Soa ovis re 4 © gosum of mons flag forever peficent aid will wave above his ashes.” pot do anything else. He sits at his dei | has reached the cent coined by New Jersey in the year " Jectors of coins as ‘‘the confederatio.”” | fain salad! Inthe rhyming recipe be Ls Fibuangiandd 3 ik 3 A——— me that it was a fitting act to make 8 pilgrimage to the tonb of thet illos- | ‘trious Frenchman, der to the hearts of | all American patriots, Marquis de La- | tte. I asked a nurawer of people be | fore I conld find any owe to ealighicn ] me as to the spot, but after repeated in { ascertains its Joeution. The grave fs situated iv old Paris, within the grounds of a cmv that the ancestors | of Lafayette fouad 4, und where repose | tho remains of muy of the French no- | bility. The first thing that attracted my | attention in cori sr with the here's | tomb was that above 19 flosted a sith | flag bearing (he stars and stripes. - “Jt scoms thot a goad many years | an American tlenen left in bis wi + vo ho need for the cial purpose of kicpiog an American | ‘fring above the grave of | ‘lafayette It has done so, without in- termission, from the day the will went into effect, and whenever, through tie wear of the elements, cue flag becomes unserviceable a new ono straightway takes its place. Through untold centuries the emblem of the country which, in its early struggles for liberty, had his bo- ~—Washington Post. Importance of the Exchange Reader. . The man who reals the exchanges is '» very important mun, and, let me say, too, he is a pretty highly paid man. He has to read, we will say, 8,000 papers regularly. - All the newspapers in the into the office, and he does “all day, and a pik of newspapers, of, cord of newspapers, is laid before , every morning He starts to worl | yd turns them over and over tos ! is in them. le has to know. wha? | t is that sbouid te taken from the: ‘and put into his paper. What is the in- | know this. It reqaires knowledge and | erperience as well a8 talent. It also re- quires a sense of lhunor, because there are a great many Hiiogs that are really | - iamportant that muy not seem £0 at the frst glance, snd the newspaper reader | Bus got to judge shout that. He must | always be on hand and spend a great | mary hours at Lis desk. and he is pretty | dyed whey bo gts thoongh with Io day’stask It'isa hud daty, but he Las Jots of amnasemént, and, as I said, he 18 very well paid. 50 be is happy. hiner les | A. Dana in MoClore's Magazine. - TRICKING A CRAE. snl Pi 2 teresting story? It cequires judgment 16 | African Natives Takn Advantage of His. industry In a Hinrtiess Manner. t In Africa there exists a certain meim- i ber of the crab gimus commonly known | as the great tree crub. is’ peculiar | shellfish bas an offensive trick of | crawling up the cocoanut trees, biting | off the cocoanuts and then creeping | - dnwn again backward eR ihe theory is that the nuts are shat- | tered by the fall, and the great tree crab | is thus enabled to enjoy a hearty meal. | Now, the natives who inhabit regions infested by this ill’ conditioned crab are well aware that the lower portion of the crab’s anatomy is sift and sensitive, and they believe that the ‘‘bivalve’’ was thus constructed in order that be might know when he had reached the ground, | and when, consequently, be might with | * safety release hiv psp of the trunk. So what théy do in order to stop his depredations, which often ruin the co-| ocanut crops, is this: While the crab is engaged in nipping off the cocoanuts they climb ball way up tlie trees and there drive a rw of long mails right around the tree, allowing an inch or &0 of the pails to project. * The crab has no knowledge of disas- ter, nor yet the fitness of things. As he | descends the sensitive part of his body | suddenly touches the nails. Thinking he | ground, he naturally Jets go. Instantly he falls backward and cracks his own shell on the ground. — : “gE $iuribus Unum.” The circumstances aitending the adoption of the legend “‘E Pluribus Unum'’ as tke motto of the United States have never been fully explained by the historians. . It was probably used “on coins—and. Smee Say Bpon early golonial fils oe before it was regu- larly recogmized by the leading officials of the new rvpublic. The oldest coin _ bearing the motto in full is a colonial 17868. The seme year it appeared on al small medal recognized among the col- 1 This medal was & national token, I be-| Heve, and wis coined by authority of § - the al goverament. It bore on (me side 13 stars and a blazing sun, the lat- ter surrounded by the word *Confeder-| atio,”” which gives it the name by which jt is known t5 the numismatists. The words in the headline are wn | _doubtedly from Virgil's ‘*Moretus,’” a’ n devoted: to a description of a cer-| gives instruciions for mixing the proper herbs and poanding the same in a mor- tar until the various colors blend as one. fomaé one has very appropriately said that ‘‘the ct¢lonies were mixed in the mortar of thie Revolution ard came out’ as one Lioaogepeous nation. Ve SE Louis Repuoiie : : =o They sii ep 8 calm and stately, Bach in his graveyard bed, I$ scarosly seems that lately They trod the fields blood red With fearless tread. : : They marchod and never halted. They scaled the parapet. The triple hoes assaulted And paid without regret The fioal debt. The delrt of slow accruing A gulity nation made; The debit of nvil doing, | "Of justioe Yong delayed— } "Twas this they paid. ~“Theodore P. ( . fe =O | i Anstrisn left | St. Mark, but | French right at Rivoli in its rear. | they arrived bit a minute sooner toe BATTLE OF RIVOLL NAPOLEON SAID THAT HIS LIFE REAL- LY BEGAN THERE. The Short (nmwpaign Was the Turning Point of th4 Var and Shaped the His tory of Farope Sor Twenty Years The Anstrisrs Five Minotes Late. Prifessor 81 loo $47 of = rare) ’ gre R Cf Lif ? IN py pt in The Centary describes the masterly Ttalian campal a Naples military gens Ls wil recog’ geribes the had! lo inf Rival: : At early daw Iogan the eqmiflic which was to settle the fare of Minto The first fierce onfitest Wak heli wenn 42 arid the French right o it quickly spread along Y Workpw ios : Hg at hey ved 41 5 ti flessint Nloans 1Hus GF the whole line ad far as gorhe time the Arstrians had the nav n- tage, and. the regnlt wax in since the Prench left, at Capring, ¥i 1d BYE TH Fis ed for an instant befors the cmsiatght of the main Austrian army made in ac- L cordance with Alvinczy's first plan, | and, as he supposed, npon inferior | force by ome vastly superior in numbers, Berthier, who by his calm courage was i fast rising high in his cornmandet 's favor, came to the rescae, and Massena, | following with a judgment which has inseparably linked his numeé with that famous spot, firially restiwed order to the French ranks. Every successive charge of the Austrians was repuleed with a violence which threw their right and center back toward Monte Paldo in ever growing confusion The battle waged for nearly three hours before Alvinezy nnderstond that it was not Joubert’s division, bot Bona- { 's army, which was above kim. In his zeal he then pressed forward on the platean beneath. the height to bring | mare of his troops into action, and Jou- bert gor owhat rashly advanced to cheek the movement, leaving the rosd to Et. | Mark unprotected. Tha prompt to tule siventage of charged © mandix z position, bat simultanecusls there roshed from the opposite side three French Ln trieve tra mistake. strength nud ndreons Aungtrians, his blander, 1%, « ant SRE fiscrder. : At that instant appeandd in Bana parte’s rear an Apsirian corps estimated by hima as 4,000 strong, w hich. having come down the valley on the left bank, had now crossad the river to take.the ; Had storming co sis wera Lown back in hill of Rivoli would have beon Joist to the French. As it was, instead of mak- ing an attack, they had to await one Bovaparte directed a galling artillery fire againt them, and thus gained time botla to reform his ranks and hold the pewoomers in check uatil his own re- perve, coming in from the next hamlet westward, cut them entirely off from the retreating columns of Alvinczy, and compelled thea to lay down their aris Ras ended {he worst defent and most cotaplete rout which the Austrian arms bad so far sustained ter demoralization of the Rying and dis- integrated columns that a young French o¥cer named Reme, who wns in com. | mand of 50 men at & hamlet on Lake Garda, saccess{ully imitated Bonaparte’s raze at Lona{o, and (lisplayed such an | imposing confidence (a a flying troop « 1,500 Austrians that they sory oo to what they believed to be a forme 5 perior to their own. Next Morning dawn Murat, who had marched all to gain the point, appiared on the 5 loTes of Mente Ballo above the pass of © na, and anit] with Massena and dim- bert to drivd the Anitrians from last foothold | The pursait was contin: aed as far as Creat. Thirteen thousand prisoners wen captured in those wd days. : This short campaign of Rivoli was the turning point of the wir, and may be said to have shaped the history of Europe for 20 years. - Chrondelers dwell upon those few moments at the hill PR ther | atove the plateau of Rivoli, and wonder what the result would have been if the last Austrian corps had arrived five minutes sooner. But an accurate and dispassionate criticisza must deside that every step in Bonaparte's success was won by caniful forethought and the mast effective disposition of the forces at his commind. So sure was he of sue- cess that even in the crises when Mas- ena seemed | to save the day on the left | and when thé Anstrians sec med destined to wrest victory from defeat st the last moment on the right, ke wus self reliant and cheerful The pew system of field operations bid a triminphant vin cation. gt the hands of its avthor. The conquering general meted out un | stintéd praise to his invincible squad rons and their leaders, but said nothing cf himself, leaving the world to judge whether this was nian or devin wha, still a youth, and within a public career of but ono rasan, had mamiliated the proudest eripire on the continent, bad subdaed Ita'y and on her soil had creat. od states unknown befare with ut the. sonsent of auy great power, not except ing his own, It is not wonderfal that this personage should sometimes have said of hijself, **Say that my life be- | at Rivoli,” asat other times he dated his milisary career from Tonlon. Whom? in the last ten years, but I worled for it.” “Of course you dill,’ replied the eni- i grammatieal, if nngrammatical, lawyear, o but the question the pecple are avg each other vow is, ‘Who did youn work?" —S8omerville (Mass. ) Journal Alum as a medicine has been in com- mon use for nearly 800 years and several varieties are known to cora- mesce ; a a p———— Portugal is a corruption of Porte Cale, | the Roman nams of the town of Oporto | ip the Lill, and seiznéd rhe oom | Sralions, elambering op to re- physical | axtivity broaght | them fir:t to. the top, and again. the | Sur was the ut “Yes, said the practical politician, i kreutzer——>5 cents “it is true that I have made 200,000 It is found in many quaiters of the world, | When It Allowed Telling Henry Ciny the : | Bort of Partner He Was. : {ame of my boyhood reesllections,” I General Wade Flamptou, ‘refers to | Henry Clay. Ho was 4 frequent visitor cat my father’s hows in South Carolin. { whist players, and nothing was more $0 | their minds than the { brane of gentiemnen : whi addicted and then the wonid pl for pours might se i Jena - reigned didn't play s | ulted andibly Cnet Lesitats w pariners to 3 ha 3 the other had mude feat tn the other's ig lack of pains i] in oeengions particularly trying, the] : even known to apply hard names 10 one ancther. This they did in no slanderons | gpirit, but to brighten op and sharpen ments of his play. As they were sitting doten to 8 gAME AS DAriners ope evening t Clay remarked : 5 “Ii's a great omtrige the way we talk to each other, and my idea BOW, | $20, to belong to the one who is first | ealled hard names by the other. If you sseail me, the money is mine; if I for- | get myself, you taka it” : , "My father readily agreed. He felt | in a mild, agreeable mood. He was con- | ident he would pever again be a prey to the slightest impulse to his dear friend Clay. And, besides, it wis his recollection that Clay was the | man who raged and did the kud talk | ing. So my father cheerfully placed the $40 on top of Clay's He thought it | woald be a good lesson to the bine grass | (amtor to kee it. As they prooeoded | with the game Clay made some eXonss- ively thick beaded and ill advised plays. ' He Jed the wrong cards; he trumped | the wrong tricks: he did everything jdfiotic in whist that he well conlid. father’s blood began to nl As he | Clay lost game after game his wrath higher and higher. sii b and suffered in silence. It went roars, until Clay made some pla) crowning bubecility which lost my father the eleventh | Ylood cond stand no nies. 30 sternly pushed the $40 over 10 “ “Why,' mid Clay, ay%ning eyes with a look of intincende and an ment, “why do you do that? You! | said a word.’ : NG, retorted my father. ‘1 $ at I'm going to tell you, sir, that yon am the | most abject idiot, the most bonndiess | trrned to the holding of markets on toe | I repeat it, you are toe ——| fool I ever met in my life.’ '—Chicagc | ' imbecile that everdealta hand at whist ‘Wes, sir; i es A | "Pimes-Herald 7 —- |. SMASHED HIS BAGGAGE. t And Then the Man Who Owned the Troak t Had Something to Say. : | “It’s queer how pecple stand it, '’ said i the man with the baggy trousers as the : hotel baggage wagon came UD from the isin | “Stand what particular thing?’ was | | asked. | are two cn that Joad which will have to go to the shop for repairs, and the own | ‘ers will foot the bill and not say & word.’ Ee “Well, isn’t that your way?" © “No, sir, and it hasn't been for a | good many years. Last sprin e baggage: | man threw ny trunk off his wagon ia | #pomt of a Boston hotel and busted it. Fie | drove off sizging as I stood looking a the wreck. Half an hour later I walked | in on him af the depot and said: «+ want $9 of you.’ ** ‘What for? «+ + Por smashing my trunk in front of | : cop stolen, J advertise qd for ita a prom + Sdn pet the cat | the Continental ’ : “You get put! Trunks are lisble to | ‘be damaged, snd whoever heard of any- | one having to pay for them?’ ft show you a came right off. You! | had no mare license to bust that trunk | than you had to bust my head. Yom! yo | “What will you do?’ {I'll sue you the first thing tomor- | row. I'll not only sue you, but I'll gar- | pishes your wages I'll. make it cost | you at least $20 to get out of it, even if | you don’t pay for the trunk.’ | either come down or I'll begin proceed: {© ‘He blustered and defied me," £1 3 the man of the trousers, “bet belors 10 ' 0 'elcek he came to the hotel and offered | me §7 to settle. ise on his part to handle all trunks with | closed the ease. He admitted to me that he had probably damaged 5,000 trur sin "his life, bot that noone kad ever ki Tred before. He didn't sapprse a trunk owner had the lightest legal right om earth, and he probably didn’t get over looking : pale for a week. "'—Detro.t Free Press. Cheap Lodging For a Frinece. Accidentally a bill of zn ion at I peier, Tyrol, was discoversd Limon © papers of a recently de | the official houséhold of Emjperur Wil liam I. which gives an idea of the eost i of living at that rime. In i501 William, then prince of Prisia, win | six companions, st< pwd af lodging for the company an Tae tuo. rast coffee was more expensive, however—=a kreut ger for each cup—i e., cent. The dinner at the nn, consisting party amounted to 3 florins acd | krentzer, ar about 90 conts. Jt Was Either Marry or Work. «My. Hardup mu:t have used a great | deal of flattery fo win the heiress “Na. He simply tld her the trad” “Indeed? ; “Yes. He sad bo cout her ati) evaldn’t live with xi. Duss Both. Clay and 17 father wore ardent s% ii . a3 ection A the wits of the other to the improve at the outset, is for each of ns to put up| to speak harshly | be hit his lip! *‘ Permitting the railroad companies | to smash their trunks as they do There | I took a written prom. © reasonable consideration theres frer ard | a suit of w inn, The med to 13 2ip courts. Aj { dish of milk was | cent, three eggs for” of soup, meat, roast, fret, preserves and | wine, cost 27 kreutzer euch, or less han! 11 cents apiece. Zle total expense of | lodging, breakfast and dinner for ‘the | I a | My My heart fu JH 8 rainbos Thet paddies in a balcyon sea; 1 My hess is gindder than all theses § Because my live is aire So me. Rates mie 8 dati of 8k and down: Hang it with vair and purple dyes; Carve it in dove and poanegranales And peerccke with 8 hae Foal 450%] Cork 5% in gold aed silver grapes, fu demwed ard Silver Sourede lin ¥ . Peesuss the birthday of Bs com IBY Wve i800 lf A CRIME TO LAUGH, Queer Sanday Laws af 1751 That win Govern lingland’s Lord's Day. he introfnetion of the that we are uve dav cherrrativns by. 178. 2 It seems that a Sanday leo ways be made the su ject of geo + Some time sgn a Suncay lecturer at pr iene | Leeds was actually sacrilegious enough | to make his andience langh. The pro- } prietor of the lecture hall was therenpon | | prosecuted for keeping a discrderly house. aL i Magsie van now be given in the open | air on Sunday, but if it is piven in a | pooms nothing must be charged for | ¢hairs. In other words, it will be possi- { ble for any body of men and women 10 | sun Senday concerts and Sanday Jor- | tures with the view of making them pay | expenses, but Bot for their own pn fit. i In the years 1200 and 1201 one ha. | tace, abbot of Flaye, preached throngh- Loot England the shwervance of the lord's | day. He enjoined that no kim of work | shemld be. done after the winth hook on | Sstmrday uotil sunrise on Menday | Aescmiing to fhe mauner of tho times his presching was backed up by mira oles. At Bewerly a carpenter persisting | pont fell doen in paralysis In the same teen A Worman went on with her wenav- ine after the ninth boar Reult, par- *adysis, with loss of volon : At Raferton n man made a Joef and 3 gordar evening. Yen be > | ‘ tres Ng | «ries Pgh ‘ bat have a periodical recrndesomes of | gwfal navare of | they have a prominent part lay in $ rine} Bey posal of garbage. ae wo 4 3 Kati 52 3 Gesd Food Allowed to Deny » Feotore of i American Households. | There are few honseholds in the land gcomorny in the maiter of food supply. | ' A big groeer's or butcher's ‘Bill imme- diately suggests that there shomid be EE practiced“ somevrhers” The present activity in the fedd of dietetics should spread valuable knowl edge into every kitchen It is already showing benefits in the matler cf nuin tions food versus medioine. Homsewives donot always realise that this grave question of the day, the “« That responsibility he doanestic thresr id, and | tion of Waka to the | ER NX seAYenger I8 hy | per a self satisfying conclusion What she | | ornaigns does not coneeTn ber, and this | “hete noir’ found in every part of the land, a subject fraught with siowost in- ¥ | surincuntable dificaities to thee whose | delivering his fin. As 1 groped pusipess it i3 to fnd a bealthinl and | : quick disposal of garbage, is far more | the business of the bonsekeeper than she | is willing to acknowledge. Wn must go i back of the garbage can to find the cause. i American extravagance is proverbial the | world over. We provide with a lavish | hand Unskillal snd indifferent help | waste acerrdingly. Espenditare for food i y of the middle and | | | | from quantity supplied is notubly small in the wealthier families : Convincing proof is found in the over- § i i be the best portions from the niistresses’ flowing garbage can. Lack of robustness | among & cwtain class and tae amonnt | | of debility afflicting s majority of peo- i ple prove to investigators n want of | | proper | wronght body, which mast enicre some- | | how the stra'n sod stress of American {in finishing a Ww pda after the pinta. | nutriment to build wp the over- 1 life and climate. = ; The unintelligent methods of poor It is eonsiderad | | their prerogative to waste what does nit i st their faney. i Leavi Te] which mar i i 1 | tahle are not palatable to their taste, and | so good material is speedily hidden from | : | sight, more is called for, and a liaphazad Pand put it ‘dong! In woman, Soding tw et fier WBRYES morning the loaves wore | baked irithemt any £12 at all And yet, thes chron of these niracles the people have re aside Sunday '- Loudon Queen. The Birds Service to Meu. Before many years have passed the | | Jogrislatures of our states and pation | will be forced to some action on the | peedless destruction of birds. The robins | and bluebirds avd wrens and the hun | dreds of g | and Selds have been driven a'vay not | merely from the cities, which they need | to inhabit, bat from the villages on the outskirts, and in some cases from even : the isolated harm ieta | betokens s grave danger, and the chear est and surest way to : iIling the birds and let them rofam ax dine wren the moths and | and the rest of the evil trie 1 cor trees and garders. Jowill nile vias meet 3T 53 yerrs, at best, to restore Liem prise as they conkl be 1 dozen ar 20 REIN to ba BZ th ki a rl wan} 3 TELA AZO, 52 ia wa tia § whack WE Shes Les CK. — Foor ber The Ad. Proaght the Cat Back. Rrr—1I Jost a vilnable cat— lost. strared {pent newrspaper, bu back. Then I tried The News. You todd | me, a8 you put the cash {cr the adver ad in The self. With .. 24 hours from the appear- { ance of the advértisement te ‘et ap- | peared at my window end seratehed 0 come in. J am pot prepardd to say whether the « actind on It her, picked «A alte seeing ¢ sat eapae back, and I feel Pray saw the ad herself r whether wme me { her up and dropped i the a2, - Al + ba #41 exvite Princess, ef Mr. Fran} x i oe» Yu g- ase namie al Naot Superstitious, He seemed pre “Why so the while with diguin of serve and consideration of : complexion she him. : “Is it true,” he said, dipnciing an tense gaze upon her, ‘that yuu have a ready had 12 husbands® : a drug stn did pot com tes NelY “Yes '— Throwing her shrness to the winds sha came avd Kissed him gious. Detroit Tribuna However rich or elevated we may be a pamelesa somethivge is aliyays want. ing to our imperfect fortune. Force - Coal gus was described and maunfac food By De Clayton of haguand sary as 1739 aur adds, In Spite little singers of the woos : The increase in | insect pests within two or three years | 3 8 BIO ~ + but it did make we langle tisemernt in yoor money dmewer, that | you had no doabs the cat #®ouid wee the iws and come Lack of her ——'‘yus, but [ am not a nt sapersti- | was thin, ana supply to keep Bridget goexl natarnd fornishes her with sn alemdance 3 overfiow ash cans, clog piges, cholie trars, fill cempools, draw ‘vermin and | offer culture as a mediom for the shigei- ’ | toms microbe. Noxions odors offend noe | erils and dangerous effiovin jeopardise ! health and obstipel sanitary Mesures. It is just this waste in the world that | | has Deen the eanse of plignes, pesti- lepers znd diseqres. ; i strength, money, happiriess aod, 100 of | [ tem, life. —BaitimdGre American. The Novel of Religion. 2] 1 heard king agoof an enterprising | tradesman who desired to have the Old | Testament a: least broken into a series tof - Br others, wery Lkoly 8 rien, no version of these { thewe, or think themselves so familiar | | (they would probably break down under | | examipaticn), that scrosthing more | L4rgpiey’’ is required by them. I have read as American novel nboat the love | | affairs of Judas Iscarict and Mary Mazz dalene. It did not interist me, I aw=, | Probably a more pions student would have een | ' edified Theie is no accounting for tastes. Perbaps po Biblienl novel has | ever won eriteal applaza or been reek oped a piece of literatvrn.’ Put wach povels lit a large class of readers Ww hose castes in other matters is pot mlware bad oe : It world be interesting to kpow what the wits and crities of the restoration | thought and said about «The Pilgrim's Progress.” Probably they never locked | into the cheap little buck at ail, the | hock which has outlived Etherege and gedley and Rochester and the re of them Of course is does pot by any | means follow that every teligious ove! | | read by the people whe do read such.’ things and neglected by critics is aa 8 i Jevel with Buuran's masterpiece. ~—An. : drew Lang in Longmans Magamne. What Is an Edition? i in oditica? Does it consist ef | vr of 330 cx 0 or §? v techmical term Ik Caos” or any like expe a £7ed pomerical sigmt is, of coarse, Do reason nit mena anvihing from ye highest of toese num: .> to the taste and faney, t of the partioa- emia ath CriiT Ow Li mag pers skort i ns to beep the pubic : 1 as to the sales jssning from his house he as well to come 10 some WX ing on this Ve know meant when we read that Miss | Daring ’s pew novel is Tin its ve — reals tieth 3 th CSAGAG, ie : 1538 "Tin . Bracelets One More. A raat hore is betag cherished that inclining to bracelis ciee fees This seems pot huprobatis The deere has gone forth that sleevis ar to be scarcely below the elbow. Th 5 Laing! true there is a considerable expanse lois for crpament, for the gloves cumot be always worn. In any case brace of we ; cheaper than gloves, and wemen hough on pleasure bent, still have frugs.. minis - 1 Jewelers” Circnlan 3 ; Mozart. : 5 Mozart was vers small, being only a mn height. His fice sae of E's nose yeas ced by tLe atterua- svn. Ele a o- his bair I i5E SAM Sek ALIN 42 las €ay. His moath was 1 Vig face clean shave. 1s ¥ iy ’ Little aver B foet 3 my oud 4 ‘aronpid the protected ipo cowards It is wnatad tiave, | Tom persons with Fh pod lh St St A Lyman has po. concepfion of the vessale Jivem the cruisers have a sides, and the air of the imclosed FOES is very onafined. The din mide vy the impart of & heavy projéctile apningd these tien] sides is axial derond de scription. 1 “vers cotton in m7 ears, bal : 1 deaf from that in spite of caus J sues | pemalore £58 onc by insole ome od fod lifting the Bd with mr Gee desirocs of seein ow the emy was LIF Way derk » homdied pound geil plored the armor shant 18 incites ia front of my head. Ina wood. my hard touching the #teel Wis #0 ‘burped that part of the shin wus left apo the armor. That shows how ine tense is the heat engendered by the fm pact of a shot ind bow rapidly the steel One shall struck an open gon shinld of. the Chen-V nen early in the actiom, sod glancing thence passed through the: opin port. Seven gunmers wer killed and 15 wounded by that shot. Early in the fight the maxim gun in our foretop. was silenced. The holes plerond bys shell oculd be seen from the deck. AfS- er the fight we found the officer and men on duty there all dead and rightfully mangled That one shell bad wrought Tha detonations of the heavy connom snd the impact of hostile projectiles actually rend ent of | produce: concussions that ac ; \ the clothing off. 1 servants, unskilled in handling food, i | 4 | ome cause of the affect. The Chinese mldiers deserve all credit for their cournge andl chedience in that action. No duty was: too difficult or dangerons When the: Chen-Yaen's forecast le was ablame from Jap shells, 1 ordered several offorrs toe eras the shell swept place to fight thew fre. They skirked that duty, lag whes: I enlled apom the men to yoliumtesr = foliow me they did it promptly, and they ship was saved. It was whils on duty that a shell passing between my legs threw me aloft and wy ma dow epcn the deck with soeb violence tha becom nnconscions and was oat of fight. All of the officers, howsver, W On my ship wore seve who had been educated in this count and they were as brave and directed men-could be. Othérs, however, were Is the safest place they could find amid- Ineandereent Lamp Cleaver. Many pecple blame she central sin tion for the poor Light from Swe inca ‘descent lamps, when the fanlt is really their own. They allow their limpsto be dirty. It has been shown that one day's bulbs cuts off § per cent of the light, = the result of a few days’ neglect cam easily be guessed. As a means of romov ing th a great extent the freqtent com- plaints of pocrness of ght a coutenl staticm recommends thewe of 3 Inup cleaner which greatly fuciliiu.es the process of dasting ihe alt Tosd tok. hand le is attached a stracg wow fer a work, which carries a mauler £ mittens. By foreing the frame dver ¢ lamp and giving © y hardle a Jew 1 the dust ou the ing the bulb as cu factory. Fach cle a set of rubber friction whet switably placed om tho ; ‘remcwe and replace bored ©6T Limp The handle can be extendod °° as reach lamps at any distance. This € vice makes the cleaning of Reiars ~ voy quick and easy task —ot Lgeis Globe Democrat : Regret That Came Too Late. The London Masical Herald told we queer story about Jack Wikon's temmb in the Little Cloisters at Westrainster © abbey. Wilson was Shakespeare's Tenor: He ‘wall probably the first wowing “Sigh No More, Ladics.”” and to died at the age of 78, in ISTE The ineringion on his to:nb nt the abbey was mused hiiz- spate, amid under the direction of am ADT STUITY A Ian WIS employed to recut the § 4, . The aciiquary stood king so Gint be shenld mehend RT mista amd to makes antly he serail the Work. merits of the tually stopped | af the antam had kaown tha i to a 3: = ; best harassed that morning 1g got Bil Abort noon, at whoo i count of them, his lum appeared wiLa anities memth's provender. What's this?’ ke asked, disy ru onsiderible anpporsroe. : “Your bord ll for the menth “Well, 1 1h not pays,” be xy throwing it on his desk. “Do. iP» people think 1 Bave no use for me: wy cept to pay bills with™” and be Lv the caller to get out. —Deétrat 1 Nevar prt away for fle uur a woolen garment of 2n¥ kind Tat is spotted with grease or soiled wil mark Grease in astomishino 7 alia . 1D moths, and all the zr lrmslied of thes vage' rapidly i pamontac for ot bbe § gUOds, une w deliote nasa of amon and sa sop ones, may te ackvised. Fu wi phi Rar : rattle in moderns navel
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers