supplies, Where there is i ly no supplement to his own- ; s. Under ' such conditions uilding is one of the most taa- and difficult of engineering s antrecinires la different se- er. al ost every case.—Frank uer in Century:I 1 - tide, wh tom of • quicksan be reme its plac Ion the b engineer !hoisting of intre • followed hardship lot of al ' The c great sp accurate I sinews a go in ex ly the eght order. The' builder must •;weave i •iheavier ,e whole t awing 1 t !high, fit and hug lees acc Classes and sel lions of them at lines. liberatel Pies, at whole cp 01 al an k or r in the h aced by gorge o from to a bsolut resoutc bridge cinatin proble lution W. Ski TVVO ODD1 FISHES, i The Changeable Pita; Hind an liae • Inatribow Hued Parrot Pis • The clear, limpid ;waters tha sur- round Bermuda and, the West ndIes Ile above. eoral eefs covered 1with plants and animals many of whi h axe brilliant in color a a. rainbow. They, look like glimpses f fairyland, 4nd as your eye wanders rom one won er -to another you catch yourself strivjing to peek just around some corner nto a strange nook, hal hoping to lsee a bery1 of 1rnerrcien a d merntaids sport 1n and playing Wein the cr nnies. II re' is itt. patch of pale green sa let- tu e,1 there a group of great 'purple sei ans, yonder 011ie goldencorals s n ng out like a shelf or bra ching • h e a tree, whil -anaong th+m all sWira lovely fishes. that, take th place of the fairies that ehouId dwell in this .1 magic land and fasciate you b their gorgeous -colors anil their giaeefu1, eenvn motions. . There is a great men "parr fish," as brilliant in col r as his na esake the lfrd, showing himself bol y and seri ming along s owly, secur from any Lss1LuIt. His cales are g een as the fresh g ass of s ringtime, a d each ore s bor ered by a pale blo n line. Ms fino a e_pink, nd the end of the tall Is .ban ed wits nearly every color of the rain ow. 11 is showy, Int this showiness serves m a good urpose. His :flesh is bitte and poisonous to • mataand probably to other filshes as well' land • ey let 1 int well aldne, for ; tley. can r cognize m afar off, thanks hi gau y dress. Underne th the arrot, lying on the b ttem, is a "pink hind." Yo notice la m,' and. s the pa ot passes o er h shelden y chan s to bright scarlet a •d as q ickly r sumes his former faint'colo . Had ,the parrot ben look- . 1dr hi dinner and thought t e hind • uld tn Ike a good first cou Se this s' dden c ange of color mibt have • s ared him off, just as the sudd n brig- tl g of a cat makes a dog cha ge his m nd. When the Ind is distil bed at T night, he gives ou flashes of ight to sttr1ie the intruder and send hill away 1r a! frighte—Profe sor C. L. istol in S Nicholas. BeHs. It w s Ion a fixed idea that silver mixed with he bell metal improved the ton , but. his Is now considered in- correc The Acton Nightingale and Silver ell,- 1:6 singularly sweet bells at St. John's college, Cambridge, are said to have a mixture of silver, 'but If true this i not believed by compe- ▪ tent an horities to be t11e cause of their bea.nti ul tone. This idea led to the story •f the monk Taadio concealing the sil 'er giVen him by Charlemagne and casting the ell he the monastery of St. Paul of i iferior metai, where- upon h was stru It by -the clapper and killed. In the ni th century bells were made n France ofiron. They bare been ast in ste I, and the tone base been found nearly equal in fineness to that of the bell ieta1, but, having less vibration, was d flcient in length, and thick lass bells 1iaye been made which give a beautitul mind, but are too brit- tle to ong withstleind the strokes of the clappe , , AROUND THE HOUSE. If marks and stains are on papered1 walls, try _French chalk on a piece of' dry bread gently rubbed in. To keep hardwood floors smooth and clean Liub them with waste and warm I paraitn oil and polish with dry waste. 1 Muslin curtains may be rendered less inflammable by_ rinsing them in alum water—teeo ounces Of alum to one gala lon of water. To clean mirrors dip a cloth in methy- lated spirits and rub on the mirror. AlloW it to dry on before polishing with a soft duster. , Galvanized iron pails for drinking watee should not be used. The .zinc coatiag is rapidly acted upon by the eLatc.er, ferming a poisonous oxide of z ,, alate a. splendid furniture polish bY taking a, wineglassful of olive oil, one of vinegar and two tabletpoonfuls of alcohol; apply with a soft cloth and polish with flannel. Rugs, mats or carpets can be cleaned thoronglily by generously sprinkling on thenyellow cornmeal that has been - well dampened in clean soapsuds or weak ammonia water. Sweep off in a few Minletes. Sasatory Traiksmiesion It has been. foand that sensation le not ahstilutely instantaneous, Ira that a very Minute time; elapses as -it itravehi along the nerves. Therefore, if a per- son put ,his finger to 8 heated ron {)i* in the blaze of a candle there i a cer- tain a1ixost inconceivably small space of titpe, say the lone -thousandth part of a secen , before the brain. knOws O the buri. Now, suppose a man with an arm long enough to reach tie sun. From the. knownrate of sense.tory tranSmijlSiOn that man would 1 ave•to liye nior1e than 100 years after t usehlag the great luminary before he would' know that his i fingers had been - scorehe t - eeeee -T ae In*entor of the Match. , The first Match! was: the product of the in enuity of Johu Frederick Itom- erer, ho early in the nineteenth cen- tury -as imprieoned in the peniten: :dory t lionena.sperg, in Germany. He inven d the lucifer match while in his gloom , dungeon. -The German govern- ment forbade tt be manufacture of match • s on the ground of public policy, becau e some Children playing -with them adcaused a fire. Icomerer was ruine .by Viennese competition when be w s released' from prisott and died a pau )er. Up to, 1S62 the. Vienna man- ufacti rers eontnolled the match busi- ness •f the entire world. Tea rupt you o Joh a co er thi Litt ask f poor he pa get t to de Th every er or Th in th down Tea "wile Pup Puck. Fzom Ree.,1 Life. her—Evil coniniunications cor- ood manners. Now, Johnny, can derstand vhat that means? es' . For instance, pa got iniini atiot froinenot's dressmak- 1:1 morning that made him swear. _A, Per Reminder. e Benue bad been taught not to r anylthing at _meals. One day ertie Auld been forgotten, when hetically inciaired, "Do little boys heaven when they are starved th?" gravedigg man finds ater. er irises to remark that himself in a hole soon - next hardest thing to getting up woild is to keep frem getting His Idea. her—Wbal do ou mea.n by us?" 1—A blow, in the solar plexus.--. Immune. lotion sore long time he bore, ut no', with joyous look; He swings his arm, secure -from harm; s vaccination "took." —Somerville Journal. ••• THE HO J rnix a le m siii 'ntertress of eiaisalene is lite ita own heap." c urts and' paved e t unkempt city be remains of eie, o1 olomon, Nehe , Constantine, 0 , !Suleman—wri f om the Holy Cit LY CITY. 1 esembieaa Great fiddle Ai0e ally "builde upon elow the 1 ouses, treets of tit pres- e the distin uisha- t older cities those iale Herod, Ha.dri- ar, Gocifee , Sala - es Walter illiams to his pa e in. Co - Jerusalem has b , en besieged .s yen. times, a. reco p ralleled in the h ciiites. It has be razed to the groun e erIy faith put to evioep uttere against it ha s letn still r o the middle a.eg Mount of iClives, ; ails, its ' fiat osques and chur spicuous towers a a nrrvelous; piet lime, unfaditig, fr I ry' of the nhircd. The city -itself ! streets., The wat 000 ,people comes The open courts and the houses a with no regard for Biome houses' are u ers on top of the The people are selfish. There is the ideal city, but ; loivireesSesruths;lesmain more tails, the same in setting; the 'same gestion, as the Jer vidisang and over by e co sem d pf stdry of t en; burn its imha the swor its ,own e to pass, les a gre ie. Seen its mas oofed h hes with d minare • re, beau m the p' has -lieu r supply a four re few e bunch.e room or c dergroun igh inclo ing fanatical, ig uch to de at despite a1r t ont the in its es he frame hi fascin • salem of which Je • 9 • enty- de un - e orld'i acked, it nts of dithe p ; ophets y •.t Jeru- t ortress frem the 1'Vl gray IIS s, its th ir con- s, resent ifu , sub- • tu e gal - w dirty, or ts 70,- C nd small, t • gether ea lines& ad ()the walls. orant, t from Is and Mo nt of en' ial -de- of its sug- h Da- ept. ! Points Abou There are Some ; ueble in horses . i. The head shonl large and well se leones should be to enable the he With the neck, w tion and a grace :Tents it bearing band. The eye s prominent, and thin. ;The ear s erect and. quick ear indicates du ness. ,When too 'sposit IIion -to mis I 1 1 • a. Good oints whi every • be prop on. The ufficiently d t'o for ich gives t 1 ul carriag a too hea.v'ly ould,be la ge, he eyelid fi ould be sin motionJ bless and far back, hief. • • • • or esc rti Low 31 88 Hid Char! s Dlcken Catherine, One three daughters, votedly attached • Why 11 did not •first pl ce is not less it 4 that Ti of gre t loVelin suecess ully con time fo Catherin to save her sister Percy 4itzgerald expres ed this i s Magaz Harpe In His Books." 1 , The Exe ptional C "You say you are thankf 1 y u have a Cold? "Yes cold is one ofthe few all ;doctor will und rtake to days ithout a ?iurgical o at the e. re val- iption. nately ✓ jaw - apart angle ee mo- d. pre - n the little e and 11 eand he lop bborne e is a 4 er Love. , though e George H n 1830, w s 1 to her sister marry M ry certainly kno ary, a yoi4ig ss- of cha act ealed her ow 's betroth d i from disa pm a' friend f ea. in a ar ne entitle 4 ' The German Pollee. A stranger ha Geereany soon . makes the acqunintanee of the pollee. Mele- es be may desire it. Yon heve bora in Germany a week. more or less, whoa the polieeman calls. At first you can - 'not believe that he is really after you. and then your mind runs back guiltily over Teen past. He takes out his little book—one of a small librerv of little books which he -carries in his blouse— and inquires your age, your natinno,lity and how long you intend to Flay. You learn subsequently thnt a record of every person in the empire is cafe.: fully kept, with full details as to his occupation, material wealth and social standing. If you oaove into a new' house, you must notify the police; if you move out, you must notify the po- lice; if you hire a . servant girl, you must purchase a yellow blank end re- port the fact, the girl also making B. report. When she leaves, yea must send in a green blank- stating why the is dismissed, ; where she is going and .so on. If you fail in any of these multitu- dinous requirements of the govern- ment—and I have mentioned only a few of thern—there is a -fine o pay, each fine graduated to the enormity, of the offense. There are offenses graded as low as 2 cents: arried arth's ter de - Mary. in the 11 11D-- • 01119.11 r, had affec- order tment. icle in ickens 88 _ " -answered the op imist. "A ents that a ure nowa- .)ert.tion." Arlettre••e• Mistate 'Fred le—Popper. 'whet d by Ad; m's one cart! slip? Friel lie's. Pop er—Not h tliat ri all guese - , ri'l 3 e Po ".& g od doe 1, can have," rem _the NV odeh In Isick, e doesn't and when you ,.zrou 4 w much worse he • diseaste.'t ' ' ' es it mean ngleg on to es* bearing og. the hest f lend a man t ed tbe to aeeonist to- ian. 'Winn you get tell you w at to take, et well he doesn't tell d same When Time Bangs Heavily. Time is never wasted -until it "hangs, heavily on our hands," when You are neither working nor enjoying yourself. There may be times when it sults one's mood to "loaf and invite one's soul," but they are tare nowadays. If you don't believe it, consider how the average citizen spends MS vacation. Most people work harder and econo- mize- their vacate)* time more. grudg- ingly in getting the Most outof It than they do in any ether part of the year. They hate to lose a minute of enjoy- ment. Of course there etre times—every day; —when time seems tabsolutely 'Wasted, and these are the pines When, men's tempers are on edge and things go crosswise. Chief among this list of wasted and monotonous intervals is the time spent in waiting for a car, in traveling on it after you get it, In wait- ing for meals, in fuming over dilatory appointments or by reaching there too soon. Other instanges are where the bore buttonholes you and insists with excessive eloquence in stringing te three line item into a two -column tale. lItuge Spiders Wove Them. Every one who owns a little strip of garden knows what it is to lear away. spider webs, a, matter of small dila= culty and lightly performed, but a pop- ular naturalist who lately returned from the great woods of Central Amer - Ica came across spMers' webs_of such strengtbl and huge dimensions that they were positive obstacles in his path. Needless to say, the tenants of these webs were of a monstrous size. "I measured one of these fabrics" he says. "It bad a diameter of more than six feet, ,without including the long brace tbreads that run out like forestays to the extremity of theflur- rounding braoc es. I then took a num- ber of ;wild itmois and flung them against the uen er with all my might. The web stop d every one. It is no wonder' that w en' a bird becomes en- tangled, in the Meshes the huge spider Is able to make a breakfast off hita.'t 1 1 A 'Newt English Author. The traveler who happens to be weather bound at Perugia may find some anausement he the library of one of the leading hotels. Among the eon - tents of the shelves there is a consid- erable ' sprfialeling of English books; but, to the visitor's surMise, a large proportion of these are by a. mysteriona author. "Bart," of whose name he is probably/ignorant. But when he finds that Bait has Written "Ivanhoe" and "The Last Day S of Pompeii" the key to the mystery Is 'discovered. The local binder has taken the author's title for hie mane. and 1Sir Walter Scott and Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton are credit- ed with but ene personality, between them. 1 Conselehee Honey. "Conecience nio ey" ha Great Britain now a Mounts ttO housands 01 pounds annually. Thelfi st sum noticed was on Match 30, 178d, when 1360 was car- ried te the pui.)lic account In cense- quencel of a note received by the chan- cellor. The witur with troubled sour implored hire, 4i'as an honest matt, to consider the motley the property of the nation and to be so just as to apply; it to the useIf , the state in such a niann by its having been detained, and. thus lr that th nation may not suffer to ease the conecienee of an honest man." I Wanted to Repeat. "Lady," said hfeandering Mike, "have you any -coffee r mince pie or"— "Haven't yo1 beep here twice be- fore?"I "Lady, I hn.v. I'm too good a judge of co kin' to let such perfortnances as yours ro witout an encore. Why Hi by. Doesn't ,Go. "Bixby sent 1be minister ten reasons for not going 1t4 church, but he left but the main o "What Is that?' "He stays atwt7 because his et7ife doesn't make Vita go." A N Deitnitleir. Ostend—Paw hat is an 'under3Vrite er? Father—A w Man, guess; at least she is the one always adds a post- seript. If a man is haped all right and his Ilnibs= are as 11 xible as they should be, Jae is able to eceateb bls own back or reach any part of his anatomy.- Can tou do It?—Atthison Globe. boubtfai. "Was her hair Always bload?" thave a dark—suspiclon that it Wasn't.' —Philadelphia Bulletin._ 1 AD litglarr 3111IXIE. 4 ;4 'Tim a gayl4g trite and tree That pied goes before a fall; 'Tie; easy qjilte to trip a Man . Who thin he knows it all. e____ teiChietaini Mew& '.1