{ title: 'Hartwick review and visitor. volume (Hartwick, Otsego Co., N.Y.) 1902-19??, June 12, 1902, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn91066276/1902-06-12/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066276/1902-06-12/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066276/1902-06-12/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066276/1902-06-12/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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OIL. I. Time Card. gong NORTE. cece }} West OneORt&.............}.. LIAUTONS... ccc cess ee cc cece ke eescsses aa ins Mt vision o ae een ree seared s Cd\ a essen. ese se +e Hone: Fantasy............. Cooperatown.......... seee ces ssc C# gGoIng soUTH. Copyright, 1m by the f S. B. McClure Comps.“ “If Judge Chester A. Ballard of Hel- { ena, Mon., was formerly of College Cor- | , [pelte@ both men and women. At the | .of magnetic clasp a strange calm fell upon 4 |; Thalia. She knew that she would rath- | ; er tell this man tlie truth and walk. the rest of her days than to part | -{ from him with a half He, acted if not | |uttered. She met his searching look | 4. squarely. 4 coun she said.. Judge Ballard regarded her gravely, i 'it geemed to her almost sternly. \Let it be only a lovers' quarrel, Tha- alities.\ \It is not a lovers' quarrel,\ she said “Mn Curtiss bas not gone on your ac- 1 \He went on mine.\\ : 3503'3WOT000000 fémJufi Rmmud - Copyright, 1903, 1 By the S. 8. MoCture Company > ' OQOOOOQQQOQOOOOCO '@ | Ha. Life is too short to waste in trivi- h, Mildred sat down with a gasp 3 'was consclous of only one ap last. ed to forget. Ke lend me & dollar I am \Aunt Urania & I fost my purse, and uu-v SPRAYING GRAPES. D E M not Prevented Seven Spraying:- t two hours she bad merci- : per ~She lushed scarlet, but with a light laugh | aid relessly, with her eyes on the I Bordenux. and Soda Bordeans. Hor 1901 Professor A. .D. Selby of the | T Ohio experiment station reports in the Ollo Farmer entirely successful work _n the prevention of grape rot by spray- He says: Little f, EUF m re than seven acres of the vineyard | ' with fungicides. were. sprayed under the arrangements made for the experiment, A certain - vineyard row was unsprayed. Other- ! Lrows, section A, werk sprayed four 'times with bordeaux mixture and three : [times with ammoniacal eopper carbo- - . | enne nn mes ' Wl‘hey Always Ike-pod“! When the T Voice of the Muessin Calls, stan \his Mohammedan begins his prayer. ig, with his hands outspread - 'and his thumbs touching the lobes of | \bis cars. In this position he repeats | 54> rtain passages from the Koran, then |© ' brin s his hands down to his: girdle, | I foldg them and recites several other] passages from the same book. Néxt he |. bends forward, rests both hands upfon: nées and repeats three times with |E bowed head the formula of prayer to |. \(cane Be- Solved! At a lecture at the Royal institution 'on the fascinating subject of \Magie Squares” Major P A MacMahon, F\ ¥B e cw» ecscesess 6:30 Hope Factory esse. cessees '| ners, 0., and would like to. meet an old ° Tfact-the little silver bag Which» God, the most great. Then he rises and - hotly. \It is final.\ Cook Summit.............. se cccscsees - 69 Hartwiek inces cas. ceesccceccssessase . b South Eartwick ............... oa &: Mt. Vision...... .... Laurens :... .... ....... vevessesss West. 0neonta......~.... Oneonta.... ae oe oe oe secsse And every hour thereafter. Last carf leaves Oneonta at 1030 p. m.,. and only; runs to Hartwiox. Last car leave Coaperstown at 11 :20 p. m., and calyx-ans to Bartwick. Jahangir-rammed common O) comme\ ro‘x THE EAST. |_ ARRIVE LRAYVE: No..10 Oneonta Local......... vcavcscs«» - 745 am ... Q.blLaim. 9 56am .- 4.06pm. 4.10 pm No. 4 Boat Expres 7 . 7 81. pim. TALpt, No. 6 Passenger .. No. 8 Boston Ex re + No. 15 Binghsmton Local\ : friend, he will be cordially greeted in | I broke fol! our. correspondence L ]. ~COomensing April 14, +02.) . 85 amt 4lvam a y, | the red parlor. If the conjecture as to 'm] identity be incorrect, please send reply | by bearer, as the writer declines to | meet a stranger.\ Thalia Lambert, with a thrill half of : 'I fear, half of daring, thrust a coin; into. 'the uniformed. messenger's hand and, . bidding him make baste, slipped be- c they f inoved to. Denver. they had gone to Helena. 'Thank good-: Her knees shook under her as a tall + well formed man of middle age entered [-the roont' and looked arpund inquiring | Then she came from behind the' {palm, and these two, who 'had been plighted lovers twenty years before, | f ly. iet once more face to face. After shev' ' heard I . E ness,\ if it fsu't Chester Ballard he { can't find out who I am!\ Thalia never was able to recall just \Don't say that, Thalia. Very few things are final in this world.\ : toward him as if for protection. \But it is Anal,\ she whispered. “I dare to come back,.\ gseemed to grow rigid. . sband- away?'\-be asked as if -I cross examining a witness. a “My promised husband!\ gasped Tha- | j, \Why I've just refused. him.\ \My darling!. My darling!\ .. . He snatched her in strong arms and vided for in the statutes of Black: i stone. épnrtially freehersélf and to pant indig- | nantly, \How dare you!\ any schoolboy, but he looked totally un- repentant and remained in. dangerous bave sent him away, and 'he will: not. | Judge Ballard's tall, dignified figure? And why have you sent your prom-1, '] showered: on face and hair fervent and | | specifically injudicial kisses not pro-: Thalia, half drowned in this | flawless onglaught, finally managed to | He only said, \I couldn't help it,\ like- 8.3 am | what was said by either at first. The } { dangled from her belt when she tea out some hours earlier was The warning solemnity of his tone | 'carried a chill. Insensibly she leaned | gone and with it all her money, A watch, the key of her trunk and v | ous little odds and ends dear to'! heart. Stranded on the exhibition gro 'miles from her hotel and her c 'This was her punishment f the face of conventionality as personl ; 'fled by Aunt Urania. - She did not. at- I tempt to retrace her steps in search- 'It. © She knew it would be useless. A sudden realization came to | I that she was deadly tired and horri hot and hungry, She rose with the sudden, impetuous little movement 80. ~characteristic of her. ~ And at that moment a man who! been watching her intently from th next bench rose also: and approached“ her, bat'in hand. As she was thus suddenly brought face to face with him she started for- ward impulsively with ofitstretched: hand, but almost immediately her hand | fell to her side as with a cold halt d you-\knew it, for it's the A. cent With me! Just to nccepting charity at your l‘mped to her feet and turn- was at her side in an in- a sai‘ pleadingly- \yours TH confess, deat. st. as it reachedthe- ground fiperhaps if I could get you commissioned you to buy for | u said I might pay my cheon: you knew that: minute, Milly. I did know it | I saw it j @ \ nate, Others were sprayed four to sey- © {en times with bordeaux mixture and. f {Boda bordeaux mixture, section B. spoke 'he plunged 'his hand into | his . many pockets and drew: er: belt bag. - Mildred seized % \Why it's: mine?\ . iddenly with Qstern,,i t eye, she went on | times with the bordeaux mixture and the ammoniacal copper carbonate. The acres of vineyard. were sprayetthough less thoroughly than the plots snag“; experiment. 'The unsprayed rows yielded no 'class grapes because of rot, but ninety: | R ' inine baskets, or 702 pounds, of poor | b ifstme you deliberately invel-. ¥ h winé grapes were gathered from the 'one-fourth acre it contained. These [sold for $1.50. Sprayed rows. of equal | larea beside this one yielded 305 baskets | ereyes brimming with tears. 'of eight pounds each, which gold for '$30.50: gross. Other unsprayed vine: rying a gentle hand on her<{yards in the neighborhood yielded as I this unsprayed part. On the gection A, sprayed with bor-: 'deaux mixture four times, followed by | A } third section, G, was sprayed eight remainder of the estimated eighty | “11:04 the 'The results are very striking indeed. | ammoniacal copper carbonate three- :d, and something popped out of | __ f Los. ething that encouraged me to | . Bixtegn times. e. ed.;; sire to show humility : He then returps to his k tling back upon hig heels, repeats a ritual. ° words, \'There is-no god but God, and Mohammed is his prophet,.\ - 'Thig may be repeated once or a dozen or forty. times, according to the piety bligations are then accomplished, but he can go through the. same ritual -~ | by the number of times he repeats bis | prayers, and, like the Pharisees of the ; 'cries, \Allah hu akbar!\ (God is great) 13 He then drops forward until 'his tore § head touches the ground between his © extended hands, He strikes his head ; fioor at.leas hree times, pro- $ h Next, arising to his» féet,. he}: \holds 'his hands and concludes the 'prayer, repéating over and again the | \.Of groups-a& fascinating branch] | mathematies which 'has an important 'of the worshiper, and he holds a string - of beads in his hands to keep tally. His- again as many times as he likes. The - 'more frequently he does go the better. : | Moslem he is. His piety is measured century a erward, confessed that it was beyond 'his powers. ° ‘ Mador MacMahon, who has added go much to our knowledge of the thesory of bearing on many branches of physical : sclence-has not yet found a key to the »mystery. \Whoever. can solve this problem or {prove that it cannot be solved will achieve immortality on the lips of 'mathematicians and perhaps open a door into a new realm of the gcientific ; wonderland which is called pure math ematies.-London Post. * 'P proximity. No. 1 Pask@rger i...... Thalia, her cheeks burning and her. No.. 7 Chicago Express [Scriptures, he prays in public placés. I '~.1°\°lm- 10253!\ 'unetpectednéess of the meeting made‘; .No matter where he happens to be or' m. | both perfunctory Then Thalia re- | bow she turned away. . Catching a MaskelHunge. or we haven t forgotten, either go, lg 511k ae Em. 9 o doom 0. cage Express......., 6: No. 3 Chicag $ No. 9 OneontsLocsl....... . 6:30 No. 19 Pass'gr, Sandals only. 1100 sm . 11-:0%am . - Trains 18, 6, 's. 17 and 3 ran on: Supday. . 'Time tables showing local and throug service between'stations-on all divisions oi D.. h gigstem may be ebtained at alFD. & H.tick 8. «-i- OOGPIBITO\ & 6, V. H. R. In Meet April 14, 1902. TRAINS SOUTH No.1. No.5 'No.] No.9 No.l1. AMs AM. A.M. PM. PM:, Lv Goc rn .... -6 00 9 G0] « Plimnix Kills »«» -8 19} 9 05 5“th ok Sem...*6 iltord ..........B $4] 9 1! dvill 6 48) g Ar Davenport Ctr. aa C TRAINA NORTH. No. 4 No.6No.8No.lONo.ll AM.: A MX-PXM. P Ar Cooperstown..... 4 1¢ * Phoenix Mills e 4. as Hartwick . [# 't Milford ..... .... # Portlandville ... «* Junction.... .... z Ly Junction .... .:.. / 4 W, Dav.(U&D) 7 2-2. ** Wost Devon 't.. bid Davenport *Stop on signal. Trains leave. Cooperstown f -r Phoenix Mills ' st and 5:46 p. m. Ret minimise“ Phoenix Mills at 7:97 a. m. and: 6:07 _ Trains 1, 7, 8 and 8 connect at portwith U. a D. trains. [ABKWANNA Milli“!!! Errrc'rivs JAN. 26, 1902. est Daven- FROM BINGHAHTOK WEST: 1 #0 a. m., Daily-Buffalo and 3-00 a. n-'.. Dilly—Limited, arrives. at Balms soc a m., Dsil --Fast mail, arrives at Bunnie up. Way inicagosleeper, (also Ithaca ; con sec B ) 1t ‘15 a m., except Sunday-Local stations to P. O.. 8 ‘25 p. ile Dsil -Observation parlor car, diner. - chicago and St. Louis sleepers,. also Ithaca connection. 8 42 p. m ily— for Bun'alo. C ugh coach and sleepers: and. Chicago. mar. 1:25 a.m. Daily—Sleepers tor New York, also coaches 4:25 &. m., Daily—Sleepers for New York, also phizand south ai rvice a room ':conches 11:00 a.. m- copt Sunday--Ve estibnlsd coach and - srlorcars forNewgork. Philadelphxi and the south.. , : 11 50 a. m Daily—Local passes .,,.' m. 7.03; 0 Express... i««« 201 sm. .2.06am | : about yourself. pm riaxed 1 \I was determined if it were you that: : you should not go out 'of town until we ; had talked over old times. | Helen? Did yeu bring-her with you?\ | \I am here alone on business,\\ 'he f | lsaid with a grave dignity which seem- | | ed to? reprove her fiippant manner; ' shall the here ten days: only at the fur- | T thest! My milssion is 'to handle -the in- terests of a mining syndicate, and:then But téll me all|f you still Thalia‘ F return to Helena. bert, free?\ puts her neck into the marriage That evening they dined together 'I The constraint .of thelr first meeting! © *) had worn off, though the judge 'had | | been told by a mutual friend that Tha» | Ha was engaged to Stewart Curtiss, | Ilunching. with | Thalia, had told her that her old friend [ was now a wealthy 'and influeftial lawyer, likely to be nominated for the'} T-senate. and Curtiss himself The orchestra played \Love's; Young\ | Dream\\ as they dailied-with their cof- 1 fee after dinner. Judge Ballard - smiled' | gcross the table ft his companion. \Do. you remember all the foolish Ht- | tie things we used to do in the old'| acade emy days—the notes we aged to' ' write 'in classp\ “Have there been other times, {Itha- ;f Hat\ - \Why not?\ defiantly. \I| times. That's a woman's record.\ =~ let. ; s: and : pauper: tor k C tics and intermediate stations. c dimming. daily—s 105. &. Bs a Trains f 4.56 %. HH., & 0 y. R T rates, routes re ations, etc , 4 ply to -J. L. Smith, Lsckawsu a Tickets nt. inghamton.. Q Gen'l Pass. GET ESTI MATES a FOR YOUR ienced workmen, good stock, the L lowest prices consistent with ' good. work, and. the Job completed on time. Agt. : consensus D: P. A. | him \The music throbbed in Thalia’s veins. . fHer‘throat swelled, but she met his - After that they were more or less : formal. The last night Of Judge Ballard’s vis- | | came, and it was 10 o'clock hen he . rang the bell: in the act of departing almost ran into! | whims stood near her desk pale ' Thalla's flat.. How is- ‘lI : B5 [) Thalia was smarting a little. Here' Q| was the old, masterful manner of the | 2 [- one man in the world of whom she Had] ffevcflbeen affraid; She gave a. coquet- [tish shrug. - .]} .\I am none other than Thalia Lam- < “bert, Jand a woman is always free until \Of course I do, But do -you remem- ber the' time we- got caught? I wrote\ ; igift? Do youl : love - t wrote. on; the mar-! gin: “pal: past 10 :Of.éourse I do\ And Professor Foster got hold of it and! # wrote onthe bottom, *A pretty time of‘ | day. land sent It to me.\ ' \Well the old man was right. Wasn’t | it a nfee time?\ * “0h, yes,\ vaguely-\that. is, nice tor | the firstltime.\ 7:85 &. Mi Daily—Scranton, New York, rhilade A. yesti uled drawing- \Surely; many other times—times! \ and 'half\ times: and times. between (ZJurtiss| - i; never ~ 4 gmail pitchers. I right to say that! You should have re- . membered-your wife!\ fdead for five years’” supported her tenderly. \You inquired about her in such a - way that for the moment 'I merely said . ' that I was-alone,. intending to tell you about it. later. When -I asked you if . you were free, you' gavle 'me an evasive | answer,. so when. L- wis told: on the att- érnoon. of the same-day that you were you had deliberately equivocated.. I met him here. You said nothing. What | was L to think? Naturally I withhe = my own confidence and got what pleas- : ure L.could out of: 'the last times I ever IF expected. to nee. you Then, .you told. i me Just now-and-I couldn't help it.\ ~His voice deepened to & sonorous . whisper -a# he paused, but 'Thalia's . ' head was bowed low on his breast, and | he felt her quiver. . 'Dear, gre you. angry?\ No answer. . . '*Are you angry?” - Bitence. He deliberately lifted up ] her face and . put Blackstone to much more cofifu- :| -ston-in the same illegal manrer as in | ; the previous case. . ~The silver chime of- | the clock on the mantelshelf struck the half hour. =. [+ Thala pushed. the hair out of her: | eyes and: laughed. \Half past 10. Of course I do.\ F,, ———-———-*——-—' A Scotch| Ring. 'The traditional history of the Scotch ° regalia ring is of thenmost tragic, not lieved that it was the, Tavorite ting of . Mary Stuart and that after her judicial | murder in Fotheringay castle It was nation at: Sonia in 1033, it played a dis- finet part. Once: more did thisi11 fated © ring fAgure, atanluntimely g@#d il} merit | ed death for, 'with almost his last breath upon the seaffold at Whitehall, . 'F Charles bequeathed it to Bishop: Juxon itt trust for his sou. In 'due ésurse of time the ring came: . was. carried away with- -bhim on: his light to the continent. When, however, | ' ie was detained by the Ashermen at Anly escaped robbery by the luckiest of- < mistakes on the part of the sailor who \ed on uninjured to James' descendants . till by the bequest of Cardinal York it ' became the property 'of the Feigning: dvnasty once more and was by then re- _| for many a long year.——Good Words. no Didn’t lay It. lived not many \Inile@ from Boston. He . \ | called-her names. when her orders were Next: door lived little Rosy, - fan angel. | but with strict -orders not to take off | hig hat and coat to go in the house if | Rosy could not come out into the yard. | Rosy could not come cout, 'but would not Harry take off hls things and play | er's. injunction. § crossly. . jhat «Rosy died\ said {won-d.” 1 \No mamma, I won't,\ said the duti- | tor Harry. ty desired to do. bune Forowarned. Agent-Let me | erimeé. I'm not.a cnipple. Agent-Of course not, but it's always | well to beprepared for emergencies, es- Filthy Temple in- India. utcd 'byconstipstion.' - Don't permit it. Sleanse your New Life ~Pills a gestion, fine ap tite, armchair-r Only 250 | heart thumping, gasped' \You have no - . \My wife! Thalia, my wife has been ' He.caught ber swaying term { , nce in | R I this. Is Miss Carson with you?” engaged to Stewart Curtiss I thought | must ask you to excuse me. eld | 'but. you said nothing of our he | lowship of a year ago. Let uggo. back; 'to where we were last January-dolly 'good chums—and let's put in our | devoured it with-artnclm-And-then-beé. | fogath Anto the bargain. w {despite what one may .say to the con-:|\ 'trary, are not wiped out of remem-A | brance by a word. - \What time is It? Do you love me?\ | | she said freezingly. | turn. to the falls now. - Good. morning!\ .to say'melancholy,. character- Tt is be- | transmitted to her son. From James it |] descended to Charles I., at whose coro- a lat her feet. {| into the possession of James H. and , theerness, the ring. which. had been | secreted in the, king’s underclothing, | journey. [friend I cannot perinit it. searched bim. Thus the ring was pass- - placed among the royal Jewels of Seot- | land, from which it had been separated | A op a ~ gelzed with a strong desire to: 8 | the aggravating smile: from the | face beside her. He was a good little boy, and he 1 fsobeyod his mother, 'he fever ; | not his wishes, and he had the face of |dred. You lunch without a 'thoul |a gir} who proved 'the proverb: about | One day Harry was. | allowed to go over to play with Rosy, : I inside? ' Harryquoted sadly his moth- \Your mamma is a silly,\ said Rosy; (Milly as a matter of co | er liked to lunch with me: in thblo ill “She is a very; | Mildred.\ mighty littleiglrl \ his mother ~de- | *You must -hever say such a . | - A few days later he was again for» . bidden-to-do something which he great-~ \Mamma said he, | 'lMfting to hers: his angelic face, \do yow | . remember what Rosy said about you?\ ' I~ —New York ‘rpeclally here in New: York—Brooklyng Sacred cow's'bftcn defile Indian tem-. les, but worse yet i# a bodyuihat’s pol- ¢stem -with Dr. King's | id -avoid untold misery..\ ive: lively \livers 'active bowels, | 'repulsed. \Good morning,\ he said pleasantly. he fell into step. beside her, apparently unconscious of her frigid bearing. 'A direct question cannot be ignored by any one with the least pretensions, after a second's hesitation, was con-. 'strained to answer coldly: \Aunt Urania is at the falls. morning!\ detaining hand upon heer arm and, dropping his half bantering tone, said | seriously: \Look here, Milly-yes, I may call‘ you that by right of old friendship,so . don't blaze! Lam here by myself, and; TI am deuced lonely. « |J parted, you. said you had wiped out & When we I8 memory 'of that-that. other, business;, |. good fel: “W. 28 Mildred hesitated. She, too, if \I think that would be, impossible?\ \I am going to re- \Well you're not going to shake me like that anyway'\ he cried cheerfully. “I am going to put you on your car at- But.Mildred, in the awful conscious- ness of her penniless condition, fushed scarlet. If he insisted upon putting: her on the car, the conductor would just as flrml insist upon putting he off when he came to collect the fares. 'In her desperation and exhaustion she own upon & bench they hap- pened to be passing. \I'm tired \ she said, digging little holes with her umbrella in the gravéli| \I must take a rest first.. 'I don't want to be rude, Mr. Gaveston, . but 1 think L wished you good morning\ 'some time ago.\ - 'The man, undaunted, seatéd himself.l © ‘beside her with a smile. \Look here, Milly,\ he said decidedly i \You are too tired to start on that long As' your brother's cloges I amex -ceedingly hungry. May I have th pleasure of your company-to luncheon T would greatly enjoy it,. and it 3 find it so distasteful to eat at my pense-why, you may -: share. Ply let us have it together, Mildred's face was burning. Sh \I-II don't care for anything to € I she fbbed defiantly. \The only thi desire at present is solitude.\ ~ - -\I am really not dsking much, Mi} t. with dozens of other fellows Why 10! with: me?\ she answered coldly. cut up when I tell him,. for, he 'me particularly to have an eyeo | Do you remember when\ he ' brought me home with him at the 'Of our freshman year? You hed skirts and curls then, and I. call Mildred fitished uncomfortably, £ \Well} if you insist upon my leay you’ -he rose as he spoke-\of cours {I must, but I'll be writing to Ton night, and I'm afraid he' 11 take it. when he hears that you have shake other business, but he may as we \know now.\ - Mildred arose. . \Then if you'll promise not to. | that, why, T'll-I'l take luncheon .you, and-you may pay for It.\ 1 finighed 'migerably, gulping down bow you something { | very neat 'in the way of artificial limbs. |- \ 'Mr. Busymam—ansense' Don't both | pride with an effort. He bit his lip as they turned in tn “Thank 'you very much. an honor to do so.\ vived rapidly, and before she: aware of it all her chilly cons was gone, and they were laughing . chaffing each other just as in the dear old days of bon camaraderie.. } s\. rested luxuriously on the soft, grassy a and all ug‘ * But the man. was not to be so easily | 8 \Surely even mereacquaintances may . i to good breeding; therefore Mildred. But I | Good | She haif turned, but tke man laid a | y.. “I carry it-she began, with cad. in the air. E' at me while you tell me, dear,\ 1, turning her face to him as Ta friendly tree. suddenly. do care still—and—always shall'” Poor Richard’s Almanac. at wiséfi'q‘SDrive thy business, let it\ 316: E ning * v MC | would 'but confess 'it, was \deuced \palos\ \Constant (11013111118 wearsaway | 'JoneJy\ : and tired and hot. and hungry Still, some things, [ lrive- thee;\ \Help hands, for I \ands \No gans withc \\Thréeé removes areas bad as- , 'He that by the plow 'would firiv \bimgelf must either bold: or: drive?\ \A. fat kitchen makes a lean I:\ \Experience keeps a dear school, (but fools will learn in no other.\ It was. such 'homely maxims as these insetted in all the little gaps of the al. ange that ma e it so popular. . Frank- id he gometimes sold 10,000 copies ' A& year, a wonderful sale for that \The first number of Poor Rich- I's Almanac appeared in 1182. Woman. Woman, the gentlest of all creatures, apt to become masterful and even tyrannical 'this because she is a crea- in whose composition emotion dom- B,. 'and emotion, when highly stim- | ulated, becomes passioxf” and passion firns all reasonable Hmitation -and be: tyrannical. women with more than ordinary firm . will and.persistent purpose; these, when A thepassion which is natural rd more tyrannical than men. Quall- cation to the intense action of the im- sgloned soul : 18 treachery, and con- diction. is. 'treason. Like a stormy. reall contrarieg, And from this predominance of the emotional element At seems plain that, though she may try - 'I must draw' the line somewhere-.f' _ \So you draw it just in front otyonr 4 brother s chum! Poor:old Tom! H6} be direction of the Midway, but he only“ . { sald gravel; hank yo. 1 account it”, Under the combined influences of | much needed refreshment and a € 'l oughly congenial companion she . When they left the restaurant, they | . strolled down to the lake, where they | i Anysthings and succeed in most, she: By -, «ber norfnal outfit, materially: tated ige.-Daybook of John Stuart 1d Time Moon Beliefs. \to the moon the farmer looked or. dlcations of the weather. If the a ‘oon lay well on its back, it was £ dry 'sreather, but if it tipped 3 extent that a shot pouch ch an - t_.-depend upon the water pouring time of changing had a good a lack of - agreement upon this At; was generally conceded: eated fair weather. isfble.: within the circle indicated: y‘como ”Eyes Only For Her. a-You don't mean to say you he-allowed to drain right on to you. ¥e that he is in love with me? He atnrnlly. 'éantly in that hurricane you described atthe club last night? Browne—Well I should say it was the blow—Yonkers Herald Saved From an Awful Fate. severe sickness, caused by Hay Fever | For desperate throat and | 'colds-and Bronchial affections, drugs-sta- G nd it is absurd to prétend that} - But, if you don't really care, { little, why do you still carry | - _ .And he opened his hand, in C \Because I do care,\ she finished | IR weakly, with a little catch in her voice, | .@ -'\Kave cared ever since I first saw you, | for. Franklin himself in one of the“, ‘ ug | was At. quite a. little. Besides, there are { {seven sprayings, 't hang on the lower horn you | do with the 'weather, but there- umber of days 'before the rain: Naney-What better proof could I | {ticularly yaluable against plant Mce. dn't the least idea that it was rain- | , the dear man!-Boston Transcript. | “Everybody said I had consumption,\ | writes Mrs, M. A. Shields, of Chambersw burg, Pa,. \I was so low after six months | id 'Asthama that few thought I could get well, but Liearned of the marvelous | merit of Dr. King's New Discovery for | consumption, used it, and was. complete- {ly cured.\ A lung diseases. it: is the safest cure in the. 'world, and it is infallible for coughs, | Gunman-- 'teed bottles b0c and $1.00. Trial bottles. l they stood in the screening shadow of | Dsl aP _- Her dignity vanished amuienmnnemadie * GRAPES SPRAYED AXD UNS] sprayap. itimes 'on the standard rows, the area 54 76 acres yielded on an average 1.217 | baskets per acre. . On section C, sprayed .] with the same mixtures, the average | from & little less than. an acre was This section tn the 1,254 baskets per acre. eastward from section A. . Section B, sprayed with bordeaux L mixture. followed by, soda bordeaux | mixture and situated between the other | 3two sections, yet much nearer section | A, yielded from the 1.39 acres an aver- | 'age of 1414 'bafikets per acre. Judging | 'by our studies, we suggest a possible favorable influence of this soda bor- | 'deaux spray upon the foliage as ac- { 'l counting for the increase in yield above ', .the sections A and CG. We could notice no différencé in the +amount of rot, yet the berries seemed . |fuller and the - clusters heavier. V‘clusive of the part under experiment | Ex- the - vineyard averaged 600: baskets, eight pounds. egch, per acre. 'We do mot think so large A& crop~.would have |. 'been possible on the part under experi-~ ment had not the previous crop or crops | been light and the ; vineyard in its | \prime. The cost. of treatment in each case | was about $7 per acre. We recommend | beginning on the | shoots one to two feet. long—that 18, - just before blossoming-four of these sex, become intolerant, masterful: 'sprayings of bordeaux mixture and 'three of. soda bordeaux or ammoniacal | copper carbonate. FAQ Stable Manure Not. Harmful to Beets. | Ind they will have their sweep and | Extensive experiments have been lconducted at the Geneva (N.Y.) sta- Hon to test the accuracy of the state- ment that sugar beets are of an interior . tquality when-grown on land to which 'stable manure is applied in the spring. - from being a statesman | ar ppl spring. | Comparisons have 'been made of the quality of beets not manured,. those | [grown with.commercial fertilizer, most- | lily 1,000 pounds per gcre, and those |: [grown on land receiving in the spring {'before planting the beets from 40,000 | to 80,000 pounds stable manure per | 'rore. Beets from at least six varieties | a of seed were grown Guring the four - | or 'sreall or is. crooked, but it always | years. .> 'The results are almost unanimous in | lone direction. The beets have been . 'of high quality with all three methods ° 'of treatment, averaging somewhat bet- ter with the farm manure than with | AQ manure or with commercial ferti- & before noon or before ilizers A | p halo around the moon was & | h of rain, and the number of: Anlenlttsral Notes. R Nitrogenous: fertilizers used. alone- proved inadequate in forcing lettuce at . 'one of the stations. Better crops were - gobtained when stable manure was add- - ted. - Some of the authorities conclude that - \It is possible to exterminate San Jose cepted that Mr. Spooner? Why, scale in small isolated orchards of p zgwkwagd gm Ilfiiow' 1 sagv |umall trees by fumigation.” Iding an: umbrella over you the. d day, and all the water it caught: {potash is an excellent remedy. Tobacco dust or tobacco water is par- | For all insects that suck the Bap whale oll soap made from fish oil and A Sad Mistake. Visitor-Pardon my curiosity, good man, but what are you in prison . for? Prisoner-I am serving time for steal- ing $50,000 from the bank I worked for. Visitor-That was a sad mistake. Prisoner-I know it. Curse the day I| didn't steal $100,000.-Ohio State Jour- | nal. A Silent Part. Grooves-That's Bascom. He isn't upon speaking terms with any member | of the company. Foyer—You don't mean it! What was the cause of the ill feeling? -* - Grooves-Never was any cause; al- 'free. at °R., P. Lucé's, Hartwick, and all} ways the same. He has only thinking parts. yon know.—Bostnn Trangecrint. p | has arrived; | ; of 8 ~ The keep of one dog costs as much as | | the keep of sixty hens, and sixty hens | { will lay 600 dozen ergs. __ Jones—What 'struck you most signifi-. ;, my | to pray when the voice of the muezzin- reminds him that the hour for devotion -* NOT so VERY GREEN. The Florida. Mun Rather Evened Mutter- Up With the New Yorker. . came to live in New York, he woke up to him a novel scene. It was a snow- the first he had ever seen:; Jumping into his. .clothes, he ran into | the street. He stooped and gathered: handfuls of snow and threw them in the air. He jumped Into a drift and | sent it fiying with his feet. He finally; | Tay down and rolled in it, all the time} | shouting and laughing at the top- of his., voice. 'told him how his mother used to cure fits and volunteered to try it on biro. \I haven’t any fit,\ the young man ] said...: “What’s 'the matter with you, then?\ *Why, don't you see the snow m | . \Yes I see it. What of it?. I have seen it before.\ ‘Well I haven’t.” said the Florida young man \What! You never saw snow be . fore?\ asked the astonished questioner, : i1:;\l’\lever. Seems strange to you, don't \It beats any sample of verdancy I { ever run heross.\ \ \Oh I don't know,\ mused the Flori-. da leracker; \Did you ever see an alll: are not so many: After gll. Ihave seen tul‘ of snow down his shirt collar he : ursued his. Joyous gambolsr-New : York Mail and Express. STORIES MADE WITH FEET Mina! Mek- In the Wood Which | Betray Identity. 'make exactly the same. The track | A4 anguished from that of a rabbit or ~Gog. And, more than that, the | ack of one coon may differ from that | an insight into its life. Thus a trmous | igrizzly in the west was known by his: { track. One of his toes had been cut | oi! by a trap, and the difference that | made in his track was easy to -gee. To come nearer home, our common , experiences with steel traps. The | marks of these on their feet often add | {peculiarity that identifies the animal. 'In other cases the track is extra large | keeps the main features of its kind. | find, always Aketchirig nature, never from memory, an it 18 always best to. make them exactly life Size: —Ladies’ Home J ournal . Our Debt to Our Mothers. ._ fan Maclaren in The Christian En- deavor World paid -the following beau- tiful tribute to mothers: } \The person to whom you owe more 1 than you can ever pay or even. imagine. \ is your mother. She endured more for : you, served you more patiently, loved 1 you more fondly, thought of you more bravely, than any other person yo ] have known on éarth or will ever know save your wife or your husband, if in- I deed they can always: be excepted. If] . your mother be spared to you, then are you bound to make her a first charge | on your life, as you desire a peaceful = conscience and as you shall angwer be ~ 0 YP,! fore the judgment seat of God. Shei must be encompassed with every ob-] I servance of comfort and honor and w, gentleness and jove, with sacrifices | ; also, if #0 be it will please her, of | | tastes and occupations and time and 5} , | even. friendship, and after you have \ pisint done all that you can think of and any with she loved you » Appropriate Treatment. The Thoughtful Man-What would: | you recommend as treatiment for a man. who is: always going ground with a t poor: mouth? The Funny Feliow-Send him to a dentist.--Yonkers Herald. NMM‘W“ sme meas “churn-m“ .. | by whom he is surrounded, whether at | . labor in the fields or selling goods in | | his shop or however he may 'be em- ' ployed the Mussulman never forgets When the young man from Florida one morning last winter, and going to the window, he looked out .on what was One- of the crowd which had gatheredé ' to watch his antics went up to him and | gator eating a nigger? 'No? Well, you | it many times.\ And, throwinga hangd-[ Fach animal makes'its own kind of | track in the mud, snow or dust, No. | coon is never like that of afox, | . an . the track otafoxisreadily 'dis- | of his own: brother, so that one can | sometimes distinguish the track of a | © given. individual and by seeing it on | ‘ diderent occasions get something like: The track of one sort of animal rarely |~. need be mistaken for that of another, | _. and the A B O of tracking is to learn | the chief kinds of footmarks that are .[ . Ito be found in your region:. The: wayto { learn tracks in to- drai one can suggest you will still remain a | 'd' ] . hopeless bankrupt for the love where- *. e er a. ' Mike br. You feel the drops of sweat on your forehead, though the early morning air is as cool as the 'breath from some snow clad mountain. Gradually he weakens, and you know that, barring accident, you 'have won. Up, closer Tand closer, you draw him along till at 'last he floats there within a foot of your boat. No eyes so wicked as a musky's. 'They glare up at you like an angry dog's, seeming to watch every motion 'you make. - Be careful. Here it comes, his final despairing leap: for liberty. As 'he makes it his powerful tail sweeps against the stern and deluges you with 'water. But the hooks hold, and once more, for the last time, you draw him 'again to where the guide waits with a revolver in his hand. A shot back of thoge glittering eyes, a shiver down the whole length of him, a swift jerk into the bottom of the boat with the gaff- hook-and you lie back in an ecstasy of ' exhaustion —Scnbner s The War-horse. The horse in war is-expensive, fragile 'and a fool. He is greedy, and his food gis as bulky as himself. He réquires an expert to keep him efficient under hard work and a miracle to keep him alive under heavy fire. He must be watched and. guarded more carefully than the Hnes of communication both in action land in camp. He is a coward. The race of them that snorted. \bg! hal among | the trumpets, the noise of the captains -and the shouting\ is dead, if it ever lived at all outside the inspired mind { of the plague stricken poet. He ls a 1 traitor and will desert to the enemy at | the first opportunity, probably with three days' rations in his saddlebags -and a useful rifle in the bucket-Spec: I tator. Iii-nauseaQ 'The general postoffice at Paris once received a letter addressed \To Mon- 'gieur, My Son, Rue --,\ etc. Tzhey | were going to send it to what in France | corresponds to our dead letter office but a clerk objected. '\There must be two fools in that : family,\ he Said. \We shall find out to ' whor it belongs.\ Sure enough, in a few days a stupid ilooking youth entered and said to the : clerk; \I'd like to find out if you haven't kept here a letter for me from my fa- 'ther.\ - \Yes sir,\ replied the clerk. “Here it 's.? Pusrled. \Well daughter,\ observed the kind lather, \now that you have gone through college at an expenditure of four years time and $6,000 in real inoneywapd, as near as I can study it : out, you show a net gain intellectually ~Of being able to recite your class yell . and possess a new and strange accent animals sometimes have unpleasant hin your voice, I can't help but wonder ' what is that 'vocation in life' you said all this education was to fit you for. ' Were you intending to be a brake mah'i’ ‘Raitm‘nm Afflflmfm . en- ing tan is gen t 18 In somme cases is. too : T omas iA. ubstagon aC c. Co umbus , writes : was ith. severe: cramps » “g not est, then Han an ' dig oi: weak so fy coals \pad allthe com- ctored the worse I had become so . the house by the ) thin I had fi'wm up Then advice and a izcoveryvand . ; so thought ge . anothe 6 storLl-md taken cight bottlesgxen . sf: weeks, I was weighed, and found I > had sined twanty-seven { pounds I am as. - stout: and heaithy to-day, I think, as I ever was.\ Frum. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense . Medical Advucr, per covers, ll sent fies on receipt of 21 one-cent stam a X. V. Hues-Mead” Ad