Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman (1888), 26 Jan 1899, p. 5

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'\3 has the largest stock er brought to Lindsay. rites away down, values rt: av up 33 Dfifferent Bedroom Setts, SC Dmerent Fancy Tables, ‘30 Dxffercn: Lounges. u {re NDERTAKING in all its 30081 Setts from $20 to $35 Cboards $5 to $30 ““113 $4.30 to $10 Rockers 7 5c to $16 ‘ tufts 25c to $16. all Racks 84 to )6 :10: Setts $2 3 to $60 $18 4_5c to $2 ERSON, NUGENT Latin: line of Nickle-Plated Stove Furniture at a Low Pnce. '-D.W00|JS nice of M18 THE TIME are things of beauty and 31,35 or scxence and heatin 3011.91“ in 21 Puma: 05 ml! be glad to 0W .. . b e you b and advxcc. MBING and TINSMITH ING of all kinds 3. Specialty. ME 1V 7 KENT STREET. méture! h your housf: than in, your IfsQit is tune for you to WW sTOVE. \Vhen you 5Aps THEA- .COAL RANGES, _WOOD RANGES, COAL STOVES, WOOD STOVES, COAL OIL STOVES, GAS STOVES. 'ablcs'65c to $8 Lumber, Lath, . .' ingles, Cement, Plaster Paris, Salt, Charcoal, Hard, Soft Scotch andfiEnglish Tweed. Overcoatings, Tronâ€"3 serings, Etc, and Blacksmith Coal Cordwood and Millwood. We make a specialty of pleasing Vour country trade 1:: all the above lines. I‘fiO'Rsz-ln the ten of the Muleton Cambridge '.. ”vacate htthews‘ packing hem. Town 0311!; 5 prepared to furnish the people of Lind 4w and surrounding countrv wm. MONUMENTS and HEADSTONES. both :ble Table Tops. th Tops, Hunts} Pieces. ow app-duty. Being a pmflmd workman, all should see ma d signs and compare prices hetero purchasing all. NEW FALL TWEEDS GHRMPION K CO Fit an Finish GuaranteedfiPrices - - Right â€" - Rathbufl 2C0; The Leading Merchant Tailors A. CLARKE SONS, RBBERT CHAMBERS A beautiful Tailored Overcoat at $10.00, $12.00, $1500, $20 00 and 23.00 a Call and examine ........ them . . . . . . . LINDSAY MARBLE WORKS Made from the best FRIEZES, MELTONS and BEAVERS. Days are near at hand. Get in a stock of Comfortable Clothes. We make a specialty of Fine Tail- oring. Ou; SERGES, TWEEDS and W ORSTEDS are choice, and with our \Vorkmanship and Trim- mings make Snusn, DURABLE SUITS at moderate prices. £2:th promptly given on All kinds of cemetery CHAMPION CO.’S Cull and examine 09:! g' OVERGDATS FENELON FALLS. TBLEPHON B S 3 ROBT CHAMBERS Smyth’a Biook, Lindsay. ...The... M. Na, 77: Agents Omce, No 778; Mill Ofioe. No. 78. ?‘CST ARRIVED ATâ€" Marble and Granite. FL’LL LINES OFâ€" ; M. BAKER. Anna. 01 w "rice! on -â€"Locked in a. monstrous~ ice tine. the Canadian fem” Niagara, with nineteen persons on board, was swept helplessly down the Niagara river Saturday mum and wrecked on the International bridg -. The boat which piays between Bufl‘alo and Fort lirie, left her dock at the foot, of ,Ferry-a: in the early evening on her last trip of the day. having on board fifteen passengers six of whom were Women and 7 0 children. Her crew consisted of four men. The river W219 full or floating ice that drifted in from the lake, but» the boat headed diagonally against the current and made her way to the centre‘of‘ the stream WUVI Iâ€"v- ' on life preservere. and stood with blanch- ed (accs while ahe_swept on withthe current. River newgation being: closed the drawers of the International bridge are inoperative and the swinging engines dead. It we“ obvious that the upper- worka of the boat could not clear the 3mm, bur. the great mmmce was the Dieru of solid masonry. The current favored the boat, and swept her between the span a‘.littlc to the east of the centre of the river. The iron girders of the bridge rak- ed the boar tic-m to her svcond de2k, carrying awn? smokestack. pilot-home. hurricane deck and lil‘ehoats. withOut perceptibly impeding her progress. The pmsengers and crew were below deck. and escaped injury from the wreckage. Swinging clear of the bridge the Niagara broke from the doc and drifted into a patch ot'clear water. A handgear was attached to the rudder, the engines which proved to be uninjured. resumed their functions, and the dis- membered craft was slowly worked to a dock on the American shores. ‘ â€"The situation in Dawson City is gioomy. The number of sick is increasing and the six hospitals are full. The mounted police have donated for the help of the poor some 330,000 in cash from their treasury. This leaves them with but $4.000 cash on hand. Commisfioner ()zilvie called a meet imz to decide on ways and means for r- lieving the situation and ’a memorial asking for aid will be sent. to Washington. in m esti- mated that $9000 a month will be required to pay for me chatmcuc of indigent, pati- ents. The death mte this winter has been almost as great as in the summer. Several stampedes to new fields have re- ocniiy occurred, but in each case the gold hunters were disappointed. gun-let of the International bridge. The calls of the ferry whistle attracted attent- ion from shore, and fire tugs were started from the harbor, a rude above. to en- deavor to rescue the helpless graft. The pmeuzers and crew of the Niagara. put 4---... -“J “bani! ndbk kin-.nk â€"’I‘he last, will and test. men: of the late Father Chmiquy hm been iyfllcd. The will. which :5 :1. bulk}~ documcntwwas drawn up in notarial form on the ML!) of January. Father Clnniquy, in his East testament, rmtemses hin disbelieves in the doctrines of the Roman Catholic church, and his) adherence to Prong-stan- Lism. The} bulk of his estueis left, to Mrs. Chiniquy. Here she became embedded in a great, ficid of ice, and he: engines were power. less to propel her. The cuncnt ablhis point, is exceedingly swift], and the. momentum of the ice field carried the ,ferry along, in spitte of the f urious wm-k- ir. " of engims to coma-ml against ir. The p 55812118?" realizinz the'r simanio", were horror-stricken with the fear of being carried over the falls and the more imminent danger of being: d‘aaghqq agfliz‘gsg â€".\Ir. J. Larkin (Tank. Iof the firm of Cook Bros., Lumbex merchants ot’l‘oron- no died on Saturday in his 73rd yearns the result. or a complicated inn-:55 of wax duration. He was a. p eminent, member ofaU. E 1. oyalisn fumiiy. hrotbvr of H. H. Cook ex M. P. for North Simcoe, and Gen. Cont: formerly of this town, and “us well-known here. â€"-The shop is doing a good tmde. For the first sh~ mouths of the current fiscal year the imports to Qumdn. have. increaucd bv 51;! 500,000 over those of the previous year. Exports have fallen oil‘, but are picking up again The duty 0011601430 exceedvd that for the si‘. months of 15:97 by $2,374,110. -The complete xeturm of the prohibi- tion vote. shown 271.3487 f-wx‘ Hr! 264.571 against, giving»: majorit"of l3,“l(i The total vote poded was "42,5055, and me number on the lists was 1,2333%. â€"â€"Thc post oflice department has issued a. circular giving notice that, lhxee cent stamps will be exchanged at; DOSE ofiices for stamps of any O'Der denomination. ~Uah..w.» mtepncra hu'e \‘0'cd w favor ota. by-hsw to rain: $110400 fur waterworks and seWz-mge by the Lane 0: debentures. This Company has $100,000 of Trust: Money to LUAN on prune Farm Prop- erty in the muthem porinn of thr County of chtoria. at FIVE PER CENT. Make application now. as it- :5 r’esimble to make inspection before “w ground is covered with snow. N Imerest will be charged an :1 money advanced. â€"Bowmanville's charitable . citizens have opened a home for the men, THEWGTQRIA LEW: HEAB BFFIGE Next Door to Gough’s. Lindsay -â€"ASK FOR-â€" Perrin’s Pine Tar COrdial THE WATCHMW AND VICTORIA WARDER,‘ Liz’wSAYJhURSDAY. JANUARY 26TH. 1899 Authorized Capital. $300000 Paid up Take no other. There' 1% none just as good. Manufactured only by lie Greatest Rem- edy on Earth ANBISAVINGS COMPANY- BOUGHS "0 GOLBS S. PERRIN; Bragg-1'51: NEWS OF THE WEEK m. MAGWOOE}, l‘ LINDSAY: ONT $Ioo.ooo MANAGER Aggravated. Ho get: violent. sometimes on very uhort provocation. and when he.s)nmmed the book down on the floor. his wife know that it wasn’t anything very ser- Jous. But; for the sake of seeming inter- ested. she inquired:â€" “What is the matter. Horatio?" “I wish,” he cxcluimt‘d, angrily, “that this author would quit; calling me ‘gon- tic reader.’ " "It doesn‘t make any difference, does "Are ypu a mowgll," l persisted. "and can you talk to all those beasts in their own tongue-f” but he only smiled in m ply- “Yes, it does mnkn a. difference. It's In: untamthful assumption. I don’t like thn way he writes, and I ain’t gent-lo when l rvnd hi1: hmfl-m. If I didn't. get stnrtod in boron- I. knew it, so that I “ant to see 3m“ his miserable story m-nms out,1wouldnt, tolerate his bad grmnnmr and Wome- senso for a minute. A nd when I’m doing my best to be pu- ticnt. and bear with him, to have him come along and put. me on the back and call me ‘gentle reader’ gm mflled, "and I can t' help showing m”-â€"Wé.sh1ng't6n " unsung? What do you mean fr“ he answered with laugh. - "Doesn’t that beat enythinr you ever saw?" ejaculated a compatriot of mine, as the elephant trumpeted a loud and cheer- ful goodby to the back of his vanishing visitor, end I agreed with him that it. did “What langfiage were you talking to that. elephant?" I asked when I. overtook my (fiend. Mr. Kipling hurried away from me in the direction of the lament. which was growing louder and more painful. I fol. lowed and saw him go up close to the cage, where stood an elephant with sadly drooped ears and trunk, He was varying actual tears at the some time that he mourned his lot mostaudibly. In another moment Mr. Kipling was right up to the bars, and I heard him upeak to the sick beast in a language that may have been elephantese, but certainly was not Eng- lish. Instantly the whining stopped, the ears were lifted. the monster turned his sleepy little sufl'm-ing eyes upon his visitor and put out his trunk. Mr. Kip- ling began to caress it. still speaking in the some soothing tone and in words un- intelligible to me at least. After afew minutes the beast began to answer in a much lowered tone of voice and evidently recounted his woes. Possibly elephants. when “enjoying poor health, ” like to con- fide their symptoms to sympathizing lis- teners as much as do some human invalids. Certain it was that Mr. Kipling and that elephant carried on a conversation. with the result that the elephant found his spirits much cheered and improved. The whine went out of his race. he forgot that he was much to be pitied. he began to exchange experiences with his friend. and he was quite unconscious, as was Mr Kipling, of the amused and interested crowd collecting about the cage At last. with a start, Mr. Kipling found himself and his elephant the observed of all ob- server- m‘rl boat a hasty retreat. leaving behind him a very difi'erent creature from the one he had found. â€"â€"At the approaching session 0f the Ontario legislature applimtion will be made for an act. to encorporate the North merk Runny 00., with power to build a. line from the Kingston . Pembroke liwlway, Near Mile Latin». in Kenn-cw u-ounty, to C. P. R. «‘r C). A. SLP. S. Railway at, Amprior. The road is intentl- ed chiefly to (carry iron ore and oxha-r minerals, and it‘d m‘npns‘gd rm rrnnuwvt. this ore to Amprior, where it will be smelted. â€"-The search for Andree still goes on. The expennio” being organized by Capt. Mamie: firunn J I umm‘ 1' WM aha-rt m-m Copenhagen and go to Jan-May, a. small volcanic island 300 miles east: ofGreenland, where a depot. was 19ft by the Austrians. This will be searched. Thence the expe- dition mu proceed to Cape Bismarck and Cape Barclay to the east, coast of Greenland One afternoon we wont together to the zoo, and while strolling about our oars were assailed by the most melancholy sound I have ever heard, a complaining. {rotting lamenting sound proceeding from the elephant house "A Cairo despatch announces th at a decree 1m» byen signed aupoiuting Gen. Lord Kimh: w-r Governorâ€"General of the Solldau umlv, Lh- \ug g-Egyprian con. x'eution rat-9 ' \ ~ gnu-S )‘Iyslow Maps, 20:18 .qu Lu area 0. n.9, vio‘eut. antagonism of {he pmvem. hr in pnrsnunw Ufa del’iwite pun. Urmu, Britain is LiuhIeninsz her grip on North Africa. The Ezrypcinu muwmion. so far as Lhc Saudan in con- corned. accomnlishes all than L‘no-e who proddad thze Marquis of Salisburymde- Marv a protectorate omr it, have desired Grew» [ix-main no longer governs through the thdi‘rc. She becomes a co-c-qual ruler, and ignores the mixed nrihuunle. Thiq means that the Governorflenuml is v-eaponsibie only to Downing street and Parlimucut. How He Cheer-ed the Spirit. of £3163 Elephant. A writer in the San Francisco Argonaut talk; the following anecdote as coming from the lips of an American traveler who spans some time in the company of Bud- yard Kipling in London: “A sick elephant. sir, Ho cries all the time. We don’t know what to do with him." was the answer. -â€"The Hudson Bay Company’s packet leaves Edmonpon for the Mackenzie River country mix in February, and the company has nmue entanglements to carry free of cbav'sre, iet hers m: miners and prospectors there. â€"-The recent experiments and inventions by France in submarine wur craft are cauxing much comment in London. The Globe warns France than these inventions, designed to destroy the Emzlifih navy, may mov» as disastrous to the French as the famous mitrailleuse, which it was thought would d'esbroy the Prussians in 1970. “What’s the matter in there?" asked Mr. Kipling o! the keeper. . @020 O_u4Im Mafifiwhmlv mAOxmzu’. Each moment passed may ho our last. For the crashing bombahells fly. And fires of fat-o raver-harms In the wide‘ smoke laden sky. In lurid night we feed the fight. AH the belching cannon roar. Bean: on the com to win the goal 01' our country ‘3 ocean wax-l Over the sea om- battery Will lay waste the upper world. And fm‘ from fame we feed the flame As the bursting bombs are hurled. We cannot know the ebb and flow 01 the bnttle‘s rushing tide. But hear the boom of unknown doom Where the thundering warshipe ride. Hem‘e on the cual to win the goal Of a blusting ocean war! By pits of 1101] 3mm] sentinel As t}: 0 dead Xy cannon roar. Thc o: mints heat in blanching hell Our battleship plows her course. Up there they fight in cool daylight, While we feed the monster-'9 force. SYM PATH ETIC 'KIPLING. -â€"-Harper’s Woehly. A reformed plan of the calendar. with tables for the movable toasts. eto., occu- pies many pages. (See act Geo. 11., cap 23.) Blots were caused by Shin in some places, the ignorant people calling out. “Who etole the 11 days?” Jan. 16.â€"0n sbie day died Edward Gibbon, the historian, in 1794, author of “The Decline and Fall of th Roman Empire." Ho becamesofat at when an Lauuanno, a few years before hie death, he proposed marriage to a lovely girl, going down on his knees to her, he was unable to get, up again, and Wm in now distress till the laughing pix-l lo ‘whom he wee paying court took pit-y on him and helped him to his feet. Jan. teeâ€"Feast of the conversion of St. Poul. It has been an article or constant belief in western Europe .during the middle ages and down to our own time that the whole character of the coming year is‘prognoetieated by the condition of the weather on this day. Fair weather on.St. Paul'e day bender! a prmporons your, snow or rain a dear year and an untruiti'nl one; clouds. a great. mortality Among cattle. and w finds. the forerunner of war. V! St, l’uui'x omy iu' mm: and More. It, dual humid:- :x Jammy gnu-w; Jim yi‘ it «bruise-v w S‘IMW m‘ min» 'mmn “mm in.- (‘I‘ili'i‘ u'lii- k'yaulp ui‘ prune; Y! clouds. or mist, dun oin'rko yo «Rye Gmeit stow-o- of blrdee amt bumps 5mm)» me; Andy! ye winds (1m.- fiie mun 'l'luem war-re smut!!! vex we country one. ' Jamâ€"'Bl-dDeatlof-Prinee Charles Edâ€" wd‘fituirt, the Younc‘PreteIder. . Jan. 7â€"8:. Distafi's day, or the, mor- row after Twelfth day, was a notable one among our ancestors Herrick says: I'm-Hy Work mm! partly play You 1mm: on St. I!!sfi;:fi"s any; Frmm rho [Jinnah s-mn frm- your 10:11]; Then m‘mxv- hum» and (min-r mom. It 11hr.- mm‘ds :1 spi‘mnmg: gm, Burn the flux and fir- m.- :mx‘. Brim: in nails 0-! wmh-r tan-n. LP! the maids bt-wnsil tho mo-n; ““0 St. Dim-.10“ all 15:» rigm; 'l‘hn-u gim- (‘hlshnzxs spurt. gov-d night. Ami next marrow awry one To his own “nation. Jan. llâ€"l’low day, so called because sprlng plowing in Europe begins usually on this duy. Jan. 21â€"88. Agnos‘ day. She waaa young Roman girl who suflered savage martyrdom under Dioolosian AJ). 304 b. The A05 for the change of style pro- vided that tho legal year in England. 1752-. should commence, not on the Shah of March. but; on the m of January, and that ufner the 3rd of September in that. year sho next ensuing day should be the 14th. mhua dropping out 11 days. Jan. 18â€"-.Annunl festival of St. Patel-’5 chair in Home. The celebration is one of the very few calobrased in St. Peter's Cathedral. Jan. fiâ€"Tho Ephiphany. Twelfth day. Benjamin Franklin born at Boston 1706. This day was cane-I Twelfth day as being that. number after Christmas, and Epiphany from the Greek verb signifying appearance. It is a festival of the church. In commemoration of the manifestation of Christ to the Gentiles; more expressly to the Magi: (Matt ii. 1-12.) It war. first observed AJ). 873. Twelfth day. once so univvrsally celebrated by the early Chris- tians, and for many centuries afterward, passes now almost unnoticed. Jan. Iiiâ€"Now Year‘s day. oid style. In the Church of England is is St. Hilary’s day. Law terms becin and the Hilary term at Oxford. Jan. 6â€"Twelftb day eve. I‘Lbieis rustic festival; the pumose originally was to secure a blessing on the fruits o! “no earth. Fields of growing wheat. were surrounded by bonfires. a circle was formed by joining hands, and a general about wae made, which was answered for miles. the shout being taken up from a given starting poine. The ceremony was followed by supper and a dance. Jan. 3â€"Acoording to the old astrono- mere 1. one of the six days of the. year perilous to life, she others being July 1, Oct. 2, April 30, Aug. I and Dec. 31. Those who may be inclined to pursue the subject more tally will find interesting matter in “Day anlity” in Aubrey‘s Hiscellanies. Cicero was born on this day in EC. 107 and Douglas Jen-old in 1808. Jan. I in the Roman and Anglican churches is observed as a feast. as the festival of the circumcision of our Lord. 0:: this day in the year 1801 Ireland passed into an incorporated union with Great Britain. 011 this day and year M. Piazzi discovered the plunetoid Ceres, the first or the group between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. On this day Was seen in Ireland, in the year 1758. aremarkable example of the aurora borealie at mid- day. above; ' Tlhcy kneolod dhm‘n, mud dyd Mun homage with love To God. “hm-rc- Lemar, that is mum’s owu bu'uddere, The above quotation is from “The Sheapheards Kalundar,” translated from the French and primed by Richard Pyn- son in 1497. The first almanac printed in Europe was “The Kalendarlum Novum,” by Regio Montanus, calculated for the years 1485, 1494 and 1513. A most beautiful calendar is in the library of the University of Cambridge. England, with the date 1482. But the Sheaphcards Kal- endar was the first one printed in Eng- land. In England in was not till 17:32 that the 1st of January became the ini- tial day of the legal as it had long teen 0! the poplar year. Before that time it was customary to set down dates between Jan. 1 and March 24 inclusive thus: Jan. 30, 1648-9,‘ meaning that popularly the date was 1649, but legally 1648. Jan. 1 was recognized by France in 1564, H01- land, Protestant Germany and Russia in 1700 and Sweden in 1753. Days During the Month Celebratod for Various Reasons in All Time: and in All Landsâ€"Tho Change of Stylo and What It Meansâ€"Some Notable Hap- pening: In January. Called am I, January ye coldc, In (Hummus season, good tyre I love. Yonge Jean, mm smm-tt'ime Judas some, In me was ciu'mmm-Jsml torr man's behave. TlhT(K‘ Kymgs songhz ye Some 0: God Our Saxon ancestors called his month “Wolf-monan”-â€"that is. wolf month, because wolves were more than ordinarily ravenous at this pericd. Subsequently she mgguh was mullet} “Afgqr Yule.” "F W“: 7 Numa P_Ompilis, whose reign tax-min- and 670 B. C, decreed that the year should begin now, and added two new months to the ten into which the year had been previously divided, gaming the first Januarins, in honor of Janus, the deity supposed so preside over doors. .mszk “.0 20535 25. 02.25.0200 82...: msom The ancient Jewish year, which opened with the 25th of Much. continued long to have a legal position in Chrisnian countries. THE MONTH-JANUARY FRAMES . . SASE . . . .. DOORS , . . Vi'CT’fffi'fi PLAN CALL AND INSPECT WORK AND GET PRICES. WE ARE NOT THROWINB DIRT There are 1~mp‘.e who incline to the opinion that. Gaunt-J Jun Wheeler can be constitutional and r. soldier at. the same time.-â€"\\‘ashingmu lust. ‘ General .Inv \‘(hchz-r shows sense again in advising the t-ruuiun m‘ a Gatling gun corps as a 1wrmum-ur feature of our army” Better late than harmâ€"Hartford Cour» nut. Spain might be happy with her $20,000.- 000 if she did not- hm‘e so many statesmen who know how to play the cash n-gister. â€"Den"er Republican. Old Joe Wheeler's taste for fighting around Santiago has led him to retire from congress in order to remain in the army. The grizzled Alabamian is a spare man, but. he seems to have an unlimited ptommh for wanâ€"Sb. Louis Republic. There is some cnmplainn against makâ€" ing Spain submit by brute force. What game was Spain playingâ€"penuchleFâ€"St. Paul Dispatch. It. is reported that the Carlist-s have all set. their alarm docks for an early rising in Spainâ€"Detroit Free Press. Spain has 21 admirnls and plenty of water. All its navy needs now is a. few Mataâ€"San Francisco Chronicle. That $20,000,000 may make Don Carlos more eager than evenâ€"Washington Star. The c " ' ’ ’ .Y' Errand p1 his new undersnirt and replied in the soft tones that soothe the ruflied soul: Oakwood's Stove and Tin Shep. “ Why didn’t you tell me that wasn’t the Wabash? I wanted the \Vabaah; that’s what I wanted. ” ”I believe you forgot; to ask me. Kaneas City Times. It was pa. He approached a depot official and mid: Half an hour later a very angry man came prauumg uuwn the dew; piauuzm. He was holding a small boy by one hand, and me euus or an ax naudxe and scythe snath protruded from under his “Hay, stop ’er, stop ’er!" cried Fred- die’s pa. “Put on that 31' Wind brake, mister! Pull that at rope up over your head and make ’er stop!” But the man only reached down and caught Freddie, who was leaping and swinging and dragging by turns in his vain efi'orts to make his short legs stretch far enough to get his feet on the lower step. Pa held on to him with one hand and the man on the platform finally succeeded in drawing him up. Pa slung the banana bag after him. It slid on across the platform and went overboard on the other side. Pa made a leap for the steps, dropped a bundle and stooped to pick it up. The recovery of the bundle took buta second, but the train was getting well under way and was a tail’s length ahead when he be- gan the chase again. One wild spurt, with his r'o"ft"ils= “tending out “chi?" him, a reckless leap, and pa, too, was aboard, but a bundle containing an min dershirt had been lost in the tussle. Ara Exciting Time For “’hich There TV” Really No Occasion. As a passenger train on the Hannibal was puling out a. tall countryman. in- cumbered with four bundles, a scythe anath, an ax handle, a bag of bananas and a small boy, came out; of the depot and began to take his bearings. Up and down the tracks his gaze wandered, up and down the long lines of coaches drawn up under the sheds. and at last, as the rear coach was passing him, he caught sight of the moving train. ”Come on, Freddie! Thar she goes 3" he yelled and began to transfer some of his belongings from his right hand to his left as he ran. Freddie made an amazing record for one whose legs were so short, and they were soon beside the steps on the rear end of the last coach. There was a. man standing on the platâ€" form. An employee of the depot picked the bumflo up, and a section man who hap- pened by appmpriated the bananas to his own rofr: 'shnr'nf The crowd that had breathlessly awaited the result of tho race mound away, and the depot at~ tendants, who had been preparing to pick pa up with shovels, went about their duties. last line of Ranges, Cook Stoves and Heatggs PA AND FREDDIE ABOARD. SPANISH FLOUNCES. FlGHTING JOE. f Into anybody’s eyes when we brag up our stock of $9355 (vet. We are sincere in saying and believing that we have u. if) the market. “We guarantee them to be the best. FL ? hne 01"le and GRANITEVVARE. Eavetroughing is? Galvanized Iron Work to order. Repairs on short 17:21 GEO. MASON. Babb! Gustav Gottheil is on 5" Greek scholars in New Yor 60! the Richard Crok'er; at. 59 ‘ 9 ”56% physical strength of a. trained mum‘s Joseph H. Choate took pm in 24 a. % debates while at Harvard and ”1.93:: n." Ali Ferrough Bay. the n minister to Washington, is 4( rich, a wit and speaks flue: £03808- If there are any late hatched (-hiclnuzt. see that they are given Warm quantum. Pea {owls are much smaller birds 33:31! they appear. It: does not, pay {4;- run them for their flesh. so than the aggregate of his hem-{acacia is more than $600,000. Henry Havemeyer the sugar Is a man of regular hours He morning at? :30 and gm.> to 1* every night. Albert Williams of ( harlestowr: w ’ Va, says he was the volomd child "Lou; John Brown kissed as he was m; ng (M. on; to his execution. Ex-Governor Sprague of mm: when recent-1y in Washingqu two daughters for the first 1i: years, during which time tiny 2-. abroad and in the west. There is no breed that lays eggs «.9 mm- fom color. The ducks and geese should have 3 «my of straw scattered (war the floor. .nmn which :hey can most- during: the wins”. MOULDINGS TURN INGS ETC, ETC. Isaac Wyman of Salem. Mass“ (‘w ' s a note for $40,000 to whivh the mum (1 George Washington is mun-120d. TL. fine was given Wyman’s grat-grandfzmwy for money adx’anood to supply the pnwmg needs of the Revolutionary army. Clean out the quarters often and wine- wash the walls. Watch for the first- appearance of adds among your flock. Attend to it pump:- ly, and you will not be troubled with way. Eggs for hatching should be key: as near 40 degrees as possible. As high a. a: degrees will not. spoil them. but ”my should noz be allowed to get. chilledâ€"bx- change. “my. By the death of his father (Toni Disraeli inherits .a men. urial ring: Ralph Disraeli bought with £2: ) es.“ devised to him (or that Innâ€"1.0% Senator Fairbanks of Indiana is and {a be one of the gunmen readers in the senate. All new books, especially history and ficâ€" tion, are at once purchasul by him. Senor Don Rafael Iglcsias. puma” 2, (1 Costa Rica, who is now visitingtém u .13. try to benefit his health and m st-tyiy we- dentally the instizutions c! the I" ,2“; States, comes of an ancient- and «Lu-gn- guished Costa Rican family. He irony a years of age. Twoâ€"Bcots-Stanéing-Togetbvr has mm deposed as chief of the Tuscarora. hula.“ in northern Vow erlr hem-m;- fv- 1:... ae- elated himself in favor of \Tuman't highs. L’tevious to $1116 declamtion he ban in.» rcspvcwd and looked up to by t-hb i'rw-z rs of his tribe. ' If eggs are desired for batchinp. an. 2-year-old hens. Profesaor C. E. Lindeman. afar v1.- m7 the great Alaskan lake was numui tags that while in that region. he wore a1- (ml-wearer mo 2:7 =5"- .; .r 1'! 1.: « 1 and outside of his woofé‘h 1.0mm; - ~11- alls oi corduroy. ‘I:. that drssc" he adds, “I never inflated from the (‘01:, " from the 13.93 3 min. net and was only 289*01'25, afi‘te‘: T":‘("' pin-9'32?" by a joint resolution of congress which exam-ted h‘m {orator VFW" “hydra! nxamina'mu an to disability. Be is the only oxfioer in ti. service who has been so honored. of Coal tar placed it: the drinking war; is one of the best remedies for running na- trils. Avoiding the drafts will prevent it. The (owls should be fed as early and as lute as possible. giving the heaviefi. and best- meal just, before they go on the «(4:15. Owing to the wound he received at; 11.x: Fisher Captain Bob Evans. was mm“? of his small feet. JING MILL Even in cold weather good ventilation is Money talks. bm Only the man with a. little head Em POINTED FARAGRAPHS. POULTRY FOINTERE. THE LISTENER my. the flaw Turkish: inguon, is 40, handsome,- speaks fluently six Ian-f it- never gives ital! the sugar magmas-g”. HITS. He rises every oningsby 3m: VJ 19b h“ 5-1 31

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