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a aa in t rege arai oes perdiera iy na fea prada anl oral . the Facts About the Institution En- { tithe chief. dowed by Cecil Rhodes; COMPOSED OF SEVERAL COLLEGES. | Each Is Distinct In Itself, but All Are Under One Head, the Vice ChanceHor-Course a Three Year One-Curious Customs of the Unis versity-Iife There Pleasant, but Expensive. , The unique will of Cecil Rhodes, giv- ing to every state in the United States two scholarships in the University of | Oxford of $1,500 a year each, has cre- | ated widé interest in the famous, old |. institution, and it is not hard to find out | {~ in Philadelphia what student life and | | work at Oxford is Hike, for a number-] | of Philadelphians went there in their 10 youth, says the Philadelphia Times. | | Barclay H. Warburton, owner of The | | Evening Telegraph, went there; Barton | |. Willing,. the brother-in-law of John Ja- | | . cob Astor, went there; the late Ellis | | Ashmead Bartlett and his brother, Wil- | liam Ashmead Bartlett, who married | } the Baroness Burdett-Coutts, were Ox- | | ford men; the Rev. Frederick Burgess, f formerly rector of St. Asaph's church, at Bala, and now bishop of Long Is: land, is an Oxford man, and so also are | E. Cholmeley-Jones and Julian Story. Oxford is admitted to be architectur- | | ally the most beautiful spot in Eng- | land. It Hes between two rivers, | the | Thames and the Cherwell, a great ar- ray of spires, towers, quadrangles and | 1 .t ancient buildings, carved with a sump- | |} | tuousness such as is not seen. today. | } -} It has gardeng and lawns: incredibly | f well kept, and ft is over 800 years old.\ . Here is a list of all its colleges, with ' the dates of their several foundations: : All Souls, founded in 1437; Balliol, - 1282; Braséenose, 1509; Christchurch, 15235; Corpus Christi, 1525; Exeter,} 1314; Hertford, 1874; Jesus, 1571; Ke | . Magdalen | { (pronounced. Maudlin), 1456; Merton,-] | 1264; New, 1380; Oriel, 1894; Pembroke ai at Bryn f ble, 1866; Lincoln, 1427; (after which !, Mawr college, ig 1624; | lit. Queen's, 1340; St. Jo..us, 1550; Trip- | ity, 1555; University, 1240; Wadbam, | 1609; Worcester, 1283. Then there is the Bodleian library, founded in 1812,; which has had the right since 1610- - though this right, of course, it has not' invariably used-of getting without - payment a copy of every!ibook publish ed in the United Kingdom. . The young men who go to this aged and beautiful place gothere as their - own masters. They may work or idle, for there are no recitations, and the examinations, save those for honors, are not hard. If the young men are Americans or if they are extremely - rich or well born, they go. to Christ- © church. That is the fashionable col-. lege, the one to which the royal fam- | ily and the great peers' song go. e Afterward, for hig matriculation, he - takes an: examination that is called the |. \little go,\ or \responsion.\ Then he- takes \moderations or \tmods;\ then | \divinity school,\ then the \great go,\ which gives him 'his degree. The \di- ' vinity school\ examinatiéns are: very | Rhard. The-othér examinations gre easy, - and a great latitude is permitted to. the student in the subjects: which he ig . examined in. But these are the “pass\ courses, those taken by young men who desire a degree'and,. nothing. more, The . \honor\. courses, on the 'other hand, are much harder than any of. 3 those of American colleges. - Hach college at Orford: is distinct in - itself and varies from its neighbor . col- | leges in its rules, yet all are underrone . head, the vice chancellor. It is As though- Yale,. Cornell, Harvard and . Pennsylvania, without changing their | ways, should unite in West Philadel: | phia under Provost Harrison. West Philadelphia then would be a younger, | littler Oxford. The undergraduates wear in hall- that is to say, in the réfectory-their caps and gowns, and they wear them - also at chapel and at lectures., In hall they havea pleasant time, eating sump.. tuously, with beer from the buttery | and tvith wine now and then. The dors - sit at one set of tables, the undergrad- uates, according to their years, at an- | other. After dinner they go to their common; room, where a formal English dessert is served to them, with port and sherry, nuts and fruit Tf later on- they go down town, they may'be‘“gat*' ed\-that is: to say, if} \ they do. not re- turn before 9 oclock they \ares fined sixpence and if not beforeilz Qicloc a shilling. ~ ate<> Hach college has two proctors, four- proproctors and four group of ten unsleeping fellows who heb in all sorts of disguises prow! about | the town looking for undergraduates who are doing wrong. A proctor can,: if he is i111 natured, lead an undergrad- vate an insufferable life, Jorexford is old, its system never changes, and, hence it has many absurd es. TC rules are usually: regarded assdead, h ters, but a crabbed proctor may bring them to life at any time. |. Life at Oxford is. expensive. andpleas— ant. 'The atmosphere to a youth. of literary bent i$ the most inspiring one- in the world, but thig-atmosphere does not appeal to the mathematical - and : scientific youth. He goes to Germany,. for the German universities have far outstripped in science their old. Engfi you lish sister. 'The course at Oxford is A three year Ts muuue A scholarship of $1, 500: annually one. is not a lavish sum to pursue it on.: FINGER NAILS. Long nails indicate ideality and an artistic temperament. Short nails, thin and flat at the base, e indicate a weak action of the heart. Long nailed people are apt to be | very visionary and hate to. face disa- 4° greeable facts. - Short nails, very flat and sunk as it ee were, into the flesh at the base, are a . f tC sign of diseased nerves. Short nails, very flat and. Afnclined to | - curve out or lift up at the edges, are “5? the forerunners of paralysis. 225 Short nailed persons make good crit: a les. They are sharper.-and more log- leal than long nailed people and usual- ty more positive in assertion. Long falls never indicate such great | physical strength as #hort, broad ones. | Very long finger nailed persons are | to have delicate chests and Iungs. Long nails, very wide at the top and, bluish in appéarance, denote bad cir-v‘ culation. Long nailed men and wom- en: are less critical and more impres- ° stlonable than those with short nails. : Woran's Life. Killing o! Scull. ' The increased. value of gsealskins in- 1900 induced, the lessees of the Pri bilo? islands, the 'breeding grounds of- not to kill any seal which has not. reached the fige of at least three years. | - If this killing of two-year-olds is gal- lowed to continue, it is certain, that the: seat herd will be soon exterminated, |Y Marsh -the: DNSSM- ‘ » '\bulldogs a | Beal herds, to kill 13,000 two—year- ; old seals, whereas the riile has been | ~- _- ~THE cumous ‘j 0mm, In This World. Of al the despicable cr atures she is There 1s no getting aw f y from het, She 4g. the woman who unbhishingly Asks your age, your private affairs, | your family secrets, and who will never | yest until she acquires the desired in- formation. No snubis pointed enough |. 'for her.. If you prove reticent, she will put her questions to you in such a way that if you open your mouth you com- 'mit youself.\ rule. . If she did have one, there would not | be: so much time at. her disposal to | bother about your affairs. you questions, the curious woman gets. ran ounrous womb: warogks YOU non. BEHIND HER LACE CURTAINS. her. information in other ways; She 'will watch your movements and‘those 'of her other neighbors from behind the: 'shelter of her lace curtaing. She will | not hesitate to bribe your maid. or even question your milkman. She is an even | 'greater mine of information than the tfor 'she observes. It's newcomer moves ( into a house 'on \her: street, she can-tell you just how old. the furniture is and, 1 judging from that, just how much mon: - éy she thinks the people are worth. | She knows all the love affairs of the |- neighborhood, just how late the gas | 'was kept burning in the Smiths' front: parlor the fight before and at what hour that gay little widow across the | street came back from the opera. More | than that, the even watches her neigh- bors wash and makes comments on it | as it swings flapping in the breeze. ° If the curious woman kept her intorw mation to herself, there would be;'no: harm done, but she never lacks.. for |- friends of her own. hind. Where there 'is offie curious woman you will find sey- eral.: They bhobnob togethel. retailing their news and comparing notes. | ery village has at. least one hotbed of Several. No person is: attecks. They ruin\ ne reputatio” .2 Dy\ marriage 'has [their chatter, more than one home bro- ken up. T the bane of her gex. | - HELEV CLIFTON. New Wall Cover!!!“ For the merely pretty bedroom noth- ing is more novel than theprinted tick- ings got up in fancy stripes, says Har- they are really more syggestive of : «chintz than of any of the ordinary tick- {ings. They come chiefly in stripes, the : floral; - designg alternating with plain [ [ribbed effects similar to the dimity and . 'zephyr-dress goods. Quaint small flow-. {ers. mark the patterns. They are espe:? 'clally suitable for semicolonial effects | .and are best employed when used fromi wainscoting up to a low hung molding with drop ceiling above. Again, they. may be used in combination with plain - toned buckram 'or with crape Aber. Pai. . [pers exactly imitatifig:-these printed | ti¢kings c at half: the price, but 'these maybe m; draper: : ies, so that the entire room may be done in: chintz effects: even to the win- 'dow and other hangings Ape of Fate. \What's the matter with the corre: ; spondence editor?” inquired the city editor. \He looks mad.\ ; h “Why” replied: the“ suake. editor; \yougsée severalidaysfago ne':told :a 'an y siidehthow to, Yea to play the 'cornet, and now he's covered that the fellow liVes next door Two “citizens were discussing their friends, =- \That man Smythe is. horribly stuck -up,\ said the first citizen “He is that,” agreed the second. -“Did Carter’s Little Liver Pills, for sale She is narrow and petty | 'of mind, with no object in life as a | When, she doesn't quite dare to ask | | United 8 , : : populatlo 3 $ rises to be tar reaching.\ 8 land owner probably of Canada. >| \that we Canadians have been a nittle : 1 slow. Our deyelopment has not beer | $ markedly fast until recently, -, We-hiave- 'I not cordially ' welcomed Englishmen, i-] but thewmericanswe like to take in | | and make one 0 . orports Your population of farmers {overflowed from Ohio to Indiana, then i\! | to Eliinois, then to Towa and: ther into \ . | |'Minnésota and the Dakotas, Now the |- ers, Iowa: farmers, farmers from south- 4 woman who asks questions outright, ‘ Ev: r yjevery town has |D a safe from their X : revented by - per's Bazar. In weave and in design | | land to open sees that already, and. he § Inching at 3m! Showflow Quick- j mobile could be stopped were given j America, and besides 'the automobiles | 'I tests of quick stopping were made with ' | rate of 16.3 miles an hour, was stopped | -| in 77 feét G inches. (313.8 miles an hour was stopped in 61 |. | was made by Wallgce Owen's gasoline | |earriage, which, in the twenty mile test, | turning completely mround as it did so.. | A French gasoline vehicle, going at 18.9 | miles, was stopped.in 84. tet 6 inches, | andanothergasoline vehicle camera & Po | full stop in 29 feet and 3 inches, going: a 1 AJ . { at the same speed-as the French car: | | \| riage.' A steam- carriage, going 'at seven | | miles an hour, was stopped Ar 5 feet 9 |. 4 inches. .. _ A large crowd watched the interest- | A number of officers from | { ing tests. [the Automobile club were present. . || in number, valued at $3, -_ [stat coon uns, |. | now Tmey Got In the Swim nus 'Far Northwest. BIG GAINS FOR. THE OUNTRY. J. H. Hasiam of Winnipeg Discusses the Re‘o-rces Manitoba and . i stricts-Says the New Set-. tlers A e Slow to Become Canas. dians. \Fifty thousand Americans will move from the| United States this year to northwest, Canada,\ saig J. H. Haslam of Winnipeg the other day to a reporter Te) cago Record-Herald. ' \They will do t ates, but because of at >- . land movement is taking. it is affecting your farming living between the one hun- C railel and- the state of* Ohio. .ow,populstion is after our lian farming lands, and the: movement may have in g northwest Canada prom- ; traording place, ant Mr. Haslam is the largest individual \L will} adandit,'\ 'gaid> Mr, Haslam, For a. number of | years in the region weit 'of Winnipeg | 'the American farming implement, ms-f -:cliinery and\ other: manufactures have | been rapidly taken by our people. Your trade with year was $110, 000. f 000 and ours. $46,000,000 felt in conjunction with, that of. your overflow 'has penetrated to the Manito- \ba district, to the Assiniboia and the BHagkatcBewan. Northern Jilingls farm-. ern Minnesota, are buying our unim- proved lands-At $4 -to $8 an-acre or tak- . ing improved lands at $35 and $40 an acre. They are bringing American push- and to Canadian soil, and the ; influx is likely to 'change not only the physical features of the Cana- Aons-and economic conditions. \Theme: new settlers are not becom- Ang Canadian citizens at present. That. will come to a certain extent utter awhile. But they are. bringing Ameri- | can money and courage and brains to join with the courage and brains 'of 'the 'ploneers 'of 'our country and the movement is lHterally by train loads, 'without any particular encouragement 'from the railway companies. It-ought to. bring about a closer bond of sympa- 'thy between this'country and Canada | and lead to reciprocity The balance of | trade 1s: in your fayor. 1t must remain | {so, and .the interests of the two lands, while under dinerent governments, are | . 'much the 1 same; . tle to England, with -this country until President: Cleve Since then, altho Gmdi‘ans‘have not' patd~ so m much at-] tention; to it. - They have- built up a : fine: export trade with England, and it\ is profitable. - \\You need our cattle and some other . things. We need. much that you' 'have. | here'. appears to be no |réabon why. we cannot Awell side¢byx side imaniity‘and, without a tariff wall between us,\ The American farmer who Wighes: for: new is coming to us in a way thaws do 'the Manitoba and. Assinibola: Tej s‘ with new homes and fruitful farms,\: ° . Mr. Haslam was a candida Lox the | - Canadianl parliament once and “Y'as de- | tested by only one wof' hme go d Tests FOR AUTOMOBILES. I riga iy They (fun 'Stop. A series of interesfini’tests in show- ing the rapidity with which an auto- the other day'at-Riversidb.-drive: and | One Hundred gnd Nisith street, in'New | | York. The event, wasjaheld under the | ubpicés 'of the [Automobile Club of: : horse dfiwn vehiléle#, says the New | York eg. Most prominent of the latter-was Berry Paynewmtney’s four- | 'In-hand ° \couch driven it The | teet' One of the best stops oz automobiles? stopped in. baif an ijnck under- 85, feet, The snarl-nun. annual catch approximateszlhpoopdo & Eye Oust-ct. wae ' treatment is ] average masculine sense. | so last tham, that they may teach, . turn to their sons and- grandson is not because they dislike the |. \Now your. people are coming to us, | and 'their influence is beginning to be |} ' thinking and' dian northwest, but political complex- | ~, Winnipeg 1# to become the St. reg tsrsburg ot this; continent—the great - he ~ latitude. Our winters are. not mevere, | | our summers delighttul. We: raise may : Altogether, when you come to think | fific toes, the. best: wheat on |- of it, the curious woman is justsabout eart : at | Fargo Andicate: that.\ 'nhy yet:have | | {that cereal. 'We can grow apples, we | | haye~tlfe best timber, as much ironies; | there 1s Innorthern, itinnesoti and sott | |. coal flit excellentvqnslity. Our gram . P:} lands are also rich, and we export cst- : A victoria going at | According. to recent data secured by | - | the United States Ash commission; I1 there are about 25,000 men- employed L, ~Alin the shad fisheries of the Atlantic | | '= I{ seaboard of the United States. The: ' -.. || value of the boats, apparatus of cap- | | / :- -I) ture, etc., exceeds $2,000,000; and the 1 M. Gabel, an oculist of Bordeaux, As | ~ : [reported to have. been successful in the \| treatmicht of cataract without opera- | odo :tions 'by the 'appli¢ation of baths of .- | salicylate of soda. He has arrested the | progress. of the cataract in numerous | ~ 'PLUCKY BARNARD olan. © Callow Mere: Man,! ~- * AmeriCans Securing Farms In | The lesson on the woman questionf P a 2 ae o, ' | recently administered to the youngmen ; - ‘l't . ' | strenuous: enough to last them the lights of, Columbia universt of their liveg if they are possessed the, best -one can wish for, them. \low| college boys, is to decide where 'her I place in it shall be. From the very beginning the young men of that institution of learninéiz' ~ which is the pride of New York é rogance the girls of Barnard college. dents. That it may |- 'The lesson 1s this: The world, was made for |- {f woman also, and she herself, not cal- 55, persecuted with persistent sex. ‘s’t-t the hall designed for young women ate. J ~d The men's college pager: Bas | ~ non“ over A “All, THIBMAN: -even gone -so fur in its sex insolence as* to to assert that Columbia is not a. coed |- -. 'The , university avuthork |- i school at all. ties, being men who belong to 'the twentieth century, are on the side of ht the women. When recently these @ | thorities granted to the Barnard. girl! for each Wednesday evening. the 'yee | of the swimming pool of the university [. C \gymnasium men students who -en} ward and skyward a 'how! of fo ¢ 'rage. They vowed by the Eternal, and | were, that they, would rout the worms \out' of that sacred he-tank or \buf What .was. more, not even a re mosquito should buzz around the BP |-: and doughnuts. vended . behind, B; Aege lunch counter. \We meh rf bave been victorious in the be tHe | the sexes, and we'll .be again’ said. which titty years ago deluged Susan B.: Anthony,1 with dead cats and bricxkbats 1 and feminine. medical students with . hisses and written missives of devilish, Anosult. - They continued on their. way, waying _ not much but; workifig.. and : \willing tremendously. Then: the. raillls of the gods that 'at length crush into powder brutality, per-. \secution and: all wrong done by \one party to another began to grind. They © . ground not \slowly\ in this case,\ but quickly, the gods apparently deeming dispatch. tilated in newspapers, and the sympa- \ery case on the side of the girls, 'which . was a great help to them. . After. a few £ weeks the returns began to come- in., Columbia boys looked down their noses, : and an expression of glumness eyer-r: | pig. I know you've been wanting to | spread their faces when one morning lately It was announced that an © 'dowment of an even $500,000 ha secured for the enemy on whose they had sought to set their colléctiv foot-the girls of Barnard e Thus bad began, put worse € Jbehind Less than a week afte .\We were strongly for' reciprocity: | .[ land's message on the Venezuelan qués: | [ tion. - Your Canadian is nothing Af not | loyal, and: that message brought bis | back up for England in great. fashion; a e ‘gh L believef’reci- _E C would be an excellent.thing for | both: countries, and a strong. minority | BaRX thinks 'that . Way also,! tne western | | swimming pool especially that was' to. | baths 'of Diocletian in: size riyal 'the ° 'and luxurlousneis of equipment; a 'to which the hbys’ tank f ouldbe as a washtub. ' 7 : ''The Barnard gymnasium will But the crowning overthrow & . worse, so to speak, is this:; Adjacent to |- will and the new athletic field the % ca very 'high grillwork fence, which the girls may bite: their-t] at the boys and say: , \. \You may go to grass with Wednesday tanking.\ ~* girls are in the swim. ~ KATE SHARP finish, » - anne: Realism. Weck,' don't yr know a» : chapple.\ Cases. and is pavguine of-syccens jf the agony“: an fearly sings! “Wm The. weck is under water e know: 'Reribner's |_ hd -ed it all the rest of the time sent. earth-r , The Barnard girle were a-éiibled, but: not dismayed They were receiving . the raild Anal droppings of that shoves: there are many pleasurable anecdotes,. 'that here was an emergency requiring [ The story of the men's persecution | ; of the women students was wel} ven- | thies of reporter and editor were in ev» | 'of tarrying long at the wine, \John I'm | buz one for a long time. How did you |- manage it at last?\ . | Adelaide: \0 Lord, save thy servant, our abyereign lady, the quéen! ~ [her with thy blessing, that she may live:;| tale and told how a- generoussnony- . mous benefactor : of: the feminine sen; |*'She-Dismiss the subject with a sin-] : :*gle word-Ghicago News, ° f neither “gym” nor restaurant wll .@ ver; | a Columbia: boy be allowed to set toot. 1 . «F So At is said. . H lng in: the dust of the boys, the worstest 1C 'the college grounds is a plot which the | Columbia Athlétic club has been' 'years | Arylng to buyfor an exercise fleld’ 'and | this now has actually been purchased under their noses: for the: young: \wom- | en of Barnard, where they may - march, , play ball and sprint at their own sweet \ Delhi ork Yes, decidedly the Bardard acollego | ms fJ \Aj ' rickefwwfimi- ~The popularity of tan shoes for spring | ;and summer wear seems:to be-asgured, | ~~ and thoge displayed are. fine in cut and I-- \But then, I don't see any week, old1 f «'Why, Wobby, .of course you don't. | See if your urine stains linen do ally at night, and does it seem- to scal or... asylum-f;- o mug will’ mgo‘ré 1 e of Favorite: emed an \ave 'Rexe *, . they will be- removed. If your druggis ou have frequent desire to urinate; especi- ' you; put some urine. in a glass- andlet it stand 24 hours; see: ifihere isa sediment or. a a M33 TA e: I dneytroublef ) ad had -D fsp E ye C , .. relief after the first two doses! It a .. has cured me of my troubles and - I recommend it to {ends. WM j. ScHuvier. This man hasfound a cure for his troubles and ishappy. He roves that |- .' there isnoneed tohave Ki lc With its attendant backache, or t 'have uble lgour Kidneys are not right, look * into the matter at. once. ~ 'TRY THIS KIDNEY TEST: tumbler milky clpudyappearance. mutilation is apt to be Satai have any symptor es £E1d 't keep It we will send for one do © To. prove I will:help you, sand Tor Froq ample Bettie, - m3 DAVID, mm! com-emu. KHondont; No Ys. wE SELL AND RECOMMEND DBR. DAVID KENNEDY; ILVORITE REMEDY, H. B. Gmnnsmvn—hflnsn THE DRUGGIST;:Oneonts. N. Y. At. stores in Laurens. N.Y. w+ DEAN HOLES WIT. (Some Samples ot It From His New; Book. _ . In bis new volume entitled “Now and Then,\ which the venerable Deanj Hole of Rochester bas just issued.; & few old and many new, says the May | his Woman's Home Companion,. One of the most time worn, but still one of the most tickling, is that about a Jury at an Irish agsize, most of whom when told by the judge to go to their usual | ' places forthwith walked into the dock. LORD METHUVEN'S ‘wousos. |/ British :General's Actions When He Ins-rendered to the Boers. - Lance Corporal Martin of the First 1 Loyal North Lancashire regiment, who | 'was captured by the Boers during the | fight in: which Lord Methuen was long letter to | rom. Matching under date March 12, in which he de- | scribes the action, says the. London | Standard. Alluding to Lord Methuen, , wounded. has Written - wife at Lancaster the writer says: \The last gunner, finding himself | % alone was ust lea: when he was, Another anecdote, bearing On the | shot { 3 ving | ttemperance question, is as follows: | gig \John said a clergyman to one of his | ,, parishioners who bad been in the habit | pleased to see you've got a nice new \Well sir,\ said ‘J’ohn, \I gur up makin' a pig of my- . But the dean's best tale is of a par- | son 'who was in the habit of offering. tip; the following prayer for Queen Grant that ak she grows an old woman she may become a new man,. Strengthen: ' a pure virgin; bringing forth sons and. aidaughters to the glory of God, andgive \her grace, that she may go forth be- : fore . her people like a he goat on the | ountains 00 ,- Would Ride an Rlephant. - ince Edward of York,; the Prince. ' oldest son, who will be king:.| i¢ if he lives, will be eight ears old a few days before his grand: mi is 'crowned-and is taking:as live- | an interest in the preparations for e coronation as would be expected | m a boy of his age, writes the New rk World's London correspondent. [found disgust and disappointment at [ hearing that the royal party will ride Hon procession. camels from the zoo. a as One ot Its Properties. Gladys—They say champagne drink-p ihg gives the eye a peculiar look. +i Hobart-Well, I know it makes a V: look like 30 cents—J udge. Yes or Ito—Which! He-Were I to broach the subject of | matrimony what would you -do? _. HL m... . September iflh, 1901. . TRAINS LEAVE SIDNEY IOU?! som ' New York E. 1€ WilkxorNewY reencse 00‘0000 information « ml! to | . He is sald to have expressed pro- | [To multitades 'who th . larative - Syrup: has. proved a | whiessiug. Price: 6Ocand 30, a bottles It] will cost you, nothingm try it. Sample: White,, No 109, 168 ]- | Seige | free. 'Atlen's Foot-Ease. Cares Corns; Bublons,; Ingrowing Nails, At all Drug-| - J. “Naturally this epidemic of grip gives | : 2, . ASk to day“ ilglsts arnd: s oé stores, 250. oseoosooevoeseeose \° OI oe \ ’, \ 1 M}. P al my. ore-lanai... \% | cleanses, | i not produce shoeing Large Size, 50 cents at Drug- \glltsorhymail . Hrial Size, 10 cents ‘ ' came over to us and stood about fifteen yards from where I was.. Five minutes | later he got his first wound in his right | side and then tried to mount his horse. | S 'I did not know what he was going to -do, but his borse got shot in the leg, | - and he had to get of. A few minutes | & later he got his second wound in the t thigh and laid down on the ground ag |. A2. nothing had. happened. His horse : was shot dead immediately afterward, . falling on Lord Methuen' and breaking | 'The doctor went to him to | dress his wounds, but before he had | 'half finished he was shot, too, and our ~general had to lie until we surrendered. j I am telling you this Just to: show what | 'a brave and good koldier he is, beloved | by all his men, those who had been | ' with hinx from: the first. 'He always | had a kind word for every one, and I | Interest on deposit. at 6 per cent. _- 4 per cent. Dividendon 100 Shares Steel Common, his leg. hope; he will pull through and get all | {{ what a prince expecreofin‘m‘m\ itéle Edward Thought British xi..- 4 1 * The Woes of Genius. 'A , whole fpromise me one thing-wil} you?\ \You have genius, haven't you?\ kicked the cat from the fireplace and | awaited the inevitable, . |d». \Well then,\ she said sweetly as she [! talista, twined her arms ground his neck,. “write a historical novel and buy us & 'on horses or in carriages in the corona-| 2 He thought that on | Buch a gala\ occasion they might at | [least be mounted on elephants andf andback, at?i di ¥ aymptoms of indigestion . 4 4 'uffer Mother Address A. J;; Duane street, New ¢ .ork. e 1.7'“ Shake Into Your, Shoes wollen and Sweating feet. -Some: Foolish People Allow & cough to run; untilitgets beyond | | the reach of, medicine. . They often say, | «*Ob, it wit wear away.” but in most. loCases 1t will wear them' away. Gould | {they be induced to try ithe successtul| I medicine.:called Kemp's Balsam, which is 'gold on 'a positive guaranteé 'to cure,] | they would immediately see the excellent | reflect after taking the first dose. Price] .and. 50c. f fvdrugglsts. 'Frial gize. free. the: diseased membrane. _ Ttcures cstarthsnddrives\ | away acold in' the head anil ;. ! by mail. ELY sacrum-s. 66 Warten Street, New York.: _- You cannot foretell ; you. can, always foretell Ma's Pla- : it in as |_ TZOOQK Book- A entonsnd ~I \What is it?\ asked the poet sternly. | *I certainly have!\ he replied as he | Indigestion brings on distress after-if 'éating; 'with heaviness and deadness of: < 'l the stomach} headache, and 1 ticed: Keeling that is not relieved by rest, | eruptions on the skin, consti- | pation, loss of appetite pains in the side. It rests the feet. | At all 'I bers in Oneonta for the hearing and «lecision of motionsnnd appeals sand. trials and other pro- |coedings without a' jury, commencing on the last.) -~ Thursday of January, July and October, and at i vtilliluchlunbers of the County Judge in Cherry { Land. . \_| Pursuant to the statute, I desispate and ap-| - [ | point the firs - 'County Courtas the time when aliens may make |. Anal application to be admitted to become citl. ;. the United States, except 'that no appli- [ fzens Oi | Cation: 'shall be nade within minety t State of New York. Otsego County Clerk's} n- | _I, Samuel J. W. Reynolds, Clerk of satd coun: | sore S‘wlth the original records of the same remaining | lin this office, and that the same is a correct } transcript therefrom, and of the whole of said. Kilin . WSeroiula and all blood diseases: successfully] treated. and cured. Address, Hares Medicine to. ‘Couls‘l Duane St, \The Aristocrat amon 'the Whiskies of the Old School. Without a peeing iFor Sale by 'to housekeepers- Extract of Beef telling how to prepare many deli- cate and delicious dishes. ‘Iew l orlz Address, Li-big Co., P. O. Box 2718, . ~--TO THE- AWARElliDSINBH. \ls THE CHEAPEST AND THE Favorite «ROUTE TO ALL Points in THE West. For fall information, rates, time tables, etc., inquire of nearest \ D. & H.\ - Ticket Agent, or write to the undersigned, J. W. BURDICK, General Parsenger Agt, | ALBANY, N. Y. - J. L. McLEESE “MAME Or SGARBIHATED __ WATERS Seltzer n Syphon: alS8pociaity: ~_ DELIVERED WITHOUT EXTRA C no Office First Hall Bank Building ourequta. __. STOCKS, BONDS Margin deposited ,. DEAL higher. ] for the purpose 0 se- the immedlalte Branch Offices: mso WEST 23d st. Orders solicited for the purchase or sale of j {mutating prices very thuch higher: 4 purchase of all good: dividend paying stocks, such as ' Manhattan, St. Paul, Rock Island, Atchison common; Steel and Peoples Gas. NEW YORK. 219 WEST 125th ST. GRAINcorms. Buy 100 Shares Unlted StatesiSteeln ommon (say 43) on 3 per cent. margin. f CREDIT. . $300 00 18 00 . 40000, $718.00 __$258.00 8258 00: ~ DEBIT. | Less 6 per cent. interest on 100: Shares Steel Common,. \John dear,\ said the struggling AU»; 1 thor's wife. \that last love song you [ ' wrote brought us a barrel of flour and |; 'ham. Now, I want you to | This is over 50 per cent. & year on your investment without considering ANY advance in the stock at all, and we have no. healtancy in raying that we fully believe this:stock will sell a GREAT A BIG ISLL MARKET. The indications are that we are on the verge of one of the biggest bull mar | kets the country has ever known. It is rumored that John W. Gates, is backed by aA pool of $250,000,000 composed of J.; Pierpont Morgan, Marshall Field, John J... Mitchell,. President; Illinois Trust Co,. Moorgé Bros. and several others We would I WRITE FOR SPECIAL LETTFR GIVING FULL DETAILS. Surrogate s 8mm OTSERGO COUNTY. TERMS FOR 1902. uly.. ONEONTA, AT SURREME COURT CHAMBERS, 9th. August: 14th. anuary: - Februar 13th. Beptember 18th. I QXl Oc’éobelpggt h. . April 17th, | November 13th, ' May 15th. December 18th. -June 19th. 20 *NATHANIEL P. WILLIS Surrosatel - EDGAR J. ARNOLD, Clerk. ‘ Dated (.oopersbown, X. Y., Dec. 10,1901. Terms of Bounty 0mm State of New York, County of O Procedure and section 45 of. the. Code: of Crimi. county: othsego . N.Y., in the year 1902+ A term: at b with trial jury, but no grand jury, commencing 'or the fourth Monday of April:and on the-second ' Monday of December. no jury, commencing on the second Monday of tember. i 'A teem will be \held at Supreme Court Char :. commencing on the Friday of March . ovember and on the first Friday of June. - day of each stated term of the 'preceding a general election for state officers. - Cherry Valley, N. Y. JAMES W. BARNUM,. Otsego. County Judge. Office, ar: [ ty, do hereby certity that I have compared the: going copy, Designation of Terms of Court. '}: orieinal records... .W. OLD NEWSPAPERS, AT THIS OFFICE. Fm: bavnd Kennedy! = 1mm AND LIVE STgOUBLES. E T8 Both Sexes. to sellf 'our Family Meaicines. snout“ nployment. -No: deposit asked. eases, Gravel. Rheumatism, Diabetes, | Cooperstown, at, the Surrogate'sOffice begin-] _ : <ning every. Monday, except during the month of- hese.are but few of the: |J and dyspepsia. | 1 DAILY, by maily -~ - tsego, B8. . Pursuant to section 355 of the Code of Civil ' nal Procedure, 1, the undersigned County Judge, |: ~- do hereby - designate the dollowing terms of the '| | gevam Otsego: County Court, to be: held in and: for the-7 e I“ ( Court House in (.oopcretown' : A term at the court bouse in Cooperstown, but | | February and on the second Monday of Sep- | . ys next: |- In testimony I have hereunto set: my |. \hand and the seal of said crunty, at Cooperstown, this 26th fiof December, 1901. { 8B. rumours, Clerk. ’ WANTED AGENTS fi News and. Opinions or. National Importance TAINS BoTH. .._ 86 a year Daity and Sunday, by mail, - $8 a year THE SUNDAY SUN is the greatest SunJayiNewapap'r in the World, Price Se a Copy. - By mail; $2 a year. Address THE SUN, New York. 6 CENTS FoR 50 . |- inutss). Tooth- 16g glean...» south“... Golds \Fo y by \ye Nineteen. T 'tosell an: Acct lens 'Gas Bicycle Lyamp. Lamps uaranteed satisfactory. - Profi arge. Any r der 'can make-goud moiey. fite . R. VBnldwin. 108 Duane St.. New York. TRUSS FEE Ades-an absolute perfect: iruss . that holds rupture with comfort. 'To introduce it quickly the inventor will give away 100 -in each State He don't ask, except or want moneyI—It's free. ent # & The U. 'B: Government Jan. 3 th, granted & 0% tor a trussthat does away with all- old- ushioned H. C. Co., 22 Main 8t. Westbrook. Maine