Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Nov 1897, p. 7

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[mun BARMAID. 0| II look. Tlllma. .`i|llI(`l'. `\\`l~.nt did I toll you!` cried the pilot. Irn nhn I; -IH I-hvlnt V STEERING BY ECHO. Ilhlilcpilumimmurjttu . ' Ihn outer :pu.-PNlulclpl|L Rellgloun Entlmnlum. A, 1. .., .|,x..._ A`g-L A Home! $500 in cash of when com- which has fort and happiness _ster Dyspepsia. enters a home tem father becomes a comes :1 ervous and is a trivial `affair pared with a home been robbed of com- by that dread mon- When Dyspepsia pers 'are soured,` tyrant. mother bi`... irritable and suers from those terrible headaches. What wonder if the innocent children seek` company in the streets and never enjoy being at home! V _ Dyspepsia almost invariably results from a diseased and torpid liv`e;r._ The digestivesystem is unable to do its work without the assistance of the liver. which furnishes the necessary bile, and the sufferer is literally starving to death. :_ :-;4 _ remove the cause by making the liver healthy and active. Digestion then goes on unimpaired and health and happiness is restored. The following is a sample of the many testimonials we receive express- ing gratitude for recovery from suffering and disease: of moons cnnuwt. WIUI ('.I\'u|.'.Iw|un. The minor wcmmi do-zod for an instant. but promptly pullul himwll together lit.- uially when the pair came whirling to- umnl him in n mgulntion wait: step with- out Any Klundiko frills. Ila Just braced hlnwulf. grnbbud the young man by the obnr and the other trmiltlxnlnnl place and tlsnzw him clounly tl;?uh A window. murmuring M hmlld . l`ll teach you wnderfmt to leave Iyalrl Alone." Thu-n he calmly seized the giggling mnltl with- out cracking a smile hinuclf and rooumucl hi: uomurtlnm. n 1. nnlv llm nnwnnmonl. however. who Ac-oophqrh Warmth. ,_ ;-,_ __. 1...--.` L--. A 1 was p:rr~nIl_v trouhiml (`om )|l'nIlm\ of huliuv. mud '|(lIu~.y4uu1 I \'m' (H- m~l1\'\ \n-urs. I lrlml wi khlnuy um I :ll~nrnl(-rs mr ruur orlivc xv-urs. I trim! without succosslo gm rnllnr from lll_\' aufwriuuza. I was rm-munmuloul ban rri:-ml lo give ChI\sn'x4 l\'1 lllla IL Irlul. I did so. Afterlnslltglxnlf x\ box all distress and [mm in 1n_vnlmImvlI hxr` loft. Inn and 1 bmmn to lmnrovn mnldly. und to-dnvl loft. and 1 b(~.;T\n lmprovo rapidly. fa lmn fraud from lhv v|m"\s nf dis ease and distress that buund mu nnzl kept Ina miserable. and I givu Lho orudlr. wlmro It is duo-lo Chnao`s l{l`lm`)'-|.h or Pllls. J. H. BEICMEIL Aunt C. P. 11.. Wlnuluun. Ont. 13, 1887; Dr. Chase s Kidney=Liver Pills wnh un uvulu .sH()||. d_\'e-xpr all: -nrnlx-rs for uur ilhnm nlltwmlslo A famous After dinner spenkor. who in also pnmldont of a milmutl and has impin- tluns for other great ulccI.-.\`ew York Journal. Oonld Not Pull the Throttle. When a reliable gentleman llke Thomae Simmons. Chall'ey n Loch. engineer of the steamer James Swift, comes forward of his own account and edde hie teetlmon to the value of a medical cure, the public an n- nurance that there in eomething deeervlng of attention; ollend on lor the pat two years he experienced intenee pain down the eciatlo nerve; too severe was it at tilnee that he was unable to handle the throttle of the engine. and would be obliged to lay off for daye. "Before the rst bottle of Dr. Hall : Rheumatic cure had been drain- ed." ea I Mr. Simmons. `'1 could feel the benec al offecte, and by the time I had need foul-I wae completely cured. Since last spring I have been entirely free from in. Dr. Hall : Rheumatic cure did it." his reparation is taken internally, end in col at 50 cent: a bottle at Wade`: drug I -5...- IU IUI\I store. hil uomurunmn. II in only the newcomers. however, are nuinjwwd in such humiliating ights through upucu. "i`im nthvnn no butter an- quaintui with tho unwritten law: that pmuli and main: no break: which they are not prepnnxi to atom! hy and tight for. In... mnnhlinu human is thu nntnmi Illu- In Much tho Rune lied. Sim looked tnmlngly Into hi: you and Imllvd. , 1413...... -...-. I nmll nnrmu luv.-n nnn nnnl ` Imllvd. i Papa any: I shall namr have one com 1 of hlsmonoy I! l mnrry you." the mid. ` "but I am kind of that. 1 pm! toowo ev'oryt.hlng to my husband. "Rut. mu form\t." he returned nervous- everything to nuauunu. "But. you forum. he ly, that that will make It non-any for your husband to owe everything Uoo."- ( Chlongo Pout. mountain. , Thus. according to the latest OIEIIIII. I an Incident cIosu!.-Dotrolt Jon:-nu. ll frv-vnuunvr-u ` "I know." ind the somewhat u-Impou- slblo mend, "that yourdou belhvoll ` sign: In tho otdlnu-y nun. But don't M you sometime: nd younnlf In el:\`I`)n- ~ Ituxoouwhlchcaunepnuanumonuol I" I -v.4 lean tlnm nmnn lnonlannk Inn 1 Iohnmnocl and the lentils. Slt.. nnswomd the mountain. gently but rmly. Mnhmnmed hlt. his llp. * I'ven good mind to call norm of then bluu," ho nultwrml. ullln. An-.`o non nlihnr " Md Eh blumn," ho nuutwml. Blua dmfl. go oithcr." oboaod tho ` mountain. ` mu... ...~..-.una on Mm Inst nnlmh. Ituncouwnlcncaunepnuonumcnuu Ivur ; "Yea. Every time some peopl-uni no lornloul Heel ulf Iwcngolng In Inony."-Wu.hlnnon Star. A V Q `IT \ "How old wnuE:ou gnu: ha-to In!" "Oh. about 85 would be I ah gig" "h'hI'.'I umnly 0Hd'IhDllGhI|." "1 mid slwould Innate nun. Ilh always uertaoundugmunwuun`nu|. ` st: mqyhcu-cl tt"-lndhnnplInJogI~` 5 7m? "Wt-`vogue owns: living Iovnolr way who undo blot nnnoll."nIl not |)ropnnKl I0 mnu ny unu ugni Iur. Tho gambling house In the natural uno- ckto of the dance hall In Dawlon and land: close by In uldn-. But. as far as that In concerned. the namhllng house In some mnnlfeotutlon towns to be close by the side of almost everything else In the city. um. nlnnn mnnc hnnnnntnd nnd thnt hm Punlo PIcuro-l`lnd tho Pouch. EDMANSON, BATES 8 C0., TORONTO. N. B.-M,ention this paper and we will send you a free sample of DR. CuAsn's Kmmw-Lxvnn Pn.x.s. A PI-eoontinout. Dr. Cha_se"_s Kidnf:y=Live_r Pills Are Sold at 25 Cnts a Box nv ALL DEALERS, on non now the loom-lly (`ompouloo loop III on_ Thooo They vouch hr. The theory of the bl] oocurlcy oom- ponlen who derlve tholr pronto from [not- oumelng the honesty of young mon who hold maponslhlo poaltlom ln tho monon- tllo world. that an ounoe of pnventlon ll worth o pound of uum. doeo not only up- ply to thooo who how a penchant for hot- tlng their own and frequently tholr om- ployora` oooh on the moon. bub loo verb that work: all the you round. llo tho Iroquont pruomutlun of defoultdro lo I powerful old ln asnlotlng other: tonlllt Imnplutlon, yet the nounrlty oonlponlol no not amlstlul with rentlng thoro. 7I\lp...- nal It nluunnnol In IIQI dlflj X of almost unrylmnu one In mo cn.y. The plan must lroquontnd and thtt. lma aw honoro! running the stardust muno" _nm "on: am." but gold dun"-ln known as Joe : plum and la ukluu In gold ubouc as {us u the mlnun um all; It. 1 TN: whole propooltlon In tho Klomllko lu ` | loan of gamble and naturally the men who have taken the chance: no poucaml If that subtle thlng, the guubllng lu- utlncl. to an intense decree. Gunbllng, that-atom. II as natural In Dmnon an out- ing, and to come of tho devotee: own nuts about tho: gastronomic custom. Thorn menu to be no evidence ol uny- hlu. Amanwhouho drnn not-ookul Inhwuonoluuychunotormdgct wouldhnvoholnhtothniwoodn. wohhto. HI: umsuou wlm nanung man. They nu It cheaper to pay dotoo VI to be continually on the vouch than look the door, M H; wen-. after the both has gone. The sleuth: no 81:. Loull mono: long raaldenoo who know by night the mnjorlty of their employers` ollontq and the watch they keep over thorn II IN` IMM- er than the wnwhed lmnglno. For lu- ntnnoe. durlng the theatrical Ionlm. W0 men on debllod we nd tholr IVOIII: In In,-quc-ntlng the :1 night menu: that am fnvomd by nmbltlono young man who want. no llvo 94 hours 0! the M. n....ox....I..-In .1. Hsnv lllrnni Llmlr Ann. whn want in live In noun or an iv. Particularly do they dlnot their 5&0- tion to youths who have I ponohnnt for things tht-ntrionl. The apioo-for Iplcl they nro-do not look like the ldegl Illlol ench- cr. in fuel. they would nthct be GIIIII for mun about town who are out for I night`: frolic and hang the uplllu." One of the moat active of the corps 0! h- tootiveu in to be found moot frequently In one oi` tho My all night rooorh tho! in ol- most entirely given over to tho fullnllo cont.Inm~nt of ntagelnnd oftcr tho In- nicht hour. With their looal ooqudnhn they lip their ohompnano until thourly hours. and their mourn am In tho mu)!!- ity of onset: young tullowl who hold 3!- Iriod poaitionn of responsibility. Lltllo Mr. Sluuth. aittinqr quiet-Iy over in olo corner, in nppummly paying all his tn- Mon to his do and nbbit, but in Noll`! hi in uniting mental nou-I of how many II- ties of winn his prey in opening and tho uunurnl drift of tho oonvorntlotl. if lo l()u(`lI08 upon his businen lilo. mat morning the security oompu: wh MI 'vom-hod for tho yuan? man : In In full possession of tho ar If thu-v am nnloiantl! dnmuln I III- Th tobod " IIII .. .`.'..'.'.'.. 5. .. ..:`"."...":'? ```m.. and Illa : Iron Tonic II wll OIIO chain my.` the urn: cm Gopulla In I in It. W n (In: sun: tun pmuu~.-anon m the IE` . If they no nulotently dlmljill tlo note In lndltod to the young lI'i|i,"` ` uluo Mn ompluyer. ubtlnglh made by tho mmpnny II V msult in generally dlllntml E Ibo CI- pluyoe. nnd be novel` knowlnt hllln {mm the fact (but he blew Mlllulflllb mod follow for Tome FIDCIIQKI -KI~ ounly. the security oompnlhl Ind Unit dot:t.IvI3 service more than app than. --.51.. Louis R4.-publlo. ` |'.r;:..'."-;;."...`.'"..':'.".' ' -_:-..-::.___._. {NY-ASA-SAN [salt Rheum; BDNDID YOUNG MEN. E rwtu W o us I`lIlU`ll. -o . D.. Tomato: "This ii to gcenify that Miss Burbon ~ Clotnlno of I38 Bollwoodl Ava. Tomato. no (mud by me f'RV- g, enl yarn (or Sllt Rheum; W nndthntbelbvinghceuoo incunblclsdtyotugqt tohcr. Your Nylnn ha `Vpu-nuuIgilgoInIlhu."` From W. S. Fnbll. H. `F-..-.0... TLh `I Q Ioch low. L.) ling.) nA- LKIIII. _Ll__l ._n;L - _ uusum-s` or run nuns. htprneueu en the light listen rev linden In Innate and chew. AI we see, it in s most amazing extent to which tohoooo bu spread all over earth in than 800 years, when it was hroughu ` into England from America by Sir Walter Raleigh in 1586 A. D. In Turkey 1: in perpetually in every mouth. In China it in no univeruliy practiced that a female of I! or 7 has a pocket in herdreu to hold her pipe and tobacco. In Burma it in smoked by persons of all ranks, even a child of 9 or 3. In India all classes and both Iexee smoke. eat and smell. 11- ....~-.. in `lndin `an vinm-ouniv that we It grown` in India `no vigorously that we can source y nd : town or village in Hin- dustan where no plot of ground would be Iound covered by this perpetual plant. And in the some `manner there would be very few of our readers who know the proc- asnee in which the tobacco become: sult- nlle for our usual umoking. It would be not therefore out of place to draw before the public an outline of its rhonufecture. Whnn it in full crown and its leave: hive outline of its manufacture. When it is full grown begun to acquire a yeiiuwiuh tint. it in gnthered and left on the ground to be i withered one day or more in the sun. A Inmnah wn mm hnvn nmnkinn mhncco ; withered one any or more In we nun. Although we can have smoking tobacco from many dlerent way: it would nut- ` ue here to mention some processes, for ` their sultublenou, current In a moat fa- mous place for the purpose In Indls, known as Blswnn, In Seetaporo dim-lot. nnlhu ultlmmd. it in hmunht to beamin- Blswnn, In heelsnporo unwrwu. Being wmucred, it is brought to` be cudg- eled with wood so nnly as to become a dust, which is called ruddee and mixed with slrup and alkali or impure carbonate of soda. It is left. In balls to he dluolved. ~ um . lnnvnmul nr lrhnmh-A tnhnnco I8 ` oi Roda. it. Ill ion. in onus no no uuuuxvuu. Now I lonvonod or khamirn tobacco is prepared by tho undergoing formula: 1. Cloven. 8. Cardnmums. B. Mono. 4. ` Nutmeg. 6. Allapice. 6. Cinnamon. 7. Dry rono ower. 8. Filling aloe: wood. 9. ` Filling sundniwood. 10. Nakh. 11. Fan- ` droc. 18. White cnnlmuunn-1; 11!. Bonzoin; of ouch part a user. 1-}. Amilian; one Ioer. All tlmnn nxuant the last. one. which in of ouch part Beer. 19. Axnnuun; unu wcr. All thuue except the one, bollod, are cudgalod and made A powder. And A next preparation in now made: Cmnphor,-two 0hntak-Knrpur; mluua, quarter as soar; bowl, quartr u seer. All thmm balm: oudcclcdare bullod, and quarter Down, qunrwr u HA.-ur. All those being oudgcicdnre boiled, now live punmriunt ruddoo mixed with airup um mixed with both the preparations and stirred with hand, and in this essence of row or koorah, ono toin; musk, six maahns, and saffron. three mnshua, be- ing grindod," are mixed. and tho proceu now ready is called khmnim, a good one for the purpose, over used in India for Imoking.--Cnlcuttu New Age. low the Term Como to no Applied to Sources of Uncommon Riches. El Dnrado is the term nuw heard on ev- ory side in commotion with tho placer mines of Alaska and tho Nurthweut Terri- tories of Canada. its derivation is of intu- ost. In the iiitcunth century it was ru- mored timt thuro existed in tho northurn part. of South America a city of great wealth oaliud Manon, whom king, El Dorqdo by name, was periodically uxnonmd with oil or buismn and was then powdered with gold dust until `his whole body had a giidod appearance. It was said that on those occasion: he threw goid. emeralds and other precious motaiu and game into a sacred lake, in which he afterward bathed. n.....i....i..- in Hum nu. I-immiudl mm . lacrod lake, in wnion no axwrwam uauuuu. Beginning in 1688 the Spaniard: tent many large expedition: to qearch for thin phantom city. and most of them ended dinaatrounly, humlreda of lives being lost. One explorer, Oreilano, averrod that he found El Dorado in his voyage down the Amazon in 1540. This was disproved, but the search was continued down to the eighteenth century. some of the results were the conquest and settlement of New Granada, the making known to the world of the mountain region of Venezuela, the discovery of the noble rivers the Orinoco and the Amazon and the exploration of the vast fnrcsta west of the Andes. About the end of the uixtcenth century an Eng- lish expedition either sent out by or under the personal leadership oi Raleigh pene- trated into Guiana. thcmby obtaining a elaim on that country which has mmitnl in the aequirement of the modern British colony of that name. It Inn: hnnn iuinnnod tht th Orlin 0' Mothet Abe tlie Only In "' Dqvnon City. .- colony of HIM It luua been supposed that the origin this table arose from the yearly celebration of `a tribe of Indium nuor Bogota. whose chic! Wu on thew occnsionu gilded with gold dust. but this cvn-mony was never witnessed by the Spaniards, and the story may simply be another version of the El Dumdo myth. . rm... mmm R1 nm-min wu nnmmonlv Domdo myth. The name El Dormlo was commonly usud to (inscribe the city or country which was the object of the search, but a law! usage of the term has how its gurative Application with regard to any region of mom than common richness. El Dondo county. in (tniifnrnin. was the scene of the famous gold nds oi` mu. and since than the oxprmuolon luu; lmm usvd to donorlbe many gold cnmpI.-l ltcuburg Commercial GIIIUNAB. \ uvu-vv-- cw. - - It In 3 roman-kuhlo but thus home: he- Io nonbntlnp owner: anon dimp- polm the publ|o-- i.. (not. ononor than than dowhioh an owned by big plunger; Pcrhnpu the acres of the business Itthu following owners money In tho best guide human. Anyway nvoontol Itxoltho hvclhl that an made tnvqtu ontlnly ' by publlo lnnmncnd no human, and ncnthocuonkmalplnngouhnohund Ohholllotlnlrooutollote. Ii:-rngnt and tho Torpodrk Because of their destructive character nothing is more demoralizing to an enemy than torpedoes. and the moral occt of be- ing equipped for this kind oi` wurfnro in not to be deaplaod, especially where the ob- jmt of n nnvy is. an it should ho, to keep peace. Fear of torpedoes was all that pre- vented the French from entering the Prun- alnn harbor: during the Franco-Pruuian war and the Jnpnnese from golna up the river at Ynlu. Thoro was perhaps no cooler not of courage during our late wax than ct Mobile. where Fnrrngtu, only a moment after the Tecumnoh had struck I torpedo and gone down below his eyes. Ihot forward with his aguhlp -directly ovor tho course when ho knew the torpe- doou hml boon planted for the deutructiun of his oat. signaling. II he wont. to the warning from the Brooklyn of "Torpodooi Ih0Id.""`D-n tho torpedoenl" r~....o,.i.. .5... In til: llfn of Pu-rnmit. Ihend. " "u-n Ino wrpcuou: Captain Malian. In hln mo of lu-taunt. wrltlng of (Mn pnungu of -the Hutton! over those torpedoes. uuI"tho can: of the torpedoes wane hound by many on bond knocking ngunn the copper of the bottom and many of the primer: snipped nudlbly, but no turpixlo exploded." FlI"l'I'\lt'l prompt action re-ton-d condence to the waver-In; llno, but had any one o! the tor- pedoes exploded all would have boon over. -BenJunln moon In North unclean `Irv-ll-UI sung --- 'BaInoyou_: man uhuu-\hc|rfn- ban ad unmotakonnnrthondghhuf -I-in _n...-.-In. Jan 1:] has an ||Ih.-8onu-vlllo Journal. A -- 11. III- &. Inna:-3 on gun. hlh no Iluuthttlo In an Ilovuh on: and in nu C ~ Auu:'c,._-p\uuuuaaan.IrrIgu--s H hohthv L j . IABCO TOBACCO SCIENCE. THE EL DORADO MYTH. Though Ion Pletnreeque n Proper, , they Are Not Io Very Wleked-A knee lull lIedeIt-Oenb_lh Oenee iluenthelqunre. Any one who hue experienced the relax- ntlone of n frontier town in` the United Stetee during I (old boom an under- Itnnd without further explenetlon how the ulneletn pent up Demon City peathelrh Tiolholioupgl. ._ -,L- _AA._ AL. Pohhn In Hanson. Aldfblpt. _..I ___ AL. Aw Lu Lessons Learned From Recent _ Hard Fought Battles. 8'1`. CAVI-ICDISH ON THE DEFENSIVE. Anny From Long suit Routine. The New Jersey Whlst club team, which recently took the American Whist lengue challenge trophy away from the l3nlt`l- morenns dfter a heartbreaking battle of brains, stew days later successfully dc- fended its prize against the powerful rep- resentatives of the Brooklyn Whiut club. ' This time the Jerseymon won by no small margin. as they had done in the match nt Baltimore, but by the score of 98 to Hi. which in matches of this sort is considered evidence of decided superiority. it is not yet time for the heterodox whist writers like myself to erow, but it is quite elenr that the New Jersey ehumplons are piny- lng anything but on orthodox gmne. '1`h(-,\' have rejected the fourth best. lead. which is the cornerstone of long suitism according to St. Cavendish. undlmve substituted for it a system of small curd lends, indicative of strength or of weakness--neeorrllng t_o the card led-in the rest of the hand. If is member of the team lends n `J, 3, -i, 6 or 6, he shows strength in trumps nnd for re- entry; if he leads in 7. 8, 0 or i0, he slmw.-I still his long suit as a general thing. but wenlmess outside of it. Supporting curds from wcnk suits when the longer suits up- penr to he hnrdly worth opening. or better for doforislve than for oiYoln~`i\'e purposes. are In port of the J'r.\'vy sy.~'te1n. nun i-ni.4-rtuiniim whist writer. my Howell Champion: the system 0! Bmnll cud Load: indicative of `st:-ongth or woumuu - suo'ooum acorn to an , `L... wu_._4n.._ pub 01 mo .n-rsvy H) Mum. Ono entertaining writer, my friend Fnntur, culls thin style of plny tho common sense game, but it in nothing of the sort. It in a very clnlnomtoly duvinud system, which no doubt`. hnn nn (`l(!lll(`lit uf c(munun1-wnso in it. ns uvurything gum] has, and them is no other reason for cull- ing it common sum-to whist. It in really I variet.y of tho invitntion gmnu, which has A great hold on tho Whit-It public m~ nv In nriuin mmr be found in my limo has groat mm on mu wnn-w puuuu |u~ day. Its origin may be my book, Whist Oponings," published two years ago. There I recommended the >2, 8, 4 and 5 for long suit openings indica- tive of accompanying-strength. but point- ed out that individual players or teams might add the 6 to tho sumo category. My friend Foster didn't quite know how to take those suggestions. At first he Llkml them. Then he condomnod them as con- ducive to a wooden game, which, of nil things, the arch short sniter (lespisos. Now he finds a champion toum using whut is merely a slight. vnriution of tho one ox- pinined in Whist Openings. " and he no- oopts it, embraces it, as his true love, the OOIIHIIOH 501150 3111110. & 11.. nthnu h-hmd Wm-Ir. whn. if not so game. My other friend, Work, who. it not so entertaining as Foster. is quite as able u thoorinnmd A much ublcr player, calls the Joraey system what it ia--tho invimtion game. It. is almost procisciy that variety nf mhn invitnision RIIIDO which Charles uonnm Ant. leisure houn, writes a oorreepondent in that cold capital to the St. Louis 0lobe- ~ Democrat. It In almost the name spectacle, only not oi! by the novel environment of gluten. 'l"hn nnnnlgr rlnunn HA" `I the bhllt It is almost precisely mun vunuuy of the invitation game Stuart Street of Boston he: recently ehris- tened, in his Whist Up to Date." the modlod" game. This system is used by the Pyramid Whist club, which is unques- tionably the strongest cotelie of players in New England. They are a i'ew-iess than A d01.en-exports who have been drawn together by 0 common desire to get nwny from the strict long suit routine end make the small card opening mean some- thing. Their modified game is, however, modied beyond Street. His treatise lays down the 9, ii, i and 6 an the strong and the 0. 7 and 5 as the week long suit lauds. but the Pyramid ployers--of whom hols one, but not the only one-hnvo stretched this law considerably. They now ploy only the 2, iiand i to show trump strength. and not infrequently lead the other small cards. up to the 8. as the "top of nothing" -thut is. from the bend of week suits. long or short. In fact, they prnetice-so for as the openings are conoerned-very nearly the system which 1 broached two years age. \\'hnn mu name to eomnnre the existing _ when you come to compare exlstlng vnrlotlel of tho lnvltatlon game. you llud that they are different moroly In nmttm-.~: of detull. Tho some prlnclplo underlies thom nll-nmm-ly. don`t loud thu lowest curd of a plum ault unlc-sn you lmve trump and m-ontqv strength back of It and donlro to encourage purtnvr to play a furwurxl msino. Two years ago I thought the 2. 3. 4 and 5 were about all thn nuuull curds thu player would m-ml fur thls purpose; that tho 8 and hlghor muull rurds would so all dom be found at the bottom of long null.-a nconmpnnlml hy ntn-ugth; thnt n dltforont. mvnnlng might. mfvly lm uttnuhml to them wlthout (lhulnluhlnn the -llzwtlrlty of thu syntmu. Now It appears t.lm't the Now Jor- my players lxvllon; (ho ll to ho not-ossury us a an-mm lung ault vurd. nnd the l _\'rnml1l.~z. on the other hand. lwlluvo both the 0 and the 6 to ho \1I1Iwo:-ssnry. 1:... ma nuvn mu-9 I fmnklv ndmlf. chm. the is bo For my own part. I frankly admit that I am not nitum-thur antisliml with nny of Nit`!-K` nrhitrury di\'i:~`i0n:< of the cards. ni- though 1 mn respmisihio for their intro- dnutiun. l`lm principle umluri_\'inu tiwm- the loml of the low:-st. cnnl of in plain suit only when the rush! the hand in strong- Ia sound nmi utmiujovtimmbio. 'l`hore in some question. h()W(`\'l`l`. hunt the proper nwthud of application of the principle. The practice that I now follow, which in tho prm-tico of the Hawaii \\'hiut. club wanna. is this: if A hand dunmmial the opening of a long unit with n umnii bani, I lead this lnw(`lltuf the unit it I have fouror mom trumps. and tho pcnnitinmto or any , lmtll card nbovo thu lowest I! I have loan than tnur trumps. This nu-thud iiiiivrs in om-ct but lit-tiu from tho original 2. 3. 4. 6 him. but it is mum oimativ uml (`mm*r\'n- tivo. It wnriu wry wvil in o\'or_v instnncu. and in quite well liked by nil plnyvra whu have trial It. It an-Ins to mo in he nmily the ninnplx-It form of the invitation name. to Mr u this Ityle 0! play in at prudent civ- winpwi. " A. I nnld in um nnhmt of this article. tho And Lin : 3 DI-Idgu-1 bonus of blunt loath Anal-lean Ilhoy one Inna hot the not or Good luau "I win I can utfour Iron kidney dis- ouo. O0 badly Ilkctod um! .oonld not at.- hnd tn my honohold (labia. I rude! Ibo nlmou ninculou cum undo by South Amodonn ptocu - ul . haul. In halt] nu-an BKII IUIUIQII hill VIII. 1 ]IIllII'- ad I bottle. Innhxunl Indpu-Iw nootnliof. soda: boulu oundnooour Eddy. I gladly noonmond it.--Iu. . Coomu. Bptinghlll. N3. Sold by ldliy. uoauor toN.C.Po|nou volupovd. As I sold at the outset of this article. H.-cum Mloumu 0! the Invitation game due: not justify only vmwlng. in hvttvr in tho Into:-mt of whm uolcnoo let. the ex- perimenting go on and calmly to mall the unlvcrul venllct. B. C. Howxu. TIN CI.` ` woumn . ?n?:ot cme"."L HETERODOX W HIST. IIUIBII. The popular dance hall is the biggest building in the place excepting the head- quarter: of the Canadian police. It in near- ly 75 feet long and fully 50 feet in width, and at night is transformed from a cold, tenantlcuu, barnlllm structure into a rock- leu revel, and all the women of Dawson who did not include good reputations in their outta when they left the States can be neon in the throng that till: the place, and rough miners and more polished ten- derfeet vie with each other for the generous Imiloa of the fair sex. Over in one corner a piano that must have seen better dayn, a wheezy horn of awe inspiring antiquity and an instrument that it would be groan attery to all a tid- dle yield up plaintive discord: tothe e1- ` {arts oi` their grizzled manipulators. lane. ah. clannmnn tln nnt. mind thn ahmnea JVC Plll Int nun. II I'll! IIIIUVI up- $.|IIIlOUCo Iivoluouqd vigor WHEN NATURE FAQS. 5 THE DAILY name. surunmur Novnunnn ow In Fooled I Tunic:-{not lg tho Alan! 0! Pike : Peck. _-. .. I_l_,.__ A`.,, ,, ,_ _- A r\n__I____I. aluvwuu nu uuuuu awn-o While making the ascent. of Plkehpeak. before the completion of tho cogwheel rail- road, a. traveler had an Amusing experi- ence-nmushm clear it was over. ` u......1-Im. nf that r-rum-!um-n Hm mm1n- em'.e-amusum Iuwr H: wins over. Speaking of that experience, the moun- taineer said: I hired I: burn at the Half Way house, stating that I would not re- turn until nut day, as I was ambitious to ulwp, `ihjust one-nlghc, on the highest inhabited spot. in am Unit/ed :~iteite:--the summit. cf Pike's peak. The liver-ynmn gssumd me that the bIll'l`0 was all right. `All you've to do is to hold on. and he'll carry you through,` he amid. In nhnut hull I mile the bll!"l'0 It0DDOd 1 mrougn, no tuuu. In about half I mile the bum) stopped short. pulled out his sides as if he wax very tired, and looked around at me with lunch a sorrowful expression that I thought he was timely broken down and sick near un- to death. I dismounted and led him about ' half a mile, symputhizing for him and re- serving my opinion oi` tho livt-r_vmn.n who would with muilee aforethought hlro to a tourist nbroken down burro. 1-`inully I re- mounted, and had not proceeded aqunrter of a mile when fho bnrro nguln stopped, began blowing like u bellows, und looked nround at mo with his -sleepy. blinking eyes, mutely asking me if 1 was not ashamed to impose upon a sick mule. I was, and dlumomtted. Coming to an al- most level port of the roadl remoinitod, and in loss tlnm 1,100 yards ho stopped and gave me unother mute uppeu,l. 1 then thought thut the hnrro wns renllynbont to yield up the ghost nnd \\'lL`i !om'i'ul thut ho would not lost until tho summit wins I reached. I wulked ulong up tho remnin- inu two miles of very steep grade. the ho`.-ro trudging nlomz nftcrme with oppor- ent tliilienlty. ()n arriving at the-summit I gzuvo the reins to the liverynntn, reint- imz the (`.il`('1liIISitl.IlCl`. and n,fter expresraiug my opinion oi the keeper who rented to me the sick mule t-nu(ge.~'te4l.timi. tho burro be not (ml for M least at i'ew hours. "The li\ er_vmnn's fnee wore a hrotnl grin, nnti he now me n. look which Heenxed to express :~_\'lii[)uiiI_V' or my overklndne.s or ;,rt't-eliliema. lio gnvo tho burro u thump in tho side. 1-auylng: "i`hut`n one oi` his old tricks. This hnrro n.ln't. no more sick than you nre-no: us mueh. "'|`hn hurrn i(iek(`(l nn hi ht`(`i and nro-nn: ml|t`n.' "Thu hurm klclivtl up hl hovls scmnpvn-(I uwuy us if t-njuylng his bunko gume."-l.us Axum-Iva 'l`lnws. Bow Klulng the Blblo First Started In llrltluh Cum-tn. Its ls at-nomll_\`nssunwtl that klsslng the lmuk" ls. or ut nny rnto was untll rc- L-t-ntly, n Int-ct-.~`.~'ttr_\' part of tho lmml wre- muny of oath tulglntz. This usuumptlon, lt()\\'(`\'(`I`. pmlmltly la nut, jttstlllvtl. It would uppvur that thv must nuvlvnt. form of am-urlmz In the t`hrl-tlun uhurvlt wus tnylny thu ltlllltl llputt tlw gmqu-l and any, So ht-lp mu tlntl uml,tlu-so holy 'UH])(`lS. " 'l`hlt4 Ht`\`llt!-l tu I-.u\'o lm`ntln- tnuml(:uro- mnny t|(`(`Ullt|IttD_\`lll[.{ u Jutllulnl nutlt untll ntr all v\'cnt.~: the (`ml of tho I-llXl0`N!lt urn- tury, fut` l.nt`tl (`nkc says: It is Qt|ll\`(l u corporal onth l)(,`t`ttltM` (tho witm.-nu) tntt(`lt- 0th with his huml sunw purt ut' the Holy t~`~cr|pturt`:<." (`uko suys not unu word ubout klsslng the bunk. \\'hun thv prutstlrvut klsslng the bank loogmn, ls, says The Law Jourtml. undu- tcrmlnul. It has bovn stutc-d thut thla form wns n prmcriltcd us part of tho `um-mnux1_v ut tukltu; tho ontlm ut' ulloglunoe nnd t~lll[l!`t`lllll(`:y'. It ls lntt-rv.-zt lngnntl may be slunlllcunt. to non) that >`ltttkt~nponre only once ullu(lo.~I tn tho pmctlw of klsulng the bunk. uml nn thut m*cn.~.lmt turns lt lnto l`ltllt`tllt`. \\'l-.ntowr tho urlgln of the prnvtloo, thoro vun lm no llutllll thnt klsw lnu the bunk what the ('t`t`t`ltH)lt_\' thut usual ly t|('t'.tIlll])nlllt`ll tho tnklnuut mt unth In an Ellkllll i-nurt of Ju.~llt't` in tho t4(v't.`Xl- tovnth century. nut in HURT ohm-n n4-mu-wul in (`run whlnlt tovmn century. `But. in mm tlujro occurred In cnso which In of Millie impurturwu. It ll|)|`(`.'ll`!-I chm. un a jury trlul Dr. Owen. Vice chum-vllnr ol Oxforxl \1nl\'v1'sity_, being unllul as u wlt.- Iw.~s:4, rm-flI:~`L-(1 to bu morn In the usual way, hy luylng hln right hund on the buck und uftorwurul kl:-1-'imzit,Imt. hv (`nut-wd the book In ho hold u|.nn hufuru hhu und hu rnlml his righm hand. The jury doubt.- lng whut. vrc Hwy ought. to give (u hll nulh tho nmth-r \\`lL-L rvfvrrml In thnclxlol justice, who rulrd (hut. Dr. Uwvn hud tukm M guotl nu nuth nanny ntlu~r\v1t- l1('zs'.\. " And tlwn tho 1-hluf j\l'~'!i1'(!lM(l|`(l nu oln;vr\'ulhm which. in ( m\'pvr'u l{u~ ........v- a.. --u........nu nn w\m.....\.." um! Kort: 0! their unuieu nuuupumwn. But the dancer: do not mind the nbeenee of reel mu|ie-nii they demand in noise and a certain regular rhythm and plenty of drinks, and all these the management` nuppiion in abundance, the int commodity being at the uniform nu of iii) cent: per and take your choice. An nid wnmnn who look: as if the had ' AIHI Invn ln0('n|ul Jl1~zIu'('.IIu(u'u "( purls" in "Mm-Imlly on E\ Ink-m`u" und r1so\\`l1cro is 1nl.~q1|utml us follows: If 1 wvm to be H\\`m`II 1 would kiss thu hook." Now, thut is not 1111 wlmt tho vhlof justicc said. '1 ho \\'urdH In h`ldvrlln's rvport. uro: ll1c:<(`. ll dim H il (ult (!v.~tru Jum ll vuill copulmrsn nmln tlmh-r mu` lo lh cl` Im-.~nm-. " 'l`lm.~' the chief justlvu says not one word about kissing the hunk. A rocvnt writer dl'|Il(1'!`(` tho hmi mun- norn of the dunvim: pmpio of tmiuy. .'l`h gomlt-uum of tho old 2-*t_\`lo n.-Ina: .\in)'l hnvv tin: vxqui.~iu- tivliuhi of In-inu you! imi_vship'u i.umi~iv cmuiivr in tho x-omiun (`ouniry (lulu-(-Y` Uh. nil`, you uro mstiy point`. and 1 mo M`:-rwhrlnu-xi hy your H`- quv 9." says tho imiy. "'i`iu~u I do not umius ioo bold?" "Uh. sir, I \\`(Ili|(l not how you lIIl.~'(`Im!~'ll`lIl` my \\'onln'." `'1 than rovkou upon your (running the mom: um` with your d(`\`l|ll`li sormnli-" I Inuy not say you Imy. sir. " ~ouru\.~'_\`imx. "Nimi- mu. you on` ion N)Ii(l|'-cwliiullu`. I will no! (oil to rinim your hnml," rc-tiring with courteous humility 'l`ho p;vnlirnmu of the new Mylo my:-'. Ah. l.mi_v Fionmco, got an entry 10 or in your hook full! "Wvil. here`:-s n quminllr running lnmw. says the lculy. looklluz ut in-r ram]. "Uh. hunu'1.`\c qumiriiic-s. i`m not out for wulkinu uxor- i rise. Not on tho nqumx-. twimxey mus?" , Inyzfihv gouiiunmn. "You i`uun_v old crip- i pie! Here's a polka I'm not. sum about. . -- A nnIl`n' 'l`hnt'n mv"torm. \\'o'ii tin Ivwry 3 its w.a.'. Mandrake Pill: mu Iain um. lngscuowhen Iskon Int it hnuloolno. usual! and lint not at and ple! Ilvrvs |IHlKlI I m mm HUN` auout. "A polka! That`: my"furm. We'll u right into the lm_m'n of `mu nnd havoc glass: of the buy uflmjwunl. oh?" "It's I IN." Nlyl the Indy. none. 830 lung." says the gomlmnnn. Ilv strolls n. hum- mlng a popular n|r.-(iInsguw lhzrnld. The bountiful glrl cun~(-'_II\to the room and pulled her chair so clost` up to her fa- ther`: big nnnchnir thqt be looked up from his newspaper tn no what was the matter. any wnum ukm won. father." she: hll tn wnu Wu mo manor. Mr. Wllklno like: you. [farm-r." said. u soon uaho aw thtt uho had MI um-ntlnn. Like: mo!" ho exclaimed. Ye-n. He thinks a great dog! of you." Well. I have I-con under the Impnulon for I-omo tlnic that he liked norm 1- how. " n-mm-km! the old Itimtlcmnn. " ut TN never teen any indication: that lkwu the tuna "- one."- "Well. you will the very next time you are Mr. Wilkins" add the Buutllul girl with mnvicuon. . un-L...-_ L- ._.I-no-tn An! dnvngntlml " V` DIIU I IN? 31 old gentleman. H I-In`: an-shut and take onoloo. An old woman who look: been dried out during one of the hot. Ipolll j nnd had now: rocuporntod In the loading ` dispenser of liquids. and nhoh familiarly called by the old timers Mother Abe. " why Abe nobody has been ablo to explain. Perhaps then: won an Abe once to whom Ibo was attached by Mm matrimonial, but at pvuunt ubo In on unsttuhetl bu-mold om! the only widow "on tho dike. " unu llhn dllm" in thn mlnnlmr nlnmr old gentleman. Ha-`n gnimz to at you ll you Milena- Innt to be his father-In-law. cxpldnud the buutllnl girl.-Chlcqo Punt. . `;I:HE unno AS AN Acton. th mnvlcuon. Whnt'| lm golntto do?`.` demanded I 1a.!!! 0 Inunnn ORIGIN OF A CUSTOM. Manner: Then and I law She Broke the loo. Ivoryflno. j_-L- All lnoldcnl 0! Travel on tho Inllnll stogmor Rnllfc to Alaska. I In-liovo (ho inlzmd stwum-rrol1tol'n A1m~ku is the Hum. plmsuru trip in the \\'u|'h!,' I-MM NI`. Lu \'N`nu \\'. .\'n_u's thr otlu 1-day. slu-:.l.|ng:u.' `u a mvn 1-nu vi; um`-`. Thu hUl`lI(`l`)` is hItlt`.~`<'|l\.')l_v hiznutlful. (lull tin` \\`ult`l`. FI`}':!1`:LH'L[ 1mm 15- l'uL:Hl(` by :: hum nf i-.?:'.m!:.. is us snmuth us nny hlIl'hM' in thu \\'< rld. Hut. at many points ulum: llw rnuln tlm chunm-I In quitu tortu- m..- um! full ..I' I-n--I.-u nml \\'lu~nn\'u-r n Inn Inn "on we pile." It will he noceuary in lite society to draw an Veil over the (lance ll scenes, but one incident in of such frequent repetition that it convey: an instructive suggestion of lite in Dawson. A minor in proper mining garb wns dancing with the belle of tho hall, who i`eHp0ndn to the pleasing appellation of Uurt." lie wna making in norry nmsa of his light tnntuatie om:-t, producing I npoctuele more fantutic than light. when the lady in the cue suddenly left him to bestow her hiundiahmeutn on a youthful new arrival who bore evidences of recent contact with (!iV'iii'.'.ation. rm... uninmn unnllnul nln-zml In!` an lnntnnt. i'm; " W .i7!i'IIIc.i1rt!:, ' Agent (2. I . R.. \VlIlgh:Ull. B.---Mention this paper CuAsns KIDNEY-LIVER OHM 1' uny. s|`t`hI.In}."Iu '11 i nwrn-xlu ru urn. is \\ ult`l`. Hm g-_ ous mrl full ul` l'rn'kH. mul \\'lu~Iw\`1-r a fog L- Ull('IIlH1ll'l`l`(l (".'l`l`_\` movement; of the ship ls l'm1uzi\t with dungvr. - "l \\u..~' uwnkvm-d uhnut. 8 o'clock one nu.x-nlng by u long hlm-tr. of the ut,onu1or'I \\'Mx~'llt'. 'l`h|.-x struck mu as umlsual. for \'t`.~.'\'L' are rmvly mct on that trip nnd thrru urn mmpurntI\'vly no settlements. A numxvnl, lam-r I heard the captain and oi... nilm nn Hm In-Mm. n\'nI` mv nmmrnmn I\ Hllllliflllr NHL'l' I |ll`lll'\l LIIU Ullllllllll llllll thv pilot un the brltlgv over my stateroom elm.-u.~ml ln u wry llvrly colloquy. `l Ivll ynu lt`a rlght there.` HAM one of them 1-xcltm'l|_\'. `It. must. be or we'll be on llw ru1'l\.~ in u mlnutul ' '1 hut ml.-a ommuh forum. I tumhlcd out of my I).-rth uml, hull llN`88l.`d, runhml nut nu (lvvk just as tho \\'h|ntlU gave an- ullu r uxwunlny .~(`l'\`l`(`h. It. seemed to be un.~wvn nl luunullulvly by unuthor \\'hlstlu Iwux` lay, uml 1 lmuglucd '0 Marc meeting n ;l4\nnutI' ' ' \\ Illll UIU 1 u'u_\uu1 L`l`lCl.l LIIU IJIIUD. "l`lwru nlw Is all rH.'|n 1' ' Aftvr wulxlm: tun mlnutns or mom, lmphux In he uhlu tuvzm-I1 n. ulinmm of the strumzv crull, I lu`(`u.~ l('d Hm vuptnln nml nskml him whore the othor nu-unwr was. My qucstlun nu-urly gnw him nun vpllupllc m \\`n hm! run Inln n almmn {nu um! mu` Rly qlll'HI IUH lI|`lll`I)` l|\(' llllll llll l'|lIIl`p| IV t. Wu had run into n dvnsv fun und our pilot was guiding us in (hut. rmnkml clum- nui and mnong those tmucimmus ruvks by the evhuos aunt hark from tho mountains which hum und there riso pmcipituusiy from the water's edge. "-Chicngo 'I`imo.-s- liuruid. III'1ll'|IlIIU ..--u-------- There seems to ho nothing that men are mhfrnld of ma rm-llgluus ontlnlnslusnu. I do not qulto undvrsnmd It. If them In an election pumllng. all chow who have any lutorvst. In tho ulcctlnn wt, to work tn cro- ato enthusiasm. They write nnlclcs ln the newspapers. nmkp speeches on the plat- form. urgnnlzv mlllmry and somlmllltury compunluu. plan lmrlmcxlos, scatter tracts. 'l`hulr Mm ls to nmkv one half the people bc|l(`\`v that lf the other half at tho people ......-... cl... ..l....ol..n Ihn Pnltml Stnrnn will D(`li(`\`L` [min it me umrr nun m um puuluu mr'r_\' tho elociion tho Fnltui States will i go in pieces. 'i'ho_v want, to cmniu an en- ` timainam of four and an omimninam of ` hope, and for the three or four dawn bcforo tho election If you mad the pnpersun either side you iim sum the other side has no clmnw. for tho nim in politic: is io cmbo g pniiiicni onihusimu. It is no in huninm. For my own part. in my business min- iiomn I would a gt-mt dmi rather have A man who is enthusiastic and not sound in Judmnont. than is man who in sound in Judgment and has not any enthusiasm. And I will toil you why. If ho hat on- Imsinsm, I can miucntc his judgment. but if ho hm: only juclmmmt I have novor yet found a wry oi kindling his enthusiasm. Wovwnnt enthusiasm in politics. We wont enthuniumin business. but W0 no afraid oi it in miigion.-Lynun Abbott in Out- Innh , nutvupurvrru vv -1 -v-u The Inn does not impart heat to the A0- mosplu-ro `xly. If it did, is would he noarlyu m cm the tape! I high moun- tain an it in at the an level. In up warm the earth. and thebu-th rullcwn. or thrown oil. the host thm nncnivnd into the surrounding Air. The denmy 0! the III` last the earth`: nurfnm pnvcnu the has from escaping into spoon. Thenrlty oi the air at high altitudes permits it to compo. Thu in why mountain push no clothed in pnfpctlltl ice and now, while the mnponuire at the foot 0! tho moun- tain maybe quite warm. The nunoophem. by thin holding tho has ndintcd hum the earth. is top! About 600 dogma `. -gunmp 1}-n nnhr ntn1n.-P.clnh and the only wmow "on ma uuw. On the dike" in the relgnmg slung here. and seems to be I tranuplantml an tnumnutod form of that choice American- Inn on tho pike." n. mm hn nnmmu-v In mm. nooletv

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