The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, December 19, 1895, Image 5

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, CKS’L OFFICIAL DIRECTORY
Vs
STATE.
Governor... .... ..Silos Holcomb
Lieutenant Governor... B. E. Moore
Secretary of State.• ■ J- A. 1 iper
State Treasurer.•••J. 8. Bartley
State Auditor.Euifeuo Moore
Attorney General.A. 8. Churchill
Com. Lands and Buildings.0. H. Bussell
Supt. Public Instruction. H. B.Corbett
REGENTS STATE UNIVERSITY.
Chas. H. Gere. Lincoln; Leavitt Burnham.
Omaha; .1 M. Hiatt, Alma; E. P. Holmes,
Pierce; J. T. Mallaieu, Kearney; M. J. Hull.
Edgar.
CONGRESSIONAL.
Senators—Chas. F. Mandorson, of Omaha;
W. V. Allen, of Madison.
Representatives—First District, J. B Strode
Second, I) H. Mercer; Third, 3eo. D. Mlkel
john; Fourth— Balner; Fifth, W. E. And
rews; Sixth; O. M. Kem.
JUDICIARY.
Chief Justloe...Samuel Maxwell
Associates.Judge Post and T. L. Norval
FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. ‘
Judge.M. P- Klnkaid,of O’Neill
Reporter.. J-J - King of O'Neill
Judge..A.L. Bartow ot Chadron
Reporter ...A.L. Warrick.of O Neill
LAND OFFICES.
O'NSIIsLe
Hofflstor..... ..Jobn A> Harmon.
Revivor.... ..Elmer Williams.
COUNTY.
judge.Geo McCutcheon
b
Clerk of the District Court.John Sklrylng
Deputy.O. M. Collins
Treasurer. I. F. Mullen
Deputy.Mike McCarthy
Sheriff..:.Obas Hamilton
Deputy..Chas O'Neill
Supt. of Schools.. W. B. Jackson
Assistant.Mrs. W. B. Jackson
Coroner.Dr- Trueblood
Surveyor.;iM.F. Norton
Attorney.... H. B. Murphy
SUPERVISORS.
FIRST DISTRICT.
Cleveland, Sand Creek, Dustin, Saratoga,
Hock Falls and Pleasantvlew—J. D. Alts. .
SECOND DISTRICT.
Shields, Paddock. Scott, Steel Creek, Wll
lowdale and Iowa—J. Donohoe.
THIRD DISTRICT.
Grattan and O’Neill—R. J. Hayes.
FOURTH DISTRICT.
Ewing, Verdigris andDelolt—G. H. Phelps,
FIFTH DISTRICT,
Chambers, Conlev, Lake, laoClure and
Inman—George Eokley.
SIXTH DISTRICT.
Swan, Wyoming, Fairvlew, Francis. Green
Valley, Sheridan and Emmet—H. 0. Wine.
SEVENTH DISTRICT.
Atkinson and Stuart—Frank Moore.
C11T OF or NEILL.
Supervisor, E. J. Mack; Justices, E. H.
Benedict and 8. M. Wagers; Constables, Ed.
McBride and Perkins Brooks.
COUNCILS!EN—SIRST WARD.
For two years.—D. H. Cronin. For one
year—H. C. McEvony.
SECOND WARD.
For two years—Alexander Marlow. For
f one year—Jake Pfund.
f THIRD WARD.
1 For two years—Charles Davis. For one
^ year—Elmer Merrlman. i
*
OITT OFFICERS.
Mayor, O. F. Blglln; Clerk, N. Martin;
Treasurer, John McHugh; City Engineer
John Horrlsky; Police Judge, H. Kautzman;
Chief of Police, Charlie Hall; Attorney,
Thos. Carlon; Weighmaster, Joe Miller.
GRATTAN TOWNSHIP.
Supervisor, K. J. Hayes; Trearurer. Barney
MeGreevy; Clerk, J. Sullivan; Assessor, Ben
Johrlng: Justices, M. Castello and Chas.
Wilcox; Constables, John Horrlsky and Ed.
McBride; Uoad overseer dlst. 28, Allen Brown
dlst. No. 4, John Enright.
SOLDIERS’ RELIEF COMNISSION.
Kegular meeting first Monday in Febru
ary of each year, and at such other times as
Is deemed necessary, ltobt. Gallagher, Page,
chairman; Win. Bowen, C'Neill, secretary;
U. 11. Clurk Atkinson.
mT.PATRICK’8 CATHOLIC CHURCH.
Q Services every Sabbath at 10:30 o’clock.
Very Rev. Cassidy, Poe tor. Sabbath sohool
Immediately following services.
Methodist church. Sunday
services—Preaching 10:30 A. M. and 7:30
F. M. Class No. 1 0:30 A. M. Class No. 2 (Ep
worth League) 6:30 p. M. Class No. 3 (Child
rens) 3:00 p. M. Mind-week services—General
prayer meeting Thursday 7:30 p. m. All will
be rnude welcome, especially strangers.'
E. T. GEORGE, Pastor.
A. K. POST, NO. 86. The Gen. John
IT. O’Neill Post, No. 80, Department of Ne
braska G. A. It., will meet the first and third
Saturday evening of each month In Mssonlo
hall O’Neil) S. J. Smiih, Com.
LUKHOliN VALLEY LODGE, I. O. O.
JCi F. Meets every Wednesday evening in
Odd Fellows’ hall. Visiting brothers cordially
invited to attend.
8. Smith, N, G. C. L. Bright, Sec.
Garfield chapter, il a. m
Meets on first and third Thursday of each
month In Masonic hall.
W. J. Doans Sec. J. C. Harnish, H, P
KOFP.—HELMET LODGE, U. D.
, Convention every Monday at 8 o'clook p.
m. in Odd Fellows’ nail. Visiting brethern
cordially Invited.
T. V. Golden, C. C.
M. F. McCarty. K. of R. and S.
O’NJULL ISHUAMl'MJSST NO. BO. I.
O. O. F. meets every second and fourth
Kridays of each month In Odd Fellows’ Hall.
Scribe. Ohas. Bright.
12UIKN LODGESO.41, DAUUUTEltS
li OF KKBEKAH, meets every 1st and ad
Friday of each month In Odd Fellows’ Hall,
i_Zj Anna Davidson. N. G.
Blanche Adams, Secretary.
GA11F1EL.U LODGE, N0.95.F.& A.M.
Bogular communications Thursday nights
on or before the full of the moon.
W. J. D bs. Sec. E. H. Benedict, W. M.
Holt cami*no. 1710.m. w.ofa.
Meets on the first and third Tuesday In
each month In the Masonic hall.
O. E. Biodin, V. 0. D. Li. Ohokin, Clerk.
AO, U. VY. NO. 1511, Meets second
• and fourth 'l'udsday of each month in
Masonic hall.
0. Bright, Uec. T. V. Golden, M. W.
INDEPENDENT WORKMEN OF
AMBLUCA.;.meet every jfirst and third
Friday of each month.
Geo. McCotchan, G. M.
S. M. Waders, See.
POSTOFFICE DIP.CETORY
Arrival of Malls
t. K. a H. V. R. n.—FROM THE EAST. '
Every day, Sunday Included at.6:15 pm
FROM THE WEST.
Every day,Sunday Included at.9:68 am
PACiriC SHORT LINE. '
Passenger—leaves 9:36 A.H. Arrives 9:07 p.m.
Freight—leaves 9:07 P. M. Arrives 7:00 P. M.
Daily except Sunday.
O’NEILL AND CHELSEA.
Departs Monday, Wed. and Friday at 7:00 am
ArrivesTjesday,Thurs.and Sat. at.. 1:00pm
, O’NEILL AND PADDOCK.
Departs Monday. Wed.and Friday at..7:00 am
Arrives Tuesday .Thurs. and Sat. at..4:30 p m
O’NEILL AND NIOBRARA.
Departs Monday. Wed. and Fri. at_7:00 a m
Arrives Tuesday, Thurs. and Sat. at...4:00 p a
O’NEILL AND CUMMINSVILLE.
Arrives Mon.,Wed. and Fridays at. .ll:B0pm
Departs Mon., Wed. and Friday at 1.-00 p m
ETHEL TOWNSEND.
ERA Ismail Khan
Is a frontier Btation
on” the cutthroat
side of the Indus.
Its name means
that Ismail Khan—
may his bones rest
—once pitched his
tent there, but a
not too careful phil
ology forgot to add
some eloquent syl
lable which would signify that Ismail
Khan—who lies with the prophet —
cleared out again as rapidly as possi
ble. Unfortunately the maintenance of
the Pax BHtannica In the valley of the
Indus requires the constant presence
in that delectable spot of a squadron of
horse and a battalion of foot belong
ing to those fine troops, the Punjab
frontier force. In the middle of June
It Is often impossible to see the com
pound gate from the verandah at mid
day owing to the prevalence of a swirl
ing dust storm, and twelve hours later
It may be necessary to pour water over
the bed to render it sufficiently cool to
be laid upon.
let tne officers or the Piffers—so
called by Anglo-Indians as a phonetic
way of expressing the Initials P. F. F.—
manage to live there, and, what Is still
more marvelous, half a dozen Regent
street gowns may be seen there when
ever the station foregathers at club or
gymkhana. Not long ago the C. O. at
Cera Ismail Khan had as a daughter
the prettiest girl that was to be set eyes
upon along the whole 2,000 miles of the
Indus. Ethel Townsend was known far
and wide as the pride of the Piffers,
and I will tell you another time how she
won the title. Just now I wish to place
on record what Major Dalrymple did
for her. Dalrymple did not know, un
til Townsend married the only child
of the chief of the Indus flotilla, that
he would never care for any other
woman. Mrs. Townsend never even
guessed his secret, but It nearly broke
his heart when she died in giving birth
to the little one who afterward bore her
name.
Ethel always called him uncle, and
next to her love for her father she gave
him the full warmth of her impulsive
affections. But now that she had come
back from a seven years’ residence in
France and Germany she found that
there was yet another corner vacant In
her heart, and this place was at once
bestowed upon Capt., the Hon. Robert
McGregor Cameron, whom the natives
had christened the Babadursahlb, and
who was known to his associates as the
Hon. Bob.
Hence it was that when the Guides—
to which distinguished section of the
Punjab frontier force all these people
belonged—were ordered to join an ex
pedition against a particularly obnox
ious tribe in the Bara Khel, Ethel be
took herself to Mayor Dalrymple and
cried her pretty eyes out on the score
that Bob would be sure to get himself
killed.
“He won’t be in any greater danger
than your father or I, sweetheart,”
said the major, at his wits’ end for
words of consolation, "aad you have
seen us return safely too often to feel
alarmed now.”
"Oh, dad and you have got good sense,
but Bob is such a mad thing—and he
will do something ridiculous, and I
shall never see him again,” boohoo,
boohoo—the pride of the Piffers was
but a woman.
“Ethel, my dear, listen to me,” and
the fine-looking soldier tenderly
TROUBLED HIM A LITTLE AT '
FIRST.
smoothed her. golden-brown tresses
back from her forehead. "You know
how much I value your happiness and
how glad I am you are going to marry
a man like Cameron. I promise you
now that I will look after him as though,
he were my own son and bring him
back safe and sound to you. Come,
you have full trust in me?"
Dalrymple knew that his promise
was of little avail m view of the chances
of a border campaign, but it soothed
the girl's heart, and her tears fell
through a smile as she kissed him.
As a rule a mountain battery, two j
companies of the Scottish Rides, two
native regiments, a ad a detachment or
the Guides should be more than a match!
for any tribesmen that ever swept down
on a marauding foray into the lowlands.
But that day the Ghazis fought with
demoniacal skill, and, just toward
evening, they made a last wild rush ;
that nearly settled matters. Indeed, ■
the square bulged in rather unpleasant
ly on one side, and had it not been for 1
the way in which Cameron and a dozen
of his sowars laid about them with,
their sabers it would have been all up>
with the expedition.
As it was, everybody breather hard
for the next ten minutes, and the Scots
men iWere just beginning to wipe out
their rifles, the barrels having been
fouled with drippings from the bay
onets, when Dalrymple discovered that 1
Cameron was missing. Some one had :
seen him get knocked off his horse and
he had evidently been carried away in
the rush of the retreating enemy. A.
hasty search in the vicinity showed that i
his body, at any rate, was not to be
found, and anything like pursuit In the
growing darkness was quite out of the
question.
Townsend and D&lrympe did not dare
to speak their thoughts to each other,
but a couple of hours later, when the
wearied force was seeking rest from the
turmoil of the day, a moullah placed all
doubts at rest as to Cameron’s fate by
shrieking out of the gloom that when
the next day dawned the followers of the
prophet would first crucify the accursed
Ferlnghi in their possession and then
wipe the British troops off the face of
the earth.
“Jackals,” he yelled, "will turn away
gorged from your corpses,” but it was
his figurative eastern way of putting it.
Then Dalrympe swore he would ful
fill his promise to Ethel.
To obtain the permission of the briga
dier for his project was out of the ques
tion, so he consulted with no one, not
even Col. Townsend. With the aid of a
sub adar he was soon dressed a la
Ghazl, and he borrowed the tulwar of a
dead tribesman who was lying, among
plenty of his kin, on front of the zereba.
This, with a couple of revolvers con
cealed beneath his flowing robes, con
stituted the whole of his appliances,
and Indeed of his plan also, as he had
resolved that If he could not save Cam
eron he would endeavor to get near
him and give him the means of avoid
ing crucifixion.
me mountain village to which the
tribesmen had retreated was 'distant
some four miles. The road approach
ing the place was fairly free from ob
stacles, but It twisted and turned in all
direction# as It climbed up the side of a
precipitous gorge, finally reaching a
plateau about 1,000 feet above the level
of the small stream that dashed along
beneath. The moon was trying to strug
gle through a great cloud bank, but
gave light enough to show the way and
to distinguish objects c\ose at hand.
Nearing the village—as no semblance
of a guard was kept—he passed several
scattered groups clustered round tires
or huddled among bundles of fodder.
Many of the men were groaning and
their women bandaging their wounds.
Dalrymple shuffled painfully along,
finding the native sandals difficult to
walk in, and he came upon Cameron
suddenly. The Hon. Bob was seated on
the ground, with his hands apparently
tied behind his back, and resting
against a low mud hut, inside and in
front of whloh were some twenty of the
tribesmen—a few smoking round a fire,
the others asleep. Dalrymple walked
straight up to him, and growled “Srg!”
That is the Persian for all that we
mean when we call a man a dog—and
more. The action was natural in a
tribesman and evoked no comment; in
Dalrymple’s case it was a fine piece of
art. He squatted on the ground close
to the prisoner and whispered.
“Steady, Bobs I’ve come to help you."
Cameron had nerves of steel, but the
words tried them to their utmost ten
sion. When he could trust his voice he
only said:
“Thanks, old chap. It’s no use. My
left ankle is sprained so I can’t walk a
yard, even if R were any good. Get
back safely and give my love to Ethel.
As for you, God bless you."
At that moment a horse neighed
loudly at some distance and Dalrymple,
in a Second, had formed his plan. He
whispered again: “Can you manage to
stand straight up when you hear a
horse coming this way?”
“Yes,” said Cameron.
“Very well, be ready in five minutes.’
Then he rose, growled another Persian
oath, expectorated again at the pris
oner, and left the circle of light cast by
the fire. He had little difficulty in find
ing the animal that had given voice.
He was tied up in a rough shed and
seemed to be a strong beast. Ethel
said afterward that he was the best
pony she ever laid eyes upon, but she
was prejudiced in his favor. His sad
dle and headgear were hanging close at
hand, and Dalrymple lost no time in
getting him ready, although the queer
Afghan bridle troubled him a little at
first. Then he led him out and mounted
him, but at the same moment a fellow
sprang out from the rear of the shed
and wanted to know in the name of the
prophet why a cursed thief was mqvlng
off with his master’s ghora. There was
no time for a long discourse, so Dalrym
ple gave him the weightiest reason at
command by hitting him such a crack
with the tulwar on his shaven crown
that, like Bret Harte’s orator—•
“He smiled a kind of sickly smile and
curled up on the floor
And the subsequent proceedings inter
ested him no more.”
Then the fun commenced. He rode up
to the hut at a canter, found Cameron
standing, swung him crossways on the
saddle in front of him, and started for
home.
The excitement on that hillside dur
ing the next ten minutes was some
thing remarkable. Jezolls were fired,
tom-toms beaten, gongs banged, and
not a few Martini bullets whistled past
them as they galloped down the path
way. Cameron and Dalrymple weighed
twenty-three stone between them, but
the little horse would have run away
with two more like them. There were
no other animals handy, to all appear
ances, so pursuit was out of the ques
tion after the first 100 yards, and in
less than half an hour Cameron was in
the hands of the doctors, Dalrymple
was drinking some hot whisky and
water with the brigadier, and the Ka
buli was being groomed by about six
men, while if he had not been a wise
little beast he could have burst himself
with gram. Next morning the village
was shelled, and when the moullah was
hit with a shrapnell the tribesmen
-gave in and promised to be good.
• •*•••*
All this happened six years ago. Since
then I have seen a fat youngster held
on to the back of a still fatter Kabul:
pony, and the name of the youngster
was Robert Dalrymple Cameron.—
i Utica Press. .
NO HA8TY MARRIAGES.
Higher Education Make* Woman Low
Dependent.
“So long a* the attraction of sex re
mains you cannot abolish marriage!”
excitedly exclaimed the conservative
man, according to Vogue.
"I have no desire to do away with
marriage, but simply to mitigate it,”
replied the woman propagandist. And
most thoughtful people will fcgree with
the woman speaker that the reckless
ness which characterizes marriage
should be moderated. It Is encouraging
to’ those whose hearts are touched by
the manifold sorrows of humanity to
observe that. In this matter of mar
riage (a most prolific source of mis
ery to human beings), different agencies
are at work, educating people to an ap
preciation of the gravity of the estate,
and Its tremendous consequences to in
dividuals and to nations. The higher
education of women has, from the start,
shown a tendency to disincline those
who took the college courses toward
early marriages and toward Imprudent
ones—quite a large percentage of them
moreover, taking up careers and re
maining single. A recent canvass of
college graduates is said to have shown
that, while 90 per cent of non-college
women become wives, only 5S per cent
of college graduates resign their lives
into the keeping of husbands. From
other sources it is learned that those
who marry do not swell the lists of
Invalid wives; neither do 50 per cent of
the children born to them figure in
mortality tables, as Is the ghastly fact
with the everyday woman's children.
College women are not apt to marry a
man to save him, and thus Insure for
children morally weak or vicious fath
ers; neither does love (?) In a cottage
translated in these days into a cheap
flat in an unwholesome locality—ap
pear to her finer or more winsome than
the self-respecting Independence of the
bread-winning positions that are now
within her reach. Tears ago some con
servative men had the perspicacity to
realize and the courage to state that
fuller life for women meant the lessen
ing of her Interest in marriage (the
only profession her foremothers had
been permitted to consider) and that
she would be harder to please and more
deliberate in her choice. That the
phophedes have come to pass Is matter
for congratulation or for condemnation,
according to the observer’s point of
view.
A WIFE’S TYRANNY.
Soma of the Awful Thine* Sho Do** to
Annoy Bar Huabaad.
She contradicts him at the head of hie
own table, Interrupts his anecdote to
set him right on an utterly unimpor
tant little detail—say the date of a trans
action, which he makes the 7th of Sep
tember and she asserts was the 8 th;
she interferes in all his arrangements,
and questions his authority in the sta
bles, the field, the church, the consult
ing-room; she apportions his food and
regulates the amount of wine he may
take; should she dislike the smell of to
bacco she will not allow him the most
transient whiff of the most refined cig
arette, and, like her brother with his
victim, she teaches the children to de
spise their father by the frank con
tempt with which she treats him and
the way In which she flouts his opinion
and denies his authority. If she is more
affectionate than aggressive she ren
ders him ridiculous by her effusiveness;
Like the "Sammy, love," which roused
Dean Alford’s reprobation, she loads
him with silly epithets of endearment
before folk, oppresses him with person
al attention and treats him generally
as a sick child next door to an Idiot
All out of love and Its unreasoning
tyranny she takes him Into custody—
in public as In private life—and allows
him no kind of freedom. Robust and
vigorous as he is, she worries over his
health as though he were a confirmed
invalid; In the hey-day of his maturity
coddling him as if he were an octo
genarian bordering on the second child
hood. She continually uses the ex
pression, “I shall not allow my hus
band to do so and se;" or, “I will make
my husband do this or that." Never by
any chance does she confess his right
to free action, bound as he Is In the
chains of her tyrannous affection. In
the end she makes him what she has
long fancied him to be, a backboneless
valetudinarian, whom the sun scorches
to fever and the east wind chills to
pnetfmonta—one who has loBt the fruit
by “fadding” about the flower.—Chica
go Chronicle.
Dr. Clark's Moral Idea.
The Rev. F. E. Clark, president of thi
Christian Endeavorers, suggested a
unique plan a week or two ago. It Is to
start a “chain of prayer,” to reach clear
around £ho world, and In which every
member of the society, if he wishes,
might form a link. Each Endeavorer
Is to offer one short petition every day
for other members and for the cause
at large. Special objects may from
time to time be included. To become a
link in the chain requires but one con
dition, viz., belief in prayer.
, It Wu Rotten.
A tery speaker In Berwickshire held
a nut in his hand and said: “This repre
sents the whole church question. This
shell is the free church, good In Y »
way, but not the best of things. No*
crack this nut and you get the estab
lished church.” He cracked it and it
was rotten and he had to retire amid
lerlsive cheers.—Fun.
Blarney.
His Reverence—I can’t take your
cab, Pat. I see your horse has been on
his knees.
Pat—Arrah, yer rlverence; be aisy
about that The last place he had was
with a praste and faith, he had to keep
up a simblance of religion.—Sydney
Bulletin.
This S86 Music Box and one Ladies’
Cold Watch actually to give away. Do
you want them? Buy a Dollar’s worth
of goods at Bentley’s and learn how
to get them.
Always Buy the
Best. The . . .
Best is Cheapest
The Finest and Largest stock of good in the Hardware and..
.Implement Line in the Elkhorn Valley is found at : :
UTIITII .
John Deere plows, Moline wagons, David
Bradley & Co’s famous Disc cultivators...
Riding and walking cultivators, harrows,
Glidden wire, stoves, oils, cuttlery, tinware.
W
SBBSL
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Sll
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NERVE SEEDS>-WEAK MEN
This Famous Beiaedyeures quickly, permsnsotly *U
nervous dlwmses, Wuak If emory. Loss of .Brain hnw, ‘
lioiulacho, Wakefulness, Las* Vitality, Nightly Bulls,
youthful error a orexcotaea. Contains no opiates. la a atnra (Mils
and blood builder. Makoathe pale arid pony atrone and plana.
ISnaUy corrled In vos t pocket. St per box* O fopfA. Brmsttjife*
paid, ivith a written guarantee or money rafwuUd, Write n«,<Vao
medical bootr, sealed olnln wranner. with testimonial a end
Hvnvwuinnoncini ffiitnainfr. AoennrgeTftrrfmjmitarionw. B$W*r*ofjmum
kM, mmi. tiona. Boldby*«risnu,oraddreai&KKVK. “Tim
For sale In O'Neill, Neb., by M0KR1S A CO., DrnggUU.
SHORTER LIFE FOR LAMPS.
Incandescent Lights Now Bon st a
Higher Tension*
New York Commercial-Advertiser: A
short life and a merry one Is to be the
guiding principle of the new order of
lamp manufacture. At one time an In
candescent lamp cost so much that It
was made to last as long as possible,
even if it had to be run at much below
Its nominal candle power. Now, lamps
are cheap, and people Insist on having
light A significant sign of the tend
ency of the times is that the twenty
flve-candle power lamp is daily being
put In In place of the original standard
sixteen-candle-power lamp. It Is as
sumed that when Edison adopted the
sixteen-candle power standard for his
lamp he took what was probably a
very good average of the Illumination
given out by five-foot gas burners the
country over. But during the last fif
teen years the gas standard has been
raised through improvements In manu
facture, and whereas twenty-candle
gas was once seldom seen, the larger
cities of this country new average well
up to twenty-five-candle gas. The pub
lic has not been slow to see this, and
now demands a unit of light at least
equal to the prevailing standard gas
unit. The central stations, fortunately
for them, realise the situation, and the
use of high economy lamps Is growing.
It is noted, too, that the time-honored
600 hours of life is not nearly so often
insisted ou as formerly. Indeed, the
specific requirement now commonly
made is for a lamp that will maintain
its candle power at high economy tor
from 300 to 400 hours. The introduc
tion of lamps of twenty-five-candle
power, although already started upon,
will doubtless be gradual, as it must
naturally be accompanied by a corre
sponding change in the fittings, out
cuts, wiring, etc., if applied to existing
installations.
Don's Be Too Critical.
Whatever you do never set up for a
critic. We don’t mean a newspaper
one, but In private life, in the domestic
circle, In society. It will not do any one
any good, and it will do you harm—it
you mind being called disagreeable. If
yon don’t like any one’s nose, or object
to any one’s chin, don’t put your feel
ings Into words. If any one’s
manners don’t please you remember
your own. People are not all made to
suit one taste; recollect that. Take
things as you find them, unless you con
alter them. lc'”
*a*en m. umner, after it to
swallowed, cannot be made any bettor.
Continual fault-finding, continual criti
cism of the conduct of this one,
the speech of that one, the dress ef the
other and the opinions of t'other, will
make home the unhappiest place under -
the sun. If you are never pleased with
any one, no one will ever be pleased
with you. And, it it is known that
you are hard to suit, few will tahe
pains to- suit you.
Dr. Price’* Cream Baking Powder Hx
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ChlehMter’* Enclleh Mmm
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urifini ua w»i/ «#<_
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mm «j aif Local Drucsiou.
o*,;
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W COPYRIGHTS.
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