The Clinton New Era, 1902-12-19, Page 611* 1902
,f` •
•Wel* 1
itaril4r7 ef aollth," declared It to Mertini ue on the "Dixie" a* Oro
rr,r, rrrorrorr,..... •
TB3 CLINTON NEW ERA
of
1011
- .. • „. Orr.
Mout Pelee. liovr Lillian 'RUM11 Keel*
Oreoot Churob•
Wrote Wronig Address. The 11:00eor's Divine Right•
• Gifsetthr k thesr - "The Y u
ee J SU . _ 0 ugit
.3fr. Geo*;ge :Keenan, 40 Went tO
Lillian Russell ia deseribet
imt obillolUtely 'true that a lifetime
mei the fortune of en Aeteriou , rewlondent or the "Outlook, bat
bdliou-etre wood aat onfnee far an
eahauotive: ga bts boa, „Tim, Tilet Oerokir 4); Bonner, wire reoently
ia at Weber 45 Field,* Thee^
hielt017 of all the Smiths in all four quer- "f 44"1" tb° refr'llte ef *
tio ' Ma t k ter hi New Yerk, as "just the iseano
tem of the globe. serVa us y . a OS lie
155 in bla 000100100a with moat 01 the „nacr old Lillian, exttetly as good-looking,
Mr. Cotapton Reade doe* not ettentptUre °1 -ti in the sellie rfeotly regular way, as
. etnYthing_SO eirrefnely heroic in his last ....i....,1,„ttli•hat Atm, d Theatergoers have ea-
u*. 4,11. fingth ramilyr just pub. 1. intiatotaa---s---e-0-0 -It-it-y-8,0ot °suit* 4•11,earrheleeeupte00° svrh4s4vwilorndweareg`dfr howl thia popular actress
fielied by Elliot Stock. He preteens% to
levee his awn words, "to review the great , is given to an argument to Phew timt the flight of time, end so they Will read
contrived to reteln ter 'beauty, desseerpietet
, : l'Itlitielattly,"„leh tear ariapad Ipt9 the theory of a cloud of inflammable gat
„
h, eineet ed into myth; or enudged t• 1**du from the volcano is unsupported With interest her Article on "The S
into Smiltli." Mr. Reade sa th t
ys a so and t it what actually Oiseurred wai lf'01 altreeWeentet ntemePoerlolif tuttieltleaell.wsteeppkelayr.ois
etumerous are the Smithsi; ete, mama Mere probably a scorching of the moult-
"Smithland." An American authority is perheated steam. The position of the '
teinsidi by a "red -het hurricane" of me rairsalltiltve salami. dpefelarzaingthiLtriton; avecreemen.
England has not been transmuted into
veyel to the effect that "the history of vent that discharged the hot 'blast could to keep fresh and youthful -looking with -
I.= Append Is the blistery of families" and not be definitely determined at the tirae e°01 tobtnhearkitutereor oetrieey,eligneatainebile, dayubeir
i ,r.:.7.7.17.•:',. 110igt.)ft gretilt taeo4e,atereie tilet 40 of this /edition becauee the disturbed
etate"Of' volcano and the heat, of the which may serve the purpose for
elf e -represent a type, Eng- a tin% but in the end leave he user all
slope •node prOper observatiens out of
hued without them would hate been very th • el t f t f the worse for the artlication. She a,dds:
e question. u roni u o finch
It is curious, Mr. .Reade ehaervee, hew amble a cl, fr
facts a* Mr. Kennon wee . able
thes little letter "y" has proved a 'huge • .1, n om a coMpai:nien WI . to promote the good health which is
ons of other volcanic on necessary vital _ . • ,
• •th 4°- necessary accomEaniment of -in fact, the
differentia. For, wherees the "Smiths" Pt
a rule have (men moneyen ,,,th notably that of 'the Japanese volcano" r PI preserve -
as
youth and nesaity. The average wornae
Bandaiesan, in 188$, a d that•
of Tario
roue and eristoeralle. Wilibethe Smiths we a in' 1888, he eisnellIclea th t the die
her eomfort. Exereise is a bore; dieting
"Smythe" have ishfairti theimealvea Wel- of to -day' isapt.to sacrifice all things to
t4haitrrtylia,:rhu,suieshi:nd.deeptroY dliSt, Pierre audits
ts are t
Tory or Jacobite prinemtes. people in less than three
cause elf-ee no at once apparent,
wore Roundheasrthe lheytbs antlered for is troublesome and almost painful; be -
minutes had its origin at or near the
Viepos, _of_ these Iterations in the
elms+, and not from the lower crater, she dispenses with any little reform in
.., alleold peeve, of tomfort to both blast was eomposed of steam. and lava
known women who made firm resolves to
p , e ivy have e en up. • ave
.
mason indeed. . • 'There is nothieg e exercise and diet
1Pg the great patronymic, Mr. mole -of /iv , in a contrite.
,intaissttenteade, pro ounds a theory Whein the disturbanee began; that 'the stbierir 11! ec
branches ;if the -raisins'''. He hotly cone dust disintegrated by exploding steam,
undergo a systeintitie course of exercise.
bate the notion that the Smyths '
and had practically no inflammable -or
that the in. and followed it up religiously for a few
caphyxiating gases in it;
Smaillies stud Smijelus have outlined a:
emieition ofspelling to lexid an albite- habitants of St. Pierre and the men dalres. meanwhile seetnimg their &ea
, maths *ever to a hemely name, "Not -h- killed in the roadstead came to their ' eagerly to note results. None developing
,
i e declarant "can be further from death by means of the overpowering at oncethey -have voted the whole thing
..The original forni was Snutb, heat. of the onrushing Steam and the still a. fraud, and. gene back to the old rou-
tine of pleasure and indolenea The wo.
hotter dost particles carried in it, or,
moderns`cifler' is a eerruption after being stunned, were bureed to . man who is really in earnest about pese-
ta 'cyder. tie far from the iaserving her beauty and youth will find,
death by the fires started n inlinunable
'aittving ibuythefi themselves, I , in a short time, that the fiter simple.
'barely 'brie notabra inernee es.letts • by the volcanic dust.
e groirth of dreed of devastat- i•ules to follow soon become a source of
*The great mul complicated orgallti
eation a populous uld energetio Ne'
York perielli" serf The New York Sun,
t'qiess become is illtietrated in ihe 'year
becks' or annual reporta of El/low:Mal
churches like Greets, St. Bartholomew'e•
1 arid St. George's. It has developed in.
. to a nmobine, religion% philanthropic
1.
and social, in the running of which is
eteadily engaged an array of workers,
clerical and lay, and the eXpencliture of
money required to keep it going •is am
great as that which is laid out on the
goverzament of a considerable town.
Take for example, the last 'year hook'
of St. eleorge'a Church in Stuyvessait
Square. Beeides the rector, the Rev.
Dr. Itainsford (formerly. of St. James'
Cathedral, Toronto), the olerical etaff
Though the German Emperor claim*
to rule by divine right, in strict Ma-
' tory the power of the Ilehenzollerno
exuded in the right of a pawnbroker
over an unredeemed pledge, ears Th4
London Monteith Uutil the fifteenth
century the Kaiser's ancestors were
merely Burggravea of Nuremburg. -Then.
Vrederielt VI. of Hohenzollern accommo-
a ed the lauperor Sigssutund with a
loan of 100,000 gulden on the securit
oi 'Brandenburg. In 1417 the Hobert.
halm money -leader foreclosed on the
mortgage; and became in default of the
repayment of the 100,900 gulden Elector
of the Erapixe and Frederick I. of Brand-
enburg. Not until 1701 did the Hohen-
ecillerzis become a royal house and the
crowned Kings of Prussia, while their
Imperial rank dates, of course, from
1871 only. Of this loan incident in the
history of the Hohenzollern% York has
* souvenir which might almost tempt
the German Emperor to visit the north-
ern capital. It is. the eity's great two-
handed mord of State, which will figure
in the inauguration of the new Lord
Frederick
H
year. This sword formerly belonged
Mayo: of York for the ensuing civic
to that Emperor Sigismund, from whom
Mark
nzollern. exacted the
Brandenburg In exchange for
a timely loan. Sigismund was made a
Knight of the Garter by Henry V„ and
as custom demands, sent a sword to be
hung with his banner! over his stall in
St. Georgeht Chapel, Windsor, The
Emperor died in 1437 ; his sword was
taken down and offered at the altar in
pigment for masses for the repose of
his goal. One of 'the canons of Wind-
sor, named Henslap, thus becarae pos-
sessed of the Imperial weapon, Being
a man of • peace and also a native of
York, be presented the sword to that
city, where it 'was and still is borne be-
fore the Lord'Mayor Stat d occasions.
Lord Mayor and Jews.
Sir Marcus Stunuel was not the first
Lord Mayor of London to pass through
the Jewish dietriet of that city on Lord
Mayor's day. The Jewish World in com-
menting on the event says: -Sir Mar-
cus, who as a communal worker is cer-
tainly popular with the Jewish people,
did not confer any favor on the Jews by
riding in his State coach, led by his
multi -garbed procession, east of Guild-
hall, before going west to the Law
Courts to be received by his Majesty's
Judges. The rule is that the Lord
Mayor's procession shall traveree, the
principal streets of the ward he *repre-
sents in the City Council. According
with. this precedent Sir Henry Aaron
Isaacs passed through Fortsoken, the
principal street of which is Houndsditeh,
when he assumed the duties of Lord
Mayor. Nov. 9 then fell'oe the Sab-
bath. The Jews protested vigorously
riding.
As hisad se ssenesTstsiinsgn, the w ss Sabbathprspo proposed
-that the procession should pass through
the street while his then Lordship should
walk the length of the street. The pre-
cedents of Mayoral pageantry interfered
with this scheute. This year the Jewish
Market street mane into "the route be-
cause it has ;Nee rebuilt and is now a
wide' thoroughfare: Formerly Petticoat,
lane was so narrovr that two pushcarts
could not pass each other v'vithput en-
croaching on, the, sidewalk. • •
One of the Most distinguished of
Washington clergymen, eays The Star
of that eity, was seen the other day
Walking uncertainly along First street
northwest, lust south of the entrarco
to the Soldiers Home.. Ile held a slip
of paper in his band, lookeil at it every
little:. while with a puzzled exerehion tni
hie face, and then turucd'to stare eb•
gently at the open, tickle all &aunt hi n.
' A t l• • • : ,*
zu
;oftsetrsiar?loittle, and asked: "Can I 11.1p
"Maybe," arswered t -he venereble sloe -
tor. "Pin looking for a house up in this
neighborhood somewhere," and with that
be limited hie_ slip of paper to the oph-
eer. "It is No, 2,810. First street. To
guide ine I've written after the minther
that the house is on First street, near
the corner of Ninth. But I don't see
includes four assistants. Than come
deaconesses and a large body of whin.
Seer la workers So vast is the volume
of details that the. rector requires the
• aid of a akilful and industrious :were.
tare, for be is like the President or Su-
perintendent of a great railroad company
or trust. The number Of 'souls who
claim union with this church,' the rector
reports; •is 890,ad thpir aide: ‘sedattef-
a I over Manhattan an an ou
lying districts.' The majority of them,
however, are residents within the bounds
of the parish or in the neighborhood of
it, for 3,408' live between East Eleventh
and East Twentieth streets, St. George's
being situated at Emit Sixteenth street.
It is a district of the town which seem-
ed unfavorable to the greet* of a great
Protestitnt parish. When Dr. Rains-
ford came to St. George's in 1883 the
pariah was falling away. 'There wes
only a handful of people in attendance
on the old church.' 'rhe character of
the neighborhood. had changed from a
fashicinable district and the population
of it had increased accordingly. A like
transformation has taken place in the
character of the parishioners during Dr.
'Itainsford's rectorship, Out of more
than eight thousand of them, less than
six hundred live in private houses, while
more than five thousand are inhabitants
of tenements, about ono thousand live
in boarding houses and another thous-
and in fiats, apartments and hotels..
• "In the twenty years of Dr. Rains -
ford's rectorship the aggregate of the
colleetions and contributions of money
for conducting the parish and its activi-
ties and for building and endowment
has been $2,254,543. The total of these
was last year nearlyone hundred thous-
and dollars. But . Rainsford is not
satisfied. He wants the endowment to
be increased so as to yield at least
$40,000 a year in addition, 'to help meet
fixed charges and provide repairs, etc.,
in our church and extensive:plant.' St.
George's Church is open daily for medi-
te,tion and private prayer froin 8 in ths
morning to 5 in the afternoon, and
there are services every day, at all of
-which the seats are free. The commun-
ion is celebrated on Sunday at 8 ih
the morning, on ThursdaY at noon, on
the first Sunday of each month at .11.,
and on saints' days at 9 in the morning,
and on the third Sunday of the month
at 9.in the e'veriiiig. During the last
year there were 103 'baptisms, 25 adults
and 188 children, $4 marriages and 98
burials. The whole number of regular
communicants was about 2 500 'and the
average attendance at the 154 cele-
brations of Holy Comniunion was. 107,
by far the greatest average numb isa.
ing at the monthly Communion, 327.
The total number of confirmations. Was
206, about equally divided between males
and females: There were 2,312 scholars
on the books of the Sunday school.
"To show the multiplicity of the aetivi,
ities of this perish we will. give a list of
them :-Choir Committee, Chancel Com-
mittee, Chureh Decoration Committee,
Deaconess •House; Memorial House,
• erected.. in inemory of Mr. and Mrs..
Charles Tracy.; Brotherhood of St. An.
drew, Men's Cleb, Women's M'ssi
Association, Young People's Missionary
Association,. .Church Periodical Club,
Girls' Friendly Society, • King's Daugh-
ters, St. Augustine League, Poor Fhind,
C Sick, Grocery Department,
Clothing and Tailoring Department, Bm-
ployinent.Society, Helping Hand, Moth-
ers Meeting,. Seaside Work, Free Circe-
•
Phange from." t'f ing volcano intheminds of anethe visiting genuine pleasure. I say rules, but that
. *rims instances o Elizabeth- observers'•enakea an interesting record. is not to be taken literally. There are
:,: having become Vietetrian They''!arrived on the Beene with tipper- no •set rules to be followed; one meet
e r000 spelling of the word
.-.apparently due to the ingen- . ently little other amnion Mien a iieebh be guided by common sense, and enter
interest. and ciiriosity. On one occasion, thoroughly into the spirit of the ,thing,
trefe•-a, ome mediaeval clerk who in
took upori himself to dot when Mr. Kennan and his party were for mind has as much to do with aceem-
em driti, lig toward the smoking Pelee, from Pliaking results as the actual training.
14 a' °L the -`3''' ti!ne Pr°11"-o whieli• the natives were fleeing in panic- The woman who assigns to herself the
e ' t i streak silence, carrying their chattels and task end, then goes about it in a desul-
tf is. the origin of this great
y? To following couplet furnishes thole little children, ' -one ivoman ex. tory fashion, with half-hearted hopes of
K elastieri elaimed,."Look at the poor unfortunates achieving ends, would better not make
, -going toward the mountain!" This' the attempt at all.".
"Whince- eMbeth Smith be he knight or , was the attitude. of the native ne„,ero. • The system of exercise Which Miss
40:: squire, . ., • - : , , Tim euitivatea residents, like Mr. •Olere, Rusiell follows may, to some, seem al-
liluk fraii the Smith that% fergeth at the. Who aceoMpanied the party, showed most heroic; to her it has now become a
314%,;..i,ergaiiiii.......i iii ,,.,; .,; . . . . .., great. eqiiyage. But their more personal sett of second nature. "In the first
i tb 5 ."... disgraie; the name relation to the catastrophe exposed them
-` . place?' she says, "when I awaken in the
Is old peewit; .at 'any rate, Professor Ma- to greater strain. Mr. Clerc insisted on morning I drink at least two capfuls of
J
*,..7 ..- htsy Nut •Aiscovertd.,that a zaaa .nataid to
.from low-lying, unprotected het water. Then a plunge into a warns
ruption *as beginning; • bath se followed by a thorough massap,
and I take a few minutes of rest before
" 4221 'and the oceupatioe'ircini Vvhiel a d once while
the were rowlin
great honor. David was armourer te country, villas ie the RoXelane Valley, .4 piece of dry toast and, perhaps,. a, cup
tinution in Olympus. In the days of walked. away from the part, until he game of tennis or practice with the made
---,91whOIX-119140.4.nt 4,(t mightiest coma tors caught some of his nervousness be• brought into play, and at the expiration
• ' : :in the , days of .Ptolemy "III. 'ag.ete when an- e
too. zosiozbi, derived vas 0riglepliy 04 0, aniong the unrecognizable flea Of the
.71 ' -eating breakfast. This meal consists of
<
King Saul. t Vulcan wee a person of dis- he broke down in a fit of sobbing and of weak tea, If it is slimmer -time, a
could regain . his self-control? ' The eig. eine-ball is next. All the musoles are
'i'l el "•tVe -1444nnar, h‘ wail -a: eg'Sdrei • ,fOre :they were done with their Work of •fifteeirminntea I am in A. profuse per
• in the heroic days of gallant little Wales .
be sat upon the right hand of the King. . it...se
After:this day among the dead, Air. spiration. But the game is enjoyable,
spent a meet. uneasy night: The and I continue until thoroughlY wearY
come a mere zaeoluinicin Norgnan times, eqn- .. ..
se Kennannrug4 after, Faleh:broke • intoThen into the bath -tub again and azioth-
ti 1 ft Vi f
But from his high estate he fell, to be- "'""'''".- an
„ eruption, anti the par .. e ve or a er rut -down, end I ant ready for break -
only, however, to blossom into the gold-.
stornsg goldsmith a Queen Anne's days, safer !mot; hut returned later in the night . fast No. 2, which consists of a.leen chop
in their scientific enthusiasm and, would - and toast -but nothing -of a liquid nit -
from which trade *prang the great Indus. not be rescued by their distracted hest. ture. If the day in gimp a. elint on my
errotshanking%. •-• • h i The next day. Pelee was still violent. With the' ambiance of pedigrees' and bleycle is next in order. For this I
other matter Mr. Reade sete to work to Mr: Kennan's fellow -naturalist, over- wear a medluin-Weight. sweater over lily
prove Via doctrine . of hereditary charac- come with the work of the night, lay regular tostume, and the ride is never
......iptisties,:„...nfor,„the ranks of these de- ill abed tied left him to brood over the : less than ten miles and it a pretty good
yellow mud. clouds and 'black showers of pace. Reaching home, and after another
•
"'f • \Seqndanta.of.:priMttteo, iron-tekkete," he , fain dust. • He describes his growing ' rtib-clown, I don Bente loose costume and
•._ , , ,. ,
t )01,,an , cow: y,ce pee r
I imatters inctical th v it iid- , •
an ideni-' anxiety in this manner: , . read or otherwise. pass the tune until
et:. -setesee:e jfitsfflci3k-fh a .„l' e# 4 "Beim* noon I had become -so vireught luOch.. This meal is also very simple, all
e•eminent: •
Pr . up by anx y
Whatever we are, we were, . . my unaginati" began to run e'weY for digestion,some other game is in -
°with iously excluded. Allowing a. -LittIe 'hem
hehniihathateeet we were, we are; .• - Me, arid. I suddenly felt a eague•but ever -i1 ,
--Ana,--wiiittoei we are; a,nd. whatever *e.. whelinieg premonition of Some impend- dulged inhesee .as tether -ball, er perhaps
were, • :. •. ing eataitrOphe. Going to Mr. JaccacPs• golf. A short carriage drive follows,.
That same shall we•alwaye be. h : bedside, I said to. himheIf you. feel able with a. bath' and massage at_.the• finwiehen. .
,,,,;, to get up, I wish you would come and That takes me up to dinner time, h
'7?t71=44-714-471;Pariet/01.41ttr7M•vA.geala'A! PtkieFec5.. It-- ionic 4 this veleano: He walked feebly Usually I eat What my fancy dictates.
the list o celebrities which he gives at
'the end of his book contain the mimes .
: 'to the side window in the upper story That is the ciziameal of the day in which
, of /many Avalwarawn men. ,3f: affair% nee of the house, gazed fixedly at the Vol- I'd* not stint rayself, although y avoid, '
to mention *lawyers, Sailors and soldiers. !ono for fully s: minute, 'and, then said: io far as possible, any foods which have
, . Oltsai ble puiths without number .hitee It looke as Vesuvius meet have looked a fattening tendency. The evenings, too,
j'-•thkeld- proverb, "There is that isibi_oeth.,mi,s,nutei before the destruction of are sPent in quiet relaxation, as I con- .
„ pen If You want to get out of this, • sider I have done enough for the day.
iet • and nervous strain that 'starchy or. fattening .foods. •bein relit
how there can be any corner of First
awl Ninth streets."
The policeman was as much .puzzled
as the clergyman. A letter carrier who
passed just at that time was accordingly
called into consultation. The three
were studying over the address, when
the nut:niter folded the paper with a
strange, faint amile, and began to walk
' back toward the city.
"Have you found the house?" ashed
the letter carrier, catching step with
the clergyman.
"Noel haven't fo Intl the house," we,
First Epistle to the Corinthians.'t
i
the answer. '1 fin that the address
,
had Written down s the twenty-eig,ht
verse of the eixteenth chapter of the
Barbara Prietc•hie. '
Let no one again doubt that Tta'rbara
Frietchie lived and waved the flag she
loved. A. contributor to The Atlantic
saw the flag, ,and records the testimony
of the old lady's grand -niece. At 96 the
poet's heroine was still intensely loyal ;
"Her unpretentious flag was mouthy fly-
ing from its mest at the window of tier
humble home M West Patrick street. lt
was removed when the Confederate
troops entered the city, Sept, 10; 1862,
and carefully folded away in her .Bible,
but it was again- displayed by Dame
Barbara as she stood by the window
watching the pasisage of Burnside's troops
on the morning. of the leth. This is
the occasion usually referred to as her
historic waving of the flag; though it
was not in the face of the enemy, and
called forth not shots, but shouts, as
the passing troops noted her extreme
age and this ehpres ive token of her loy-
alty. Major Genera Reno himself was
.attracted by the see and stopped to
; speak a word to the. ol lady, inquire
herw however,
and s sibutyt the fflual ot s i ..a.`it wSliitei;
I
. this one, but finally consente. to give
the gallant General another owned by
her. And this flag,- thus presented, was
a few days later laid en the bier of the
brave Reno, who fell the day after at
South Motintain."
•' How to Tell Cut Glass..
. Concluding an interesting article, 'deal-
ing with the eut glass factories it Corn -
leg, N.Y., a Writer in The :New York
Tribune Says: "Many persona are puzzled
to distinguish good out glass Iron% the,
.
inferior article. One good rule is that
if it is cheap. It must be inferior, for •it
costs to mako. geed cut glass. Here ire
some direetiona Which Corning manufac-
.tnrers give by which one can tell the real
_
article.: "A piece of fine cut glass trans.'
nuts light colorless as a crystal., Wes
-rior glass usually shows a tint: yellow-
ish or greenish, and its surfaces are apt
to lciok sinoky •as you hold the piece
between your eye and the light. Then
. you will notice that in fine glass the
pattern is not only: better designed, but'
truer in execution, that the cuttings are
, sharp and polished. with perfect even-
ness.. In the inferior glass you will find
, b c m ariio all ort f h. g 1 rit•
'Until you have mastered these differ-
ences you will not be a connoisseur of
. fine cut ,glass, and will not Understand
why the collector is willing to pay .the
necessary difference in price between
good • glass, artistically designed Lula
cut, and inferior glass made"cheaply for
Competition." • .• . •
e a yeter ••
14: t eenuiet eccentric end yet praptical be -
1) Prn eeady .to go.' 'I've been wanting to , • "Tim following morning, concludes
.1.• gusset; was that Of Henry Smith, in 1717 te• s
get out, ,ef this,'.I said, 'for the last four Miss Russell, "the sante, plan is followed,
. St. flepulehre's. "to help poor maids for ours. ' The thing -4s getting on my and I. take genuine pleasure in carrying .
huishandel" Clearly when •,George L was nerves. If Yeti and Varian are able to . out the schedule laid out There is notle .
kinark spouse must •have been a. perches- rid I' w favorf leavingli t in herd or disagreeable in what I do
able commodity, and at a moderate prim. once? We summoned Mr; Chancel, held In the 'winter, when bicycle -riding is out :
Why should there net be a day set a volcano. -council, . . . and started Of the miestion, 1 play ping-pong, or row
apart every .year to celebrate the great- for Apiers leaving Vive to its fate." • a few miles .in an indoor boat. The
great -
nese ot the Smithe, after 'the manner of Th book i d f unchin -ba I finch is a nd f rra of
most appallinf disaster direetiy refer. exercise, and I am beconung an expert Society' Batt l' Cl. b B '
•
e •s a record o perhaps the P g hJ gra n Jating Library, Young Married Woinen's. •
Ili linith, baiViot Which teak' Place in abl to ' ' t th t Th f th ski i of
a vo cane that has -been •ob- 4 a • e *are * e n a, r de
_ , T a Scheel, Sewleg School, ,Goiden tar'. . ategla.nd Wants Their .Dust. '
, .
, a ion u , oys , Industrial •o-
. . that etghteenth century.? At this ban- 'a . 11 ori ' do i t t I t Th
itilectike4ueots were smiths to a. man, ...erv..,e„.16,inn. ist e times The tone is un- ., urse, an mpor eii •,. ae or.., .
alld.ifhe ,fpresident was one Captain ""---"...6 '
down °Vonmindedly and plainly, and the
Conditions as seen are set p!est forpia_401.e.Pou'ents,114. el.
ill °mi- Baskeh ..Weaving , Claes Drawn -work t.
6 WA' thanlatie Society: Kindergarten, Gym: 'According to the Marquis de Fon-
nasium, Caliethenic Class, Cooking Class, tenoy, negotiations are in. progress be-
' 4 Smith, Governor of Virginia. The. eooks • • tion with mom inmate, i nee are the •
• li t B t th f ttl ith t , „ ween the English •and the French gov-
The Rorie in Heat and Dust.
' When at ' work in the field On a hot
day, and especially in dusty Workh as
harrowing, &titivating and running the
horse rake or tedder, which usually stir
up a dust, there are few men who not
think it necessary to stop Occasionally
tOwash the dust out of the inotith and
I throat with water,lf they have not any-
thing worse. Yet hew many think that
; the, team. also may be suffering front -
thirst or from a month filled with dry
dust? We fear not many do 'no. If
near the well Or spring they go for their
own, drink, and if far away -they are
usually. thoughtful enough to take jug
along with them, but the animals must
wait until it it time to unhitch. Then
often they drink tee freely when over-
heated, and there is a case of colic.
• especially if 'the water is cold. How
much better it would be to take it bar-
rel of water:and a bucket into the field
and give the:harks a little two or. three
times a day. They could learn a les-
son at the ram track, where the horse's
Mouth is swabbed otit after eaeh heat
to relieve it from the dust, and the nos-
trils also are :cleansed. The animal is•
refreshed Withoet haviag his stornech
• overloaded or Ins body chilled 'with too
much water nt one time -American Cul-
tivator. .
testnnony taken from witnesses. is care.. es . u ey are o e use w ou Glass, JC Dressmaking C19,88, • millinery . ernments with the object ,of the trans-
• 40•06• lattlitits; the waiters also, and a fully analyzed. • the exercise -which 'brings. the natural Class, Recreation Class, Penny Provident 'lei to Great Britain of the remains.. Of
.,811104, .444 grape, The feast was graded glow of bealtiz to the cheeks. .The hair
4 14 is poet Smith, whose sole claims to• Fund, Mother's Class, the English /tint Henry II., of King
hhh .1ted..ger the oceasionit the publisher of , youtlrful or pretty as .hers. 'crowning
Jell hiras.jaahes SmIt "Yes,'" said the young man, as he glory.' Frequent shampoos combine ties, is only a type of a freat ' sort ..of King .Yolin, all of whom are
girl graduate"I love you, paid 'would go is neeess th t "
The Girl Who Didn't.
ehOuld be earefully looked After, is ncith- "St. George's, in this multiplicity of Richard Coeur de ion, and of his Queen,
imikeitalltjhrest neon the ode he cow- Capturing a Girl Graduate. ht at k lk its religious and philanthrope activi-.. Meaner, and of Queen Isebella, the eon -
threw himself at the feet of the sweet with persistent brushing, willido all that al parish of New York this Imo entombed in the abbe chur h f Fo -
ft is a marvell c
ous development, and it .tevrault. The church is no longer used
:pry in a ne. as taken place airnost wholly during for Divine worship, but as a prison, the
to the world's end for you."
the last twenty years. A.' New York nave having been converted into four
-• "You •could net go to the end of the
,,' (A FABLE,)
ere 0 11 . en UMW a. girt de.oided that .. 'called; is.round, like a ball slightly fiat ' '' ' . ' .
world for me, James. The world, as it is witeee, '
A Bill Nye Story
• the superintending engineer of a compli- 'mounted by the recumbent effigies of the
Episcoparreetor has become the director, floors of ,dormitories. , The tombs, sur -
r o •in for•health rather than ' • tailed et the nOles One of' the '+' hh:' •• Theithresy freeuen ily insinuated that eated Vetere. of reitchineryh a 'man of five royal 'personages in .question ansi.
h, i .. . ers„ ..--- •enblishere Ito* inordinately rich at the affair* and not a men of the cloister. He '::ithieh have been subjected to a good
:Vaal he a true women, • sons' in the e emeittary geography is de.
such ea men like ter talk about in .. • .
the Seated to the shape .of the globe. You expense of the author was once simesing7 ihust have the qualificationsof remark- many indignities, notably • at ' the time
abotreot; . * must have studied it when you Wire a, lyt•ihllustrated by the late 13i11 Nye at an ablehtdministrative ability, and he must of the great revolution,,have already on
, rs , • c er ea a
- ..Shot,:** iiiii)ng,lools on ouniber siren . boy." • • • au ors dinner m London. us a year be Supported fi t b,y a 1 i 1 et ft two previous occasions been- &eked of
finsi. shivered at the Very idea of "Of course I *did, butL.......” ago,". said lie, "I was walking on the assiduous in their _labors under his • de. tbe French Government by England.' In
t Her waist, measured thirty-six "And it is no longer a theory. : Cir. principal street CZ Indianapolis, when I rection, and, second, by a large body of 1817 -that is to say, two Years after
h4ffillehher -hipe andhhust *ere. -eumnavigetore have' ettablishel the met ,a man whose appearance allowed lay workers and contributors•upoe whole the battle of . wsteri007-Xing. George
• • hiett4irte_e_She_avouldn!t_ourther,„ Aug' ,,,,,_. „,, : '_ • •
hair, and as OM thought powder wager, ' "I knew; but When inerant Wiirthat-o . " - '''
L -n vertv . His elothee Were ragge_ , his liberal pecuniar3r gentributiOns. They by the French Government, in' ;reply to
ii, half.„:41i0e4 alWays re d shiny. ' I Would do anything to please you.. Ab' face unshaven, his hair long and. mated meet -hell show-their-faith-bytheir workshheehrequest4orhilie torabs,...tl_lat the _ethe.
ifais dhan
' esti ,islotties were all made .to. hang Minerva, if you only knew the aching and his feet embed. .As 1 passed him, a Such is the Episcopal parish at the be- thorities of the" department of Maine
from the (shoulders, and she never sat on vold—" • ' look o . tecogni. ion vame la o a eye.
. ' t hi ginnialg of the twentieth century. To et Loire did noteare to part with them.
., d'h,*knillPintti:4' -4.41. the tinurshe was twenty- . ,t7r„Aire is no such thing as a voice "'Nye, old fellow, dein you know : what further development will it be Later on in. 1848 King L
aiid
* °riming, they never knew which, au admitting that there .ould be such a . , a j.eeho,
who was your clahonate at &illegal' Raitieford speaks as if tbe work of St. they were about to be removed to Eie-dh
c ieni. 0 Q sen olds IT ii,ilippe
Ivo' suen,11111--whin ihei,saar hei oominff Ames. r Nature abhors it vacuum. But, me? Don't On know Abel P Jones, brought .t y y hence? ., r.
fpb.,„loOked at: t her .'. through lorg, thing, how could the void you apeak -of wen, well, what
a IS do
erlea7110y you? George's was Only in its beginning."
00610 and Said she Was au unsexed crea- be a void if there was an ae.he in it?"ht nitl f • ti? land When the revolution broke • out,
. which drove . King Louis Philippe and
"'For Heaven's sake lielp me. T•am ' A' Bich Island., his family into English exile, Once
that he reduced t thetic?* h rely ri ein eervicee or ., rine° Regent, was in orine
tuft! "1 • • meant to saY that my life will he starting. Lend me half a, dollar) ' • •
ifei_r_a71--0 The easheet wsit------------ the lonely Without you, • that you are my . fiat in my tweeds.. _They 34ra In an a•ddress to the Geographieal Se-
aoif um pi , • dai
nightl .dream more have negotietions been in. progress,
-------
I
--
and the French Government. haff, it is
, •• -woulgo anywhere to be wItli you. et empty, I had no menet myself. But a "ciety of Brisbane. Mn ii. hi i
agu re, 'understood, arranged to present these
"Abel, I can't lend you the halhdol-
bright thought imited t rough icily mind. who spent two: years- in tlie 'country .tontbe of hie ancestors to King Edward.
Jan I haven% feit it. But look here --Ill greven1 British New:Gilitiea from beeom; . for. thera in Westminster °Abbey. • Per -
At the Footbidl Match. you leer° Austraha or at, the /gerbil,
• o•
teile I would fl y to you. I—"
makh: offleiel surreys kid nothing con VII., who will find 0, fittine resting place
0'1*. 1:--gy:int.Ord,,i wenIdn't drop on a EtIlY1h 3"tr,k li"I't 17 yet, dear b"'Y' tell von what, will do: pll let you pub- g one of the riehest islands in the haps in ;course of time King Edward
. 'tail likethat iii front of iheushh. You ' „,,tesilniT when 'ger there(''Ms' 1 nil ‘n.',°: • Ich
..,. i y OVo ,.tv! stiWorld, It_ comprises every range of may likewise he successful in obtaining
laid out for twenty minutes.
Mkt t gat your bead kieked in and be ma n.,.., sayt, A late o,ionvle authority, ° "Gentlemen, that was jug a year ago; temperature, every Ouse of soil and has . from the French Government the tomb
,and this month Abel P. Solos soot nu: a splendid, regular rainfall, fine rivers and the remains of Xing William the
No, 2 -7 -yes, but think of the •cheere the diffictuty Of maintaining & ba° an invitation to go to Europe with hitt and numbers of excellent natural liar. Conqueror, one of the principal features
hteghahh•hhautlyouhtnight never geh up." • •ankre—ell "sh, all e -vents,".. ehclaireed the in his sisala rieht ' bora Wade gold is. likely to be the of interest at Caen. Aside from the
• ;h9hthe. .eity , ' go Pe - -•
"Then think of the funeral youth, r'Pv t a t
e r pre ty fair 'balance - - economic bakbone of the colony there fact that these tombs of English Kings
Are also niant thousands of aeres on in Prance attract tourists,. and are,
&Wein•
A wfolovee Weeds are often tile outWard
at My banke and I want you. to be - Journalistic EMulation.
"Well James (dace you at it i that A 1 h ricultural possibilities arc tar e an5 1 aliti th it t d it
••••••••••••••••
Tasting the 414e of Eggs.
• 'When „poultry -keepers adhere to. a
• rigid •system of •controlled' noshing ansi.
daily co ection and marking of eggs,
•• there Is little. or no trouble about bad
• or stale eggs. lint .whrre. 'dealers and
shippers have to • handlo. eggs' froth all
• quarters a. method of testing for fresh-
ness is indispensable., There are -Nail -
tun ways Of doing this, the holding ot
tigg to a light being perhups the
most favored. In Saxony a large. mult,
• try -breeders' association has had under
• consideration 'what is elehnecl to be a
• new Method of deternmung the •age ot
eggs, and- has. been so satisfied with it
Lthitt it -bas --meh.rded : the •inventor a
• special model. • • The apparatus is based .
on the physiological -property. that .the
air bubble at the blunt end of the eg,g
increases in size With the growtlhof the
embryo. When the .egg is. placed in
liquid it has eonsequently an increasing
• tendency to •become vertieal, with the
blunt end uppermost. Tim apparatus .ih,
self consists' of it glass vessel, bearing at.
• the hack lines drawn at various 'angles, -
• Molt line being marked with the .age.
• The vessel is filled -with oonie Mirthless
liquid; in which the .eggs to be tested,
are , Each egg led) telc,e up a vere
ain pos tion, and, 'wording to tts age,
its longer axis be more or less hi-
elined to the horizon. The direction or
this axis- lit compared with •the lines et .
• the back Of the •vessel, arid the age of
the eggread off at the line' to which -
its axis is parallel.% A new laid egg
lies 'horizontally nt the bottom of 'the
• vessel, An egg three to five days old
• raises itself front the.horizontal sto the t
its axis makes .ait angle of about 20
degrees. ,At eight days old this angle
-has inereased to ebout 45 degteee, at 14
days it is 00 degrees, at about three
weeks it is 75 degrees, arid after four
weeks it !tomb upright on -the pointed
end, A bad egg floats. 'With praetiee
it is -stated that the age &hi be told tb
a day,. -Agricultural Gazette of Now
South Wales.
My wife. Theret" • which rebber roes are thriving, the a • therefore, a source of scene profit to the I
ona meible eign tsf an inward and *fa-
tal rejoicing,
(tit' IVeriAbt)-4 thought, yens,
kad AvAlogi,00ping..TA tee**
Col-egebred Servant G il-terepardoni
eirt but I'was Net deeomposing.
etttelente--Whet
• Oottege-bred Servant Giri-r was to.
touiving dustj
o i y p n tdistinguishedjclurna ist as in*
light I—" formed the uhlic that he invariably
Let the curtain I fall.
.,. pts down ideas --to be subsequently
worked up into articles -at the moment
of their oteurrenee. In illustration of
Sunday Sokooi Teacher --You remene . tale good results of thie practice he •
um trip Yon leek int* the states that an idea, Which was after.
oothitry last, summer, and went through wards worth five guineas, once dame to
a lovely perk to your treat,/ Tell int him when lie was washing his hands,
What, you first observed -when you vielted Fired by this exernple, several journaliste 1
that home of linieltal SSholar--"Iteel have mate arrasgsatents for fairing a
P.4. AP gritini." CoMPletts chath.---"Pinich."
,
• "..4it`F —
• A'
though the pastoral 'country is small, li is &M 1 111 51 oult to understand what value a.
ii equal to the finest in the world, and republic such AS Prance can possibly at -
its grass is so nourishing thht the eat- tag to the tombs of foreign Monarchs
tle brought' to the genet settlements are on its soil, and it cannot be denied that
tilito.st too fat for market. Thousands it would be More appropriate that these
of acres Meng the rivers are admir- 700 year cid stonemonuments of
ably a'da.pfed for agriculture. Only the royalty should rest in the aficient abbey
fringe:ocii
f the •gold -bearing entry has of "Westminster enica,,,e the other Kings
been totiehed.; there is still it great in. i and queens of Eligland than in a build -
toiler, silent and unknown, iwaiiing the , ing in irranee now used AS a Jail for
pioneer and prospector. . Criminals.
r • Yrrrodor.
'resemimenmereamineatiisiessamessoneree • t
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