{ title: 'The Pokeepsie evening enterprise. (Pokeepsie [i.e. Poughkeepsie], N.Y.) 1892-1918, November 19, 1895, Page 3, Image 3', 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/sn90066261/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066261/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066261/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn90066261/1895-11-19/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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THG H O ltE E P a il! E N T fiR P lU ilE , X II£«^A ir. JWOTEIBBBB 19 , 18 »a j the doctors approve of Scott’s Emtilsion. For wlioni ? jf For men and women wlio are weak, when tkey skould be strong; for babies and children who are thin, f when they should be fat; for all who do not get from J ^ their food the nourishment they should. Poor blood is f f starved blood. You eat and are nourished. Consump- ^ ^ tion and scrofula never come when the blood gets its J J proper food. And nothing is better for starved blood than c o D - n i v K R o i l . J I S c o t t ’s E m u l s i o s i | j| is c o d - l i v L R o i l with the taste taken out. It is for all i i who feel weak, have lost appetite or are losing flesh, f S JVo one else ireaks up cod-liver oil as it is broken up iiz Scott's Biztuision. « ^ -If you need it., ffet i t. A^'o szebstztute zvill do. ^ J TWO SIZES, 50c. and $ 1 .0 0 . SCOTT & BOW N E, C h e m ists, New York. W m M . I T a n l K e u r e o ., FBA0TIOAL JEWEIEU AND OPTiSIAN iltkitiv E f 6 glass 83 and Spectacles a Specialtr. 367 MalnUStreet. W . T y l e r S m i t h . O h a s . W. S w i f t . POUGHKSSPSIE GOAL GO., Yard Uptown Office North Front St. No. 9^Market St. ------- O.-'.O— ---- g HIGH GRADE COALS A S p e c ia lt y . PAINLESS Modern Dentiitry. TSETi WfTMOOT PLATES. T£ETH WITHOUT PL4.TES S5 PER TOOTH WEARS A UFETIME WITHOUT REPAIR A WRITTEN Q-UARA.NTEE WITH EVERY OPERATION. i Best set of Teeth that can be Made. Rubber Plate, S8.00. EXTRACTINC^ WITH GAS FREE. 22K Gold Crowns, - - - each f5 00 Teeth Filled with Gold, - $1, and iipw Teeth Filled with Silver, - 50 to 75 cts. Teeth C leaned, ................ 75 cents Teeth Extracted, - - - 25 cents. Gas or Air Administered - 25 cents Boston Dsntdi Associotion, 324 Mam St,Poke 8 psle, U. V. WITHEE, B. B. S., General Manager. JOHN D. BaOTH, Post Graduate, liS, 0.,- 0. D. S. in’^charge. OfUse hoursfriitn8 o’clock a.m. tili 8 p. m, EQUAL RIGHTS.^ ^ T h a t ’s certainly an interesting topic, but’whatever you may think about it, you are more surely right in believing that our furniture bargains are unequal led in this county. Even if you went Miva K7V«.u.«i-U.X?Jk Xb KiKJKJ XOl^ 1O0» hm and Elegant furniture, fashionable furniture, strong and durable furniture, cheap furniture, for any and every room in any house—ail are here, and buyers who fail to be here also will soon hear about lost opportunities. .. H . B A R L O W , FURNITURE DEALER. JUST THE TIME FOR THIS STOVE. Just ThejSTOVB For Your PURPOSH NO SMOKE. ^NO SMELL. BURN’S ANY GRADE OF OIL. J B.H.Trowbridge&Son ‘TH E IDEAL.”’ BABY SEED SONG. ’ tattle hrown soed, O little Prown brother, A r e you awake in th e dark? Herelere wee liveive eozily,zily, closeose too eachai other, w l eo cl t e Har^ to the song of the lark I \Waken!” the lark says. \Wi you, says. \Waken and dress Little brown seed, O little brown brother, What kind of flower will you be? I ’ll be a poppy, all w h ite lik e m y m other, Do be a poppy like me! What? You’re a sunflower. How I shall miss When y o u ’re grow n golden and high, But I shall send all the bees up to kiss you! Little brown brother, goodby I —N e w York Tribune ROUTED. Pingwill was a nuisance. He married a respectable young woman of matnre years and lives on her sufficiency, and he goes about pretending to be a literary character on the strength of an edition of a classic, an examination success at isome university place or other, and oc casional reviewing. He likes to talk about books and is offensively familiar with all the masterpieces and most of the rest of English literature. He con siders gabble about books intellectual conversation. H e regards a quiet man smoking in a chair as fair game for his scraps of quotation—which he is as eager to void as he is greedy to acquire — a n d he cannot understand that people who w r ite books never read them and are fu ll of b itter m eraories of their own adventures in authorsh'p. H e wears a pince ncK, and I'Irs. -Flngwill, when present, echoes all his quavering severi ties \v ith th e explanation that “ George is so satirical. ’ ’ He is exasperatingly reliable in th e raatter of names and dates, and at first, perhaps, we made the mistake of encouraging Pingwill. Heydinger was the chief encom-ager of Pingwill. Ho is a humorist, a kind of person who sees jokes in things that rouse the passions of ordinary people, and he found an unaccountable pleasure in developing one particular aspect of the Pingwill constitution. No retired pork butcher’s lady, no wife of a village rector who has married beneath him, could be more punctilious of her in timacy than Pingwill among his au thors. And Pingwill was just as in tensely sensitive to the breath of scan dal, which in matters literary is called criticism. No one could be thicker with a really chic author; no one readier to “ cut” the writer who fell under the shadow of adverse comment. He was, in fact, a literary snob—a by no means rare variety—and he had an alffiost passionate dread of admiring the wrong man. He took reviews in the weeklies quite seriously. Naturally he had nothing but serene contempt for Dickens and Jerome and Mark Twain, and “ people of that stamp. ” And Hey dinger never tired of drawing him opt upon Kipling. In a careless moment he had informed us that Kipling’s style was rough and unfinished—it seems he tried for once to form a judgment for himself and had happened upon really quite vulgar and coarse expressions. Aft er he had learned better from a review, the mere name filled him with uncom fortable memories. It was as if the rector’s wife had cut the duchess by mistake. Horrible I Then he was pri vately in great trouble about Besant and Hall Caine. “ Ought I to know them?” was the attitude. The oracles differed. Ho was deliciously y a rded upon these authors under Heydinger’s most search ing questions, but his face flushed guilt ily. Le Gallienne, Zangwill, and most of the younger men, who have warm friends and animated critics, bothered him more or less, and ho had a horrible dread, I know, that Ruskin, whom he had committed himself to admire, was not quite all that he should be. “ One has to be so very particular, ” was Ping- will’s attitude. However, after awhile we tired of this creature’s odd way with books, and his proxim ity then became, as I say, a nuisance. But Heydinger, who had form ed an adeqnate conception of his char acter, sugge'sted the remedy, and togeth er we routed him. Both Heydinger and I had got through a morning’s work, and in he came, fresh and freshly prim ed. He dropped into a chair and emit ted, some indifferent rem arks. “ I have heard,” he said, “ that these delicious child sketches of Kenneth Gra ham’s are out in a book by themselves. ” “ Read ’em ?’ ’ said Heydinger brutally. “ No—hardly— -yet,” said Pingwill, “but they’re good, aren’t they?” “ Yery,” said i, “ but that’s no reason why you should go about calling them delicious before you have read them. ” ‘ ‘ P e rh aps not, ” said P ingw il L ‘ ‘ P e r- haps not. ” “ They remind me very much of Wen- dle Hooper,” said Heydinger. “ You know him. Bellows?” “ Intimately,” I said. “ I have one of his first editions at home. ” “ You will be reminded very much of WendleHooper,” said Heydinger, turn ing to Pingwill. “ Indeed!” said Pingwill, stepping into the trap. “ The same subtle suggestiveness of phrase,” said Heydinger. “ The same delicate yet penetrating sympathy. ” “ I must certainly read them,” said Pingwill, evidently seiirching his mind for fee name of Wendle Hooper and flushing slightly. “ I imow of usutiin ” said Heyclin- ger, “ except, perhai^'^, Laut, who comes so ueua; to Hooper as Gi'aham. You know Lant’s style, Pingwill?” Pingwill flusiic'd a little deeper, and his ears grew pink. “ I can’t say,” said he, “ that I ’ve read”— ^ “ H e’s not so well known as Hooper,” , I admitted. “He was in the little set 1 that clustered round Leigh Hunt”— 1 Pingwill suddenly felt hotter again. » “ I think Leigh Hunt”— he began, evi- i dently ready with a fragment of text book. > \ 'He borrowed from Lant, ’ ’ interrupt- ■ ed Heydinger. “ Certainly he borrowed from Lank That essay on the c h ^ n e y pot hat”— “ Pure Lant,” I said. “ I ’ve neglected Lant a little, I am afraid,” mumbled Pingwell, horribly bothered by this unknown name. “ You should read him,” said L “ He’s a perfect mine of good things. That passage in Browning, for instance. You were pointing out the resemblance only this morning, Heydinger.” “ About the chattering disks,” said Heydinger. “ Youremember that, Ping- well?” “ I think so, ” said PingwelL “ Chat tering disks. I seem to recollect. How does it go?” “ The chattering disks go reeling,” said Heydinger, inventing boldly. “ You must remember. ” Pingwell now was really very uncom fortable. But he was having a lively lesson in priggish conversation. “ I wish I had my Lant here, ” said I. “ You surely remember about the chattering disks?” said Heydinger, turn ing as he pretended to search for a book on the shelf. ‘The phrase is quite familiar to me,” said Pingwell, “ but for the life of me I can’t recall the context! It’s queer what tricks one’s memory plays. ” Heydinger quietly resumed his seat. “ Have you written anything lately?” said Pingwell to change the subject. ‘Yes,” said Heydinger, and seeing some further question threatened, add ed, as if in explanation, “ Alvarados. ” It pulled Pingwell up abruptly. “ Al varados! Ah!” he repeated after Hey dinger, with an air of comprehension. If he understood, he w as certainly w iser than I. His ears w ere now b rig h t red. We remained tranquil, w a tching him. It was not my affair. He returned to conversation presently with an air of having found and grasped the thing firmly. “ Will you make them into a book?” be said bravely. A just perceptible dew was on his face. Hey dinger evidently expected as much, “ Them I” he answered. “ What?” “ Well—it. Alvarados. ’ ’ “ I t! ” said Heydinger, raising his eyebrows. “ I don’t know,” he said and became silent. Pingwill was evidently baffled. Very awkwardly, and after a pause, he said he hoped that would be the case. Heydinger thanked him dryly. There was an interval while we watch ed one another. Then he discovered his pipe was out—it always is—and asked me for the matches. He talked incoher ently upon indifferent topics for a few minutes after that, and all the time I could see the trouble in his eyes, the awful doubt of his own omniscience that had arisen, Alvarados? Presently he rose to go. Routed. As he went out I heard him whisper to himself very softly, “ Alvarados!” He has not been near us since. I can imagine the dism a l tim e s he has had hunting through Rabelais, Gil Bias, H u d ibras, the Dictionary of Phrase and Fable for Alvarados, going through the British museum oataloOTe for Wou- die Hooper and hunting all Browning for the “ Chattering Discs,” feeling most horribly ashamed of himself all the time. I like to think of his flush of shame, the overthrow of his frail ap paratus of knowledge, and ever and again Heydinger and I break the friend ly silences which constitute our inter course by saying casually, “Pingwill seems to be dropping us altogether, ’ ’ or, “ Don’t seem to see so much of Pingwill as we used to do, Bellows. ” Such re flections are the olives of life.—H. G. Wells in New Budget. V e s u v iu s a P o p u la r S p e c tacle. A N aples correspondent reports that the lava descends Vesuvius very slowly, straggling about the crags and small ravines. Therefore the spectacle from the observatory is very interesting, and, BO far, quite safe. A large stretch of the mountain is covered by the lava from the new crater close by, and at some distance from its point of issue the fiery mass divides into smaller streams, which find their way down the inclines to the south of the observatory toward Resina. The country people around Ve suvius are more curious than prudent. They climb the mountain in all direc tions, some even crossing with foolhardy bravery the still smoking stream. Crowds of little boys play on its very edge, where it is not so deep as to emit unbearable heat, and pick up smoking bits to throw at each other. A strange crowd of sightseers 1 Men in their shirt sleeves, women in their white jackets, come along singing, playing the tam bourine, beating time even on empty petroleum tins, anything to make a noise, taking the demonstration of the mountain as a good joke. A few car riages bring foreigners as far as it is possible, after which the tourists must walk. The people who keep little drink ing shops on the highroad up the moun tain drive a roaring trade. JEconomy o f Slioeblacking:. Every morning on South Sixth street can be seen a well dressed, one legged young man getting his only shoe shined. The other limb has been amputated at the hip. As he stands on the one crutch he carries, with the shoe resting on the bootblack’s box, he is the cynosure of passershy. “ That '^bung man is a reg ular customer, ’ ’ said the shiner in reply to questions asked of him. “ No; he doesn’t pay the regular price of 5 cents, but gives me 15 cents every week. As he only has one foot and has his shoe shined* every day I do the job at half price. I have other customers of a simi lar character, as this neighborhood is thickly populated with cripples.”— Pittsburg Chrouicle-Telegraph. H e H o s e to tlie O ccasion. The Daughter—I was so ashamed of you, pa, at Mrs. Upinstyle’s dinner when you took your pie in your hand to eat it. The Sire—^Waal, I knew it wan’t proper, Mahree Ann, but I couldn’t do nothin else. They ffidn’t bring me no knife, only a fork and spoon.—Buffalo Express- MUNYON’S DYSTErSU COBE. Is guaranteed to cure all forms of indigestion and stomach troubles, such as rising of food, distress after eating, shortness of breath and all affections of the heart caused by indigestion, wind colic, bad taste, offensive breath, loss of appetite, headache from indigestion, overindulgence in eating or drinking, or where the lining of the stomach has been impaired by physic or injurious medicines, Munyon’s Homoepathic Remedy Go. put up a cure for nearly every disease. 8oId by all druggists, mostly for 25c a vial, Those who are in doubt as to the na ture of their disease should address Pro fessor Munyon, 1505 Arch street, Phila delphia, giving full symptoms of their disease. Professor Munyon will care fully diagnose the case and give you the benefit of his advice absolutely free of ail charge. The remedies will be sent to any address on receipt of retail price. IT WAS EASY TO DO OVER. H o ty H e r H u s b a n d ’s D e s k W a s T r a n s form ed In t o a Sideboard. A suburban w o m an is obliged to en dure the gibes and jeers of her f a m ily W ithout retaliatiou because of her cred ulous f a i th in a suburban c a b inet m aker. An heirloom , on the husband’s s ide,w as an old fashioned m ahogany desk of m o re curious than a rtistic make. It w as useless as a desk and not pretty as a piece of old b ric-a-brac, so w h en an idea for its evolution came to her she w as doubly pleased. She consulted the su burban cabinet m a k er, who pronounced her plan entirely feasible a n d announced him self w illin g to carry i t out before she broached i t to her husband. “ Make a buffet, or serving sideboard, out of my great-grandfather’s desk!” repeated he, when it was broached. “ It can’t be done, my dear, and I hate to have it touched too.” “ But you don’t like i t , ” now coaxed the wife, “ and the cabinet maker says it will be very easy to do over. It will be the desk, slightly enlarged, that is all. The lovely doors will be set under the shelf as panels, and those graceful columns will stand out in added beauty as front supports. He will have to add a little wood and introdnee a mirror, but all the choice mahogany of the desk will be preserved and show much more effectively. ” In the end he was persuaded, and the desk was taken away. Some weeks passed, during which the wife made several visits of inspection to the cabinet shop, seeing parts of the work and ac quiescing to various suggestions and ad ditions to the original plan. The evolved buffet was finally deliv ered one evening not long ago. Its own father would never have known it. There were six feet of sideboard against the former two of desk, and the original doors and columns were there, but that was all of the first piece of furniture, which had been built on and added to till it stretched half way across the din ing room. The wife turned pale, the husband groaned. “ What have you done?” cried one. “ My lost great-grandfather’s desk!” exclaimed the other. The cabinet maker withdrew, after laying a folded paper upon the table. The husband rallied first and opened it. It was a bill of $85 for “ work and wood furnished-. ’ ’ Curtain! — New York Times. H r e n c lim e n B e l i e v e I n W o m a n ’s A b ility . Frenchmen are great believers in women’s work, and a splendid tribute to the educational value of women has just been paid by Le Temps, which strongly advocates their appointment to all state schools for boys up to the age of 12 years. The military laws of the country cause, it seems,- an annual dim inution in the number of male school masters, and there seems some danger of the supply ultimately falling far short of the demand. Le Temps sug gests this possibility should be antici pated by appointing schoolmistresses, SO that young France seems more than likely to be trained by the gentler sex. Woman, says this influential organ, is a far better educator than man, and boys trained by her up to an age when firm discipline is required are certain to have the foundation of stronger and nobler characters laid than when placed from early childhood in the hands of men. This is indeed a tribute to the gentler sex. H r a y e r fal K e v e n g e . A Puritan preacher named Boyd was in the haibt of inveighing against Crom well. Secretary Thurlow informed the latter, advising him to have the man shot. “ H e’s a fool, and you’re anoth er, ” said the protector. “ I ’ll pay him out in his own coin.” He asked Boyd to dinner and before giving him any ■nravfid for thre>o bnnrc ENTERPRISE_ 6 iiiEeT 0 l l . ARCHITKGTS. Wni. Beardsley, 43 Market street, M ain .tree*. ATTORNEYS AND GOUNS££LOB&j^ LAW. E. Acfeeraian, So.Market Street;. ^William C. Albro, 4 Garden Street, ^ederick Barnard, 54 Market S treets l^ g E l t i n g , (Pat©nts)56MarketStwtft Waiter Farrington, 3 Market Street, D. W. Guernsey, 56 Market Street, Stephen G. Guernsey. 54 Market Ghas. A. Hopkins, 4 Garden Street, aernan Lawlor, 35 Market Street. Joseph Morschauser. 56 MarketStreet^ Geo. H. Williams, 235 Main Btrem WilHam R. Woodin, 46 Market Street.. W. B. Nelson, 47 Market Street. S. H. Gardenier. 54 Market street, W. L. DeLacy, 263 Main street, Martin Heermauce, 56 Market Street O. W. H. Arnold. 56 Market Street, T TEUCJKlNa John I. Qements, 343 Main street, Andrew J. Silvernaii. 317 Main steeelv BAKERIES. Frost the Bafcer, 253 Main S treet Branches 231 and 373 Main S t w u BARBERS AND HAIR j)BESS^B^« Louis Crauer, 5 Market street, BOTTLING ESTABLISHMENT'S,. Oharles G. Bauman, 116 Main Street, Geoi W . Post, (Root Bccx) 23 Street. 196 Smith Street, near ^5?%^ Thomas J. Zimmer, 219 Main Street CARPENTERS AND BUILHEBg;. lames D. Burgess, 109 North Street, A, J. Dauchy, cor. Garden and P a s t e avenue, G. Mann uiett litu-o, -x-a: v.i£tujLit!mie otxeei, .. CLEANING AN& REPAIRING^ August Bantlin, 319J Main street. CIVIL ENGINEER AND S U R Y l i m B. H. Brevoort, 56 Market Street. Lawlor & Hoiise, 42 Marhet St. DENTISTS. Bopwjn Dental Association, 824 m. P. L. Foote, D. D. S., 288 Main ’ John J, Mills, 348 Main Street. Stephen Palmer, D. D, S,, 810 Street, DYEING AND CLEANING. Mrs. J. J. Bagnall, 15 Garden St,, owafa ments dyed and cleaned. Hate dfS l and pressed. Curtains, carpets SHATTERS AND FURNISHERS. Martin Bros., 255 Main street. JEWELER AND OPTICIAN, O. M. Lewis, 215 Main street. A m ^ for Mdme A. Ruppert’s world renowss^ Face Bleach. LAUNDRIES. Ferguson & Courtney, Catharine MASONS AND BUILDERS. Johnston Fleming, 13 White street, MUSICIANS. Conway’s Orchestra, Rider’s Music Stssinr PAINTERS AND DECORATORS, Wallhead & Dubois, 9 Catherine Steeeir Pierson Lake, 135 Pine Street. James Maher, 27 Market street. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONBL fred A. Faust, 31 Cannon s t f i i l ; office hours 8 to 9 a. m. 2 to 3 and 1 le 8 p. m. Sunday 2 to 8 and 6 to 7.80 p. ase Charles E. Lane, Office No. 28S KIH Street, office hours 8 to 9 a. m.. I f te 2 p. m,, 6 to 7 p. m. Horace R. Powell, 31 Garden office hours, 8 to 9, 3 to 3, 7 to 9, D. B. Wsard, 27 Garden Street. Nelson Borst, 24 Academy street. SPECIALISTS. S, W. Scott, M, D,, 25 Cannon etrestp (Thursday only.) RUPTURE CURE. Dr, Norris 224 Main street. REAL ESTATE BROKERS. F. R, Bain, 42 Market Street. JONATHAN DICKINSON, 290 Main I. D. Crosby Poster, 21 Market street. B. E, Lansing, 16 Washington S tr ^ $ ROOFER. Oakley Osborne, 21 Oakley Street. STONE CUTTERS. W. A. Joy,Orchard Place,north P, F Railroad Thos, H. Seaman, 488 Main Street, ifl^HOLSTERERS. Daniel O. Bloomfield, manufaotov^ of mattree^'.es, 387 Main street. UNDERTAKERS. Joseph G. Frost, 819 Main street. Frank B. Tan Dyne, 406 Main atreet-^ H a v ing bongnt t n e property o l the CITY TRUCKINO COMPAN Form erly eon d n e ted by th e la t e D. < 'Lpplebee, I am prepared to do klL KINDS OF TRUGKIS^I Furniture, Safes and Fi¬ a Specialty. And all kinds of Heavy Truebin^i A. J, SILVERNAII. OfSce 817 Main Street. C. N. ARNOLD,^ Lmber, Sbin^les, LatliEh. Northern Soft Pine, Southern Hard Piae, New York and Canada Spruce, Pennsylvania Hemlock. Tennessee White Wood, Indiana Oak, Quartered, plain, Ohio Chestnut, Kentucky Ash and Black W ainut. Florida Cypress, very dun^( -ie, Michigan White Fine,XXIX mdXXXX Also ornamented ends foi jablee sidings. LIME. Canaan, Gi. Falls. CEMENT. Rosendale. i • Ttland, CALCINED PLASTER. Kinz'f Vindsor Asbestos Cemeat, Dry Mortar. t ths Qld Stand - H. WaterlSt A N H O N E S T Q U A R T FO R $ 1 .0 0 . CADTIOH! Gemiiue only when each barrel, case and bottle bears our Trade Mark. l.C,HiRRlS, p ?