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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1904-01-21, Page 3A Romance That Lost its Hero, But the Author Found HIM Just in Time to Finish Out the Story, "GO 1" Ate and, 'pointing toward tire doer. "Aut-----e" • he etorted to protest, "Oen" oho repeated', otampine her little foot itupernmoly. "(So 1" Cle.renoe Catclatell teepee olowly and, With bead klifunk dejectedly Orl- on leo breast, etrotio out Into the talent eight. "Wall," thougirt Clarence, "I naps Ode° thane the lest they'll hear of me in tido 'Agree I coil it 0, love Sloven trick for an further to ollove a character out In the nigbt thin NAY and Leave nine" After an Weir or more Of carelene retriding (flarnce pux1 llistm Porrow rotalway. leading Into the woode, and walked boldly itheo,d. 'Sven if it doeeret oventureity lead . sue out to daylight," he roe -Meals "Lt' to wtainle" better than this aim- ttlees night striding ttint that my • enthor'S etacked me up -against." tliarenee bad gene °exert a qvar- ter of a mile Wilea loten"Ilelloal" (meson iiim ect raise hits head, which wao etill dejectedly sunken Open his broseet. lie could scarce believe Me eyes, Clanking tioleard lam woe' that strange eat figure ne hail ever 'seen -nom° nert 01. old-time 1nIght, encased iu earlier of widely diffenent perloate "Bow now, estranger ?" demanded the knight, raising his visor with What Clarence wasestute was a mail- ed fiat. "Whence comet thou, and welther away ?" Clarence, too Astonished to make reply, merely oted. "Zounde, 'man 1 Mot thogzio tangue?" "Me?" otarnmered Clarence. 'Me? Oh, yes, sir, eve -got a, tongue. Me? Why I'm Clarence Catchitail -oort of a villain, yort know. Tho bereine-,she didn't' want to ft bit, _ enne ?nut the author made lier-she said • 'Go 1' And sabot could I do? 1 nat- urally turned slovelY, and, with *head mink dejectedly upon • my breest, Otrode out. into the alloot ni-" e;Well met, sirl" cried the knight with maiden -enthusiasm. "Weil, met, brother. I might have known you • were. one one us. Bound for the club smoker, eh? You're travelling the • wrong WAY:, sir. *Zotinde and zooksi Come 'With Me, Onielll journey to- getber.". Clarence, still greatly bewildered, turned and started back in company with the knight. "I'm Sir Percival Tynpa.nte," ,yol- unteered the knight after they ba,d gone a way. "Pretty much tbe sante sort od experience as years. But, as • T remember it, Lady Choo-Choo, in- etead of merely saying 'Got drew herself up to her full beiglit and cried "'Out of my sight, thou •ricurvy knave!' • . "Sir Percival [that's mel started to • protest. • " Out of my sight', air! illy I Be- , gone I' • . "Her eyes flitehed with anger, "Sir Percival erne, you know) turned and etrodesullenly through the door. . "She kept ber eyes upon bio retreat- ing form until it was completely • swallowtail up to the darkness of the night. • stead • that thatet bows I borne be Imre," concinded the knight. "Say," he asked after a moment's '•salience, "got anything to emoke about you? No pockets in these clothes.; 'to carry . clears, you know, and—. Thanks, a cigarette will _do just ato . • • "I suppoSe some people Would look at my sneaking as something nd an anarehronism: But rin not a reel knight, you see. I'm Aust • the, his- torical romance sort, and they're not eo particular. Besidee, whena men's out in the dark here, witir no fur- ther part In his story, why what's the . Clarence was beginning to be mere at treats with his strange companion. • eleut What's tide club smoker 'you were talking about?" he ventured. "I've only been out 'u the dark thee° last eouple of hours, or se, you know, and--" • "Ah,'then you're not a member. No matter,. put, you up. But, od's manikins! 0:10 yo a mean to toll me that you've neverheard of tilo'nn.: sedated Night ;Workers of Itictioe? And you it 'villain who has tridden forth into the silent night! "But here we ere, and now you'll have a cilantro to eon for yourself." •:The knight turned up a little Path to a large stone building of indes- cribable a.rebitectere. At Met glance It seemed to be an Egyptian py- re/nisi, but as thee drew, closer Clarence !thought it looked, more like a huge Queen Anne cettage/ with rose wendows, or n, Gothic cathedral with something of the Itellan hen- aisstinee about it. On top of all this there see ed to been air of Coloniel siMplicity absent the place Willett greetty - puzzled Clarencet lint before he had time to mention the matter tor the knight theedoor etas opened and they were tethered into a. brilliantly nightee rooms 'rhe place Vends crowded with peo- plet or if elassee, and from every period in the World's 'eatery. There wore pirates, Dekea 'Vikings? Egypt - kit Queens, modern society me, cher' dwellers. Itettlan eitalators, rigida Introns, Jealeuethainbereitalcite tineerupulous •dIplomeite, Kings -and goodnese knows wbitt Met - It bight base been, a fancy drew; hall SaVe that nei ono Was danciag and thee every 0116 Was wandering about from group tie group and "And are all thesepeople night - !Workers 1" whispered Clarence. "Eel% they, too, stridden forth into the night and been ewalloWed nO by the darkness V' • "Most of nee," replied the knight, "All eseept tire English Villain in the elreee eat over by the victor. Tho one with the bleek moustache; he's smoking a cigarette. "When he ghetto throe& the door, inetteld of -being aWallotred Up by the darkness, he %vast enveloped by a donee Landow fog, The re- sult's the wane, thOtutie Ilbs author, left him there., "Mello, 'there's: our preeident, The Colonial ohap that just tame In. :Wonderful, experleitte, his, "With an effort ho reimed hireself to' bin 'elbow! and mustered all of hie test faith* etrength tor one final ilhouto "They meet have heard him, for they stopped and turnede "Bet Slott then the nun eat* tiaern behind Wallerhameetse bills and Iliatkmore Blake Wets swallowed up • itt the Inky night: - • - "'Hero ite eereee noterie I mot yora to meet hires "Alt, Mr. Prolsident, 1leave a ow, Menther or yoet., Aliotevi Mo tie pm, ,ger. It Wag evident that N40114 too foully -dealt with. Cathel, 'wearing Dents corduroy suit, an rkling net eaddle, whiele by the way, had Ilene name etampea upon in retreated north, trad. :Mg horeee, and even the meddle, a� Went. Ile brought up finally at a lonely • settlement in the ler northern coullnee of Alberta an4 there hitched up with a half-breed rancher named Iebester. To him he traded of in elle of their deals. , •Beit's oat and vet, retaining the ear. duroy trousers. lbs next move waa to take up with a half-breed woman in the - eterit14z. larenee-or-arClenneighbor ce-or hood, and withe ber he lived •••••••••r" • "aa°111‘11,111" Clarence supplement- ed. taking the presitIont'e out-, stretched liend, "It' i a great pica- eure, dr, to -e-" Juet then there Wee a lone croon outside in the (*rektor, fancily -0d y shouto and eursos. A nioment later the whole place Wan in an up, rear. Sono one owned to be trying to fignt lila way aerobe the rOone Above the general laailiub coulO be heard oce casuirtak oriel ei '$tlenehl 1" "Pet biro Out 1" Avast, yo iubbet 1" • elie 1" • - "Forward, lade!" cried the Prete.. • dent, and lie and tbenIg1it rushed lido. Ile fray,. Clarence eternal after Wein and Wee lust About to throw hirnselt en top ot the struggling mass, wilen whet* 1 Some one bad dealt hini, blow on tire head, end everything became a blank. Wilco Ms senses began to cede baps to hint be was being dragged bY lab coat toner back over' the dark road through the wood% nroole," be hoard • aa tonne any. • "They sought to loll us With' their • awarder end fclearfs and things. Just • an if their weal:one weren't all fic- tion too." "And you, you iditet"-tlfe band on Clarence's conar ehook bine violently -"if yozed onlsr geese °nee& to wait a few eninutea tonger I could liege tole you that everything was go- ing to be expiaineci all right in the foilowing chapter," "The next eine you get put out in the dark perhapt you'll have Tense onceegle coneult your author be -- fore you go wandering off. Now: ,then, you ninny, get back where you • neleng ? Page 263 for yours 1" Witli that Clarenee received a kick that spent him spinning through the • air, • 'Mei he next regained consoloue- neett tee wan, tying in a cot. Tire sun miter'estrearlinag in through the win- • delve, and the birds were twittering izr tiro trees outtide. The whole worn1 seemed bright and cheery. - Clarence etarted to retse niMelf, but Wok back with a groan. - "Clarence, Olarenee. You mustn't move. The doctor bas forbidden, it." A thrill went through Vlarence as he recognized tire voice of the hero. Ire, •"Ail, Clarence," she „Bald, drepping to het• knees,. 'bow cruelly 1 have nesjunged thee. Clarence; does-er- care you ever -or-" But to go further woull be to ine ..fritege aeon the copyright ot the ro- mance tele ch Clerence Catchitall so neeepectedly reenters on pege 203. • .. • ,• • ACHES AND PAINS. Are Merely Symptoms of Disease and ' ;Must be Treason Through theBlood If you suffer with pale -any kind of pain -keep le mind teat pale is but a eymptone, not a disease; Wet What you meet fight is not the pain but its cause; that liniments and 0115 tor external applie,ation are ab- eolutely. useless. To •overeome • the cause of pan internal treatment is necessary. Pains, no matter where located, will disappear. whe,n you purify and anthill' the -blood and strengthen tbe nerve& Aches and pains disappeer as it by mete when Dre.Vflb1atn link Pillsare used. Every Ooee actually trinket; new, rich, red bltion, which drives disease from th.e system and bearishes peen. Thous- • ands and thouetteds or grateful peo- ple have given 'their testimony to prove this. Mr, George :Cary, • Til - Imre`, Ont., Foos: "For a whole sum - neer I metered terribly 'rem telatica. The pain waseaomething awful, and emod scareely bear to have any- thing touch my leg. I took medicihe front the doctors, and tried a Dum- ber , Of ,recommended remedies, bet derived no benente. Then I was ad- vised to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pine, and this medicine helped me almost aim thesetert, and toon released me from the trouble, and have not I canoe- had a. ,tivinge 'of it. I. there- I fore have grene reason to praise Dr. William' Pink' Pine." Seuetida rheum atlin nearaigin. and all other aches and pales are completely driven froMt he system througb a fair use of Dr. Williams' Perk Vila Don't take any p'nk col- ored Wubstitute ; see that the full name,. "Die W1Il1arnS' Pillk Tills for Pale People," is printed on the wrap- per around tire box. 11 in doubt send client to the Dr. Williams' Medicine CoMPany, Brockville, Ont., 'arid the pals will te sent by mail at 50 cents w box or six boxee for $2.60. or Seine wee R. eautorte, 8MM cre about the middle of Jul l lest the body of Belt inel been found in the river, GO wilco from. the scene of the murder, and identified by his relatives. . One fine day in the autumn two treitinted police officerarrived at Is- lIe4ter'a p13100, it1tr a loiig andweaiy Beanie The corduray clothes, gave them - A elite. Another wee furnished by the hattleerd woman in her story of ber acquaintance with a young man mined Tueker, with whom ,:he had lived, and who at one time had: sent her into the village to make some purchases with ae $50 bill, Tucker? The name was Wain ial. Of course, Tudor was the, name of the young men then. &leg time in the Manitoba, Penitentiary for tire theft of a diamond, ring, a young man who wore corduroy trousers when • arrested. "Tucker" was accordingly taken from penitentiary, 'fully identillea as the• youeg cowboy that had so ill -requited the rancher who seven him from perish- ing erre cola night in December of the year before soul lent lain next day g pony that was never returned; identified by the Thomas boys as the jovial young =eller who had stayed a week with their uncle, and disappeered at the seine time as del Dolt and les belongings, in- cluding a lifty-dollar reentitled too be the people to Wholu he bee traded Delt's horses and saddle; and, as Earn- est Cashel, the Karim rounder, he was placed on trial -for murder, found guilty and sentenced to be hanged on Tues- day, the fifteenth day of December,. He was just 21 years old on Thursday last, the clay he made his eensetionel escape from Calgary barracks by bolding, up three mounted policemen at the point of a couple of police revolvers„ and then locking them in les mit There is nothing in the contention that if not formallyerespited and not recaptured in time to be believed on the date named in the sentence' CO:label would be "legally dead," and thus immune from the death p0115113'. Without the formality of a respite be could, if taken, be hanged at any time after to -day upon an amended sentence. However, Chief justice Sifton bent e special sitting of the Supreme Court of the, Territories yesterday to order a respite, so that, if recaptured during the next few days the execution. ot the death .sentence might be deferred until after the Cbristmare holidays, ' The Snow Shovel. Tomei.° Globe. This lamely ImpleMent is the one link connecting the city cavedwener with the actual and visible Outside world. * * The hush tit the snow Is an Invitation, but the steely ring of the shovel biennia an inspiring sense of duty and opportunity. The long stops of the early pedestrians who passed silently in the morning seem both a call and an accusation. It is so seldom Oboe one can te really useful in this world! The care- ful plane, the arduous labor, the self- sacrificing effort, are so often futile and come to naught. But with the snow oho -vel the benefits are certain and, tlie reward untailirig. It forces a contemplation of the city's; quiet aspect, when even the oralled streets Aro touched and_ smothered bY - the enotherin hand of nature.There isgrat- itude in the stamp, stamp, of the early pedestrian as be shakes the - snow ol your more dilatory neigh- bor from his feet. And sometimes there is even more than gratutude when a disfranchised pedestrian comes along striving, in spite of dis- paritiop, to utilize the overgrown and sparse 'footsteps of the earlier pro- cession. The stamping of dainty feet, the shaking of snow -encumbered skirts, the inowen•lary honielike at- mospliete'.0f the little oasis of pave- ment:the teleetneree to venters: again on the unbeaten path, all show that the snow shoveller' is a benefactor of bis race. But, like ell real public services, shovellive snow has its' own reward. Like all true charity, it blesses the giver most. Evert; strip lifted from the peeked snow on the pavement give, a mental satisfaction peculiarly. Its OWn. As the cleared space enlarges., the_ heart of the six:wailer expellee in sympathy."When the dividing line that marks, a neigh- -bores resporetibilities draws near there is a. feetints of coming triumph as if the victory were over the forces of ;nature. -CASHEL'S CRIME • roe Wtbch NeWais Uricler Sent- :. ,ence Of Death at Calgary. • The -Story of Ernest Cashel's Crime, eepture arid eseape from the very shoe ,dow of the seeffola is not orateone for cruelty and desperate coolness in Cana- aian erimintil records. Early in Decem- ber of last year he was ,being taken by - train to Calgary, to undergo trial for forgery and fraud. By a very ordinary device he eluded tee custody of the sheriff and Jumped from the car window While the trine was going at high speed. •he night was bitterly Cold, and there Ne baby cries for the more fan of was snow oh the ground, but, coatIess • the thing. It °Mee because it is not and hatless', Cashel made his way to a Willi -generally its little etotettell Is ranelt a� miles from the railiVity track, Sour, its bOttent, congested, la; skin He WAS there dead thati alive When to hot' and fetOrisli. This Is often- why bles ate 'Wakeful and make nighte Wife mule comfortable for the Miserable or paregi s. eight and itt the mornieg he was given little oho ond it will sleep at night, warm clothing and the loan of a pony and let the mother get her needed and saddle to take Win to the next rest ite Well. Just what mothers need post, *where be was to leave the horse, for Ole mirpote ie Bailees .0ven !lab, his story being that lie WAS a cowboy letee-a Medicine that epeedily m- an& that hie horse had run away nnti Wes tied promptly Mires all the minor alineinto of your children, The 'left him afoot and half clad mi the made.. The petty and saddle he traded experlente of thouertede or mothers bee proved the truth of this and and kert on riding northward. Next lie among. these meteors is eon neteee Modem elerhod of Tool leer's:tering. Every engineer Is now ta,raillar with the fact that in all modern works of any size the making and repairing of tools is managed by. a special de Partment ,ef tho works. The "good old days,'" witen a gang of men would stand In line twitting for their turn at Sate grindetone hove gone by. In a inodorn 0110P, when a tool needs grindtng it is emit to the tool deport- ment, and anOtbee one, all ready ear use, ie obtalned et once. It le easy to See how: miteli More ecorromleal such a method is, for the peepornelon of tools kept in the hands of people who are doing notia Ing else And who are necessarily MIMI) mere expert .than the gencrel workmen would be, while the later deeff WA wade time in waiting for a titre ot the grindstone.-Ceselorns Magazine. , I- I t • . tc BABIES, - • reached. shelter. The rancher and his ba thot Relieve the br01.1 11 13 3 at a ranch on the fled neer g ) River, newly started by a gootleuttured old bachelor named Belt. He itigrati. atea Itinteolt 'with his 'host, inuell to the empties of lielt's nephews, who lived on a meth not far away, and etune to visit their unele frequently. Caeltel planned all sorts of fake deals witle the boys during hie week's stair Stith Belt, telling them he had a interh of cattle of his own in the iteighlarhood. One Sunday morning about a week otter Cashel's ar- tival ono of, the boys hailed the lint homeatead from the opposite side of the river, as was hie custom, Ito got no answer, but although this wes unusual 50e1115 not to have taken it 101.1(1u:31y, The Fluetty following the river was frozen over. The bete tamed oft the lee, and found the heirreetead looted' the hest horiete hisa *addle gotte, and no sign of eitheer their in:tele or the MM. Parrott, Benberry, Ont., who nays; "1 think Baby's Oven Tablets the best medicine in the world for little mese • My baby was cross and gave me a good deal of trouble, but sinemteing • the tablets. 1 ould not WISIl for irealtbiet Or better nature:I Stronger praise could not be given. nod the mother has a guarantee that the tablete eotittan no opiate Or iterMittl Artie. Sold by' medicinedeal- ere or Pent Net pain at 25 torte a box by writing the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, • A Mighty Nimrod • Pennsylveolte tench Ikon. Bard Hunter -Had great lttek to Areirio Genter-elleg anything? • teurd Banter- No, but 1 brobght stil the doge baok , VALUE OF PEDIOREE Tho hero then, without delay, Steps briekly forth arul walks Away, Ms fair preeerver by Ida Aide. lie asks her if she'll be his bride; "Yes, derlirig," site replied, "I will Providire yotell give up the ' Theeerebeetre begins to Vey Soft trembly music jugt AA they Walk off the atage elm the dome The curtain tirops--the play ;a .ceer. --Milweukee Sentinel. Cameo of •Coldn. 'jYjo I v bi s, letteettesese . . ••. • __.. The- door -of the grim eidahoose, Mr, Hodson Tells What a Good Pedigree le, Department of Agrktulture, L'OhtfillSelOtilleif lerattele le 010 o 1,V.0 stook ti4 freelY of the good pedigrees poseeeeed by tbeir animaito; but a great 3alany 01 1.31 not Oft. teiYm refiAly meap,, IXItat is a foed gree Wad auitwerel veri fully by Ur W ltocleou • Dire Stook Conunlisioner, in his evi-' *denote bolero the Committee on Agri, ouiture end Colonization derlog the tweet seseion l'arliemeot. Vor a pedigree to be really good, 'and a mire impressive, the eiteeetors should be oliko In type, (veiny and breed - Mg for went' generations - the more the bettor.. There le a great necessity for breedera to observe uniformity In the type of animate they select as sires. Tito more unt- termite' there le in all itie armee- tore, both In breeding and quality, the ntore Impressive le sire wIcil be The. strepessful 'breeder liveeteck Pars a great deal of attention to tins feature; he cannot be sueeees- tut unless Ito does. frequenely see an uninial Of' excellent appear: once Viet bas teem got by re good sire, but out of a very indifferent flaro. 'Many of tbis sort are kept for siree in this country, to tee great detriment of the live ?stook industry., What we greatly need is line breeding. The animate inelueee In a pedigree sbould be. of the Hama breeding., quality and style. If an animal lute had a bad sire, or a lead grand -sire, or dam or grand - dam, the .pecullaritlee of these whit crop oet in the offspring, because the sire is only, one of mane' la ' peeigree, and has only the influ- ence al one, while ragalest bins is the influenee of each of the ann reels In his ancestry, all tending towards verie.tion. It le often bet- ter to ohoose a somewhat inferior aninaal of good treating than a good animal of bad breeding, bet °nese in each case there is tbe 111. faience of one against the whole anceetry and each individual enteral in that ancestry., • It will not do to contound a long pedigree with a good pedigree. Xeres animals with long peelgrees are use-, lose for improving the quality of our stock, Wby ? BeenUse their an- cestors lia,ve not been of uniforinlY" good quality, nor have they been of the earner type. Many of the pure-bred animals imported lute Canada are of poor quality and not bred to type; others have a good aPpearanee, but, their offspring is inferior becatise their ancestore have been irregular In type, quality and breeding. If a man wishes to ehew a herd of good eattle or a stable of good horses he must have them of uninorte type and in order to get Orem so he must steely and practice line breeding as far MS type and quality go, $o it is la breeding all clesses of animals. The edvantageo of adhering , ly. to type, and culling out all ani- mate that do not come tip to. the n standard are well illustrated In the case of the British sbeep breeders. Their fitocke are large and good, and exceedingly well managed. The greenest °are is exercised in regard to the quality of the breeding males. Tho wive nooks are, of uniformly good quaiity, 'but eee the British farmer eoute improve hio methods by paying more attention to the an- cestors of tee rams he buys. The quality of those he -now uses le good: but Ito does not always take the trouble to make sure that their dams or grand dams weep 'equally good. good. Th1,9 is a very importn.nt return. The asual custom with the , elteep fatmer, to go carefully over his flocks each year, and reject and end tio the butcher all the aged ewes, yea,riteg ewes, ewe lambs. and rams that are slot of the de,sired, gnat- • ity, or have not proven valuable as breeders. This culling .process is very . carefully carried out. Buyers' are not usually allowed to select sheep trom the breeding flock ot any of the well established breed - ere. The best of the flock in reserved for th.eir own use, the next best is sold for breeding pur- poses and the third grade goes to ;the butcher. This eareful selection a.red graeling are -what have estate - Oohed and maintained the suprem- acy of • the Englieb flocke. British farmers are • not breeding any bet- ter sheep than Canadians could pro- ductes if we ware to devote Lite same °attention to the .industry. In Bra tain selection of breeding stock has been so- thoroughly carried on for generations that their sheep are idgely appreciated in all parts of the world. They are bought by all Wen - tries for use le improving the 'na- tive etock. In Canada we cull on a. very different principle. Many of our pure-bred flocks are annually ;culled by the Americans, who buy the best to improve their !lecke, . end leave to our breeders- the eec- second and third -elites animitise This Is a very groat mistake. Tourer very truly, W. A.. Clemente Publica- titre Clerk. ellinllff from within, not without. No one takes cold sv,hen In a eigoroes state of health,. with pure blood coursing through the body, and there la no good reasort why any orie In ordinary length should bone a 001d. It may 00ine from insufficient twee - else, breathing foul air, want of wholesome fool, eXnesti et fend, lack ef bathing, eta, but Always front fionte violation of the plain laws of health. There cart be no Moro prolific cause of col& than Welly season. al footle, as well as frequent r•at- 10g. These give 110 time for the di- gestive organs to root, and incite an increased flow. of the digestivd secretions. TIM larger quantitiee of nourishment are absorbed than can be properly ntilized, and the re - Sault is an obstruction, commonly railed a "rola" Whielt fl amply an effort of the system to expel the unities material. Properle speaking, It le self-poisoning, due to an in- capatility of the organism to rage. late end compensate for the dire torlianco. A deftelent supply or pure air to tbe lungs is not only a strong pre- disposing Cause. of 'cokla hut n. pro- bit to source of much graver condi- time prtre air and exercise aro 'pecessary to prepare the system for tho neelmllittion ot nutriment, for wIthout them there tan bo vig- (wows lienith, The oxygen of the air we breathe regulates the ap- petite es well as the nutriment that Is built ep in the system -Selene° of Ilealths Bed -ridden 10 yeers.-"If aoyebey ws,nte a written guarantee from me person- ally AO to my wonderful cure from reeume. matey south American Rhenium -tie Cure will be the gladdest woman In the world to give it," sayaMrs...Tolin Beaumont, of haora. " lied deepaired of recovery up to the time 0 taking tlds 'Wonderful remedy, It mired me completely," --58 • 400 Cedars of Lebanon Left. Not mote than 400 of the "eedare of „Lebanon" nee 'standing to -day. They do not, though their age is measured in years by tbousande, rival in dimensions the cedars of the western world, Inieg but twelve feet in diameter. No tree gives go great an expanse of shade as the cedar, and it never Wes, except tronr ning stroke or the woodinates axe. IMelodrama. The curtain rises on a scene In which is shown a dark ravine' With shady elm trees scattered 'round, Ana withered leaves strewn o'er the ground, The hero comes, 4 mountaineer Young, handsome, with no the' ugnt of fair. His only inoae of doing ill Is relining an illicit "stiil" (Which, in the mountains, is not •Shought Despicable, unless you're caught). Emergieg from baba a clump Of fire, be perches tru it stump And, in a moment indiscreet, :Ile &ape his rifie at his feet. Enter the villain, with a pack (lf hired scoundrels at his back, And, jest as fiercely AS he ma Ito bellows: "Take him -there's your man!" .They mix -it is a thrilling sight, And thoght 'ti.; a one-sided fight, The hero tattle a few right airings Ana with. an uppercut lie brier; The villain crashing to thq floor -- Me fights till no can fight el) more. They lock hire in a mountain eave And then all make thew itkit save The villain --when they're out of sight Ite tilos a lot of dynamite, Ton sticks, petheps, or ineybe more, Arta pintas it 'nate. the prison door, Excinintingr "MI fulfil my yew; (ease him. he')l uot esettpe me hotel - Thiless bar fine is dampened some I'll blow him clear to Kingdom Centel" Them with ri, few lona oaths- and Stied% He lights the fuse and distippeare. Enter the heroine (for yell know , rrlin melodranta'e built Just so. Sometitiog is ieeking in the plot When she's not found upon the spot.) Enteriug, Abe beholds the fuse And sees nett there's no thee to lose; She gathers up the &relive toad, Now aimed ready to explode, And with the strength of twenty men She hurls it far adown the glen. Mere it eopiodee with awful force, Near where the villain Mande, of tonne, Vining the air with stones and rse.itd, And &sheeted Villiiiii, Oa, , As leek will have it, breaking ltreect hook of memory , ThtirOITTs 1.11). !) III. 2 ..a..111t.....gth_s a harmless couril.. Allen's Lung Balsam mires the worat of eolda. It clears the bronehial passages ao that the lungs get plenty of air. Lighthouse Mashes. By tho improvement of lenses and the clockwork by which revolving Igete are operated, it bas been made pesable greatly to vary the charac- toristics of the light. As a foundation an LAW IS AGAINST THE JEW. Russia Lias Barred tilm From Many Lura - live Occupations. Tito faete toueitiag tlet ectual eon. • dltion of the Jews in Batcteet aro eae , trentely difficult to obtain, . Tito ' promo censorship maintained by • agents of the Czar le extremely rigid end extend* to all teleterapitic des- patchett eut of the eountry, no well an to the contents of the hosno newspapers. lt la recorded that • telegram destined for a Londen. • paper was -committal to the tele- graeh wires mile, efter being' oar - tied by n, seeret messenger 700 Milee steross the Russian frontier to A little, Moravicte village in Aloe Wan territory, and was seven days In -melting Loudon. This elesPatell alleged that unless other powers Voice a, protest whieli the Czar min- uet ignore, Itleltineff's streets wonel flow with blood again on Jan. nth. The eeto euggested the and cause that lies bellied the perlixile Rus- sian Jaw. killinge. Jan. nth in tire Realtor ealendarois Christmae day, There, the day bee not, rte with us, lost ,e particle ot its reanioue ranee -ma It is Clinest's natal day. - fit otemion to remember that tire Jews; delivered Christ to death, We forget it-livieg in a tolerant age and a country that team; its rang - ion lump too seriously -but deep et the roots of the universel shrinking from, the Jew, a feeling welch rangier from 'Burner in Rusele,' 0.1'000 persecution, Koh as ibM of Dreyfus in France, to shutting him out of exclusive betels In erica -back ot it all, consciously or subconsciously, lies . the thouenit that it was Sews who dragged the. Redeemer before Pilate. And 00 the Russian Chrietinas day le feared its an occaelon to vent a vicarloas revenge 'which has not been satis- fied ey eighteen centuries of perste- oution in a hundred forme-te visit the consequencee of a ein oven unto not only the fourth, but the- fortO eth generation: That this Is tire chief cause of the tellsed-of 'massacre is proved "by the means adopted to make the pot boil. Flam:ng eirculers wore widen, distributed picturing "three Jews holding a Christian girl dressed in Russian easturee. A fourth. Jew is in the not of cuttiug her throat, while an old woman of the hated rite° holds a vessel to catch the blood." 'What this plettu•e repre- sents, the •Russian peasant firmly believes, that human sacrifiee-the murder of Christian ebildrenene a part of the nevi:Ise ritual. The Russitin Government does not believe We, of coarse, but it does have A very present rear of the growth of the Jewleh religion" aria of the revolutionary spirit. In a coun- try where the emperor is also pope it is natural that the growth of any religion other , than the ortholoe: Ohould be anxiously watched. In the tained a univereitv 4 ree and UM • oroalthilli4 inereininte.-iltatta who riay one thetteatel rub".es a year la taxer", Iliermerly the great lablk gMele bad the right of giving to 0111540 jewel certificates wnich wend permit theist to travel; tias funetiou le nom made one Of the dattes of tho ponce, whose brutality in the angle:all-on of logal restrain te iff ittotorlotte. A Jem from the Crowe -etre went to the forbidden toren of leharkef tor a 4orgleti.1 epee.. tion and woe fined for :nig Elegel 6°13°`..surim'ile.rly tne Unitary AvaileleY On Medicine accepted Jewieli etudentsi up te 0 per cent. of Its total enroll- ment -now no Jew may eater there. The number of Jewieh sletOents ret the School of Minos is tsn 5 per neat., at the Halloo' of Arts Ann Tradee 10 per cent., et tbe School of Engineering 8 per cent. In the ea:booth ot St. l'etersburg and Moseow asewell as in the universitlea at theea pities the Jewish attendance is kept obefte.tru,attpleroruegeurro%,titinttiu,ssnliao,etinetrtivkillitugt correeponils to our publie sehoola the nunater of Jews is kept below 10 per cont, outside of the pale, sate profeasions of attorney and of advocate 11,1*0 forbidden to .1 ewe un- less tbey obtain a speeial authorizat tien Tor easth individual froni the Miniriter of Public lustreetion. One can imaglee the fruitful Heide ot grat tide opens up to the caprice) of tie Minister. Jews cannot be mem. tears or even partiolpmte in til4 cisc- tl3n or Tiro provincial aseentinies. Jews are boreal from the bourse, and they cannot be notttriee or court eierke. Tee tow ext.:options 1.0 there sweeping rulese wilialtsexceptions con- e:et ot holdere of certain univereity diplonia.s witliont the pale, care not transmit their privileged to. tbeir heire. One obvious .purposo of tire rostra - tisane ao to schoole is to bar the Jew from competing with the Christien In occupa.tions requiring educetion. The result Is to Duero his teeming numbers ruinously competitive in the lower classee of labor, To the orthodox merchant the Jew. le a rival whose prices are murder- Ously eompetitive.; the orthodox arti- sans see in the swarneug ',Jews a laborer willing to work at starvation wages; the Russian peasants see in re Jew massacte rt.ellance to vent their ebronie discontent under the oorteplaeent eye of the a.uthorities. sixteenth century. the Russian Gov- ernment refused the King or Poland the eermission, soaght by him for the jewel of his klegdons to go into Res- ale, to buy' 'anti aell 'in the .market laces, alleging that they " might turn the masses from Christianity." d the Emeress Elizabeth, when it red, and the reVolving apparatus. The t wire euggestal to ber thee the pre- sence of Jews would be useful to Rue. there are the two colors, wbite and with a white flesh, o fixed red with a ela, °Waned "fame the enemies of tlifrist I desire no pecuniary adva,n- vo..rlatIons are fixed wenn combined red ilasie• a fixed white svith red tage." fin eheS of different 'numbers, flashee -But there is more -much more than with- intervals of different lengths, religious fanaticism: back of the Jew.. oeinbinations of white and red isle reassacree in Russia. Thesaotber flashes, lights enrich aeon, wbite in causes are mimitely auctiveed in a certain directions and rod In other little "notebook" recently etibliehed direotions, .1 -Several of these combine.- In Parte, by Henry Dagen, which men- tions can be seen in New York bar- testers with great care the events of bor and the Deighborhood. The well- last April in Kirerinef 1. The ceases . known light at the westerly :end ot other than religious, he says, "con- Leng Wend Sound on Execution Rock elk in the continual cooillet of ems - Is 0 light which flasbes white, except noneic intereste, a conflict Whitt) Is in oue meter, in whichthe flashes ore only male voarse by the Russian Gov - red. The Hell Goto port light has ernment's efforts to prevent it, and Hennes et tepee seconds' duration, welch grows more disastrous to alternately wento and red. Mlle North Chrietian and Jew alike, with every . Hook baleen on Sandy Hook haa a legan re.straint placed upon the Jew." fixed white light, with a fixed red Business rivalry and competition rector covering the Neaten, beneatla anrong the low-ealarled classes are welob. lio the cables operating the tbe chief causes or anti-Seraitic ani- eleotrie bucys in the Gainey and Bay- mosity noted by M. Dagen. This is Ode cliannels. Vessos are forbidden only aggravated by the' restrictive to anchor in the red relit district, measuree designed to prevent it, the Th,o centre of the main slap channel net result ot wiech Is to Make the leading into Salem' barber Is marked Jew e more and more miserable' in an on the water by rt stronger light economic sense, anti therefore all the tetan teat on either side. The light is more trilling further and further to et need white, a lens panel greatly underbid the Chrietiana In the cress inrceasing its intensity being placed glare of eineloyment, "The Jews," M. on the !aide of tho lantern opposite A. Levy -Beaulieu has said, "overflow 1 At Montauk Point the main light is the ebannen talt raesnatoruinotteodf ilaineects.toheevvehitcooh they a. !revolving !igen A fixed red light openinge tor their activity, too rim placed in a I tile balcony jest beneath, calliege for their labor. The more the main lantern tends a warning lista over a reef on the north side of lionorable or more lucrative careers arc forbidden to them Being coin- • the poillt.-atribune. I relied te be either artisans or small enee ellopkeepers, they: all pour into those occupations. The result is inureerouo comintition, In the pro.. vinees where the jetve are compelled by low to live actnal measurement elrows that 1,220 Jews live on the same apace as 410 to 510 Chef/a tians. The Jews live like dried her- , ring.% le a box rather than ilke Ina man lainge. Tho streets of Jewish • villages are but four feet wide; on eacii aide ancient ionises( lean decree: - it, almost ready to fail, cbildren plait almost naked lin the streets and roll in tire mud, coarse -looking women, their ruothere, stretch themselves In the ewe" Tito lave of May of 1882, le:twueoe: the physicant congestioe, the • crovgling here described, are as foie "1. No new, Shall live outside the I"2. NO contraet for the sale, mort- gage or rent of laud Outelde eines and teverts shall be binding when signed by a. Jew. And no jeVir shall bo the executor or tulininistrator of property of this kind. "3. SOW,S, Shell* not open their oboes on Sundays nor on Christian holklaye." The obvious energise of these laws in to segregate the 'Omen To be mire, exception is made hi the ease of Jewish artisan; but of what even when a newthating Russian of. paeses upen the question whe- ther it man te an artisan or not? A vinegar -maker who leol been earr,v- ing ,on his trade outside tho pale for thirty years WAS Wrap:Alai to give up his trade, and ream to tire pale 'because the guild of at tisane declared that vinegalernakers were not arta eters, .nithough trie, stellate bed year bider° 111018(1M% negarentakere among those permitted to ilvo at will acre - whore within tilts empire. The vic- tim set this 01180 was 02 yearn erre inel 11 faintly, cito one more eereeg thoutande of 81111114r Wel- t -Mete: TWenty-fivo .hrovisit compost- , tors employed in e. printing house eteseow Were etuidenly eleettroged and thieve teem the eity batik to the retie, The mum assigned was that typesetting is not a teeth) but nn oat, and that teoneermently Own- positorm aro ,not artisans bat net- 1°Ttlgi.te peticroge livieg, even of tree voting, bee owl ;:t'e te reetridted tie tWtO einesee-let T.!, wee have ob. Miss Gannon, Sec'y Detroit Amateur Art Association, tells young women what to do to avoid pain and suffering caused by female troubles, "DtAll Vita. PINIKVEAlf X can con- ecieetiously reconentod Lydia- E. PinkhaWs Vegetable Compound to those of my sisters suffering with female weakness and the troubles which so often befall women. / suf- fered for months with general weak - utast end felt so weary that 1 had hard work to keep up. I had shooting pains, and was -utterly miserable. In iny dis- tress / was advised to use Lydia, E. rinithaires •Vegetablo Com - .pound, told it was a red letter day to Inc when X took the first dose, for at that time restoration began. In six weeks I was A elimaged woman, perfectly evebt bit every respect. / felt so elated mei happy thee I want all women who ettiler to get well as X did." Guna. GAtneole, asa jotiee Ste Detroit, Mich., Secretary Arna.tcur Art Assoeiatioli.e.ettedfosten If *Hessl of dime tato sowing genainoest tanner 69 produces. WhOlt one eonsidets that IVIISs Gannon's letter is only one of the eountless hundreds which WO are eouthwally puldialting in the 116We. papers of this towatry, the great virtue of Mrs. Plokhon's utak** mot twittauta by all. War 'Record or 0. Dog. theuenal interest centred In ee ease beard ie the Dublin polies court: recently, in welch the leading fig- ure !MI6 0, bultdog teat fermerly be- longed to Gen. Philip Duthie and went through a good portion of the South Africen War. Ernest Warns -- Mebane canteen manager for lite contractors, ware otenmones1 for critelto to the toalnue, which has beea Motioned for come tinio with the Royal trial' Itifle,s at Rich- mond 'Barraeles. The,bulidog, which now belongs to Color Sergeant Edwardes, Rosal Irish Rifle% wan 4,000nm:seated with ow seat in the witness box, from whiell West be hsieerned to ta,ke &tangled in- • terest in the proceedings. He was dressed in le nont with green archive and wore several Mouth, African mai- With elaspM. The aulmare 50 - Ord la ;rut eventful one. During, tiro Boer war lee ,wao captured by the Second Anna Irish Rifle, Mounted Infantry, from Commandant Philip Botbats Lam in the Dioornberg, Septeinter, 11000. nolo that time lentil the end of the wale he trekkea, with the Rifiee' mounted lone from Griquatand in the west of Baeuto- land In the eaot, and lie stilt Ware the scar of a waned received in no' tion. Later be wee with Gen. Trench's colainn in 041113/0 Colones. For his ser - 'deo th0 bulldog now wears •tho Queeine Sleuth African Medal with three clasps; aod the King's South Afrieran medal with two cheats. eta Drury! remarked, when tbe cnee was called, that tale was the most ills- tingelehed dog in the country, aa he had 'medala-London Dal1 Tele- graah: ! : Why Think ers Live bong. Thinkers as ni rule 'live long, or, to put the preposition into more general teems, exercise of the mind tends to longevity, Herbert one:neer bee d'ed In las eiglay-fouttli year, . Darwin reached els seventy-third, Sir George Stokes hie eighty-fourth. Ce.rlyin hia eighty-sixth; Tyndall was a:evident- ally pelt:once at seventy -thee, but might have lived several years Cl°1:igiL(Viailtillst\olattYe wiaSit alielsventti Lord Kelvin still vigorous In re- ifittwyoll'etnanthri ever, Disraeli in his seventy-severala Newton lived to be eighty-five, and etaareit in bis eightieth. It' a great extent the brain is the centre n.na teat of hie, what Sir William Gun culled the centrel battery, and ita bthintlation undoubtedly strengthens the forces that make for vitalite. Healthy exercise of either mind 'Or bale' or (memo favors length of days, but the strivings of the thinker nnd writer ere soldem quite of the healthy order. Darwin, Carlyle and Speneer were vienme of nearly lira. long de operant, nett yet exceeded three snore and ten. Pleasant *awe ton without eieasure •' a prior!, one would not °sleet the abstraet thinker to live zo happily as the man Of experimental refienrell, and °marl. once latexes to eminent tire expeetae lion. No one *v:11 queetion Sir Sams Paget's dictum that undue fatigue is • a, common cense of disease, but RO alS) lig1011lisce. What part of the Lumen ecottomy, mental or physical, is not made for activity 7 -London . Teieg en pla , !Siete and Pipes et ltitiner. Highlann dinner is a very smart artair, and one that is uever seen south of the Tweed. Prbc laird wears his tall drew; kilt every night, anti everyone With nity eleint to a elan doee the Pante, 00 that often there aro mare kilted men around the tri- kbe thee him* wet% Aleut some of the nouveau rielte seem to think because they rout 20,003 or 80.000 .n.erre of sltooting, they nee quail - flea to don it kilt, too, hat nothing le more rielleulotte. It le a (trees that rmly belonge to the desell.thiailifi Of the I/100314e. Tile Deke of tetabeie land \satire n tweal kilt Wilkit 1111 WAndPrS teboat Ihrarobin, while the Ilnkes of Athol, lar clench and Mont- roso nil wear their tweed Mite ey tilt* 'Laetrile.; by night. Ono nee oely to !look LAW h in Inver. 11080 tO ,600 What alt endless number of chola there are, and no llOrilll of them have a lending tartan ne well no an texithatty Will, the collection Of pla1d3 anti nroot.hpo in nurprieing • to a Southerner. The full &eve kilt le 5t2kli441, aril it 2211fl to the nail- ner born looks Mr Letter hi it than In any ocher elothea tt gle• • width, height and digel'ef to t witiktvorg,