Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, December 29, 1904, Image 5

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    &IPARATGR 109 ASMS.
It 1 a well known fact that Amr
LIiUM " " 11111 ' 1 1 ;.mryum'
rhere It very easily and advautu
nisly (HniMb.-TJ'his Is true not, on y
"It fn rtrnlmt of 'iHPclaAse's, and a
fooflTIlHBtratlon 1 ,yie..wasts tiat !i
gip'arent everywhere In the burning
. if coal. Jjook at the ash boiea on asU
lay, an notice bo "few people alft
telr aahea. Not oim out of er
W. A glance will suffice to sbow that
tearly one-half of 'what are calif 1
tabes really contain a considerable
tmount of good coal. If the ash
after ahown In the illustration were
aaed, there would not .be Uila waste.
tbe deiice la to the shape of a barrel,
apen.atjta lower emTViid adapted io
art tightly down on the floor. A banl
aaPAMAih coax, raost ci.ndkrs
lop porting a plate la secured ItishU,
tM plate being of uietal and provable
aftb' perforations Arranged &Wv$J
AM plat- la the crusher bar, while
Trejectlng downward from the com
tr a number of fingers, which alft
'-ftM.aaooa when they, are put HjiOii
flu screen, causing ail but the larger
tlecea to fall , through. The bigger
leces of coal can then bo readily re
ooved, and after allowing tlie ;oon-
' lent to fall to the crusher the appar
atus la again put In operation. The
mistier bar breaks up the cinders Into
mall pieces, which full through tho
perforations In the pinto, while tho
ood cool, beriiff harder, la not dis
turbed, but can be collected find used
again. It U obvious that this device
tonld also be lined to ndvnutage fr
epfiratlng other material, particu
larly If It wum desirable to separate
' gritty from smooth substunecs.
James Jackson of Chicago, 1 1 1 Inula,
the patentee.
Making Mouey.
Why don't you uuke ninney?"
my
friend say to ide,
And I tell theni I do not know how.
Ttten they give nie the laugh aud the
gentle "Como off"
' Aod the alangr "What's eatiug you
Mwf
fhey aay I could d It a easy ni Dot
If i worked like the fellows who do;
Chat I've got aa much sense aa inany
they know - :
Who bave'gathered a million or two.
fhey aay It la easy enough to get rich
If a fellow will, only work hard,
No matter whatever the field of hi toil
la railways, finances or lord.
fbey aay I have braini and a good gift
of gab
And success In the making of fronds;
That' I ought to tonke money and fame,
for a nin
" la known by the money he spend.
They telb nie these thin with a conS
. dent air,
Aud I'm sure thisy believe what they
. wy.
For they jcr-r when I tell them I cannot
because " 1 '
The Lord didn't build nie that way.
Out it' true, Ja'tthe woe. nod these
frieu l-i wouMp't .lasiiTh
If I Siid thai I con! ln't write Verse
Or do other stunt -itf te fcMvljice uf art
.Where wealth b'u't ine.'i.ir.sV by pur.e.
riie pwt. the printer.'"!!!" sculpt. r i.-i
lie can't make himself others im-,
Ko (imtU'r how hard he may work iv.r
' how Ions
He may airusle to m in the fair pnxe.
and ko with the genius" who piles up his
'i!e '
T'ntii he ha -million to pnre. '
Lnhn he ix horn vvuh the apoon in his
ntotith ,
Voti i-iiu bet he will never get there.
Collier".-' "''.-''. .
I I . ..v . i,.. jt .l.e I'
- A Chinese woman of il!stliition,
--fnw lit thin cotmtiy, was recently
K ki-d by li New York Tribune rop Tier
to tell him what npHarel to her to
feu 'the (liiiiiitiant Ann'-lean trult.
"Ilopcfiilnes," van the 'lul k ro-
tly; "a vlnerfu! i'i s-vi-ruine, nn In
iiKtrlona iptlmlim.
''lhU triiit certainly puveniel a
i n-lw.m t met the. rtll'T
ll a ..Inner natty." the lady con-
tinned, "lie was a niedlciil Htndert,
tiid nonie cme anld to him:
""Iioii't yiu despair of ever biilMiii
jp a pni' t'ee In niedicUie?'
"ftidcel. no,' be iitiMvcied.
"Hut you will nd'iilt t! t the pro
I.. lr......tL' rt'...,'t'OU llt'l! ?'
; , : , lt said the yo,m
Si 'nut I p.op .,e to gradifat... iu
BHlcJ. n,. the Kuuie. and' tho ...
Mm are nlre.adv In the profession will
i . , '
bave to tube their i hancia.
.
js-vi.l. tin ti. Willi n li.u'.rii, li ,.
H loitlgnn'loil.- . ;
--' Town. Some in. an rim'al passed ft
tad dollar tun on me ui-u.-. e"j
$ndy who would (hi that la tlie Iov:K
,l!ud of a cio ik. t
liruwne V'es, you're out a dollar,
Ih? , , '.
Towns O, 1 gtiesH not I think I'll
e able to pax It. on on fioeuuy
Hp &
stavl'aiidJpbU Vrvw.
4r
gg- OLD '-5
FAVORITES
Th Hrautifnl Boost.
) the mow, the beautiful anow!
ruling tlie iky and earth below;
ver the hoaartopa, over the atreet,
vr the heada of the people yon meet,
trancing, Hirtiug, akipping along,
fceautlful anow! it can do no wrong:
flying to kiaa a fair lady's cheek,
. bilging to hps In frulickaome freak,
beautiful anow from the tea vena above
I'ure aa an angel, geutle aa love!
p. the anow, the beautiful anowl
Sow the flake gather and laugh as they
go
ft'hlrliug about la their maddening fun.
it playa In it glee with every one
jhaiing. laughing, hurrying by
4 light on tho face, and it aparklee. the
eye;
ind playful dogs with a bark aod a
bound,
I nap at the crysiaia that eddy around;
The town la alive, and Its heart In a
glow
To welcome the coming of beautiful
auow.
Uuw wili'l. the crosd goea rxtjizg
along,
flailing each .other with humor and aong!
ttuw the gay alad like meteor flash by,
Bright for the moment, 'then lost to the
. eye!
flinging, swinging, dashing they go
Over the crust of the beautiful anow
6 now so pure, when It falls front the sky,
s to make one regret to" see Jt lie
Pube" trampled "and tracked' of ne thou
' .. sand feet, r Vt J ' ' '
rifl-it iilenda with the flUh in the horrl
. ri street, r ... . ' -. "
i - '- ...
Obce I waa pore as tlie anow, but I
fll ." , f
fell like the anowfiakea from heaven to
. " hell; - -
Fell to be trnrnph-d as filth In the atreet;
Pell to be scoffed, to be spit on the beat;
flcnding, cumiinf, dreading to die;
felling my aoul to whoever would buy;
Tn-aling iu shame for a morael of bread;
il iting the living and fearing the dead
Merciful tlod! Have I fallen so low?
And yet I wns ouoe like the beautiful
snow!
t)ne I was fair as the beautiful snow,
IS'ith an eye like its crystal, aud heart
like iin ch'w;
Dnee I whs loved for my Innocent (trace,
I'lattered and sought for the charms of
the fare.
Father, mother, ster, all,
3d and myself 1 have lost by my fall!
The veriest wretch that goes shivering
by
Will make a wide sweep lest I wander
too nixh;
For all thnt is on or above me I know
There's nothing as pure as the beautiful
now.
Dow strange it should be that this beau
tiful anow
Should fall on a sinner with nowhere to
go! -
How strange It should he when night
comes again,.-
It the anow and' th'e lee struck my des
perate brnin!
Painting, freezing, dying alone.
Poo wicked for prayer, too weak for a
moan
To be heard In the street- of the crazy
, town,
3one mnd In the Joy of the snow coming
down;
To be and to die in my terrible woe.
iVith a bed and a shroud of the beautiful
snow.
3elples and fnd as tho trampled sn:w ;
Sinner, despair not! t'hrist stoopeiii low
Vi rescue the aoul Jhat. i hist m aiu,
iud raise it to life and enjoi n. nit again.
iroHiiiiiR, bleeding, dying for thee.
The ("nu-ified hung un the ncrurwd tree;
flii n event of mercy fell soft oh thine
ear;
U there jnercy fur tne? Will lie hied my
pray er '!
3 (Jod, in the stream that for sinners did
How.
iVtinh and I nhall he whiter tli.au
snow.
GOurON. PORf liliO DIAZ.
Oemnrknljle Career of tlie Sl.inv limes
Klecu-J l'1-i.-i.iil.-iit of Mexicu.
!tmioiilK of tl.i." life of I'orlirio IHnz
tnadi' tin' claim Unit history dui'K not
Lolil, tlii K flc of tlie' eriH.-ides, a pcr
Imial reeurd t.y vuricd nnd eventful,
tayx tlio San Antonio Kxpress. The
man of Mexico in credited with the
p.ost knltMilo"tipi' career xlm-e , tho
( i.vi'iif Uleliard the IJ.orl Hearted,
liale and hciirty at 7" yearn of jikc,
flenr-c.ved, nml llnn-fonted. his life
fj.ittH half a century of incredible nd
tetittire, nnd stand for political devel
jpiuetit wliicb probably In Htiown by
yn other nation in the nineteenth ct-i-l.iry.
Witliln H memory of Kan Auto
aluii Mexico was tlu m mt revolution
try of .noijnirltw;. no InfeNted by ban
tit h, h iKjwerless to afionl security to
life and property that partien In the
jtoited Hate, sg,eH,e.l thin fa.lnreof
r.neritment a n pretext for nssistiug
lexax in her Btrugi;le for Itidepeinl
(nce. To-day, outside of the l.'nlled
tfates, Mexico la probably the best
fovenied country on the hemisphere.
I'orlirio lilnz was born In the city of
f ;,aca Sept. l. ItlO, the iilhl before
I'"- u..ly.'-y of Mexican J.,,!,,,,.!-
!ncc d.'ty. Ilfti ,reat gra",
llatln r, cum
r"-' trV r.l'i'rt bad uiarried a woma
- fPf -'be ptve. r,,ee ;,ml , o.tluit exte,
U ''" ' ' '
e win. left an orphan at 3 yearn i
i
'(i'.'- Whei mere boy be helped at
in
extent
of
a
jniinlry ?V,r'- ' ' n(' bi'lisclf nil
from the help of friends by hnvlng the
llicilniJcul emiilaryv liut he - gained
the friendship of ltenito JtfiiTeK, tho
jn-tit counnonor. of M,exlco, tlu-n (Jov
priior of Oaxacn, who obtained for
111 in it librarbtiiMlilp. At the uv of It)
tfi Viin mnde a professor of Hom.ui
w
Io a plebiscite offered by -aula Ana
rlac waa one of two lo Oaiaea who
dared openly to re gister vote against
the dictator. He paid the penalty of
banishment, rwaphig n arrow! with
bi life.
ife Dowvtnsted warfare in a guer
rilla organization operating .ugaiiiHt !
Kanta Ana, aul wJtliiu eight. yeaya had
risen from captaincy to commander-in-chief
of the Mexican armies and to
a place la the government second In
Importance only to President Juarez.
Lur)ng that time he won many sen
sational victories and made a aeries
of hairbreadth escape. ' At the
same time Le etioeed a remarkable
talent for civil administration. In the
midst of the stress and rigor of war
he panaed to eatabllah girl' schools In knowledge of the latent qualitle which might
Oaiaea, which are now the models f r have made him great, aay this publication. It has
similar Institution all over the reputv leprived families of all bnt the bare necessities of life and
lie. At practically the same time hejtaused their members to experience hardship and want,
gave Mexico one of ber national hull- Ml this because "the bead of the bouse" has placed
days by winning on the Clnco de Maya low limit on the domestic expenditures and has also nn-
tbe battle of Pnebla with raw Mexl- ,
can levies pitted against armies train
ed In France.
In April, 1677, be wa elected Presi
dent and except for the Interregnum of
Gonzales from 1880 to 18H4 be tins
been at the head of Mexico ever since.'
The chaotic country experienced IU
first peace in seventy years. i
eruption In public service was re
formed, taxes were reduced and public
Improvement begun and prosecuted
upon an elaborate scale. The country,
was cleared of bandits. Laws favor
able to Investment ware passed and
industrial development Invited by Urn
liberal aptrit of granting concession.,
factories, libraries, telegraphs and
scientific commlHulon were all fos
tered and have been brought to a high
standard. The valley of Mexico bus
been drained. Education baa been
made free aud equal to all.
Change In Mexico has progressed at
Hiich leaps and bounds as to be almost
Incredible and all has been wrought
by the "Orphan of Oaxaca, the savior,
unifier and fatbef of the United States
of Mexico."
TACTICS OF "LITTLE JAPS."
Russian View of the Enemy's Art of
War.
Yes, we were greutly iniataken when
we called them "little Japs." We have
never before bad to deal with such
skillful opponents. Tbey have Included
In their tactics all modern methods,
strictly adapting them to their own
national peculiarities. For IiiKtanee,
knowing tlie weakens of their cav
alry, they never allow it to go out un
supported. There Is always Infantry
behind lt, and our cavalry often runs
against It, not expecting it preaer-.ee.
The Japanese reconnolnsanee Is ef
fected thus: A compact force of rille
men marches, sustained by screens,
and patrols move about five versta
ahead. At a distance of three versls
tlie scouts are preceded by a number
of Chinese. Those last come to the
Russian lines, examine the camp and
make signal to the Japanese con
cerning the whereabouts of the cav
alry patrols. As the country Is moun
tainous, they advance ut the rate of
seven verata a day, Intrenching and
fortifying every step they take. Their
path is nu uninterrupted row of forti
fications. Knowing the excitable, Im
pressionable temper of their soldiers,
they never pursue the enemy before
nettling down In good order upon the
position occupied, because during a
pursuit troops often become disar
ranged. Judging by their operations'
one 'could imagine tbey ure the most
phlegmatic and methodical people in
the world so strong Is their military
education and their knowledge of tho
nrt of war.. They very reasonably
avoid the bayonet. Their lending ranks
run away to the right and left, open
ing the front for the fire of the suc
ceeding lines. Ilunnir.g round these to
the rear, they sixain form their ranks,
thus taking the place of reserves.
If Hie troops uncovered are unable
to stop our attack I y tire they repeat
the maneuver. What le-if control,
what, disci;. line are r.!i;iirod in order
to do this, and what a consciousness
of KUeiglh: When they are on tic)
march it Is all but luipii.ss.ble.fnr tinna
to meet with any surprises, hi iidli
lion to I he men detached for guard
they surround their columns by .-halm
of scouts, wbo advance along the
cri'Kts of the elevations. Moenici.t
under such conditions may be slow.,
but it Is sure. Husskoye isiovo.
Ktory lol.l by Kr. Kei d it.
-I have bad discouragements," ad
mitted Kzrft. Kendall the other day."
"Once, just once, years agi), l was sr
rest.sl. It was in a little rennsvivatila
tnwn which we sought to elevate. Hutj
it refused to be Oievated. We rented
ihe hall for f-'O, and there was JoM I oi-ia-r..ns ieo.it ins of fotlculans lle
f I'.MO gross in the bouse. The mana-l Hoved to He Doomi-d.
get', or Janitor, or sexton I forget! Although liarvaid came in lor intlcli
which was a kindly looking old gen- stinging ridicule when lt protested
tleinan, and we had lt all framed up igalnst rrinceion's vociferous "root
to ask him to help us out of towu. lie ng." that piolcft lias nevertheless been
catne iiround after the show. heeded, says the Kansas Independent.
"'Hoys,' he said, 'you're shy on tlie 1'bo college yell Is about done tor in
rent. What are you going to do about American athletics; ut least It will
ity j never again lie the feattl.e of every
"We- explained Die situation, and he jame that It was. A .nod thing at the
seemed deeply touched. 'Well.' hoys, Dtttset, as a source of Inspiration and
It's too bnd,"'lie' salii. 'You Just wad :h. er, lt caniu to be an unmitigated
here '-about - twenty minutes.' AImiuI nuisance., both to players and speclu-three-qiiarters
of mi hour later became lors.
tiiK-lc I i:tighind played a lartre part In brlng-
'" 'It's oil Vlgbt, Ixiys.'-he exi'l ilmeed. jig about this reform, 'the I'.ritisb
lAi'' fixed li. Yon-fce 1 ain't j-ot all ire notably quiet at games, a "Well
Hie'sr'ty.'and1 ) i hd-to- consult the played:" or "Well done!" being the
trtistec's: It's ' all' rit'bt. They'll rrusl .linit of their enthusiasm. When Yale
von for tho-rifl cents.' " j
If we. should marry a thin sort of
woman, and sho should steadily In
crease lu weight, we would leave her
ns soon is she reached two hundred ,
find fifty pounds. That would bo the!
limit.
.
A girl who looks good usu't necossar -
lly good Uokliig.
i HQ lf"MTJll)II A H $JbM
OPINIONS OF GREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS
Save Some Money.
Will i ER iu one of the current
ft
to think the people of this country are saving too
much money. The bugbear of "living . beyond
yonr means" boa kept many a man from
fonsclously restricted bis earning capacity
!ng minimum.
Voung men are warned by this magazine not to be too
tconomlcal, lest tbey grow mean and low-aplrited, presum-
bly.
la extravagance really so rare among ua that it needs to
! encouraged'
Which of two youug men is the more likely to succeed,
-the fool who spends bis entire weekly or monthly salary
K-fore he gets lt or the young man wbo saves one-fourth
lt and Is able sooner or later to nae bis savings to take
1 vantage of some ilrst-clasH buainess opportunity?
Debt la bad enough when lt bus to be resorted to In
irder to utilize home chance or other in business, but to
let Into It for mere enjoyment of luxurious living Is the
kibllmlty of folly. It destroys pence of mind, and Instead
if goading Its victim on to heroic endeavor it often drives
din Into acts of shady morality.
After Intemperance, extravagance Is the greatest curse
Beimeiiig the people of this country. , The young are called
Uon to struggle against no greater foe. Pittsburg Press.
Victims and Combatant.
HEN the battle of the Sba-ho ha passed with
Waterloo and LelpzJc, with Plevna and Sedan,
W'
it is safe to assume that Its
stagger humanity."' It Is not
hous extent of the casualties that we are horrified. These
lesperately gallant fellows who are watering Manchuria
vlth their blood, and exhibiting to the admiring but shnd
Ierlng eyes of the world the splendors and horrors of that
1st argument of kings and peasants, that reversion to na
ure stripped of the trimmings of progress anil civilization
rlilcb Is war these poor fellows have at least the sntlsfac
lon of dying for a country und a cause and of doing a
Ji'g duty lu a man's way. Itut there are others whose
tilferlngs are nearly as great who have no sentiment to
uoy them up, and no satisfaction for being Involved In the
onorul ruin.
With our eyes fixed on the heroic combatants In a TI
mile struggle, we lose sight of the deeply unfortunate peo
le over whose country the armies have been marching and
suiitartnarching. Victims in tlie beginning of the aggres
lve greed of Hussla, they are now forced to pay for the
it1. , s 1 - '--. ... .. - f"
t saV 'OK aw jfmm rwv (! JBT rrm m.. rs 1 - . " k3-j
'A- I. lb LW
-a A?.'
Kv n!,n; t.r tiiio iiii)i;i)i,s t:Ai:A(;i'; on sou-shan .iiiu,
One of the most desperately contesteil positions in tlie liguting before I.iao-Yaiig was Sou-shan hill," and titer
tunny brave Jipai:ese paid wilh tbeir lives the penalty of their .daring and con rn ;.'. Writing of iiie horrors he
.Here witnessed. le'iiin t Itnrleigli, the noted Loudon correspondent, says: "On tlie south front rose a conical bill,
the whole south front of which wits a steep green slooe. It was thickly strewn with Japanese dead. In one
el u ter l.iy over ;:.; bodies. The trench upon tiie summit was tilled with dead soldiers ntid in a snniil space there
were strewn the bodies of a thousand inea."
lesei'i!iiiig the niiiiiiicf In wbieh the Japanese dispose of their dead, Mr. Iturlelgh writes: ""i;he dead wore
.Maecd side by side in wide f-hailow pits. Wood and grain stalks were put under the bodies, and a 'layer of mould
v.as d.,eed over nil. Then lire was sot. to the stalks and the beat, acting- as a brick kiln, incinerated flu, remains.
Such are Ihe Japanese funeral )yres which, like camp llres, light up the sky -by night and send thick clouds of
smoke up by day." The illustration, which so faithfully embodies Mr. IVurleigh's doscriplioi'i.' is taken from tbe
Illustrated Lond'in News. '
KNELL OF THE YELL.
mil Harvard competed abioad Inst
year their college .veils Ml finite liat
Hid last week, when (lie American col-1
,'ces won over ("onihrlde and Oxford,
the yell was noticeably eosent.
Speaking of liie Itiitlsli lack of ma
niacal shrieks when witnessing any
ithletic Hrior'f, Tommy Hyiin, iniddle-
, weight champion of the world, had a
'bile to tell when be retwrued to Kan-
magazine seems
to a correspond-
tule will be one to
only by the enor-
WAR'S APPALLING HORRORS.
,aT 1 ?
.'
sits City nfter lig'.tUnr Jourmy Gorman!
of London.
"We fought nt the National Sporting
Club," said Tommy. "Rverybody wore
evening clothes, and every mail's right ;
eye had a monocle in If We began to .
fight, and, used to American crowus
as I was, the comparative silence was
hard on me. I thought, they weren't
pleased with my showing and let out
every link, but never a cheer. When
I knocked Gorman down the lirst time
they simply snid 'My word:' All of
them snid it together a feginir chorus
'My word!' just that, and nothing
more." -
I leal. V .-K'-laliies I ,lnw,
lo you live where cat-tail flags
iTo,v?.'lf so, you mjy easily procure'
oottii to fill pillows for sofa or beds.
Late in the ll tltinumii, when tbey are
golden brown in 'ohr, gather a .juan-
tity. ' Hil.-Stlfls may le ptx-ked lu a I
Short time..' l'ut them -In- sticks, and,!:
strips Che iiowicrrotir tm stimrs. jus
Is .(tiiekiy ami. cnsiiy uotic-ann tiicre
'need be" 'no IHler U' ca'i'r'WMIH'rvlA
Ihe down, if not quite so light nnd I .
puffy ns that of live geese. febew. i The first time n brldogrooni eats at ,
Is preferable from a'saiiitiiry, "tt'IT 'foTftitaiUrTlo has u "l-would-liketor
as a pecuuiary point of view. 1 1 ? ex4ilalu" look. . '
helplessness of a government and nation which knew not
bow to oppose tbe Illegitimate absorption of It land. Theii
eropa are destroyed, their country la laid waste, thU
homes have been wiped out of existence, and tbey them
selves, when tbey have not by a happier fate fallen victim
to the shot or shell intended for an enemy, are left to peris
of hunger and cold. No one ha a any time to -apart) tor tbatf
affliction They should not get In the way. But when kJa
tory la written lt must be that this picture of the desolate
country, which ha been made the theater of war, will
stand out with a dramatic touch of horror from all t4
slaughter and the suffering that have caused the nations
of tbe world to gasp. St. Jamee' Budget.
Penalties far financial Criaaea.
NE of the commonest ways of giving fictitious talu
to stock, and of selling large quantities of worthlea
certificates, la by paying large dividends not oat of
the actual earnings of the company, but out of the
money paid by stockholder for their stock. Stockholders
and others, believing from these dividend that the com
pany 1 actually prosperous and earidug money, either la
crease their holding or buy stock at high price, only t
And later that lt I worthless. The penal coda provides
that tbe director of a corporation who perpetrate txtia
swindle are guilty simply of a misdemeanor. Equally aerl
ous Is tbe action of directors In knowingly making; and
publishing false statements or reports as to the financial
condition of tlie company of which they are trustees. Whit
taker Wright (tbe great company promoter, who committed
suicide after being sentenced to hard labor for issuing falas
balance sheet of the wrecked London and Globe flnaacs
corporation) Was convicted in England under a statute aolv
stantlally similar to tills section of the penal code. Ho was
sentenced to seven years' penal servitude. Under this Now
York law tbe maximum penalty which be could haTS r
ceived would have been one year's imprisonment or a fins
of ?T'00.
In dealing with offenses by criminals of previous goo4
social standing we rarely look beyond the offender himself
to consider tbe welfare of the community.. If, for exam
ple a man steuls, and, after hi Indictment for the crlmat
his friends or relatives repay the amount of the theft, la
America that Is the end of the matter, and the pffenao
committed against criminal law devised a a protection
for the public la entirely negligible.- Tbe greatest bank
wrecker In American criminal history now lives undis
turbed in New Vork. He never served a day In gaol for a
defalcation of Jti.OOO.OOO. Tbe Indictments against hin
were all dismissed a few year ago. He even seems to
liavo returned to soiuo sort of social position, and the so
ciety columns of the New Vork Times, commenting soma
time ago upon a reception at his New York home, alluded
with becoming gravity, to certain Canadian guests a;
friends 'whom their host and his family had made "during
their long stay In Quebec." Atlantic Monthly.
u i. i
4 J
Our Now Kugliind fiiremot.hei:s muds
net only' pllloitsvif cat-taits, lint beds.
They are soft and "warm, and cost
nothliug btjt.a few hours of labor. Ye4
many a country housewife, living neat"
a lake or Htream ' which' Is bordered
by these stately reeds, shrcps on a
hard, cold straw or husk mattress and
uses pillows of hen's feathers.
Ideal pillows can be ninde-of tha
silky down of milkweed. The gather
itig of this involves some labor, but
children enjoy such work, and a pall
of pillows fit for n king light ami
airy as swansdowii may grace your
guestroom.
Hop" may also bo used to fill pil
lows. Tbey often prove beneficial In
ciim'S of insomnia. Poppy leaves tend
to Induce somnolence. Their odor
ink-fit not be agreeable to some, but
rose leKveS could be mixed with Uietu,
-National Miigaiflne. ..
" - '
tf yiu !,. J.,'lr path'tiec threo time!
n (1,,y watJuig for your meals, cut one
.,r ,(,, ,; f Two UU,H w
-4Vl,VH1.1,,(. ,11H, h(x wm fl,t)
Ill do th
fool better.
X
a I io a pieuiaviic uuvn-v
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...i.'. .Ui '- X:,!-y. -'
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i.