Camping Song. Has your dinner lost its savor? Has your greeting lost its cheer? Is your daily stunt a burden? Is your laughter half a There's a medicine to cure you, There's a way to lift your load, With a horse and a saddle and a mile of open road. sneer? Is your eyeball growing bilious? Is your temper getting short? Is this life a blind delusion, Or a grim, unlovaly sport? There's a world of health There's a help that cannot fall, In a nd On mountain wand beauty, day beh the burros, Triads a dus trall man, we free nless 're going and large, are resting Come out, old To a land that's Where the ral On a When we camp In God's own You will find vourself again, With a fire an blanket and the lain! —Blisa | ader, SKIS NOWY mountain marge. country, the | upon Carma: n the Re — 25e52525e5e5252S The Last Watch on the “Empress” ScheSa5ehdhds2sadsases252525252525¢ Str i, tempest-bufteted, leaking] etopmast i 325252525252525 splin vith four hold, weeks from vily into tha fog of the Calcu the Do erson tug in the mo if you are Hardy The first thing had vanish tant pufiing ie whisper, and load straightener SWing flung back od iis watch: He the cabin, where came to a tongueless him strike | the if he were! keeping ing an ocean voy-| age; it would break the monotony of his ight. With a rusty iron marlin spike, picked up from deck, he | beat out eight clear, silvery notes | from the sea-mellowed brass, The night wore on. Every thirty minutes Hardy paused near the bin) nacle, and the bell pealed out ita warning beneath his vigorous arm-- one stroke at half past eight, two at nine, and %0 on. But the hours moved slowly. He! was just on the edge of the channel, and up to midnight there was plenty | of passing-—passenger-boata, freigh ters, tugs towing lines of barges: he| could hear and tell them all, although | the fog hid them from view. Toward | ng came to The fancy to $ hours upon . ng i watch dur the twelve o'clock they thinned out, hulk but for the were present in scores, leaping bewiskered the deserted They gray, rats, with no half-tame 1n- house animals, brutes, born one another, offensive impudent shipboard. and bred Hardy watched them. grew tired, and at eight strokes on the into the cabin. In the floor stood a huge rat. shouted at it. ta head inquiringly without a sign fear, and the captain's stateroom Hardy stretched himself dilapidated haircloth sole midnight, bell, went down middle of The watch man then trotted leis armchair, the of near by and command of He lost was sud the flung remaining article set his lantern to fancy bark down tried himseif in on a foreign consciousness for a time, but YOYage. denly ris roused arp pain in hand he Fo ¥ sole} 1¢ KDUCK Ie He looked at nearly two : man's life their open Hardy apstan-bar ick of the massacre } outsidy the illumine As many as seemed unthi continued witl His he bar, arms were wear! but he had he would ut he was swimmer, the was cold, and the shore uearty a mile FWAY. ut something once His breath coming He stumbled and almost fell, down! He shuddercd at and wielded his An incautious lantern, and whirled it with a jJingling crash The watchman's face was now turned toward the bow As he shot a glance forward through the mist, must be done at waa short bar sweep desperately caught over the of glass Once on its top he would be gate. Could he gain it? One jump fook him off the cabin to the break; another plant. ed his feet cn the main deck amid ships. His enemies pursued him. The black square of the open hateh yawned before him. Hound it he dart ed, threading his way among the rope coils. Once or twice he was almost thrown headlong. Close before him rose the fore. castle. It was six feet high. Could he reach its summit? He must. Up he leaped and flung his hands over the edge. Beneath him the bit at his feet and hung at the bot toms of his trousers effort threw his left leg up the side of the roof, caught his heel, and a moment later lay there in safe ty, half-fainting. There Hardy spent the of the night. With the dawn a fresh landbreeze dispersed the fog, and fell the rats dis appeared hold search scattered When the Orion the off at six o'clock pO gi 8 of life, as the the city he as the tide into the rice grains to took watchman | the decks showed Late that drew away load, a of rags up a land, The wa evening toward match soaked in with last touched to a kerosene beacon visible afar over ea and the funeral pyre of the her bul masts, yutline flames danced along streamed wl in ounding gloom and up her she luried the before ainst But i them conflagration touch overboard, allve the rats leaped relit surface forms for was Few the reached ‘EV OT sea ' i tnwhile bark Companion, HENRY SLAGE DEAD. The Noted Spiritualistic Medium Dies in a Michigan Sanatarium, Aged BO, j y 8 i spirituails in the Henry S New York A Tragedy of inp ree Bl: at South d reserve animals for at lions roaming He obtained hem back to mangled and body man was then On the remains being re | covered, they were found to be those | of a named Livesey, who was in the employ of the Tower Company He had been heard to his intention of going into cage lions were kept, and ale night he sean to stockyvard another of fear afterward coming from within, and short. ivy afterward a man was run- ning away from the stockvard. The manager of the Tower Company gtates that Livesey had no right go into the cage-—London Pall Mall Gazette, . “yankes Doodle™ an Irish Jig. Mr. W. H. Grattan Flood writes: Will you allow me to point out to you that the tune of "Yankee Doodle” {x an old Irish jig of the early elgh- teenth century, well known In Ireland still as “All the Way to Galway? Your statement that it was composed by Dr. Schuckburgh is a slip. You probably meant that he wrote the doggerel words, which is generally admitted, but he merely adapted his verses to the Irish jig, which was printed an “Yankee Doodle” In 1782, and was subsequently introduced by Arnold Into his "Two to One" Low don Truth. kpool Shore * men are kept, he was te rorio Agere find the three about the yard and where drove the of a assistance cage, half-eaten the discovered carter express the where the on enter the was with wore Saturday man Cries heard, geen to ————— LIVE UP TO HIGH IDEALS, Good living is art, are few who get the out takes genius to do that, genius is sanity One money 1 lack the an best They In muy and still real refine ments of life, & panacea to Nor real fore, It character perverted taste the more always attain of life largely conscience can ohiect poverty and d« ps nd the ends There must and of Individual Such a condition 1s attained by any one uals as a whole, temperament sénse that it ill society living Good 1 Aree variety living does u i 3 % mnirond 3 yf 168 poorly COOK EQ but a few whols je dish well house poorly well ken nuct {fo marry Bulletin, “But,” he ads erious affectation ANDOYANCY Here sharming in vors fr resp manner irawback apparent] polis It BION if ahe tea times being her Men tion of tremely An affected is unpleasant Faults men but affectation Try and bear a simple, natural more fo bo admired one As a rule the affected the one who is not quite sure of her self. She is nervous and feels she may not do right * thing, may make iistakes In etiquette, ete, and in or man Is have in is not « of in mind, girls, manner is than may i them that much an affects ne won 4 the would be grad manner that deceives has doing woman she ia The truly well-bred quaims as to whether the right thing or not. She dod#s it naturally thought as what makes on others, A friend who from Italy had and without to lately returnd pleaure has the Margherita. “She 1s,” sald this person, “ one of the most charmingly natural, unaf fected women I ever met, and while talking to her 1 forgot she was a queen and thought of her simply as a very delightful woman. She laugh: ed and chatted in her pretty foreign way, A queenly woman, as well ag a womanly queen.” Don't try to give people the idea that you are a very grand person. Be content with letting them see that you are just a natural, sweet mannered girl Delleve me, they will much prefer you to be the latter. Be yourself; don’t keep wondering what sort of an imoression you are making. You can tell perfectly when vou are laughing or talling afectedly and pretending to what ~~Manchester Union —— NEW YORK pASHIONS The color note is particuifly strong in the newest The il ny +h will and the Dis you are not BOWS new bit of pink ranges to deep Ameri wood brown ored gowns, wri wealth of ¢olor is splendor of the ateris With With BEOWDS ing 4 for win warmth being The coming t was off iA mnt ££ in being fut ’ tolieite ON Large lor or shades one color and in a were often numerous Tats were the flow tint {rimmed POCKET. woman has in to wear her Neither a watch A WATCH The difficulty finding a suitable watch is provera nor a entirely safe, while if the watch is worn on a chain there is no convenient piace to put it. A that a way ial fob is daintiest pocket imaginable by sew. ing together around the effes two It tle circular appliques of embroidery. These may be In butterfly or leaf de- eign if preferred any of the hundreds of motifs which may be found in any of the shops. Lace may also be used, bur it should, of course be of the strong heavy sori, The little pocket, or bag, can be stantly fastened to the left side the shirt waist front by two of the tiny faney cuff pins, or shirt waist pins, as they are now usually called It will lie flat against the blouse, and the watch can then be slipped In to it, where it will be perfectly safe and convenient. The effect of the gold or enameled waich oase through the open work Is charming. or in of FASHION NOTES. Charming litle frocks are made of old-fashioned delaine, The daintiost little Watleau fans are round and scallopy like a shell when open. King of the Penguins, emperor” penguin, one of the discoveries antdretie expedition, of Capt. Scott's recent was the subject interesting illustrated lecture Wilson before gress in London four feet pounds or more, of an by Dn thological bird stands weighs eighty with black has, seen atl a startling resemblance orn The high, and posture distance, a the recent about its cout agd erect when io a of the pen great girdle ant to depend “emperors” upon the These world man guin of pack i« live nds the ARC seem food on crustaceans crevices arctic ¢ dally for caught in The female lays is caught o font + 44 feet, so 1 i the Ww nic h never and mothers Advancing the Farmers’ Interests. agents salesmen are & of the Ameri 3 A TIN fr I BABY ONE SOL SORE Could Boils on Head—Spent Not Shut Her Eyes to Sleep—Forty $i00 on Worse—~Cured 5 Doctors by —liaby Grew Cuticura For Avoid Yellow Fever, Antise ptic Remedy For Family and Farm SLOANS 0,103, KILLS PAIN. Dr. EARL S. SLOAN 618 Albany Street, Boston, Mass. 8 Hi hei
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers