The Clinton News-Record, 1905-05-04, Page 6FOR OVER SIXTY YEARS,4.
Mrs. Wileloteie Soothing. Syrup. hae
been Ord by teillione pt mothereLr
their childreii. ethile teething. If die
-
tithed bY night ,eud broken •of
r.st by h sifet rhPt1 tcint'ad
reline with in •of cutting teeth seed
et once geld 'get A bottle of "Nlis
ilelew's Soutli•n t4Yree" far rfEN
n teething. It .will reDeve Het poet
I'tUc stele= m meth Mete'. Peeee.
upon it, mothers., there is no mistnec
400;3 it. it .cures Diarrhoea, rep -
Lees the fel tomaela end liewele, veer'
WWI Celle, stiffens: the Gums, mite" i,
InVanunalitm. and giVee tene awl en
.c ee y to t ha ;thole system. "MN.
Winslow's Seething Syrup", ler cell le
ren teething ia pleasant to the teal;
and is the •preseriplien of one of -th;
oldest and hest female eitysicians am'
nurses in thy United Stales.Pile;
25 cents a bottle. Sold by alldrug-,
gists, throepeout. the woeld. Be eurc
and ask for "Mere Winelew's Soutb•-
ing Syrup."
...4,4.4;1}...e4s-01,1....14,1"......A.,,irara•Nroy.0—,,,Frr..
a1*e11 OCceirea 11,041M
A London gentieume has during ble
various holidays spent with his family
at the seaside collected sufnelent shells
, to cover the walls and ceiling ot a
' small room in his house. The floor of
this unique room ifs covered with, dried
seaweed, while much of the furniture
Is also decorated with various kinds
of shells. ..
f'r735*16525
,.. K.
11 ,t1 se4 Work. PI,
A.11 Done '1, •
11&!
15
k'
k
Irlouse clean
and bright
bdfotethoclay
is rightly begun,
Whon good,
brooms and
brushes are used
it takes very
little oftbrt to
keep the homeattractiVo.
BOECKil BRUSIME6
AND sRooras
aro the best made, and like all
good tools make labor light.
UMW Fattories, Limited, Toronto, Can.
wrilloY
Shor ainod
BfisirieSS ,_C4d
'''' LONDON
Each pupil is given.. in-
dividual instruction.
The Shorthand Systein
taught is that uted by :all
newspaper •and eourt• rg-
porters. .-
Best systems of Book-
keeping, Penmanship, Arith,-
• :tactic, et e . , thoroughly
taught.
Situations guaranteed
to every Graduate.
CATALOGUO FEZ.
\Aim. ot.c.,loo 5
Few reemeopier
piNcIpAL
eeeee
Policemen In Genoa,
In Genoa the policemen Wear silk •
hats and carry silver headed walking
sticks. Genoa seems to be the only
place where a policeman care look
big as Ile feels. •
.•.
•
e
zuci iiheumatism
Jim's Mother,
• By A. ?4. Davie* Ogden
cofriight, 1904. by A, M. Doi.. Pease
Miss Turnbull, her arms full of 'bios.
limning lilacs, •entered the dusty day
coacb and walked slowly down the
aisle. The car was erowded. PaSaing
the seats; where men sprawled over
tire bot looltiug red plush, ebe moved
forward to halt by the side of an ole
Woman, a gentle faced little creature
neatly dressed in a 'threadbere blade
beano.
"Mayl at here?" asked Aliso Turn-
bull. The old woman, glancing up,
moved quickly toward the window.
"Pray do," she urged heartily. AO
The Clin,ton le141.110
Icall. We people In the rear cars were
not injured," ate continued, "and,
Unerring a little about Mang, offer.
• ed oerviceo;" She did not think ft
neceoottry to add that the attraction Of
the unconselouo girl's face bad some
what prompted her offer. "Now try to
Weep." But Entlly had tamed White,
"Jina's Mother—the Woman with
mor' she gasped.
i "Quite Safe also. You were found
I clinging to her dreee, you keew her
• then? She is a relative?" seeing that •
1 *he girl wished to talk. '
! "I •only naet her today," reeponded
Emily. "But she is Jire's mother. Oh,
I must telegraph to hirer auxioesly.
. "Ile will be so worried, ter he knew
that I was to take that train."
The woman fetched pencil and pa-
per and wrote the message, Then sbe
let her eyes rest thoughtfully upon the
girl.
"Se yeti are Emily Turnbull, thet ac-
tress?" oho asked. Miss Turnbull nod -
Sled, •
••
•
.na—iuiu you are euro as to tne
identity of OA woinanr pursued her
Mies Turnbnll Settled down, bee coin. •
panion, attracted by the purple flow- interlocutor. • Her manner eouveYed
ers, put out a wrinkled hand and strok- More than her words, and Emily looked
ed the fragrant buds. troubled
"They remind me of early days miter' . "Why, she oald that ber son's name
cl g
I nwas Jim anthat she was gointo
eed in the country," she volunteer-
ed, with a shy smile. "Oe course my New York to see his sweetheart, and—
Son a nice house
ued I knew that Jim's mother lived
eon Jim gives killin the
city now," with a toucla a pride, "but, near Albauye" ;she stammered eonfus-
I still 'eve the country." edly, °I—I thoughtso,"
•
11Xiss Tnrubull smiled, and insensible' And you risked your lire to save her
•the two drifted into conversation. Yet on that chance?" cried the other
petuouslY,
intelligently as her tongue auswered: •"for the men said that you
could. have easily eecaped." Miss Turn -
'the girl's mind wife absorbed in an
!Unclercurreet of its own. Sbe WAS ge. hull lifted lier clear, gray eyes.
Ing home, back to New York; back to "I thought that she Was Jim's moth
-
him, What good was a vacation? It er," came tbe sinatile response, With a
would be three weeks tomorrow since smothered exclamatton, balf 4augh,
she had gone away, Had he missed half sob, the woman dropped pad and
ber? Dear Zhu! It seemed almost pencil and flank to her knees y Emi-
absurd to remember that they had ly's side. ' •
known each other less than a year! "Oh, my dear, my defter she 'uttered.
On single dark threa.dmingled with "Forgive ree. Flow hateful, how nal. -
the happy fabric woven by her • retv mended; I eat° neen! „I am your
thoughts. That was :Tim's attitude re- •Jines 'nether. I was bound for New
garding his 'mother. She would marry , York on a similar errand. It was a
no raanewhose family did not welcome . blow, 1 confess, when he wrote that
her, refused the girl, with spirited Inde 4 he wished to Marry an actress. But he
pendence.• And Jim knew that The was quite right when he said that I
old women's somewhat querulous voice had only to see you to understand.
brought het back with a start t Will you tharry.Jim, dear?: I! know he
"Yes, rayboy Jim lives in New York, ! 10.tes you." e'er 'duelled, eager face
And bees got engaged down there Pne .wae yery close t� Emily's, and for an-
leieeee terribly painful alirnoritte
asee theroter Ili* cured by
cor.'ohase,a 'Kidney -Liver •
. . . •
:7•Ince rheumatism arises from derangements
i. C.:e kidneys it can n ler be cured until these
o gans„..- restored to he.4th. By acting directly
the Dr. C. A.Se'S Kidney -Liver Pills
L11. e both:kidney disease and rheumatism.
MRS. elote..ee,•Nev gasket, Ont., states
" I have thed Dr. CI e's Kidney -Liver Pills
f r kidney trouble, and would not be without.
them for a great deal. They have certainly
(,,,ne me a world of good, and I would net
e 1,k of using any other medicine for an ailment
of this kind."
I "My husband N trr tvith sciatic rheu-
runts:a and is using ; ••. Chase's Kidney -Liver
Iik. They are doing him more good than any.
iicine he ever used, and we both heartily re,
commend them as an excellent medicine."
• Dr. Chase's Kidney -Live Pills, the cdttfort
t.f old .age, one pill a dote, 25 cents a bok, at all
t:ealers. Polimit and signature of Dr. A. W.
Chase on every box. . •
Pain eameet exist where Dr. Cease's Beelt-
ache Plaster is applied. •
Tft NaraidUr
•
Sport iirk
the ex-
andperiences of anglers, shoot-
. ers and campers, of yacht-
Abenture 1Pg;
are in.
with taeszsr ,,,durinne,:suietayeriiig;
"FOREST
AND
joigipm, STREAM,' or Send
us twenty-five cents
Al for four weeks trial trip. A
aizi.4 large illustrated weekly
' journal of shooting;
Ounfishing,natural
tory and yachting,' *
;new depart-,
meet has to
do witivthe
Country
Home andits
surroundings.
Terms: *4
a year, $2 for
sift Menthe.
We send
free On re.
quest our
catalogue of
the best
books on outdoor life and recreation.
FOREST AND MEM% PUB, Ca
# 144 Broadway* Now York.
1
going claten no' to settles girl. 'Pears ewer the girl put up her lips and
like as if no one was good enough for kissed the delicate cheek:
Jim. And, besides, this girl"— Then "011," breitthed Eerily, "what a beau
she Paused, evidently, recollecting that tiful .world it is! Don't 'you—don't you'
ber listener was a fitranger • -think that perhe ps we might "straight-
-Miss Turnbull became conscious Of a 011' things opt for that other dines
vague Suspicion, a strange doubt C3ould girl?". see 'added presently; "I want.
It be possible? •'We raUst wait until : , her to be bappy too." • • '
you meet My mother. ,I am seep things ' Aeld Jim"e mother smiled,
'will 'come right then,"e Jim' bad said, •• • • •
•
THE LUXURY OF WEALTH,
FifF Iehowsand Doti:lee (Men Pohl
Far Fgr
IDA 014 0,000 for a sable coat
$0 Only a fair price. In fact, It is a
very low price for a Oat of fine sable.
M witness tbio talk that Thad the oth-
er day with New York'fs leading ter.
rier; •
"Can youshow me a good sable
coat?" X Inquired.
°Russian sable?" he asked.
"Yes," said I, "something especiallY
gne, say about .$0,000."
He smiled. "We haven't anything
made up that I would call especially
line. We have a rather 'Mort coat of
rather light skins, • moderate quality,•
that will cost $10•dot"
"Ten thousand dollars!" I exclahned.
"Then what would a good eoat cost?"
He continued to smile and produced
a number of fine sgins—the real IM-•
perial • sable, very dark, with silver
lights playing throe& tbe soft fure
And he "showed nie the piece raarks,
$550 a skin, about $1.0 a square each. s
"This is the best Siberian sable," be
Wenton. "A coat of Moderate length,
• say thirty inches, requires sixty skins,
aed"—
"Sixty *nes 550," I murmured.
"Thirty-three thousand dollars, 'Which
Includes the eost of making."
• ' "And It longer coat?" I gasped.
e
, "One , reaching to a lady's ankles
would regialre, say, eighty okies; that is
$44,090,!, he replied rather %matter Of
fact,
"And you 'sell coats at such plues?"
continued in amazement; '
"We sell this kind of sable as fast
•es we. can, 'get it The hest BMUS are
very scarce." ;
• , "And a muff," I asked meekly, "Jost
a mtiff?" •
• •
1. eFivesleins,"- said he, "$2,750. There's• •
one in the show ease," • •
"And a bee; a little boa?".
•
"Four sk:Ms at least; that is $2,200.",
1 Here then evidently I erred riot On
'the side Of exteggetertion, but of under-
statement. I put down $30,000 as the
nueximene yeetef sinn that a. few New
York women spend on Anse, ineluding
everythinghetease . neatly $50,000
.• May be. spencielhiply fOr e fur coat
With bon' and -muffle-Cleveland MO-
fett InBuccessi• ' •
• • .
Soraehovr she bad always. 'imagined
that 31in's mother disapproved of her,
She gibeut it.
"Beforeyen go downtown Cyrus
•said his wire "yeti meet not forget to
•
'.1ee me. 50, cents, Pee got to buy
seine things thidenoreing." • • •
f`Thisaboinianeleg eetrevaganee of
. Yours,' ..lielinda," replied e'er; -,Kneee,..•
• opening his nocketnook:witievioible re,
Iuctanee "le Whet keeps tie.! peer.
Where, IMOuldlike :to lenOtif;.4 be 'One
tlnued 'becoming- elicited; : "Is the 50'
••• centre X 'lave you 'last week? ;What
• lutVeyoudone , with it?e. :Elite nee&
• be Clean, cold cash, -mariner; gone le
noth-
ing' What haVe you got to show' for
less than sie days : and :gene. for • nettle
• it? Do you think Permade of money?"• '
demanded iverelineet, taking mit a Coin
• .and slapping'. it down On the table:
• "Do you" -• • ' • ' . •
"Don't say : anything more; Cyrus"
exclaimed Meeleneer, with taro in
ber eyes and pettingher. hand bur-
, eledly: over the nanney..,: "I'll not speed
tens mien ,of ft than I,ane ttetually oblig
' ed to spend, and lrthank you ever so
• • •• •• . .
With. aliaoliffied grunt Cyrus put his
• •
. purse' back In his pocket, took his •bat•
• arid went doweitown, and in lees than'
•• , .
eon, enemieee, mez Omani" •seeseerrentre
• • • ."Fonoayu..zazi!'
. ;
and: she had resentedthe 'fact. She
. . . .
knew nothing :of Arcee • felinity save
that he ,eame ffom ;seine -Where . un'
state : And he bad written that he
'VMS:* expecting his mother for a Visit
•The vete widened.- CoeTd ft he
credible that -this 'Woman, ,ignerant; un-
lettered, might be Jint'S Mother? Foi•.
the, Moment a qeick.disteete made her
draw back, then ;a :look at the kiedly,
faded. eace with the esteadfast bide
eyes awakened a'nobler 2eellng 'Atter
tin, what were mere .extereald -Werth?.
Did net beauty or soul count for'neare.
than beauty et diction./ And Jim Wed,.
her! The girl's 'eyes showeda flew
-.0enitatithy . as she turned to her ba:111.
ilaition. • .. • • ••:-
• "Tell MO.— ohe began.. But the sen-
Amice Was never finished, There Was a:
• crash .a Jar,: Csickening suspense, is
• the eat:Wavered. Another moment. and
the heavy Wood erumpled int" card- .
'beer& Flung ,to one side, by the:force
Of the impact, Emily Turnbull , struge
• gled to her knees. The car roof above
• her was split open.. She was not badly
enough ;hurt to prevent her crawling
through that -aperture to safety.
armind ber.rose.cries and groans: The
girl shuddered. Her lilacs, fallen be-
side her, filled the alr with their
crushed 'sweetness, and a Madden
thought made her;stsrt,
; The old NVOMAII lay. pinioned under at
Seat,. senseless from a cut ott her fore-
head. Emily hesitated. Cadd. elm
leave• her'? Yet -what good. Could she
'achieve by staying/ •Arid. if :meant;
death fee both! The piteous shrieks
for heti were lecreasing, She could
hear a Crackle 02burning Wood, Th• e
ter was tfee gre. With a treteendeue ef-
fort ht1il attempted to move the
,heitery: seat, 'Useless. ret she wrestled
With the cruel iron, striving in desper-
ation to lift it -even an inch, The noise
•ef the detnee tame nearer. The beat
• was beeoMing intolerable. Making one
Met clesnairing effott, the gfrleent her
• voleringing Mit in. a. Wild appeal to'
Aid and then,'Xhatested. hank ineens1!
hip beside theItirp; figure that slati
taaught to WO. • ' . •
• On opening her eyee mu1 Ttirebtill
gazed -about her in bewilderment,
Was she dead/ The roorn was quite.
unfamiliar. Bare white walls .met her
wondelIng eyes. • A, Woman seated by
the bed ;whereon IMO lay rose and fuell-
ed drown on her.
• °Do hot be -frightened," said the we.
man in a low, reassuring voice, "You
etre at the Warren House Where' they
brought you after the aceideut, 4. reit
• days' rest wilt make foil gate -strong
Some mon found you Just at
the lost 'MOalent, They, heard your
n:
half an !hour efts. • Kneere trembling
with eageeness, was on :the way to the
great Ary geode stores.
•
:For Mr.. Cyrus eleneer: by t e most.
.caleneiteins and' unaecometable blender '
of bis 'Whole fife, had .Civen. her Al n
twenty 'dollar goldpiece Instead 'Of -50
c.entere • . • • '•
. :
• Sign of Good Manner*. •
As the oldest of the family ,Anna felt
keeelY the :neceseity of keening e close.
:Meech .upon : the miaimer of her ttvo
yoenger sisters lest disgrace be attach-
ed to the good nameof the:family. Her
intmitions, at all events, were beyond
eaell,' although as much • could. not al-
l/nee be sied for her meinier :of efir-
tyieg them out •
'bertefely the provocetien was great
When sienna's younger sister deliberate-
ly pet an entire hard liMled egg in ter -
mouth In the crowded steem cat on the
Way 'home front ehooI Ojily h few
persons Saw the dreadful deed, yet An-
na straightway rose; crossed; the ..aisle
and administered to the offender e 'box.
on the ear whieh redounded f rem :one
end of the ear to the other, • thereupon
she resumed her sent In the pined con-
sciousness of a duty well nerearine& , •
"Why, Anna, how could you de arch
a thing, and publicly, too?" said her
mother later after hearing a tearful
recital of the incident from the lips of
. her yOungest daughter. ' ,
"Weil, I just wanted to "Mew the
people," was the reply, "that even
though Lettyebebavedese badly 1 at
least had been taught to: have good
• Manners," --St, Louis Republic. '
MAY 9th, 16'4
IIMpownen11...RIMTOMMa•
THE MODERN BABY,
Methods That Make Vs Wonder Mow
• Old 'rime Waists lever Lived.
Wheel an A.merican baby arriveo in
the world be finds enough parapherna-
lia and impediments smelting him to
furnish forth all the papooses oe a nu-
merous native tribe.
The garments that were authorized
for tlae baby's inaraediate predecessor
• are already discarded by science. The
slips and jackets that were used at an
analogous time by big brother will not
do for bine. All baby cloths mug now
be in one piece—or is it three pieces?
No one Can tell till the fatal moment,
And as for soaps and powders, the
brands that were used five nainutes ago
are UM esteemed extremely deleteri-
ous. Soaps, in fact, are nothing, What
we want is skin food. •
Meanwhile if the thermometer Is
overlopked the consequences will be
dire.If the baby didn't have a thee.
mometer he probably would refuse to
have a temperature. And if he didn't
have a pair, of scales he might refuse
to have any weight. Some kind of
weighing machine is essential. And an
inclieiclual bathtub! So that he can be
• weighed before and after his swine to
see what effect it has on him.
The cradle roust be thrown away. It
goes to the junk heap. The thing to
spend your money ou now is a bassi-
net. Next year for the next baby it
may be a hermetically sealed test tube.'
• Where, oh, where is the drift toward
the simple life?
Certainly not in tbe baby's food. Ali -
gator oil rubbed In through the chest is
the real nourishment, And cheese made
from the milk or the goats of the Oen-
• cases is an indispensable element Of
diet.- •
; . . .
.• Take Alamogordo Desert'.
One of. the enteral wondere elf. New
Alexico; the Alamogordo, or Tularosa,
• desert, was teimititlecilly described at
.. the Philadelplea 'Meeting Of tbe Ameri-
• can aesociation by • Professer T. H.
elaebricle. It is a sandy plain, measure
lug. tenni 100 to 1e5 miles front ,north to
-sentli and from 3e to •50 nines from
east to west, and, according to Pro-
fessof Maeleride, it, represents the u-
pee Surface of a gigaetic Leeds of the
eirtlee•erfist that !sank after the depo-
sition' of :the creteeeous strataeItiS
sureounded by an 'elevated border', and
On the east especially • theelle& riee
Omer to a lielfeht of 1,000 feet. The cu-
rious Orean moeuttiiies stee: on its
southern. border. Within the
Mimeo needs or lava once Welled tip,
aka vast •deposIts of g psum, 3,411c11
forms eiand- as White ife . snow, •whieh.
the -*hid drives into vast &efts. Th.°
vegetation Le peculiar and highly lifter,!'
•eStinee-tytnielre Cimereiniee.
' . ,
Our Forestry Reserves. • •
In compliance with the law recently .
prime• by congress . the geueral land
onice has just surrenderecl coetrol of
!the governMent -forestry insenves to
!the burette of :forestry. there .are
fifty-three' reserves, containing 82,000e
000 acres, 'Or More than 9.6,000 Sqeare
Miles, and it•seeius but nature./ that': .
they 'should be under the supervision
af e department which devotes its time • •
•to the .selentitic study of the foeests.
The control which the forestry bureau
-now, has 'Conelete• not In nesting' 'We'
••Treepeeeinge signs 'about the reset:if:ate
het rather in 'seeing that they 'are •Usied
to their fullest extent without being e
• abused. There IA a probability _•that
the "fOrestry. bureau". will. in :the fue',':
tine be kitesen as 'the •eforestte : serve...
iee.L,11.faxwell's •Taliarriita. • ;
„... • , .
.inereeatleit in Prison:
,..During ' the 'first two days' :cof his
imprisemeent in :the •fortress : at St.
Petersburg AleXina Gorky was denied
paper; lialeetiene and pencil and ordee
after the protest of his wife was he al- •.,
lowed materials for wilthig. He then •
corianeeed a theatrical Piece, which had
been revolving In •his mind senile tithe
before, the ground 'tone of whichewase
to be somber. But in the chilly, nut
tow foeftess. ecu the biteltground oe the
dranati became more ample and his
sense of the humorous was sharpeeed,
He worked out , the chaimeters of his
play, :Bemiring effects • which set him
shaking :with leughter When- he eead• -
them .overin the •twilight of his cell.
In Midays the drama. was completed
end •received the title leClaildren ot the!
ItOpe on. a Man-of..War.
\ The total cordage required forit first
\i;•ste .inan-of-war weighs. Omit eighty
't ns. •
• • The Reddest Language 10 Aeguire.
Probably the easiest European lan-
• guage Is Italian, not so much on as -
count of Its analogies with Latin as be.
cause of its phonetic charaeter and the
simplicity of its rules.
•
The Bedroolls. •
In choosing a cblor seheme tor a bed.
room give thought to the loeation; thee,
blue is best adapted, for a south room,
a west or east room Is,effective in
green, laVentler or brown, while it north
room le •brightpned by yellow. or Old
rose. •
•
•berWiti and Greek.
• Dentin has been cited as having exi
pressed regrets st not having learned
Greek. Passages hi his letters.
• however, that he Was against the toni.
entileery teaching of Greek and believed
it should be taught only to those who
have it special teal and taste for it.
•*withal Itivoirs,
Thera are 2-,000vivere itt the Britt*
OPpirk
'
••Londen Subway Wages.; .
• Lfeeer the new 'see le, the Leaden Seb-
. way leietrietraileity will Pay its em:
"ployeee asfellowe: Alotormenwill be.
paid from 35s. te•-•42e. °ed.; conductors
feme 25e. to flOsand gatemen from
els. to 22e. Cd. -• The Week is to consist
of • stmllays of ten hours .each instead
•
of eeven.dase,.as at present .. •
The, men ask • that.8d.; 9d.. and 1011:
•per hour ellen be paid to 'first, second
and third year ractornien,:. With 10eed• :
for le.adieig men of this elass; 51/ed. and
...0& per hourte coinittetore ,and.- Assist,:
ant Metormee, and. 41/2de and 5d. Per :
, hour te•the first and second yeer gate -
'men respectively. •• They also propose •
• a ninebout day :and an ,elght heat day
...en reckoning overtimemidethatefor-Sune •
• cley work 'the reteerf payment shall be,
hale as Much ',heath • as the •orcileary
!rate. !, • •
.
Sltimose PoWder
. • ,
. . Body, ••
Most people had s 6106d that the,-
disPooal 02 Garibaldra body had been
finally settled twenty yeees.e0o.Thls
heiyeveleeae appearsfrom' a: letter.Writ- .
len .by his eldest surviving son to the
president de the Italian chamber of ,
deputies, IS not the case. The Writer
• points out that, contreeyto his own
wishee, Garibaldee! direction Or the
cremation. irk 'his. body was,. owing to
theopposition of powerfel public men, ;
• net carried out The son asks if this'
•• Bettingaside of deelbaldrs'illihetlogs:
•
Is to emitinue. • Should the 'answer be
•• in *the effirruatiee the •Ierejelattnie isre-
. queeted .to assnme. •the responsibinte.
aild to 'haVe the Wily renrovedefroM
• Capreya to the coetieent, „
" Adventurea of a Torpedo,
,• A, torpedo was fired recently from
tbe after starboard tube of the flag-
ship Wisconsin of the A.slatic smiad-
ron. It went straigbt Until within'a.
hundred yards from the ship, when It
dived and beried itself in the mud.
• 'Cali the propellers stopped tt Created
a blaek whirlpool where it was bur-
rowing into the bottom. A beoy was
dreppecl, and nativedivers were dis-
patched to the emcee. Some hours later
the torpedo was located and returned
to the ship, The tail, et the little de-
stroyer , was burled six feetbeneath
the mud, and it was a difficult task for
tbe.diver to melee a line fast to it.
• Figure It Out. •
The following • problem •10 said to
have, demoralized the railroad service
of a large part of West Virginia, 411
the enipioyees being so absorbed in
working it out: "A. train one mile long
Oaths from the Station at Gladys. The
engine leaves the station, and the colt-
ductor walte mill the cabooSe domes,
when he jumps on the caboose and
walks forward over the train, When
the *engine reaches the nett Staten,
OXley, four milee distant front Gladys
the concluder. Steps off the engine. HoW
ear &me: the Conductor tido and how
far does he walla'
Aceineting toe.:Captain Th c er, a.
..!aanitelite officer; the ildinose. eowe
der used In the. Jiinctueee aeray iS .teve
,degreee. More destructive than clYna-
inite dun eotten, on ,which lyddlte and
'other high 'explosives are based comes
directly bele:teethe Japanese eompouncl,
.while the 'cost nf mattufacture. Is • one.
half. that �f gen cotton,: Unlike ordi-
nary explosit'es, which explode after
they have pierced- fin Iron plate, with
shizeose powder the piercing and tbe
detonatio,n are practically eimultanee
ens:. Thensands of fragments are scat-
tered: IA all directems,. Which niesna
the most fearful .carnage 'whenthe eX-
plesieu (*vie on a ship's deck: •
• • •
Tho
.snIten'o. 'Gold camera.; "
'the. 'great eault, 'of misfortune' pere
• bans, of the sultan of Alorecca bas been
iuia•eitreeegance. HeIiaS enent lathe
•
few years. slime .he teek 'up thereina
of ,goveniment not on:y the..winale•rev;,
put° or his' country, but aipo the fete-
• lege ofhis predecessors. .
• "NW of the things he bought gave,
. hin. any pleasure, Photography Meuse.
• ere 111113 fer a time A. center:nee gold
at e2,600 came ,froth London; .1.0,000 .
francs' • worth Of ophotograplec. Paper
aerivedin one day from Paris. His
majesty once . informed' inc • that his.
• Materiels; for one year eoet bile be-
tween e0,000 and e7,e100.,
ed Rose
Tea
GCOD TEA"
It is good tea because it is made of the
young, teaaer, juicy leaves of the tea
plants of Northern India and Ceylon.
These leaves contain a large pbrcent-
age of Theine, wh'ich is a mild stimulant
and an aid to digestion,
Tliis is why Red Rose Tea is good, not
only "while you are drinking it, but is good
after you drink it,
assuessoursoszonsuanarannazaninseas •••====ner.=Ms&Manalissib,
"!1"'"'"i'`'''"*"'-`*!mf•-•1`.21!a2Mewa.'s"7"°''-"*I't7"-"*".1
TheatriCal Salaries.
Somebody has unearthed a pay list Don't !Beep on the Datalr,
of the Queen's theater, London, forle not geuerahe known, but to
a
week in December, 1807. Henry Irving •'sleep on the back makes one 'very lia-
is down for a sum equivalent to about We to take cold, as the chest and throat
$12.75, 'Miss Terry drew e25, Wynd- are exposed •.
ham. $1,0 and J. L. Toole $54. •
Formosa Sairdgess.
• A Dutch Maxim. ' Tile Japanese have hadlittle more
A. Maxim of the Dutch affirInS that success tban the Chinese had in reclue- •
"no one is ever ruined who keeps good ing the savages of Formosa to subJee.
accounts." ' tion and preventing them teem massa-
cring colonists. Tbe jungle is so dense
• Animals and Perfumesand they are em much at borne. In It
An investigatorof the effect of per that pursuit is almost4impossibie.
. ,
fumes on animate in the London zoo- '
logicalgardens discovei ed. that most Manhattan Ulan&
of the lions and leopards were very Alrthe people in the Welted States ,
fond of lavender. They took it piece could be evenly distributed over Man -
of cotton saturated with it and held it batten Island without making it as
between their paws with great delight. densely populated, ae its southeastern
- • quarter now Is. • '
The Stage Iron rounArY.• .,
After the liquid air on the ,stage
comes the Iron foundry. A performance
now' being giveti'ln one of the London
halls has Attracted a good deal of at-
teetion. The performer Pours two pew-
ders into a crucible and lights them
with a match. The resultis a blinding
ineetadeecence and in thirty seconds a
• lump of iron. The eXpetemerit 18re:
peated, end this time a horseshoe .is
made front the lugot that Is eftst. The
experitnent, however, is Well lateentt to
• chemiste, 'the ingredients 'Used being
tiler:mite and barium superoxide. The
• ignition of the Ictot glees the tremete
doles teroperattlrea,
A rift ON D ro.
E S
EASY TO IISE, BRIGHTEST AND BEST*
• ASK FOR TH debiAMOND.”
All Drug:eat. and Dealers. • Tim so Groom*
*******10••••••••••••••••••••••••••14.0.....
PERFECT
HOME
• DYEING.
•••.,
,
Bicycle's of the Best •
ot
kes
I HAVE .11 STOCK OP NEW WHEELS' OP THE
BEST MAKES, CLEVPLANDS, RACYCLES; ETC.
ALSO A NUN/113ER OF SECOND HAND WHEELS.
I ALS() DO REPAIRING, SHARPENING LAWN
MOWERS, SCISSORS, • ETG. , • •' . '• • •
• SATISFACTION GUARANTEED:
r1-1-TI:ER),I\TT221
. •
e
AT TIM'OLD. STAND HATT te 1,1:Ree..e .
•• • . . • • , .
rdrPTIZMOSIMISstai
• Canada's Greatest s " ort.
ed
Y
. - .
hose for Whom the.
BUilt
• SK.Q.KA.Y.3t-717ZE.,..:.
PITAL FOR
SU2V1.-PTIVE$";:
t Not a single patient has ever been. refised admission to
. the _Muskoka Free Hospital for _Consumptives because of his
or her poverty. • .
S'ine e .the hospital Was • opened in April, 1904 nearly
400 patients have been eared for
Would Have to be Scot Free.
, .
H. J. Pettypiece, M.P.P., Forest,
Ont. : "There Ise young lad in town,
named Kenneth Levitt, aged SeVerl
years, showing ate Very first signs of
consumption, and Dr. McCordie, who
is attending him, reecannionds that ho
be sent to the Saimtertum. He would
have to. bo sent to the Free Hospital,'
as his mother says the could not pay
more than $1 per week. They asked
me to write to you. Do you Meek he
out be achnitted?"
No Means to Pay.
L. It Cascatiden, M. 1)., Douglas,
Ont. : "I have a patient in whom pul-
monary tuberculosis is :jagdeveloping,
end who hes no means of her own to
\I
pay for treatmone or at any.rate only
a small fee in a to itel. I think the
treatmene at the amt.:whim would
help her, and es she tee nolonle / 'have
advised hor to seek admission in your
institution. Will you kindly tend me
eonclitions governing admission ?"
Vildove With Small Means.
'Mrs. Readwin, Hamilton, Ont.: 'el
am it widow with one little girl, ag63.
11 years; en), ago is 30 years. T. am
troubled with tuberculosis. I have
been doetorine for some tine, and my
physician has advised me to go to
l'iluskoke, I am not left with very
much means, so will you kindly lob me
know the full particulars, and what is
the lowest, fees you would charge me
a week." •
timidly Supported by Chitral
• and Neighbors.
S. Ewing, Alliston, One. ; White
Is Gravetiluneb the other &v./ called
at the Hospital re a young man llainecl.
Arthur Annetrong, of this town who
was sick With pneumonia about ton or
eleven months ago. Since then he hes
not beet" :able to work. • The &roily
ittrietne7ported by the cher& and neigh-
bors. What coo' you do to admit'
No greater work o,f faith has been undertaken in tvity
country. For its support the hospital is dependent on the
generosity of the people of this )ominion.
• Coetrilmtions, large or small, will help, and limy be •eelle to Ste Nitta Pe
Mmunsrlt, letinporb Ave.,'termite, or W. J (Mom, 4SQ 64 Frailty Ste
. \e'erit, Tofente.