The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, April 17, 1902, Image 7

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    Rina ls
SpA abi
L of Lack of Ski,
arms are evidences of |
a industry on the part
2. Tha fart
me have been
demonstrstes Sihar
abanioned beens |
gs in other directions (0
SARuo make the farm :
15 of 4
ove oT the sams §
a s fod the cows Li-
in their ik ‘to 3 larger
“x had belorn given,
as! 2 prov that pampkin
i etion is
tv hy the Wo BAER
Bre allowed an im-
ros for Qutex Returns.
ays been my experience
decided advantage with |
in given As with all sack
iE that a god breed be
"Ape i ate Cael sot to
a from cold, in nine
ples enn be growing
an sell two lots of pigs in |
other stock will answer
The valve of the hog to tha
anol be questioned ~ Mra M.
nal in i OrangeJudd Farmer.
retul Cribing. :
shoud be taken in cribbing
: it aginst rafts Uribs
ised from the ground so |
not be gaawed
hat they cantiot be climbed
tor plan than the oid
ing the top of each post
Are iron pan extending
20 that the rats cannot climb
strips of malvasized bron
railed around the top of the
ring outward aad Jownwird,
saves of & Bouse so that the
not pas the obstruction. Cribs
| mot Le pear other btmildings,
whire care shonid bs taken
building rat harbors. The
tats does not stop with tho
of the grain they congume,
corn be 50 Cents por
this loss is weil nigh intoler
visit dwelling and poultry
verything about the farm
“AR should begin at the be
to reduce this nuisance by
ing the corn so carefully that
e will be no encouragement to the
p43. March, in the Epito |
Fallore ar Bnceens.
dairyman bas no poe
for existence. His cans
than likely to be rized in |
ii hot water chanced to
they may be scalded
ek or two. HH he makes
bome. he Joes it without a
ef The youngest child
urn the handle or iff the
is placed at the churn, and told
vin until he hearer the butter
ing round!” This man, if
keeping cows, should | F, as deat comatition ot the anil ang
milk to & creamery and buy
2r there. He is a fossil, not
virtues of water actual
iting point as the only destruc
germs of ill flavor, if he can
his cream and control ita
urn with His thermam.
iz hands, i he can be snthust
rer th grain of his butter and
; ; piind's eve the perfect
than the dollars and
by it-—then he haz
ition and is Likely to do
Bath Evans Ttore the
bar iy in the season there ars certain
precautions to be taken. The hens
be | pa to uxercise 2 as much
er i percent and 20 percent i
er, of animal matter.
animal food is ground
found bensficia
The oxgs nal be gathered regu |
oold in order to prevent thelr belay
ments have shown that the jarring |
i rotfen.
| starts to grow, but rottenness proves
that (here was 5 germ which began 1D
the incubation
American Agric nit,
ow lands of New England are in no
are not dead,
get ptarted; they wiil goickly obhanes
giving satisfactory retarns
is oie of the best har raising sections
of tha whole sountre Much
do were they Bandied {a & business
wil do in the way of rescuing worn
moved to Durham the farm pepre
gentnd one of the mop depleted and
brolendows farms in the whole New
weed ent that frst year:
i for the smal sumbwr of animals kept.
flowing, and 30 head of cattle and
horwes supported. besides a large Dun
of that farm i possibile for
farmer In New Easgiand The first
that: chemicals and erop rotation will |
tiliaee is foiloowed.
Coal it makes a cumlodttabie Home in
farin to add the following chemicals
er fields were treated In a similar way.
per ton. The expenditure of $14 per
| acre for labor and fertilizers will be
returned in a single year with a profit
ally spent, aad then for four or five
| cost of harvesting the crop. ~- Charles
1 w. Burkett, fn American Cultivator.
meats are apt to be two laxative and
thelr nse requires more rare than |
most ponitrymen are willing to give,
It a mash ig given for one meal RB
should be fo! warm, not bot, and the
addition of a Jistly guiphur will be
larly. and frequently if the weather 18
ehitled, While an egg will endure con
shierable cold, yet sven a slight chill
may prevent it from hatching, and it
ig always “hetter to be safe than 10 »
be worry” in such matters, The frenh
er the eggs the stronger wil be thelr
fertiiisy.
Bate when «ix weeks or two montis
old they are much more like!
While eggs sometimes will 5
toa friend wif
hatel i ned more than ohne wosk
old. If they must be kept, their fer
tility will tend to be preserved by |
turning them over avery day or two
it pgees are phrchased for hstohi ng | i
and come from a distance, they should |
be unpacked promptly, put in a ct |
- place and allowed to lie undistiyrhod |
. upon thelr sides for from 24 fo 4%
pours, according to the distance they |
have travelad before they are placed |
ander 4 hen or ina incubator. Exper
fneldepial to travel to some degrie dis
places the contents of the egee and
I that a puriod of rest is peosasary fo | ff
+i secure the proper readjustment of the |
ry and constitute al
seeds act adversely
contents Neglect to give traveled !
sggy the réglaite rewt fs probably re |
sponsible for not a few complaigts
gardioe their being fertile. ;
A rotten egg is lone that has been
fertile. Not a few complaints are |
made that the eggs s&t wore infertile |
becanze after incubation they wore |
But their rotienness proves
exnelly tie reverse. An ogg which bas ;
never been fertilized will be an odoriess |
after three weeks incubation as it was |
at the start. The sweetness may aol
prove tht it was never fertilized bo.
cause it ix posxible that fertile eggs
may be so injured that the germ never |
grow but died during some pariod of
~H, B. Babcock, In
To the Ratcus of Warnont Lunds,
The naproductive pastures amt mead. |
sense worn out and exhausted; they |
pover to bey recd
vived again Their redurss are
small simply because they lack |
care and attention Stir them up, get
ge through them and then add some
available plant food so plant lite can
conilition,
from thelr unproductive
All things considered New England
of Those
fapds are Eiving gong farm yen
with either artificial feeding nor
care. Think what they would purely
like way The New Hampshire cob :
jee farms Is one of th most vivid ex
amples of what skill science and oxen
When the
out jands eallegs Was
put 12 tons of Bay |
it required
some time to produce enougl forage
England dieiriel
But what a change in & few brief yeu!
The past season finds every field on
the ol} farm under cultivation, and
newly sesded to grass and two largo |
Barnx led with hay and corn 1o over
ber of hogs
How was this done? Hy tillage.’
crog ratation, manures and fertilizers
Whit was Jone for the improvisnent
BYery
step is tillage, and thoroug lage at
not show thelr full vaige unleds gd
Boll pant be stirred up and Riled
ith alr. This practice will improve
changes the unavailable anaseimil
. femnl into diatic plant Toad
to lasens the soll Br opus fle in the
whirk the plant Bay grow, Then
grop rotation gid justs the different
tatiks to the environments of their
fool. Fimaily, chemicals supply ihe
needed plant food WwW grt 8 goad auld
vigorous growth from the beginning. |
We pave found it advisable in Living
ing up the New Hampshire College
fust before sowing: Muriate of potash
153 poupds nitrate of soda 100) and
seid phosphide 200 pounds per. alre.
This mixture was seatterad bhromloast,
then harrowed in followed by the crop
sot
One favoranhls season the vield waa
increased from less than a hall toa of
kay to the acre to more than Troon]
tone. An sightacre Sell three years
ago was treated in this manner by fall
gpd spring seeding, and the following
samier 12 tons of timethyelover bay
were cut. The last summer a trifle
fess than 34 tops were harvested, Oth
In every case the vield has been
doublet and frelind by tillage and foo
tiliration.
Does it par} Nothing pays better
than when hay sells for $15 and $20
of as much as twice what was origin
years everything is profit, except the
Meta htashtin eol oas dns ae ia.
The leopard cannot change his spots,
boar basdices
dower of :
fare the es andl “san Gein
#7
alte am
gaditiag thay in the whale of La
i of the
wash ant renew he
office Sok
groomed than | do It 8 absointsl
9 a » ”
Hand of an Fwpress
The German Empress recently pre
sented her husoand with a mode! of
hor own hand. carved in marble by a
famons Berlin seu Iptor. This wad |
soriainly a Siting gift for a wife to | :
i busines in case of au legal sale. Dr
give her hushand who is not only de
voted an! affoir
“After il there {5 po one of
Pevices far Work Bayes
Among (he gumesrsns
Poof the traveling Lig fs ane with a som.
partment tor jow
fa Biley with al pOCOSERYY
ing implements os & varity of
i Ses :
ail the
peak ving thn 23
yeaa gi 1 stoekingy ag
Fail par of paanicirs tools ax wall
The Guuint Kosetts.
Rowottos ail bo pred af tiimmingd |
for tonckes of eénlor on the spring :
frock which has a penchant toward |
the pichiresqus. The proper may Ing |
ef theds rometten j@ worth a ite
gtudy for thay anpear a good da
the akirtd of sew models Ino
sized and are geed instead of Wn HDDS
finely asd stiched on to a sail cone
Fire ia plain fer dlgen Button will dod
rosinad and rend in
got fn the middle to Anish it off.
Finest Wamen in the World,
Russian women, writes George Ken.
oR. are amine (he fnest in he warid,
In the wpnper clisesn they sre (he nos
tle fowls,
| jshes and ripe raw {roite should form
| the prineloal part of the dist. AY
threads should be at past one day old
Land ostmeal and cornmeal may be
© agen for
| companiment of cream or sugar. Dry,
markediy individual, the most bhrifliam
the mast aceompliisiod, They are ail
highly educated, many of them speik-
ing a pumber of languages floent:
and being 81 the same [ime gooin
plished monsicians, Bul (a ay
i ThE woe
woril i : $50 host
oa sacrifices in onder to aocampling
thew Thess ambitions are ldeals
Thair donire Joes not Soom In be fo
personal advancement nov
career for themeeived, hot to work far
the good of the people gbaul them,
Copal dn of Raul: the warly le le
coming pratts » The Bane eNery
of
where but Rassin is «00 01 of Savor, |
Her people ars ariging
ane of Bier tw nw 1s
mora marked and resaariahle in
of Europe ~ Washington Post
When Waman Feals Like Shirking,
The household is pot the anly do
mln ig Which the guestion of cog
goientiong shirking comes up Bven | : .
Fosu arias ia
i a business woman who Hves fa og TNOUANR FR
boarding how and has mo fare |
knowledss of what she sisi} eat or rlothing of any kind —~New York Tri
drink, cannot ezeape from the hae
sherewithal she shal
clothed. Ths wear of huginéss Hey
on & whman's clothes is so great that |
| $t would take half the evenings in the |
weak IF not all of them, fo Keep pe? i
clothes wp to the proper standard he |
. AE Sone Gove calle |
if. meanwhile of conize ime perfec |
tion that will br a detailed exans }
Morgue” standard
fratinn.
Thera are aleoays ring and worn
places In the ball
pefiiconia to vend dreds shields
wala TO Baen. ne
tis Lo prose dlocka tH Beaute
finiags of ou ri hbogs Hi
fo clean i
lars to wash a
dare, hatr to x
8
thing as
ance sald 44
after all my work b
trim and bette
discouraging”
Seif respect ja the important consis |
ergtion in gerd
the personal potat of view
will mv sellrespect allow me (0 ahirk”
Is my Sat duty to my clothes :
it? To me personally no ments
velopment can reconcile me tow
ness. but, on the other hand,
amiannt of thilness can reconcile
empty beadedness ~~ New York N
frasnde Aghinst the Corser,
Ir is 406
Medel mtoniuee
Since that day
Catherine
long after the deat;
Io Wear one
evils of the corset and preparing a
till which be proposes to present to
the chamber and which in case of
its becoming a law, would most effes
tually put a stup to what this physi |
sides of the collar in front
clan terms “The crime of woman
hood.” Dr. Marechal 1s a physician of
reputation, tonsequeptly his charges
&re arousing mueh comment. He as
serts that out of a hundred young
women who wear corsets only 30 ro
tain perfect health. The law that Dr
Marechal is endeavoring tohave passe, |
{a divided into three articles. Article
} forbids any woman under 30 years to
ate, but who sald |
whom he had been |
CC dfervsing the beavtiinl women of his |
L rapital:
them fo be compared to Augusta, Eo |
(pres of mv heart and of Germany”
devices ford
PEOVER gigs abt ised Fa yo Jie Ag i F
work boxes sulted ta tae limited SDRCS | pn ghywien] culture By peoples in gen |
a ST 2 eral, the distinctly “ing”
Fon EF PRY Peta yd oo
inn tray, whitu Lonot disappeared
corn oining Eh ahs “papnol pet rid : : :
complaining that she "cannot get rid itary career never lost & battle. though
ianly admissible |
To make thom as butions |
Priban of about ball an ad wide
: should ba selected, pleated up very
wo i
toy ale &
frags af skirts and
othe guestion fram |
Pooosiiime
sesety into France |
corset has heey |
frequently attackad) in fact, it was not |
of Catherigs that
the French savant desmand if 8 orimae
Now another celebratatd
: Sr ogegend of gold
French physician {8 lecturing on the |
{ wear a corset of any description. Any
“woman convicted of doing «0 shall he
punished by thres months of impris
onment
{ minor her parents
well ghall be rondemiind to pay a
heave Ane
woman of 50 to wear auy vorset sho |
wighos At feln 4 orovides for the
| most rigorons formalities surrounding
If the delinquent shoul] be &
ar guardians ax
Ariicle 1 permits any
the manufacturing snl sale of corsets
every one jirenssd to geil corsets shall
be obliged to take the name address
and age of overy hove and shall be
gubdect to fine and confiscation of
Marechal! is an ardent supporter of the
woman's rights movement in France,
grad vol i ix to men and the law that
the appeals to bring about the reform
sehich he has so mach at heart Chi
i rage Record Herald,
Advice te the *tont Wamu.
Notwithetanding the interest shown
woman has
Khir tx to be heurd
i of Ber superfuons wilght”
inter two triangular g
which swings out nn
Under the trav a the
In point of lact ale could 15 she
really tried to but wa a mile she is]
xX, 4pm for the | fon indolent 1 take the BECRIRrY =
: { ereime aml too weak of will to restrict
4 ber diet in any way,
ness is cither a disease or a sign of
Cweni self indulgence gad one should
| be anxiois to get rig of it, in either
| CAue,
The woman-—or man--who wishes
toy lose feash will avold sweets ani |B
starchy foods eliminating from the | gw
Bi of fare such edibles ae potatoes |
i corn, beans peas, parsnips. spaghetti |
heeds croam and fresh breads. The 1 |
Jrinks are weak tea]
without milk for breakiast and juneh:
pos one ginss of water for dinner and |
a cup of Bot water befors breakfast
i and Before gofanr to Hed,
| This quantity will supply the Hauid |
| necewsary to health and digestion, and
thyew or four
rows, and a atrads of turquoise stud
sboald not ba execandsd The vleay tig
water ig ewoecially desirable as it
| temds to yemove the rhenmatic tend |
Caney that so fief acebmpanies exces.
1 five "fleshinesn ”
Weak
may be silowsd If sweetened with a
Lsaecharine tablet instead of sugar.
I nderdone meats in small quanti
hettura encumbers ras
broaulast without any ao
en gnbnttured toner 6 perioissibis
Lio oa small extent
I make roared
The steprivation of acensfomsd lax
i uries my seep a hardship at five, at
PI RHO be Sees avcaatomed to the
oF chery time fines that
Cras angele has dedireaesd sa that a
much Emaller quantity of food is de
i ronan bent
SHE nee. pi
The woman wha roslly
Sas anbwcoming Hoh will also use cpr. i
: that toad to reduee the
+ Dosire. She will deve at least 26 mip.
;, 1 ates a day to beading from the waist,
wt fareard and sidewnsy
| her fos and stretoh the whole body
Papwand in as effort to toch a point |
| some melies beyond her aetaal “reach” |
| he will bend forward with :
cfd, trying
Rif HReYCis
Ger da or ifs
cniuahle,
hee perinfmed without corsets or tight
pink baroque pearls simply ser. The
pink iz of a beantdul shade,
“hwedta for
seer in the bck
rad {0 Waar
combined
sow wrstels of toe
Wer.
foe
i lege
“ili cont ht fends a iin
spater figures conus from
Paris and oldseg at the eft side. It
can be found to harmonize with any
Valves ribbons in two color effects |
are much in demand, The black vel
piobon with a white satin back is
in af sorts of Jess and hadr
x
iad in any color
wunament of pearly and the adages
Gps with ihe
pearly,
Dsnion
nament at the lu ;
by bars and links A hed
ey sel oa delicate tine hack
in adapted for wean
with Hght colors,
A melton cioth cont has ite colar
Cand dickey as wall of Hoeneolored
Batiste tucked jn squares with a me
£
dalton of lace to patch set in the two
ished with a narrow band of the same
Lolace
The butterfly comb is the latest |
idea for decorating a high ceiffure It |
is formed of the finest carved shell
and affixed to the hairpin or comb by
a brass hinge or tiny spring. the lat:
ter lending a fluttering motion to the |
buterfly whenever the head is moved,
Puvessive glont-
jemons jo
Sha will plas i
Rows
ta toned the floor with |
All these are simple
They are to
A A NA Spit ate ibs
spring
with the
Riffon pomaops ars aisg poh)
hale decorations, and oan be
Romie Have x centre
tiniest ppangles or
has an or |
ta the belt!
f
with a oapyet
It is fin.
.
o
.
®
:
Victorious ‘Goners Is Who Conducted : Campaigns wi
Revuorses. :
Sssesssssssssees od EHS 0000TINENININEseIIIIRNES
in Burope, ‘io win Hever one !
It in curious and interasting in reads
tng the lives of great nillitary com. |
manders to observe among ibe larg
number of generals who lieve held in- f
dependent commande bow few have |
rareers of aninterrupted syccoess X
man who can gu through =»
and fight many battles and gover suffer
‘A reverse must indeed. be a command
“gr of the first order,
I The Duke of Alva one of the most
-sminent soldiers of the sixteenth pen-
‘tary. never. throughout his long and
[ eventiul career, Just a battle The
| archbishop of Cologne was struck by
‘his efforts to avoid a vonfliet, having
‘on ome occasion urged him to engage
cthe Dateh
repliisd Alva,
conquer. he Aghts enough who obisins
the victory”
Gliver Cromwell throughout his mil.
“The ohiect of a general,”
Phe very nearly sustained a reverse at
mbar
The Dike of Martborough atinrds an
exeellent expmple of a ancvessiul gol
diver. Hea combined gil the oualities
The fammis Ruskan seners:, Suwars
| off. was another commander destined
never to suffer defeat. de gained seve
eral victories against the Turks and
| aginst the Poles. and in ftaly he was
entupalyn oo
F ontunmbered he effected a brititant res
treat over the mountaing of Switser-
land, through Germany, into Russia
. He was held In greet respect by BE
soldiers. and although be showed him
-#olf to be an exceedingly able tactician,
he used to say that ihe whole of his
yystem was comprised in the words,
“Advance and #trike” 3;
The Duke of Wellington, throughont :
| hte brilliant campaigns. both in india
ia pot to fight, bt too
ind in the Peninsula, has preserved to
himwelf a remarkable record of wine
tercupted suceesses (rom the frst bat
fie in whicn he was vested with u-
preme command througlioot the Pens
insular war in which he defested the
| ablest of Napoleon's marshals, until
the eventful day of Waterico, when he
: detonated the greatest soldier of modern. ;
¢ ties
necesasry for 4 peal commander and |
although he fought several hattlen
against the mcs Sxperiusced general - Look for the pin.
SR i Rn a Nm lS Bl Ga.
Don’t bonnes the baby when heorfek
Americans in the region around Swe.
face unexpecfedly with a curions hin
trivial things.
idistriet the commerce gf the twentieth
century Is stopped every ttle while by
surdly young infant conipared with i
The clans are all formed of blood reds
ttonshin. Esch member pave ail he san
to the headman of Dis clan, anil the
IR,
Thus the Ur clan revstitly fought for
a8 low a war budget us there is on recs
orl
A few months ago two men from two
Han in a dieresoectful way
tow, China, have been brought face tio |
£
i
3
§
i
: on each side
{drapce to trade in the form of constant |
ight between clans cover the most
As nearly every Chinese |
iimhorer is a member of a clan in that |
"a inese Clans Fig
pees ah it we
Trivial Disputes That Sometimes Lead 10 Great Loss of Life. :
CEEEEH EEEE EEE TETIESEEREEEECECTE ;
| battle was fought In
Aeveral Dundred men were
About fifty were killed.
It was a sarisfartory aflalr :
In Chao Peng two men of the rr
Chang clan went out frog-catehing and =
passed through one of the villages with
the dans
| fess clothes on than the law sifows
| It was late at sight and only one vik
the survivals of a past wo ancient that! |
the Ameriean commonwealth is an ab: |
ager saw [t. Rut the indignity was not
to be borne, and war was declared. IW
[involved 16.000 men on one side anf
(20.000 on the other
atives and are added to systematically |
by intermariage so that all the mem.
bers sre bound together by ties of rel |
Asother batile in which property’
vated at PIO 00 wae destroyed WAS
caused by § dispate between men of
(rival clans over a gambilng dedt. The
{amount at see in the quarrel was
sums obtained fn this way are enor. |
; smitary fighting
kix months and the total cost of the
war was only 13 cents a man, certainty
AHIR cont
At present there is mote or lees des
Yang and the Jao Peng clas. No one
knows what they are fighting sbout,
put the fate of deaths (x estimated a8 2
hedug ten or twelve 3 day, which 19
pretly goes for mers bickering
| different clans met In a village fn the
| proviges One pientioped the other's
A pretty 3
ini aa
It in Sard to be acer, of course. Bub :
then, it fen'y easy to be rich :
which, while © las not yet heen ems
A DREA M
A former Boston newspaper man told |
a story aot long ago of an experiends
of a young woman of his acquaintancs, ©
Soddiead In any work of fietlon, at feast
[gives evidence of imaginative powers,
{and may be consldersd later The
an old Marshfield farmhouse, the wins
dows of which had an omtiook on the |
wens. She had a fad of course, and x
was the collection of various Kinds of
{ seaweod,
Arenm one night of a
Cpoint in the Indian ocean.
paaned and the
young woman spent har summers ad i
STORY
IIIS ICED DO IORI BRI
never seen before She could pol see
cofint for if, bat if was carefully pre
served in a specimen book.
Naot long after she Wis § passinger
pn une of the ooean liners. Among her
fellnw-passengers was 3 professor In
ane of the English universities, and aw
acquaintance was formed between the
two. ‘The professor shared to a certain
extent ler interest in seawoeds, sod
ane day she was turning over the leaves
Caf her specimen book in his company.
Coming to the specimen so strangely
According 10 the story, she had a
storm-fossad | :
imariner who cme and stood by her
: ide and tmplored her aid in going on
Beautiful Hake sre made of Jarge |. oh for treasure Jost at a certain |
The dream |
moral came. The
FONE Woman Was anont fo leave hor
poor when aha noticed a small pool |
Cin the British Museum and was found
at a seidom visited point in the Indisy
af water which suight heave bhedn SREY
‘hy a dripping winbrelld, near the free
algew In fhe pond al
sre a woadl piers
af seaweed of a variety which she bad
acquired the professor uttered an ep
clamation.
“How did you come by that™ We
gaued. with a manifest show of inter
est, She told him as well as could be
Tir ig straoge.” said the professor
“That i the second specimen of that
variety that 1 have seen. The only
he Ty on that | Know of is preserved
sierra. Then Lhe young WOMAN fe
mepoerad her dream. Boston Herald.
A Eittts Berolos
It was Cover in Jerser” that a litle! @
fpeddent Bappennd & tow wonks ago
native
whieh an Tiovearoll giel displayed
frieg of characier wortay
nared with the men wio stood hy
their posts in the New York tanned
dpanter. ¥The girl in question, Witla
4 companion somewhat older that hers
soif Wah
"Raritan canal, near New Brunswick,
throngh an
Weakly
th be
who ass Ming
gine bis pipe
Under Hig chair was the Et Toe
migrkable speciinen of a cof that the
gepticman had ever seen. IL had the
| appearance of a pug, with rough red
wade and a tong tall,
It was impossible
to resist laughing at the piscid old
Loman and his nondeseript dog.
playing on the ive in the
when the latter suddenly went down |
alr-Lole, says Lesile's |
No help being jn sight, the |
yonuger girl promptly Iatd down dat
Lan thi fee around the hole and waited
for hor frivad to come up but when
awiy, and her résolier colin nol grasp
the latter appeared she wal on far
Pher, Twice the girl sank out of sah,
Pexpregiton of the dog ax he looked up
snd when she reappesred, the other
help, Hut witaomt changing her pos
tion, managed to BTasp ner friemt's
Pwho Bed commenced to yell tusidly for
: {the statement.
hair, She could pot pul the Srowning
Lgl out of the seater, bat she held an
qesperately until 8 man who heard
i her ertes cxme up and rescue both,
i THe water
i
i girl was
| than half frozen when help came, but
{ she did not shrink rom her effort, nor
hail flowed over the ice |
around the hole so tuat the younger
half submerged, and more
“What Kind of a dog is that?” sek
wil the gentleman.
“1 don’t Koow.” replied the German
“f suppose you ase him for hunts
ing™
“Nant
“tq he good for anything?” |
“Ne
“Then why 46 yon value him sa?™
“Recnuee he a me” sald the old
feitow. still pufing al his pipe. abd the
fram under the chair fully confirmed
“There 3 mo better or SITODNRSS refs
son than that,” asserted the gentleman
emphatically, as he walked away.
Cas of Velvet Caffe
Velvet cuffs on costs, after the plan
of King Edward's new frock, were
i hailed here as a grea! invention severs
al years ago when they were introdues
(seem to realize that she herseil was
fn any danger, ber only thought being |
| for hor companion, whom she had |
| enatched from the very jaws of death
a iim
Why Be Kept » Dog:
A prominent dog fancier and
wealthy man of Philadelphia stepped
into 8 grocery the other night and ac-
| sidentally stumbled over a fat old Ger-
i
|
:
|
| made.
od. The wear and tear on the enff of
an overcoat 18 alwsys likely to be so
great that the cloth soon! shows it
There was never any means of repairs
ing this until the velver cuff was heard
of. No other oonsideration did a0
much to gain for (he style ih vogue it
got. Nine out af ten Americans who
wore velvet cuffs on overcoats did it
Jo hie hide the repairs that had bees