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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1905-02-23, Page 3Febritaty 23r4 1908 tr. Consumption -41 There is no specific for consumption. Fresh air, ex- ercise, nourishing food and Scott's Emulsion will come pretty near curing it, if there is anything to build on. Mil- lions of people throughout the world are living and in good health on one lung. ij From time immemorial the doctorss prescribed cod liver oil for consumption, Of course the patient could. not take it in its old form, hence it did very little good. They can take SCOTT S EMULSION: and tolerate it for a long time. There is no oil, not excepting butter, "so easily digested and absorbed by the system as cod-liver oil in the form of Scott's Emulsion, and that is the reason it is so helpful in consumption where its use must be continuous, (if We will send you a sample free., Ill Be sure that this picture in the form of a label is an the wrap-. per of every bottle of Emulsion you buy. Scott &Bowne •demists Toronto, Ont. Soc. itaids1; an drugglato 1r—reuirliallelleleepessreeeNs+c..97---- ----- SAVERS- OF HUMAN LIFE. Three Notable Discoveries. Melte by capeuese. We are lli debt to Septet for at .east three notable dtscoveries, two of which have already saved many European lives, says the London Academy. The oldest of these is the discovery by Rd- tasato, a Japanese bacteriologist, or the , bacillus that causes lockjaw, or teta- nus, leading to the production of an ntitoxin senile widen is now regular ly •used and Is by far the most efficient • remedy we possess for this terrible disease. 1 A Japanese observer nettled Siege Itaa • recently diseosered the bacillus which , causes st, greet many cases of disen. terY, and, though that discovery has not yet led to arty improvement In pre. ventioa or treatment and will, there. fore, not lower derieg the present struggle between Russia and Japan the death ride from that dire foe of the soldier in Wartime, no one doubtO that this to the trot step toward our control of another deadly disease. , The third discovery s really more interesting becitese it raises newer problems. There Is in the body of each of us a pale of organs known as the adrenal glands, yet nukirownto tne publle, though life could not continue without them. It was a Japanese chemist, Takarnine, vette isolated from these glands the Inveleable subetance -which they produce for the benefit of the rest of the body.-. It is known as adrenalin.. It is the most'powerful of • all chemical agents 6r stopping-hemor- • • rhages It will arrest bleeding from the. nese When everything else has Not that that witch Matters,' for the nose ie Accessible to meehenical Means, but adrenalin has alretely Saved many • ' lives that were oozing away in a thin red stream no surgeon could reach. . • • .1 oteaw Ik.11ii.' secortine, to .an. engtneer; though there may be every reason present why steam boiler sbould stearn. there; are • 'occasions when it simply will not. It refuses duty and sulks without .any cause that C8n be detected. On .stieb occasions every one- takes a hand at, the fires. but the result s the sanie— n steam or only ematign to keep three' quarters speee'\.I iilflo andee4tionary boilers are both. thus afflicAd. "there. are "good 'days" rind "bad ditys". iii. the. performanee of easel: • . •644, .4.14111.404.0.4C,.. 954•11.644•441.:44440144:6:.44 4.1•••. 4!,,,I•441G,WMe t7e. . . Lover's Queer TOO, • • Setters. for • the hantis of ' the • fair maidens of lower Austria are pubjects ed to a curious .ordeal.. Before he is necepted a• young man has to stand open mouthed near a hive of erild bees. If the bees are not attracted by les breath he is accepted as being no drinker. Dreinitenneee. Accorclieg to the diagnosis of ""a learn. ed physician, drun-kenness is, vOlantary • 4t......,.........rwacas4=i4.2.54callaistialliiscimM/014/111111111/011/1/ Palne s Celery• Compound Made Your Friends and Neighbors Well. Mrs. Geo. B. Griswold, Nanating, B. C., wri ti eg especially , ior • wora n says : "The greed sucoess of I'aine'S Celery Compound in my once; leads me to believe -that it WO no equal if: the curing the ills- of women. 'For three years female troubles,. "dyspep- tie And nerVousnese made tee a shad- ow of my fermer. 801. I was treat- ed by competeet &miens and took a sea• trip that lasted six weeks, but got home again feeling no bolter. Af- ter rradang one of our hOolis em Pai- ne's Celery Coini•ntind !ought a supply and eerd itfaithfully. Three bol lies were e, efficient to convince me that I had found a. Mind and helper, Six Wilke, thank God, banished 10 fl Complairde a»d mate Onte a new veneer. I am mildew that every suf. lie lug woman • Adult lcet w What linen Celery CoMpetted hair done for eve hTu • Pitellicine • That .0'perates Dimas. on the . Nerves and Blood The midi.. That Cannot Break, • :it is found—tlae.boolatleitt housekeep- • ers have taiglied for, the fatal gift that . . will drive amid the .cook in her tan- . • truism—the diSh thee • cannot break.. Jr McNally; United States consul at Liege e• Belgium, reveals to it happy• .' world this wonderful kind •of plate, • whicb is made tit that town. It isof •sPecially herdeited erystal and looks like tine, transitteentchitta.• •The con- s'ul. has 'seen •plateS ,of it ehurled to the 'stonebeer of a warehouse And go. . !Mending •along the .whole length. of • the butt:Beg::n Ithoet etiffering the least damage." Elastic, lermortalS Plunge ' it In boiling Water, .then into lee tea- • ter, arid you onlysimprove• WS' plate of genies. Yoe cAriuse it as !lanes leer for driving nails into •WeeitV • 1n.. the Satire town..and by the.seme coin- pany.. is made. glassware equally bust and Innunne.ftom freetuee: and china nee nosionger to be marked -e"perishable." • )3ut how Will cook -rel. Bove: 'berefeeliegs' new?-a-Dveryhody's.:: Magazine. • • • . • .• Tito, yrorldfs Sayings Illangs, .Iti the savings banks, of. the World 82,d40,000, :depositors. have over $10,- 500,690,000 to 'their eredit, saysthe partmeut • ofcemmeree • and- •labor through its 'bureau ot. Statistics. This Is the . 'detailed record of the. larger : 'etiuntriesi -United Stetes, $3,000478,011;- Gerinene, n27.3,409;46;..ileited. Ring- denas $900,854,e53;S.Anstila, $870,941e 933; Preece; $$47S224,910;• Italy, $482,- 203,472. ReesieS $445,014,901;• Hungary, $432,811.1,515s Denmark, . $230476,057; , SWItzerland; $193,000,000; Australia, • $164,161,081.-: The.' average- deposit renge from .8418.89 :for ,the •Vnited. States to $5.48. forJapan;Canada is Seciand With $289.14: The depositaper eapita of population -vary frOM .890.41 -for.Deinnarle to 15 :cents' for Italy :The 'Apteeican per capita 19437.38. The Jap- anese ner .capita Is 90• cents; the Rus- sian: .83.10 and. the Canadian $10 99 twitserlaud is second with $62.26.. s . . been* Wortlt,.Thonseands. Aedeesr Sabel, twenty-ene years e 010, employed iv the ileiyetone flour 'mill at- Nantleoke, some.thee ego In a •dre,anr, s,a1V at' invention for separating 'fOr- eige sulastanees frontgrate just before It.. was ground. He told some friends and asked their asetiefeneeinpeeking It, but they laughed at -him. .preserving •elear .conception of the inventitin in - his mind, he Went to work, built a Med' ,e1, 'got a. pafeet on it last nienth. and ' line no*'received an offer of40,000 for the patent righte -.froera Massachusetts fires •The principle of the invention Is neignetisin. It renieves. foreign sflb stances' frem•the grain And averttracei- dents to :the grinding machinery; • . • Deiully Absinth. Satisfies :show it steadily eontintiing, increase in the cOtistuription • of ab. shift' In France. Betiveen 1885 And 180 there was an increase ef 85,000 hectoliters. • From • 1802 only four years more were ,tieeded to add anoth. er 85;000 liters to the consumption. A, recent experiment demonstrated that six drops: of eseence of . absinth in three gills 'of water were as deadly to • fish life as six dropo Of pm:IOW aeid -111 the same quantity. of watete-Lendoe Globe. 'Vegetarian Wolves. • One of the Most extreme vegetarians Is the well knowu Itusslen sculptor, • Prince Troubetekol, who reeently VW. Red Parra lie considers meat eatees not tmaela better than cannibalo, to, • boos even eggs and milk and lives an. Vegetables boiled .in oil, salads, fruits and bread. At his home in St. Peters - berg he has tt Itelnber of ahlteals,in eluding a bear, two 3VOIVeS and 'nine dogs, none of whieh is ever allowed to oat meat. Ancient tiggor In chins. A Gerintre epleure eomes to the rescue Of the SlItinetre In regard to their el` leged !titbit of eating rotten eggs. The dggS, he gays, aro annoy preseeved In • lime until they get a conoisney like that of hard butter and they •taste iternewhat like lobster, lie declares them one of the eboicest delicacies be lets ever enters He thinlor there are no better eoolts in the world thee the 011111086, When I* went to live Among them his friends predicted he Would Starve, but be had it good time and gained 'tveightednore than he Wanted tee • ANIMALS' WANDERINGS. country moose se4 'town lilowoe Va. Iiht* FoUflditI�fl Jig Vast. Wile fable of the country mouse and I the town mouse has a foundation in 1 fact. lifiee occasionally migrate in large numbers svhen food grows scarce nud 1 travel eonsiderable distances to fresh I houses. Farmers in it part •of Perth. shire had a good reason to become Iaware •of this fact When a couple of years ago vast Swartes of mice invaded their cornfields at harvest time. But the mouse only travels when it has to. The rat, on the contrary, seems to take a yearly outing, in very lunch the same fashion as do human beings, Rats are the most migratory creatures In the world. Troops of rats leave the towes at the end et ottermer and spend a melee or two in the country, annar. tautly in order te enjoy the change of food whicb the country affords at that time of the year in the way of fresh fruit end grain. Before the cold wentls. er sets le they are all back again in their old quarters. Reindeer migrate with the same reg- ularity as swallows. They move south wlien winter sets ite. but as soon as ev- er the snow begins to melt they travel steadily north, .sometinaes for act much as a thousand Miles. TO end a heliday by deliberate sul. I eide is yo strahge a phenomenon that for a long time naturalists looked noon the stories ot the migration of the Imn, wings -as MI improbable fiction. Yet the -facts are beyond dispute. •At irregular intervals these ratlike creatures. start ant from their !metes In the fastnesses of northern Scandinavia in huge droves uumb.ering tens of thousands and trav- el steadily 'southward. Death pursues • tient in a hundred forms. Thiwks.and other birds of prey .hover above them. Th'oucineds are drowned in rivers.' Yet the rest struggle on until they` 1'080 the sea. They tinted stop. They plunge sWira outand eteeggie on until at last their streegth fella ited 'thee . drown. Notone. ever returns from this journey of deals—London Answers. • COTTON IN A FABRIC. nolv..to Ton if Wortited or 1;Voolen Cloths Are Akiatioratea. • • • Worsted Mahe are. Tess often edulters , cited 'then svooleus and are more. easily .detected. A. cotton worsted is a lie On .the.face• Of it, for the cotton stands out with .pronilnence. But often a cotton thread .istwisted'. with 'a . worste.1 threed, Mid to. deternene its presence it is only necessary to take the twist ont•of the thread and then examine its conmeneet .paits: • • , Cotton,•.having a long itenie . can be carded and eourbecl• with wool to be SpUll int° woreted'yere.S This is dope to cheapen: the &rat of m.6610166. Cot. ton 'la cerded and spun with. wee!. encl., 'shoddy, not so tetteh to Cheepets the , karts for cettoe is generally as .eipett,..• sive. as •sone -,shoddles,' but is intros • dueed te , give' :strength; Orsplinting' qualities. to•,the,stoek. nty. 'eases' tbedtheddy is of sue!) short stapledliht, it would not :Shied the : drawing i1. Spinning; and, aa it 'Would Make, the nest of tee .yarn toe Ittgls' to, pet in • enough wool to • .giVe that sleeking strength, cotton is left in for this 'per- . The percentage of eottorein a fabric Oen be determine - in this. Manner: • Take tt smell piece ot cloth end weigh it Nciw boil it •for five mineteS. in a 5 per cent solution of caustic Freda. Take. . out wItat is left, and, if .any, it is all cotton. Tho wool will MI be tlissolved Tbe percentage of shoddy cannot be de- termined except by experience.. „ A. cloth or yarn with shoddy ib It is easiiY detected by its feel, • Cloth made of all neav :Woo! is softer feeling than • one containing shoddy, for the latter The Clinton Newm-Record 0111111MMI 3 ravollet'$. Samples - at. Than Wholesale Priees •••4 We were fortunate enough to buy a travellers complete set of samples in Wrappers, Ready- to-wear Skirts, Fancy and Colored Lustre Waists, Boys' Summer Linen Suits , and Baby's Silk Caps at' a price that enables us to sell them at less than wholesale prices, ist LOT Wrappers, no two alike, some are trinuneS with lace and some plain, all nesv designs, prrees run from • • 7-5te tist to $1.0 _ 2114. LOT. 15 Ready -to -weal: Skirts in plain black and fancy patterns. au LOT 0 Ready-to-wear Lustre Waists in plain, white, .cream - • and black,- from 10e to $1.75 with LOT Boys -3' ' Ready-to-wear Linen -Summer Suite:: These are . snaps. and will pay -you, well to lay aside for a few . weeks,. prices 850 up to $1.50 - WR4PPERIET1E- FOR 10c. . There are still a few .hundred yards left, e0 inches wide, good weight and all newliatteens, regular 15e for' ide Asixecia----NEW GOODS '4' This week we will pass into stock the following new goods : NEW PRINTS 1Oc ancl. 124e NEW GINGIIAMS 14,0, NEW:. LINEN VOILE „.. ...lZkc, 1.5raecl ,18c NiSIV SIIIRTINGS 10e rad 12:kc NEW 'TOWELING'S . 6e ‘iip NEW BROADCLOTH Light weight in plain: black, blue brown mut Veen.. NEW FANCY .TWEEDS NEW WAISTINGS. NEVV LACES: NEW DRESS. TRIMMINGS. . • • • ss.c.1-0.opp • NEW ,•.1.:USTERS • • itt black, blue and brown- and Sine herd .checks in black --and blue, • . . evv STRIPED 1401-IAIRS Indite* and 'White ••and blue :land White, wide and narrot;v. NEW 'VQ•11!..374'S In all colors. 50c up s . NEW CREPE DE Cl-IENB . In blaek, blue„ bi•ownand cream, prices._ ..... ..,;.„.... The up • 0 4 Successors to R. CoAts',. .•CLANTON. , . CIRCUS PERFORIVIERS, • Vresii A iv a sellout:nil. - : „ ,., ti To cif W.hemille cir-ans IS a Tory Se. "hen 3tOtt ere 'wt. downsaa , • ys • ',ions Altair physic -dun, '`Opn't..take a stimeseit. 1: • • ' ' J List lirea.the. Put your linger on i • Po OrcuS Pe°01.9 the Oltelle is. a .verF your pnl$t. and ot its. rbytiiiii, i,„,... . serious thing. Wheu a birreliack rider I el ht beat tr v i the be, it.11 1 slips p".} the ground after a .seinerstinit ng, g s : al. n . , , .. breathing deep' and low, and foreleg ,.• or it lofty temblet misses the shoulder the diaphragm down: lirst„, thell fining I it IS bis business to lend on the en:li- ttle upper tutees.. - Teen eshate this i onc0. is iill sympatitY, • its if feeling it - breath .during loth; • heRta• ,or the 1 "self how it Is to thn before. so many worn In.ppam as a sign of the cross. . • Nets For Birtik. , . • : Along the Aeriatie sea swallows and other migratory birds are cau-gbtev ery year by the hundreds of thousande and eaten by the Italians, Who: spread nets in svbich• aa• Many. at 200 to 500 of the birds are caught at Ono'. llinsittelti; and Geatee. The first mustache and goatee were • Now it•you with e vee the neer rimer cares .• . a pis'ee of .' tilacitinet•Y,; SO' a tS.Pt•'7 • for .ait. the vast •meltituda need • • . 1 P el ilis d • writer, what do you <10 t•P' laaki•-' • •it is On the superintendent, his Particular has •Jost that ntive. so t, •springy . feel necullar to wool.—Ara actin Weal and GAO* 1epoiter j. • Success rroionjrrtt Llfe' • Itis nens•Wellkeine inerecised comPlexity,.or •11-'1Vitti••lticreased • M<! pendlture distinctly • ids .longevi ty,' X.sixury,'. .fortile parent ear ce WhOle family Of 'dieeeses," modifies it greetles of courses bet.this i e -manageable fee: ter, says the LtindOnSChronicle, •••We.• have only to -recall personel-eXPerieuee :to realize -the force of intellectual sem. 'elation, Tire interest Of Sport:will' crass date:men Without rittigne :for dietaneeo tbeY otherwise couldnot traverse. 'The excitemeet of strife . will often inasys the presence of *minds. Self -forgetful-. •ness. in all' the wall of life, undet• the •. • • stress of love, chivalry .er Accepted dnty• doubles. huntan. enditranee.- Sue; . cess gives .nese vitailte; new. powers and this isanother-name for eteW 11111 11101e stiv.,)Othly? N llop t. put 4 • sua., perintendetit, who • IS watching him lot 100:1 Oil 0101, and•sgton" anti clog at 1A .-.f the 'arena; ond Who,. when, . it ••all up. You elean• it fir.st.. t-litLt best clean tins blood •bv • breath- • • • 1. lie goes ott; aurti Ask very -.pointed- ' ',The bleed Peesee through , the . ty 'how his e.Yeshappeeed to be teac- hings, and it rweiia expt,e.ts •.ettrite or his- inuseles inflitn.:.••••There is ) n y of freth aie with oeyeen. no pniee in the eltetIS for performers et- le t • - ...in it. • it,. . find .perfeetly, ,Nrho 'fail.: , . ... • • -•• • . air, •It "needs more wbich .issitot I ; .1.11ven the. elegyits Seek alittle'bit seri- ..pAlsfectly, ffesia., .needs to be • ouS.:••bellititl the"scenea., . But • perboUs • „ed' ey: contact ivltii• thO• Qiiee• in that Onlybeeause the, lalitek liegeIVLULU . . • , . • -..- • • • Whet.e Napoleon Died: Longwood; 13oeaparte's house in St. la• now a arm e room n Which he died' it a stable. On the Site of his former grave is a machine:for. •grinding corns • Ara essees. , sa..•••.; r,vtx,t, e•• ••••-• • „ Robins:2,a ornsoa. ' Outtles •Iliektitts Onee• said' of '"Rote teSoe Crusoes that it was "the most' populOr story -in the world and.Yet one.: -'.• which never drew a smile or a tear." • Fialltting Crick:tits. • Among the curiosities. of canton are shops svhere.- Crickets are %reined 'for fightieg, as the Filipino lighting ,cocks. The .Chieese- -gettable. on the. .ienultn, Oa a gOad • , cricket is• Some- times:sole .for $100. . • No thetn own them. Panneis in Servia. There are fie:paupers in Service Even ' the poorest pe,ople sueeeed in establishe • Mg homes of their own and Most Or •• Size or St Peter'. • 1 • 'St Peter's at Rome le' tbe form 'Of ' 'The Senvq 61* The Cries of no animals epproaCh a•-eroes.036 feet long and 450 feet Wide. -.Its height' 'Only two feet lees. •than' more closely:Wet of 'the huntae- voice atl:tl'il,nilge laroiols:?,,osists 1.ettillitigeNo.f.cth•%eute.te•exaptilli.;..•,1.... ,aeigyaipwealynst soongillitiemir aivildhitoeonlemednvisaAgneda. 'ton : In. dining ' thin. you sae:. simply. • i Wbat- a Witclereeas of inn :making. pee- eleaniog the machine. Yoe are crime- . ,ple theranre•in the latter day circus-- ing tne blood. At the Same tiuto you . the 1.1iininki the Leon, the Ilariequit, . are giving that little Ohm to the ne-. the Grimacer, the Merry A:ndrew, the t ion ots the heart .and the nerVouS, . n•LoobY, the Zany, • the Pierrot, nystent Which yo 4 thought . yeni wei e ,d.ustria lver • re ow Y. *. • " When Ivory :eas become Yellow from :age •or use wasit it well With sociPy water And a lartiph and bleach it. by • Seceding: it in the sun for seVeral. dears, wetting it repeatedly witlt soapy., water. .•. thee -thoee of seals when linnenting the loss or capftire. ef • their yoinne.' They eatt a. wallieg mid:electing ery . ' Similar to that of • a Woman in ..deepgtief • ' 'When Children Wstlk,. ' Nearly -10 per cent -of children learn' to walkby the thee :they are ten ng When you took the stimulant, , the.Puneh, the Motley Fool and finally . Months, old.. • In the latter case you didn't clean.1 the German Broad Face, Wheee name the maciene. . You simply ran it a,is Paddy Burke! One Cif the clowns little faster and gUntined it up a. lit- tle More. You cart get the sante re-' sults, the sante 'feeling of exhilara- tion and of aeconiplishment without tali:nig the stimulant,, and at, the Ivo Notion of Real Trnithle.' , bet I get: fete more tremble, 'then any man. ie this state," .voliinteered the young•fellow who bed come in the club- houie. "Nothieg le the trouble line overlooks tie.' ' 'Silty, I'd be afraid to • • ' "What! .Ain't yOu married?" Orme,: hinted the red nosed elderly party -who was heverieg veer •the • gratis' leech:. "I3.oy, Yeti don't lino* .whet. trouble is." Charity.. •• • Sheserm glad we went. It was ith excellent performance—and for sect) a ebaritable purpose. • Fier Busbancl— . Yea, indeed! We all feel a thrill of sat- isfaction when we do soMetbing for charity and get the worth of our morn Cy at the same time.—London tit.13itS, • Intenried. saute 'time the machine will steadily improve ia its running {quality., just "Funny Friskey,7 and he got, his Ilreatlie the best air you . Call get, • visiting eard out of bis teunk., It read, and plenty of it. it ,. ls as neceaaary _ ".to. inelskee, Clown and Comedian," as food. The }tenet and:lungs act in- 'veltintarily. In hurried businesS life and it hada heevY geld riln, wilieh- . • was Sitting -on his trunk inthe dress- ing, ioom licking a Stick' of •black paint and •rubbing it on his cheeks Ao 85 to make a most funereel expression. Ile small boy asked. him What kind of it clown be was. HS said that he was they beeoree too ., 'eyeteeth:1'Y.- 1. -in.• Made it very Imposing. •in the four that case—just breetheS' • corners it said Ettrope and Asia and Africa. and America, whieb showed that •11. Priekey's fame had reached • the four corners ef the card. Uittil you saw bis merry cepers in the ring you never could believe that a Man with such a serious face and stich an ine- • posieg vitiltieg card cOuld be either funny or frisky, , Both Could Do, • Mrs. Truit—My husband is a sort of lila of all tradee; he tan' do almost anythieg. airs. Gayboy—And mine is a sortof jack of ebbs; belongs to •fifteen different societies and can the' alneast anybotlyt , • • cause :And Offset,. Mifkins—Wasn't) Benedict's death rather sudden and unexpected? telt Ides—Well, • it Was • sudden,' but- not necessarily unexpected. IIIA wife had ! just graduated from a cooking settee', Inade a fenny break le • et:Mgt:Mutating the bride's father • he stead of • the groom, ,Wills—NO, I didn't, i've- a daughter, too, and 1 • know what they cost. Just as you tire pleased at finding tariffs you are displeesed a finding per. feetion,—dsev'eter. Nedklaces of .Aists, Zrk the island of New Guinea, or Pa- ean, the chief adornment of the ladies IS a tteektle made of black ants. The 'native erica find the Ants iu dip gas' dens, they bite Off and swath)* the lowe mid, throw away the head and thread the thorax. One woman, the bride of It chief, Wore a neeklnee eleven feet long, on Which Were the beedle8 of 1,800 abbr. A timbal Limb. A Cripple in Nearry, Ireland, had scene trouble with two policemen, mei he defended himself by unscrewing . his Wooden leg, With which he knocked Oat Ithr 6011, s .r879. Whooping Cough, Croup, Bronchitis Cough, Grip, Asthma, Diphtheria Cragglono la a boon to Asthmatics • Clusormitolto bag dAtablrithad afta thifidaril roroodr . for tho dltentoo Indlcotod. It nitro because the air ran. donut ittongly antltoptio lo carried over thO ilh0000d our. • Stet of the bronchiat tubes frith avert'Sreath, gtvitl trolonged and oonstant treatment,. Those of e ,511$111111). tiVi5 or sufferers from chronic bronchitis, find linintitiato rad kont oonghl or Inflamed conditions sr thothroot. Vapo-Ctottolatto- hi arogritoto orr(int pre. pea on receipt of price. A. Vdto.etogolen6 out,. fit incluiting a hand at resoletio *VA esa for frrO illustrated healtlet- LPAMINU MICA% C154 La, Avoto,L141 MoutrOtd.corooti, 804 .Advereity hi Sometimes hard upon Man, but for one man who can stand prosperity there are a hundred who Will stand adversity., Tate Tide Table. 'The inventor ef the tide table, it is Saidnever saw thera nis life. . , , Puzzled hi the taw. , The librarian tirtife Congreseimial bra*. tells a. story of a colored, man who Acme. into the library aud asked one of the aSalstants for a '"good 'book," Ile explained thet one of his. neighbors intended to sue him 'and he wanted to get a 'book so lie could find out the law. , . The clerk gave him a copy of a book called "Every Mali HIS Own Lawyer." The colored man eat down at oho of the desks and turned the pages of the book ' • for an hour: Than he ea -Mete the desk assiStailt and said: sPIreed beSS yoti sit me sunm• easiee? • Dis yere is d' fifth edition. • Cain't I have de fust editton? latebbe c'u'd Understate. dat. I ain't bin git- TRUTI-1 OR PARADOX? Life !cycle all men; death reveals the eminent. Liberty means responsibility. That Is why tnost roen dread it. While we have prisons It matters lit- tle Which of us occupy the Cells. Titles distinguarb the mediocre, em- barrass the superior end ate disgraced by the inferior. Demodracy substitutes eleetion by the incompetent many fOr appointment by the corrupt few. Do not do unto others AO you Wottld tin; on right smart with cits yore flftb one,"13110NCHITIS il • Tre,es of Iiinland. , The.trees of Finland are the Money bag e of the people pz.sasitiit. even raakes his shoes from birch bark and •thatehes his roof with sltayings. Fie virtually lies art wood. • . . Frank, it conors. • n o ty ng n man,u tureisa.. u t 1 el! f evben asked why be had befit for his work people cottages which paid no regard to sanitation or to comforts ' And decencies of life, replied that the eetteges were to sleep in, his work people livleg le the thetery. , • : • . etiih aineterin. In the best milk bacteria nuinber *COO to it $1)0011611. In a redlY bad Sample Of milk the astonishing total of ' 000,000,000.1s reached. • The Tools of.Glenitis. •• 1 , Some of' the greatest discoveries in physieS and chemistry have been made • With the eimplest forms Of apparatua and Meier the most modest' conditions *ef laboratory- equipment One need only recall the achievemente of the famous ' dello Dalton alai in later time of Sir Gabriel Stokes to Illustrate the point. As regards the latter, a conneeet of Lott Rayleigh ,is of interest. Stoltes' experimental 'work, he Says, Was exe.. Cuted with the most inedeet appliances. • Many of his discoveries Were made In n narrow passage behind the pantry of • his house intethe window of which lie • had it shutter fixed with a slit in it awl braeltet on which to place crystais and prIsras.—Lonelon Telegraph. that they Should do unto you. Their tastes may not be the Same. Your word ean never be as good tie your bond, because your meMory era never be as trustworthy as your honor, yott strike 11 child take care dud you strike it in anger, even at the task of maiming it for llt& A blow in cold blood neither can nor should be forglv- en.—From George Bernard Shaw's ",Xan and Superman." A Masa itogorti • -- "1 lutve been told,." said ales.. Ohl. eaStle, "that your daughter haS Wen doing Aetna wonderftd things in pyrog raptly." 410h, no," replied hee hostess, "sbe ain't been there at all. The hist letter we hrtd from her she wag in Plttaburg and thoughtshe'd go right through to Washington' . AND AD k 111 "- - wits ML WHETHER it \the wheezing, W and desperate Struggle for . breath so chagactertstic of asthma* the soreness', tightness in the chest and hard coughing of bronchitis, or the barking cough Of croup, • DM CHASE'S SYRUP OP LINSEED AND TURPENTINE affetrds alineSt instant relief and timely Cure. People naturally and correctly reas rota that what will prove effective in such obstinate diseases must be the best treatment for ordinary coughs en& colds,- which are the starting )int of consumption and other lung° r:rouhles. Dr. Chatsde Syrup of Sineeed arid ;tut erget ittiltel es' atIti.eificl?, ait bottk' rattliallitYdseizaels' O To protect you agaimt 'Mit:Woos* limo perteet AO signature et' Dr. A. Wo tin famous receipt 1 oelt author, ere on every bottle.