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The Clinton News-Record, 1909-08-12, Page 3I I . I . I . I . . '. � I I I I I . � . ! I . , . � 71 � I . I 0 *� August 12th, 1909 WAKING UP WILLIAM, , His My''Wife Finally Got What She Was After. IT WAS A WELL PLAYED GAME William Wpm a Little, Slow, but When - J the 1pa4lp Trump Card Wait Played No Said, 44vt What She Wanted Him to Say from the Vory Start.. I I "WIllfam," said Mrs. Gilmartin. bend- ing over the sewing lu her lop, "what do you think we'd ,better have Thurs. day night %i,bon the Pritoluird.s come?" Mr. 011martill lowered his paper an Instant and gtaro4 across the table at her. "Have9.11 he oald� "Why, I suppose we'll have w couple of games or cinch . , and a lot of foolish talk. as usual." "I mean what will we bare to eat - stupid!" e:,Kplalned his wife. "You know they always bare a, 11ttle lunch when we go over to their place." . 110h, to eat!" echoed . Gilmartin, ,rk- suining his newspaper. IINWiy, have , , � whatever you like. I don't care." Mrs. Gilmartin sighed 4nd patted the sewing on tier knee titter taking u fur. -tire glance.(tt her engrossed husband. *,That's easy enough to say,91 she ob� -served, "but I want to talk to you about It. This Is Important, Do help me out, Will." she -added. "I've thought until I'mi. dizzy, and nothing -seems quite the thln;.�' "H -m -m!" said Gilmartin, frowning at the wall paper and tryIng to think. . "Why, I should think-er-- almost any- thing would do that's--er-nice-what- ever they usually have, you know," he added rather helpless . . .�y. "Go ahead � ard get up a nice little suppor. Yiiii , , . know how," And -he calmly resumed ,his newspaper. "But this Is different, dear," perstst- , -ed Mrs. Gilmartin, puckering - tier J 'brows and her sewing lit her agitation. "This Is Mrs. Prltcbnrd's birthday, . -and we Invited them to celebrate It . with us weeks and' weeks ago, You ' linow she's such a stickler for bavirig everything just right. I'm *6rrled� sick." f . ' "What Is there to worry aboutTl de- manded her husband, looking over the I top of the paper In surprise. OI -sup- pose the PrItchards eqt about the same . sort of things the rest of us do. I mever saw I much_(Ilfference the few times we had a bite with them, They aren't any better than we are, as far as I can see. I guess what's go�d �enoug,h for us Is good enough for.Al Pritchard and his wife." . . . ' Mrs. Gilmartin ho.iv(-.d another rAth- ,er pathetic sigh and said: �Ilt Isn't the -actual food I'm worrying about arid ­ . whether It will be, ap, you say, good *nough for them. ThaVs Oily. But It's -the selection of a I Ittle -menu tot -a birthday party and the table di?cora- tions an " d the lights and -and .every- thing." she added. ,115irs. Pritchard ,says it's the little things that I show., the �elever housekeeper." ... .. . There was silence for it few mo., . . ments, and then Mrs. Gilmartin "ten I - tured a suggestion: I � . . . . .. "Crpam(,d oysters are'rifec," she said. .' "Um -bum," breathed the head of the . 'house absently: "What was that?" he -demanded. turning suddenly. 41 didn't -bear." I . . .. "I said creamed oysters are lite . e,1 . I re-. I , . ,peated Mrs. Gilmartin. "Sure! Of course they a -clared with enthusiasm. 11�11, right. Let's have creamed oysters,' I I . and be . * I -dired into the stock market repo . rts. I "Well. you dov�t Ima' . , gla,e we can - mak ' e a whole birthd ' a).� suiiiper off I . ,creamed oysters, do you"' demanded Mrs. Gilmartin Indignantly.. -There inust be a lot of other things tholight - . .of. Mrs. Pritchard says It's just these little affairs that bring 'Out real tact � . I mud good taste." . � . I . � . "Oh, bother Mrs. Pritchard! I " . sna . 1ped Gilmartin. ' . . I , 1), � "Why. W111:11 said ills wife mildly, "I'm afraid you're - out of sorts this -orening, arid I did Irant.to'bave a nice ,long talk about this little supper, be­ ,cnusp so much deliends.on it." * . 111 beg your pardon," sold tier hus. band contritely, laying down, hl� pa. -per. "I didn'i mean to be cross. �Iow. ,wbut will we have after the 'creamed ,oysterslrl . . . '.'I suppose a chicken salad -or sorne.' "thing like that would be till right" -said A�Jrs. Gilmartin rather doubtfull�, "'and *we ou,,bt to have a stuffed to. " hiato, although that seems. awfully -common and ordinary for. a birthday � 1party. You know the Pritehards al. ,wnys turn the wholething over to 'Robbem, who has that caterer.*a.placti. 1. .. . �npar them, whenever they hat*' any - 'thing sort of foruial�a birthday or -a holiday party Ilke.tills, you knew.,, "Wh& do we watit or a -caterer to ;get up supper for four . Deopleg." de-* manded ItIr. Gilmartin. "You can get away with It in great shape with 1111da to help you out." � . I t ' *'Ob. I d.ldn*t mean for us to got Rob- bem," she saht. glancing at film from beneath h(Fr -lashes. "I was just tolling. .you how easy it Is for thenL Mrs. . Pritchard says It's absurd for. people to go to the expense of hiring a caterer for a small affair unless they have plenty of nioney.". Mr. Gilmartin stood up and took a . .turn across the floor. . ..Oil. she does, does she?" he said -defiantly. "Is that so? Well, ybu just -go over to nobbem's tomorroW and put the whole thing In hisbarlds and Quit worrying. I guess we can stand to l It about as easily its At Prltcbard �can.11 Mrs. Gilmartin dropped her sewing -to the floor with a delightful little faqueal. ran around the table and threw -both arms around hisnock. % "Oh, you old deat-;" she cooed. "that's - just what I wanted you to say all AJ040110 ... .� .. . . � �� C-hatriberlain's Colic, Cholera aAd Diarrhoea Remedv the. : . best and Surest, "It afloeds the pleasure to - state 1hat I con4ider the -preparation knoWil us Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and varrhoca RenicSy the �l%�,st and surest , 7 of good results of any I have C�er I used in my fanifly," 6ayi P. BI., Her. ringtott of Alot.nt Aerial, Xy. Tbi% I.-, the univorsal Verdict of all who use this remetly. It, epres are .,,n pro-q1pt arid effectual that peblile talce plpaq- ure in roeottruftditg, it. For sal� by ,all druggists. I CHINRS HOLY DUKE, Greatest Aristocrat In the Qof�sotlal . . . Empire. The father of the infant B China. who is, acting as "Ir'nor Of R lie t during his son's minority, is doing I much to abolish the distinctions be- tiveen the Manchus and the Chinese. , . Until Dow the Manchus, that is to . say, the ,conquering race, to ,which I the reigning dynasty belongs, have enio foyed all .sorts ot special privileges re be , the law. now all will be treat - Off alike. Should the rqgent carry into effect his intention of betroth7 ing his son, the three-year-old em- peror. to ,a maiden. of pure Chinese blood. probably either ft daughter or ,arnfidil'-mighter of Chipti*s "Holy Duke,". Instead of to one of the Man- cbu princesses from whom the mon- arch's consorts bpve until ,now been, . Chusen, be will have mode a long -stop toward reconciling the b0k of , the Chinese people to the rqigning dynasty and toward obliterating the I antagonism that oxistg between the Chinese and the 'Manchus. The Holy Duke Is fully alive to the. advantaires of reform. A man about fifty years, of are. and me%lentv- sixth in -unbrolcon descent in the mille line from Confucius., be may be regarded as the most blue blood- . ed noble. 1T) the -world. the more eo as be is still in po9qe9qinn of the landed property which bpl,)ngpd -to . the ilbistrio-R fornder of his house more than three thousand years aro; that is to say, some twelve e-r)tUTie8 before the birth of Christ. 'The pro- perty is situated In the province of Shantunir, and it -ornprises the tomb . , of Confi,nius at Kvfu. and his. -rpal- dence. Thp duke is verV rich, since baeb crenerstinn of emperors. Chinese as well as M--rbu. has lavislied gifts i7non the 'Iffolv T)1,ke" of its day. This one's name iii 'Kiing Linvi. that is to, sfiv, Ptike Ungi, and his of- ficial doignatinn Is Slieng Kung, wbich means. "Holy Dike." He is a tall, heavy faced Chinaninn, of somewbat .mqqsive build. .with A rather mniestic presence and a good bumored face, the moiiib inclined. -to laughter and in -kepping with the shrew.d. cheery evoi, 'Though re- garded as a iint, lie is a very i,ovial saint, and extremely frilid of all the good things, of life. Fvery now and again he visits Poldn, where he IF;, re- , ceived with impo-in� honors, and on � these occasions he does .not disdain . to travel,by rail. � . . I . . . ' � . STORIES OF THE .KAISER. I Llitle Tales Which - Are EnJoyed by . . I - . His StibJed.03. � .Will,fam, Il.:of 6eimany"llas many sets of kindness to the .poor to his ctedit. One. day at the palace i of . Potsdam he noticeii.that ond of %bei sentries, seemed very melancholy. I With much hwitation the.man told hi story, bow he. had. been on.the is . point of getting married when he' lost all his money and now hardly hoped..ever to r�alize his dreams.. 'The emperor, after inquiry bad .proved..that the mail was speaking . the truth, gavd 11hp a generous pres- i I ent for the expenses of his Nvedding, promoted him corporal and found a' place for, his Niffe in, the serviiO *of . I . . the empress� ' ' - I . A poor sewing. '-woman. at Cologne, finding it impos�sible'any longer to . earn her living' with a worn . out old sewing machine,' appealed to the emperor.for. ' asaiaance.,. A week later I a . new machine- with .all 'the. latest . impiovements, reached, her. froin., her . , .sovereign. , . . I � . When the halser told Prince von nuelow be., was to � be chancellor it - w I as evident -from Buelow's face that something about the epliaintm6rit did not . alogether. please him. The I emperor pressed -him to tell I what - it was, . arid Won Buelow .reluctantly:.explained that greatly as .his wife would rejoice in finding her . �h�8band appointed chancellor. �he * detested the pala6s - of the, chaneel� .. lerie, as. she ivas a great housewife and he wai sure that the thought, of . the* two or three ,months that ,would eded -to cl.eari the immense pa.lave to the, pitch zhe would want . to would. terrify her. - . - - , I "' � - I ','Dori't let that 'bother you, my, dear Von B.uelbw..- Present .my com- plinients -to�4he princess arid -tell her that it �vill-.be a great pleasure t6 me to contri . bute, to making that Job less difficult to her.."' ,. �. I . . -It was I not -a regiment of soldiers d , etailed for house cleaning .purposes. that came to, the pribeess. only a . small 1. which oil bellig 6pened. . I . " was =. to contain a hundred .pieces of soap. , � . . I . . . . I. . . � . . .. I � I . - _ . I I Love's .Young 'Dream. . . . , -The Stern Paiprit-L-And it vou mar-. ry thfi- v6una-- I.ittlpcash %�here do . I . . . . . yon 'prnnbsp to IfvPF . The Girl -Why, George savq we are goin� to',Iiv� itt'the saill.d" ll�tel where . . ho lives now. � � . . The Pnrent--:-Dori'V pil know it I co t% a erpnt de.41 to live tit a hotel? The Girl. -Why, no,* PaPu; it won't en-"!, I any 'more. Georop says that if . you- Iiti�w how to order one portion is aftiple for tu,o Parqonq. 1, retilly won't be' the . leaut,.* bit cf a burden on George, pupa. - ., . . . I - I . - . That It the Difference. . I "' I ' ,qow, then, boys, it you hnd to Fid- " dress a Isirge box of ten .on the one lisind iind a schoolmilstpt nn the oth- or, what would bp the dillpr(nieff in your form' of silluintionP .01 i6sirse jou will roply 'We don't kno%.? Well. we will tPll vou. A litrco'box of ten you would nildrpss as 't6nix tPactiost,' .strict o schoolmaster you w6uld salute 'th 'thon that teaellest." This is w; the eifferencd, you w,e."-London I Scraps. - 1- � - . � . . The,Rernedy. ' The Grand, Duke of M,Pcklenb1lTg ,wn-% ono day parribling, at the Dober un tables and .wits betting on the same numbers as a rich master Polo, ter who stood nPvt to him. Both having lost their money, the grand duke inquited, "Well, potter, wbat shall we do, ,lie*?" "()b." replied the master potter, "your highness will twrew � ,ip the taxes, and I shall make pots." . . Bronchitis Creeps into Consumption. Coligbing wealcEns the tulivs and mak- es a resting Place tot the baccilii. %Vhy lot .Bronchitis becolue establish - oil I I Vi easy to curc­just itilvaLle CatarrhoyoAL-breatbe ip its soothing Valsams and Toliet at (mee. Vatarrho- I zone is so certain in Bronchitis �Uhal evety case is cured. Throat is strtn-1 , irritation gbes I away, all danger of tuberculosis Is, prevented'. Por throa,t trouble, eat- i arrh and Poughs, Vatarrbozon- is , � The, Iteniody, 25C and $1.06 sizes at all dealers. Oct it to -day. A , Milstein Nem-RocoM a � I . 11 .... CHINESE 6WARFS. TRANSFORMATION OF SEOUL SOME COSTLY PICTURES I W 0 rum . Humans Who Seem Lower in the 4apanoso Tt4rnln$ Coroon Capital Into . Seals, Than African Baboons. a Modern City. , I .. e Relieve Trustees and Pynny human beings who live'like In writing about what the �Ispa PRINOFLY SUMS THAT' HAVE & f# .0 � , "' N PAW FOR PAINTINGIS.- 01% jra a and., seem lower Ill the scale are doing in Corea. Frank 0. Carl,,,,! , B I. F_ eCUtor tharl African baboons were,discovered ter says-. They, have taken, the hernalt . I ''S of Reopon � I � -'p .in the mountain solitudes of Northern kingdom by the neek and ore shaking ,. . - --sibility China hV tip IN . V tZ.11 A .A. 40 A . t.- . d. &_- L - . . . 0 - -## can explorer, and. writer, who has 0 ry hes r. o oc on. I ey aaw establishing courts. abolishing squeez. Surn or. wouscou palo ror mqlbelfifs "Christina, . just returned to this country. The In and reorganizing the Unances, . of - Donmark" Ranks. discovery. was made in the course of a T& propose to build roads. to re- HISh In the List Blot 4, P. Morn I caravan journey alon; this entire ex- fore,61t the mountains, to open the gan's Price of Halt a Million for a tent of the Great Wall of China,, 1,800 � .miles, rAnd it confirmed the legend mines and to turn this half -barren country into a gardell. All those Raphael Prevent* It Becoming a , that far in the interior dwelt a race things are in .their beginnings, but is Record-Picturs Costs Two Lives. . of bit dwarfs -the kind of beings start boa been made and signs of pro- deson d by Marco. Polo and Baron greB"ir fire everywhere to be seen., Big prices for pictures or% by no Munebausen with damage to their re- The capital.. teoul, is fast becoming means rare nowadays, but the sum of putatioris, for veracity. But the dwarfs a new city, When I came here tiventy $,369.000 demanded for Holboln's f% - mous "Christina Don exist., and ancient inscriptions on the years ago the trip from the sesport, portrait of of - Great Wall, deciphered for Dr. Gell Chemulpo, took over 12 hours, and I mark" is almost unprecedented, In the National Gallery 4y .Chinese scholars, .profess to ex ; had to have a pony and eight men to at the pres. etkt t4me the plain their origin. Back In 210 D-9. bri myself and wife to the. walls. picture which. cost most. the lEmperor Chin decided that his I rue the pony and the madaw came money is what is known as the "Blen- country needed protection from the In a chair, borne on the sbouleers heim Raphael." for which $350,000 fierce Tartar tribes on the west and north, and he ordered the building o of four coolies, with a. relay of four , others to help them. Toward the end "as paid in 1W. The, other Railbact In the gallery to the prop o Mr, . houe! A horse shoe shap6d barrier t Of the journey we bad to push on for ,erty rlerpont Morgan, find he Is believed, ends of miles in length to inclose the -. fear we might not get to Seoul before to have; given $500,000 for the w.orh. empire from sea to sea, A work more the closed. The city is sur- There is. on interesting story attach- � monumental than the erection of all .gates rounded by a massive wall! nine miles ed' to 'a rtrait of Lady Coburn, and her chillroln by Sir Joshua, Reynolds ramids and temples was begun. Millilains of Chinese toil- in -length and 30 feet high, At that. time this wall was entered only. by now in the gallery. In 15912 this beau. ed at the Great Wall. cutting and Jay- gates,. and these were closed at night tiful .work was bequeathed to. the na- frig grarill -a for the first cours * �,e block es by heavy doors plated with iron. tion by Lady , Hamilton. arid, for a and g brick for the surierstrue- Ina , .1 � which were not opened again until few years occupied an honored poai- ture. The towers were built first. and the next day. We got In just in. time tion among England's art treasures. they served 'as military blockhousei to see the gates. close. There was Some time In, IB99, however. the film- while the connecting walls were Put , no hotel, and. we find to be met by discovered that Lady Hamilton V'AL up. . the soldiers of our legation., and were. only a life interest in the work, . Kept at their job by strict compul- quartered there during our stay. , and was, therefore, no' entitled to sion, the millions of laborers were in- , The city still has its walls. but the dispose of it. andt they claimed re- spired by. the fear of fin unurual pen.. The gates now stand open day and night, Possession. After "ting their ease.. the Gallery trustees found themselves , alty for error or rebellion. work- Find an electric street eat line runs man who made a mistake or listened through two of them and on out into compelled to give up the picture, arid , to agitators was promptly incorporat- the countr An electric light globe the. family sold it to Mr, Alfred Beit, ed in the wall as so much building preven�s ti� closing of the on., which the South African. millionaire. for material. Burying alive proved to b a we entered, and another gate has � Lbout, $15%000. Now, bowev the good. discipline with a miliority of proved too small to accommodate the ter picture once more hangs in he' no - the laborers. obviating strikes and truffic arid has been cut out by the . tion's great gallery, for when Mr. Beit discontent, but some of them ran " a P' mose, wide roads bein made died a year or two ago, be, bequeath- away to the remote forests on the Ti- thro the walls on each . e. The ugh ai� , ed the work to the nation. betaii border. They took their wives *them. , elf, which is a, temple gate Its -like Romance is frequently a feature in _ . , and children with So affected structure . with a double roof of heavy the history of great works of art, Find were they by their te�rible experience tiles, has been fuced- with stone; and the story 0" a great. picture thatmas that some of them went crazy, and it is now proposed to put it c()mmer- � u foT two -human lives is not the rest bad such a hard fight for cial museum in the soldiers' guard- Ight ni tterest, ng- I existence that they deteriorated pbysi- room above Jt. In that old gate all Tbo picture Is a biiatitiful represen- cally, transmitting dwarfishne,gs to 'their the industries of the new i0orea will tatiou of the "Immaculate Concep- present day descendants. - The, be shown a I ide by side with those of tion" by Murillo, and hangs in the ' Chinese legend to this effect may not other nations, and the -people will Louvre, in Paris. � be entirely astray, since it is likely. thus, be taught the various methods of While Marshal Soult was following that deserters from the army of -labor , . manufacture and sale. the retroating,tirmy of Sir John Moore fled to the forests and that the hard- � - . � before Corunn,a,- a p4rty of his sol- ships of a wild, isolated life should , "All the Winnersl" � diers. took as prisoners two monks, have,bad effeet on them after many 'The- dwarfs have long � � � One gets so acctr9torned to accepting . This class -was very hostile, to the . . French, and monks captured - were ,generations. - nails, Aerrible 'faces and resemble things as they conne that ver � few of tie, when we take up our favorite pa- , generally at once isbot. Instead of apes- Dr. .Geil believes that - the . Great Wall has never been entirely per at the breukfast-table, think any- . following t , he usual practice, however*. the great. marshal ordered those two 11 times previous.to explored in nioder . thing of the number of -papers pub, fished d.aily in the world, or of the I to lead him to',their Ynonastery, . . year. He found a his expedition last ' stretch- of 200 miles that bad not been : , many strigutHr Janguages. in -which At the. monastery, Son It saw. �the picture, iand wished to'buy it, but- the . mppped. At places the Great Wall 'miles some of thern are printed.. The Im-' e r Press Conference, which is now �flor refused to sell,' stating that he for the climbed to a - height of two level. 4bere were evi- ,ftgd t ei bel - d in London, calls t6. mind ad. been offered. $20;000. work. The marshal then offered $40,000, above sea , dances of monumental barriers ante. , some remark saper. facts. The entire number of newspapers and, thinking he saw . a chance to' .' dating Emepror-Chin's celebrated in- . . pri hted. all over the. world is some- save his humbler brethren, the prior . . closure. . � .. . . . . .. I.. . . " where, between 5.500' and 6,000, to -cepted, oil the condition that'sthe - ac I two monks should' I handed over to � I.. I . . I I I . . The Dweilins of the Void. .� I . � 'still. . which America contributes 1 500 Ger. ' . n many 900, and Great Britain 2 jb. I ,be I . . . . . him. . . I *is '$40 00 " 'sold, . There is I- enough unexplored land in .the' wortc! to mu)ct, a new con - � Persia they have six periodicals, and Austria possesses news sheets printed ."The!r ransom ' -; Soult, seizing bold of hi; opportuix tinent if lun'lped ! together. Per An s*tance. within tell. ilays, journey from. in ,no fewer .that% ten- different lan- in Italian, French ity,,and nothing the prior could say we d move him' fro& �hii. - quickli-. � n by -modern express routes Londo I there. is a tract of country -the size guage I a- . Hung "Ge , lap' k LatiR, Polish, Set- arian G tie vian, Slavic . - , and Hebrew to be pre , ' made 'decision. - " � . I.. Eve�tually, the., great ictute , was � ..yen to - of Germany. ,' France and Holland I combined and as unkrio � wn "a "'a . else. The ."Escuimb Bulletin " put)- lished in the Arctic circle, is'�n. Alas.. 91 tip the marsbal-in exchange for the lives of his prisbn'ers. Mountains of the Moon. It occu nearly the whole of central sw%eiren! . kan paper that appears once. . a year. '.. 11 . . I Frequently, ttiere. have been bases of valuable. pictures being, lost or stol� Arabia. This" -pleasing district is . known' the Dablina, or the '.!DweII-. It is very newsy. .. � Chitia, .despite its vast Population, '�'dailies,". lin, and never heard of. again; and, on . the o*ther, hand. pictures whose very as in the Void,".Find consists of -what g of beasts only two dozen but ­ t paper 'in among tbeso is -the oldbA existence have been torgotten, turn. I ' ' 'once L Ord. Salisb'ury once politely referred to "chiefly' light soil" when he I the world This is the "Tsing-Pao," . "Peki-� line, mor a Ao up from time to ti cause a stir in the world. So recently, as was speaking of the French posses- or News," which'was started � 500 before. the Norman Cori. as IM4, in -the home 'of a gentleman .6 . ions in .Africa. . It is a mighty waste . of send, with not a. single river --so years . - quest, and JA.- now more than. I . .300 old. They are careful- on -the at Whiteb4ven, a canvas was found rolled up, and �in such a fearfully dir, far . as. can be judged -in :more than 'with years " Tsing-Pao." In former'd4ysi. an er- tv condition that, at ftisti it' was quite .- . to trace a � 400-000 dquare miles:. Compared thi; country the 'Sabara.is a pleasant . _ ror I in 'printing wa � a . punished with � 'Impossible any signs -of . * ctura. Careful- cleaning, 7however. arid fruitful trAct.' * It.. defies even instant death. .. .. . I . � . . I . . �,Iscl6sed a portrait of two children . .th6Afab.andthecamel-��Westminster- . - ' .. � 11 . . . I . . . 01;ean Cables. . by ,George Romney, and one -of that - . . . : .. Gazette. . . . . . . . . . ,; � . . ,� The diameter of the Atlantic cable I artist's flnest w4ks. Fifty years. bcf0fe, -the 'canvas bad . - . " 4 Belaying. His Jews. . I . 1, to the depth of -the varies accordir,, , ' been boiiaht, with tw 0 others, for $5, . . �. . ' . I � . " - reason, are Sh ark. stories, with some water� the - character 'of the'! bottom - At Chrisfie's. it fetched $35,000. ` I co6monly received' with incri--dulity. on which it lies and- the Probabilities . Only the year beforbt the.ulleorthink . .1 A well iitithenticated anecdote,- how of interference from'anchors.- It is of. this treasure. in the possession of. ,df -was found ever, is'told of Dr; Frederiq Hill.. or ; -amiille�t in midbeean* depths. There art old lady Worthing; I , English. � surgebtl -of distinction. - A is little oi. no moyemOnt�at the hot- . the, portrait of a Andy, in A white mus - , I man. fell 6verboArd. in Indian tom, an1d it is import ant that the ­ "not fin dress with yellow trimminas'.. The . . .the� Ocean and . into:, a - shark's . cable should hhve great weight., picture was . co-vered with Airty- yar- ' .almost . mouth. -Hill.-who Was standing. close to - rail.' a belaying pin, A heavy cable in" dtep water would be diAlcult-to bring'iip for'repairs if. nish iind disfigured by two holes. An attempt to'dispo,s6 of it to'some dealer - the grabbed .1 arkd,without hesitation jumped. to - sn(+ wereneeded.. In.the shallower for $25 was unsuetessf�l, but when -it save the sailor; The great brute was- %";ater.a heavier type of -cable is iiied,' "shore was found to. be a Gainsborough.. and it for less Just turning oil his back to bi.t4 when belaying iiglit The types are kn6wn as end(.�' "inteirriediate." and ' "deep: sea.": sent to auction. sold -no thin $45,'000, the purchaser b6ing.8ir Hill drove the pin - through both Jews. Both men were I * * . 'The dia*meters (if the commercial . . Char � le� Wertheimer.. , I ,. '. gc�.Pon i i6ard again unharmed. " - erhaps that follow -won't. want cables - arb t Shore end,-'. two and I . . . three-qiiartpr inelient, 1n+errned;-)te.. � . . . . . .. I ' . I ' . . The Point 'of View. � I Ill . another , tooth pick.- Has an� one got , lie' one and thre"varter ine' a; deep There is, alwats was -and ever wi .. a clean shirt to lend? This ­*as mk the. sea, one inch. . . I . . .. : � I 1. . . � � - . be so much in tfie point of view. An darky.' wandering through the last,'.' were the2 o'nly, words of. . rescuer. . I . .. . p � . . Klckliig WridriTts Into HI m- .old' - past side in I a vein search for work, I I . -_ . .. . . �. . The benevolent did gentleman .ant *wouldri't have -understood - this orig- "' I thought if. "lie � hiid beard it. ina . The Pig In W atem . . . . . of I it it. commonly reported, . eight buqv when he Raw fony. bovs of nine vpars of age, tittack'oile. boy - i lified' .thoueh � lie unconsciously exemp pig 9 . that so queerly. fashioned are they I . . I -of Plitnidthe some age.. . .. . . , , -inustn't, he it. .Weary and footsore. he leaned an electri't, light. po)e to rest, that if they attei npt to swim they . cut their threats with their fore-leeto .11Y.iiii yo u Tnustn't,,". said when he lind. houled them- off. ,ngainst * Several factory, whimles in the neigh - ibe hour. the but this is only an -61d wife.'s table. Whether tame, they all "attack vony little romponion .this, `WbAt has : he (tone.lb deserve borhood blew �no6n As , shrill blasts died away th ' e.old darkv I wild. or .are qod a . wimuiert.i. though, owing to the I - *Ahcq yra­ sii�'� ll,�rqh treatment?" - � turned. to a loiterin I 'tit of the-� g ""de, . block and rentarked sententiously shortness of .their' legs. just .. wir . touch their throats with ti ' fore The ,four hov,a alowored -;ull-nlv . ' :vbilp the onp bov whimpered tie he I I it's sure (11 ' ritler ti ni'� *for " Tas, sit . h, P -it's I feet and beat the water very high. , ,"..,to -him t1notiolit what .wnuld hanne 'gentlemen Iota o' folks, .but only 11.) o',block , I . . . ter me,"' - . . Many of the islunds of the southern . wlipri the benevoletit went I .q . . ' � And he shambled on down the I , sead are flow Inhabited I by ivild pigs. the deseem ante of tho.�el ,. .. . . Oil his way, . . . . "Well," ssid one, of f fmir Pt. a treet-looking -for a 'job, . I which tire which have swum ashore, sometimes -ho IAF:t. "be won!t join the 'Band 'of . � . . . . ­­ . . .. great dist I ances, trom wrecked vesbels. Rindripsq our teacher wants to get -Up . , . How We Change. - . �� . � . I 4 . in school I" - . . . : - . "Did you notice that woman's 161T- , . 1 The First Kindergarten. , I . .� I . Woods. pression just then?" queried it travelor � The first kindergarten waa opened . by Frocbal in 1637 at )3r4j,.den burg. . ,. . Weeds if they nre pl)llpd out nf." on iin-elevatod traln�-arid_.-he--poIntPd­ to linildsonlely gowned woulan Germany, and -1if!een years after- lawn at a time wh(rr they are full of seed will evince a degree of enr(% for .a . whom tbe exigencies of trilm., Dirtation . .P ward :.a ilidd. This -short period was . tit to e . stablish a system . of the speds which is Rimost. totichinir. bad pinced,Alroctly Opposite an,agod � sutlicio . - education that ha,s,alade lite. differ- - They will curl theirJelives upward BA far a& each can zo to cover the sewriq arid not too clean main. The old man wits about to conceal a big -red, hand, ent f(,r little childron. When the King of Prussia in ISM forbade the. Rild protect them from tho sun till tho end, and often one will Vind weeds ' kerchief. - , , . I . . "That old feliow " *the noliq the e�t b thinent of kindergitrtalis old man d"ed of a broken beart, not that arp quito dend., %tin killPd- wh.6aP . continued travolor. "just took 'a pineb of snuff, . J been 'dreaming that his life work ha( lotorpq otill are irrapped tirritly nroithd the seed d4. No mother co614 sh w .and took -it vigorously. and the operft- . a, noble sucenss. . more strit7no devotion in death th(H)II tion appeared to give the woman quu- - - ' - . do these plants. , sea. 1Xsgust was written all over `;r - The Acorn. . . . ­ face. Think of Itt �A habit condemned Take a large acarit, suspend it -by is . I Returned the Greeting, . � . upivertally by tontlement today and thread go as to nearly touch the-wa­.. . I A rt-gitrient 0i , I koldiors were at once the' hatilt of king, .courtler arid ter in. any gimis vessel, set it apon mantelshelf, bracket or table &mrip, and a yonng Swittish recrult . social exquisite. The jeweled sutilt- your arid lot it stand there for about t . Wo wit s put on sentry outsirle'the' gen- tral's tent. In th� morning the gen- box -What a treasure It wast Arid now-wello,virp.da chanzf-14,doh't-we?" ainfiths without in an� way inierfer- Ing with it excepting to sll'�ply irreh eral rose, looked out of his tent find said to the men in a , I I . 1�� water. The acorn will burst, throw a root dowh into the water rind a young, etera arid. loud - voice, "Who ore. pup " . . LOW61 Complaint in Children. . atern upward. sending out from the The Young man turned around smartly atie, said, "Fine. hoo�s srar- WhOn Six mouths old the little stern berlutiful.gre6i leaves. ..Aeluo kob^ � . o- . se.11"--Lobdon Tit -Bits. . .. __ daughter of L-1, �X. Dewey, .1 � well - - � � .. �, , ,- . 6 . . I �, - �.*.� kn;Own merchant of A-jftcwvjIIe,, Va,, Proper Treatment for Dysentery and I .Dr. Hatniltou�g Cure for Pimples. had an Attack a, cholera infantunt . . Chamberlain's (jolic, ' Cholera, and . . Diatthoci. - - as pim All s�in &cas" auch pio-4 ore, Diarrboca Itetn�,,dy was given. arid et- . The great niottality froin dy-icutery iginate through faflu" of the kidno-ys'fectod a complete cure. This, renied� and, diarrhoea is due to a lack ot and liver- All taints libat block thO has proveft very successful in eg,ses proper treatment at the first stages avenues of healt'll' must be riamoved. .of bowel complaint in ehildren , and 'of the disease. Chamberlain's Colic, Dr. 11amilton$s pills do thig,quickly, when given according to the plain Vbolora at�d Diarrhoea Remedy is a . They cleanse the systein. make the Prillte,d ft�ctlohs can be relied upon reliable and effectual rnodlcine,, arid - st(in smooth, restoro roses I to - Ole with perfect. confidence. When reduced when givcn in rea.4onable titne will thecks and give dear, dAltity coin- I with water and sweetenoA it is Pleas - Prevent any dangerous consotluehees.1,plexion. For g6od looks, good. lfivaltb ant to take, which it of gteat im- It lai ,been In tiso for many mars and arid good spirits there Is nothing solportance I when a medicine must be has always met with unvarying sue -i sure as Dr. 11amiltork's Pills. 2 . CI. O given to voting children, Vor Halo - cess. F ot sale by all druggists. lboxes , at Ml dea3ers. I by -.%It niedicifle dealers. I 1# . . --1 -,fl. I ­­­ ­­ . � . . .... ­­_, ­ - - _ __ Many trustees and executors INAVO their tkne folly occupied with their o , . writ business Affairs. They And It difficult to spare the time AeCessAry to attend to the Manifold , . details in coomectle, , , a wi . , th the proper administration of the estatop entrusted to them . , ,. This Company has a vit"sage for busy tru I � ste4a and executors. We will relieve them; of the .F . rosponsibility 4114, detail work, and � they can exercise a supervisign . OVOr the Mansgement of the estAtes Committed to QVV 424ligo, Our Intinigto AsSo�CjgLtlou Wlt4 , the Huron & Brie Loan ancl , Savings Co. gives us the privilege ot procuring 'for our Xstate rundif , the beat class Of sound� profitable Investments., I Correspondence invited an4 promptly answered. . 1, i �.Sl , : : - I 1, - 11, I � I 1� - N - " I I ,N� -1� . I I ,�� " III' I -1 , , 1% `�` 11 \` -------- . . "I'll .... 11IM1111 . - . . - . . - . . � I . �w __ I M 1111 -,il,l3l,, .7 .- 0 - - - I - - , - . , . . - I 11 I . . .. 1. I . I I I .1. � � . I I I t . F I arm Laborers I 1,01 . I . . I I . . I WORK FOR . 20,91)(I MEN IN MANITOBA �� Wanted'ALBERTA ANQ USK,ATCHEWAR ' ,I 0 � I . . SP94MAL - . Q 10 GOING Q Additional fbr thq Return ricket EXCEIRSIONSi CPP TRI L:pp 1 8 . I undep condlVons as below. I . . . . GOING DATES I . Aude 19 From Stations E10j4h. 4 line of G.T.R. Torent I o to[Sarale. ana Con. Pac. stallous on �a west of Toronto'Sudbury line. Aud. 23 From Toronto and, all C, P.R. Statio west In Oxktar='don and mormik . I . of inain llno of Geand Trunk Ry.. Tonrp%to to Sairnia. n � a,, stall9as I in Ontario tin M.C.R., 1P.M. and T.R.&R. Rys; Avid. 27 From S,tations Toronto and east. Includind Sharbot Lake and Kind f OW ty% and allStations in Ontario west of Renfrew. also -stations 5' I - a B. of 0. RYS., 004 staiians on R. et P. Mouth of Renfrew- . Sept. 7 F" 411 Slations Toronto and west. Includind Stafto . us on C.P.M.. I T.,onto W I . Sept. 10'From all Stations east o�Tcre.nla in Oaterto. � . I . . k" ONE-WAY SECOND-CLASS TICKETS WILL BI-] SOLD TO WINNI.P.F.0 ONI I LY . . Ile entative farmml. appointed by Atimitoba. $askatehowAn and Al�erta GoveMments, 11' prill's WAge "I I meet and en N bomrs on amyal ;4t Winnipeg. Ftee transPortation will be. fumished at Winn!E.Pg t.0.7ints on Can. Pao.: where labor'ers are neecied,east of 3lowe Jaw, includirig bmn,c es, at one cent a miles each way west thereof in Saskatchewan an(t Alberta. . , A certificate k furmh%hed with onch ticlwt. ind this -c�tflficnte when executed by farmer . showing that luborer has worked thirty davn or more, will be bonored from that poixxt for at pecond (-Ia§s ticket back .to starting points 14. OnWtio, at $18.00, priorto Nov. soth, J909, . .. Ticko,t� tire good only on .,iperial Farin Utxm.rs'trainq and will, be issued to. women as welt . � . I . . as to =eu, bta will not be i3sued at balf fare to childre.n. .1 . . I . . rot -full Particularx see zteut,est C.P.R. ndent, or . . . . . I- . . 1. .. wot� R. 4 THO.BIPSON. D.P.A.. C.P.R., TolkONTO 1 . � I AND THE . . . I . . I . . . � . . . . . I m. . I . I . . � . . I . , . . � . . I . . I . . �. . . . I ,. � I . . � � . .. . . . I I . . . I . . . ' . ' : , I . I . . . . . . � ., . I � � �, . . .�. . FOR.. 60� 0ENTSIt . . .. ,� ., � . . . L'.. . .11 . . I . . . . I .. I . I.. .. '..... .. .. I I I . - .! . .1 I ., . . I.. .. ­...­ . ...'' . ... . .: I... I.. ... � .. . I , . .. I . . ...., . . . . . . :- I 1. . I .. * . .,..:. � �..'THIS RJEMARKABLY 7.�`L 1W RATE.'... .� � . . . 0 , . . . I., ­. ­ ..­.... ..-1 ...... .­ �. .1 1, ":,. �'. � , - . ,.; - - .. -1 e. I . - .. I � I.... � ,_ .1i � "We offer with- a 'view to extendink. o*uii field of, ri§aders, and'providing aix -1 . . I—... easy way by, whieh anyone who isont already a subscriber to eiiher,paper ,'. . . . I . . I way.become acquaint d.with'them, and at the lowest possible cost. .* - I . � I—, . I . i .e , I � . . I . .. . . . . . . . . 1. . � � .. � - . . . . . . I , . . . . . . . 1. .. . , � . , . I.. .1 . . . . .� . . . . . , . . . . I � I . .., . I . . , � I . ' ' . , * * ' , . ' * ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . . ' I d . tb i Ont. . . - ... 4 A. dies's O*rders to, ' The News -Record, Olin 'n' I I . . I . . . . . I- . .:.- ____ -_1 . . I .. 10010t - . . I . . 11 . . ­ I . I I I . . . . . .. . � I I I . . . . . . . 1. . .. I I . . I I . - I . . I . . I =Mft. - - .. I .1. . . .I.... I . : . � . I . . . . . . . . . I � . . . . I . .. . . . I � . . 4 . . .. � .. - I I � . I . . . 4 . � . . : . * - . . . I , , � I � . I I . � . I . . . . .. Th' A 'MR.eeo,rd - U Hdlls';... .' . C. � - ews'.. . '. � ­ ., . I . I ­.. ,. .. 1. -, . . . �, � � . � I - 4 . I I . . . , I . . , . .. L'o, t for 1909 . ­".. Ibinod . IS 0 1 . I. . . . I I . I . 4.4n I ... . . . . . . �. .. .. I . I , . I . . I . . . . . : I . - , . . I . ''. . . � � � . I . � � I I � . . . .. 1. .. . 1. I . . . . I ­. 1. � .., . . . 1. . ­ . .. - . ...... : .... Much Lrood reading for -little , monevo . . 1. .. . � . I - . � . . . . � 11 . . . � The'News'Record and Weekly Mail and Empire, one year. * ­ . , ­ $1'eo ': ' - L � . . A. 11 , ­ . I I . _ _ . Weekly Globe ..... * ­, * * ** ­­ '" * * ......... 1.75 . . . . . .. . Is . 14 . . Fatially Herald a:nd Weekly Star.-........'. .1.15 . . I .. I . � �9- 1, . �( . Weekly Witriess.. ' . , . . 11 �� . . ..6'._ ... 1.7.5 , I . k. . I . I . 16 I I Sun ...­:'­*­­***" ... : ... LW � � � I . ........ I ......... . I . . f 6 . I 9 . . . ' .. . . t Free Press ............... ....' 1.75 . . 9. 46 - . :.1 Ailvertle'er ........... *.. 1:,.,-".* .... 1.16 - , . . . I - , � I's 1. . to .. . .4 I . Farming World .............. 1...,.*­.'I*60 .. I . . I . ki 44 � I . I . . . . . . I � Farmt-i's Advocate and . . ' . I ., :-. __ � .. � � _ _. ­ � � _ ­ ,. _ , . ..... _�, ki.pme Magazine - .2.25 . . . a 4 .it . . . I . .- ._ . 4 . - I .. _. 1. - . . _ . __ ­ , I . I - . . . � � , � �. - - -- . . ­,", ­_­,:"_,* _* .... .. . ­ ­­_ .,Daily Sows, Toronto ..... d ............ L. ; ...... 2120 . I d� 96 . L star, . . I Ps -, , I . I . * ' ......... I ............ �. 2.3.0 . I If I $A 0 " ..... ­­ ....... , . ..... 4.25 1 . . , . � Glob . . . . . . .4. . .1 . , Mail - . I . 44 I .......... �. .., - o - 11 I - - - .4.2.1 . . . . , . � ad. . .4i 1 World - - . . 4 . ........ N...'. �.. � ....... *1. 3-25 . . I � t,# * , I 6, , .. .. '�IzaturpdayeNight *1 ................... ....... 1 W . . ' � 44 - it � . roe r, a, London................ ....'....... . 'I 25 . . . 69 � 46 .. . - - . Free Prebs, Even Ing' Edition .......... ;.. ,... 175 1 . .. . I . . . . . . . o I . I � ' ' ' 0 . I . It what you *ant i� not - in_this list, we can supply I Alt at less t � ban It wotild coo you by sending direct.. . *. . . . 4 . J . . ... iris'ren�ftflng, please do so by Express Order, Postat , Note or re&tered letter alad addrese. . - � , . , � . . . ' � . . -1 I . . I . I W. J. MITCHdlf � I . . * . '' THE NEWS -RECORD, On' - , Clinton; - � . . I . 1.