Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, November 20, 1895, Image 4

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    -UJ. "-! -
t
-" wtaralta Ihebnd cf Sflmewhers-a
But days or year awayf
Where brown bees ever bam there
'Mons; flowers of endless Ma) T
No matter t Desrta must be ers-el
On seas oar barks will oft be tnased,
Ann many iirrami as jetsam lost.
Ere reaching thee, O sutuewlwral
Far. iim-gnesed realm of Somewhere,
Be ond the preei;t'a pain,
Wi ere dallying sails that eome there
Ne'er leave ihy ports again
V ben ille Is dnoe. and timing's o'er,
l.y some strong band upon thy shore
Jieach out a welcome evermor-
"".L i. nail, in Hruphu
Commerciat-i p-
A FAITHLESS WIFE-
The ennrmeT lay was dying in the
(rest; along the low, far-off line ofjjhe
horizon the iky was full of flanfmg
brightness, that mirrored itself in the
blue waters that seemed to meet it.
Higher up, the sky was full of purple
shadows, shot through here and there
with lines of gold.
Two persons walked along the
beach a man, who saw only the
brightness in the face of the woman
by his side, realizing in a vague way
from her features, that held such a
charm for him, the splendor of the
sunset pageantry.
She was looking out to sea. The
sunset fires seemed to glow beneath
the lashes of her eyes ; its crimson ra
diance made her check bright and
totti-licd licr hair with shifting lights.
I shall be gone three vears," ho
lltn, and great light came Into Ma
race, and lid wliIpored very faintly
but still loud enough for her to heir
him, "Agnes, darling, I have come"
Lack to you. I knew yon would be
true. Come and kiss me, darling."
A cry of pain found its way to the
EARTHQUAKES IK AMERICA
A rotnij"ljUJy' Heroism.
f ftatMr thin ex dom hi mother to
tat at Chart to. Was Pelt at a Dtane J flinhtheria. IT year-old Prank Book, al-
Of 999 SUM
There have been three treat earth
Jakes in the United States during
woman's white lips. In that voice, so ! he present century." said Professor
a-eak and low, and by the words, she
recognized Uie man before her. John
Derwent had same back to her, and be
thought her true! And for a year
she had been the wife of another man,
"Don't yon know me, Agnes?" hi
whispered. "I'm dying, I think.
Won't yon kiss me?"
She sank down beside him and
kissed his face, her tears falling on ii
like rain. Her husband came towardi
her, wonderingly; but she motioueC
him back, and he obeyed silently.
'It's a different coining home front
the one we thought of, darling," Den
went whispered; "but I knew yon
would be true, and I never doubted
yon for a moment, though I didn't gel
any letter for a long time a very long
time, darling; but I knew you would
be true."
lie said these last words in a dreamy
way, and they knew he was drifting
out to sea again out to sea, past all
wreck and storm ; and on this voyage
there would be no coming back
Every word was like a knifo-thrusf
in the heart of the woman who nac
been so faithless, and whom he thought
so true.
"I'm sorry, dear," he said, a mo.
nient after, opening his eyes and smil
ing in her face; "but we can't help it.
aari
filbert, the geologist, to a writer for
be Washington Star. "One that
ras very remarkable occurred in 1811
cd lttl2 near the bead of tne delta
though alck enough to die, tried to walk
four miles to his farm home. Two hours
later be was found beside, the road
with blood-soaked clothing, having fal
len from exhaustion, and Buffered a se
vere hemorrhage. Young Rook la a son
of Mr. and Mrs. Hyatt Rook, who live
on the Sexton farm four and a half
-. i . - ; 1 1 An I
Willi, mini v . 1119 cico sun vu ii.i; i . . . ... .
"Three vcars are a long time." she ? c:ln d" asicr w,th OH ,by '
answered, slowl v. . '? ? ou'? " ..
-I know thatj" he said; b.t thev 1 The bitter thrust again I She shiv
cannot be longer to you than they will cred like a guilty thing,
tome" "Kiss me I" he whispered.
cu'.im t . k . And she kissed him, once and again,
nnoi. -th... fndinV hrio-htnnM in tha and John Derwent lire went out into mass of rock in sucb a manner as to
upon the fading brightness la the tcrna Miiied out to find change the relation of Its elevation
1A- , .. T, . 'the Happy Islands and the lands oil to that of a mass ad.oialnir. The
1 uu will "in" , "....-- -Mm M-Hnir th.!' front Inn ft
"Your letters' - -----o
tne woman lie iuvcu wno nuc.
It was better thus.
Hut, I wonder if, in the Hereafter
he found out how faithless she hat
been? Did it touch his soul wit
thoughts of bitterness or was the nev
life too far removed from the old U
. know any earthly care or disappoint
' ment Who can tch ?
ftne Mississippi- It enioracea a;mUea from JanesvUle on the Evans
uraber of severe abo ka at abort ln.i vllto He nad compUlnlng
trvala during several montha. In of not feeUn wen of Ute but would
act, the disturbance lasted for about not admlt that he wa. 8lck. KlnaUr
wo yeara. The ground was moved w mother fbaam he had tor see
. . v . 3 " "T" "T I a doctor, and took the tad to JanesvUle.
t the forest were rocked and in some ' . . , .,. ...
ases uprooted their branches be'ng
o entangled that It was impossible
o separate them. Great cracks in
be earth fawned and closed again at
ach shock, while from the fissures
oud was thrown Into the art so vio
ently as to lodge In the branches of
rees. Some lakes were drained by
be escape of their water into the
liasms which were opened, wbile
tbers wen created by the sinking of
be land. One great sunken area
bus produced was eighty miles long
ty tbirty-nve miles broad. The otber
wo big quakes to which I refer oc
turred so lately as to be remembered
y the present generation. One of
ihem happened in the Inyo Valley of
ahforn a. It was caused by a re
lewed movement on what we geolo
;ists call a great fault-plane at the
(astern base of the Sierra Nevada
uouotain In that part of the
vorld there is extensive 'faulting' in
be structure of the mountain raDges,
such range consisting of one or more
aue blocks of rock bound by faults
and lifted above its neighbors. A
lault Is made by the sinking of
Young Rook went to a physician and
was told that he had a severe case of
Ulphtherla. Be left word for hia mother
hot to wait for him and then proceed
ed on his way home. When the mother
heard of his act Bhe started In search
of him and found the lad on the road
aide. He was moved to the bouse and
the family took up their residence In the
barn. Although nearly dead from ex
planation, the boy will probably re
coverMilwaukee Evening Wisconsin,
FIBRE CHAMOIS FAD3.
Gastric Dyspepsia
And constipation
troubled tne for
over a year. I grew
worse and could
hardly perform
my bouaeho'd du
ties. I bad severe
rains in my stom
ach, especially at
night. I treated
with our physician
six months with
out avaiL 1 resorted to Hood s arsa
narilla and having token six bottles J
am free from all distress in my stom
ach and am no longer troubled with
dyspepsia." Mrs. Margaret ejjner.
Indian Falls, N. Y. Remember
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Prominently in the public eye.fl ;6 for 15
MOTHER'S TREi
I:
a w 0 m eaty in eneci. 31c.
COMPENSATION.
said, takiiiir her hand
will help to make the time seem short
er." "But you are not sure of getting
them," siie answered. "You are go
ing far away, and into a country
where one doesn't enjoy the means of
correspondence with a great deal of
certainty or reliability."
"But I shall know you have written
if I do not get your let ter," be said,
trustingly.
John Derwent had a vast amount of
faith in Agnes Brent. He loved her;
consequent ly he trusted her.
"Ami you arc going to-morrow?"
She a-ked the questiou with a little
shadow in her fare.
"Yes. 1 start to-morrow," he
answered. "I shall not see you again.
I have cume to bid you good-by."
Hie dropped the long lashes of her
eyelids to hide the tears that gathered
there. Her betrothed husband was
going away for three lonesome years.
Mie should miss him.
Like most women, sweet words and
tender caresses were pleasant to her.
No one had ever cared for her before
as .lohu IVrwent did. To know that
he wa loved by some one that in
that person's regard she was the one
woman in the world was a knowledge
-.i. 1 . ,
jr;tii"HL n iueaiiL i-mouiin. 1
Thev walked tin and down the beach. since been 1 resided
while the sunset died awav into sun
A Crimt Against Education
A ffr mvtntr thu anh'onr. rt aitaw
I crowded schoolhouses throughout ihi
United States further attention, a
jrouiised in a previous issue, wear
prepared to state authoritively tha
over 100,000 children are now ex
eluded from the public schools fo
. want of sufficient room. This an
I nouncement may seem startling, ever.
Incredible, yet such are the plain,
cold facts,
j Nearly all of the fifty larger citia
In the I niteJ States are excludini
I from 1,000 to 3,000 children each
New York City alone has turned awaj
as many as 9,000 children since Sep
tember last.
According to Superintendent Jaa
ler's statistics ."',91 children werede
nied admission to the city schools it
September, and 3,875 in October. O
; this total of nearly 10,000 1,301 havi
tor. As to thi
night schools, the record shows thai
bregrnvness, and till long after lhe ! wsiween . and i.ouo worKln
n,..- lm.i Kt.irte.l on i...r vov.i r,. children who sought to gain a iitth
thai creation of sucb faults Is often inci
dental to earthquakes. The renewed
movement along the great fault lino
of tne Inyo Valley In 1872 produced
a tremendous seismic disturbance.
The shocks continued fur fourteen
montha Great Osauies were formed
along the base of the mountain range
for a distance of forty miles, the lan 1
west of the fault rising and east of
it falling several feet A feuce was,
parted for a distance of fourteen feel
In one spot. Owens Kiver was teiu.
purarilyswallowed up, and the numer
ous other phenomena excited the as
tonishment and alarm of observers.
The memory of the Cbarle ton
earthquake ot 1SS6 is yet vivid. Th
locus of the disturbance was atiout
fifteen miles west of the city. Kunio
bus big cracks opened In the earth of
the surround ng country. Water and
n ud were thrown up, and railway
(racks were dislocated and buckled
The first great shock lasted for about
a minute, others following with
gradually decreasing violence. At
the end of four weeks they ceased to
be destructive, but tremors were fett
I occasionally for several months,
j Twenty-seven people were killed out
right. The invention of the delicaio
re ordlng Instrument ailed the
, seismograph' bus revealed the fact
that earthquakes arc far more
. erous and frequent than used to lie
: Imagined. In some parti of the
Fibre Chamois, the comparatively
new interlining, has this season, by
virtue of its rare and useful oualifica-
tioe.8, been placed among the standard '
materials known as dress-maker's sup
plies, and it also ranks high, as an
interlining in gentlemen's coats and
overcoats instead of buckram and
canvas.
It is claimed by large manufacturers
of suits for firemen, policemen, letter
one , carriers and soldiers, that Fibre Cha
mois is more protective and quite as
durable, as any interlining they have
ever favored.
The home dress-maker, as well as the
bigh-claca modiste, knows without tel.
ling the meritorious qualities of Fibre
Chamois, for instance, that it will not
'brink, that it does not draw or pull
out, hence the ekirt interlined with
it holds its shaie, even after passing
though a heavy rain storm, and it is
surely uncrushable as ladies well real
ize from using it in the large outstand
ing sleeve Of to-day, but very few
housekeepers are aware of the fact that
the lightest, yet warmest blanket one
can hud is made of No. 30 Fibre Cha-
f nctdaat In th Utm ot Gear- Aagw
taa Sala.
When George Augustus S.ila was a
little boy he suffered agonies from de
fective eight, for he not only endured
the deprivation of vision, but had to
bear remedies from many physicians
who suggested the possibility of curing
him. He waa cupped, leaches were ap
plied to bla temples, his eyes were rub
bed with ointment, he was compelled
to take various nostrums, his ears were
pierced, and his head was shaved.
In these circumstances. It was really
almost a relief when the twilight deep
ened into night and he became wholly
blind, and then, for a time, nature was
allowed to take her course. But he was
not unhappy aa a blind boy. As be
beautifully says:
"Out of the depths of my necessity
fame the sweet, low voice of my sister,
to cheer, to comfort and to help me.
1'or hours every day she read to me.
First the Bible, stories for children, and
fairy tales. Then books of history,
travel and biography; and lastly such
extracts from the newspapers of the
For seaside .such Ta TlXn- ' S M thought I could understand."
ket is beyond compare, as it effectually
excludes the salt air chill, that is so
objectionable.
The real Fibre Chamois which bears
the brand imprint, routes iu black.
brown, slate, ecru and llesh tint, and
therefore can be
evening dresses
By and by a wise French physician
undertook his case, and so built up his
general health that he began to see.
The doctor phophesled that the day
was not far off "ven he should veur the
vine green shade over the eyes before
ill io.i :n i,: i seeing nice a genueraana." Aim lie
as well as in 'heav- wa8 Tisht; the sight of one eye was per-
a rftjuf lvaal I-o OasaaaWd
Veaaty and j
whtta etrollinir tbiougb the beauti
ful lawn of Shadeland. Upper Darby,
a few days since, viewimr me w
havoc made bv the late storm upon
the grand old trees therein, my atten
tion was attracted to a structuie
bearing a striking resemblance to one
of the huts of the South Sea Islander
of the late "Midway."
My genial boat, Joseph Dunn, in
formed me it waa made to protect
'mother's tree" from frost, and ap
proaching nearer we beheld a jnoble
lemon tree full of fruit, In all stages
of maturity, from the tiniest forma
tion to lemons of a size seldom seen
in our market about 200 in alL The
giant trunk measures 14 lnehea in
circumference, and- huge branches
extend eight or ten feet high, cov
ered with masses of dark, glossy
leaves, flecked with pink tinted buds
and snowy fragrant flowers. - The
tree Is a miracle of beauty and fra
grance, and shows It baa been fondly
and carefully reared. A few ques
tions drew forth iu history.
A way back in the 20's the seed
from which this noble tree grew was
planted by the owner's mother, who
then resided upon the Trvon Lewis
farm In Kadnor. Several times it
h.is been fro. en down tothe large
trunks. At the age of 50 it figured
at the Centennial in 18t, as the
largest and most flourishing
Pain of tn con
centrate all
Its Misery in
m km ca am sra ai
. ST. JACOBS OIL
If you want to feel it Co
a cure.
tatfsaififi '
a
if
'East, West, Home is Best," if Kept Clean
with
APOL
O
TYRANNOUS DOORKEEPERS.
AaOadSypaaff ISaaFMaUartotba Wbota.
aala Soalawas Horns.
From all outward appearances the
moat important men in their own
estimation in tbe targe wholesale
dry-goods establishments of tbe city
are thejioorkeepers. In this respect
they occupy positions analagous to
their prototypes, tbe floor-walkers of
the retail establishments, Bays tne
New York Herald.
No doubt tbe positions bave their
responsibilities, and what positions
bavo not in a large business bouse,
from the humblest 92-a-week office
tree I boy and porter to the head of the
there, bearing IsO ripe lemons and esianusnmeni. .nespousiuini. iijcic-
about 300 in all. It was badly' 'ore, is uuv oiuuuwiiu uy
scorched by the are at Laubers res
taurant, which was quite near the
Horticultural annex, and it recju red
several years to recuperate. It is
now perfectly healthy and wonder
fully luxuriant for its age, having
doubt ess few equals outside tha
tropics.
itolhint; would induce tbe owner
tenders and affords no reason for the
fine assumption of superiority whici;
tbe actions of the men Imply.
The duty of the doorkeepers Is
primarily to take the time of the
salesmen and clerks on entering and
leaving the stores, shaking hands
with hayseed customers and bawling
out tbe names of the salesmen they
Killing a lAn-lVlt Want.
WoilT Brothers of Kieu nach, havs
patented and put on the market a
mute violin for the use of heitinnen
on that instrument which rcmov
i.he annoyance caused to listeners by
:he constant exercises of niuslcj
neighbors. The violin consists only
if a mahogany frame without bottom
hi top. In every other way it 9 bUlt
like a ioiin. This uniiu Instru.
;nent is not entirely unite, however
nit proiuc s Jin excceiinuly jofj
tine, audible only lo the player. Tb
-ound is delicately pure withal, aa
unly in this way can it he of real
value to the students St. Louu
L'o&t-Dispatch.
to send it to tbe World's Fair for ;oesire w see in sienionan icues. m
lear of Injury, but had it been there addition to these they are expected
it would have reigned queen, for no ito exclude peddlers and beggars and
tree in Hon cultural Hall or else- ,to see that no one removes small par
wbere, in our estimation, could com-' 08,9 ot merchandise unless they bear
pare with It. jthe proper "out check" of some ooo
It Is so large that housing It has ; ,u aumoruy.
become quite an undertaking, and I v " ,n tne manner In which these
often robs it of its wealth or beauty &"upio duties are performed which
and fragrance. Doubtless all feel make many of the doorkeepers ridlc-
that it should be where it need not uioua, They would be obnoxious
be disturbed and have an even tern- ere tney not 80 supremely absurd,
perature, etc., but the words n a voice, the volume of which
mother tree" tell the whole story. mignt, uo creais to ine late JounL
Wayne, Pa., Times,
ler costumes, and there arc three ecuy recovered, and aitnougn uieouier
grades, Nos 10, 20 and 30, light me- ne was never good for much, the sound
dium or heavy in weight. It is very 'rgan did duty for both,
wide and cuts to advantage for skirts. ' -As soon as he had cast off the green
coats, cajies and sleeves, and cofts only ' hade his sister taught him to read, and
35 cents a yard.
up tne sky.
Then .lohn Perwcnt kissed her good
by. She hung upon his neck, her
warm tears falling swiftly, and would
have kept him back. But he must go;
and, with his kisses on her lips, he
wli i oitrn. I lii tt'.tt-ila rt noi-limr fiti.f
I r o , ritA it inn ,.1 nr.in niimluir Af thaji
was gone. j--
I wonder if the moon looked down are not prop .y equipped
,. ,. i;,.. ,,.. :.,i,o! A natiou whose veiy foundation
Did it see other lovers kissing good-
education were barred out becaua
of a grossly inadequate provision o
this peculiarly pressing need.
Chicago. M. Louis, Buffalo, Fblla
delphla, Cleveland, etc, are con
formed with a similar problem. Thi
smaller towns are, as a rule, In bette.
byes and parting with trust in each
other's faithfulness through the days
or months or years of separation?
The days went by.
John Derwent reached his destina
tion safely. The situation offered to
him was a lucrative one, and in his
new Australian home he was
contented, feeling that love was
rests upon its public school system I
committing a colossal crime again
education, rendering all efforts
compulsory education farcical am
disclosing a condition which must
seriously reflect upon its methods
municipal government. The onl;
remedy Is more school buildings
Meet the want promptly. Let tin
cry for new schoolhouses go froii
auite ' ocean to ocean. American Schoa
wait- ! Board Journal.
A Wiae Judstment.
Here Is a story which has gone the
rounds of three entmies and a half.
nuiu-jlt has bicn credited to many writers.
but was first told by l;abelais:
In l'a is, at a roast-mcut cookery
Df the i'etit-C'hastelet, a certain hun
jry porter was eating his bread and
it the samo lime sulking the reck
Hid st am from a fat goose which
was being turned on a spit before a
ereat fire, thereby gaining savory uo
loinpaiiiment to his dry ration.
He eat very slowly, that he might
in'yy the recking, smoking savory as
long as possible, and when his penny
loaf had been consumed he attempted
then came the happy reward for her
lovely devotion to him. He was then
hbout S or 9 years old.
"My sister," he writes, "had uncon
sciously taught me a large number of
things. From the books she had rend
to me I had gathered a fair knowledge
lf English and French history. I was
familiar with at least a dozen of the
Waverly novels; I had the popular ver
sion of the 'Arabian Nights' at my
tongue's end, and 1 had begun to be
ing him by and by that would amply
rcpav him for the loner davs of lone
some hours that were sometimes his.
Letters came regularly for the first
year; not half as often as he could
have wished them to, but as often as
Disproving a Common Saying-.
It is a well-known fact that thi
"bolts of Jove" seem to have special
spite at certain spots, and that tb
old saying that 'litrhtninc nevei
he could expect them. Pleasant, loving strikes twice in the same Dlace" is ai
letters, mat were iuii oi teiiuer muu , raise as most or the old proverbs are,
wishes for his comrort ana happiness, The writer knows a tree that hai
and of longing for him to come back ' been struck by lightning five tiniei
to her. It was so lonely after he left, since July 3. 1884. a gate nost stand
It was pleasant for John Derwent to ing within two rods of that tree bav
read such letters to know that at ing twice been struck since the samt
home one heart was so true and tender, date. During the last seven
yean
five horses have been killed bv light
ning on a single knoll on the French
farm, which lies on the road leading
from Flint to Flushing, Mich., and
nearly every tree on the same farm
is said to bear the marks of the
forked fury." An open lot at East
Great Plains, Conn , has been "hit by
thunderbolts," as an old resident of
I never thought for a moment of doubt- that place expresses it, eleven differ
ing vou, Agnes; I should not forgive ent times since the spring of 1887,
mvself if I were to do so. You are and a piece of woods not more than
my ideal of all that woman should be half a mile away has been literally
true, tender, womanly." riddled by the electric shots. At
You can see from that how much he West Heath, Mass., a hill near the
cared for her what faith he had in tillage scbonlhouse has been struck
that one heart thought always of him,
and yearned for his return.
'lf every man could have a love
like that which life has given -to me
your love, Agnes," John Derwent
wrote home in one of his letters, "there
would be much more happiness than
there is at present fewer men who
scotl' at woman's truth and constancy.
her. DT lightning so often that the old
.seiners nave urea trying to keep a
, . . . . record of tbe singular occurrences.
ine iay was oying again in a pomp Two mllfi9 out from tDe Uue xlhw
f purple glory. The sky had a gloomy of Gosport Iowa, two houses and a
look about it, despite its lurid bright- barn nave atnick b nKhtnlna
HAr-n -n-l.SkWA Clin 1 1 f 1 1 rTAIIA rllll' 1 m
i.;.9 ,.c .,. an one-rounn or an acre, and several
The wind moaned across the beach, head of stock were k lied on the same
and beat against the rocK, wnere tno jpot before It was fenced
waters had lushed themselves into a
was fenced for resi
dence purposes. St Louis Republic
sum wootsuinl ftever mlndl Never
mind!
I Tootsum Wootsum Yaht Y-a-hl
Y-a-a-a-a-hl
' Mamma (from adjoining bedroom)
Say, Henry, can't you keep your child
white, foam of fury.
It had been a terrible day. The
tiArm 1 a t aftotir it a -Lial oittn -ncar " Yaiit
e a 4 iwn ii-v 1 tari aTa -1 iaaa
the ship that had struggled so nobly to rapaThere, re. my precious Toot
. o i -ii. r-i. ti- I . ti . I Tiilli.il a TmT nt lfiaf 1
to wind and water, and lay a helpless
wreck a little way out at sea.
Men and women gathered on the
ihorc. They cast anxious glances sea
ward, and watched the waves to see if
mv semblance of humanity was swept
vo land by them.
A woman stood a little way off from
Jie others a tall, handsome woman in
rich garments. She looks towards the
ivrecked vessel with a little pallor on
er face.
Presently a wave leaped in shore
ivard, and then swept back again,
'caving a body on the sand. Seaweeds
.angled themselves in his wet hair and
llung to the man's garments.
She cried out (o some one close to
tier, and directly there was a littlo
:rowd about the body. They took it
lip reverently, as though they were
bearing the dead; perhaps thy were,
l'hey might b, for all they could tell
then.
The man was taken o some pUce
where shelter and care could be afford
ed, if there was any trace of life cling,
ing to Iii m , and medical aid summoned.
He was not quite dead. There were
rreat gashes on his face and bruises on
Bis body, and the waves had nearly
shilled out of him the little life that
tther injuries had left him. But by
and by he opened his eyes and looked
aroHjid.
He saw the woman standing near to
ITbose feet the waters bad brought
world feeble shocks occur almost
dally. Probably there is no part of
the earth where they cannot be de
tected at short intervals. Oneot thd
most remarkable quakes of this coun
try took place In 1323. On that oc
basion several hundred miles of the
coast were lifed a number of feet. It
has been reckoned that enough rock
was thus elevated to make a mount
ain the si e of Mount Etna The
Charleston earthquake was felt dis
tinctly at a distance of 900 miles. A
comparison of time showed that the
shock traveled at the rate of 17, Ooo
feet a second. Tbe fissures In the
earth's crust, which are among the
most terrifying of seLsmlc phenomena,
must be of great depth sometimes,
though nobody has ever tried to
fathom them. They nave beep
known to swallow rivers for days
Without being tilled un. Severe shock foul, pnlcrnl lhi chnn ami r ho ni.it..
a:e commonly accompanied by sounds t r was referred to him
like explosions near or distant.! "Wilt thou sutnuit to the judg-
Quakes under tbe sea produce waves ment of this good citizen?" asked the
in Ihn anrtiiM lib, f li,..n p-a-i k. ...... I .
pebbl. thrown Into a pool, and some.l "Ay. by the blood of the goose, ! Z1"':
limes sucn waves rush up on the that I will," answered the porter,
land, doing a great deal of damage. The story was then told and the
"There has been much dispute as case argued. Tho fool listened at
to tbe causes of earthquakes. They tentively, and in the end he asked
are often a-sociated with volcanic the porter to let him take two pieces
phenomena. When the lava of a of his money. The poor man drew
volcano contains much water the from his fob two pieces of copper,
latter is converted into steam andlSeyny Jean took them and jingled
produces explosions which jar the them awhile between his two hands,
ground for miles. The explosion ol and then gave them back whence he
tne great mine at Hell (.ate, In New
York, occasioned tremblings of the
to depart. I ut the o ok was not o'
that mind. The master of the shop
I id hold u on him by tbe gorget,
iemanded pay for tbe smoke and
steam of the goose. The porter de
murred. Tho cook claimed that a
iki: tion of the meal bad clearly been
made from the savor snuffed up and
swallowed.
It chanced, while the discussion
was going on, that Sevny Jean, the
minutely conversant with tho career of
Napoleon Bonaparte.
"Thus It came about that as soon as
1 had the full power of my one eye, and
could read distinctly and write legibly,
I began to teach my sister. Out of tho
pigeon-holes of my mind, which she had
Idled to repletion with facts, I was able
to impart to her things which bad made
only a transient trace on her own dear
Intellect She and I read systematically
and Industriously, I being th preceptor
till she waa sent away to school, pre
paratory to being flnlahed' In Paris."
Suggested Lone Ago.
A correspondent of the Popular Scl
ence Monthly calls attention to a curi
ous foreshadowing of the Invention of
the phonograph In a book published ut
Paris In 1006, of an Imaginary visit to
the states and empires of the moon
; de 1 Lune," by Cyrano de Bergerac.
' The author Imagines himself, In the
j course of his lunar travel, left by his
guide to pass an hour with some books.
They do not resemble earthly books,
but are little boxes.
"On opening one of these boxes 1
found I know not what kind of metal
similar to our clockwork, composed of
I know not how many little devices
was
had received them. Then to the ' and imperceptible machinery. It
cook he said: "The porter did smell ! a book certainly, but a most marvelous
mil 1 1 ... . I. .... n .. ,1 i 1.1 i ... .
the iinirle of his monev. Thou hast! nkm- a Knir i nmiiion.i n .ik
- - I . ..UVK V. U 11 1.1 1 Oll.llll T, 11 1 1 11 IU,
thy gooe Intact; he hath his money, !eyes are useless one needs only use
as seemetb to me right and proper; ' hu mh
"When one wishes to read this book
' j he connects It by a sort of little nerve
i to his ears. Then he turns a needle to
sarin wnicn were observed no nil lei, of thy goose, and thou hast heard one, which has neither leaves nor char-
iway.
Ixv of tha Fantastio.
When we behold the wonderful re
sults obtained- by florists who bring
plants, notably roses, pansies and
chrysanthemums, to the highest point
of cultivation In order to Increase the
si e of the bloom, we are tilled with
admiration; that seems a worthy am.
bition Indeed. But in the olden time
the mania in tbe great gardens nl
Euro, ean palaces and c tateaus was to
torture plants, and by trimming make
them assume the forms of men an I
animals.
A I.lt tie Economy.
Biddy strutting proudly In the yard Is
Unconscious how little valued Is the
fluffv il u ui a co she Is so vain of. Tbe
The time expended ito ob-1 cpnornlltv of bnsv housewives nrefer
tain results was great but the results to scald poor Biddy until her feathers
themseles were not Queer, quaint,'i- n nnanvnrv mesa. Havlnir reninv-
are the qualified terms of praise that ed all wing and tail feathers, cut any
alone can be accorded to them. Sucb ehaPp poinu off the remainder. Have
gardens are now rare encugh, but one ' ready a bag the size of cushion yon
exists near Steinbam, In Germany.! desire to till, with one end open. In
As tbe cars speed along pas-en gen ' this place the scalded feathers, and let
seeastrat ge beige, which gradually, water flow freely from pump, or hy-
assumes the forms of sportsmen, a draat straining through the bag. Hang
man on horseback, men Quarreling, nn and drv. then beat until fluffv. To
a general with bis laurel wreath, an this first collection yon can add until
elephant, a camel, a llama, sheep, you have sufficient It la very little
and now this court doth decree, fur-
t.l.er. tihaf. Acnrr nnA trnatvuiLhlanvn!
business, lest we bave too many fools
iimonrr iu "
A story somewhat similar to this! . , ' . " "
appears in the Arabian Nights." w e.uerBe, irom tne
luouuiiicui, ,o (iiui cue uiuuiu Ml n
man or from a musical Instrument, all
tbe words and sounds which serve the
grands lunalres for language."
Tbe writer adds that Cyrano antici
pated many aeronautic Inventions, and
was, of course, considered by his con
temporaries aa a verveau brule, or. In
English, "somewhat off." This, as well
as the above, only goes to prove that
there la nothing new under the sun.
deer, goat, bog, ass, cat. crocodile,
monkey, ben, peacock, bird feeding
its young, a spinning wheel, etc
The dwarf trees of the Japanese a e
now very well known. Some of them
are ao small that you could nave a
un: now ao you suppose i can lie; ao.en or them in your window gar.
awake all night hearing that boy and flea In all tLese dwarf trees, the
then work all day to-morrow getting root, unable toexpand, being hemmed
out a full vote for Mandy Sufferage? 4! In by the pot, becomes distorted and
Truth. f trops out of the ground, so that there
Is sometimes more root apparent than
For the Heathen.
Mother Where did you get that six
pence from, Fritz?
I Fritz You gave It to me yesterday,
for 'the heathen, you know.
Mother But why did yon not give It
to the teacher?
Fritz Because teacher said I waa a
regula heathen. Die Ostschwela.
r?al truulc Among wealthy Japan,
sse, it is not uncommon to And stand
ing outride tbe window a little case
sontaining a number of these dwarf
trees, wnicb, left to tbelr natural
' growth, would have formed fa grove
large enougn to surround and over,
ihadow the bouse.
work, and you will be surprised at the
number of nice cushions you can make,
Womankind.
Hed Knd It.
.-Ta'Io.r-'CureI' yoa don't mean to
. - - U W.ant th,s Poat niade i
n ' o 'a"u,u Between the shoul
ders? Customcr-IIushl I'm a
member or the Cycling club r.nd a
randidate;for its presidency Journal
AiuusanU
Memorial to a Poodle.
Lowell has on one of her roadsides (
targe urn, which Is kept constantly fill
cd with fresh flowers at the expense ol
a wealthy lady who resides In the vl
clnlty, as a memorial to a pet poodln
which was killed bv tha cars at thai
point Whether the dog waa burled li '
a aatln-Uned casket and baa a lot bjl
Itself In some fashionable cemetery h)
not known.
In Either Case, Mlased.
He was a well-to-do looking stranger,
and when he had retired for the night
the landlord aald to his wife, "If we
don't get a good speck out of him I'll
miss my guess."
After be had been there a week, he
"cleared," leaving hla bill unsettled.
"Well," aaid tha landlord'e wife, after
, they bad talked the matter over, "yov
. nave misaed your guess."
Thera are a great many people wb "Yes," aald the landlord, bmnorooaly,
are lazy In every particular except in -I haTe misaed my guest" Boatoa
tha mattar of naraoaal r "arier.
Pretty Names in England.
With retrard to vour list of out
landish names in the British Isles I
The Decimal System.
A modification of the decimal system
for tbe division of time and angles is
proposed by M. de Sarranton. The hour
must be retained as the unit of time
because It Is universally accepted and
It Is hopeless to try to change It Ev
ery hour, however, la divided into 100
minutes, and each minute Into 100 sec
onds. The new minutes would be 30
seconds long, three-fifths of the old
minutes, and the new seconds a little
over one-third as long the present sec
onds. Time would then be expressed
In decimals: thus, 8.3348 woald read 8
hours S3 new minutes 48 new seconds.
For angular measurements he proposes
dividing the circle Into 240 degrees In
stead of 360, with the same subdivision
into 100 minutes of 100 seconds as for
the hour.
Goethe as a Joker
In his younger days, Goethe, the
.celebrated German poet was not at
all aliove pract'cal joking of a com
paratively harmless nature. Thus it
; Is related that once, while enjoying a
bath in tbe river at midnight, he
onservea a peasant crossing a neign
boriiig bridge.
Immediately the poet raised him
self half out of the water, and with
his long hair flying around him, gave
utterance to a series of wild un
earthly noises. j
The peasant promptly fled from the
iP'it, and lost no time in spreading
the report that the river was haunted
iiy a whole company of mermen,
pixies, and other water spirits. i
On another occasion, when he was ,
taying'at the Court of Saxe Weimar j
with his friend, Duke Charles
Augustus, one of the court ladies, I
when about to retiie for the night J
found her candle sudden y extin- j
gushed just before she reached be
bed-room door.
Taking no noticeof the occurrence,
she groped along in the dark, but to
her astonishment, could not find the
door-handie.
Again and again she felt her way
along the wall, but with the same
result At last she made up her
mind to go to the Duchess for ad vice.
The later, however, was already
asleep, and no help was to be had
from her.
The jioor lady did not care to take
any ono else Into her confidence,
fear of being laughed at and
Johannes In passion, and with a look
' rill.li.. r l A of .llrn aw.ab . n .........
soul, one of them stationed in a
Broad way jobbing house Overawes
little messenger boys and creates in
the minds of some of the linn's
humbler customers an impression
that be la a powerful lactor in tho
firm.
; This latter quite possibly Is what
the man desires to do, for as a sup
! posed power these simpletons seek to
'propitiate Cerberus. They drop an
occasonal cigar into his hand and
some time during the winter prob
ably send him a turkey or a big
j pumpkin. With the proprietor of
the peanut-stand on the corner and
tbe bootblack, both of whom are
privileged to ply their trade in con
sideration of keeping the sidewalk
: clean, he exercises a mild system of
black maiL
The vender In return for his fa
vored glances, supplies him with pea
nuts and apples; the bootblack shines
nis siioes ior nothing. Ao newspa
per boy is permitted to enter the
store without the understanding that
j he Is to give the doorkeeper a paper.
'Su h are the perquisites of the po
sition of doorkeeper in a wholesale
down-town house. Not all of them,
.of course, accept these petty favors
TTow' Thin I
Wo offer OnftHutnlrcd IinlUm Tlivr rf
any rase of Catarrh tuat, dtiima Uicuied lit
Liali'a 'alarm ( 'urr.
F. J.Chkkkv & Co., Prop.. ToM0 o
W, tho undrrHi1iriirl, have kf.n-.vri K. J.'cha,
ney fur I Iih l.ir, 15 years 'i'l l iifVK him iT
frctly honorable in all business tr.insactl,,
ami liiiHncr:ally ahhi to carry 'jut aiiyobllrt.
turn maile by their firm.
West k Tkuax, Wholesale DninnMs. Toledo
Ohio.
Walhio. Kisvas & Marvin
Jiruirtfibts. Toledo, (ih.o.
ITa'l'M Ciiliirrh Cure Is taken lntirnallr, act.
Ini directly ujioa the hioo I ati'l t!iiicousiilr.
faee of the system. I'rh-e, 7-V-. p.-r h.,ttltj. hold
by all Liruivyiat.i. lealiuiuuiuhi In.
A hotel i9 to be buiit on IIis:li Knob,
a mountain in Virginia. Trom its
balconies guests will be able to tee into
live States.
Catarrh a constitutional .ll-w Hnd tig.
not be cured by local ni.p.llc iitiorn. ll.-ol r, Pf.
Biipurilla is a con-titutioiial remedy iin.l It cunt
catarrh.
Hood's I'lllaarc purely vecetiihlo.
A slick of yeliow pine fifty-eight
feet long and twenty-eight inches
ffpiare was (juartered uti lan week lot
Maine sawmill.
We think ri-o' Cure for ( on-iiinpllon It th
only im-.liriiti' f,,r CoiiL'lt. .Ienml riNiKAfta.
frinyiield, Ills , Oet. 1, Imi-I.
The remains of Mr. Rmhl, a Brook
lyn artist, who was lust in tlie Italian
Tyrol five years ago, have just been
discovered.
T'ohhlns1 Klectric Soa has I n nin h f.ir
Veins l-j4t-li j ear's wiles hae infi,.n-e.l. la
Is-ss sahis u ere ' 11 IT r.li ...... si 1 1 ...... . ... Ju.
I and alisolule uniformity and runty, ijimie ih'li
IniMiible. Do i.jii lire it ? Try it.
Licorice grows chietly on the l.ankl
of the rivers Tigris and Euphrates.
FITS stopped frc ny Dn. Kinfr'S Onrjl
Nkhvk Ki-STOtiKH. No tit.s alter first dayViu
MH vehius rtires. Trealisp and J.intnal hot
tit Iruc. lr. Klin . 'd Arch St.. I'hila.. l'a.
or exert these petty tyrannies, but
some of them do, and display a very
contemptible spirit too, in doing so.
The Duty or Physician.
The horror with which the dissec
tion of buman bodies by medical stu
dents was almost universally reuard-
for , ed a generation or more ago, is grad
so . uallv disaDDearlnff. Intelligent nul-
spent some hours in the vain search, hie sentiment now recognizes the ne
only to And at last that Goethe and . cessltv of knowledge In the Dhvsie an
the Duke himself had, with their
own hand', taken the door oil Its
hinges some time earlier In tbe even
ing, anu carefully walled up the eu
trance of the room.
Not Guilty of tieae-MnJoatj.
Some months ago a German trl.
nunal in a provincial town sen
tenced a man to several months'
imprisonment for lese-majesty, be
cause be kept his seat while the Em
peror's health was drunk, llecently
another prosecution occurred in an
other town, but the accused was ac
quitted, the Judge deciding that
keeping one's seat under such cir
cumstances could not be regarded in
the eyes of the law as an insult to
liis majesty, unless words were use.J
clearly implying an injurious intent
ew York Evening Post.
Eaally RrmedlI.
Distressed Young Mother (travel
ing with a crying infant) Dear me:
I don't know what to do with this
baby. Kind and Thoughtful nrh-
lor tin the seat) Shall I open tbe
window for you, madam? Life.
TO a to h Monkey or Shut tbe Window
British Ialea I A story Is told of a genUeman who
(writes a correspondent,) 1 would or J waa reading In his second story parlor
una that, there are no such nlflcea mt while the Chambermaid win nitttlnir
Alvager or Coxhof, which would be his chamber In order, In which he had ! duced, pleasing to the tasto and ac-
A laager and Coxhoe. Hut there are left a valuable diamond ring on the ccptabie to the stomach, prompt in
Fnan InAl.l.d I. a A - .1 m .... 1 .a a I I T
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the ta.te, and acta
gen Jy yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation, cyrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
wnicn ne can gain in no otner way,
and in Wisconsin and many other
States, there are statutes providing
means by which bodies for dissection
cau be lawfully obtained.
If there ever was any excuse for
the crime of body-snatching, there is
certainly none now; and It would
seem to be in the Interest of the
medical profession as well as in tbe
Interest of the public for scrupulous
care to lie taken to prevent lawless
outrage upon the feelings of people
who are bowel beneath the saddest
of earthly griefs the loss by death of
a dear relative or friend. No physi
cian with exalted pride in his profes
sion will willfully be a party to what
if generally known would tend to
create in the comncunity a belief that
members of that profession are de
void of human feeling and ready to
ruthlessly trample upon the Under
sentiment of people in deep affliction.
Tho law providing bodies for dis
section in this State would seem to
tie clear and ample. If not, it can be
amended. Hut every physician with
a tine sense of civic duty and pro
fessional honor must stoutly stand
lor quick compliance with the pro
visions of the law, and must be above
collusion with body-snatchers for the
purpose of obtaining "subjects."
Milwaukee Wisconsin.
The only birJ that sin
is the lark.
;s whi'e (lying
'A Penny
Saved is a
Penny Earned."
But a penny saved l&
buying a poor article of
food is a dollar lost to
the doctor.
BUY
SELF-RAISING
Buckwheat.
Saves
Health,
Dollars
And Time.
KaphaeE, Augi'lo. Kuu-1, Iu
Ir. Kilmer's Swixp-Roor curat
all Kidney and Bladder troubles
1 amulet and Consultation Iroj.
laboratory Binghauilon. N. &
The largest cast bronze statue in the
world is that of Teter the Great at
St. Petersburg, Russia. It weighs
1100 tons.
Mr. Window's Soothing Syrnp Tor children
teethlnv, softens the gums, reduce lnllamma
Uon, allays pain, cures wind colic Ale a bout
ONE MAN'S MISHAPS.
Para
plenty muio quiio as luiunu'iuviiui i laoie. aiici ii uuuiuoerniaiu lert De u mi tuix nuijr ueueuuiai in IIS hrok tha hnno nt
as the rest you have quoted, e. g. : heard a slight noise In the chamber and, ' effects, prepared only from the most tnee. npI. tif
I'ontac, yuy, iteicoo, jnoKeeiy, Aire- looklmr in saw a Ions: cord reaching healthv and arrreeable BuhHtnncea it
most
was, Ingestre, Insch, Drax, Oamlln- j trom the window under hla bed. Msh many excellent qualities commend it
mi nilwern. (7ronredv. Ahv. eta. K . -11 l i . i ; .1
r . .V. -i 1 ii suiiu", .xnuu a uivutey aiiauueu VJ mi null uava uiuue H tne
ur course 11 you ku w toe teuic uw tf the cord and In the monkey's paw 1 popular remedy known.
""'ow ---t nis aiamoua ring, xne monfcey aroi-
you uia,K", ped the ring, sprang for the window
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro-
er Beldlngt Baa Had Hia Bhare
of Hard Luck.
Willard Belding, 76 years old, of Bel
rhertown, Mass., has experienced more
of casualties than usually fall to tbe
lot of one mortal who lives to tell the
ttory. At the age of 7 he had part of
the fingers of one hand cut off. In
later years he had the bones of one
ankle smashed. The next accident that
happened to him was the result of be
ing caught by the mouth by the sweep
of an old-fashioned cider mill. His
mouth was enlarged to an unnatural
capacity and had to be partially sewed
up. Next a horse fell on him and
one leg above the
lMll1f nf a fall fia
j had his rlba on one side broken In, next
a sana Dans cavea in ana mined him
under It, breaking his limb over again,
and after It healed he was left with
one leg considerably shorter than tbe
other. Last winter he fell and shat-
T.f ,, "NFNF." re th. Bmrt and Mot Beonmai
enl Collars sod Culls worn: they are mitd.of ssj
cloth, lxth milra umnlird alike, and hm missal
Dip, one roltnr is equal to two of sny ot litf nd.
Th'M "'" ve"r il '" smII. A kstsl
Ton Cullars or iiv.IWs ol CuQs for T H
riamplaronarand THtrof OnfraKraaalaVa
MUa. Nxoiesiyltiitudiiize. Addrens
RKVERSIBI.E COIXAR COMPAHT,
tt Ftmntltn St.. Kew York. T Kllby St., BaaaSs
(iFND
. TOUT
id.lma
to
s-iailav: l..lmt.y.ur-; weiur-
Iilh til.- work in.. I l.-.ii h T"U rrr. u
work in Oil I. --..lily h.r.- jou hl
m-n.1 im voor f.l.lr. nn.l w.' UI rtilsln
th? Imsim iH fulli , r. lii' in r u,r
anm ..,Ar.roili o! $.1 iorrTT
b. ..... aril. t ..
0 L aAMUC-riKIVIi COHI .M. rU, IS, ll.lr.U. Bkt.
A DAY SURE.,
D I md t viil frw you 1
DAILY $3 PER YEAR.
I'rertUlcntlnl Year.
THE CHICAGO CIIUONKUiR, Uip prvat flrmO
oratlc newHiKiKr of the wst, poHtpaiti every day
In tlie wik fir one war. ;t. No substTlptlon al
this rati? lntta than om v ir. Sam plea trtv. THB
CHKoXICLt:, Jtii-Kw; WaHhiutftun At.. Chleaifo.
9 Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal KxAminHr U H. PmiisIod Bursu
3jrrsio last war, ldiiutUraLUjfclaiiiiia. aUvatuou
KIPPERS PASTIUES.i:4S
BBHsllMBSHsBnHCStowa. Mau.
Tt YOU SVKdl.VrK! Then nend fnroar
lMMk, Hmv to Spt'iMilute Snrcetiillr m
Limited MutKins in .rtii antl Stock MtritV"
MaiU-1 Krre. KlMs lUl'K, II rut! Kit
liaukerM and ltrokoiN, iA Itroadway, r Vork.
Wtwh I it Kia. 1. C.
PATENTS
I rr l.yarisiwl h r D I
PH1LA..1A. VJX": J,
4tlU I tll. ft. EbdnrarKirt.
aMr tiOAelia. tj. tnt ttrsaJtr,
I rntn.n ot iU It? from hgainea
taof pd ralclana. ladif nn.i P"
utnsM ttMirf i
Best CoiMih byrup. Tarus Oinid. vse
in timft. (ld py dniggmlf.
mnnainiiniiitiwmwuMiiiiAitm
r? IVn.i.i'. Lr.i. Mii:ijt:T iwojii 3
names, but this Is perhaps hardly Z. Z7--J"
fair. London Globe. " i 'L7io. 7 ,y IUD arnggist wno tered his knee pan. When he was over
who immediately made off. The mon- may not have it on hand will pro- 60. nature, If to atone for some of
Somk people are like candy with .JS K H? h VIJ "7 one who his shattered bonea, replaced the teetb
red pepper in th. middle, CLLot ISj'sJg Do ot oept ttny -Jf Sif Jaw with a new aet of
Sh.k Is grown In twenty Statea, would probably have been tried and j "SS O tee In apite of hU many ln-
bile men who buy it groan la S 'convicted and sentenced, a. no other CALIFORNIA FI6 SYRUP CO. l,"e,"',M' 1 . ccomPuh"
Uta. . ' fnoa had enUrMl Ue caamta 1 tatMmn,.i'LnAMcmo-C4t Wo wMdHinitbBe. won.
wmu$,a w rots, sit rby yffl Ubdwi maxtyV,
IMPERIAL
y 3rRANUM
Prescribed by Physicians
Relied on in Hospitals
Depended on by Nurses
Endorsed byTHE-PRESS
The BEST prepared FOOD
Sold by PRUOOIST5 EVERYWHERE I
fllTa CmU A MMM Mm. Vn.ll.
saisaasjas1""a'k''kaissTwaaisaasarsriJis