The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 06, 1888, Image 2

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    EIGHT MEN MISSING.
Fire in the Calumet Mine in Michigan.
INCENDIARISM SUSPECTED NO HOPE
FOR RESCUE OF THE MISSING
MEN.
Detroit, Mich, « Nov. 30.—The
Journal's special from Calumet, Mich.,
says: Fire was diseovered at the eighth
level of No. 3 shaft of the Calumet
branch of the Calumet and Hecla mine
this morning. A large party of men
were working at the time of the fire,
which, when discovered, had made
suck progress that the smoke was ter-
ribly dense and their lives were in dan-
ger. All made a rush for the surface,
but eight men are missing. That they
are dead is certain. Among them are
two ltalians named Joseph Mosoller
and Tony Catawara,’
The mine location is completely cov-
ered with the dense smoke, and the fire
looks worse than did the last, but being
pearer the surface it is believed the
damage financially will not be so great.
The company is making the most
desperate efforts to control the flames
and to try to rescue the miners, but at
this time it looks as if the case Was
hopeless. The men are all married but
two, and all but one are Cornishmen
The scene about the mine is heartrend-
ing. The families of the men are, of
course, cognizant of the extreme likeli-
hood that the men will never come out
alive, and to their grief and lamenia-
tions are added the most frantic con-
fusien on the part of all except the
trained employes of the company.
Chrict Rule, one of the miners who
were at work in the fourteenth level of
No. 2 shaft, says that about 11 o'clock
last night Le saw and smelled smoke,
others to it, Charles G. Sarson and
Henry Burkineynki, who were tlor-
oughly familiar with the Calumet
branch of the mine, at once started up
the ladder as far as the tenth level, and
then went south to the malu engine
shaft and rode up to what 18 called the
grand sixth level
They then crossed to No.
where they saw the shaft all ablaze.
The bed plank and mill timbers, top
bottom and sides looked as if they bad
been burning some time, Burkineynki
pipe, opened It, straightened out
but there was no water there. He
says, however, that nad there been
water there it would have helped mat
ters none.
Seeing this Sarson, who had a nar-
row escape from the former fire, led
and warned the men to turn back. He
and then came to the sarface.
ing 1s known of the whereabouts of the
ight men who are missing. They were
working 1700 feet deep, at the man
ing the smoke, they tried to escape and
were smothered,
Over 100 men were In this portion of
the mine at the time, but escaped.
The missing are: Joseph Masaler,
Antonio Kattlarers, John Vanderbilt,
Andrew llanson and two others, naines
unknown, a Polander and a Finlanaer.
The eight-hour shift men went
through No. 3 at 10 o'clock, but saw
of an Incendiary 1s believed by all
Immense volumes of smoke are issuing
from the burning shaft. The fire will
not prevent work at the South Hecla,
and that part of the mine is now io
shape to employ all the miners, and the
product can be kept up to the syndi-
pate’s limits,
the mine materially, and it will be
kept up to the limit imposed by the
French syndicate,
cs ———- = —
NO POLITICS IN THE GRAND ARMY.
READING, 1a, Nov. 28, —The sub-
In this city composed exclusively of
Democratic soldlers is being agitated
To-day & number of Democrats were
interviewed on the subject of the G, A.
RB. belng used for political purposes,
Dr. 8. OC. Ermentrout, brother of
Congressman Ermentrout,
purposes in the West.”
ber of the Bar, and a Democrat, says:
“Inside of our Post, or any other Post,
I never knew anything political to take
place in any way, Some members of
the Order of both parties acted indls-
creetly when they wore their G. A, R.
uniforms in political demonstrations,
for which they were liable to disci
pline, The G. A. R. is not political.”
Henry Rambo, Isaac Weaver, B. F.
Barkley, all leading citizens, and a
number of other strong Democrats,
unite 1n saying: ‘‘Noone can say there
is politics in the Grand Army; if there
was we would leave it.”
A M5 ORI
THE GRAND MARSHALSHIP OF THE
INAUGURATION PARADE.
HArrisburo, Pa, Nov. 20.—The
Inauguration Committee at Washing:
ton to-day tendered Governor Beaver
the honor of being Grand Marshal of
the parade which will constitute a
prominent feature of the Imposing
ceremony incident to ihe induc-
tion into office of President elect
Harrison, He bas not yet signi
fled his Intention of accepting
or declining the honor, but, as Penn-
sylvania will send an immense delega-
tion to Washington on the 4th of
March, it 1s hoped he will decide to act.
Adjutant General Hastings returned
to-day from the National Capitol, where
tie has boen endeavoing to secure quar-
ters for the National Guard, fe will
gO baci ees week to complete arrange-
men
—J'ive new cases of yellow
were reported on the 30th uls, mn
# ¢
fover
Jaca
meee —————— A SH
AN OFFICER SHOT
While Arresting Supposed Burglars at
Bryn Mawr.
TWO SUSPICIOUS ETRANGERS ANSWER
SPECIAL OFFICER KERSHAW'S QUES.
TIONS WITH A PISTOL AND ESCAPE
—HI8 WOUND IN THE THIGIL NOT
DANGEROUS,
BRYN MAWR, Nov. 28,1888. —Lewis
E. Kershaw, who resides on Walnut
Place, Thirty-sixth and Sansom streets,
and who was formerly employed as a
special officer of the Citizens’ Protec.
tive Association of Bryn Mawr, was
shot in the thigh early last evening a
short distance from the Bryn Mawr
railroad station, and received a painful,
though not necessarily dangerous,
wound.
On account of numerous robberies
at Bryn Mawr and adjacent places
within the past two months, E. P.
Passmore, of the former place, had
offered a reward of $200 for the ap-
prehension of the robbers, and this, to-
gether with rewards offered by other
persons, led Kershaw to act upon his
own account to trace the thieves.
At noon, yesterday, it is stated, he
saw (wo men acting suspiciously in the
neighborhood of Bryn Mawr and he
watched them, He first saw them on
Moutgomery avenue, where they were
inspecting the premises of Mr. F. F.
Hipple, Thence they went to the
residence of Howard Roberts, close by,
and then proceeded to the house of J.
W. Townsend, also on Montgomery
avenue, but they made no attempt to
enter, Jt 1s said that just prior to the
shooting an attempt was made to enter
men were frightened off,
About half-pastsix o'clock Kershaw,
who had followed the strangers, stopped
| them and asked where they belonged.
| They told him *'it is none of your busi
| ness.” He lald his hand upon one of
{them and said: “1 am an officer,”
| whereupon the other man drew a pis
| tol and shot Kershaw, the ball striking
{ lum in the right thigh and penetrating
| to the bone, where it was deflected,
| The two men then escaped, going, it 18
| sald, towards Conshohocken.
at the railroad station and told of the
| occurrence, when Drs, Powell and
| Lindsay, of Bryn Mawr, were sum-
| moned and the ball, which was of 32
calibre, was extracted, Having had
1s wound attended to Kershaw was
placed on a train for the city, and upon
| his arrival at Powellon Avenue Station
| he was taken In a police patrol wagon
to bis home.
Kershaw describes one of the men as
| plexion. He wore u stiff hat, but no
overcoat. The other man, he Bays,
| was short in stature and wore a slouch
hat and a long overcoat. Immediately
after the occu
ment of this -.'y
steps were LU
for the men,
After the shoo
were
ng two men, it
| building belonging to E. D. Smith, at
| Bryn Mawr, and when they
challenged as to (their business
sent to fix the electric light wires,”
and they then left,
On account of the numerous robbe-
ries at Bryn Mawr,
neighboring places,
have been made to catch the thieves.
A few weeks since a horse and carnage
| der.
Among the places robbed
were the residences of E. Tracy, J.
W. Hoffmau, BR. W. P. Goff and E,
P. Passmore, at Bryn Mawr; tie oflice
of Walter Bevan & Co., lumber deal
ers, at Rosemont; Mrs. Baird's Liouse
at Marion, and the premises of Miss
Wright at Dryn Mawr,
From the house of
gold watch and
taken. From Mr. Tracy's a shawl,
| valued at $75, was stolen. It was al-
Bilss Wright a
| Philadelphia. In most of the cases the
| robberies were gold watches and other
| trated about tea time:
co
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
— An engine and fifteen freight cars
| on the Maine Central Railroad were on
| the morning of the 26th thrown from
the track near the lower end of Lake
Maranacook, and precipitated into the
lake, Migh water had underminded
the track, which was also covered with
several inches of ice. The engine and
cars were wrecked, ‘The engineer,
fireman and brakeman, though badly
| scalded, were able to swim ashore, A
wagon containing Stewart Christie and
his mother-in-law, Mrs. John Kenyon,
was struck by a train, at Elgia lllinows,
on the 25th. Christie was killed and
Mrs. Kenyon was dangerously hurt,
Two passenger trains on the Chicago,
Rock island and Pacific Railroad col-
lided near Husted. Colorado, on the
26th, Two persons were Killed and
several injured. The 18-year-old
daughter of William Tarner, of
Amelia, Olilo, was shot and killed, on
the 24th, by her brother, Aaron, aged
13 years, Reports differ as to whether
the act was accidental or intentional.
~The 25. old son of Capt,
Thomas, in Raleigh, North Carolina,
on the 27th, walked into a hardware
store, bought a pistol, had It loaded,
and committed suicide by shooting
himself 1a the head, A man about 30
years of age, who registered at the
Whitehall Hotel, iv Harrisburg, on
the evening of the 20th, as J. W. Bit-
ting, was found dead in his room on
the morning of the 27th, suffocated by
the gas, which was turned on, -It is
suspected that he purposely blew out
the gas, Papers in his pocket indicated
that he was from York county.
—For the first time since August
cmos PA
«William Bradbury, a miner, while
descending shaft No. 8 of the Kingston
Coal Company’s mines, near Wilkes
barre, on the 28th wuit.; in some way
lost his balance and fell from the cage
to the bottom of the shaft, 200 feet
below, He was dashed to pieces, He
was 23 years of age, and had been mar
ried only one month. During a storm
at Frostville, Connecticut, on the even-
ing of the 27th ult., Minnie Mel arthy
and Mary Maloney were swept off a
foot-bridge into the river, Miss Maloney
was rescued, but the other was drowned,
Her body was recovered on the 28th
ult,
—A despatch from Cohasset, Mas-
sachusetts, says all doubt concerning
the loss of the steam collier Allentown
was dispelled on the morning of the
98th ult, as the North Scituate Beach
is strewn with wreckage consisting of
fire buckets, tables, chairs and other
furniture, ali marked “Allentown.”
Nothing has been heard of the crew as
yet
—Burglars broke into three stores
and the post-office in Chelton, Wiscon-
sin, on the morning of the 28th uit,
They got $500 in cash and stamps from
the post-office, but only a few dollars
form the stores,
—Frank Unger, Charles Bulse,
Adam Gouse, Frederick Kaegel and
Henry Fisher, professional burglars,
claiming to be from Philadelphia,
were arrested at Carlisle, Fenpa., on
the evening of the 27th ult, charged
with eleven robberies in that nelghbor-
hood. Several hundred dollars worth
of goods were found In thelr posses
around
visited by
-The country
crops and drowned a number of cattle,
Work on the railread has been sus-
pended. A telegram from Havana says
the newspapers in the sugar districts
report that the prevailing drought is
injuring the cane. Itis expected that
the anticipated crop will be decreased
considerably,
—Four pew cases of yellow fever
ing to the town. Three new cases of
uit., in Jacksonville, but no deaths,
—A riot occurred on the 28th uit,
Mount Carmel, enna.,
borers, who had been at feud for sev-
eral months. The fight lasted an
hour, and several of the rioters were
stabbed, three perhaps fatally. David
Hennessey, 20 years old, shot and
killed Hugh O'Keefe in a saloon in
New York on the 28th ult. Hennes-
sey was exhibiting a revolver, when it
was accidentally discharged.
— Diphtheria bas prevailed at Ait.
kins, Minnesota, for the past Lwo
weeks, The Board of Health has or-
dered all persons who have been ex-
All places
have been closed
have been closed
of public meeting
The public schools
—Anns E. Neal, aged 19 years,
minsville, Ohlo, on November 6th, Oo
the 28th ult., her dead body was
There was the usual observance of
Thanksgiving Day as a national holi-
the 20th uit. There was a special pro-
gramme at the Exposition In Augusta
About £fty thousand people attended,
Members of the South Carolina Legis-
lature were present, and were greeted
by the Georgia Legisiatare. In W ash-
ington the President attended services
fle also reviewed a parade of the Na-
bia, and then went to Oak View,
where a family Thanksgiving dinner
President-elect Harrison
pate, at his board. Senator Stewart,
of Nevada, was one of the few callers
on the General
~An attempt by police to quell a
colored men In
Savannah on the 20th uit, resulted in
a riot, in which one colored man was
policemen were badly injured, one be-
into insensibility and an-
other having his skull fractured. John
B. King, a young law student, was
mysteriously shot and killed near a
her husband in Amesbury, Massachu-
setts, on the evening of the 26th uit,
died on the evening of the 28th ult,
The husband, who committed sulcide,
was buried on the 20th uit.
Thomas Davis, aged 45 years, a
draughtsman in the City Engineer's
Office, at Cincinnati, committed suicide
on the 20th ult., by shooting himself in
the head. No cause 1s assigned for the
deed,
Seven new cases of yellow fever,
but no deaths, were reported on the
90th ult., in Jacksonville, Total cases
to date, 4687; deaths, 408,
John Rogers, a painter, of Day~-
ton, Ohio, was pat off a Dayton and
Michigan train, near Johnson station,
on the 30th ult. He started to walk
back to Dayton, and, for revenge, as
he came along, drove spikes between
the joints of the rails, piled ties and
stones on the track, with the evilent
intention of wrecking the south-bound
express that sh arrive here at
noon. He was observed by some sec-
tion me, who gave chase on a hand
ear, They captured the man and took
him to Johnston Station, where he was
placed in charge of the passenger
train crew, who took him to Dayton,
and he is now in the city pri
Kidder has
~Post-office Inspector
been informed that the night mail
pouch from Des Moines to Washing-
ton, Iowa, has been found out and
about one-fourth of its contents opened
and rifled, Dostmaster Hinton, at
White Church, Kansas, Is missing,
His accounts with the Government are
#0 badly mixed that his bondsmen fear
they will be calied upon to settle, The
house of Mrs, Anua Beck, of Plaln~
field, New Jersey,
destroyed on the
ult, after It had been
Beck and daughter away
winit. A As artinlty tA,
po —————————————————————————————
~The dead body of an unknown
man, who is believed to have been
stealing a ride, was found on the 30th
ult,, undera load of lumber on the
struck and killed on the morning of
the 80th ult.. on the Pennsylvania
Railroad, at North Penn Junetion.
August Linke and John Albin were
erushed to death in Albin’s coal mine,
at Olney, Illinois, on the 20th ult., by
a cave-in. Two trains collided on the
Chicago and Atlantic Railroad, at
Crown Point, Indiana, on the 30th
nlt., causing a loss of about $30,000,
The train hands escaped injury by
jumping.
Mrs, Emma Jackson, aged 2
years, was shot and killed on the 20k
ult, at ber home, in Glasgow, Missou1l,
by ber brother, Harvey Ballew, aged
14 years, She asked Harvey to get a
bucket of water; and he refused, She
threatened to whip him, and went after
the water herself. As she was enler-
ing the door of the room her brother
shoved the muzle of a shotgun at her
face, and fired,
tari
“Ax to Grind.”
Benjamin Fegnklin, the well-known
American statsman and philosopher,
relates the follwing story of his boy-
hood.
was accosted ip a smiling man, with an
axe on his shopder, **My pretty boy,”
“You are
'* said he; ‘will you
“Yes, sir,” sail Franklink,
a fine little feliw,
the head, thgman added, “And will
you get a littlpwater for me to wet the
grindstone?” § Little Benjamin, upable
ful of water. ?** How old are you, and
what's yourt name?" continued the
man, withoubwaliting for a reply. id
An sure you fire one of the finest lads
that 1 have per seen. Will you just
turn the grigistone for me for a few
pad him yout Benjamin went to work,
Ihe axe
y toil and tug
y death, The
d not leave
noel eave
was a
sigelicity.
ap he had
new one,
ired
school-bell rig, bu he cou
and yet the ¥ was not
ened, and the san turned round to hin
and said, **Nov you little rascal, you've
played the truni; off to school with
you, or you'll spent it.” It was hard
enough to beturning away at the
wintry day; bt to be called a litle ras-
cal by the manvhom he had been serv.
ing, was too auch, tres
being so differet fire
have expected yas not likely soon t
forgotien,
The clrcomance
m wha
was long remem-
from that das work, in afterlife,
whenever he s& a merchant over-polite
to his custome g them 10 Lake
a little brandy and throwing his goods
down on Lhe ¢« he used to say to
hunself: * an axe to
grind.” “If haappened 10 See a Ian
who, in privatdife, was a tyrant, mak-
sofessions of attacl
Franklin thought to
would set the
people a-turnid grindstones ¥ Or if be
saw a man chen to fill a responsible
position withot a single qualification
to render him €her respectable or use-
ful. “Alas!” thught Franklin,
deluded peopltyou are doomed for a
for a
lesson from
beggin
uler
Iba man bas
great
to liberd
ing,
nent
shy
poor
boody.” Let s learn a
Franklin's exgrience, and when we
flaering us or praising us
too much, let ¢ suspect that they have
some design oftheir own to serve by
it. or, as Fraunlin puts it, want uf to
turn the grindione for them.
Franklin live between the years 1700
and 1790, Theabove story is, 1 think,
likely to be th correct origin of the
phrase, ‘axes Ligrind,
s— ——
From Qumt Old Nantucket,
one hears
Apropos of Nantucket,
“You see, wéare somewhat out of
islanders;
that we think o locking our doors al
night.”
Last falla mi was tried for petty
larceny, sii senenced by the judge to
three montis Iniail, A few days alter
the trial the judge, accompanied by the
sheriff, on His way to the Boston
boat whedthey jassed a man Sawing
wood. |
The sdvyer stopped his work,
touched Hi hat nd said: “Good morn-
ing, judg
The jude looked at him a moment,
passed on short distance, then turned
hek ward, with the question:
slitiff, Isn't that the man I
pd three months In jail?”
“Yes, plied the sheriff, hesitat-
ingly, ‘yell that's the man; but you
s, we—we haven't any
how, and we thought it a
s to hire somebody to
keep the j& for three months just for
this one nih; so I gave him the jail
4 him that if he'd sleep
the Ge 1
of a single loiter 80
despa
The aadith
pronunciation of a word
very step.
or into Saver d a
transforms
A BURPRISED FEXCER.
A ——
The Lesson Taught 8 Young Ameri-
can Swordsman-Disarmed.
In the bank where he was 4 clerk a new
man was given a somewhat inferior
position,
lish was decidedly lame, but
geldom spoke that it made little differ-
| ence,
penchant for fencing, and compared
with most fellows of his age and po-
sition was unquestionably a good
swordsman,
a most insufferable braggart, and his
\one topic of thought and conversation.
He bad about him a very patronizing
air, which he proceeded to inflict upon
the inoffensive Frenchman, and his fa-
miliar slaps on the back evidently dis-
pleased the stranger. Finally a par-
little Frenchman’s shoulders produced
{ 88 response a stinging slap in the face,
| which left the red mark of a small
otherwise deathly
young American,
found his desk, and shortly afterward,
| through a friend, challenged
| Frenchman to mortal combat,
The
The details were ar-
| runged, the Frenchman, as the chal-
| said haughtily.
of the hot blooded
the cashier of Lhe
to the surprise
| young challenger,
| acted as the latter's second. The
| came and the hour
| stepped to position, saluted, and the
blue blades crossed with that smooth,
| gliding sound which 1s music to the ear
| of the true swordsman, The French.
| man, whose familiarity with his
turning bis opponent's point with a
or pervousness which were poetry in
| nection. The young man grew bolder,
| tis thrusts began to bave an air of fe-
| rocity which seemed to anger
junge, and the young American barely
partied.
the writ were too too much for him;
there was a sharp snap and the top
| bution of his coat few across the room.
Angry at thus evident trifling, the bul
ton’s owner made a spiteful lunge,
whieh was quickly parried and the
next button was snapped away. One
| after another the shining bullons
his natty blue braided jacket were cut
off t ' the Frenchman's ready poir
Decidedly “rattled’ at his opponent’
skill ana the irrepressible smiles of Ll
seconds and surgeon. the young clerk
now, with greater rapidity and
caution. made ferce junges, any one of
which would have driven the sharp
rapier through the body of the cool
Frenchman, while the little man,
qu etly parrying, with the sharp point
of his weapon siripped the front of the
young man’s jacket to ribbons.
The contest had lasted some Lwenly
minutes when suddenly the Frenchman
caught the swiftly advancing point of
his opponent, turned it aside, slipped
his own sword quickly down along the
other's blade, turning it with a quick
wrist motion so that it partly wound
around it, and with a sharp wrenching
motion tore the weapon away and sent
it flying across the floor. Then he
saluted, threw his weapon down and
left the room. It subsequectly trans
pred that the foreigner was—and is—
a member of a once noble French
family, acaptain in the French army,
and his teachers have been some of Lhe
best swordsmen in France, The young
American has not challenged any inis-
eellaneous foreigners since, and is less
inclined to talk of his experience or
{ skill.
on
$
a
i
less
a
DIPHTHERIA:
Symptoms and Causes of the Dreaded
Contagions Disease.
—————————
| illness ¢ eclares itself to be diphtheria,
| our granamothers used jo call “*douncy,”
| says a physician in the Providence Tele-
| gram.
| tired that they ache, too, with occasion-
| Appetite is gone and sleep
| begins, which slowly increases, until
| one morning there isa sore throat. Not
| an ordinary one, that only hurts to
| swallow something, but one that gives
| pain on pressure, and aches even when
Lit is pot touched, Look in that throat
| now. Press down the tongue with a
tablespoon handle, so that, with a strong
light, not only the tonsils, those senti-
pels on eather side of the entrance to
the windpipe, can be seen, but the soft
palate and back of the throat. Showing
intensely red, a dark scarlet color in-
deed, lies the inflamed mucus mem.
brane, and scattered upon it, so thick
hiere that they are patches, and there
clearly separated by fiery red, are gray-
jsh white spots. Of all sizes from wheat
grains to navy beans, they present the
certain signals that diphtheria is on
hand,
Now comes the danger to others
There is no disease known more certain.
ly rapidly contagious than this, with
the additional evil that from a light
case may be contracted the most ig-
pant type known, and utmost caution
should be observed,
be promptly
doctor to authorities and plentiful sup-
ply
should
empty
enter the sick room upon an
stomach, nor remain there longer
than absolutely needful.
Ketp away
from the sick one’s head, and if forced
to go near hold the breath until again
ata
minutes
aired,
from where the tongue ends to any point
| in the bronchial tubes that can Le seen,
{ which grows of a dirty ash color and be-
1 gins to clog respiration, ‘lors
: off, he bleeding surface beneath sels WO
I evel
ulmost
sapping
: until
cif
Billi
furciuily
| work and promptly replaces it
| increases, food is taken with the
difficulty, exhaustion comes on,
vital force with lightning #
| death comes Lo close Lhe scene by
i focation or sheer friends
weil be troyel
stops wilh a single victim 6 Lhe
of tins diseaner Ji
i due to specific poigon, as |
eases are known to be but it
the child of filth and can be Lracea in
€VEery case Lo some such source
of the most sudden deaths I ever
came from digging a well in a City ¥
that opened into a near privy vaull,
pile of garbage, frow
table, lies unoticed near a windov
til it decays and sends death in
direction, A sewer Lrap refuses
i in the cella? and every oue sleeps in
atmosphere polluted with se
is more deadly because iL 13
and cannot be smelled or
| carried miles from a putrel
Ww ear £
{ Ioay content if
i Caine
wail 321
Jot 3k
1 hiree
HAW
ard
A refuse Lhe
til
Cvery
10 Work
an
wer gas that
colorless
the gern i
ying carcass
until it finds congenial soil, where it
| straightaway alights and sels { work.
| Any one of these causes seems compe-
tent to produce diphtheria, but it must
be remembered that no pods an kill
unless it finds a fit subject, © out of
a family one may be taken and the
other left—because one 18 SLIong
he weaker suc
i can resist what t
What can be doue to
| scourge? Much, Itis the di
| one to preserve the house in
lives in good repair, 50 thal wher
come it may not fall, The
be mainta:aed in hig
i these trying mo
i every
hi he
h con
dition
18 of cold and
come, by nourishing food, long |
sleep and careful avoidance
| habit that weakeus, Said a man W
| toulay: “Doctor, do you
| eruption on my skin comes from drink
{| “Yes,” 1 answered, “liquor would
| certainly cause it, and if you expect lo
| get well you rust absolutely abandon
drivk in every form.” *' Well, doctor,
] try, but God knows it will be &
hard job.” That
makes people Liable
poor blond and weak nerves
from drink. Let it
having done your
and do not fear,
Is G0
think
is OLS
to diphiheria-
thal
alone,
LOC]
People
contract dis
¥ pt
PAL
not
ease, which § i strictly true, for they
But they exercise
every precaution that experience teaches
-just the ones I have been giving you
re for example—and usually get clear
S80 may Jou every one-
self
ob
wv
| have (heir are,
%
on a evel
if vot
ie
place 3
i
Le CAS
throat.
made of
LOmmon sail
Cidar vinegar
TT ¥ be LF]
Bind a re d
Ee a #1
HECK ANG KOC]
§ Crone
gone,
Ee —— ann
FOOD FOL THOUGHT.
Samuel J. Tilden left $5,000,000
Speech is the greatest Load
man.
Trust
Him.
To be really yourseil you mus
different from those around you
Him when you cannot
A ‘good man gone wron oo" 18 1
iy a bad man found out.
The simple faith of a little child is
the world's truest homage.
Good breeding is like affection—one
cannot have too much of it,
Tne ups and downs of life are
| than being down all the time.
betler
Dreams are oftlitnes the fullilment
of a prophecy within ourselves,
Never think that you can make your
| gelf great by making another less,
A litle knowledge wisely used is
better than all knowledge disused.
Fun is the holy-day wisdom of the
| gage, the fool's folly, sud everybody’s
puppet.
The lucky man would be happy if he
| wasn't always afraid his luck would
| change.
The French have a proverb thal not
the day only, but all things have thelr
morning.
He who receives a good turn should
never forget it; he who does one should
never remember it,
It is with ancestry as with autiquity
~—nations are proud of one, and indi-
viduals of the other.
Think well over your important steps
in life, and, having made up your
mind, never look behind.
It is a low benetit to give me some-
thing; 1t is a high benefit to enable me
to do something for myself,
Great men are they that see that
spiritual force is stronger than material
force, that thoughts rule the world,
He who does a good deed is instantly
ennobled ; he who does a mean deed, is
by the action itself contracted and self-
degraded.
Faith spans the space between the
real world of sense and the more real
world of hidden life, so that a man
syning on the solid ground, may
close his eyes to sense, and fall at the
feet of the Unseen, and worship in the