The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, November 15, 1901, Image 2

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    THE NORTHWESTERS.
BENDCHOTER * CIinSOM. F«U »nd Pol*
LOUP CITY, • - NEB.
■" ■_g?- *
The Khedive of Egypt recently sent
i present to Pope Leo XIII, in the
iliape of a mummy, dating back to two
thousand years before the Chiistian
»ra.
A movement is on foot in North
"arolina, prompted by the tobacco
dealers, to erect a statue of Sir Walter
Raleigh in Raleigh. Collection boxes
ire to be placed in stores where to
aacco is sold.
A line of “observation automobiles'’
* to be run in Washington, D. C., for
.“he benefit of visitors. Each vehicle
•arries twenty-two passengers and will
,>e accompanied by a lecturer on points
it interest at the capital. The fuel is
cerosene and the motive power steam.
Dr. S. J. Trexle of Kutztown, Pa.,
before his death, provided that every
one who attended his funeral should
have a free dinner, and over 1,000
persons availed themselves of his of
fer at the two leading hotels, where
arrangements had been made to feed
the multitude.
A New York newspaper recently
'elebrated its fiftieth birthday by
cringing out a copy of its first issue.
That number contained, among many
musty and forgotten things, an arti
cle on the Nicaraguan canal route, ex
tracts from English papers on the su
periority of American yachts, and an
article on the sympathy of Americans
with the Cubans, oppressed by Spain.
Verily, "the thoughts we are think
ing our fathers did think."
An American laundry machine com
pany has recently shipped a complete
steam laundry plant to Vladivostok,
eastern Siberia. It will be capable of
handling four thousand pieces of lin
en a day, and will consist of wash
ers, centrifugal wringers and a large
mangle. This is said to be the first
introduction of such an equipment in
to that region. If so, it is doubtless
a case of “Wring out the old; wring
In the new,” slightly to amend Ten
uyson’s familiar lines.
The "Donau Zeitung,’ a Bavarian
newspaper, gives currency to the ru
mor that the Kaiser has instructed
the military authorities to remit all
sentences passed on soldiers of the
Jhina expeditionary force. His Majes
ty, it Is said, does not wish that the
men who went voluntarily to China to
tight for the Fatherland shall return
home to undergo punishment. Quite
i large number of soldiers of the Ger
man forces have been sentenced to
more or less heavy punishment for
affenses against military discipline
committed in China and for excesses
against the person and property of the
Chinese.
When Emma Paul was called as a
witness in court in Baltimore, Md., in
a suit brought by her father against
her mother, the astonishing facts were
disclosed that, although she is aged
twenty years, she did not understand
the nature of an oath, had never been
to a church or Sunday school, had
never heard of God, or heaven, and
did not know of the promise of im
mortality. It was discovered that the
young woman had lived in Baltimore
all her life, and that her home was
in the heart of a densely populated
section. Judge Wickes allowed her to
testify, saying she was an extraordin
ary and unsatisfactory witness.
The street car companies of Chicago
are apparently not in high favor with
the Service committee of the commit
tee on local transportation of the city
council, for it has formulated a code
that is likely to reduce the receipts of
the railroad companies considerably.
The committee at a meeting decided
that if a passenger is obliged to stand
up in a car and hang on to a strap
he has received value for only four
rents, and not five. Then the com
mittee has suggested to the corpora
tion counsel to enforce an ordinance
relative to transfers, making it obli
gatory on the traction companies to
furnish transfer slips to any of its
intersecting lines.
An interesting; operation has just
Seen performed in the hospital attached
to the University at Halle, Uermany.
A 6-year-old girl patient was suffering
from partial paralysis and as the doc
tors in charge considered this could
»nly arise from a tumor on the brain.
Prof, von Bramann decided to remove
it With an electric saw he cut out a
piece of the skull a little larger than
i half-crown, cut through the Inner
(kin, anA discovered a tumor as large
is a walnut. The professor skilfully
*emoVed this tumor, sewed up the in
ner skin, fitted in again the round
piece of the skull he had sawn out,
ind sewed up the outer skin. The
»peration lasted an hour, and may be
lonsidered perfectly sue jessful, as the
:hild Is quite well again and all symp
ems of paralysis have disappeared.
At the request of friends and ad
nlrers of Dr. Armand Hansen, the dis
joverer of the bacillus of leprosy, the
Norwegian sculptor Visdal made u bust
»f him, which was unveiled the other
lay, on the occasion of Hansen's slx
leth birthday. Professor Lassar de
Ivered an address. In which lie re
narked that it had taken the world a
,uarter of a century to fully realize
he import of Dr. Hansen's discovery,
tut that already, in consequence of it,
treat Improvement had been effected in
forway, long one of the favorite
aunts of that terrible disease.
TALMAUE’S SERMON.
THE LAW OF COMPENSATION, SUN
DAY S SUBJECT.
Uooil or I'.vll Ilwrt* Iti-tarn to Him*
or BI»»t Oor Lives Avhlrvemt'nt* of
I*ouiology—-**lt Is Hr That Slttotlv Upon
the Cirrlr of the Karth"—Is. 40: 23.
[Copyright. 1901, by Louis Klopsch. X. V.)
Washington, Nov. 3.—in this dis
course Dr. Talmage shows that the
good or evil we do returns to bless or
blast us; text, Isaiah xl. 22, ''It is
he that, sitteth upon the circle of the
earth.’’
While yet people thought that the
world was flat and thousands of years
before they found out that it was round
Isaiah, in mv text. Intimated the shape
of it. God sitting upon the circle of the
earth. The most beautiful figure in all
geometry is the circle. God made the
universe on the plan of a circle.
There are in the natural world
straight lines, angles, parallelograms,
diagonals, quadrangles, but these evi
dently are not God's favorites. Almost
everywhere where you find him geo
metrizlng you find the circle dominant;
and If not the circle then the curve,
which is a circle that died young. If
it had lived long enough, it would have
been a full orb. a periphery. An ellipse
is a circle pressed only a little too hard
at the sides.
Giant's Causeway. In Ireland, shows
what God thinks of mathematics. There
are over 35,000 columns of rocks—oc
tagonal, hexagonal, pentagonal. These
rocks seem to have been made by rule
and compass. Every artist has his
molding room, where he may make 50
•hapes, but he chooses one shape as
preferable to ail others. I will not say
that the Giant's Causeway was the
world's molding room, but I do say out
of a great many figures God seems to
have selected the circle as the best. “It
Is he that sitteth on the circle of the
earth.” The stars in a circle, the moon
In a circle, the sun in a circle, the uni
verse in a circle and the throne of God
the center of that circle.
'!»»© AcnieremenU or romology.
Pomology will go on with its achieve
ments until after many centuries the
world will have plums and pears equal
to the paradisaical. The art of garden
ing will grow for centuries, and after
the Downings and Mitchells of the
world have done their best in the far
future the art of gardening will come
up to the arborescenee of the year 1. If
the makers of colored glass go on im
proving they may in some centuries be
able to make something equal to the
east window of York minster, which
was built in the year l.*90. We are six
centuries behind these artist3, tut the
world must keep on toiling until it
ehall make the complete circuit and
come up to the skiil of these very
men.
If the world continues to improve in
masonry, we shall have after awhile,
perhaps after the advance of centuries,
inortar equal to that which I saw' in
the wall of an exhumed English city
built in the time of the Romans. 1,600
years ago, that mortar today as good
as the day In which it was made, hav
ing outlasted the brick and stone. I
say after hundreds of years masonry
may advance to that point.
If the world stands long enough, we
aay have a city as large as they made
In old times—Babylon, live times the
size of London. You go into the pot
teries of England, and you find them
making cups and vases after the stylo
of the cups and vases exhumed from
Pompeii. The world Is not going back.
Oh, no! But it is swinging In a cir
cle and will come around to the styles
of pottery known so long ago as the
days of Pompeii. The world must
keep on progressing until it makes
the complete circuit. The curve is in
the right direction; the curve will keep
on until it. becomes the circle.
Well, now, what is true in the mate
rial universe is true in God’s moral
government and spiritual arrangement.
That is the meaning of Ezekiel’s wheel.
All commentators agree in saying that
the wheel means God’s providence. But
a wheel is of no use unless it turns,
and if it turn it turns around, and if
it turns around it moves in a circle.
What then? Are w’e parts of a great
Iron machine whirled armin'1 whether
we will or not, the victims of inexor
able fate? No! So far from that I
shall show you that we ourselves start
the circle of good or bad actions, and
that it will surely come around again
to us unless by divine intervention it
be hindered. Those bad or good ac
tions may make the circuit of many
years, but come back to us they will
as certainly as that God sits on the
circle of the earth.
The ( In k of Onl'irU'i.
But it is sometimes tb* ease that
this cirele sweeps through a century
or through many centuries. The world
started with a theocracy for govern
ment—that is. God was the president
and emperor of the world. People got
tired of a theocracy. They said: ‘‘‘Wo
don’t want God directly interfering
with the affairs of the world. Give us
& monarchy.” The world had a mon
archy. From a monarchy it is going
to have a limited monarchy. After
awhile the limited monarchy will be
given up. and the republican form of
government will lx- everywhere domi
nant and recognized. Then the world
will get tired of the republican form of
government, and it will have an an
archy. which is no government at all.
And then all nations, finding out that
man is not capable of righteously gov
erning man, w ill c ry out again for the
ocracy and say, “bet God come back
and conduct the affairs of the world,”
every step—monarchy, iimitc-d mon
archy, republicanism, anarchy—only
different steps between the? first theoc
racy and tim last theocracy or seg
ments of the groat circle of the earth |
on which God sits.
But do not become impatient because
you cannot see the curve of events and
therefore conclude that God's govern
ment is going to break down, History
tells us that in the making of the pyra
mids it took 2,000 men two years to
drag one great stone from the quarry
anil put it into the pyramids. If men
short lived can afford to work so slow
ly as that, cannot God in the building
of eternities afford to wait?
What though God should take 10,000
years to draw a circle? Shall we take
our little watch, which we have to
wind up every night lest it run down,
and hold it up beside the clock of eter
nal ages? If, according to the Bible,
a thousand years are in God's sight as
one day, then, according to that calcu
lation, tlie G.000 years of the world's
existence has been only to God as
from Monday to Saturday.
Tilts C'lrcle of flood Dt*ed*.
One day a man coines to you and
says. "Good morning.” You look at |
him and say: "Why, you have the ad- j
vantage of me. I cannot place you,"
He says, “Don’t you remember thirty
years ago giving a letter of fntroduo- |
tion to a young man—a letter of in- ;
troduction to William K. Dodge?” i
"Yes, yes; I do." He says. "I am the
man. That was my first step toward
a fortune, but I have retired from
business now and am giving my time
to philanthropies and public interests, j
Come up to my house and see me."
Or a man comes to you and says: "I
want to introduce myself to you. I
went into a prayer meeting some years
ago. I sat back by the door. You
arose to make an exhortation. That
talk changed the course cf my life, and
if I ever get to heaven under God 1
will owe my salvation to you.” In
only ten. twenty or thirty years the
circle swept out and swept back again
to your own grateful heart.
But sometimes it is a wider circle j
and does not return for a great while. |
I saw a bill of expenses for burning
Latimer and Ridley. The bill of ex
penses has these items among others:
Shillings. Pence.
One load of fire fagots.3 < j
Cartage for four loads of
wood .2
Item, a post.1 t
Item, two chains.3 4
Item, two staples. 6
Item, four laborers.2 8
making in all 25s. 8d. That was cheap
fire, considering all the circumstances,
but it kindled a light which shone all
around the world and aroused the
martyr spirit, and out from that burn
ing of Latimer and Ridley rolled the
circle wider and wider, starting other
circles, convoluting, overrunning, cir
cumscribing, overarching, all heaven,
a circle.
The K«lin of Pn«t Hliilredi.
You maltreat an aged parent. You
begrudge him the room in your house.
You are impatient of his whimsicali
ties and garrulity. It makes you mad
to hear him tell the same story twice.
You give him food he cannot masti
cate. You wish he was away. You
wonder if he is going to live forever.
He will he gone very soon. His steps
are shorter and shorter. He is going
to stop. But God has an account to
settle with you on that subject. After
awhile your eye will be dim. and your
gait will halt, and the sound of the
grinding will he low, and you will tell
the same story twice, and your child
ren will wonder if you will never be
taken away. They called you “father"
once; now they call you the “old •
man.” If you live a few years longer ;
they will call you the “old chap.” >
What are those rough words with j
which your children are accosting i
you? They are the echo of the very j
words you used in the ear of your old j
father forty years ago. What is that j
you are trying to chew, but find it un
masticahle. and your jaws ache, and
you surrender the attempt? Perhaps
it may be the gristle which you gave
to your father for his breakfast forty
years ago.
A gentleman passing along the
avenue saw a son dragging his father
into the street by the hair of the head.
The gentleman, outraged at this bru
tal conduct, was about to punish the
offender, when the old man arose and
said: “Don’t hurt him. It's all right.
Forty years ago this morning 1
dragged out my father by the hair of
his head.” It is a circle. Other sins
may be adjourned to the next world.
That circle is made quickly, very
quickly. Oh, what a stupendous
thought that the good and the evil we
start come back to us! Do you know
that the judgment day will be only the
points at which the circles join, the
good and the bail we have done com
ing back to us unless divine interven
tion hinder—coming back to us with
welcome of delight or curse of con
demnation?
Oh, I would like to see Paul, the
Invalid missionary, at the moment
when his influence comes to full orb,
his influence rolling out through An
tioch, through Cyprus, through I,ystra,
through Corinth, through Athens,
through Asia. through Europe,
through America, through the first
century, through five centuries,
through twenty centuries, through
earth, through heaven, and at last the
wave of Influence, having made full
circuit, strikes his soul. Oh, then I
would like to see him! No one can
tell the wide sweep of the circle of
Paul's Influence save the one who Is
seated on the circle of the earth.
I should not like to see the counte
nance of Voltaire when his influence
comes to full orb. When the fatal
hemorrhage seized him at eighty three
years of age, his influence did not
lease. The most brilliant man of his
century, bo had used all his faculties
for assaulting Christianity, his bad in
flu'nee widening through Franre,
widening out through Germany, vrid
ening througn all Europe, wid
ening through America. widen
ing through the 123 years that have
gone since he died, widening through
the earth, widening through the great
future, until at last the accumulated
influence of his baleful teachings and
dissolute life will beat against his dis
mayed spirit, and at that moment it
will he enough to make the black hair
of eternal darkness turn white with
horror. No one can tell how that bad
man's influence girdled the earth save
the one who is seated ou the circle of
the earth, the Lord Almighty.
Cod'* Omnipotent Mercy.
“Well, now,” say some, “this In
some respects is a very glad theory
and in others a very bad one. We
would like to have the good we have
ever done come back to ns. but the
thought that all the sins we have ever
committed will come back to us. fills
us with affright.” My brother, I have
to tell you God can break that circle
and will do so at your call. 1 can
bring twenty passages of Scripture to
prove that when God for Christ's sake
forgives a man the sins of his past
life never come back. The wheel may
roll on and on. but you take your
position behind the cross, and the
wheel strikes the cross and is shatter
ed forever. The sins fly off from the
circle and fall at right angles with
complete oblivion. Forgiven! For
given! The meanest thing a man can
do is, after some difficulty has been
settled, to bring it up again, and God
will not do anything like that. God's
memory is mighty enough to hold all
the events of the ages, but there is one
thing that is sure to slip his memory,
one thing he Is sure to forget, and that
is pardoned transgressions. How do I
know it? I will prove it. “Their sins
and their iniquities T will remember
no more.” "Blessed is he whose trans
gression is forgiven.”
But every circumference must have
a center, and what is the center of this
heavenly circumference? Christ—his
all the glory, his all the praise, his all
the crowns, all heaven wreathed into
a garland round about him. Take off
the imperial sandal from his foot and
behold the scar of the spike. Lift the
coronet of dominion from his brow
and see where was the laceration of
the briers. Come closer, all heaven.
Narrow the circle around his great
heart. O Christ, the Savior. O Christ,
the man, O Christ, the God. keep thy
throne forever, seated on the circle of
the earth, seated on the circle of
heaven!
On Christ, the solid rock. I stand:
All other ground is shifting sand.
WILD ESKIMO.
Somi* of !!»«• Habits of These People s
Home.
Returning from the Coppermine, wi>
fell in with a party of Eskimo, who
ran from us as we approached, in
spite of all our efforts to restrain them.
Hut, as a matter of fact, even had we
seen bloodthirstily inclined we would
lave put up a poor fight, because both
my assistant and I were quite tired
Jilt, and my men had gone on some
!iours before us. It seems rather in
:redible that twenty-five Eskimo
ivould run from two played-out white
men; but it is quite probable that they
may have expected an army behind us.
rheir camp was a most extraordinary
;)laee. It lay on a hillock of sand,
ivith a large lake in fiont and a pond
itehind. The knoll huts, the walls of
ivliich were formed of flat stones placed
m end. and the roofs of caribou skin,
rite pond was filled with caribou
tones, which showed that the camp
tad been much frequented. In t^! mid
lie of the miniature village lay a large
iieap of raw caribou meat, which the
Eskimo Btoie up in seasons of plenty.
We waited some time at the camp,
itoping the natives would reappear,
jut they did not. It was their period
tf good feeding. The caribou were
(razing on the Barren lands in vast
Iterds, and musk oxen were plentiful,
so there was no necessity for them
to return to their extra food supply.
They had evidently never come in
contact with white men before, be
cause no article of civilized manufac
ture was found in their camp.—Geo
graphical Journal.
Highest of Waterfall*.
The highest waterfall in the world,
geography tells us, is the Cerosola
cascade in the Alps, having a fall of
2,400 feet; that of Arvey, In Savoy, Is
1,100 feet, and the falls of Yosemite
valley range from 700 to 1,000 feet. But
higher yet is the waterfall in the San
Cuayatan canon, in the state of Du
rango. Mexico. It was discovered by
some prospectors, ten years ago, in
the great harranca district which is
called the Tlerras D’sconoddas. While
searching for the famous lost mine,
Naranjal, a great roar of water was
heard. With great difficulty the par
ty pushed on. and up and down the
mighty chasms until they beheld the
superb fall that is at least 3,000 feet
high.—Land of Sunshine.
lithographic Stonr I* Plentiful.
A deposit of lithographic stone has
been found near Mt. Sterling, Ky..
which Eugene Leary, of the United
States Geological Survey, believes to be
more valuable than any gold mine.
“There is no reason," says Mr. I^ary.
“why the quarry should not control
the market in this country. There is
no lithographic stone anywhere else,
so far as is known, and there will be
no difficulty in competing with the
Qerman product.
The first factory for the manufacture
of cotton sewing thread was located at
Pawtucket In 1794.
Those whom we suffer ourselves to
scorn or hate, have overcome us.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL,
LESSON VII. NOV. 17 EXODUS II:
I • 10.
(.olden Texts Tr;»ln l'p u Child In the
\Vny He Should <;». hn*l Whrn Ilf I'
Old Hr Will Not Depart from It—
I’rov. 'J?: O.
I. "ilosca: His Ancestral Inheritance.”
-V. 1. Ills father's name was Amram
(Ex. 6: IS, LS)», of the house of l.evl. His
mother's name was Joelieb* *1 (Jokebed),
Jehovah Is glory, also of the house of
I. evi. anil the aunt of her husband (Ex.
CJI). Both were religious people, for wo
are told In Hehrrws (11: 23) that they act
ed from faith. Moses was horn near Zoan
(Tanlsj, the beautiful capita] of Humeses
II. , on one of the outlet streams of the
Nile. A Slave. He was horn tl slave, of
parents who labored under poverty and
severe oppression. ilia name. Moses
means extraction, a son, 1. <>.. one ex
tracted. Moses was extracted, drawn
from the water (v. 10).
II. "The Btory of Ills Infancy."—Vs. 2
S. 2. "And bare a son." There were two
older children. Miriam (15: 20). probably 8
or 0 years old. and Aaron (7: 2), who was
three years older than Moses (7: 7), and
probably born before the edict requiring
male children (o be destroyed. "That ho
was a goodly child." Beautiful to look
upon—"fair to God." or "exceeding fair."
as Kt. Stephen expresses It (Acts 7: 20).—
Hawlinson. "She hid him three months."
That Is. "kept him within the house—per
haps even In the female apartments. 2.
"She took for him an ark." A small cov
ered box or basket. She did not make It
then, but took It and prepared it for her
purpose. "Of bulrushes." The papyrus
plant. This is a strong growing rush,
with u triangular stem, which attains the
height of from 10 to 15 feet. The Egyp
tian paper was made from its pith (our
word "paper” Is derived from the word
"papj ras"). The rush itself was used for
various purposes, among others for boat
building (Film X. 11. 0: 22; 7; 16), as ap
penrs from the monuments. It would be
u very good m iterlal for the sort of pur
pose to which .luchebed applied It.—Pulpit
• ’on). "And daubed It with slime and with
pitch." Bitumen, or mineral pitch. 4.
"And hi? sister.' Probably Miriam, the
original form of the name Mary, now so
common. She seems to have been a girl
of remarkable tact. Her after-life shows
that she shared largely the genius for
I1IU ■ .
"Stood afar off." So its not to betray the
object of her solitude. “To wit." "To
know." She was to watch who would find
1:1m, or whether he was in d mger from
reptiles, or whether lie was left alone to
hunger. "And the daughter of Pha
raoh." If Humeses II was the Pharaoh
at this time, then, from the Bgyptlan
monuments, we I urn that her name was
Nefer-ari. who was the daughter of the
previous I’humob, and first the sister
and thin tin wife of Ramises II. Mr.
Paine thinks sin was about lti years old.
ill. "ills Home Training.”—V. U. Age
up to seven or twelve years. "Take this
child aw.it. and nurse it for me." "The
princes- must have seen that the uurse
was Moses' mother. The plot was plain
■ nough. but site enters into the fun of It.
The mother is to take the child, of course
only as a nurse.' Prof. \V. F. Adeney.
"Hy thus taking the child, tile mother be
eline, from lids time. In some sense, the
recognised servant of the princess; for
otherwise how would she enjoy more safe
1 \ with her babe than before?"—Alford.
"I will give thee thy wages." "The high
es-t wagts in tile world are earned hy
good mothers. The mother who does an
honest day’s work, week in and week out,
in faithful and faith-filled care of her
children, is on n large salary, and she
w ill b" rich sooner or tutor."—H. C. Trum
bull.
IV. 'llis Training In Court l.ife as a
ITince.”—V. 1". From seven or twelve
years old till lie was forty. "And the
child gn u ” l'nder ail the influences
noted above. Growth means life, power,
influence. He grew unconsciously toward
litmss for his work. “Brought him unto
Pharaoh's daughter." "At what ago we
can but conjecture, and yet, probably, we
are safe in surmising that he was at least
seven, and not more than twelve."—Pro
lessor Fagnani. Hitt the impress of the
early years was too deep ever to be
erased. "Tin boy was the father of the
man. "Hi becar.o her son.” And thus
an ISg.vptlau prince In the most luxurious
and learned court of the then known
world. He lived amid wealth arpl luxury
at the capital, Zoan. "The ruins show it
In have been a marvelous city, the Ath
ens of Kgypt. An Bgyptlan poet of that
day says of Zoan. 'She is beautiful, beau
tiful! nothing like her is to be found
among the monuments of Thebes—the
very secret of the pleasures of life. Her
bowi rs bloom with garlands. Bach gar
den Is perfumed with the smell of honey.
Her granaries are full of wheat. Flowers
for nosegays are in the houses. Hpr ships
come anil go every day. The Joys have
lixed their seat there.’ "—C. S. Robinson.
Miss Amelia H. K<1 wards gives us a pic
ture of the marvelous Via Sacra of Tania,
275 fed long, in which were a multitude
of r-'d granite obelisks, yellow sandstone
colossi, portrait statues, shrines and
sph'nxes In red. black and gray granites,
towering above alt which. 120 feet high.
Including the pedestal, was a figure of
Raineses II.. rut from n single stone of
the precious red granite of Syene, $00
nilhs away. These tilings would cultivate
ills taste, give him gracious manners and
an acquaintance with the* ways and man
ners of tile court, which prepared him for
going 1>efore the Pharaoh when he went
there to ask his people's release.
(iiivf iht» Silent t'lirer.
A grizzled old man wearing a G. A.
R. uniform walked along Chestnut
street yesterday afternoon looking
eagerly into shop windows for por
traits of the late president. He was
followed liy a curious crowd, but it
was not a dtsrrsp-ctful one. No one
attempted to molest the old man. in
spite of his peculiar actions.
When he would come to a window In
which a picture of the martyred Pres
ident was di; p ayed ho would gaze at
It sadly for a while and then give
what used to b® known during the
war of the rebellion as the silent
cheer. All the motions were gone
through by the old veteran, but not a
sound escaped his lips. Tears were
streaming down his rugged cheeks,
says the Philadelphia Record, atf he
tt.rned away to lank for another por
t alt.
A Triflu Mixed.
Tees—What is absinthe, do you
know? Jess—Oh! I think it’s one of
those fake love-potions. I rv.d in a
book one time that “absinthe makes
the heart grow fonder."—Philadelphia
Press.
Color for tlio (ante*.
Tn most European railways the prin
cipal differences between second-class
and ilrst-class lies in the color of the
seat cushions, first-class being usually
red, second-class gray.
Her Nme S»tf>l K«Mnl I-ltrft,
A year ago the husband of Mr*.
Mary Hirsch, a New York woman, met
with an injury that prevented him
from attending to hia work and also
made him subject to epileptic fits
Mrs. Hirsch is an expert needlewo
man. and has been able to keep the
family together, in spite of the fact
that her husband had taken to drink
The other morning after a hard night’s
drinking, he arose from the breakfast
table, drew a revolver from his pocket
and said: “I am going to klH you all.'
There was insanity in his look, but
Mrs. Hirsch remained perfectly cool.
‘ Where did you get that pistol?” she
asked, pleasantly, as the madman
came toward her. He did not answer,
but leveled the weapon at her head
The woman never flinched, but said
in ever tones: “Now, Henry, if you
oo that they will lock you up, and
then you won’t be able to get a drink
nt all." The maniac had been prepar
ed for resistance, for terrified cries,
for light—for anything but this. It
confused him and he muttered, “That's
so,” as he put away the weapon and
left the house. Half an hour later he
was on his way to the Insane depart
ment at Bellevue hospital. Mrs.
Hirsch was terribly shaken by the ex
perience, but soon recovered.
THE CHAMPION WING SHOT.
Capt Bofaidm Um a Dmngeroti* Experi
ence bat Comeii Oat Unhnrt.
Ferris Wheel Park, Chicago. Nov.
4th.—CapL A. H. Bogardus, the cham -
pion wing shot of the world, has spent
the summer here. His shooting school
has been one of the features of the
Park during the season. He has giv
en many exhibitions and his skill with
the rifle is superb.
The Captain tells of a very close
call he once had when living at Elk
hart, 111. He had been a sufferer from
Kidney disease for several years and
It rapidly developed Into Bright’s Dis
ease. All his friends told him that
this was incurable and that ha would
never get better.
To say that he was alarmed Is to
put it very mildly. This plucky man
had faced many dangers and It made
him sick at heart to think that at
last he was to be conquered by such
a cruel foe.
At last he heard of & medicine that
had cured many such cases—Dodd's
Kidney Pills. He used them and wae
completely restored to good health.
Ho says: “I attribute my present
good health to Dodd’s Kidney Pills
and to nothing else.”
Longevity of Tortoise*.
They say that the biggest Galanagos
tortoise now in Bronx park, New
York city, i9 at least 400 years old
and so must have been living when
Columbus died. Itr. llornaday, of the
New York Zoological society, rests his
faith on Walter Rothschild, of Lon
don, who has a tortoise which he says
is much older than that, and Roth
schild has made tortoises his special
study, so that he Is recognized as an
expert.
I.argr.it In the World.
Walter Baker & Co., Ltd , Dorches
ter, Mass., are the largest manuf&ctur
era of cocoa and chocolate tn the
world. They received a gold medal
from the Paris exposition of last year
This year they have received three
gold medals from the Pan-American
exposition at Buffalo. Their goods are
the standard for purity and excellence.
Thu ImillMt Piece of Kaal Estate.
The smallest parcel of real estate in
New York city is for sale. It la lo
cated at the corner of Third avenue
and East One Hundred and Forty -
ninth street, and the lot la 6x14 inches
A new building is going up on the
corner and the people who are erectlug
It wanted the small lot. They offered
$200 for the sit. Frederick Uhl, the
owner, demands $1,000, and will very
likely receive it.
Plso'a Cure for Consumption Is as Infallible
medicine for cough* and oolds.—N. W. Siscu,
Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17. 1800,
An imaginative writer la one who
toasts of the prices he gets for hia ar
ticles.
ALL PP-TO-OATK HOUSKKEEPKRS
Umj Red Crons Ball Blue. It makes clothes
clean and sweet as when new. All grocers.
Tavlng experiments are to be made
In Havana with vitrified brick, gran
Ite squares and sandstone blocks.
Brooklyn, N. Y, Oct. Slst.-After In
vestigate* Garfield Tea, which is quite
universally acknowledged to be the bi at
family remedy, It is not difficult to ex
plain Its success— it is the medicine for
•WOp RESULTS! It is prepared hire
by the Garfield Tea Co., In their new and
attractive laboratory and ts rnado wholly
and witha! HEALTH
nm uS. K?B?' Garfield Tea Is the
25? .iw herb cure for constipation
ana sick headache.
Envy is the lowest known form of
p:'alse.
T.adlra Cm Wear shoes.
One sir* smaller after using Allen’s Foot
Ease, a powder. It makes tighter new
shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweat
ing, aehing feet, ingrowing nails, corns
and bunions. All druggists and shoe
sti ires 25c. Trial package FREE by mail.
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Leiioy, N. Y.
The virtues a woman laiasts of she
seldom possesses.
MORK FLEXIBLE AMD LASTIN',).
won't shake out or blow out; by using
lietianee starch you obtain better result’
than possible with any other brand aiul
one-third more lor same money.
The caterpillar and the glutton Ihe
to eat.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES d.. not
Stain the hands or spot the kettle1 (ex
cept green and purple). Sold by drug
gists, 10c. per package.
We attract hearts by the finalities
we display; we retain them by the
qualities we possess.—Suard.
Mrs. Winslow a soothing Syrup.
Tor children softanj fh« khiyih r*tim et Ip*
«wimiatiun,aH^><ipain.curc« wimlcolic, i^cabotdo
When a couple marry under the roi. ^
they usually walk on a path of thorns
ever after.