{ title: 'The Lansingburgh courier. (Lansingburgh [i.e. Troy], N.Y.) 1875-1909, August 24, 1893, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031843/1893-08-24/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031843/1893-08-24/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031843/1893-08-24/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031843/1893-08-24/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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iThe Question 1 ^ is a simple o n e ^ a s ily | M decided by reason and j S common sense. j eonOLENE —the new scientifically W prepared shortening — is made from pure beef suet, and highly refined vegeta ble oil. Lard is made, in old, from the pure leaf of the hog. Which is likely to be the most healthful ? Decide for yourself. It must be eOTTOLENE Cottolene is sold by all groccrsi jjjlk Kefuse all substitutes. Plade only by # N . K. FAIRBANK & CO./ ? CHICAGO and ^P roduce Exchange, New V o r k ^ ^World’s Fair EXCURSION TICKETS A R E O N S A L E T i c k e t O ffices, TO CHICAGO AND RETDRN, AT LOW E ST CUOREOT FARES. Choice of a Variety of Routes. For detailed information apply to D. & H. Ticket Agents, or write to J . W . B U R D IC K , General Passenger Agent. AI.BANY, N. Y. 11.360 BOTTLES FORESTINE (KIDNEY AND MALARIA CUREI ■\-“-9 sold in 12' Counties of New^ k State (including this county)\ •during April, 1893. CHAS. JACOBS’ FAOTORT. S JACOBS. Calaria Cure acts v • A. 6LOOMINGDALE, Prop., Rloversville, N. Y.^ MSIO AB^ A MEMM ITS POWER EFFECTUAL IN REMEDY ING NERVOUS DISORDERS. I’atient. at Bandaira Island, Under the iiiilaonce of OIuslc, Show Various Changes of Medical Condition—tCbe niedloal Musical SocleSr Interested. ■Several New York medical men InvesUgating music as an au.xiliary the treatment and management of cer tain nervous complaints, and one of them, Sebastian J. Wimmer, President of the Medical Musical Society, has gone so far as to isuggest a place for “the soothing language\ In the materia medica because, he says, it is a r for such complaints as neurasl Insomnia and nervoiis prostration. Dr. Wimmer can explain the action of music on the human body scientifically, and he'Is able to demonstrate its pow- e | on the development andi fv 'ional ’ facMtif Sis conclusions are as follo' lat there Is a music whlGh has 1 the Intelllgeni funct intellectual ■cial action on the intelligence the motor nerves. (2) That there rnusle which Influences particularly the nerves of sensibility and the senti ments. (3) That there is a music which acts all at once on the motor nerves and on the sensitive nerves, on the intelligence and on the sentiments, fie further believes that between the effects of music and those of the ail ments which modify the nervous sys tem there are such analogies that the laws whldx regulate the one and the other may be arranged In the same terms. Slow, monotonous music, explains Dr. Wimmer, provided it is not too sluggish, has a calming influence over the Individual, because it is then in harmony with the nerve habit of the person who listens. It is essential to the ultimate success of any endeavor to bring the brain under control that the music should first arrest the atten tion either by Its power or sweetness, ind then gradually conduct the organ- into harmony with itself. Unless leasured cadence begins with a powerful appeal to the brain in a key which accords with that in which the cerebrum is at the moment itself work ing a negative result will ensue, ami instead of allaying irritation the irri tation is more likely to be augmented. To arouse the spirits by music plain tive sound is roqTiired, and this must oe in the key of melancholy which blends in harmony with tlio brain state of the patient. Some curious experiments were made Among the insane patients at Ran- lall’s Island the other day. Four liun- flrod women were congregated in the entertainment hall of the institution and subjected to a strain of piano music for half an hour'. The general effects were noted as follows: The pulse was raised, the patients became restless and there was a marked de sire to keep time with the music, liivery patient was susceptible to the thjffhm, and its effect was decidedly stimulating. Melody without any very decided or certain tempo was without 6ffeet except in those cases where the force of association was still active. In a case of chronic melancholia the playing of ‘‘Home, Sweet Home,” in variably brought the patient to her Knees, where she began to recite the Lord’s Prayer in an apparent ecstasy it devotion. In another case—one of Icute mania—the patient’s pulse was elevated from 78 to 106 beats, the pa tient not showing any other signs of excitation save the involuntary twitch- '.ng of the facial muscles. Cautabilo ■: seemed to have an effect in the ; cases similar to that which it Ises upon certain animals, the person being disposed to lie down and go to sleep under its influence. The results of all these experiments (vei-e markedly beneficial. Many of the patients showed great improve- inent. The effects in almost every in- dance of the pronounced rhythm wore Involuntary, the movements of the .Imbs and facial muscles being attrl- puted to reflex action. Whether or not music deserves to lave an official place in the mateii.a luedica as a medicine, it certainly damps itself upon the sensitive nerve pi'ganism of the individual, refresh and stimulating it, and thus paving way to mollifying the effects of mi complaints. The Anatomy of Hie Oyster. 'A clam is considered as an embl of stupidity and caUousness. But you wUl make a great mistake if you put the oyster in tire same categoiy as when you class a Chinaman and Jhp- th l anese together. The oyster is so strong of muscle, as we all know, th a t no human fingers are able alone to open the doors of his domicile if he chooses to keep them closed; liver and stomach and digestive organs he has, all a s sensitive as ours; respirato.iy or gans as complicated as the human lungs; machinery for obtaining his water .supply ami for preventing an overflow, and wondronsly contrived mechanism for the trapping of his food. Finally, he has a heart whoso pulsations may be seen after his house has been torn from bim. With this very limited understanding of the anat omy of the oyster, it is not diflicult to comprehend how cultivation and caro may not only improve its outward ap pearance and augment its lines of beauty, but how they also cause the quaUty of its moat to surpass tliat of the “natural” or uncultivated oyster, ns much as grain-fed poultiy surpasses the product of the barnyard. When your host places before you oysters that are plump and round and thick S REGULATE THE • STOMACH, LIVE£ AND .BOWELS, • PURIFY Tl^E BLOOD. • A RELIABLE REMEDY FOR • Inai»epMoii,BIUon»n(!ss)HcBa»oIie,Con««\ _ J pMttoa>]>7spQp^8> CliFonlo iilTerTrouMcBy • • BleitncAf, Bad Complexion^ Bysontcryt # 2 OirewBlye Bre4tk> end all dlBordcrs of tho 2 2 Stomaobj lirer and B owo I sa I THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO. • • 10 SPEUOE STKBET, NEW YOKE (3ITY, • a, Breweis of the popular X X o x x x e 3 B r © x iE r o c a L 3 3 1 t t © 3 ; * E R o o r j s . Jjolm Cullen, 3:^50 5th aye., Troy. Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria. distiu’bances, bi 3 of cultivation. The Stone I m p lem e n t £<ecio(t. The period at which the glacial epoch existed in tliis country has long been an interesting problem to scien tists. With few e.xcoptions, geologist.s have united In placing the date withiu comparatively recent times, and evi dences are multiifiying that the great Ice age in North America actually oc curred during the present era o f human life. These evidouees consist in the finding of stpne Implements of the- ancient man in undisturbed glatdal gravels. Among the discoverers, ot these relics is Dr. C. 0. Abbott, a di.s- tinguished archaeologist of I’hikuii'l- ipMa. The specimens were all found by Mm in the Trenton gravels, at , Trenton, at recorded depths and in in. disputably undisturbed glacial deposits. Prof. Putnam also found spoeimens in the same locality, and othei’' scientists have como upon implements of stone in similar deposits in various /parts of the country. The most convincing, however, is a find made some tiino ago by Mr. W. C. Mills, a t Newcoraer.s- town, 0. In a glacial ^ a v e l terrace in th a t town, a t the mouth of Buck- horn Crock, he came upon a stone in.- plement fifteen feet below the surface', and which Is now in the Western Re serve Historical Society of Cleveland. ■The gravel In wliich this relic was found was covered by six inches of sand, several feet of supplemontai’.y gravel and from three to four feet of SRBAfSPEMHEAD GOiOSi: 0 x x £ ^ w ' ^ SAVE THE TAGS. Oi(e Riiiidieil aqd Seveqty-TIiiee TliousiiQil two Honilieil (mil Fifty Dolfaio, $173,250.00 In Valuable Preaents to be Given Away In Return for S P E A E H E A D T A O S . fS a t & s - g S B w ; - \ 23.100 00 CHARM . ............................................. . 00 PICTURES (14 x 2 8 inches)/I IN RDR'VBN Ivertlsing on them ........ . 28j875 00 115,600 DARG® PIGPURHS (14 x 28 I n S e s N RDR CODORSj fbr framing, no advertising o n them ..,. 26l;030 PrIzeSi amounting tbi ........................... . ............ . The above artlolas will be diatrihul c h ^ w S P B ^ H:eAD Plug Tobs SPEtAR HRAD T A & from this OOI ^ as follDwe; To tle^FIVPl'pARTms'se^^^ est number of SPRAR HRAD To the^oi C H A ^ ’ To the ONE HU: next greatest i will give “ “ RN C( Total CAUTION.— after February plainly with 1 m each p this ooan^wewill . .......... . ........................ 1 GOLD WATCH. .....................5 OPRRA GRASSHS. RAD N IPR .;.................90 POCKET KNIVHS. iTlRS sending us the r of SPEAR HRAD TAGS •we will give to each 1 DARGE PICTURE IN E l e v e n c o l o r s .................................................................loo ‘ ' number of Prizes for this county... .,100 TOOTH PICKS. uwii, ...uuuLy, State, and Num jes’ o n packages m ust be prepaid. ) possesses m ore qualities o f ii ~ -— ^— d. It is the S' in flavor from any other plug tobacco. A trial will convince the m o st skep tical of thm fact. It ^'ure largest seller o f any similar shape and style o n, .pulartasf - ' ” ---------- ’ i yon bi ORG COMPANY, M iddl RTOWN, O. A list of the people obtaining these priaes in this ooualy will h * published in this paper immediately after February 1 st, 1894, DON’T SEND ANY TAOS BEFORE JANUARY lit, 1804. matter how sm le quantity. Very sinemcel TH E P. J. SO R Congress Spring, A Saline-Alkaline-Water, CATHARTIC and ALTERATIVE. now (by a most elaborate ro-tubing) restored inee, the great minerfil-water-driuking publ lO past si'ason at Saratoga hurrying to slake thoir thirst HEALTHFUL FOUNTAIN, bec&uae of tho THIS FAMOUS WATER being to .all its former strength and excelle lit Imve been seen tho past si'asoi A uicamne S a ] CONGREBB WATER, i either FOREIGN or DOMEBTIC., hurrying to slake thoi lortioM of its various A gent , stands UNRIVALED by all. HFU L FOUNTAIN, bec&.'uae of th e happy proportions of its v l LTS, its efficacy, purity rmd acknowledged sanitary properties. WATER, as a R em '^ diaz . A gen t , stands UNRIVALED 1; While the water is now as strongfy CATHARTIC as a t an period since its dis- Dvery—over oue hundred yfjars: ago—it still retains the delii always The value of the GON'ARESS SPRING WATER may be expressed in th e fob YLars ago—it still retains th e delicious flavor and smooth cathartic action th'Athas always been characteristic of this famous water. ts pu^rposo is to entirely prevent disease, by oxadiziug tl ’ i.'^u the SALINES lost or eliminated. It assimilates with tho food pleasant, . I t words: Its pi^rposo is to entirely prevent diseas( ■he SA] > a n d is om the packed and Address, is '^jnwfnlly qwart^^ ixadizing the blood and shipped in cases of 4 and 2 dozen pints id .s'nppl;ilying d the all tliG lime sepr^rated from the blood to strengthen the bones of the body. Elegant, to ilbumiuoadsv and is tho medium through which nature holds, in solution lOth a luxury and a necesst isity. COiraRESS SPRING CO., Saratoga Springs, N. Y . N e r v e , Tonic « for $ 2 .5 0 . '' Blood JBuilder MEDWCIKE WILLIAMS' ME CO., ^ Schenectady, N.T. andBrockville.OnL THOMAS WALL, 644: Second Ave., Lansingburglt; Funeral Director and Em- balraer; Personal attention; Store never closed; Telephone. WANTED S0LIG1T0RST% l . uno-wBit nieiiT. “ Pretty, fragrant four-o’olooka,\ Said the rose one day, “ Pity ’tls your bads unfold Into blossoms gay When the west begins to burn With thesunsot light— Sweetness wondrous rare to waste On the drowsy night. “Other blooms have birds to sing. Bees'to hum their praise, B’atterflles to visit them Through the summer days. Bee but seldom hums for you. Bird b u t soidom sings, Butterfly is ne’er your guest, Pretty, fragrant things.” “liovely. graceful, crimson rose ,\ Said the modest flowers, “Though the sun wo scarcely know. Happiness'is ours. Moon we have, and sparkling stars (Each a heavenly gemi), And their light sogentlc ls, tVe can look a t therh. ■ ,JS “And the flashing fire-fl{«s Round us'gleam aad glance, Iiike a countleae^hust of fays I d an airy danee; And the moth-king, velvet-winged, { Dainty kiss bertows. As he whispers, 'Yon are sweet, Sweet as any rose.’ “Grieve no more for us, dear friend; ' Thrice conieht we are, Loved by inoth and fire-fly. Dew-drop, moon and star. And while you o'er garden reign In the bright daylight. We are hailed by ■wand’ring 'winder Flower queens of n ight,\ —Margaret Eytinge. THE OLD YIOLINIST. People may live from childhood to old age in large cities and y e t there will be a great proportion o f their fellow inhabi tants whom they have n o t eve® seen. There are denizens of ever^ orQwi >polis who have never passed ei build. His head,\ which was covered with a soft felt hat, was very massive. His hair waa< white and clean as silk. His linen was snowy, though ragged and decaying like the rest of him. His atures ' jardless. inly moulded and ind'he carried a vio- , As he passed between his fellow e JoUrners a t Mrs. Shrimp’s the old liii bowed and thenI loweredhis habitual movennent. bootbl)aok lowered h i eyes with an r As he went by the It himself seized by the 1 man sm iled as h e replied: vould not understand it, m y lit- it ’s heavy opera. You would >l h e felt himself seized by orm, and a boyish v o ice! ' \ ‘‘Say, professor, can’t 3 tfeater to-night?” The old n “You w o tie man J i t ’s heavy opera. You w< gel very tired before five minutes pasi “N ol Iw o u ldn’t , ” replied the boy, HIRAM J. CASWELL, EEAXiEn IN PiRlOa&CiKHffiS Magee’s Boston Heater. Tin Boofliu?, 0 utters. Loaders, &c. JOBBING NEATLY AND PROMPTLY EXECUTED. 621 Second Ave., Lansinglmrgli. “No* I w ouldn’t , ’’ replied the be erly. “Take me i n ; won’t ye?\ “ Very well. But y ou mustbeliave. “ Thebootblaok gleefully sprang to tho old mauls side and went out the gate whistling. “L a w ,” said the boy, after awhile, “I don’t know your name. ” “It is'Saohi, Saohs,\ returned the other, ab- - — \ \ - iph Sachs, is •ently. “ I am Mr. RudolpI “Very w ell,\ said the old man, va cantly. “ L et me carry yer grip, ” said Teddy, anxious to mak-i lumself agreeable. “No, no,\ said the old man quickly changing I f to the hand furthest from Teddy. “I can carry it. ” Then he lapsed into absolute silence, and not a question from the bootblack elicited an answer. They arrived at the theater and Teddy was duly remanded to the gallery, where he waited anxiously NEW YORK GENTtlftL Hudson BiveT Kaiiroad- GREAT fOiB-TRACK TRUNK LINE t;i& iirssr arriving at and departing from Grand Central station, 4th ave. 42d st., the very oontreof oity. Trains leave Troy as follows. GOINS SOGTU. e ‘ic K p i ^ o r c a V i a liy - n o m each other’s faces, though they hav lived within a half-mile of each other all their lives. There are streets and houses that are never seen by some dur ing their whole existence, though tho distance from their ow n domiciles is short a nd could be traversed in a half- hour or le It is cei her of pec. ever c ast their well-bred eyes upon Mrs, Shrimp’s boarding-house, where it stood narrow side street, surrounc by structures as gloom y and uninviting as It was a two-story red-brick building without a cornice, the absence of Which gave it a curious, bald-headed appear ance. Not even a gutter crowned the fa cade, though a strip of wood about three inches wide was nailed just below the roof and extended from one^ side of the strip was not to be conject any other than a dubii luse to ■ if it had lions m e ans of impression upi th a t of a n architectui id th e foreh The house was spectatoi bandage around the forehead of a de- itated building that had the sick idaohe. Ihe house was set back a short dis- 36 from the sidewalk and was ap- acUed by a path paved w ith brick, ■ad ■ ■ow V fencee buluilt \ h a l f This fenc on either side was not designed to idals from trau keep irreverent vandals from tram pling down the scarce grass that somebody or other managed to keep a live in the yel low clay, but was used by Mrs. Shrimp’s guests as a bench, where they took their post-prandial siestas or discussed politics or baseball or tho latest innova tion at the factory. The array usually consisted of two dray drivers, two bod-oarriers, a street cleaner, an organ-grinder, a couple of ineohanics aud a bootblack. One even ing they were all at their customary haunt a fter their supper. “ I s a y , O’Rourke,\exclaimedM cFlint, the hod-carrier, “do you mind not to create such a racket whin you cum home drunk nixt time. I cud’ut sleep fer yer maudlin carryln’s onl” “Mind your tongue, y’ ohaw! W hin I cum home drunk it’s none o’ yure fu neral unless you put ip yure lip—thin there w ill be a demand fer choristers to sing the requiem.\ “A n ’ y o u won’t h e ar’em. ” \No. 1 stay ^way from tho church w h in they bury dogs. It wosn’t me that raised the racket at all. It was that old duffer in the attic wid hia midnight fid dlin’ and his cryin’. Thinks I to myself, MoFlint has been to Hogshead John’s wid the poor divil a n ’ made him take a swallow av the gasoline he thinks is whiskey t But I was wrong. You must have given him a ohaw av that papier mashay tobaccy av y oura Did ye ? \ It would, as usual, have ended in a row had not the person alluded to by O’Rourke unexpectedly made his appear- in the doorway. H e was a small \ressed in threadbare, black clothes, J upon reded the;hey re, black w hich show t had been wort tim es when hia frame was of a heartier seness HILL’S II j u &I Doable Chlaride of Gold Tablets ing l a a few days. DRUNKENNESS ai MORPHINE HABW ^ th e patient, b y the uso of our SPECIAL FO.RMUI.A GOLD CURB TABLETS. During treatm e n t p a tients a re allo'wccl th e free use of l i t phino u n til such tune as they s h a ll voluntsiTily g ive th^'“ ■ Wo send particulars a n d pamphlet o f tiastlmohiala fi he glad to p lace sufferers from a n y of theae hatdts in ci tlon w ith persons who have been cured b y th e uso o f o ur . HILL’S TABLETS are fo r sale By a ll viESl ffrnggists a t $ | .QO Por package. If yourdruggistdoesnotkoepthem ,encloseU 3 S | OO and wo will send you, by return mail, a package o f ou r a Write your name and address p lainly, and state whethe^ifoblets are for Tobacco, Morphine or DO NOT BE DECEIVED into purchasing anyof the various nostrums th a t a re being j offered f o r sale. Ask f o r TrTT T .'r,»i=t a : A 3 I j 3B X S a n d tafeo n r ^ Manufactured only by OHIO GHEHIGAL CO., EI.E3& BEOperaBIe LIMA, OHIO. PAETICDBABS FREE. JUUULMJUUULMJULMJUULJr^^ y H V lorits of o u r Tablets. | ^ * V^AFEf Testimonials from p e r s o n s w h o h a v e been cu r e d b y t h o u s o o f Hill's Tablets. / . is'Sa'SssstK’WS??.WrS\.: tw o packages of your T ablets, ahd without any ef letsj ah d without any e ffort on ihy p a rt. jA d d h e s s aU. O r d e r s t o THE OHIO CHEMICAL CO., 0 1 , 53 and 55 Cpara Block, r ---------- metropolis who have never passed each the gallery, where he other on the street or set eyee upon for the curtai'i to rise, each other’s faces, though they h av e Ha had never seen t [a had never seen the gallery so r spectableas he saw it now, Ou evei side of him were good-looking gentlemt with opera glasses and ladies who v quite as well dressed as any in the quet. He longed gets, but realized “Dis must be a bang-up show,” li muttered, as he took his scat beside tw gentlemen, who were surprised to se him. “'Won whistle on his fln- ; he had better keep Presently rough a doc came up e and took lore of til fellow-boarder ist to c ome in, Teddy tlirew a him after he was seated and to-night than usi was tiie last peanut at hi struck him on the top of his head, occ sioning some merriment and a little di approbation on tlie part of those who “H e don’t mind it,” said tlie boy, con fidently, to the man next to him. “Wo know each other. W e both live at Mrs. Shrimp’s. He brought me in, be did. ” And to prove i t he pointed to the old man, who was shaking his liead at him with a frown. At last the curtain was up. As the old musician had predioted, Isddy was very much wearied in a shoft « iiile. He took his eyes from the stage aud looked at Mr. Sachs a s he sat scraping his instru ment in unison w ith a number of othera. W hen he wasn’t playing Teddy was the most interested. A t these time he won dered ■what gave the old man that odd, far-away look as if he were thinking of something sorrov\’f»il. “He’s a orfu! s-ud-iookin’ gu y ,” said Teddy aloud to hirosGf, wit'n a commis erating wink. There was a prompt chorus of remon strance from every side of him. So unanimous was it that he drew his breath stealthily for the rest of the evening for fear i t would offend some one. At length it was over. The last chorus had been sung and Teddy, as he went downstairs b etween a very fat gentle man w ith a tuning-fork in his hand and a very tall one w ith a thin lead pencil and a narrow memorandum book, lieard them discussing the perfor-mance over his head. H e learned that something wonderful h a d taken place. He learned that a very y o u n g man whose name was a prolonged aspirate had written an opera that was equal in power and execution to the operas of a host of other men whose lengthy names were a trick of linguistic legerdemain in the pronounc- “It was transp jrting,\ observed the tuning-fork. “It was a wild, weird symphony of the—er—of the—sbul, ’’ returned the lead Pencil. “It wus bum. m ,’’ said Teddy, irned in that nighi \When he turn/ tally resolved that it was his last excur sion into the realms of the classical with his neighbor, the aged Sacha Then, a he lay in his cot, his mind wanderei away to thoughts of the latter. Wha made him so miM and gentle? Wh; was it that you had always to speak ti him twice before h e heard? What made him play his fiddle at night when every one else was asleep ? Even as the last thought he heard the well-ki n via. All NIC J . WOLFE, A lliany Ktatii Grand C’untral st Niagara^FailV Special via Albany, dailj from Albany........................................11.00 Trains run on standard time. ____ U s Delaware & Hudson llailroad. THBOHGH TKAINS NOETH at trains between Troy and SOUTH AND -WEST. Susquelianna IHvision. ■ • - '.on, Sharon, Chor- °°^'in and «o;uh. ix t t o h iso w n . Creeping over to the points may b procured nt union depot Hek». rtitionrtition hee looked in t r o u g h a crack a t ' ju,, lupy 11 . pa h h his neiglibor. The old muiusician had qeased playing was turning over the leaves of a blankhook w ith 1 e paper yellow his clean, white faded,t the edges, yellow and decaying. The first page bore in big letters made with pen and ink, “The Silver Chime.” Be- The other pages were lines drawn in groups to Teddy like barbed wire oovered with many 1 of five that looked barbed wire fences in which sently the old man began playing ain, and in the expression of his face svidenc r like barbed w fenc« tangled myriads of tadpoles wi eccentric tails. Presently the ol again, and in the expression c there w a s evidence that he saw some beautiful mental picture before him. Perhaps he heard the plaudits of a mui- ____ hundred voices chanting the silver nieas- ^ for roe Fitchburg Railroad. LEAVE TliOy. I S l S i s M S s S S S L m Adams and in irrtving at seemed to exhale a li,, tion, that changed and varied with cadence of the music. Though the boy’s untutored soul could not comprehend the harmony he heard, he remained fasoi- ' ;ed by the magnetic power of tho o; 0 a. m. the end o f an hour tlie old man laid ^ m' locifl lui'senguf froir his instrument and his head fell VoLt“^spJe\ his hand. Teddy still watched car. I E M l U A I . W . g i ^ B Opera Block. LIMA, OHIO. down hi * I upon h is hand. Tedd y still watched ■ ^ him , breathlessly, for his frame quivered _ ! a s i f with a violent torture or some great * ^motion. B u t presently he rose, took up the tattered manuscript, folded it carefully and put it into a trunk. And then Teddy crept back to his bunk and said in disgust: “Cryln’l He’s daftil”—Chicago ing News. 'A fool Is sure to tell who he Is by the questions he asks. _ a ^ f t Even- 9:40 p m daily express li m.’”lundays only; fi J. R. WATSON, G. F. A , Boston. - ■ \TMMO G,W. P. A .. Trov. from Hostou. Ohildreti Cry for Pitcher’s Castorlae