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Oot alot Coat +B agia rbs cs & f 3 i 1 1 i 1 i I \gs-f +20 ~ £25067 < oa,\ Sune seers lae c..%~»~wc,,‘»ov‘rx7 8 00 a. m Ia Dail 8-00 sum. nail --Fast mail, arrives at: Bullion 0. e. & R0\ SQ’R. R. Time Card. gong roam- oneontg-nui-ishs“cargoes-nu, J Woe@t ONOONtR ...; 1 Mt. vi ion...‘ toottsflt «sea sae00s see 988 ‘7 A! South Hartwlck HAUEWIGCE Gook Summit ONRRAO, cs cece ss eases}. Hope Factory. dee ces COOPOFSEOWN . . ccc ss cesseaseser gong scum. . COOPRTSLOWBN... ... qc in ccsscenveccesise Hope Factory « Chase Beca ave ces ies cen see see accsesese ree Ae aa wie sea escésceea se se ae wee cesses C2 Mt. ViSIOTi...... .... .... .s Lamiurens.... . ... ... West Oneofita.............. ««, 8 :00-% 0118011178“...... seee same seee seis «JU a And every hour thoreafter. Last car, leaves Oneonts at 10:30 p. m., and only ; rung to Hartwick: Last car lpaves, «Cooperstown at 11 :20 p. m., and only runs- to Hartwiok \ - Welavarsand Nodien Esilread. | [/ gomencing June 16, +09. | FOX THEEAST. ; R tra No. 10 Oneonta. 1:10:in....i3.5.‘m gig %: lee ie e » No: & Hooton Express... .... - 10. 5t am. 10. No. 15 BinghamtongLocal..... $20 am | No. ifimfii'm‘ O. H + No. 17 Milk.=. ...... No.iSPsesenger-“uu Kxpi rams 8. 6 Time tables silo wing local and throug 1 train service between.stations -on. all divisions of D. & H. system may be obtained at a I D. & H. offices. | a coo passions a; q. van In ”Erect June. 16, 1902. - TRAINS 80m © No.1 No.5. No.7 No.9 No.1t | A.¥. AM. AM. PM. PNM. | Ly Cocperstown.....soo 11 85] $ 25] 5 * ~ Phoanix Mills ....8 12.9 00; 11 41} 3 81 ( rtwick Se *9 04 45)*3: 38 \o € e‘ Ar Cooperatown:... 10 an» O) 1- i 91:02ng Mills ..10 99) 12 13] 1 44] 4 Hartwick . moon, Olp . a Milford ..... ... 10 18] H1 88) f 21} s Portlandville .. .10 04] 11 24] 1 Lv Junction .... .... 9'55 ll 100 1: Ar Junction...\ ses» 7. 32 *W »Dav. (C. & D)= 1 124035, t Wast Dayeap't.. | - | 10 3011 « Davenport Ctr. summed“; 26,1902. . m., Daily and Chicago alsepers. $00 4 \a P4 yy---i. united. arrives at Bpeal 1 +00. m. bloago meeper, (also Ithaca con- it: lg B Wi, except Sunday—toes! station to'\ 13 | for- a: special effort. .mire you intensely in the individual.“1 taken singly, but :| 'SE.K Raya) 'O l.distinction. A multitude of rare wo-, ‘~men brought together in one building {IQ CCI \I T JEALousY AND PRIGE, ~ sto s A Through One Writ These Two Appear as Virtuen Mon Gen kind: words and a caress, but there are some- unhappy persons whose jealousy {is chronic and who make themselves A ridiculous and -&nnoying by their fits] 'and storms of jealous passion. Indeed: itis of dementia Pride P8 the! strongest ‘colitro er: of | <.. 10.00 ava 10.05 am | € shunning-u: j. * 5th hlrpitudez-San Francij Tl Bull ON‘E MAN’S FINE cou‘cslT Kass!“ of lien, no lays. odd thing about women» re- | - marked .We adote you whe‘ , At's &. strimge sad fact that when a few! hundred; of you get. together you lom = ‘lmdoubtediy ade~up< of ideal mothers. RC and wivessbut‘one resolutely l-ejtusesi. mgwssg - mass meetings onl , : , 1 A* the-world. An exclusively feminine tea | | BI ;was.neVer an object of envy. to. those 3s. fdiee criminal, 'the sight does not lack fin- | liliessiv ness. The imagination plays. FROM momma wast. Sut t fat smoker\ and 'speculates: as: to-] \the quality of the cigars and the st fries. And & good;: shareeof the world. Fe purpose; Union--to us 48 strength“: and the novTelist lways, remained | {Below \whet! the door \of .the, banquet |, Ithaca: 'nall was opened for the filing out of { 3 43 p. m., 'Daily-Throu coach and sleepers fgr tunlo. Cleveland\I aud Chicago. . RAST. 1-25 a. M. .Daily—Sleepers tor new York, sisal; i-25a.xn.. Daily—Sleepers for New York. also ° _ _ com . 2:08 p. nu, Dali parlor car and vestibuled - id nadelpnia. . New York * Trains for Utica, all “intermediate stslioss _L iy—Nh B. in. and t 4:50 a. m. “mum &: 551), mwexcept . For Syracuse, a rates, vations, efc ,. with. Lsckswsuna Ticket [£0 The latest style of New Type, expat; ~ ieniced workmen, good stock, the |- lowest prices consistent with good work, and the job- completed on time. As we pay cash for stoc and labor, work must : for when taken —Lnsited. diner. obsenstionli enaches. Saran j yroutes. reser: | fthe iadies.”~—New York Tribune. m’l'lln“ That Gout. fiCi'omweii believed 'that howlegged' ' men madethe tsoidiers. Washingr. bones. \Receding foreheads were thé | rule among hig generals. © Alexander | I-the Cireat judged men: by their teeth, | those having very large canines bein, . A Welsh Town“ er's Bpeetacies - J . L w There is a little jealousy in. all per- ; Away In A Md m] sons and especially in all women. . It n; | springs from deeplove, which always ' A\ desires to be first in the affection 'of | . * | the one beloved. .A lover, whether man | * M| or maid, who is not susceptible to occa- | ; ~ | stiongl twinges. of jealousy is not truly I| c | in love. ° : | , While Jealousy, considered with ref- | _.. | erence to its origin, is not an ignoblel, y, | emotion, 'It is frequently absurd iu-its |\ m | outbreaks. A father is sometimes up- |: I0 a m |-set with jealousy because he imaginesE f :10a m [-that his wife loves the children more |- ® | than -she loves him. Mothers are fre: |- i] quently jealous of the husbands or \| wives of their daughters or sons. n | become jealous of the 'Bisters OF MOK | man ; ers of their husbands. No one is im- g; ir no influence rk mune against the little green bacilli of }, ives ° | + ally \the teats .or frowns of); 4 jealousy are swept away with a few +. The [ | jealousy of’ such pérsony is beyond rea- | son. - a ' - andwdhughtr busy V‘. I which begets: every‘sort of violence.; | the ds f 'he-is fs pleased as -the o ; his native place: isifam ted ‘fi‘aveiing‘ man, Means y | ”rehab; of Wo-en, Bonnets. <a 5\ <+ “lt’sum ones-to.his: wife as he settled || *We ad PS. It is said that Cesar chose his gen-. oc 6. I believeitis a Napoleon's-f , generals were selected by. their 108€8;. preferred fis commanderss—New York; ‘isanencl' ere the Feminine ° Sek Reigns Supreme. . | the 'Pémbrokesh lage entirely mar ‘Langum—for suc aged by women. In is the hamlet’s name nether civilized or not 'are bvy estab- \ ted to compassion. 'S1tt ', \his\ éoftage brood playing Al \by no mental anis ‘~ % :0 of all: resporial iiities; of are, oyster for which - -—London An- | he panic that * Fengued there 4s; on\ incident that stan out in my mem{ ry, illustrating t slender thread b 1 the ridiculous. \f strike everybody at: fers “laugh foliow‘ &C ved, and there inf. Bergen. Norway. says. “Hot rolls and © white :brea dial-e rely-seen in Sweden.\ ~Rnackbrodé:or har ard> article of -: m ~ It 1s. made: of | :the bread, and It is .rulled into th wafers. which are baked. and. hung: up where they will) keep perfectly; dry Swedes eat this bread and drink milk 'for two'megls a y and have one meal at which thzey’ at meat and potatoes. iveetd: are alm «unknown. Children Why She Want yd am Introdsetlom ~ \Why yes;. cettainiy,\ replied 'her | ry | friend, and at 'once brought it about.' [- Later she asked. “What made yoL Ns keen about meet» \ ing Mra; 8.1 . You gazed at her as in- | teiitly as 1¢, you. could not take. your | eyes-from her while you .were talking n » er ound he sointerestmg\ Ato * lon't know whether she 18 in- tel-eating, 'but didn't you see that. love- ly tie she wore? [t just. \had -to find out | how it vas: ‘madef I know 'how to. mafia} one exactly like it now. Just Jet a \Or flnything of that- so: I\ t and I'll reproduce rod never'.could: tell the' copy origins ”—=~New York Press. C . of everything t hasfever cohle w‘thin the range of it hings may be hidden #4 without giving 'any token | -of 1 their existene The heart may be | gay and may se d the smile roantii 'to the Tace, 'but all :the while you, a? \only the topmost stratum. Itihegmv 8 eneath. were to give up their dead, the | siniles. would germ; strangely out of lace. 2T oal fie seyen: and «on half times 'the diam F of\ the‘ base‘ By this rule 'on an nter. ome: women? You Somebody figures that there are 1 437 his\ tutor “You teach me. .I Te nple in' India. , offen, defile Indian tem- 'body that's pol A MAN AGAINST A NATION | The Most Curious European. War tered little nook on . ~eoast there is a vil- ' \1 from his hands he was betrayed int a further act of hostility by treacher .and, being captured,. suffered death of sglonal men in London today: Scot,. whose business ability is above [ the average, but everything he does is- | done with the air of a man constantly ‘wrestiing with some problem of the: | soul. He rarely speaks unless spoken [: |- to. He never smiles, and his eyes have ~] a fixed but intense expresgion. ~] day he was returning to London. with. a- | several companions. ' he | ty were 'Rceotch, but the companions | e? \| were of genial type. 'a. bumorons tale, 'over which the rest I | laughed upronriously. ] man problem. l \I the railway carriage his | t \I mirthful 'Friends.\ \Ward however, when all were standing at a street corner before separating he ; took one aside and said solemnly. and order a er. that.”,—Phiiadel- » | na' leugh'at yond' story. Well, I saw 1 have a keen sense of humor.\: breadsisthestan- : groundwats and ry e..'ihereis no yeas t : i cial Tribune. _. e - \I must have a, Antroduction 'to that | a woman.” 20. Briggs—Borg: you know Mrs. Dul |. Figgs~-No,\ : the other women' talk about hen—Boa * I ton Transcript I . althy 10oKing : amps. who was . that \he was better . | ly the sound of a chisel | burglar.\ 41 | sleep in church the way you do. That; 'Eyer Was Waged. , The most curious European war e ever ; waged was that which in the sixteenth century, «the—period of the: reformati [.and the renaissance, was caftied 0 | single handed for 'between five' gand six. 'years betWeen A bankrupt grocer of\ | Berlin and the. elector of Raxony, who _| was 'the most powerfubGel-man prin | of the period. Hans Kohlhase, and\ the jmmediat | cause of the quarrel was the arrestin | of two of his horses in the elector' The (greeer s name wa territory, he being a. subject of th | elector of Brandenburg. Failing to: < | redress, he adopted. what was then '8 -| perfectly legal expedient and decia | formal war op the realm.-of Saxon] .The declaration was accepted in 3P | form, and the. war began. Te The extraordinary part of, the 7 -* | 48 that the grocer kept the war: nearly six years practically, as; t i \handed and even went to the ex ' in the meantime before he was caught He 'burneéd farms and even villages; 'employed mercenaries after the fashion | t | of the times and made himself, the ter- E | ror of the district. He was finally in- | | fuenced to stop \hostilities by Lauther, | 'and after he had taken the sacrament the wheel after refusing an' act of- | grace which granted him the painless | and Honorable death of the aword. The: | story is perhaps the: strangest of alt. | the romances. of that romantic age. He Saw the Joke, Here is a true story of a curious per- | sonality well known to many profes He is a; One: One -of them told\ 'Not so the hus He sat in a corner of Half an hour after: |. slowlya \Ye. would obsairve that I did . the joke. Ye might not think it, but L- London News. i An Impossible Tusk The committee waited: upon t \a suc- ~$t _ \Your fa: e: has precededsyou # they.] 3 room.f Be smiled \You have given names to sleeping“ cars. 'new \cigars health foods. and. games-names that have pleased the public and your patrons?\ ''The successful man bowed. . \Well said the spokesman, \we have ; Cl - a new baby at our house, ang we hav come to you to select a name that wil : please her parents, sisters: and broth- ers, grandpdrents, cousing, . uncles, | aunts and friends of the family and herself later on.\\ > tela The successful man frowned stern \Sir he said, \I do not undertake | the impossible\'——Cincinnati Commer- |- , Life In. New York. Nobody Mving outside New York knows how difficult it has become. in 'that city for people of moderate means . to bring up their children in the love' 'of genuine things. It is still done by | many, but with Increasing elfort and | only by dint of a strong will and an- Anheritancée of the truest gracesmf life -- simplicity, the domestic affec:: tions: and the love of nature and \one's: kind. It is to the cultivation of. these . 'graces that we must look for a rescue; from the frtificlality and the vulgar} : ty of the pitiablecircle in every Ame fcan city known as \the smart set.” Century - Telling the Weather Fro” lusts. \The motion of- mists, rapid or slow, was regarded as -oné of the best meth: ods of foretelling the approach: of Ta . or snow. When there was A . mist be-‘ - fore the rise of the full moon, | were seen in. the west beforg the su ' rose of there was a mist 'In the fields | before sunrise, wet weather waser- . pected,. When the mists vanished rap idly and the moon seemed to rise fast- to gladden thehearts of the mgerrymak: ers on the succeeding day. When th winds changed and the clouds flew : Along on \tail the farmers predicted: e A. storm. Railroad Time Folders. The average person who picks up a [, railroad time folder does not.. realize: . ; the enormous amount of work whic the preparation of such a publication» . Involves. \* he big Burlington systeng, for in- 4 . stance, has a general time fo mad up from sixteen different division tim . tables. The folder-contains 2,l)00 naniésg | ' of towns, gives the schedules of over; ~,000 trains, and whenever there is A change in time 60,000 . figure; have to. : be carefully checked and corgected. No Smoking. «There. is one country in © the worl where it is. considered a crime to smoke} —-Abyssinia. The law forbidding to- was at first merely intended t? preven | priests from smoking in the ¢hurche E but it was taken too literally, and now> |; . adays even foreigners have to be care ful not to be seen smoking. Concedes! It. . \There 8 a burglar in the hquse, Ben-| > Jamin,\ said Mrs. Frett, arousing her husband in the dead of the morning. \Lear that?' she continued. \It's sure #¥ou bet he is,\ sleepily returned. \ Benjamin, turning over for Another) nap—Richmond Dispatch. , Couldn't Improve the Method. Mrs, Chugwater-I'd be aghamed to: Mr. Chugwater-I can't help it. It's the only way I know how to sleep. Chicago Tribune. aas NATIONAL CAPITOL. fIe’r Were Treated Long After Come red ‘siill rtist's Curious Blunder. tis « curious fact that the same sthe remains and shrouds of King | 'The whole par- } ibody word King Rdawar posed, but . bacco dates from the year 1642. 31} Dlétures is f He's a safe“ | ly: :cured.\ . used to preserve four of the great his | paintings. perpetuating scenes | I tion and establishment of | flexunder the supervision of theartist | the. artist were proved to: be welt | founded, for four years later the ip | changes on the surface of the paintings ‘ came so apparent that congress | ssed a' rtsolution authorizing their ‘removal from'the walls of: the rotunda E edge of. the preservative chemical com- pound was drawn on, .* \In a letter to corigress, dated Dec. 0 ditlon of canvas. Trumbull says: \All of the paintings | vas, but the back remains bare and ex- posed to the deleterious effects of damp | 'AlF,; 'The effec West that the- continuance decomposition or rotting of the can- and\ prepared them for the preserva- . '\ tive.: On 'this point he continues: \I | -| had: learned that a few years ago some of the- eminent chemists of France had examined with Great care some of the view to ascertaining the nature of the had proved that, after the |- 1 application: of liquid asphaltum to the | cavities of the: head and body,: the | -| whole had been wrapped carefully in ; many envelopes or..bandages of Mnen 'prepared with wax. ,The committee of vivid brightness: had aiso been pre- stance.. en- cloth, waxed. ' Within: this envelope | were: found: splendid robeg Of silk,. en- friched [with various ornaments cover-p filtrate finger, in\ bandages 'of fine linen and not only was the body not decom- 'such . scarlet plece-of sarsenet which erwjard rubbed . in with hot Jrons until | 'the cany ordered - Spring doors. were also 'Blacta ge . ;. __ Another 1 shown the - Washington resigning his commission. Saved From an Awful Fate. burg, Pa. 'and Asthamg, get well, but teed bottles 50¢c and $1,00. gglsts. OUR HISTORIC PAINTINGS IN THE”. lion and' When They Alresdy' Of - Dissolation -- An' ‘ stimulus of cold bathing and 'the ] combination of. chemicals\ which pre- |- ved in a. perfect state for over-500 | ward I. of England have also been | himgelf, but not- without much hesita- 'tlon-and objections on his part- because | e.dampness of the walls and air in] -the rotunda at that. time. The fears of | if possible. ' If was at this | point that- Colonel . Trumbull’s knowl- I 1828, Colonel Trumbull explaing 16 deaf il his treatment of the paintings at | at time, and an inspection now of: hese Tour pictures shows; that they | 'are in.a perfect state of preservation |: both as to brightness 'of color and con- | translators. : a 7+ In 'the letter referred to Colonel f.KiR%n£t:actAezse§;iafi3f ggar’ were tiken. down, removed from their | Italian editor Who translated a pag . frames, taken off from the panels over | hich they Were strained removed to | dary, 1 iy and: carefully examined. The mate- - \Flal-which formsthe basis of the paint- { figs is -a Hinen.cloth whose StreDEt) | porate expedient of the French tr insg- | and texture are very similar to those | 'lator of Cooper's “Spy \ who had to | An the :topgallant sails of a ship ofwar. . The substances employed in forming a (| proper surface for the artist, together | 'with the colors, oils, etc., form a suffi- | 'clent protection for the face of the can- . : of this 1sfirst seen in- the form: ofmildew. It was this which | I dreaded;-and; the-examination showed | T:that mildelvlwas Already. commenced {and to an\ extent which rend | of every mansion for the convenience: g t same: exposure 'for a few years, longer: to it. would have accomplished the complete | 'A vas and the bousequent destruction of | 'T' the Balntings.\ . - Colonel Trumbull then explained how . he first: thoroughly dried 'the canvases} ancient. mummies of Egypt with a. substance employed by the embalmers . which the lapse of so many ages had | >, proved to: possess the power of protect | \ing from decay &. substance otherwise | so perishable as thehuman body. This |- chemists decided after a care:\ ful examination and: analysis of. the? 'Hferoglyphic paintings with Which the i \casings ete., are covered, that the col- \ork: employed 'and still retaining their | ] cella e lean clothes. __ | \pared and applied with the same sub- ice oo\ maca t \I also know that toward the 'close | 'of the last . century the Antiquarian | Society of England had 'been permitted | to open and-examine the stone coffin | (deposited in. onevoffthe vaults of West- | sald to contain the:| ¥d.1.. who died in} On removing the stone | 14 of the -coffin-its 'contents werefound | ; be closely enveloped In a strong lin- | -which had been 'dipped in melted wax, er than usual, fine weather was sure | | he' varlous parts of the | a a. scarlet satin: mantle: laced. over, the face, were in per- | preservation,: even in their colors.\ | iel Trumbull then :states,.that, | nowledge,. he, melted com:] Wax and mixed with anequal | ity 'of 4011 of. turpentine, which | m re-was applied 'Hot with brushes“ rfto the backs! 'of the paintings and aft- | 'cloth was perfectly saturated. The |- es in the walls were backed with |. cement: and! the paintings 80 placed | in them that! air could circulate behind | ; In the entrances to: the | rotunda 'by Colonel Trumbull, Since | that treatment ; these. paintings -have |. flotillng dong to them, and from | resent appearances they need noth- | culiarity in one of thesevi lnted out to persons being | pitoi under the care-of a | fide,. and that is in the scene of | 'The two daughters of Charles Carroll, | {-who starid embracing each other, are. {given live hands —Washington Star. Y - **Eigyerybody said I had consumption,\ writes Mrs. M. A. Shields, of Chambers-| \I was so low after six months. :of severs slckness caused by Hay Fever that few thought I could] - Tearned of the- marvelous: t merit of Dr.¢Klngs New Discovery for ,'consumptlon,, used it, and was complete- [ For desperate throat 'and |- {hing diseases it is the safest. ctire in the' world, and it is infallible for coughs, | | colds and bronchial affections, Gugran-| Trial bottles |. $20: at .R, P, Luce's, Hal-Wick, and alt . | ~~ Harpy suwarorr. ~] Pee-llsrities of One of Russ? Great. Mllttsry Commanders. tits of & plain diet. , Buckets c think them edeminate . He despised dress and delighted in drilling his the in mhirt sleeves. sometimes with his \4 soldier whom . he saw - moving wit“ a' paintings were put in plac e in? plercing. cockcrow in. commendation. of : . his early rising. During the first. [Po- lish war he had given orders. for an: attack at cockcrow. and a. 'Bpy in rthe at 9 o'clock in the evening, when the arrangement had been made, [for' Buwaroff, suspecting treachery, had: then turned out his troops by his w known crowing. The enemy, expect- ing the event in the morning, were ens tively. unprepared and fell easy victims to his forethought. 1 “Tomorrow morning,\ said he to) h troops on the. evening before the stoi ' break I mean to get up.. 'I shall + @ and dress myself, say my prayers, one good and then capi are ' Ismail!\ - . e k Curious: Translation Errors. Some amusing errors are made; by . An. Italian, paper turned. Into ; Another sage from an English paper about a man who 'had killed his wife with a ; poker added an ingentous footnot to: ~. say, \We do not know with certainty. | whether this thing 'pokero' be A do, hes- |. tie or surgical instrument.\ explain how a horse could be hit “ed \to a locust,\ 4s worth recalling. |He had never heard of locust.trees nd . rendered the word by “sauterelle, 3 or grasshopper Feeling that this né I some explanation, he appended a f t- : note explaining that. grasshoppers: grew to a gigantic size in the United , States and that it was the to. 'place a stuffed specimen at the door' . of visitors, who hitched their hol The Blnejsy. One may pet or patronize, according to one's nature, a clipping 5 Wy T bluebird! or phocbe; but he 18\ 1 eed | welt coated with self esteem who not feel a sense of inferlority in presence of- a . jay. 'He is such shrewd. independent and mg, shive ing the fall and winter,. \when -of birds are quietest, he becomes silen gifts. § thrasher seem eager to betray the tion of their nests to every: passer - but the bluejay gives no eviden f . the site -of his habitation by being seen Ir Its vicinity.-Frank M. Chapma .3 Century . a A . Precocious Diplomstist. ' Boy-Oh, mamma. I upset the salt- Mamma-That was careless. Go ' brugh the salt off, and see you : soil the clothes. \But momma. when any one salt they have &A quarrel don't the?” \So they say Addl salt they 'Gon't have a quarrel. that so?\\ >> \ \Yes that is so. But why do lyou ask?\ \Well because, . mamma, . it wasn’t the salt I spilt it was the ink » - zeal and Knowledge. The . Outlook. crowds an unusual. ' amount of practical wisdom and good | sense into the following paragri ph: \Zeal without knowledge, often ¢ _ demned, is more valuable than kn wi- edge without 'Keal, often commended, | for zeal without knowledge inspires life, and life gequires knowledge; but | . knowledge without zeal sits in} its | study, plays with its books and does: nothing. All the greatest: things in life | knowledge \006. - A Curious Relic. left Versailles forever. It is said tna when the 'box. containing It : brought In the queen exclaimed to her “What & sinister plaything to gi chilat\ The sinister plaything is now | 'added to the: other revolutionary Jects preserved in the Hotel Cam\ va- let—Landon Chronicle. > A not Come Bsok. u President of the Getyourcoyne Gas | Company—Heavens, doctor! ¥ou don't . mean to say : . me $8 for pul Ing. one tooth? Chronicle. *- -- ee A Truilsm. ' generally comes to grief.-Philadelphia | Record, He Is No Hypocrite. ing. for your wealthy uncle? Jack-Only a black pocketbook—Chi cago News. e Jne of the commonest forms of luna- agines all others have no sBense.-Mem- pll.s Cimmercial Appeal. coro in , ore ne enim \ \ad # camp | \carried. the news to the enemy. | -The attack however, really took place: Conspicuous by voce and a action: « if ble. , There is no straight line in nature. It is for this reason that groups and. don't | P spills | “Well then,' if. they don't spillf‘the , Ten't | 'have been accomplished by entjusi- . asta whose zeal was greater than hnelr | you are going to ch rge 7 Dentist-¥es; a dollar for pulling the | | tooth, the balance for gas furniglied | I at. your regnlar rateés.-Ban Francisco | When the undertaker is sent for, he: [ cy is that when the insane person im- | [ astrres WHILE WE SLEEP. 1. The Muscles sud Org-us of the Body Are Still Working. If the organs of the body cannot be : : muscles, Witness the phenomena of t ,_sleepwalking, the postilions: in stage coach days:. who slept in their gaddles | fand cavalrymen who do it today, in- | fantry who have been known to sleep - 6 ion forced marches, sentinels whowalk : 3; their beats: carrying their guns in a: gflxed position while they sleep. For ; all we know policemen may do it too. ° | People who talk in: their sleep are fa- ; {xofliar to all of us. Experiments made | A number of things might Bbe | . [proved 'by these statistics. Of these , | sleep talkers onehalf -of the women ' 7 | and one-third of the men are able to . Answer questions while asleep. More. | which they had been taiking.' It has also been found that most sleep talk- ers are under twenty-five years of age. | Evidently, then, with the muscles' 'and organs of the 'body all working, it [1s the. brain=only that sleeps. and by | no meang all of the brain. The senses of sight, hearing, touch, smell and [taste may 'be very much awake while the subject sleeps. A sleeping person - ] hears | and answers questfons, rear- ]ranges his bedclothing. covers his eyes [to 'keep out the light, draws away his | {hand when the experimenter tickles It. [ ing of fsmail, \an hour before _| A child is broken of the habit of suck- . | ing his thumb while asleep by putting ter taste and dreams of wormwood. | {The nerves, then, and the brain cen- | _| ters corresponding to them.are awake. | | A busy lawyer, exhausted by over- L work, one night went out to. supper | ' with some friends, ate, talked and walked with them, and the next day remembered absolutely nothing of the [ occurrence, Hehad not been drinking. tThe man was simply asleep during the - 'whole evening. His conscious mem- :ory-that is, consclousness itself—slept. | -Ainslee's Magazine FLOWER AND TREE. R Fruit trees and fruit require potash for their 'best. development. changes of temperature should | be avolded. Too many trees prevent rapid growth 'and extend the time when a grove is 'well shaded. 'Grapevines-like their roots to be near : the surface, and the food for them should not be placed at too great a> { depth. - Small growth and too much small ' C fruit go together. Thrifty growth fur-. | nishes a few large and fine specimens . + of fruit.: 'There is no use in growing a tree very tall. 'The top limbs are apt to be- . | come slender and break- if fruit is pro- duced on them. By choosing a. 'rainy day and not exposing the roots 'one can sometimes manage a trans. \jferenoe. Avoid straight lines as much as possi- | masses are so much better than formal | or get beds‘ > ~ What Pussled Louis. - Louls: Philippe was a wit. Whit he , fspecially 'éxcélled in was: the \clinching 1 of an argument, such as, 'for instance, | 1. | his Anal remark on the death of Talley: |- “rand. «-He had paid him a visit the day | , | before. When the news of the prince's : - | death was brought to him, he said,; L f“Ar‘e ~you surefihe 1s. dead*\ | sure, sire,\ was the answer. j=did not your majesty himself notice | «very “Why : yesterday that he was dying?” \I did, - a | ances with Talleyrand, and I have |! been asking myselt for the last four' jcould possibly have in departing at | this particular moment.\ A Queer Library. tated in the Mbrary of Warstentein, 'near Cassel, in Germany. The books appear at first sight to be logs of wood, , but each volume is really a complete | history 'Of the tree it represents. 'The 'back shows the bark, in which a small | place is cut to write the scientific and - common name as & title. Cne side 'shows the tree trunk in its natural: J.state, and the other is, polished and | A varnished. Inside areshown the leaves, fruit, Aber and insect parasites, to. tree and its products A llstter of Fact \D6 you see. the horizon yond 'where the sky seems to meet the earth?\ , \\Yes, uncle.\ \Boy I have journeyed so near the _| that I- couldn't put a sixpence between my head and the sky!\ “Why, uncle, what a whopper!\ -_ *\It's'a fact, my lad. I hadn't one to put \—London Tit-Bits Excellent Explanation. why is a wife cross?\ | \Before marrlage she was an I A | After marriage she leaned on another 'I, and they formed an X. Of course | ~ she's cross, and so are you, I'll bet.\- New York Times. come your friends A boy is usually ready to eat every Inherited the Business. Casey, the humble Jady of 'the corner fruit stand, \Faith Of'm: a descindant [ of Eve, the first apple woman!\-Phil C adeiphia Press. Tom-Are you going to wear mournm A Business Bead. mule from you?\ - Tey. It were sech a good chance to get de beg' of de trade dat I oouldn’ he'p ad vancin' de cash \—Washinston Star» alee {eaid to neither can the voluntary | by , Sper, Armstrong and Child onz200 | ; Leollege students Of both sexes showed {that 47 per cent of the men and 87 l. ;. 'per cent of the women talked in their - .| sleep. women than men could answer ques- | tions on. any subject, not alone that- 0 #1 ive jaloes on it.: He is conscious 'of the bit- - With house plants all extremej ) |_ All members of the poppy family are . | hard to- transplant. 'but there is no Judging from appear- ~A curious collection of books is con- which is added a full description of the | . trellis“. Thoughts. Thore is some seed of goodness in qthings evil would man observingly | distil it out.-Swift 'Its ever my thought that the most (rod-fearing man should be the most blythe man,.-C. Fox. - In thy right hand carry gentle peace to silence envious tongues Be just. and fear. not.—Unknown. What'er thou.lovest, that, become thou must; God, if thou lovest God- dust, if thou lovest dust.-IHymns of 'the Ages. | Unbroken sunshine and perpetual \heat make deserts only. Clouds that | bring no rain shelter no garden—Par- song. -In the thought of God's infinite love lies the gleam: of light in the saddest 'destinies or the most perplexed enig- [mas of the individual.-Farrar. 'Tis. worth a wise man’s fest of life, 'tieworth a thousand years of strife, [if thou canst lessen but by one the countless ills beneath the sun.-Ster- ling. - We can only begin to do work Chllst’s work in striving .to make his 'world better by personal innocence, | by personal holiness. Ah! how many will stumble over this entrance! -Far- rar.. In gll matters of eternal truth the goul is before the intellect; the things 'of God are. spiritually disconcerned. You 'know truth by being true, you recognize God by being like him.- Robertson. If there were men who had never 'been . awake during the day and had never once seen the sun or felt its - warmth and if these men had come to . [doubt ever the existence of the sun, their doubt and every trace of their {agnosticism would 'be instantly re- moved were they $o -come out Gut once {nnderthe sky in which the sun was {shining. In like manner all doubt and Jagnosticism with reference to God are Tinstantly removed by coming into ] God's light.-Rev. W. S. Fulton. Regarded as symbols of Jesus' love 'and sympathy, the New Testament miracles have a unique value, 'but the moment they are put forward as proofs of his nature or workithe ques- tion of evidence and testimony arises, and we are diverted from the spiritual experience of the soul to the problems Lof sciences, philosophy and criticism. Tt-is also well to rememher that Jesus 'left no account of himself, his work or . his claims and that what we have in {the New Testament is the report of those who did not always anderstand hlm.-Rev. F. L Phalen. When the fOOllSh man wants to buy Or ~. sell anything, he rides ~all over the 'country in the hot sun looking forthe party of the second part. A 'wise man {pute a few lines into the newspaper, {and lets them go all over the country for him. Whenever any man has a horse or a cow to sell, there is some . other man somewhere whois waiting 'to buy them, but these two men 'might travel a week without finding each other. Advertlsmg brings them together. * A Callastota mauufacurer went to lOneida last week and drew $1,253 with which to meet his pay roll. Not having: anything handy he rolled it in 'a newspaper and on. his way from. the bank to the station dropped and lost it. 'He rushed back in time to meet a stranger who . carelessly kicked the parcelashe passed along and was as- { tonished to gee the greenbatks roll out |The: money vies all there. The blgbureau department \of agri- culture at Washington is preparing to conduct a systematic campaign of ex- termination agamst common house flies, A- caréfual luvestlgatlonreveals the fact that they transmit disease germs from place to place and viewed from neariyevel'y standpomt are a first-class nulsauce. F \ We do good lob prmtmg at reasonable prices. Call and see'sampies. ._ Benefit your friends that they may { | love you\ more dearly still Benefit 'your enemies, that they may at last be- [ time he. stops playing. —Atchison Globe. \Oi'm. descinded from: Brian Boru, (I f I ma' am, Oi'd hov ye 'know,\ declared |. 1 the haughty Mrs. Fitz Clancey. e \Is. thot all include?” replied Mrs. |- \You lent him the money to buy that |© “Yassir,” answered Mr. Erastus Pink \It doesn't look like business, but: 7h L sell. her Health - ¥ hnd she would tell - ' you that the choicest in the: world 'buy it. What “Why is a wonian-honest, now- |, \M e delicate I and the gen- is perfectly restored. mkable benefits E: eatablishes regulari nin draine esglilllcaltyn mie great pleasure to be ° few words in regard to © Pr. Plerce's. Favorite ; f motHer. At Aed life I was cred with painful peri- ubiesome drain which