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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1903-07-31, Page 7JULY -31,,1903.,_ EieT WEAMER FAG. 1 agam.wanoomma rd A s *lair V -is elegant g end ter leepink tnng at fite wee Felder antfoa s done on' lt loses frien n4 every 'hair is a friend }fair Vigor rill prevent If the split ill stop f All rIst cannot sun • and we ^will I sure and ei.fSei t Ikx.vr..s.sofe ce. I 4.V.f Lowelletasee. sr& nt ore, t f Philadelphia tread fourteen like tarbor to the mine. re Unlike Cuser, hen. fall. Clergue *sec pring, Talbott ohtereela lergue must be ersay. , tent for 'him again, eel eat. hinting said to inderhenven could indite, railroad merely on et ookets of iron ora. eer. The road masa , reedy to opinion, tin demurred. The poke a chapter of mean peer 'es eye to eys agsinst ale will. preemies of some mitt* tlined and explained` hie embracing mmet, made tee carrying ore to Mee - reboil for confirmation, so Talbot." And Tale that it wee so. For he the contract. L. began. A small army m elle work on a rallomelt fhe men ono. in the 1138 Of getting out. indeed on Clargue and belied- the very sne te do. The greW re govern them out armed. His- *hen `Ike, & eastle. telL But the rood int ey no other MAR lift iave got & living man edges Cure. trug StareeSeaforth. rrue \ efret and look behind girt who does so- directly, ttentions- from- men who- - nuns or a meinber of not rise when gen rat her. onform to the rules of the are stsiying. A visitor., i this in mind. do not. order assistais er forgets to be thou erre her, Iowa by the companyt fes equally :to woram4a- annaoh troublea Drug Store; Seafortalt amen Womy. :protect herself from- the. t id to retain her youth fee a must- comer into more WI other people, aa her I read Igoe& boob; she inotony of her dutfeeend ieot confineinent 1,41ga iing outdoor exereiliet.dt e spin on a Moran In 'else the body and mind - ier, and *he will find the hearth remain with her faded in other WOMell omen," & esieurseee eel a. monotonotes ars- has no ocempation but eeeds let° coma- oat of ban. she doss. f3he unit Ith more people and take he done witheet oan a, end every rightemindet belie to secure for hie his wife these &Mato tba iness of body and mindr a. -- is locating :eaith." Yee, Wet pa - /Berta Compeena- you; observe." 'rug Store, Seaforthe -r I' the :Street. Walking down Libert, knawn artist, " s000ped the, stook uncIer a! wee and boy'a arm, made in the mud and d came near sereialr As he fought lifehithet m tersely surrimeria in the remark, " eard me laugh. and sesuming a sail pose, he savagely aaai at .?' • y boy,' I hastened to' a half -dollar to and he gamin as well *I this case ite oharneiall' recipient to remake , Yon tribal duck Pr he scooted in a the last I Wad dm!'. gmy purveyor of tlieti f. was hesthisg ,ho "raw ht quick patter of p avertook me to V. Say, mister, OW eery night f tiort ask t't said - ried, want', ter gided ght till 1 scitiares 1 d the artist, " tiberir nOb feel Die heari bay u that a lift tee r who does nOt be those, he svould dowdy? id successful Man rete feelieg, and Wig verte will bo mipidi Milleade Componnd ag' Store, Seafatati e been formed ja d $100,900e to n THE illIRON EXPOSITOR. No Snap, No Energy, Exertion Dreaded and Work Shunned. , " Fagged` right out," is an. appropriate way to express the feelings of many people gereng the hot stimmer months.' No „strength, no vigor, no snap, no ambltion, too weary to work and too languid to take say knit pleasure in life. You need a toniit for this summer fig, and the very hest sum- mer tonic, in the wined is Dre Williams' Pink bile for Pole People. Every dose makes _weer, rich blood, tones the nerves, shsrpens sla appetite, stimulates the liver, and ban- -beet weaknesse and weariness, headaches, backaches, Languor and despondency, k The _ only tonic that can do this for you is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills -it's a waste of inoaey beexperiment with anything else. Mr.Louis Thema, Grand Etang, N. S., says " I war vary much ran down- in health, and wag wok and essily tired. My appetite - Iraq variable, my nerves unstrung, and I often felt a complete indisposition to work. After tribig severe' medicines withosb bene- fit, .1 decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Mel and after taking a few boxes I felt batter than I had dose for months, snd joal to tiny exertion. I don'b know any- tethate equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills when onii bets fagged out." ; You eon get the Pills from any dealik in Medicine, or theyewill be sent post paid at 50 rents a box or lig boxes for $2,50, by writing -direct to The Dr. Williams' Medi - eine Coe Brookville, Ont. Be sure you get the genuine with the full name, " Dr. Wil- liams' Pink -Pille for Pale People," on the • wrapper around the box. Grey °Omen Meeting. Grey Chunoil meb in the Township Hall, Ethel, July 13th. Full Council meat, Reeve in the chair. The following tenders ware received for the Hanna Drainedaohan & hishony, $a,51h7e H. Fogel, $3.160; A.His- lop; 15oi per oubio yd., $3,169 50;Connolly & Waters, $3,550; Patrick Eohan, $2,947; Moho:Aeon & Region, $.1,085e Louis Lenge- way, $3,109; James Graig, 43,622; John Moho/ton, $3,379; John Curtain, sa,i5o. Moved by Fruit.. seconded by Turnbull that the tender al Petrick Bohan, be accept- ed, it being theelowese-Carried. Petition from George A4111elop and others for a Ittlute ieipal Drain, 15th con. of Grey, was read, Moved. by Granb, seconded by -Work that the petition be approved, and that a by-law be prepared, appointing, John Roger O. -14, S., to examineand report on same.-6arried. After passing a long lige of amount, for tow ship imnrovements, the Council &d- ie ed to meet on August 10bh, ab 10 a, m, , i filuicide.Among Doctors. Suicide among physiciane- is notably on the inerease in England. The reason, in the opinion of the Daily Chronicle, is not far to seek. It has recently hien shown that a doctor who might calculate on len income of over $1,000 slew years ago can count to- day, in corresponding eircurnstances,on only something over $500. The simple causes of this are two: first and mod important, the • increased health of the country at large and the diminishing death rate. The enedreal . profession, ase matter of fact, is working in these dates of preventive medicine in the dire . faction of its oWn extinction. - When the last Anopheles morquito, for instance, i killed and malaria passes into ill history, m t of the doctors of the tropics may pack ‘ti their baggage and depart. An- other clause is -in the- multiplication oi the univeesities• to whose interest it he to turn oat ae many graduates as possible' and the inereaeingoompetition which onetime And, again the hospitals are daily being need more andanore ley people who Can afford to pay. • His Composition. A father going into his. stable one day found bile tittle son astride ono oi the hones, with a elate and pencil in his hand. '" Why, Harry,' he exclaimed, " what are you doinger " Writing a competition," was the reply. " Well, why don't you write it in the house ?" asked the father. " Because," answered the little fellow, " the tesoher told me to write e. composition on a horse." . • Lever's Y-2 (Wise Head) isinfectant Beep Powder is better than oth r pow4ers, as it is both soap and disinfehtant. 34 • , featly Oppli of keepi g track '1of int bee longin i you would only leo them a one." Mrai Je4ings edified a tranquil -but exits., paratnigeMile, but said nothing. - - "And yeu don'trweys put thing where ii they iteloag, hy an ' means, my de r," said Mr. Jen logs, w th inereasing a, phasic. - "You knew I wished te start off e rly this- - in OM 1 ad -map let the i I shell h an air holt boil - a, and a as if to it, and ed himt self on a shedy bank ten miles rom his home and took out his road -Map, fo he had loot his way. ' i - . i . "What," he exclaimed to the solitude' and an inguisitive equirrel. ,"Wh b-"' e For apread out upon his knee was e paper covered with tracings, to be, gum bat, noti afternoon fora twenty.five utile s the new read, and yet here is my r without its cover too; you mutt hay children tear it --on youiework-tabl be hack iti time for supper," end wi of triumph at this timely illuttratio point, Kr iJenninge-pooketed the thin paper ennead it, many fol stalked ea. - Mrs. Jennings opened her Mouth call after Mm, but theught 'better o smiled again. - An hour later Mr. Jennin sea Poppies 2,000 Years Old. The extraoidinary resuscitating power of light has received a very curious illustration In the silver 'mines at Lsurium. The mines had been abandoned more than 2,000 years ago se unworkable- and consisted for the most part a the slag produced by the work- ing ot the ,miners. An enterprising English- man diecovered that the mines contained plenty of silver, which could easily be re- moved by the superior modern appliances. He discovered, however, something.fermore valuable than the silver, viz., smite poppies of a species 'which had disappeared for twen- ty centuries, the seed of whioh had laid dor- mant beneath the slag for twenty centuries. When the slag was removed to the* fur- nace, the next visit to the mine found the entire space covered with a mese gorgeous show of poppies. 'After their twenty Oen. turies' rest they had bloomed as- vigorously as ever, without the aid of a single drop of water or any restorative efther than the rams of the sun. - --e Justice .in 'India,. A clergyman, wins was for many years a missionary- in India, relates the following odd story: Four men, partnere in hueiness, bought some cotton bales. That the rats might not destroy the cotton they purchase a oat, and agreed that each of the four ehould own a particular legmf the cab. The oat by an ac- cident injured one of its legs. and the owner that member wound round it a rag soaked in oil. The eat going too near the fire, set the rag on fire, and, being in great pain, rushed in among the cotton hales, where she was eectuitomed to bunt rats The cotten, therefore, took fire and burni;d. up. , The three partners broeghb ahuit to te- oover the value of c the ootten against the partner who ownedtthis partihular leg of the oat. The judge exemined thp ease ani de- cided thus: h "Theleg that had e oiled rag on it was hurt. The oet could not 'lee that leg, in facia held up that le and r h with the oth. er three lege. The t .ree un urt legs, there. fore, carried the fire to the oetton, and alone were to blaine. The injured, leg was not to Memel The three partnere who . own the three legs -with svhieh the eat ran to the ootton wilt pay the whole value of the bales to the partner who 'was the proprietor of the injure leg." Served Him Right. Mrs Jennings was in the habit of keeping everything in otder for -her husband, and he, like mime! another equally fortunate man, took it as a metter of course. His letters were always airanged on his desk; his dean. clothea on a ohair hie stude in the proper place on the fdress'ing table. But Mr. jen- ings, instead of taking these little services I gratefult and appreoiative fashion, was rather inelieed to iniehnize their value. Ile never liked to have them mentioned by his wife. • "I don't know what you mean by speak. ' leg ae if I couldn't find things for myself, or aft if yea always had to look for them," he said one day, in an injured tone, "I'm per- the' kindle was moms aloine the lower edge t "Seven -gored skirt: Forty-two,i1lehes."- I Tried To A good story of Ki the Salvation Army is of the Social Gazittes stipporter 0 the army e fooled wor Two years ago Mrt meson, who torested himself in ob ining done social work, was on hi wey one to call on a certain b neVolenb p he lost hie way in a t bele 'forest. hi raninte a man ne r B okinghs Apologizing be aske e drug could diesel) him to th ale he in for._ The reply 7 ' Certainly. I sm there m sh w you the house." . d We chatted a ay me rily," eon 'continues: " to d ini all a work and the labo s o th Selvatio He teemed deeply' in ere ted, and reeched the house he siti "It is to think so much saff I want yen to accept suffering enes," and h ten sovereigns. "I wae astonished a donor what nem° I thou! book. H replied hu rie I all. please Simply in) iy I saw li s face disti ib was the' Prime of I having, omed to,;an e teorele: I. Srzei twen WitiComp OU Bide It. g Edward's i told ia a ree Waleh D Oin y-thlree. tenet in nt ' issue - mon, a had in- ions for fternoon r, t when addenly Palace. ✓ if he as look - self. I'll r. DaW1 - out rny Army. when( I dreadful_ rin exists in this °ley. tle glib fo placed in i d eked the Etif6ortitsh. '0' shin pow th i 11 . 7 M. 0, 's Founcle . t The founder of the ChrietimilAse mistime is of 82 yesen living at London. ;He is Si knighted in 1894, the the Y. 24. o. A. .Hat in the employ of Hite Hitchcock, Williams selves together for worship apd mutual small beg naing grew is . , i to -day in, (trope and Williams; being e go ployee, fell in lone wi ter Helen a member that the a his gift of the work of the erga the poor y hands . nknown ire the IIM8 et , Sudden. rst tinie; rift You fine loo o. 13 Rune orge eth anai a few fell k and Rce ere, now a., band d theme- = owe of domeetio help, and f om that A erica. 0 oo rse, th great sootetii of d \boy and faithful am - h itolicook s er, beeom ng he possi ilit ave faile ir a halt iza fife nd CO g - Men's ing men 1,8quare, Wimps, emu* w clirke and'marri d of the tirm. eiety Woul $25,000 to A - °the) , Mre.J. Suelling, Unde has'ueed Dr.Low's Pleas ily for the past ,eight -yea ng so good! for lohliciren - '8 00 5, ho pinion , Ontario, oral fly ru d she kfic suffer Irani Don't let.headsobe w y u out and unfltifor busine,ss or pl as re Milbur Headaobe Powders will c re onguiokly no bad after effects. y do not depre t Price 10c AO 25o. .Severe,:lloothache., "I have fled two bott Gum, and ind it splebdi toothachel ever ha `." es f Di. Lovi cured me lvina Hill, agyi4rd'Iri ellow ad ugh.. ater es are at for, speed` ye that site in her faut- s of noth- orms. • render you 's. Sterling and leave 3 the heart Tootbae the wo va, Man Can .be used exteinally f ta en internal y. it cures cuts, burns, brulies, contracted cords, etiff pinta, painful swellingsiiquinsy , so e throat, c. It is a regular fa medicine eh C.-- Price 2 o. Laxa-Liv Dysyerda plexion, e Small and er Pills onre usness, Sic Sour Mimetic , Ater Breit, -They do not g ipe, weak soy to take. Pri 25o. Sometimes after getting o remedy for tne worst kinds a chill, tin a severe cold. l)r. Wood' Norway Pine Sy -4184 Headache, Sallow Comi n or sicked erheated t ere follows The quick sb and best of coughs and colds is up. Try it. Prices 26e. Perth otes. ' -The oontraet has $4,500 organ for the church, Stratferd. -Stephen Douglas a North Dakota, ere 'vial. °hell, after an abseeee' =Thee° died at thelt limb, Deeid Trachsel, , He had heen . a reeideei over 50 Years. 1 I -During the storm fast the harn of Henry 54,11 cession North past lightnin and hurried t this seamen's hay Was' horse •was killed. : T $2,000, ptertly covered Ab Milverton, !on 'were badly injured at Harniltori walked too f fell to the grotind, ,br i , locating als wrist and ternally, Another, ,n breaking his leg, seve and sustained, inteinel -GasOer Rem,. the Frank Rosso, It'alian Stratford, died eatly poisoning. Three lof were playing roued a heap, upen whiehuthey glish rnettard, ahd three beetane very sick and cumbed.t -At 6 o'clock on Shnday af fen 7th k by lig enty-fiv f grain w unt to ab een let Central d wife, oi ing frien f senate spear° r, in h'is of that n Sunda ohn, jr., tliti was the gro destroye e loas wil y insure Saturday, barn rai r out on eking hi injuring med Par ely injur d his foot 'njurien ad well. three 'yea old 8011 of fruit m rchent, of riday. ning, from r. Roes 's children /stable d rubbish found a- an of En. artook• f it The asp IT SUC- * ernoon the ooneeasion, toing and tons of hay re destroy- ut $2,000. , but the e belongs, om, and re- charge and - of age was morning in the 8hake- There:were ft:water a bub as he as in fun. °cover the til late at eat of water mployed at home was in Stratford. • - It putable ommeens w city Will hergrante tiop of taxei for a given a guarantee by the Munieipalit -Through the k Stook, M. P. P., f Marys Rod and G recipient of about spawning end repl river Thames in The Deputment of Toronto. sent thro Saturday with so The fish were in oh H. Fox, of the Maryt Rod and Gu for the transfer of tank and D. A. GI IL Brown and Dr. bass. One half w hridge dam and t Wear and Mathiee Co., all on the river ment (Adele ga have the Beaton olo MeKay's dam up t -John Roberts° ing of hist week, ft hope, near the Lit that township fro ents in 1832. The one interhehing ye' eating story, whi oonditiens thee; a present day as bele farther bsek than lately been among bee the country in, ed with thick fore weee numerone. Mr. Robertson tie though rugged mo hie sturdy perents perinea bub littl eviteble infirmitiett end he paired awa bed shims February and four months. - or a new Methodist Enderline ti in Mit: n years. a Monday 95th year. village. for afteenoon lot 8', con - 'struck by nd. All and one be abott ee. two men Win John plank and arm, die: imseif int inson, fell most aesured that re- s ing Ito ,100.14tel in the xemption from a fret& erin of years, and be f heir bonds for a period n nese of Mr,. Valentine PORTRAITS OF CATS. Varionel Beason" Wily They' Are ;Very' Difficult tO Faint. In speaking of the putting,,, of cats on canvas a painter of peal recently said: "They are withoutdoubt one of South Perth, the Sa the molt difficult creatures to paint, Club was the hippy .t and lamentably few Lutists ,make a parent black bass for suceess of their portraiture. Ihey are Mug the waters of the e St. _Marys district. alniost impossible to keep quiet, ahd isheries of Coterie at the' particular fluffy !cattiness' of their h a fish tank oar on coats is far from easy to depict in pig - very fine specimena Ments. The famous cat. painters are ge of W. 'W. Ellis and few, and when choice or chance dis- coVers one he, or more often she, finds the gift a mine of wealth. "tjin David Brooke's well known plc- tu e of the &inky 'preacher at dinuer in the Corcoran Art gallery inlWash apartment. The St. Club had barrels ready he bass from the car sey, Ed. Fraleigh, E. B own had charge of the platted in the Sarnia 4rekt in the dams of ington the cat in the foregrouud coule Bled the J. D, Moore be induced to sit still only by having balms, The Govern. e strict instructions to her feet glued to the floor. But satis- s d against fishing from Ncabeiteohry_i't rceastu, sitsf a caes catno beexppraerstis icourl rll yn driievdero'n Monday even- eloquent, are not to be secured in this , is home in South East. way. Those Who have had reason to Lakes. He came to know say that even -the fur of felines ootland with his part is indieative of several things. In h story of' the seventy - health and contentment it stands 'out would form an inter - fluffily from their bodies, while in fear would 'include many . looked upon 1 at the or displeaSure it lies flat and lankly to ing to a period much- , the skin. 8 2. Mr, iltobertvon has "Not long since a, picture was placed e very few whe rennin- on exhibition of a cat lapping Milk, primitive state, cover- with its tail held high, Though the t in which wild besets technique was good aid the fur really t amid these conditions 'furry,' the value of, the whole win r up and tthe healthy e'er life wam reflected in practically nil, because no cat has eve ity. All hie life he en- been known to eat with its tail in the of sioknewitiintil the id- air. With waving tails they do indeed of age took hold of him rush toward the food, but with. the miter being confined to firet lap or bite down goes the caudal , He was. aged 80 years appendage lower and lower, until iwith 1 Ne -Six hundred a Fitzpatrick's oonst three bands, from Quebec., visited 0 t the guesnof the They visited the experimental farm, twenty street care Wog p mediation. it -A drowning so Lake, near Elgin, young man named bathing, and 'wide fiet of his tether a able to ,render him -A painful socid on the fourth cone a full stomach it 'sweeps the greund et Notes. In the ease of young kittens it is 'Often d ten of Hon. Charles different, however. They scramble in meat, scoompsnied by to a dish of milk with- their pointed . Basuport, Province of ratlike tails at right tangles to their wa the other day. as roily poly bodies and. sometimes forgei . Minister of Justice. to take' down this sign of animation and alertness, Any one who knows cats knows that the tail at every angle and with every movement IS expressive of some definite emotion." 11 barn of John Kue Morningeon, was stru totally consumed. T and aboet 200 bushels - ed. The loss will am Mr. , Kaepfer had n insurane membere of the sect to which will tinite, as is their usual one store to him his building free o reimburse hint for the 'grain los -James M. stowitib, 21 yule drowned while bathing Sunday ea pond in Jarvia' brick yard, on speare read, east of Stratford. four °alive others with him in the tinitewhe sew him disappe made . no outory thought it Efforte ware made all day t body, but lirts not found night There as about fiftee in the pond, Stewart was Avondale cheeee factory, and in Stratford. -There is a movement on Stratford, A iliumber of ent zone bought up all encaeoupie southeastern perb of Strad majority of the factories are 1 they parpose ,hieving surveyed lots of one-fifth more each. sold to factoey employees at half of which le to go into will be adminiitered by true . a ft &tided for their &mom- , Went mourred at Sand ate a few days ago. A oil Ilsiladay went in et sank within a fold brother, who were tun a y assistance. fait occurred lest weeki sion of Culross, a ,mhor distance from Teerhater, A young mint named MeCormiek infas engaged in . mowing hay, when in some lway his arm got caught in the machine, ouliftlig, it so badly below the elbow that snip -F. H. ()Lague,' syndinate at the So active partin the solidated lake $u announeemen Mr. Clergue has gi Soo, and will devo , Canada Central Railway. -The Manitob held last week at iy favored in the grounds were .oro tation was necessary. vignette. of the Ciergue , has tretired frOm all nageMent of . the Con- erior Company. The was ate last week. n up is offite- at the hir e tire time to the I Proyi Mal Exhibitio , iie , was perticula • weather, and th h visitors. The good this yeae, f Ootario's fineilt f sightseers from on Wednesday. de of Americans, fton, North De- trains were else Province. 1 stry in Ontario me reverses thih ork `waking Company, ree ears ago, with a as fo oed to make se inere. The cause give for t e failure is kee a hi mnipe atter of ed wi stook display is pa eeionlarl and has included t pick I3 herds. The first ig body across the line - rtived There were fifteen eerie all of whom came ram Gr kota, and south. pedal ran from many pa te of th -The perk-pachieg ind appears to have sitffered a year, The Penley which was formed t capital of $10,000, assignment of its bu by the promoters competition and t h prices of hog which have ruled this sea on. The assig merit was made to , Cosvae, of Paieleyotnd the liabilities are net yet -Mte. Robert Cotvan a Mason, of Chicago, hrere at Port Rowan, awl wh Dedi iekta Hill the Florae 0 Mrs. Cowan pitched 1 caught by Mra. Maeon, and keit from going out horse, in endeavoring to r stumbled, and, the hreee .buggy went againe; the Cowan again pitehe forw of the front of the bugg road, and when tak medical men, who moned, were of the resulted from fright, and was dos d when she ell o a de for ears t to boom rising °W- and in the where the lited. This -hi ;building lots will be 0 eaoh, one- und, 'which s to locate en up were opinio -After evading t England and Canted Ellen Macaw, 35 Tubertnore, a suburb of for embezzling end for about $2,500, sevings ba arreeted on Tailed& mor son 1 ay Provincial dete honey. Mite Mao ee mistress at Tuberm re, w family of eight obi dram aim nine months a o led thatehowed her operatic) ing n for a period nee, was raced to Quebec, her 48 lost uatii I oated she had been read ng f She waived extradi ion p retut'n to Ireland to sten DOWD. d her niece Mrs. riving in 'buggy n coming down umbled and fell. rward, but was ho was driving, of the rig. The gain its feet,again ing breaking. the horse, and Mrs. rd and went out and fell to the was dead. The immediately sum - that her death that Mei. Cowan t of the buggy. eetives of Ireland; ine months, Mrs. f age wanted in Belfeet, Ireland, ing receipts foe itc deposits was ing last, in Wind- tive, Charles Ma- as assistant post - ere she now has a ,Her dieappear- to an investigstion e to have been gq. ly ten years. She here einem* of in Windsor, where sederal months. oeeedings and will trial. Route s of ColOr. , I An interesting 'enu eration has. been Published in a t cluii I journal of. the source's of color. . Fro this it appears that the Cochin al ects furnish tlie 1 gorgeous earmin „ c son, scarlet car - Mine and purpl lak s; the cuttlefish gives .sepia-th t is, the inky fluid which the fish sett' rges in order to render the Wate ope ue when attack - t - -. ed; the Indian ell° comes from the _ camel, ivory e ps, p educe the ivory, black and beon bl-a.c -, the exquisite .1Prussian blue c es 'rom fusing horee hoofs and other refu e animal matter with impure pc, assi' m Carbonate, va- tious - lakes as de ved from roots, barks and ga s; b nap black comes from 'the chart al 0 the vine stock, turkey red is ade rom the madder', Want, whtch ws ltindustan; the fellow sap -of a Siamlese tree prodUce0 gamboge, raw ienni 1,0 the natura earth from the eighborhood. of net Italy; raw :umber 10 Ms meth ound near Unibria, fxrdia ink M Slade front btumed eamphor, mastie fs Mtge frost the gam of - e MalitiO Ma; which . : , grows in the Greelan archipelagO1 1,11iister ls- the, of wood ashes; very i little real ultrataarine, obtained front Market. • - ' the precious lapis lazuli, is found ha the 1 , . CHiVALRY OF SAVAGES. Miley Barbarous Tribes Are Exceed finely Deferential to Women. 'Untraveled people commonly sup, pose that savages' always treat then women badly, making mere slaves and beasts of burden of them. This is true in some cases, but many bar barians are exceedingly chivalrous to ward women. • The Maoris of New Zealand alway treat women with the grenteet defer- ence and respect, so much scrthat the Earl of -Ranfurly once called them "the truest gentlemen on earth." They will not permit a woman to dO any hare. work if they can do it fori her, and their boys are taught from earliest youth that rudeness and unkindness toward women are crimes only second to lying and cowardice. A. young English lady named Ger- trude Bell traveled alone among the Druses of Syria. She was everywhere - received by them with the greatesi courtesy and hospitality. Special tents were assigned to her use, and the Sheiks vied with each other ia being het humble servants. "No well bend English gentleman could have been more chivalrous," she said, "and they were just as courteous to their OWn women as they were to me." The Fijians go to extremes. They are so deferential and polite to their womenfolk that they let the lattei "rule the roost" entirely. A. -womansf. word is apt to be law In the Fiji is lands. f ' As ti mile, women occupy a sub- ordinate place in the east, but Kali- ristan is an exception. The Kaffirs are of Aryan origin and to all 8.6earances are a white race. They ellen Alexan- . der the ' Great as their an ester and have a lbfty code of chivalry. Their with fair axen hair, ost 0# #1 a I # Medaim For Soldiers. ' The .flest issua of medals to-Brills/1J ; troops was in 1043 by' Charles L Dailansed teeFes From a Lamp.. . Eyes are sometimee inflamed by be- ing held too near the heat of a lamp, and relief may -lie obtained by shading the eyee with ferry old scrap. of green nauar. I women, lovely creatures complexions, blue eyes and are treated. far better than en in civilized, society. , Coristabl4 and Rio P1 • Conetable, the eminent Br er, onee sat on the hanging of the British Royal fien.de small landscape was brem judIginent and pronounced tore. tis h p aint- co win ittee iy tviren a ht pp for "aWfully bad"-4by everybody • but hif - He rose and Made short'an speech. "That picture was me: I had a notion that s didn't like my work, =and pretty convincing proof. much, obliged to you." YNITh leagues redovered. from thei tion the head carpenter bring back the picture. '4.1ti would -not haye it.- "Oitt i said grimly. - , a A Monument to Cheer The: following -quaint ep be seen in Crayford church, It strikes as one of. the -cre monuments to cheerfulness rie England: "Here lieth f Peter .Isnel (thirtY, yeara cl 'parish). He lived tespected and a mirthful man..and c way to church to asaist at on the 31st day of March, seventy years. The inhabitai ford have raised this stone to his che.er- ful memory and as a tribute to his long and faithful serviee."--I4ondon Stand- ard. asinateridilbnyg me of you, this is a am very 0 his col- ' ,stupefac- bidden to Constable goee!" he FREAKS OF CLOCK /HE FR Peon Bri STRANGE WARNING C OM STRASSEURG CATHED levities of the Tiltneplece ish House of LOrds-The IM D, AL n the Mita- ners of Mechlin's -Clock u ,lcs 4:fro Crazy', Things. Go !re la, an old saw which d "when clocks go crazy, till T:i that daft.' At , t wort cad d ral chithe: with ut rhyme or reason. It sOunded 1,87( pears, then 'stepped, and after an. iliterVill slowly began to toll as if. rex a gqat one dead. Tit political atmosphere of Fiurope int -time was indleative 'of pi,o- peace. Nothing of danger or dis- i could by any possibility:be con - d of as threatening Strassburg lor thabitants. Yet less than a year ward the German artnies,,had en - 1! d the city with a ring of st ,e1 and The German shells were falling thiehly ,in her streets and squares and lexpl ding even within the -precimits df the stately cathedral itself. ,And 2 on Sept. 27, 180 famOus clock,in the great Strassburg comtnenced to Itt. igs 0- t form gra c ceiv -Its 1 ft fie: Orel tire. • eral whi the in torn al timepiece which is said to in- Vari tidy suffer fawn 'temporary abet- ratiOn whenever a member of the ro3a1 family bf Britain passes away. Tie fierily was first noticed when WH- IN'. died. Very early in the mom - he clock began to emit a series of pect liar gurgling - noises, as though gasIdng for bmtli, went suddenly and finally.. stopped altogether. All efforts- to start it failed, and on the. evel ing of the day of the funeral' vied of its own accord, nor did it any further trouble wbatever or y years afterward, has over and ever again been AM>. 1 that clocks,. especially those gs re lb sely at 2 a, m, Sent. 27, 1870, Gen- Uhrich signed .;the capitulation h Was. to deliver' Strassburg into fanrls of the invaders. the house of lords Is a certain his - peel ing rest f"u;itivte(d in the turrets of high' buildl: LUU 1 I t nee hay ng unusually deep foundations, liab c to go wrong in sympatby w seis nic disturbances happening in 's- tyle s sometimes very far away. 0 Nov. 1, 1755, for instance, fully halt the timepieces in Edinburgh were affeleted. Many stopped altogethler. Othlers went slow ' or fast or star Pd striking wrongly. In this the super.ti- tiolls saw some ealamity impending, and' it was not until news arrivedl or the great Lisbon earthquake that the alai m was allayed. It was then disc v- erec, by comparing times and datls, the the first shock must have traveled from Fez in Morocco to Cape Wrath In l!ss than eight seconds. A curious coineidNit waS then recall- ed. On II:Q.-evening of April exactly :')Ve years previously, several thOu- sands of persons, particularly those of 'rank and fortune, bad camped' out in 1:yde park and had thus passed the 1.01:11-1; from dusk till daylight. This was to avoid 'an earthquake ek which bad been predicted !or early mornhig of the Sth' by an al- "inadman." The threatc ed ke. however. failed to materialle, the seared.ones got heartily laugh- ed at for their -pains. Nevertheless, it wa noted at the time. that several of the public and private clocks of the ropolis stopped at precisely the ie moment on the Morning. ques- , and this fact at once took on a new and sinister significance. "Was it possible," people, began to as , "that the so called 'madman' was no so very 'mad' after ail and that Lo don had providentially escaped what might possibly have beers a. hid- eceis and unparalleled. catastrephe?"' The so called "madness" cif Meph- lin's clock constitutes one of the Most mysterieus incidents of the Napoleonic wars. It happened in. iso. Two years previonsly the Corsican usu er had razed a portion of the lcity to ground, and the place had also ,suffered severely in other ways. Bat the mag- nificent cathedral had been epared, and then, as no*," its massive tevter rising four square to a -height of Mere than 800 feet and bearing four dials, each forty-eight feet in diamet7, Was ene of the . most striking Ian Marks for Miles and miles around. ' Inside the tower was ti clock, the biggest in the wo boomed the haute for long oldest burgher could remember ind had never gone wrong. When, there- fore, in the early dawn of one sunatter day the great bet' began cla.nging ously small wonder that nOt only [the - city, but the whole counttyside, as roused. Mechlin itself WaS like a is - t rbed hive, men rushing , from their h uses half dressed, but all armed, while from every town and village thin a radius of twenty miles a asants poured cityward. , It was a false alarm, hoWeVer, a a I. No assault followed. No col Inn o dust on the horizon heralded the ad- --v nce of the enemy, althopgla anxious. e es watched all day. Bet , when to- ard evening one more cnrious than h s fellows bethought him te examine e interior of the clock toWer in order t discover if possible the teasel:0 for the clock's strange behav s rne sight met his view. Entangled in the massi e huge timepiece, torn, ne broken, was the body taph is to. -ard, Kent. prettiest in all Mer- e body of rk of this as a pious led on his a wedding 1811, aged ts of Cray- " :•The Bad With the Oood. Visitor—Why don't you open your windOws and let in .sorne fr Flatman--SecanSe as sur we'll let in some stale air t next -door starts- playing time of night, -Exchange. sh air? as We do at cornetist about this A Follower of Pre ept. Simpcon-Yon blow -your wn horn a good Oval. J,,nlzins-Well, if you whirt a thing well done do it yourself.—Petrolt Free Press _ They Can't Laugit. An Indianapolis doctor is authority for a story of a family neared Tinsley, whose 'members as well as their an- cestors have never been ahle to litugh since a clergyman cursed. al Tinsley for ill timed merriment at the hanging of a thief in Oliver Cromwell'e day. • !.-An the leg (nu Sa tiO reeteed A COMMON CUSTOM.1 Manes Habit of Bunning Ms Fingers i9BVisugh Ills Bair. "Why doaet a mart ,always run ltis hand. through his hair when be takes -his hat off?" asked an observant man. "Did you ever notice that man will in- variably do this very thing? Is It just a nervous habit? Is it vanity? It is an old habit I have never known a man who did not Indulge this habit. Even men who have no hair to run their fingers through, men whose heads are' as bald as billiard balls, will. brush their hands over their heads when they lift their hats. If the men simply wanted to smooth tbeir tousled hair, of eourse this would afford ample explanation of the habit. But why should a man who has no hair on his head. do the same thing? It is not a suffiCient answer to say that such a man may have had a fun suit of hair at dne time and that it is simply a+ matter of habit contracted under dif- ferent conditions. As a rule, men are unconscious of the fact. They do not know why, hoW or when they run their hands over their heads. But they all do it just the same. Go into a court room or at any place where men con- gregate and where it is necessary for them to remove their bats and watch' them. You will observe that event man will go theough the same perform- ance. It seems to be a perfectly natu- ral thing for them to do. My own con. elusion is that It iss an evidence of van- ity. A. man wants Ids' hair to be just so. Originally probably it was sitnply a matter of tidiness. But it has grown into an act of vanity. The lavryer, fof 'instance, if be has enough hair for the purpose, will want his head to haVe tousled appearance. It gives him a studious appearance and leaves the IM - pression that he has been struggling with the books.. Whatever the reaSon, the habit Is a curious one and one which seems to be deers rooted in the 'masculine nature:* • gigrantic .1d.' It ad ✓ than be grY ter t b 0 t chught by the machinery gtaged in tampering with i tject was in so doing non hat it was something s uld be no doubt Prob I tended to so , arrange he interior echanism of the clock as to cauee it t sound a signal later in the day. AI 11 events, whatever his plan, it mtg.. arriecl. And he 'himself fell a Vietilli t his own temerity and want of knowl- ot a grew - 1 e work$ of shed, eVery of a French cer. He had evidently elimbed into e tower unobserved and had been. while: en- . What his ever knew. raster there bly he linf.1 ithriA• ( Gold and Silver Alloy, One -twelfth of alloy gimes the grist. st hardness to geld and silver. i The First English Judge's liabiry. The first record of a judge's solar, yes £134 18s. dd. as the stipend of homas Littleton, judge Of tb. ONO 1466, Bow Blisters Arc, Biased. blister Is the vesiele, or bladder, which Is formed by an effusion of serum—the watery portion of the blood -underneath the scarf, or outer skin. Any such powerful irritant as boiling water may produce blisters, and we 'may regard their formation. as an efe fort of nature to protect the true and acutely sensitive inner- skin from at- tack, The fact speaks for itself, but the reason for this injurious action of scalding water has a much deeper seat. Our blood Vessels are supplied with nerves, and the stimulation of these causes in some cases dilatation and In others contraction.. Any excessive stim- ulus will cause paralysie of the muscu- lar coat of the vessels and consequent stagnation of the blood in these parts, and then their nutrition is impaired. It is owing to the condition. thus in- duced by scalding water that the se- rum oozes through. the Ivessel wall and makes its way into the surrounding tissue. This raises the upper and in- flensible skin inte a blister, which prob• ably takes its name from the Anglo- Saxon bleestan, to blast or puff. LAURA', KEENE'S D EAM. A 'MI° In-, urn!ler That Was T r ccl Into a acorns-. Stuart Robson used to teill a fstrango story of Laura Keene, with whom he played in the sixties in the last centu- ry. "The sight of a bottl(1 of red ink was enough to upset her flor ft week;" - he said. "On one occasiOn we' -were playing a farce called 'This Lady and the DeV11.1 An important scene of it was when she Was -Aiding at a table preparatory to writ:111g a atter. L as her servant, stood at the back of a, chair. 'Take your right b nd off that chair,' she whispered. Th sthge dia- logue proceeded.. 'You a e sure your can find Don Rafael at li s lodgings?' 'Yes, madam; his sarvant tells me his wounds will confine him his bed for a week.' 'Is this the ord paper that we have? Where is the Ink? 'Here„ madam.' And I bent forward -to''place the ink within her reach, when, in mse, confusion at her reproof, the vessel was upset and its contents trickled on to the lap of her satin drew. The ink was blood red. I shall never forie get the ghastly look that overspread her face, and I was 50 frightened that I never knew bow the seene ended. '''The next morning at eeheartial Oa told me I was doomed to 11 luck for the remainder of my ilaye. S e called the company together and gavie theirs a de- tailed description of the lawful scene the night before occasioned by the young man who Would never make ara, . actor. She told of a terriSe dream eh& hid had in which some Freat perscht had been foully murdered before hes . eyeS; how she had attempted rescue without avail; how be, had,fallen dead at her feet, and how his blood slowly oozed into her lap. It was two years after this that Miss Keene was play- ing at Ford's theater, Washington, orf the occasion when Abraham Lincoln was shot. Miss Keene was the only person avho seemed to realize the sit- uation. fehe ran to the box, and in a momeut the head of the dying man was in her lap, while the scene of her, dream was being pitifully enaeted."-- Argonaut Au Ancient Tragedy. A. historical paper in Lord Montagu's toll4etion in- Lenders tells of a strange tragedy "done in Holborn, a little be- fore Christmas," several centuries ago. "A boy seven years old name tige int,o a gentleman's chamber and prate tied to him and drew his sword . and nourished with it. ! The gentlernatn heing in bed, wondered to see the boY toSs his blade 'Sol and said: `So, good boy, thou bast done well. Put In the sword.' The boy persisting, the gen- t,leman rose and held him the scabbard, end the rude handed lad, thinking to ftheath the sword, lustily chopt it into , his belly. Company were called. One offered to strike the child. 'Let him gnoth the gentleman. 'God is just Tilts boY's father did I kill five years- since and none knew. Now he bath revenged it.' And the gentletuart died the second dressing." Handel as George Frederick Handel, the son of a Saxon barber and valet, was only, five years old when his "Angers wooed 'divine melodies" from the spinet/ which a goad natured aunt had smug- gled for him into an attic, so that no Sound of it might reach the ears of his father. At eight his playing so aston. ished the elector of Saxony that his gatlw was compelled to withdraw his Opposition and allow the genius of the boy to have fair play. And before he tad reached his twelfth birthday young Handel was known throughoui Germany as a brilliant composer and virtuoso at the court of the emperer. When Boys Wore Wigs. A century and a half ago irea1/4 ing was at its height, and bol" lour or five years of age submitted fa having their heads shavced preparatory, to donning their !false headdresses. Leyden professor -Rivers by name - shocked all churches:1)y declaring that a Christian must necessarily, wear a wig or be eternally lost. On the other hand, Dr. Thiers, a, celebrated Cath- - olic, assailed the wig wearing priests In a good sized volume. Cranks, Judge -Let us get this thing right. You say this Marl whore we are Oial/10, firing is not insane and yet he Is not fe his right mind. How is that? Witness -Lots of people, your hon- or, who are not Insane are *roue stbie4 ed about everything. An Aid to Mesisei'l. Slopay-And, doctor, lf Firm' g wish you would give me Something MI help tuy memory. 1 forget so easily. Doctor -Very well. f'll seed you bill every monthe-lial re Ames. THE TOO EARL BIRD. ‘ A tiocial Nuisance For 'Whose Therta Is No, Excuse. The too early birds are a source of trouble and inconvenience to the entire neighborhood. Invite the too early birds to 2 -4.inners and they arrive an hour before the time. 'Your last little topches have to be delegated to the drst am able revel who 11, appreciates the misery a . entertainb3g the too early birds. Yeu had• intended to replace a vase of carnations with One of roses or possibly y u had at the : f last moment intended to hift the plat. cards, having sOdilenly remembered that .31iss Jones had a quiet fancy for nr.. Smith; that: Mr, Smith reeipro- cated. Mr. Smith will have to wonder, and Miss jones will haverto SUMM011 up her i 'presence of mind land conceal her din - 1 appointment. The too early birds must • 1 ibe greeted as thodgh you were glad to isee them and appireciated their appar- ent impatience to have the fun begin., You really would likel to give your hair another touch,- but not so. Your guests await you. -` The too early birds haunt the railway stations hours before th train leaveS and start oft on the Jour ey jaded and out of sorts. Id, the too early birds are elver amia- ble it is at nuch a "previous" boor that the rest of mankind. is 910ewbere, and the fact is not generally appreelatedt If there- is 0110 class ef humanity more exasperating than the too early, birds I have yet to meet them. The man who Is too late may entail ille011- venienee, but at least yoa have the sat - missing the treat 'Damn bis own act- isfaetion of noting' hisPeseomilture at \ The too early birds are au inflictionf and they tarry with them no eoraDen- s'ating reflection. whatever. unbappr MAO "Yes, my old friend, I have been th10 victim of misfortune. in all my love af- fairs. My first sweetheart died, the second jilted me, and the third became my wifel" The abide -la's coarse in a straight line is only sixty miles, `dio g its etreara it pleasures 213 milek .•-•••••••••In Eastor Itassia. Easter in Russia is the greatest festi- val of the year. Russian Christairds presents are as nothing compared to those given at Easter, Eggs are of course the principal feature, and not till one has seen the EaSter bazaar Ist the Gostinoi Door aod the shops on the Nevsky Prospeet is it easy to imagine the beauty and daintiness of Easters productions; Fortunes' in trinkets, laces and jewels are sp nt on the cone tents of the eggs. A. very pretty egg Is made of pink veined marble rimmed with goleI4 Small ivory eggs filled 'With sliver ro4 sary beads make a lovely offering fOrl the devout church woman and for OM practical housewife a rush bas- ket full of fresh eggs Is wonderfully attractive. A Voracious Monster, The most voracious of all marine beasts of prey is the ma or killer Whale. It reaehes a le gth of twenty-, five feet, and its jaWs bristle witli teeth from four to six lichee long and as sharp as a dirk kx31 e, Its digest:Iva power is proportioned to the Verne* dons efficaey of its jaw It seems alStf. to be an atrocious glut n, es one spiel? men exanained contained. In WI stomaelt thirteen porpoises and fourteen -gut's. His BeassOlto "What reason have you for th that the defendant was intexicatedr "Well, your honor, iwhen his 'MO caliled me over I founO blin In the Ceti' lat cutting kindling Vrood with 110 lawn mower."—Clevelard Vain Dealer. The architect cannot live by the 1* junction to make uo plans for the fop - tare. Swearing is seldo gunaent except to it wiry/nein' AP man who_ doos An 'Bye For "I am afraid the poh become your son -in -la talent for business." • "I don't know," ans rox. "If be can mana prices for other ;me does for a title t dismeet fin bus -z • Ionian who, is I* has not mnelti ered Mr. Omni. ro to get all good ebandise as his ust bins to talra a.