The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 02, 1893, Image 3

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    GAINS AND LOSSES.
Come the hours when wo sit indbe shadow
That falls like the droop of a wing
er the nest that {3 naked and empty
When the fledglings have |
sing,
ihon woo is the heart for the old time,
Che time that was busy and gay,
With the world aud its clamor about us,
And we in the midat of the fray.
in tho shadow, wa count up our losses;
Wo creep whore wo marched with the boat.
Oh! the ache when wo try to walk softly,
The ary of our soul against rest.
Aud we griave for the golden heads vanishod
tar chuldren aro women and men,
And wistful and doap 18 the yearning
Yo have thom but children again.
And we fra oor the fruitless endeavor,
he labor that satistied nos,
the shadow grows thicker ani longer,
And the blur in our eves is a blot
On the liagaring splendor of sanshing,
Fiat taps with its lanees of light
ys
Aa aftar-glow radiant and bright.
Ix: we sed nothing oles but our losses,
We monraing there, fools and purblingd,
With the orown and the Kingdom before us,
{he conflict and turmoil behind?
1 the harvest lament for the sead time,
Mra bud aaa blithe than the leaf?
Lara joy when the plough breaks the fur-
row,
d nous when the haod binds the sheaf?
*
wings that are folded and drooping,
spring wide in the evening's uplift;
‘sch out to tha slars that are showing
{he skios in a silvery rifi.
No day of our days is so hallowed
is that when wo seo, just before,
ba light in the house of our Father
shine out through His ha
Margarot B. Bangster
1¢
il
su door,
in Harper's Bazar.
™ hb]
THE ESCAPE.
BY WwW.
The last palisade —over! and
sng stiffened felt lissom once more with
the life of twenty-five. Now for a sl
wud cautious creep along the gully by
«hich water came into the township;
iter on he would bethink him of that
rrow escape at the third doorway.
hisht! a man's head in the road, and
bent down once mu behind the
rih-ridge and pushed his up
ream with difficulty, showing as little
{ himself as possible. It was an offi
ming into the town late,
Very silently; the moon was
me to one just escaping, but, prai
ord, who r bold E
men, the guard had not yet di
wir loss, and the water was bea
Never return thaoks
The officer veined his hb on
spe, and, turning in hissaddle, glan
wk over the shadow-dappled land so
that his eye, running up the shiny ribb
stream, suddenly saw the black
boring away against its current,
Instincts of destructic ¢
rves of his hand; he drew a pistol
tired, sending a splash of
foho's head, while the el
wriress-walls and lost th
voodlands behind, A
wat of Ban Jago; Jobn rose oul
stream and ran to
Spaniard spurre
sword, eager for
im when caughi
DELAPLAINE SCULL.
limba
w
Ww
re
wav
er
watches ov
£4
pif {oo
FIRE
TROD along
Wil
Th
Lh urawn
ORS,
owed spot
il the
noment John like
rushed desperatoly at the
eined up all at on i
aig blade——vainly
+ &h
doubled
Pe
shman ducked under th
nen popped out, seized his f
foot, antl with a sudden §
the soldier sidew ays out
aid on to his head, Ther
© ked, while the victor
widle, beat to carth and snatches
sword, mounted the animal and stuck the
weapon's point into its haunch: off
he horse with a suort of pain, while the
latter of pursuers arose behind, finally
sinking away as the pine trees flew by
Then, as the moon entered a thick eloud
bank, they came fo an open prairie, and
waward into darkuoess they went without
jer
shot
Ban Jago. Ile went along the chasm
and after an hour or two stood on the
platform; bare rock and nothing else; he
went on higher still, with hunger assert-
ing itself, miles and more miles yet, The
sun came out and sent yellow rays neross
the pinnacles, casting purple shadows as
queerly shaped as they, He climbed the
highest of these rock-teeth and saw a
vast upward plain, with an orange-tinted
rim; here and there gray twists, where a
slight valley came, and a few lonely
stones—really great boulders of a prime
val sea; he looked behind and only a
faint green tinge on that horizon indi
cated the grass country of San Jago, but
he felt that even now they might be at
the cleft in the rock-wall, those Span
iards who treated captives so hardly,
there was no course but forward
Forward then he went, and the
came thick and soft underfoot so that he
had to use the long, Spanish blade to
help him in walking. At
became an emecumbrance
snnd be
last even
and
the knot had be
5
ne
have cast it away, only
tlc time to undo, so he Kept it out of in
dolence and ebbing wi
{ came a harder surface which was
i to the feet, and then he would
| a space and try to hope i might
{ across this place; ‘nt
wits
restful
sink for
2
then he W on
| and a hot, gray sky overhead.
The sun heated his wet rags: they
{ came burning moist; they blisterad
i back, sore already from the pavment
! yesterday's forced labor in
he had to turn round at
| his back a relief by
| front,
At last the whole
him, came
| seemed treading
| under a vermilion sky, and
pains of thirst deadening the
{ hunger he lay down
| first rock he reached. There
{ till no shadow was left, shrinking aw AY
from the hot, encroaching ve till he
{ was at last covered by it
his
the fortress;
and give
being roasted
fines
swam
place
ther moments
he
whnste
Ww hen
aver # crimson
wit
ache of
he stayed
low
it, then rose
and piodded along through the
| ing hours with bunt
i old shoes,
His wits
senses felt that the whole land
vast upward slope, a cont
pressures back, it were, hi
hetook. In the late after
ht pulling tendency, a
SCOrCly-
tin his
“
were all ablur,
lay
inual
as to eact
some step
he
that he
then ¢
felt as
ame a deli at
ie
ong
nothing was
not
| He
#33
#1
$2 oete bd 3
signtnead edness
gether with the
in every flog
The s
i cooled, the
small Later
1 rid globe in aj
pearcd, and
wdow 1
reli
sins went down,
ple haze ; the stars ap
illowed one
on the
Mar
:
he fi
Looking behind, the sight of. the fear
fully come through filled him with terror,
only to fall again like a child,
awhile his tortured frame could
him no more; there he lay, deliriously
mumbling about streams, and lnkes, and
his bare head Hot
with its rays,
suffering, and hardly able to think at all.
Indeed, he did not think, but merely
followed up his instinct when he crawled
up on to his feet and staggersd along,
other, hanging his hands and head, moan
ing in a dry, broken way, like a cut hel-
| lows, yet still going on, And his
i dim eye received a refreshing momentary
then
coolness—a pluat growing green at his
feet!
Down he sank upon it, seized it, chiewed
the there drib
of earth here Auother
ugrht he raised
vers little
there,
eve:
dusty leaves;
and
his
| lets
bit of green of
h hea
away the platean on
broke off sheer, le
i desert, for down there,
i
his heavy
A:
which tood
had ¢
he
rosso
were Hains,
and bevond
green
palms, and a
the blue Pacific!
rnver
with
irids
bony, cracked claws and gurgled
trinmph. He had chented tl
{ and the Thirst Lands; hurrah!
And there were more pl
10 Spans
plants nearer the
i
ti
ed
| blade
fall
to them he hastened, with the
still draggin
ol
&i
prone on a little
from his wrist, to
group of them, aud
ton 1 huge pull adder lying mimost
| ble along ax esrth.grove, nstantly the
i beast drew back its head ane
then fled.
A rage filled him; he i
in both shaking hands, brought
at the marked missed it,
ward, and the steel bent and broke under
him as the enemy away. But
| after it strength
or
invisi
on the bare leg:
i
ed the sword
! it down
feil for
back, it
i
i
1
he panted with
twisted
vor
revenge; caught it 3 it
{
fs
larore stone HR stone §
| : tone, pu stone «
i
i
till a stupor came over him
ith his d
t} border
ae
eatrover the sleep
of the 3 aed
i . .
Palm Const, as the
their tongu
Nuch +
Pwenty-two Billlons Insuragee,
gaa
EA) fuNy iY)
Whether or
the fertility
Bre corr
Was nor
has been
Ch wed
This condition of
Mis
| term of year
creasing
through a
1 3 LF
nerensing rates and de
with »
agency involving
agents, brokers, and middicmen of high
and low degree, have each contributed
numer Causes, ¢n
together
Ey#tem
COMMIRsIons,
Several miles; the horee began to breathe
bard and sob, then settled into a slow
trot.
More miles. The trot became a walk,
and the walk more difficult; more miles
vet, ve
ip
gruy-~there. were low hills and shallow
ravines, then came rocks, and ledges,
wad cliffs; the gray speedily thinned, the
horse stopped at a cll wall,
for un opceaing: there was none.
raised his hands, licked a finger of the
cleanest, thought he fell a faint fresh.
ness on the left side of it, and so turned
in that direction. After some hundred
rards he came to a crack in the wall; he
pushed into it. There was hardly room
scent, and the wearied creature he rode
stumbled aod threw him iato a pool. of
water,
The shock of the plunge brought Lim
together again. He struggled beneath
the water, came up at last, half choked,
wad pulled himself
with the sword still "hanging from his
wrist. Looking for the horse, he saw
uothing but a vieleut commotion on the
water surface, which presently cessed; a
few air bubbles fame to the top and
iwoke, that was all; his rescuer had
ended ita life in the depths from which
be had escaped.
Then ho sat for a space and thought;
he could not stay there, they would track
iim to the rock wall and cleft; was there
another way to the other side! The
«old, shut-in lake was quite still now,
the cleft by which he had come in was
dimly visible across the dark level; he
stood up and looked behind him; the
cleft continued there like a narrow road
upward, Then he knew that he had
come to the on source of the stream
i
th It
he
in the dark,
iH moonrise;
them
soy 4
"os
his body against
was of no use going «
lay ther
kept him from feeling the hardness of it
At last he could bear |
rose and ran on, then presently
against ope of the and
| stunned, as he had fallen
i the sand tracks. Still tho man was
{ beaten. When he had recovered
wiped his heavy coves with
of his hand and felt his
talong through that rocky
ttapping his sword on each
i and following the passages, holding on
| to his star with all the buildog instinct
of his race. At last the moon came out |
and lit the plain, showing it mounting |
up and up in a long, slow slope till the
aye lost it in darkness, Lut covered so
far with stones, stones, stones, like the
| graveyard of the whole haman race, So
| he went on, rattling his tongue aboot in
| iris arid mouth, wondering why he did
i not lie down snd die at once, why he
| did not at once’ full down on his blade
{ and end his portion of life, yet persever.
ing all the time, no uaworthy man of his
countryside and yoeman name. He had
no visions now, in the night; they were
reserved for the treacherons day, when
the guiding stars should be hidden,
So through the long hours he travelled,
and at last shuffled out into places where
the stones, that dreadful maltitude all
exactly alike, stood in groups only. The
moon aped on her course, and the ground
underfoot sent a ring from his steel-staff
«it was rock.
Then the stones ceased altogether and
a series of low ridges came; they taxed
his shaky legs and arms to their full, low
though they were, so that he lay downto
rest on bone fu he got upon it. Then he
came to the long ridge, highest of all
this huge inclined land, and saw its edge
winding away to right, to left, for miles |
in the moonlight, nnd the rock floor
t no longer, but
stones fell,
not
way |
maze,
‘hat passed mystoriously Wlleground,
Where the to i an et po
ps
slopiog downward far below for
a
the underwriters complain,
How They Strike In China.
There is an impression in Amesica that
in China, My ex
perience is quite to the contrary, says a
in the Engineering Magazine,
developed fully is the art of striking.
Whenever they want anvthing they
i
did not appreciate at first the importance
one came round they not only struck,
but two hundred of them came up and
mobbed my house, No violence was at-
tempted, but the interchange of vigws
was like the chattering of ten thousand
monkeys. 1 yielded. The miners
would strike if they did not like
their shift boss, strike if they
had a bad dinner in the
company kitchen, strike for any
reasons Once when mine, mill and far:
nace were in full blagt the miners all
struck for some insigniticant caunse,
Tired of expostulation, I sent for the
head men and told them gravely that 1
had no objection to the strike if the men
wished it, but that the mill and furnace
could not stop. They had to go right
on, and it was very costly to keep them
at work ‘without ore, 1 said that I did
not think it was right to make the com.
pany pay the loss, and that I should fine
ihe workmen three days’ pay for every
day they were off duty. There was a
reat hubbub., The miners came to know
f what the head man told them was
true, They went to work the next day,
and striking was free in that mine ever
after, bur each man paid for his own fun.
In the end, however, they devised a more
poten mode of warfare, They went in-
the mine with delightful Inrity.
They put in their time, but d fot pit
out their ore, and our product fell
seventy-five per cent, :
pires at His Home in Boston.
Heart Failure Put: an End to a Life of
Honor and Usefulness.
Hshop Phillips Frocks dled at
{ devce, 230 Clear nn on treet, Boston,
i o'clock A. M., of hear! allure,
nt
brought on
LL
by un fit of cougting. The deuth was entiro-
ly unexpected.
He was taken
| bat nothing s*r.ous showed itself,
A. Beach
| therstic
i
il
iy with sore throat
Dr. H,
discovered diph-
Thurs
hi« yhveician,
sidered no consulta.
H. Fiz,
systome, and con
tion avis ble, ani called in Dr. BE
Atl this time no hing » rious was
| aud Dr, Fitz remains l cooly a
Dr. Beach
About 6:30 J'clo
with a coughing
shor
110.
wus with hin the euatire night,
seiz d
pelt wh cb lasted (cr a few
$. Dr.
caused {rom heart
‘# ths patient was
moments and his heart ceased 10 bea
Beach said that death was
»
ithe rin, IN tis
d
failure and uct wip diphthers
membrane was discover Uy & superficia
examination,
Bishop Brooks preiched his 'ast sermon as
the Churca of the Good Bhepberd on ortes
street, last Tuesd vy. Toe at thw
Bishop's nouse was one of gri f ard deson-
tion. With u the house a few of the B.swop's
most intimate £ lod, who seemnied Lardly 0
realize the were gathered
groups ws the diff reat rooms, The spiric
rast pervaded the ssemblage was one of
cimplets and overs helmiog sorrow, they
did pot comprobend the fact that Bishop
Brooks was dead, nod againand again as.ed:
“Is the Bishop really dead?’
Soat their beloved pesior and friend had
{ left hem forever seeiiod 10 them too awful,
and they were unib ¢ 10 grasp the
ance of hii deat.
PC BG
1g tide J0a8, in
on—
The Rizlit Rar, Phill
LL.D, was born mn Bs ou
1885, He graduated at Harvard College
the Ula of 10056, took the divinity cour.e
the Eplwopel Theological S:munary
Alexauvdria, Va. snd entered the ministry
as assistant to Dr. HW, McVicker, in Plula-
welph a,
Wh on bot 20 vears old be succesded the
Rev. Dr. Viut nes rector of Holy Tronity
Churen, New York In ING Lis tecame Forte
tor of Holy Trini.yv in Bs ton. He.
an clecdon as assntant Beh p of Pennsyl-
vania in 1556
Bish wp Brooks received thedsgreacf D D
i from U. fon College in 1570; H.rva d
Ozford 1555
member «
ciety und
emy.
He was deputy to the Gener:
from Massachusetts irom 150
of the 8 ana for many
t the M
December |
i
+
2
i
a
ne
eclined
1877;
and coumba 1857, and wis a
i the Massachuse ts H stor eal =
a fellow®of the American Ac wi
i Conven 3
and meanbe
yo
ng committe
{ member of
ion
st
«d I}
Ho wa ect
fron
Council
He wy Ji Bera in
by Bistio;s Willams, of Cosnsct
of Khoi Is'ani: Wh pple,
IMtiejoho, of Long Isan.; |
Niles, of New Hamps!
vans tter, of Ne
VOoiuines «
oston, and as
Yu
Hoy
3 nary oi
Fotler, nos
de p Aoenrs
Lhe
We
ik vi
en yew ug
offers ay wea
Bish
the key
understand and
nan ifs
The work of P
never tounded by
Hw» chin
oreacher Le exe
’
the Fy iwcopal t
eRe Te
differ in
ret (
Zone «
opi t
the aniverss)
Bishop Brooke le a proxit
impressi g itself marve
When he entered von ¥
Trinity Church be found his 6
sue of the most conservative and a
parish & of Ame ea hrough tis
{rinity Chu ch h « for years teen no
ts marked couriesy ard i
ty.
[1]
geberou
FEOPLE AND EVENTS.
Hammzsr Brecuen Srowr's mind con
tindés to slowly fail, Bhé is 8... One of her
divertions is the singing of old sougs Ly her
sinier, iy
Boston photographers are forbidden to
| work on sundays any more. The city has
#0 orde. oy, and the chisel of police has not
¢ Bed the photographers that ve will entorce
the or. er. Tuis action is seem ingiy the out.
come of a gen Tul moveront ou the part of
citizens of Boston, who bave majo many
outpinints concerning the matter,
Miss Frongxce Bascos, who will take
the tive of “Pu, D." cext Juns from Juhos
Hopkins University, will be toe Hirst woman
| to receive such au vonor from that lostitu-
| tion. She has been studying in the geolog-
| deal depariment in Baitanore 10r two years,
and had been similarly eugaged for three
more in the University of Wisconsin,
{ Tux Hopkins mansion on Nob Hill, San
| Francisco, Usl., transferrsa to the State Udi
Poyersity regents in (resi lof an art scoool and
| Balery of paitticgs. Edward VF. Scar es,
a who makes the gH als) guarnntees $5 00
i tov five years tusard the expose of Lue
i school I sufficient in. erest be shown by
{ others he has prodiises Wo crease Lue gil,
| the Houpsins Castipy, as it is call d, is ute oi
he most conspi uous buildings in the ty,
and it can Le easily 8.bared ww sult ibs pew
| Lees,
Wary Father Molin zor, the famous faith.
cure physician, ded so few months ago at
Troy Hill, never Pitts urg, it was rumored
thas bs wad acquired wealth amouniiug 10
mili ne, Helatives froin a wstance bave
recentiy Leen vi iting hs late howe 10 secure
sheir supposed inheruance, Bat it bs now
alleged toat there is very libio property in
exulence ng 10 bis estate, and that
nlmost notalog «il be leit when lus dects
are paid, ‘Abe church ot whicn he was pas.
tor wil surrender all bis possessions except
corimin re.des testitying 10 wi aculous cares,
but the courts will be sso to set sside
£3,000 for a suitable monument to wim,
Tux beaviet income tax ever levisd by a
civiuzed government wa. tha. § sd upoa
op. of the United States no 1564, wien,
perhaps for the fir time in human hatory,
that wen
might have
A. T. Stewart's inoue tax {a one
wi 0, hing 6 per cent. of his
Dues i ot Yorg wuo,
renily
ov
yonr was
i
|
|
JUSTICE LAMAR,
tlhim ¥1veniE
Friend in Macon, Ga,
JL
GEC. Lavan
tr Uuintug Clneinnatus Tamar
died at at A clock a few
CYEn ne The deat was =u der
1 in the
extrem, for althouzh he had been siting for
time, Just
Lamar appearad to be
health
Cre
gradual v ga ning
He went from Washi to Maron about
vf Deen VEILING ZL at tae
Vie, a
min belor
am
#1 Vine
rh of tha
,
alteirnonn at abt 3 vg
gar took h iatendin g
i , buat by
fi irient, | ewellyn whom he rae
turned 1o the slit ¢ AL that time,
and during ail the afternoon be was in god
and at dinner G:3) Ww evaniaz
good anpetite, Dr,
ues about 8 o'clock, and
Beige d
WAS
and died at
12 Lhe ool
vareaat,
& met al the doo
wills
wi
Foon,
gprity, inn §
he seemed to bave a
Lieweliyn leit the i
ites later the Justics
@ beart,
our menti
us Quintos Cine naatas
orn in Pawmam County, Ge, Beplember |,
142% He was graduated from the KE nory
¢ in Georgia in 1945, and was adanitte |
i Macon in In 1549 be held
nce i ¢ Bel professor mathe
the University of Missassippi, He
ed to wigia Legislature in
and 1854, hey he returned
ppl, sould in was elects to Cons
fe was re 2. and re-
to take hig Secession
tion his La
3 +
the mienderaie
l.imar was
'
4
Loti
”
to the bag he,
the 1 of
mnt mn
was elect
FS
Mies
gros
signed
to
1855
wetted it
seat in Lhe
State, Later
Army ry
»} > »
Lipsteenih
He resigned
in {he
and app
srt bepch in 1°
sia
Lime
Hoit, wi
He Jow i
2 the Hous
ia
Ka
eve and
a
pildren. 8 Son Aan
SW IArrie
I SOCieLY
i, and
1K
WORK A
ALL the haild ng trades in Chicsgo
demand increased pay on th lat of
aod will also ins st that only u
sha | be omy loyed
Oxe th ussn actor OPPTratlives ars «
of wor« and the genet bw
Muncie, It uferi
the Lake Erie sw itchinen’s sari
Ine Ohio
Zanes
June, i891, tue a
Ammsigamated
BRON en,
I —,
ND WORKERS.
BO
iness intrests «
dina, g Locauss
Are
"
iron and Steel Company's mori
. which had been © sy
agers refusi
pOfe, s.arted
a. a
a! 0G
10 »
= 1
will
he
aon
THE coal miners in the King m ne at Como,
Colorado. where the explosion occurred iad
woek, struck » hen work was rosumed be
Aus, as tuey cual med, 190 mat ¥ nell Wale
pin od in 8 chamber, making it dangerous 10
work,
A pesrarci from Kokomo, Indiana says
that 700 men are out at the Uiamo d Piste
{; ass works The men in the grinding and
po.asaing ba 1s were or lered to com dete
Deuches each in 10 sours nstaa i
wos previously the rue, and their rofosal
bas caused a groeral shut-down of the mils
Gexeaal 3 perintendent Hill, of the Lake
Erie spd We tora Rallroad, appezrs inte
United 8: .te% Lou t at laganap. lis, and
tiled a petition agaiost the Muncie s rikers
snd asked 10r A restraining oruer 10 prevent
thm from inte fering in any way, or in any
way moisting the agents © the company.
up
toy
Pw
order
Skves thousand shop men on thy Union
bh urs on Sa uray,
officinis sv, is male n cessary LY the goa-
eral unsstidactory coudit.on of business on
ths main dee and branches,
the Hig Four and the othe als oi the
sult on the Wabash road,
amounts to $34,000 a year. increase Ww
Calvined,
WORLD'S FAIR.
Mei ————
Tix Kentucky Lgisiature has passed the
Tug Internationat Union of Brickiayers
Tur lilnois Senate 1 a resolution
Fair Sunday Closing Law by & vole of 3
to 19,
Tun Senate of Indiana, by
7. instrucwed its Keprosentatives in Congress
Fair,
Tue United States stosmnshi
tion srrived at Fauch dea
Hbe is on her way to wis country with art
works from France, Italy and Spain, 10 bs
exhibited at the Woria's Far,
Dmecron Gexkral Davis bas
a sta went bowing that of §642, 512 jest of
exhibit space in he World's
only 214,470 (eot remain, 0 be
eX iuitors. Forelg
Constella
Istand,
“
The Aretie Highlanders,
The Arctic Highianders are, from their
enviroement, a nomadic race. They;
rarely have their summer abiding place
where their winter settiements are, snd!
the dwellings for the two seasons sre ofj
entirely different character. Their winter
buts, or igloor, ar of two kinds of con-
struction. Tame | temporary use
while traveling are built of ssow or jee.
Those for permanent use sre located
where the fierce porthinest winds are
tempered by great cliffs, and are buiit of
stone: an entrance to each is bad through
# lcng, low tuenel, and Loth are covered
by turf. The iotefiors are about six
{eet square and Qugh, and lined with
sitins, with the fur out ward, One-half
the interior is taken up by a platiorm on
which the family sleep znd sit, and the
other Lait is used asa receptacie for all
kinds of fiith and refuse. In these con.
stricted quarters five, six aud somehmes
in a terrific heat
and enjoy them-
selves during arctic might,
which lasts from week in No-
vember to the middle of February. This
enjoyment cop:ists in eating, sleeping
and visiting.
As soon as the spring thaws begin, the
roofs of the stone igloos are taken off to
allow the elements cleanse the inter
iors, and the or cupants betake thenselves
to tupics, or skin tents, set up perhaps
miles from their winter habitations,
Thess tupics are made of sealskin with
the fur all scraped off, and ali are made
exactly slike, asd of the same number
of pieces. The interiors
are fitted up
the same as theigloos and are nearly a8
filthy. Indeed, filth snd vermin seem A
nec EN accompaniment of the Eskimos,
Water for washing purposes they detest
with great bheartivess. I belive a cat
could be persuaded to submit to a wash-
ing wore readily than an Arctic High
lander. Only a bribe of uscommon value
will tempt one to undertake a bath, |
tried the experiment on a woman at
“Red CHifl House,” Mr. DPeary’s winter
quarters on ome occasion, aod it was
only when I offered a thimble that the
protesting snd almost tearful creaturs
consented. Crawlisg slowly to a near
by stream she dipped one hand is the
water and hurriedly rubbed it on her
face {rom her eves to her chin, and thea
sorambied back to 1 house as fast as
her feet could carry her, where she
wiped the objectionable liquid off on a
towel belonging to one Mr. Peary's
companions, and demanded her reward,
Her face looked a little brighter, but the
accumulated dirt of ill remained
behind her s.— New York In-
ent.
memset snes
At Minorca the fisherman simply dives
to a depth of seventy feet with a weight
in one hand to carry him down. With
the other hand 1} up as many
pearl oysters as he can carry and brings
the boat,
entific
ar
more Eskimos sweiter
from a small oil lamp,
the long
the first
in
ne
AA €
od
rad
Me DICKS
them up to the
.
WHEREVER the gospel is faithfully
wreached, going to be
$
somebody is
0%
————
2 \I ETE
Mrs. Ogden Snyder
Albany, N. Y
‘‘ | Owe May Life to Hood's
ey
Sarsaparilla
‘ Warde are powerless 1o express the gratl.
tnde | feel toward Hood's Sarsaparilia, for un.
der God, 1 feed and know that to this medicine
* owe my lire, Twelve years ago | began to
los! followed hy nausea at ihe stomach, and
ater with swellings of the frambn, acoom-
panied by severe pain. This gra ually grew
worse until three jesrs ago. Physicians told
me the (ronble wes
Caused by a Tumor
For several months | had been unable to retain
any food of a solid nature. | was greatly
emaciated, bal freounent hemorrhages,
and was satisfied the doctors wers right in say-
ing my & fo was nearly seer. One dara
friend saggested that | try Hood's Sar aparillag
1 did mo, and for Sor 4 days | was sicker than
ever, but 1 kept on and gradually began to feel
better.
i Began to Feel Hungry
Could. after a time, retain solid food, increased
in weight, the saffron hue left my skin, the
Moating subsided, and 1 felt better all over.
For the pat two years my health has been
Hood's Cures
quite god, and 1 have been able al: the time
i do The housework for my family.” Mas O6-
pes SxypEe, No. 10 Judson S56. Athan, Xe Y.
“Hood's Pills are the best afterdinwor Pills, a
whet Alpestion. ones he Ter a ue
at la
remedy which,
shoutto
per oped npon
Child-birth,