Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 6 Nov 1891, p. 2

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. THE DISTURBER OF TRAFFIC. The Brothers of the Trinity order that findin no rest either at Portsmouth, or Gos- none unconnected with their service shall be port 3rd. found in or on one of their Lights during the . . hours of darkness. Their employees can you and say, “ I know the Java currents," led to think otherwise. If you are fair- I ken and take an interest in their duties, t ey will permit you to sit with them through the long night and help to scare the ships into mid-channeL . Of all the English south coast Lights, that of St. Cecilia-under-the-Clifi' is the most pow- erful, for it guards a very foggy coast. When theses mist veils all, St. Cecilia turns a hooded head to the sea and sings a song of two words once 'every minute. From the land that son resembles the bellowing of a brazen bull ; at at sea they understand, and the steamers grunt gratefully in answer. Feuwick, who was on duty one night, lent me a pair of black glass spectacles, without which no man can look at the Light unbliuded, and busied himself With last touches to the lenses before twilight fell. The width of the English Channel be- neath us lavas smooth and as many-colored asthe inside ofan oyster shell. A little Sunder-land cargo boat had made her signal to Lloyd’s Agency, half a mile up the coast, and was lumbering down to the sunset, her wake lying white behind her. One star came out over the cliffs, the waters turn- ed to lead color, and St. Cecilia’s Light shot across the sea in eight long pencils that wheeled slowly from right- to left melted into one beam of solid light laid down directly in front of the tower, dissolved again into eight, and passed away. The light-frame of the thousand lenses circled; on its rollers, and the com- pressed-air engine that drove it bummed liken bluebottle undera glass. The hand of the indicator on the wall pulsed from safer to keep to the north sideâ€"of Si- i mark to mark. Ei ht pulse-beats timed oneilence. half-revolution of t ie Light; neither more, “And on Flores Strait, in the fairway is never yet known to mortal man. Some- r times they’re here, and sometimes they’re! there, but they never runs less than five 1 knots an hour through and among those islands of the Eastern Archipelagus. There’s ’ reverse currents in the Gulf of Baniâ€"and, that's up north in Celebesâ€" that no man , can explain ; and through all those JaVVa I passages from the Bali Narrows, Dutch I Cut, add Ombay, which I take it is thel safest. they chop and they change, and they 2 banks the tides fust on one shore and then 3 on another, till your ship's tore in two. l I’ve come through the Bali Narrows, stern first, in the heart 0' the southeast monsoon, with a sou‘-sou’-west wind blowing atop of the northerly flood, and our skipper said he wouldn’t do it again, not for all Jamrach’ . You’ve heard 0‘ Jamracli’s, sir?” “ Yes; and was Dowse stationed in the Bali Narrows 2" I said. “ No, he was not at Bali, but much more east 0’ them passages, and that’s Flores Strait, at the east end 0’ Flores. It’s all on the way south to Australia when you’re running through that Eastern Archipelagus. Sometimes you go through B ill barrows if you’refull-powered, and sometimes through Flores Strait, so as to stand south at once, and fetch round Timor, keeping well clear 0' the Sahul Bank. Elseways, if you aren’t full-powered, why it stands to reason you go round by the Ombay Passage, keeping [ careful to the north side. You understand ‘ that, sir '3” I was not full-powered, and judged it nor less. between Adonare Island and the mainland, Fenwick checked the first few revo- they put Dowse in charge ofa screw-pile lutions carefully; he opened the engine’s Light called the \Vurlee Light. It’s less feed pipe a, trifle, looked at, the racing than a mile across the head of Flores Strait. governor, and again at the indicator, and 'lheu it opens out to ten or twelve mile for said : “She’ll do for the next few hours. Solor Strait, and then it narrows again to a \Ve’vc just sent our regular engine to Lon- three-mile gut. With 0: topplin’ flamiu’ vol- don, and this spare oue’s not by any manner 011110 by it: That’s old Loby Toby by Loby so accuratefl Toby Strait, and if you keep his Light and “ And what should happen if the com- the \Vurlee Light in a line you won’t take pressed air gave out?” I asked, our, of much liarm,not on the darkest night. That’s curiosity. what Dowse told me, and I can well believe it we’d have to mm the flash by hand, lulu, knowing these seas myself; but you keeping an eye or, the indicamr, There‘s a. must ever be mindful of thccurrents. And regular crank for that. But it hasn’t liap- there they put Dowse, smce he was the only pened yen \Ve'll need 9,11 our compressed mantliattliat Dutch government which owns ail. tedfighhn Mares could find that would go to Wurlee “ why 2" said L I had been watching and tend a fixed Light. Mostly they uses him for not [nope than a, minute, Dutch and Italians, Englishmen being said “ Look,” he answered, and 1 saw that, the to drink when alone. I never could rightly dead-mist had risen out of the lifeless sea. find {mt What made Dowse accept of that. and wrapped us while my back had been POSILIOH. but accept he did, and used to sit turned, The Pencils of the Light marched watching the tigers come out of the forests I staggerineg across tilted floors of white to hunt for crabs and such like round about cloud, From the balcony roum‘, the light. the lighthouse at low tide. The water was l room the white walls of the lighthouse ran always warm in those part8. as I know well, down into swirling, smoking space. The afld uncommon sticky. and It ran Withlhe noise of the tide coming in very lazily over tides as thick and smooth as hogwash in a , the rocks was choked down to a thick tl‘Ollgll- There was another man along draw]. with Dowse in the Light, but he wasn’t “ That’s the way our sea-fogs connc,”Sai(l rightlyfi-_man- H0 W318 1': Kling. I NO. I“)? Il‘enwick, with an air of proprietorship, ycta lxling he wasn’t, but his skin was in “ Hark, now, to that, little fool calling out little flakes and cracks all over, from livuig 'fom 113’s hurt,” so much in the salt water as Was his usual Something in the mist, was blaming like custom, His bands was all webby-foot, too. ' an indignant calf; it might have been halfa He “'33 Oil-“ed. 1 remember DOWSG saying! mile or half a hundred miles away. iio‘lf, all Crease-Lord. "11 0.0001111!) of his i “Does he suppose we’ve gone to bed?” ha'blts- continued Fenwick. “ You’ll hear us talk sir?” to him in a minute. He knows puliickly “ Orange-Laut ‘2” I suggested. where he is, and he’s carrying on to be told -“ That's the name,” Said FenWick. smack- like if he was insured.” ing his knee. “ An Orange-Laut, of course, u who is . he 1 -3n and his name was Challong ; what they call “ That Sundcrland boat, 0’ course. Ah 1” "- Sw'gl’PSY- DOWN mld me film-l3 that man. I could hear a steamâ€"engine hiss down l long hull" and a“: _“’°“ld g0 swimmins'up below in the mist where the dynamos that 9 “ml dow‘} lhe smut-‘3 1‘15“ 1°r,301nethmg ‘30 fed the Light were clocking together. Tilell:doi rumlmg dmv“ 0“ One “‘19 and 13301; the", cmne a mm. that split, the fog and ; again with the other, swimming side-stroke shook the lighthouse. .. I and the tides going tremenjus strong. Else- “ (lit-toot .7” blared the foghorn of St. Will's he’d 139 SkiPl’ing “130‘”? the b93011 “long Cecilim The meaning ceased, I With the tigers at low tide, for he was most “ Little fool l” Feuwick repeated. Then, ( pill‘t 1" beile ; (“he’d Sit in “little boat Prle' I listening : “ Blest if that aren’t another of , mg to Old LUbY TObV Of all .evemng mom 1 well, :3 ..they always say that a li when the volcano was spitting red I fog do draw the ships of the sea, together. gut the south end of the strain. Dowse told They’ll be calling at night, and so'll the ' inc that he wasn t. a compamonable man, siren. We're expecting some tea-ships up. ‘ like you and me might have been 10 Donna. You’ve heard of an OrangecLord, Channel. I “ New I can never rightly come at what it ' If you put my coat on that, chair, ‘ was that began to ail Dowse after he had been you!" feel more so fay], air." , there a year or something less. He was sav- ‘ iug all his pay and tending his Light, and I now and again he’d have a fight with Chal- long and tip him olf the Light into the sea. Then, he told me, his head begun to feel strcaky from looking at the tides so long. He said there was long streaks of white run- ning inside it : like wall paper that hadn't been properly pasted up, he said. The l streaks, they would run with the tides, north I and south, twice a. day, accordiu’ to them i currents, and he’d lie down on the planking â€"â€" it was r. screw-pile Lightâ€"with his eye to l a crack and watch the water streaking l through the piles just so quiet as liogwash. 1 He sand the only comfort he got was at slack water. Then bliestreaks iuliishcad went round , and round like a sampan in a tide-rip ; but} that was llt‘ uven, he said, to the other kind l of streaks,â€"â€"the straight ones that lookedl like arrows on a wind chart, but much more 1 regular, and that was the trouble of it. No i more he couldn’t ever keep his eyes off the l . . ‘ ‘ tides that ran up and down so strong, but 1’ busmcss'hk" "M‘lm' Haulpon bemused as soon as ever he looked at the high hillsI to talk down to me, and became so amazing- standi'm a" dong Flores 8mm; for rest and iv technical that I was forced to beg him to ! "‘° - - . , . . i ' w be ullcl l ' explain every other sentence. This set him| comfort 1 la 0) es mud p i i mm mm . . to the nast streak water - and when the fully at his case ; and then we spoke as men 1 once not mire he gumum ’pu" them “wag together each too interested to think of; u . ~ . ., _ Ir . anything except the subject- in hand. And i 853m “u um tide ch‘m‘fid' H" mm me a” It is no pleasant thing to thrust your compmy upon a man for the night. Ilook- ed at Feuwick, and Fenwick looked at me; each gauging the. other's capacities for bor- ing and being bored. Fcnwick was an old, clean-slinven, grayhaired mun who had fol- lowed the sea for thirty years, and knew nothing of the land except the lighthouse in which he served. l-Ic fenced cautiously to find out the little that I knew, and talked down to my level till it came out that I had met a captain in the merchant service who had once commanded a ship in which Feuwick’s son had served ; and further, that I had seen some places that Fenwick had touched at. He began with a dissertation on pilotage in the Hugli. I had been privileged to know a llugli pilot inti- mately. Fciiwick had only seen the impos~ - ing and masterful breed from ii ship's chains and his intercourse had, been limited to “ Quarter less five,” and rem-irks ofastrict- . “ And if anybody was to come to of thesgmir, steamers that came by,--there wasn’t many Linn; LAND-limes. o; tili‘cm, â€"-made the streaks, instead 0 t e tides as was natural. He. 1 to sit, he m1 d me cursing The Duke of Sutherland Owns Nearly a Whole Country. every boat that come along,â€" some- _ - times a junk, sometimes a Dutch _ There is only one lauded proprietor brig, and now and again a steamerrounding ; In England passessed 0f more than 100.000 Flores Head and poking about in the mouth 3 “0'83 in one country. there being three in Or there (1 coma a, boat groin f Ireland-and no less than fourteen in Scot- Australia running north past old Loby Toby - land; In England the Duke of Northum~ don't you listen to him; for “1038 currents ‘ panting for a fair current, but never throw. i3 proprietor Of “Cm in log out any papers that Chanon 7 might pick Northumberland. In Ireland Mr. Richard up for Dowse to read. General y speaking, Burling i5 Proprietor 0f 160.152 “CNS in the steamers kept more westerly, but now 1 Galwayi the MHQUiS Conyugham 129.346 and again they came looking for Timor and acres in Dong“. and the Marquis of Sliuga the west coast of Australia. Dowse used 0‘ 122,903 in Mayo. In SCOthmd the Duke to shout to them to go round by the Ombay 0f Argyle is proprietor of 163.315 acres in Passage, and not to come streakin past I Argyle, the Earl of Breadalbaue 234,166 him, making the water all streaky, Inn. it 1 acres in Perth and 204.19? in Argyle: Mr. wasn’t likely they’d hear. He says to him. Even Baillie of Dockfour, 111,148 acres in self after a month, ‘ I’ll give them one more Inverness ; the Duke Of BHCCICHCh: 953.179 chance,’ he says. ‘If the next, boas don’t, - acres in Dumfries and 104,461 in Roxburgli: attend to my just representations,’â€"-l.e says Mn Dona-1d Cillllel‘oni 01 Loewe]. 109.574 he remembers using those very words to acres in Inveruess; the Earl of Dslhousie, Challong,â€"-‘ I’ll stop the fairway.’ 136,602 acres in Forfar; the Duke of Fife, “The next boat wasa Two-streak cargo- 13*.8'29 acres in Aberdeen: the BMW 0f boat very anxious to make her northing. Hamilton. 102.210 acres in Rule iSil'GeOl‘ge She waddled through under old Loby Macphersoe Grant, 103,372 acres in Inver- Toby at the south end of the strait, and HESS ; Sil‘ James MMheSODi 403.070 acres in she pasted within a quarter of a mile Ross ; the Duke of Richmond 159,952 acres of the Wurlee Light; at the north end, in Biufl‘;Sir Charles Ross, 110,445 acres in in seventeen fathom 0’ water, the tide ROSS; the Earl Of Seafield: 160.224 acres in against her. Dowse took the trouble to Inverness ; and 1113b bub not 180-33. the Dake come out with Challong in a little prow that Of Sutherland» With 110 1853 than 1:176:454 they had,-â€"all bamboos and leakage,â€"and i acres in Sutherland, so that his grace is pos- he lay in the fairway wavingapslm-brauch, Bessed 0f very nearly the “41018 country. and so he told me, wondering why and what the from“ area- Of Which it 1397.845 acres. for lie was making this fool of himself. Up come the Two~streak boat,aud Dowseshouts; “ Don’t you come this way again, making my head all streaky ! Go round by Oinbay, -_ - ._ and leave me alone." some one looks over I correspondent of the Anti Jacobin. At . . Nanchau in Kiaugsi were two litersr the port bulwarks and shies a banana a g’ -' y Dowse’ and thaws a“. . linen who used to read in the Polar monas- Dowse sits down in - . \tery. One was elderly, the other young ; the bottom of the boat and cries fit to break they were united by the bonds of closest his heart. Then he says, “ Challong, what f - - y i - a ; v. 9,, riendship. The elder one went to liis.honie .l’;lvifizl‘ligli’fan2E2.§i?i.§fif’" “P by findsuddan‘y am The as (To BE COSTIXUED) now of it, and went on With his studies at tltie monastery in the ilisual play. On: night . . . a ter he had one to s cc e saw is old Suspicious Death of an Austrian Noblemau . friend one“ tfie bed muffins, come to the It is reported from Pressburg that Count bed; and put his hand on his Shoulder. Emerich Esterhazy, 3. ed eightystliree, was i saying. “ Brother, it is only ten days since drowned in the Daiiu e on Friday night, I parted from you, and now a sudden sick- having fallen, with his carriage, horses, and ness has carried me off. I am a ghost. I driver, from the road over a. dam eighteen cannot, however, forget our friendship, and feet high into the river. The driver saved 80 have come to bid adieu.” The young himself, and gives the following account :â€" The Count had‘engaged him at six in the . speak. The old man reassured him, saying. afternoon at Wieselburg, and wished to ba. “If I had wished to injure you why should taken to Pressburg. At ten they arrived at; I have told you I was a chest? Do not fear, Orosvar, where the Count stayed to take . then. The reason of my visit is that I have A Chinese Ghost Story. The following ghost story is related by a the driver, a country lad of sever teen, to l future.” The young man grew it little drive on so that Pressburg might be reached calmer, and asked. “ \Vhat can I do ‘2" before midnight. At eleven the Count l The ghost replied. “ I have a mother over appeared to awake from his sleep, started 3 seventy, ani a wife not yet thirty; “- few up, and ordered him to drive. away from the piculs of rice are needed for their inainten~ high road along a road crossing a field. ‘The f auce. I beg you to have mercy upon me, lad remonstrated, saying that was the way 5 and supply their wants. That is my first to the Danube, but the Count ordered him so 3 request. I have also an essay which I have peremptorin that he dared not disobey. and written, which has not been printed. I beg before he knew what he was about the l of you to get a block out for it, and print it, ground crumbled under the horses’ feet, and so that my name may not utterly die out. in a second all were precipitated into the This is my second request. Next, I owe the Danube. The driver ran to Orosvar to re- 'stationcrs same thousands of cash, which I portwliat hadhappcned,und though thebody have not paid ; kindly settle this claim. was searched for immediately, it was not This is my third request.” The young schol- fouud till the next day. A very suspicious ar assented with a nod. The dead man stood fact was ascertained. The COunt’s trunk, l up, and said, “ As you have been kind which had been corded to the carriage, was 9 enough to grant my requests, I will depart.” fpuucd loose on tcliie gunk, Iand only contained .. tie ount’s war ro e am 167 florins in thc ‘ - pocket of a coat. Now, the Count had Brupmve Geysem' written to Piessburg to say that he was Bunsen has explained the periodical erup- comiug to pay 6000 llorins, and it was his I tion of geysers in such a satisfactory manner custom to go to Pressburg once a mouth , that doubt is no longer possible. A with a similar sum. It is, therefore, quite . cavern filled with water lies deep in the possible that he was robbed by people who '3 earth, under the geyser, and the water in knew the coachinan, and that the carriage this cavern is heated by‘tlic earth’s internal was driven into the Danube to give the § heat far above 212°, since there is a heavy affair the aspect of an accident. The Count 5 hydrostatic pressure upon it arising from the leaves a large fortune, which he boarded liveight of water in the passage or natural during a life of strictest economy, not to l staudpipc that leads from the subterranean chamber to the surface of the earth. After a certain time the temperature of the water The Ozar and the Photographer. below rises, so that steam is given off in A Berlin Paper smug that the 07m, does I spite of the pressure, and the column in the - . - - I exit tube is gradually forced upward.’ The gslfgclimgyhiiggvlgg {1;5312130:ۤ$p:1$126$ release of pressure and the disturbance of ithe water then cause the contents of the say avarice. â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€".â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"- front of the camera, or is subjected to the process unexpectedly or suddenly. A Danish photographer found this out two Weeks ago. He had taken up his position on the road, which leads from the castle to the station near the Fernbane Hotel, in order when the Czar took hisluzual morning Walk to the _ station to cute i im, and to force him in a â€" . - ' sense to give him a sitting. The Czar came, The Household Pnza‘ as luck would have it. quite alone, when 135 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, Ont. suddenly to his left he heard the ominous . “ Your reliable preparation, St. Jacobs Oil, click-click of thciustrumeut. He immediate- i has proved a benefit to me in more ways l I have used it for quinsy (out- subterrancau chamber to flash into steam l and expel the contents of the exit pipe vio- Ilcntly. These eruptions may also be pro- voked by throwing stones or clods of turf into the basin of the geyser. The water in the cavern below is disturbed by this means. ly turned sharply round, as if the shadow Of a danger had crossed hi8 Path. and Saw I ward application) with very beneficial re- 10 paces off the black camera, which, being l suits, and for a case of rheumatism, where dazzled by the Sun. he evidently did not at‘ its action was swift and sure, and a perfect once recognise. The Czar’s face was whiter cure was performed. I considerit a remedy than an apron ; the s‘ick which shortly be- ' to be prized in every household.” Tiios. fore he had been carelessly waving in the Pmiziiox, with Johnson & Brown. air fell from his grasp, and he trembled like a fawn in face of a sudden fright. But then - - as if bya. sudden determination of will, be A Brave Bntwh Bay. collected himself, and as the photographerl A plucky attempt to Bil-"0 We, madq by came forthlfrombehind his box withahumbief Mr. W.R. Parr, the _son of the Rev. L. R. request, he gave him alook which made the Parr, British chaplain at llpulogue, has young man tremble. and the words died on - received unexpected recognition from the his tips. “Jamais,” hissed the Czar be. French authorities. The inculcut occurred tween his teeth, and hurried back to the ; at Bolllogne lust December- _ A FljenCh bOY castle, a group of children running to meet? fell through the ice on'the river Liane, and him. In their millstllc most likely soon re- ,5 young Parr. a lad of la, made anjost gallant gained his composure. The photographer though fruitless eflort to save him, in the returned by the next train to Copenhagen. l course of which he himselfnarrowly escaped He was near fainting. the poor fellow, and death. He has. received notice from the for half an hour nearly lost the power of I Minister of Murine that asilver medal, as a speech, such an impression had the Czor‘s reward for his bravery, Will be presented to enraged looks and his imperious " Jamais" i him by the Commissary of Marine, who is made upon him. the chief maritime authority at Bouloguc. _.._._â€"â€"â€"+â€"__ The Loreley. than one. Behavior is a mirror in which every one supper, and at aquartertoeleven he ordered a favour to bag of you with regard to the man was so astounded that he could not ' that subject. was wrecks, and Voyages, and mm lumscu’ Speaking Jus‘ as though he was old time trading. and ships cast away in desolate seas, steamers we both had known, their merits, and their demerits, ladmg, . ’ f l l ~ls .” hlkmg 0 some ’0‘ y L 0 displays his imageâ€"{Goethe What a man cannot believe can never at bottom be of true intcrestto him.â€"â€"[Car- (From the German of llcinc.) I know not whntit meanelh That I so sad should lie. “Where did you meet him?” Iasked. “In Portsmouth harbor, a~cleaning the Lloyd's, and, above all, Lights, The talk brasses of a Rydc boat, but I‘d known hiiul always came back to Lights: Lights of thel off and on through following the sea for Channel ; Lights on forgotten islands, and i many years. \'es.hespokcabout liimsclfvcry nicn forgotten on them: Light-shipsâ€"two, curious, and all as if he was in the next montlis'duty and one month's leaveâ€"tossing ; room laying there dead. Those streaks, they on kiiiked cables in ever-troubled tidcwnys; ! prcyed upon his intellecks, he said; and he and Lights that men had seen where never? madcap his mind, ever time that the lighthouse was marked on the charts. Dutch gunboat that atteiii s to the Lights Ouiitting all those stories and omit~ in those pirts come along, that he’d ask to ling also the wonderful ways by which he he took off. But as soon as she did come arrived at them, ltell here, from Fenwick’s ‘ something went click in his throat, and he month, one that was not the least amazing. Wis so took up with watching her masts, It was delivered in pieces between the roller l because they ran longways, in the contrary skate rattle cf tliercvolving lenses, the bell- direction to his streak s. that he could never owing of the fog-horn below, the answering ‘ say a word until she was gene away and her calls from the sea, and the sharp tsp of " masts was undersea again. Then, he mid, reckless nightliirds that flung themselves at he’d cry by the hour: and Challong swum the glasses. It. concerned a man called i round and round the Light, laughin’ at him Dense, once an intimate friend of Fenwick, i and splashiu' water with his \vebby-foot now a \vaicrman at Portsmouth, helicviug’ hands. At last he took it into his pore sick that the guilt. of blood is on his head, and‘ head that the ships, and particularl." the 'l‘hut like as one ilint dreamcth, This tale comes back to me. 1y 10- The air is cool and dark’ing. And silenttlows the lthinc. The mountain top is sparkling, “’hcre evening gloricsszhinc. There sitsa maiden, seeming Of beaut wondrous fair, \Vi'th go den jaw ‘18 gleaming; She combs her golden hair. Hercomb llkewi=e is golden ; A song meanwhile sings she.- A stirring song and olden, or touching melody. , ,7, . . ‘. -.--¢.,.. ~’;. '5‘ Elf barque the ski or guidln ls touched wlth wildest woe; g. “is gaze on high abiding Secs not the ice! below. And so the wavelets swallow Both boat and man ere long: _ How strange that this should {01.0w A beautqu iiiaiden'ssong. .. ‘L 3 . â€"";-<771.~::,â€",;g,.; V. I, ._ .-, THIRTY YEARS. Johnston, N. B., March 11, 1889. A “ I was troubled for thirty years with pains in my side, which increased and ' became very bad. I used . JACOBS OIL and it completely cured. I give it all praise.” r/ ‘r. .1403 11.01 T." 4 2 .« '7's ~vo.~,. m; . .. . -Makes the? Weak Strong The marked benefit which people in run down or weakened stale of health derive from Hood's Sarsaparlna, proves the claim that this medicine “ makes the weak strong." It does not act like a stimulant, imparting fictitious strength from which there must follow a inaction of greater weakness than before, but in the most natural way Hood‘s Sarsaparllla overcomes That Tired Feeling creates an appetite, purifies the'blood, and, in short, gives great bodily. nerve, mental and dlgcstlvc strength. “I derived very much benefit from Hood's Sarsaparilla, which I took for general dcblllty. It built his right up. and gave me an exch- leut appetite." ED. J amass. Mt. Savage, Md. ragged Out “Last spring I was completely tagged out. My strength left me and I felt sick and miss erable all the time, so that I could hardly attend to my business. I took one bottle of Hood‘s Sarsapurilla, and it cured me. There is nothing like it." B. C. Become, Editor Euterprlse, Bellevillc, Mich. Worn Out “Hood’s Sarsaparllla restored me to good health. Indeed, I might say truthfully it saved my life. To one feeling tired and worn out I would earnestly recommend a trial of Hood’s Sarsaparllla." Mus. l‘nann Mosnim, 90 Brooks Street, East Boston, Mass. N. B. It you decide to take Hood's Bursa- pnrlllzi do not be induced to buy anything else ‘lnstead. Insist upon having : Hood’s , Sarsaparila Sold by all drugglsts. 81; six for 55. Prepared only by C. I. HOOD a 00.,Apotbecarles, Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar 'Bailways in the Holy Land. The Turkish government, having decided on the construction of a railway proceeding from Ismidt or Samson to Bagdud, has in- vited the administration of the Anatolian Railway and Baron Macar, who received the concession for the Samsun-Sivas line, to a. conference in order to consider the best means of attaining its object. The Minister of Public Works has a number of applica- tions for concessions on hand at present. Among them is one from Mchmed Assim Ell'endi, for the building of u. tramway line from Janina to Hanopoulo. This tramway would be worked partly by animal traction and partly by steam. Another project is that of Ibrikdarzade chmil Boy for the con- struction of a tramway at Broussa. . _............._‘ m. r"..- l . How does he feel ?â€"â€"He feels blue, a deep, dark, unfading, dyed- in-the~wool, etemal blue, and he makes everybody feel the same way â€"August Flower the Remedy. How does he teenâ€"He feels a headache, generally dull and con- stant, but sometimes excruciatingâ€" August Flower the Remedy. t °How does he feel?â€"â€"I~Ie feels a violent hiccoughing or jumping of the stomach after a meal, raising bitter-tasting matter or what he has eaten or drunkâ€"August Flower the Remedy. How'does he feel?â€"He feels the gradual decay of vital power; he feels miserable, melancholy, hopeless, and longs for death and peaceâ€"August Flower the Rom- edy. o How does he feel ?â€"-â€"He feels so full after eating a meal that he can hardly walkâ€"August Flower the Remedy. ‘ '9 49 G. G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, Ncmcrsey, U. S. A. Naturally Arous ed Suspicion. “ Brother Means,” said the Rev. Mr. Goodman, entering the counting-room of one of his parishioners, “will you kindly tell me whether or not this 85 bill is u. coun- terfeit ‘3" “ It is perfectly good," said Brother Means, examining it. “ What led you to suspect its genuinencss, may I ask 2" “ It was dropped in the contribution-box , last Sunday.” Smacking H1 Chops. “ I suppose Jimpsom when he struck the free lunch counter fairly smacked his chops ?" “No: the birkeeper came around and smacked them for him." MRS. \VM. RYDER. "3â€"... i-.. ; amt w..- ‘ I'M” .px-“n h.-.~.~10-

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