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VOL _L. 0s(‘h&R-Se l‘el‘eI _-_ Time Card. GOING NORTH. cic cscs se cc s cesese ses c 6s WAOSE ONOONU® . e ee sssecscccrssssesee Lanronsg.......... ee secsce cecses cee wes cei MB.. VISION ca o 4 :8C South Hartwlck.,............«.....0 C3 HAPEWIOK s cain veecccesccsse Cook burnout ««« Ch888.u.,§. ...... Hope Factory,........... Cooperstown .. ...... gona soUTtH. COOPGNtGWn...\-u.u.......'.“...‘uq.i Hope Factory se ese e oa a saa. Cook. Sumtalt.......... s i2400+.z20e, South Hartwick.......l.,...... +a. Mt. VISIONM...... ieee sass «as Taurens... . ... ;.. WESH gree .a seee seee sins sise ses... C0 ® _ Ang every hour thereafter. Last car leaves Oneonta at 10:30 p. m., and only;. runs to - Hartwick, Last ear Tenvea Cooperstown at 11 .; 20 p. tm., ani only runs. to Ear-twlck . Fox THE EAsT. No. 10 Oueonta Local ; No. 19 Milk :5pm.1 No. 4 Bont: Express... 354mm. No. 6 Passenger .. 8.12 pm. No. 14 Passenger #= . 12.20 AM. iC EST. No. 15 Binghamtonihocal...“ I No. 1 lOilOann ( 12.30 pm. 12 40 pm : 1.20 pm 1.30 p No. 13 Passenger-\nu\ G4 No. 5 Chicago Express...... eh‘lpm . No. 3 Chicago Express... .... 2. 01 am. r No. 19 Pass’ r, Sundays only 11.00. am. 11.01“ Trams 8, 18, 8, 17 and 5:ran -on. Sunday. Time tables showllig local and. through. train service between stations on all divigions of D. & | Hmsystem may. be ebtained at all-D. & H. ticket: offices. ; OOOPIBSTOWI Q 0. V. ll. K. In Eflect June lb, 1902. ' TRAINS SOUTH. No. No.5 No.7No 9No.11 AM. AG AX. P. Liv Cooperstown .... - 00} 8.55] 11 351 3 ..6 12) 9 00 11,4]; Ly Junction...... . \ W. Dav. (U & D)..7 20/10 O5) 12 27) «* West Davenport.. - [10 15] 12 Ar Davenport Ctr.... 10 23 TRAINS NORTH. No. 4 No.6 No. 8 No .10 sou ' AM. PM. PX; Ar CGooperatown ....10 351 12 20) 1 40] 4 B «« Phoenix Mills ..10: 29 : 12 13) 1 24) 4 a Portlandvllle “do | 11 24,1 10] £ 21/6 Lv Junction .... ««. 9 551 11 10( 1 02] 402] 6 Ar Junction.. ; 32, 1 | * W. Dav. (U&D). 7T 21 ** West Davenp't.. «* Davenport C't'r. * Stopon signal. _ Trains. leave: Cooperstown fair Phoenix Mills | at6:44 a.m. and 5:16 p. m. Returning. leave: Phoenix Mills at 7:07a. m. and 6:7 Trains 1.7. 4 § connect at port with U & D. sins. LACKAWANNA RAR EFFECTIVE J an. FROM Bmem'ro't WEST, 1 :20a. m., Daily -Buffalo and Chicago sleepers. 3-007 1.5 IB +4 Daily—Limited, arrives at Bunnie 2. m. 8 00 a. m., Dail --FPast mail, arrives at Buffilo : 'hicago: sleeper, (alsoofiha ec it? » except Sunday—Local stations to. 3 ‘05 p. m., Daily-Observation parlor: car; diner; | Chicago and St. Louis sleepers, also Ithaca connection. . 3 42p. m., Daily-Through coach and sleepers For Buii’alo. Cleveland and Chicago. RAST. flfia .m., Daily-Sleepers for New York. also aches ids a.m .Daily—Sleepers for New York. also: coaches.. 7:55 &. an, Daily-Scranton, New York, Pbilsdei» phizand south dinér, vest'buled drawing- room service and regular coaches.. | ; 11:0 a.m , except San ay-Vestibuloed coache and parlor oars for New York, Philadelphia and the south. 11 50 a.m.. Daily-Local pa 2:08p. m., Daily-Limited, diner. observation parlor car and vestibuled enaches. , Scran- ton, New York and. Philadelphia. x 5:55 p. t., except Sunday-Local: passenger. 11:5 p. m.,. Dally-Coachers and. sleepers tor New York. Trains for Utica and intermediate stations.. _ m., and 4:00: p.m. daily-8:05 a. m., and |, except Su) & Owego and intenufiiéie sta- tions, 5-00:.m,2:20 and: 3951: Mm. y—8‘15 a. m., and 8. 10p.m.exoe it Sunda For informationr ghamton. n’l Pass. Ticket limit. E. J. QUAKfiBUSH. D. P. A. GET ESTIMATES FOR YOUR 3 The latest style of New Type, exper- ienced workmen, good stock, the: lowest prices consistent with good work, and the job completed on time. |_ $4 As we pay cash for stock | 'and labor, work must be paid for when taken. Strabgers will be required to make & deposit when leaving order. \ | nary, spam mnvr 4C 8.22 pm | 4 i tientlis | be sure it the patient that 'only -a t r $ .be taken at a time and that at stated | est Daven- . ca con: | .a given area. ing rates,. routesfreser . vations, etc ,. Iglply to. J..L. Smith, Lackswanna [trades unions in Nineveh and: Babylon, | : and so strict were their rules that in | charter of his guild or I exa tly the same state of. ifairs ex- Matar tL - p C PLACEBO PRESLRlPTlQNS. f An Old Doctor Tells a Secret of His | 0 Profession,. “Never tell a patient that there is A+| nothing the matter with him,\ said the- XM [old doctor, who was revealing the se- |- '\ crets of his profession. \'If you do, you { {make a lifelong enemy and: lose your [¥ m | patient, who sends for another doctor. | ] Give him something, if it is only favor- | 6d water. If the disease is only imagt- - cure the imagination with a | harmless dose, and your patient gets: i | well. In the profession we call much © 5 a nx} prescriptions 'placebos,' and more won-. :60 m cures are effected by placebos * Athan the world wots of, So, also, when . M lyou run across a patient who an- ~,, | nounces the first thing that he cannot & m} take certain sorts of medicine, don't & m-! tell him he must. Agree with him and - $0 im give - him the medicine, if 'he, needs it, -in a disguised form. - ~ \There are thousands of people who . labor under the conviction that they t tomorpect it young; t you gravely impress u ) intervals 'The whole virtue of apiece bo exists in: the solemnity and lmpor tance with which you surround it.\ \| New York. Press FLOWER AND \TREE. taual, easy and worthy A place BL in the garden,. The birch grows farther north than '15 | any other tree.. Next comes the §t- +] berian latch and then. the fir. _ 'The dark spot in the center or A bean iblogsom <is the nearest approach to black that occurs in any flower, Sunflowers may be'transplanted quite easily if the work 48. done on & rainy | {j day or in the cool of the evening. - .. Preserve a green, lawn in the- center \\the: 'garden, however smill This Is to fet off the flowers and for | |-purposes of relief. - Mignonétte is so: unobtrusive that its | - | presence is often betrayed by its sweet {Scent merely, but a large bed of mi-~ .gnonette should bein every garden. been noticed with the clear solution [ thus made. L That \it is never too late to set out | Troges\ is a true word about gardening. But “the; enrlier the: better. go long. as the frost is out of the ground,\ is: a maxim no less Worthy or dependence. A Spiny Mon-tel » redeemed by any milder facial attri- 'btites, a Hzard called after \Moloch hor- - rid king\ Moloch horridus is- pro-emi- nent-among reptiles, Thebody of AustraHan reptile is so covered with 'apines: that, as it his been-put, pature seems to have endeavored. to how many.spinés could be Auserted [on But, unlike its tute eity. who Beems. reall to have spelled mane the blood of:- children. It is, in- deed, vegetarian and only fiery in: that It hag a curious faculty of absorbing gand drying up water, A specimen - placed in a shallow dish was observed 1 to attract the water like A& plecé of . blotting paper.—-Westminster Gazette. | , Ancient Trade- Unionn. , Seven thousand years ago there were | some cases. the* penalty of death ~ inflicted\ for infringing them. Each man's 'work was strictly defined, and 'even the number of hours that: he v allowed; to work Was=:sta ed in P \rand women - fiild identical - vith theirs’. Read what he says, and note I| the. similarity | «of. your own . d get a per- of what is was. aston» | ~ ferers tolgivc these-remedies a trial,\ . Sold by all Druggists - on guarantee. faw. about hin Balpiglossis 1g a pretty, showy an- : : gscertain | Later | {handed she fggafdmg I f and waten ’~\oi' her roo P c. fPams. re similar suf- - g TheI Face i§f In the Sand © BY JOHN 4. A’BEOKET Copyright, 11901. by A. S. Richardson | ©00o0000005b0000600000606006 Miss Har éll strolled along the I'beach at Atlalitic City that early sum- [mer morning, drinking in: the: aip and [ting new strength for her settlement I this sea air too! But they would reap : was comfort. - paused to Joo] Jifoflle ot'a young girl fashioned -very [finding All the company she needed in The waves almost lapp f the incoming tide were it, but her .companion: 7 i'rcaught sight (of the alto rillevo mod- ; it; eled from the unstable material and ° is. * stopped to look at it more closely. \Why Margare \\ she exclaimed aft- 'er a moment, raising her - eyes \to the j other's. face, \It looks like you! : {your -head:> «T ere' ~Now-:take off your | hat. Yes!. It is a fair likeness of you. : is Who, in the world can have done it?\ “It is: enous; gh of a likeness to merit this \ réturne ence!\ her.. There: 4 las a. contented, well fed although he f in 'his heavy way. Earnest, , practical 'interest in t She averted her face. Miss Hartwell | one, with no taste for a flirta- | ton, . \That 4s Burlington. the sculptor » 0 I she heard a., woman remark to. her | | when the tide is coming in, and: 'ter how early,\ she smiled fain neighbor. = That face In the sand! THis was the man! Miss. Hartwell got A. note from her not come. before the end of the week. plain that 'the place is restful, but a jlittle dull\. Here's your chance. I hear that Hammond a Boston man, classmate of 'mine at ¥ale, 43 at At- him a note oqhintrqduction to you and | Miss Cunni ngham,\\ | charming young man. an acquisition. 'nified, not shy. 'like him very well “Tom is a g athlete, but not strong on analysis 'of \ Cunningham. 'reaping nothing but health and pleas |ing she came upon It again. As before, it was early morning. She stamped it out even more emphatically milch annoyance the sculptor was oc- jeasloning ber. Tom lost no time in. . | getting' after the man, who denied all ~ | thirty dollar Ass!\ , Moral.-The man who. stops to, figure C | knowledge of the matter, work in more durable material.\ ° Jand you-are, 'the only sculptor here,\ B inrge’d‘ Tom doggedly\. ; ,I bad nothing to do | ] with it, My word ghould. offset. a more.. f I do not know your Sister, | but. if she C the young woman I think 3, on can assure her that L will not\ \That may be. | suspicion. ododel her face in the. sand,\\ the man satdastically. . gand; er reproachtully Miss Hartwell tossed her head. Tom j Awas so easy goifig. She might catch f | traveler, who leaned toward him cof Adentially and asked him how he:coul« \Kean - 'this man at his work. Then she knew 14 'she could count on Tom. She strolled . [-[ along the board walk, occasionally ap- ‘ lipioaching the rail und looking down on ~I the beach, for the next two or three | {. mornings early But she saw no one. Perhaps he had 'been frightened off. \If she could only catch him! \The next morning she -»did, 'There, | watching the slow, green waves break . I with the- conviction that she was deriv- [work. If only some of those poor east. . {aide youngster could have a little of | 'the benefit of 'all she got, and there . I mebt, \this place is doing you At which st ge of her reflections she 1 with smiling curiosity - iatrsomething dn the sand. 'It was the | i {Miss Cunningham. - After their break: - jgtast she would get her friend to walk. | lig- { that' wdy and see how the sand image | n- dim: affected her.. 4 Turn - the other, stamping the : delicate profile into oblivion, \It is a ; Upiece of imper | In the gun parlor of the casino. that ° | afternoon she noticed a man regarding | ; the open alr as soon as possibl 4 . which she did not like, . as a good looking man | thin poor made her & | | Bittle intolerant. of; sated idleness. . 'At dinner. that evening ghe caught his eye f | uponher again as he passed her table. [ was a. yery pretty girl, but a fastidious . filer face! . {brother Tom that day saying he could | ) 'and let me explain?\ he asked, his i “You girls want a man to fetch and | 'carty for you., You mention half a doz- - : a - Dissolve fresh lime in water, allow Hen women you have met and then com sediment to settle and saturate earth - . '+ George's three months lat [in which small, white worms have - . Fi ' 1 mond must have “explained\ beauti- t fully. *> Mantic City. He is a good fellow-rich, | 'family, braing-but is shy of girls, 1 |shall make him miserable by sending | '1y sleeping he was aroused by a Lon the door, and when he asked who A day or two later the young fel . [low presented the note, He was a From an &C. {quaintance he rapidly developed into | He was quiet and dig— 1 Miss Hartwell got to LL have come for thy Goat, but I reqi character,\ she laughingly said to Miss - Miss Hartwell had not encotintered {her fee on the sand again and was | \hin that he should assist to steal His 'ure from her vacation, especially since ° f | young Hammond. bad become such an- [interesting part of it, 'Then one morn- - Her brother arrived that day, and . {she immediately confided to him how | | mistake, the county, but I do know the differ \ \I came here for rest and amuse | | ment, and the last thing I am likely to | 8 [do is to make faces in the gand. I \But the likeness was unmistakable, He and she were |} Shutters All Records. cure a seve R. P. Luce’s, arthok and all drugglsts +@ ' honorably justly without living pleasur- Subdues® . It. is. impossible to live pleasurably, | without living prudentlyand honorably 1; and justly; or to live prudently and - 0000000000000900660‘066000. a ' { than ever. He had : -| aweet smile on the lips! Budden | turned and studied the sea.“ ; was coming in. She stood motionless, thinkinfl\ Thard. Yes! Every timé s | the face on the gand it had | morning, when nobody was: the tide was coming in. |_ She turned, a smile on her ff | garded the sand image twist 'suddenly stooped and stuck a nation from a cluster a at the neck f the dam she hastily retreated. E 'find, her brother and M: ' well on with their breakfast - \I declare, Margaret,\ obsert Cunningham as her friend at her. morning repast: with km of good. Your color is excellen your appetite leaves nothing 10, sired M . mpro vernent, If - | called that. But this momin does improve the appetite,\ she mC It was a mere coincidence. or course. | ~ She dian't know anybody in the place, | innocently. her companion. ° \\Tom said he denied it in a way that left no room to doubt his innocence. | Besides, I have discovered that It was always done early, when no one' about and when the tide was in, so that it would be washed. 'fore any one saw It,\ \What on earth did he do~ 1 then?\ cried Miss Cunningham. \Only * a man In love would do such a thing» as that!\ ~/ \Perhaps A8 five finger exercise just to keep hig seulptor hand in train- | ing,\ she re oMed laughingly. But Miss Cunningham looked 80° su prised at her mitigated tone and : ' face felt so. red that she escape Hammond. sitting on a bench pensively at the sea. His tan sho were wet and sandy. In his fingeée were a precious relic. , She paused near him. His preocc , pation was so great that for a momel 'he did not perceive her. Then. he : mered: \Oh Miss Hartwell! X ; thinking of you. © I wanted to see you. I hope you are not too angry. .- You will let me explain.\ R \It must not happen again, not v \And I may keep this little Rower] She nodded. \Will you sit down just for a minute genuous eyes fastened on hers imp ) ingly. f She seated herself by his fide. Judg ing from a very pretty wedding iw Bt. 'Mr. Haim ~ The Wise Pennnt. 'One night as the Peasant was sound. called a voice replied: \O Peasant, I beg the loan of thy lan- tern for a few minutes.\\ ~ \Hast lost something in the dark- ness?\ was asked. ° \Nay not that I am a thief; and a lantern to light up the stable.\ \You shall have it with cheer, and you may leave it outside the doo f you go away.\ 'The Peasant's wife began npbraidingfi own property, but he turned to her a commanded: \Silence woman! come armed to attack or defend; sec- { ondly, the Ass and the Goat are ptebled‘ [side by side, and did I not lend -my] lantern the thief might get the Ase 6 I am not the fllest man ence between a three dollar Goat's 'a little generally comes out ahead the game. With Interest. <1 \Yes I know that certain passen : ders object to tipping on principle, but, } speaking for myself, I believe in-~it,\> remarked a ruddy faced olF man“ the corner of a third-class smoker.. \I is only right to reward courtesy and guard of this train sixpente when. he comes to see if I'm [Fm only a poor man.' it\ ~ 'The other passenge , not to be ou done, thereupon dived into their pock Inter he found himself ove rw! with sliver coins. \ | ~ An hour passed, and: the passengd's {got out one by one until the old man | wasg, left facing Aa spruce commercia 'afford to give the guard sixpence ev . time 'he took a journey. \Oh . don't worry yourself abo . a ' | that,\ responded the old man.: say I ghall getit back with inter \How will you?\ tos ' \The guard is a son of mine\’——Lon | {crouched down on the sand, working in | don Globe. _- | [it, go absorbed that he never glanced | ~ [| {around, was a man. L almost the sole persons abroad at that . /J hour. |. Bhe recognized the clandestine mod- I | eler beyond the shadow of a doubt. But | 4 | instead. of. getting her brother and hav- « ‘n-lng him fall upon the delinquent red | urried- back to the Hotel | : from behind the curtains | until she saw the sand | | artist come up Then she salted forth . Life's Little Ironies. _ h PDoctor-I'm very glad to tell yot | Mrs. Hodges, that your husband: recover after al Mrs. Hodges—Lord mir, don't sa that! _- br ull Doctor-Why not, you unnatural we man? 2. Mrs. Hodges-Well, you see, Sir, er I'd sent for you, gir, I took an 0 all hisclo'es!-Sketch. _\____ cp c Awkward. -- » Professor (im -a medical college 3 - '| hibiting a patient to his class) _J | Twice in h« pital, F. A, Cuiledge. Ver. J | bena, Ala., [Ed a vast sum to doctors to ! | case of piles, causing 24 | tumors. 'When all failed, Bucklen's' \LArnica Salv sooncured him, | Inflainmation, conquers Aches, kills the. Bestgalve in the world. 25¢. at tlemen, allow me to call your att no tion to this unfortunate man.\ 'the matter with him. Exsioine: shape of his head and the expression of his eyes, and you are pone the: wiger for It, but that is not. strange,. \It fakes years of experience and: C | stant study to tell at a glance, aat can“ that he is deaf and dumb. 20 Patient (looking up. with a grin} Professor, I am very sorry, but mj brother, who is deaf and durib,: cot not come today, so I came in place—Penman. h \If it weren't for that horrid man | 'and his faces in the sand,\ obserVed'i he clasped a pink carnation as If It [ bounded to his feet, his face discount: | will [ing the flower for color, and a 9 Firstly, I am. no |\ match for a thief who has doubtl € all right, although 'ets, and when the guard popped 'his | . | head. Irigide« the door a' fe (Vig gather“ from His- remarks that be doesn't like your | minutés impossible for you to guess what -is I brigandbegan the \614 song. The audt- < | :ence listened in amazement and as he . \| finished the t verse filled the house < { with genuine applause. By the time! the song was finished | ) | the collectors: had completed. their “Hamlet. uh, . that there was He gentlemen, I trust that I : [r. > sfiall hare four undivided attention. ar ndulgence, offer a little. medy, part of whose action will take | ' body of the house. I think In no danger whatever,. but finish of 'the little ntrlse from your stats, - oll Mill look toward the exits . &. that they are carefully teach door on the two tiers | ed.floor and balcony of the : stood a resolute looking nA & brace of revolvers and | eating red cap. A tendency to ) part of the women was “Allow me to intro- am Gentleman George, happen to have upon you The. people behind the scenes are safe fth‘w 'Red Cap gun. As long as you: u are in no. danger, but the at‘ we understand eachoth-. ed the speaker, \our col-} II pass among you, and I you 'will remember that their. luable and cannot be tasted | always make a point of giying: the }g 5 my mother’s.” said a young girl in &. f unglady keeps her brooc no i granted immediately, others as fused. and stil} others compro- ome 'citizens were allowed to Inkets they valued by giving an. 4+ tor their value This unex- fright my frien _ffter a pause, D AY * please, then,\ All Were Saved, , from Bronchitis,\ writes J. H. consumption.. Throat and Eung diseases. inate state a 'pilercing ery of \Fire!\ Trang out throughout the house and 1 | was immediately taken up on several | rsides. © he- slightly and shall, with | arn®yoit beforehand that It | best. for you to keep your | you obey this injunction, you ' :the man who. th the outside is cut off. \guarded. There is not a |- ,,George, to thL 'day it has not been de- | | ther or not it was that |: Japan says: ' pyon may be trying to catch. oi 1 be all right to say in Japanese \Chot- If tremulous roicé from the balcony as] I eheld up & small brooch in 'her hand I exclaimed his result was greatly con- | tributed, to by the good natured way in- h’l © 0 be moving serenely, and while | the res of the Collection is being made, | p to entertain you with a little, Can you accompany me in 'The a sweet, rich tenor volce the | “For yéars I suffered such untold mis= , *'! work, and only the guards -on the doors: : remained. The leader again raised. his . { hand for silence. \Ladies and gentlemen,” he said, \I~ | thank you for your kind. attention. Our ~ .[ little comedy has passed off sguccessful- . 3ly. and now before we wind up let me | ma, - @uLF STREAM MARKS. the OceanPlainly Indicated. bly deeper blue than, that of the neigh- boring sea,! this blueness forming one : 'Of the standard references of the nau- I tical novelists. - The-deépth of color is | due to the high percentage of salt con- 'taitied as compared with the cold green. water of higher latitudes. observation give you a few final instructions. OUr | jn @ , | guards are still outside the various 14 | doors and shall remain there until we j: have had a good start. That will be, . glet us say, fifteen minutes. Any one . who attempts to leave before that time | will be shot dead at the door, and you | \\ know I have a Habit of keeping my ore | word. To simplify matters I intend to | pos - | placé this alarm: clock\-here he held | py ' up an alarth- clock’ which was Mb}? ag Before the sentence was finished Gentleman George had vanished. f The people in the house looked at.one | {another wondeé Ingly. No one dared to . | be the first to tempt fate by getting up | | and leaving tiie theater. Yet each man.. i | there belfeved that the threat was a . 4 \bluff Intended to give the robbers a . | chance to get safely away. 'They were: : | disinclined, however, to put their belief - to the test, and no one stirred., While matters were still in this indéterm!i- 'The managers of the theater at this | I outcry rushed on the stage and shouted py£ t words meantto be calming to the 2004 | gre; - ence. They succeeded in a measure in alloying 'the panic which was begin- | * i ning to get under way, but many peo-} { ple, overwrought by the evening's hap-. ipenings, rushé d from the theater out | { Into the street. Then it was discovered . conclusively that there was no fire, but: that the. scare raised by the cry bad | added to themtart already gained by.. | Gentleman George and his band. By noon on the day following the | sheriff, was: ready to start for 'the. haunts. of Gentleman George with a: 'strong posse, when the mayor sent for | { him and read this letter, found on his | £ ~doorstep 'that. morning: pear Mr. Mayor—A. dastardly outrage has been. perpftrated on my good name. and incidental ly on the people of your . city by. 'the © radians who held up the | Opera House last night. The person call- ing 'himselt Gentleman George was only an impersonatpr. 1’ believe I know} the . scoundrel, 'this myself and a few trusty co' _| will be on. his itrail. ‘regrettable occurrence of ' GENTLEMAN GEORGE, _ The sheriff \did not like the cool, im [ j ”pertinent toné of the letter and thought | i that, owing to his long immunity, Gen-: 'tleman George was inclined to jest | : with the township. The mayor thought | It was, he said, ~a very | 8° 9\ i | courteous note, and he could not see | \C4: | that it in any way reflected on 'the |. : {town. Sides were taken, and the next. differently. election was fought out largely on the { wise of Ge the election eman George. Though | ent in favor of the may- | : question of fie good faith or other- | or and the ‘upholders of Gentleman; termined wh polished bandit who Had held up the | Opera House, “Come Here!” In Japanese. 'Come here\ in English to any onei It will’» .(Condescend 'to come | The: person spoken to will not | 'olde' of course If he or she can 'help | himself or herself, but if you call out | ‘jin English «Come here\ as I know a> | foreigner did once, you may interrupt | :[the game. wcharacter written kami) means for-] . }eign dog. Inu is the word for, native | f [dog, but the' first foreigners in Yoko- € . | hama, Americans and English folk, al- |. | ways said Gome here? to their dogs | e { and the expression has become & Jap- | iganese word.\ : . <Gome: hero (in Japanese Sarcasm That Failed. : He is such alittle man-only three | 'years old-yet he insists upon intrud- | yj | ing 'his presence and advice upon his | p Ser { elders, often to their intense annoy- :| | | ance. ently. requests of various kinds. began to come from all parts of the: ..in some cases the requests | ' It was only a few days ago that his.“ mother © and 'his Aunt Belle were dis | . cussing some household problem—some- L000. thing which an infant was not sup- | - posed to know anything about. Sud:], denly Cuft appeared on the scene and { An a moment was informing both of | 'the feminine members. of the family: ? | Just what the facts were. ' ~ \Oh Wisdom, when did you arrive?\ And Aunt Belle gave it up as a hopeless case.-Duluth News-Trib- une. R I Art and Literature. mec a On Sare Ground. ~ scene. He was go indignant that he at. last interposed with the remark: \That painting is valued at £100. 'Allow me to ask if you are familiar | with works of art?\ 'about nature, young man. «When you make a cow that gets up from the ground by putting her fore feet first, ‘kottles b50c fnd $1.00. Trial bottles free | @itat R. P. Liuce's, Hartwick, and all! ‘dtogglsts. + we & - 'you do something that nature never. | 4 your seats until you hear it. lt‘ig’ p you dg'\'- © | Ins | teng lly The good citizeris.of . Oaktree cannot be more grieved than I~ am over the 'last evening. to show you that I was not , eld up the Opera. House I | 1D inclose you my latest photograph made . mf 1m Ban Francisco. You can depend upo‘n At that the evildoers. of last. night will be | brought to Justice. Yours in good 'taith, D ced: tor the occasion. {t really amounts to anything first cldss menjare wanted. A writer on children's games in | \Blind man's buff as | Played in Japan is quite the same:. 'as the game played by western chil-j 'dren, but if you play it with “Jap- 'anese I may warn you not to say . unt. Belle, thinking that» @ I she might be able to \squelch\ the | youngster. . \Just come dis minit,\ replied the | mite, not in the least abashéd by the | l.sarcasm. * said Gentleman | \everything | | it. makes Friend-Have you gold that historic» | B 'al painting of yours yet? 4 Artist—No, but I've hired a fellow to | 'write a historical novel dealing with | | the game period. If that makes a hit, | - I can easily dispose of the picture. - |f Life,. = A well known artist overheard a fcountryman and his wife ridiculin 'his plcture, which represented a farm huston, of Broughton Ga., \that often 'was unable to work Then, when everything else failed, I was wholly | tured by Dr. King's New Discovery for My wife suffered intense= ly fromAsthma, till it cured her, and all '-* 'our. experience goes to show it is the: {best Croup medicine in the world.\ A.} I grialwill convince you it's unrivaled for: Guaranteed:] [ \Not very familiar with art,\ replied 'the farmer, \but I know : fe water of a beautiful blue col- ; las. for instance, in the Mediterra- a and in other nearly landlocked i being 'more or less impeded, the Geographic Magazine. tan e in the minds of navigators that | 'At no longer possesses. -In those days thol chronémeter, invented 'by Harti-. sonfxn 1785, was still an experiment. lFetus of the nineteenth an impor- tables often at fault. tion of - ie longitude was . largely & . | matter of «guesswork, a vessel after a firs suggested by Benjamin Franklin, ing' the temperature of the surface wa- ulf stream and could hence with delight. 'by | Jonathan Williams in a work | entitled it of : to |avold hanger.” rakes R& patriotic comparison of the : to a streak of red, white 'and blue, painted. upon the surface of gators. . ' Don’t Be a Second Class Man. Su & boy would be regarded it class lorie. tll time, f | laps meat and first class bread, or, if you don't, ‘you wish you could. Second ass men, any other ley Are taken and used when the cle is scarce or is too high For work beer t - The Home of England’s Wealth. 'he Bani: of England generally con- s su cient gold in sixteen pound nake 20,000,000 sovereigns, bank; which stands in three par- quarter of a million a year in Starting the Conversation. said the hostess in a tone of great an- one ano her.\ ’ Cayenne. A—Washington Stan.. The Lapse o! Time. m each other for some time meet, ofie or them always says before they vi le (Mass) Journal. | A Soft Ansvver. \Keep: ya: temper, laddie. 't A 0 Counter-balanced. The Cour-e of the Flow Tbs-om The color of the stream is percept!- | e; of salt contained 1s raised ition above the average, says | voyage from the channel to America I being out 'of her reckoning by dé-\ | S instead of by minutes. Theidea, | that the master of a vessel, by observ- ten: 'cotild tell the moment of his entry | 'B Stitlous, ition to within a few miles The method was published in 1790; \Thermometrical - : Na igation Being a series of expert: I ments and. observations tending to | prove that by ascertaining the relative -| sea water from time to | ne the passage of a ship through the | v stream and from deep water into | 80 ndings may be discovered in time In this work he thi\ sea for the guidance of American You can hardly imagine & boy ay gr “I am going to be a second class .I on’t want to be first classfl Thousands do that all that second class men are' . on 'the market, remarks Suc | howfirer, by not trying to be a; c ‘nd‘ lass things are only wanted I class can't be had. You- we P first clasa clothes if you can pay . them, eat first class butter, first } ' tapestries,\ adorned with paintings and sculptures that a king might envy; 'its 800 magnificent churches, with their Services of silver and gold, their fres- foes of pearls and precious stones; its are no more wanted than second class commodity.: es, covers 'three acres} of ground, | asthpcurrentpriceo land in the | ity works out at £1,000,000 an to oido' (Come here a moment) or |\ re, it is easy to form an-Adea ofthe |- I <Oide nasal) ; here) ' money value of England's wealth. The:] retable vilue is about. £1,000 & week. | The bank; employs about 1,000 people, E'mmk\ of & bonnet. w‘ges and £35,000 a year in pensions.. There are]£25.000,000 worth of notes in | circulation which have been banded | ver the: bank's: counter, - London | Globe. i‘Get him to play or sing something \_. i - Yhen two married men who haven’t ate, \‘Let’s see-how old is your: . oldest. non?“ And then, after he gets | answer, he adds. \It is astonishing, | 't it, how time does fiy?\-Somer-: Never: quarrel wi!' an angry person, especially | a woman, Mind ye, a soft answer’s,mat 'aye best. | It's commanded, and, forbye, | 1them far madder than ony» |. ng else ye could say.”——London \Mt - Mr. Brown-Darling your butcher - yes you short weight for your money. | . town—But consider, my dear, | wait you give him for his.-= . did.\-London Answers. ase ent to mew lem > No. 18. CATCHING A THIEF,. ~ CI An Old Method Utilized by a German. 'Oficer In China. Thirty doliffirs was stoley at the Of- 'ficers' club in Tlentsin, China, and the of the club resolved, If poss- \ble to catch the thief. A German captain volunteered to manage the affair, and the first thing he did was to summon all} the native . servants of the club. He ther said to fthem' \Some money has been stolen here, | and I am looking for the thief. I shall | fnd him in an hour, not before, since ~ ° .I need that much time in order to get instructions from a celebrated magi- clan in Germany.\ An hour later all the servants were again summoned, but this time into a dark room, in the middle of which stood the table on which the money : \stolen had been laid. Another mportant fget in connection | i-th {stream 18 its almost tropical ”adds \tbe: factwthat its»; f it f'hand. anc when that is done you must 1 raise your two hands over your head | and step into the next room.\ \Fach of you, now,\ said the officer, | “mustgo (up to that table and press on ~FHight- and. then: your\ left. The servants did so, and as the last : | one stepped . into the adjoining room | the. officer followed him, and after 3 | looking fora few momentsat the many. - | uplifted hands he poifited to one man and sald, \You Are the thief.\ 'The Chinaman to whom he pointed nearly fell to the ground with fright and ad- . mitted his guilt and promised to make ' restitution. uments were crude and nautical | Very simple was the method adopted I by the officer for discovering the cul- The result was that the determina- | prit. While the native servants sup- gposed that his spirit was in Germany AIn-communion with the celebrated ma- gician he was carefully smearing the surface of the table in the dark room with fat and oil, which he then black- ened by means of soot. 'The innocent servants naturally pressed their hands on the table, according to his instrue tions, but the culprit, though super- did not do so. Aga result, while the uplifted hands '| of all the others were coal black, his | were of acnatural color, and thus his guilt was clearly proved.-Detroit Free Press. SIGHTS OF OLD PANAMA. City Once as Beautiful As Any De- plated In Storied Romance, Following the English style, dinner - is a full dress and céréimonions affair. After dinner comes the promenade [along the esplanade, a charming walk Around the old battery overlooking the prison, says the Catholic World. Our way borders the seai behind us lies | the city, with its Moorish towers, its +red tiled roofs; back of it rises Monnt | Ancon; to out left is the little Indian .A bamilet of La Boca, at the mouth of 'the Rio Grande, and the green hills of 'the Andes in the distance; along the horizon occeanward stretches the bay. % end class jobs are good enough for | 5 in color as the rays of the setting sun \What words can describe it? A study turn to crimson, freen and gold iits \islands the stately palmetto trees that fringe its banks, the white beach and 'far away the ancient towers of San Anastasius, sole landmark of the once 'beautiful city of old Panama. 'The story of this beautiful city, old Panama, reads like one of the ro- mances from the \Arabian Nights\ that so delighted our childhood. Its houses .of aromatic wood, hung with costly pleasure gardens; its broad driveways, chief of which was the king's high- 'way, over which the royal horses bore +] the treasures to Piierto Bello and the Tships ready to sail with them. to Spain. 'I Into the midst of this Agiatic splendor l+came Morgan andhis buccaneers, and this struggle, one of the fmost memora- T'ble on our continent, the first of white against white, led to the destruction of the flower of Spanish chivalry and the capture of Panama. So pass the glo- tries of the world' A “Bird? Anyway. . Mré. Spenders-That's what I call a, Mr. Spenders-Yes? T'd call it a \pel- Ican.'\ Mrs, Spenders-A \pelican?\ l Mr. Spenders—Yes' on gecount of the,. LsiZe of the bill. ——Ph11adelphia Press. emre The records left by the Phoenicians,. $ Assyrians and ancient Persians show‘ ~«I don't know what the trouble is,\ |- Lof. perfumes was very common. {od | nogyance. | \My guests seem very dis- | | | tant and unsocial. I wish % could think | _| of some way to start them talking to young salmon is under $1 per 1,000. 'that among sll those nations the use| The cost. of producing and planting 'That's vety easily, done,\ answered | ee H \Is there a musician [ i'health and all otherycharms Sign be | added to her. 'There can be no women while there is dissase of the delicate womanly or, . 'The first € perfact healthds to cure womanly | 'by the use of Dr. Pierce's Fa- \natal health for Aar dries weakening drains, heals FP i n and ulceration and cures ness., vorlt Prescription. It establishes regu- | our ‘Favorite Pre- edical. Discov- .v» of Mount- | four bottlgl of ; uterine trouble. better Health than ever before. Every- knows se is surprised to sée me look In June I was so p n health that I could not walk. y I am cured. everybody that Dr. Pierce's medicines me,\ FREE. Dr. Pierce's Common Sensel i : Medical Adviser is sent /ree on receipt of , y expense of mailing only. . Sen aL one-cent Stamps for the book in , and volume. r. R. V. Pierce, = thar per tovers, or: x stain s for the cloths ~ S~mump “El-\f“? = ue ~~ asir imams cons - 1