OCR Text |
Show t? THE LAST OF BOODLE'S. and saluted their eommander, tlie snow line recede up the mountain, CORNER. VETERANS a who us a them eyed sternly sphinx. Oss f (fa ll.alurirsl Clubs uf Lu' the trolley cars climb after It. and aa They filed in front of' the guard anJ It extends down the sides of the peaks liuu. of the and valleys, the BOMB GOOD SHORT STORIES started for camp. When their backs is about u Another landmark oh were turned on him Grant removed (Hr is routined to the lower ranges. Boodle's la one of the hisFOR OLD SOLDIERS. disappear. Several of the lines are controlled ale a tbe cigar from his mouth, and, with torical clubs of London, a roi.Lei-rr..xohttcly by the condition of the wea tilcynical smile, asked the confederate link with the er, due notice I icing given by telephone Th Tilrna'l Ilrrsm days ot dandies" ami we 7' Mnl Forlari him ahead 'Oh, nearest 'Who's as to W'hethcr It Is desirable for the squires, say. th .uiui. a;. with Ills HulMMisrnl Lnd.r are,' replied the defender of the stars Review. More than half ears to ascend to tbc upp-- parts of the Mtlg a century age Those chumps you've Fraud wrote: Grant RMd th lrljr Wsalilutoa'i and bars. system, ami whether a view of ihe a can be read of the Fliectacuhir jMirtiniis brought down here ran't play poker Cuf Dlaaer Olht-In parliament 1 fill my ieat secured by tbe passengers. It Is said little bit. But they can fight, general, e Along with other noodles; i lint a scheme Is on foot to run nil I remarked. Have to sometimes, said In nor,1 Jermyn street I lay my head an( 'T5 railway up Mmit Plane Itself, Lp w to a certain altitmlc it would follow an at break of Grant dryly and rode away. And sip my bock at Boodle's plane, and tbe ascent would be The proprietress of Boodle's is dead, day (siiiideted by a vertical shaft of a aa there la now no one to carry With all the and, IIInttiT. WwhlnlH'i ( ship meters, tli rough which depth of of on tbe club. It must come to an end unecu-v-c was would The elevators letter jiowcrful following pleasant age. y tbe passengers to tbe observatory, written by Gen. Washington to Dr. less the members acquire tbe properly. He was a hero, on tlie siiiiu.iit. In the But there are only some 300 member; Cochrane, a and Continental grim West and thla number would have to dated army. It is lb Horseless Carr Isa. leluta In order to run It aa a mein gray. Aug. 16, 1779, and fa printed oft had Point, Who It Is generally understood that we In the Philadelphia Saturday Review: ben club. But, then, Boodles would are on tlm eve of an enormous developheard the Dear Doctor. I have asked Mrs. lose Its distinctive charm, which Hex battle rage. h ment of the hmselesa carriage, and that Cochrane and Mrs. Livingstone to dine In the fact that in its lofty, I1 rooms one loaed is at home. really the solution of tlm question of n prac- And led mad soldiers to tbe marge In not am J llh me but Is one In Of awful In the chaege. club lxmdon where death bloody la only vehicle niuomoliile tical and popular honor bound to apprise them of their fare. Aa I hale deception, even where Is unelbowed by a crowd and where at hand. Joseph Sachs diracM from And now he fought those fights again. the Is concerned, I one la nevr asked to pay for anything. thla view, holding that the whole And muttered in his sleep commands will. Imagination only that my A member's house account is sent to to la needlesa It Is as yet hnnlly ojiciicd. In view promise To hordes of fierce, determined men the la- him only when he asks foF it. Some hold la table to of the fad that a large iiiimlK-- of large enough Snored mightily and rlenched his dles; of this they had ocular proof enterprising gentleman like Mr. Algerin tiiis country an mw Slupldlly fvnwaUaMl. boya eleo-tri- e s r mr. kihsox rKnrmr The IlMilfri Him llliualara. ! r let Car et three years the treatment of hnimlred vision by inoann of the X ray would lie brought to stu-jieifivtlou that the Bight of ilio lilitul could lie restored. It waa stated that two men who had sightless for yenra had had ihelr eyes subjected to the X rays, and, for the tint time nince tliey bad lieen stricken with lillmhu-BH- , they hud seen the light. Edison wan made to say that results were m cnMitrngln rhnt he tdinuld Je-ut-e himself to the production of n B)ioelaly-proiarfM- l lay which would giro the Mind the ability to distinguish . Tins peraniiN and things, if not to whole of tlie Inncciiriite story ar nut of a eommtinlcation Edison had made to an electrical Journal. In wlih-- he fftnted that the Roentgen ray jiowcr- fully change the normal condition of vision. With strong till tea, one can easily see through the hand with the naked eye, when lmth arc brought very close to tlie tulie; moving objects aro also wen plainly. Edison emphasized the fact that, for the llrat. two or three second. the eyes imtccIvcm nothing, .but by that time the rny has made amne change in the eye. and the sensitiveness la Increased. The question of the applicability of the X ray to the treatment of the eye. or any other organ, blngea on tlie dlworery of the exact physiological effect which the ray baa. and the extent to which thla effect ran lie muddled. Judging from and eMclnlly from many anme notes recently made upmt the auliject by.Vrof. Kilim Thomson, the result of turning the X rny usn the eye for any prolonged iwrlod would lie to destroy the eyeball. lrof. Thomson, liy way of testing the sta lenient that lloeidgen rays have a jscnllar effect on tlie tissues, removing hair, causing Mistering of the skin, deep-seated lain In the Joints, etc., excised the little Huger of his left hand for half an hour to the radiation of a strongly-excitetulie (single foeusi. For several dnys after the expisure no sign was apparent, liut In eleven days tlie I ck of the linger became red. swollen and ps Infill to tlie touch, and the tlnger, which had licgun to Mister, felt aomewhat stiff. The effect resembled a strong sunburn. It waa quite a week before any of the symptoms Indicated were seen. From these facta. Prof. Thomson deduces that ltoentgrn rays may he found to have a thcrniieu-ti- c value, though It Is doubtful If they can be sujierlor to ordinary violet light, except In the jsiwer of penetrating opaque IkkIIcs. Prof. Thomson Is well known ns oue of the most skilled and progressive electricians In this, or any other, country. Not Inferior to Ids Branding la the esteem in which he la held by the electrical community. A pleasing Illustration of thla krone out of the sending of the romnu nleatlon Just referred to to a acleutillc Jon run 1. The editor. In acknowledging receipt of the article, said he noted the effect of Roentgen rays on the professor's Huger. Me suggested, however, tlint the next experiments of the kind lie tried on anme one else, as, lie added: We cannot spare evtn your little W-e- ro.-ul- exis-rlincn- t. 1 d le lln-fer- ." ( thr lb Jsfrau Kkt-trb- elec-til- Mr. Edison bn a grievance against 4 hr ncwsimix-r- . IK protest aunlnat swing mail nut a fakir, and Insists man that la, la a Ida In. iiMiter-of-fnulm U (Inina liia ltest, and of not a divine healer. This came alwnit through a statement In a New Yorls palter that Edison had lieen try in,? tu make the Mind wo. and had succeeded ao well aa tu lie led to prophesy that In Sabjsgatiaw -- by Meaaa Trolley. The forty mountain railways already laid In Rwitierlnud seem only to have whetted tbe apietite of electrical engineers for greater achievements. The latest scheme la a railway to tbe top of 0 the Jnngfrau Penk. The peak la feet above sea level Although heights approxiiraiiii) this have bron attained In some of the railroads of the Andes, and in the mountainous districts of our own Western states, no 13.-17- auch grades ns will he here employed A vivid Idea of what tin undertaking Involves may lie gathered from the fact that from the lower terminal, at Sclieldegg, to the Jungfrau peak, the diffen nee In level la 7,inxi feet, which rise will lie accomplished In the total length of the road miles. The of only seven and one-hal- f read will nltemntely pnxa through tunnels and wind along the edge of mountains and glaciers, giving tlie passengers unique npmrtuiiltic of gaxlng at uiierii landscape. On the Moneb Mountalu there will be a station, which, from Its situation, will be of special Interest. It ts the center of a circle of inasnlllront glaciers. At Its bare been atlemptenl and right la situated the Jungfrau crevasses. On tbs Its left Is the vast and tranquil sJ'j j reck-lctne- cbs-trl- c aurxeon-gener- Kwig-chneefe- bl llilh-iilty- tin-mai- al old-fas- r ninn-iifictur- socking to evolve cheap and effective motorcar, Mr. Sachs has outlined some of tlie points which Imre to lie borne In miiid In the coiisi met imi of such a vehicle. lie looks U)Miii the tubiilHr tuna of eoiist ructii hi us tlint to lie early of the ordinary adopted. The qs-cvehicle will Is fro, 11 icu to ffflecii miles an hour, and, for Kicclul emeu, machines will Is made to g- twenty to thirty miles an hour. Tbe element of danger-steerin- g, bundling, etc., increases with tbe sNiHt, and for road sss-vork, tlie ciiiMmenls regulating TIm will nave to lie very strlngi-nt- . n omr car tire will Is pneuuiaiic. and provision will Is made to make It pumTin steering nppatatiis will hare to lie greatly Improved; Its In cases of vital Inqinrliiiii-e- , high rates of sHsl. Is evideul. Fl.'ly Kr cent of tin whole motor ear question Is dcKiidcnt on the motor. Inventors wiill have to concentrate Uipm-selv- e on the ennstiuctlon of the motor amt Its connection to the driving wliiels. lu many of tlie old machines the gearing weighed mote than tlie motor. Altlioucli the vnrious lyjies of gearing an rapidly uiiNliiled, tlun is nothing efficient, cnmtnlrrlnl and cntiroly satisfactory to the market. In electric mol or cais It Is imin than pnilsilik that gearing will be with. The rivalry In tlm mutter of motive power will lie lietween steam, gas and electricity, lit all probability, steam .will tie used for very large can luges, tins has many advantages. It is complete in itself, and It needs no Imller; but, on the other hand, it Is hutiqicnd by II . Ion of Mr .Sachs thinks that the iMipuhir form of an automobile ear will eventually lie a combination of gaa and electricity. The electric motor ear cniiiint blow up, and It cannot he ntallcd. Its great objection la the uncertainty of the supply of current whh'h now exists In thla country. Given a reliable course of current, the electric motor Is unquestionably better than anything else; but, until thla la resclied. electricity will take a aulsird-Inat- e place as the motive power for horseless carriages. 11 - tiire-proo- f. esK-clnll- y nou-raria- -t sjh-ciI- Tbe Mlxtuar of Preach Wlsn. An American who has been realdlng In France, and has devoted anme time to studying the wines of that country, aaya the California claret Is as good a wlne.as tlie claret of France. The Bordeaux wines thnt are exported to England and America are not pure wines, but are mixed expressly for the for elen trade. Tim French have a groat objection to this fact Imlng known. It is said that n f (inner I' lilted States consul to Bordeaux was shot down In the streets after having described tlie process of mixing In a consular report. The Idea thut a Frenchman will consume large quantities of wine Is a mistake. He will go to an Inn, rail for a glass of wine, and sit down and play cards. If he Is playing for an hour, the wine lasts him all thnt time. He takes but one glass. The French da not like a heavy wine, and the darct they drink la quite light .Even this thin wine Is nearly always mixed with water, They say water brlnga out the fmltly flavor. TO meet the English and American and other foreign demand, .be French wine deal-er- a at Bordeaux take the tliln native wlnea and mix them with the much heavier wines of Sjmln and Portugal, and the result la the 'Bordeaux" of commerce. The method of mixing Is wonderfully rapid and effective. Two blua of Ftvmii wines are placed close to one of Spanish and one bln of Portuguese wine. Above them all Is another bln, empty, and ready for the receipt of tlie mixed win. The product is a good wine, but it Is not a pure wine In the sense of being the product of one kind of grape. f. g (Kverlastlng Know Field), an almost unbroken sheet, where even tbe most tncxcrhniccd tourist can, . without danger or walk and admire at his ease tlie frozen altitudes of eternal snows, which are still untrodden by most Alpine travelers. From Monch the grr.de of tlie line descends to the Jungfrau Mountain, and men rises sharply to a point Jnst beneath the summit. From thla an electric elevator, with a lift of .330 feet, carries passengers to the peak itself. A remarkable feature of this and olnib Jar roads is Hint w licieas Invalids were formerly rut off from tin enjoyment Incident to the ascent of famous penko, even paralytics can now be taken to any altitude and can avail themselves of tbe site.esslon of new and unsuspected bits of Alpine scenery, to which even pedestrians could not. In many faxes, formerly gniu acecw. Electricity will not only lie used for the propulsion of the ears, but for their lighting and heating, fir the elcTator, and even for the drilling and excavating of the six tulles of tunnels, which have to tie pushed often through solid rock. Ute electric current will lie derived from the waters ot tlie 1 Slack and Whit l.utKcliine. a few miles distant, la winter these mountain roads aro shut down on the higher levels, seetlun lielng retained for rnmiimnnl traffic. The Iraille, f. fact. corresiKinds with the sciuum. Aa as N rw Hydraulic Xppllaace. At a recent exhibition of hydrants, gate Talves and other hydraulic appliances, a very Ingenious machine was shown. This waa connected by a sleeve, having a patent h anfety-valv- e pipe, gate with a waa water which through kept running with n pressure of thirty-fivpounds to the square Inch. A drill, worked by hand by two men, eut out in twelve and a half minutes an oblong piece of the Iron aa a scoop cuts a cliecse, leaving the wnter confined by the gnte and the sleeve aa a connection to tit another piie Into. To ntuko such a connection with the appliances usually In use In city water dciurt-nicu- ts would necessitate shutting off the water supply from a whole section of the city for. ton or twelve hours. Another Invention wns a machine for ealking the Joints of pipes with lead Tlie present method of doing thla la t( make an embrasure around the joint drop enough for a man to work In, and to ierfmi the oiurntUm by manual lutior. The new mncliine encircles ihe Just below the s;lnt wiili thlr pi Iron band Hint control a Nix of lend. The '.carl Is thus brought into cont.ict with portion f the Joint. A small liatt tier follows the lew. driving tlie lead tonic. The strm which works tbs r.aii'i ler runiix'ics li.c l.cnl to Uvm th ie?? I'quM. pipe-tappin- g six-inc- e -- hands And tossed like one In awful pain in vain. And spurred his folding-be-d But suddenly, within bfs dream He say the enemys gray line Fall bark and open, then the gleam Of sabers flaxhing like sunshine. The move unmasked a mounted corps That he bad not dreamed of before. The order Charger1 rang fierce and strong. A sound like thunder Jarred the air; Of pounding hoofs in mighty throng Then he awoke. Judge his despair On hearing still those sounds of woe; Twaa bash day In the flat below. , Chicago Record. yesterday. To say how It la covered is rather more essential, and this shall be the purport of my letter. Sire our arrival at this happy spot we have had a ham, so met lines a shoulder of bacon, to grace the head of the table; a piece of roast beef adorns the foot and a dish of beans or greens almost Imperceptibly decorats the centre. When the cook has a mind to cut a figure, which I presume will be the case we have two beefsteak pies or a dish of crabs in addition, one on each side of centre dish, dividing the space, reducing the distance between dishes shout six feet, which without them would be nearly twelve feet apart Of late he has had the surprising sagacity to discover that apples will make pies, and It Is a question If, In the violence of his efforts, we do not get one of apple Instead of both of beefsteaks. If the ladies can put up with such entertainment, and will submit to partake of it on plates, once tin, but now iron (not become so by the labor of scouring), I shall be happy to sea them, and am, dear doctor, G. WASHINGTON. Yours, Uniit and lorter. While Bitting In my quarters In the little town of Chattanooga, Tennessee, about an hour after nightfall on the evening of Friday, October 23,' 1863, an orderly brought me a message from General George 11. Thomas, commander of the Army of the Cumberland, on whose staff I waa aervlng, summoning me to headquarters. A storm had been raging for two days, and a chilling rain was still falling. A few minutes' walk brought me to the plain wooden, one-stoJoan or Arc's Mratrgr-A- t dwelling occupied by the commander, which waa situated on Walnut thin epoch, when the art of war street, near Fourth, and upon my ar- waa In a rudimentary state, when rival I found him In the front room on hazard waa counted the chief element the left aide of the hall, with three of success, Joan waa to discover and members of his staff and several strategic measures aa new to armchair facing practice strange officers. In-aas were those which gave her time r, the fireplace was seated a general Bonaparte victory over Austria at the alight In figure and of medium time of the Italian campaign. First stature, whose face bore an expression of the warriors of the middle ages, He was carelessly Joan of weariness. appreciated the advantages to dressed, and his uniform coat was un- be gained by reiterated attacks on an buttoned and thrown back from his enemy already shaken and demoralcheat Ha held a lighted cigar In his ized, without leaving him the time mouth, and aat la a ntiirp ween action to recover and reor-li- e. with hla head Knt aJCntiy forweViT And this was not the effect Ills clothes were wet, and hla trousers of happy accident; during the entire ts were spattered with mud. and campaign. In every circumstance, she r, General Thomas approached this again and again gave proof of the suand, turning to me and mentionperiority of her intelligence, and this ing me by name, said: I want to pre- despite all difficulties, In the face Theresent you to General Grant ot the 111 will of her officers jealupon the officer seated In the chair, ously Indignant of being superseded without changing hla position, glanced by a mere girl of low origin hampered UP, extended hla arm to lta full length, by the Indolence of the king, and carshook hands, and said In a low voice rying on her frail shoulders the weight and speaking slowly, How do you of all decisions and the responsibility do? This waa my first meeting with of all initiative efforL To the chiefs the man wltl whom I was destined af- who sought to make decisions without terward to apend so many of the most her she proudly asserted, The consulting Interesting yenra of my life. Hold your counsel together; I will strange officers present were members hold mine with the Lord Ood, and His of General Grant's staff. Charles A. will prevail. The ardor of her prayDana, assistant secretary of war, who ers moved at last the coward Indolence bad been for some time with the Army of the king, and she succeded In makof the Cumberland, had also entered him share her enthusiasm, warming the room. The next morning he sent his cold heart at the fire which a despatch to the War Department, be- ing burned within her. The National ginning with the words: "Grant arrived Hero of France. by Maurice Boutet laat night, wet. dirty and well. de Monvel, In the Century. Campaigning with Grant, by General Horace Porter, In the November Amarlrs's Krad of Cavalry. Discussing the possibilities of a war with England, and the strength of the Grant Raided th Party. United States militia or national guard, . F. B. Hilliard tells the following some of our newspapers lately boasted poker story, says the San Francisco that an army of a hundred thousand Wave: men could be thrown Into Canada withGen. Grant onre Interfered In a in a few weeks. How many of those most unwarraiueJ and arbitrary man- men would be mounted on horseback? ner with a poker game that was pay- It Is a very pertinent Inquiry, for It ing me a big profit, said Andrew requires from three to six months' Danner. It waa shortly after the bat- training to make a cavalryman, and tle of 8h!loh and we confeda were some of the states which furnish large feeling pretty badly down In the contingents to the national guard have mouth. I was on the advanred picket not a single troop of horses. If there line one bright moonlight night and la any lesson that the failure of the the Yanks had a post only a few hun- Confederacy can teach us. it Is this: dred yards away. We shot at each that an Invasion of Canada and I do other unUl we got tired of the aport, not mean that such a thing la in the then we swapped newspapers, coffee least probable or desirable made and tobacco. A dare-dev- il young Yan- without sufficient cavalry would ba as kee corporal walked right Into our barren of permanent results aa it post, sat down on a log as unconwould be If made with an army of cerned aa you please and asked us If crossbowmen. (Why the Confederacy we hvlffi how to play draw poker. Did Failed, by Duncan Rose, In the Cenwe? . We rather thought we did. Had tury. A few. we any greenbacks? Then he pulled out a deck of cards and we War Caused by Wooden Market. sat down to play. Pretty anon another In 1006 some Modenese soldiers ran Yank came ever, then another, until to the away with a bucket there were six of them, and we all state of Bologna. belonging Thla Implement Joined In and played a wide open game, might have been worth a shilling, but forgetting that the cruel war was not It produced a quarrel which terminated over. In a long and bloody war. Henry, King Luck cams my way and I soon had of Sardinia, son of the Emperor Henry everybody but the Yankee corporal II, assisted the Modenese keep posbroke. Ths rest were squatted round, session of the bucket, and ,nj one of the blue and gray, watching the gams, battles he was taken Ills prisoner. esme that ugly when there father, the Emperor, offered a chain of so familiar to the soldier's ear. gold that would encircle Bologna, which We looked up and there atom a Yan- la seven miles In compass, for his son's men. with four kee sergeant their mus- ransom, but In vain. After twenty-tw- o kets cocked. 'Members of the Furly-r.intyears of Imprisonment he pined consider yourselves under ar- sway and died. The fatal bucket la rest, said the sergeant. Oh. come still exhibited in the tower of the now, sergeant.' the corporal began,-whe- Cathedral of Bologna, enclosed- - In an a horseman reined p behind ths iron cage. guard, and he concluded, alcn. Croat, by hokey!' The bluecnet rot up lookGod's mercy can no more wear am ing like a lot of whipped school- - than Ms lore. ry n ofll-ce- top-boo- ofll-ce- h, n non Bourke may possibly reorganizt the club upon the lines of White's, hut It will be the old Boodles no more Eleetrict light and rash payment will supersede wax candles and the convenient "slate. Samnisr Hwt lu Various Countri. The following figures show tbe summer heat In the various countries of the world: Bengal and the African desert, ISO degrees Fahrenheit; Senegal and Guadaloupe, 130 degrees; Persia, 125 degrees; Calcutta and Central America, 120 degrees; Afghanistan and the Arabian desert, 110 degrees; Cape of Good Hope and Utah, 105 degrees; Greece, lit degrees; Arabia, 103 degrees; Montreal, 103 degrees; New York, 102 degrees; Spain, India, China, Jamaica, 100 degrees; Sierra Leone, 94 degrees; France, Denmark, St. Petersburg, Shanghai, the Burman empire. Buenos Ayres, and the Sandwich Islands, 90 degrees; Great Britain, Siam and Peru, 85 degrees; Portugal, Pekin and Natal, 80 degrees; Siberia, 77 degrees; Australia and Scotland, 75 degrees; Italy, Venezuela and Madeira, 73 degrees; Prussia and New Zealand, 70 degrees; Switzerland and Hungary, 66 degrees; Bavaria, Sweden, Tasmania and Moscow, 65 degrees; Patagonia and the Falkland Isles, 55 degrees; Iceland, 45 degrees; Nova Zem-bl- a, 34 degrees. Old Jackson ward fo? What you ride Cuffee So I wont have round when I cum back. back- to turn American Iltrtlwouda In Europe. hardThe dema'iil for American woods lu Kuriqie la growing, nnd oak leads tbe foreign shipment, although tulip, poplar, ash, gum and black walnut, whenever a bjo1 quality cab lie secured, arc In some demand. European consumers like tlie quality of American oak. and, since it is kuowu to be plentiful here, It will prohably be In Increasing demand. Cottonwood has been shipped tc Germany In considerable quantities, where chrap wood Is required for furniture and other uses. Much of this lumber Is forwarded from New (idea ns; and, since a great part of the oak, ash, poplar, cottonwood and other timbers demanded by tlie foreign market la In the southern states. It Is not Improbable that lumber for foreign markets will be largely sliippid iu future from the gulf ports. In speaking of this matter the Northwestern Lumlimnan says that the Euroiieau market requires lumlier cut of exact ticknes and of accurate length, trimmed so as to have the butts square anil true, space for piling In the yard of the old world Is an object, so that random, uneven lengths are objectionable; and, since tlie foreign buyer Insist that he shall has just wliat he bargain fro, quality should lie strictly attended to. Garden and Forest. Tha Cibkiwt! Wraith, The richest uinn in Mr. Cleveland's cabinet now is the new secretary of the lntcrkir, Mr. Francis. lie has leased the beautiful residence uf Sawyer In the Northwest and will entertain this season. Next to Secretary Frauds, Secretary laminin follows as tlie best off in this world's goods. Eight yean ago he was poor, but Metropolitan Traction stock in New York city made him several hundred thousand dollars. He got In on the ground floor and la now floating with the stis-- 011 the roof. Attorney General Harinou has sufficient to keep the wolf from th" door. So has Secretary Olncy. Scereiary Morton, SecreIlliteracy la th United States. tary Carlisle, Fosunastcr General Wilson Tbe 1890 census enumerates 36,761,-60- 7 and Secretary Herliert are compelled to persona of ten years of age and up- ask for their balance" lu bank several ward. Of this number 4,923,451, or 13.4 times a month. Tlie president is a mil per cent, are returned as unable to llonaire. Chicago Tribune. read, and 6,239,958, or 17 per cent, as IVhit (h Emldont Https. unable to write. The following states I take pleasure in stating that I per show over 40 per cent of their population aa unable to write: Alabama, 60; sonally know persons who, once abbald, have regained their lost Florida, 43; Georgia, 50; Louisiana, 49; solutely hair through the use of DANDERINE. New Mississippi, 50; Mexico, 65; North My wife, whose hair was falling out Carolina, 48; South Carolina, 55; and from some cause, has received great Virginia, 41; and the following states benefit from 1L I heartily commend with less than 5 per cent unable to DANDERINE. Thus writes Edmund read: Connecticut, 4; Dakota, 8; Illi- D. Munlaugh, president of the Terrinois, 4; Indiana. 5; Iowa, 2; Kansas, 2; torial normal school to the Knowlton Danilerlne of Guthrie, OklaMaine, 4; Michigan, 4; Minnesota, 4; homa, fromconqtnny whom Danderine can he 2 New Montana, 5; Nebraska, Vi; Hamp- obtained for f 1 per Nittle, If not kept shire, 4; New Jersey, 5; New York, 4; In stock by local druggists. Ohio, 4; Oregon, 4; Pennsylvania, 5; Utah, 5; Virginia, 5, and Wisconsin, 4. Won Thun Theater Huts, An auditor In a Japanese theater is allowed, for a small fro. to stand up, I.lltl Tom to Go. the unfortunate individual behind It seems that there are to be no and him has no right to remonstrate or to more little toes. A comparative anat- rise and at tlie stage. He get a omist declares that the little toe must may hear, lint iieop he cannot see. Philago and announces gravely that already delphia Inquirer. . It is showing signs of degeneracy. TO CURB A GOLD ONE Iff DAT. Once upon a time It seems that ths Taka Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All horse was the possessor of four Druggist refund the money If it fails to cure. So toes, whereas now he has And now, little children. said ths but one to save his life. But that toe school superintendent, If you are mod Is a great one. And mans toe that Is children, some day you nisy sesr a enhlen crown." Taw one on sot his tooth now," to survive the crash of matter and chirped the sinalleet and newrat boy. Inthe wreck of worlds is to be the great dianapolis Journal. one, too, so this wise scientific anatomist says. But If man Is to own an evolutlonized foot at all, like that of the horse, it does not appear that the coming race Is to pride Itself on Its pedal extremities. New York Tribune. b misery to thousands of people who have Um taint of scrofula in tlirlr Mood. For this teafld affliction there is no remedy equal to The Illble. There is no date from beginning to end In the Bible. It comprises some 60 documents, and Is supposed to have been written by about 40 men; 54 miracles are recorded In the old and 51 In the new testament; total, 105. Ths shortest verse In the old testament is The Best to bet the One True Blond Pnrifler. Remember Lot's wife. There Is one Pills new testament as short as John in the TtoiSi &rs& xl, 35, In point of words, but not in letters, vis: Thessslonlans v. 16, ReThen there are 2 joice evermore." Vhat organ shall 1 buy chapters In the Bible alike verbatim, 1 and book, Esther, In which the Deity Why not buy the one is not mentioned. hand-shinel- y ed dun-da- y Inloods Sarsaparilla Hoods rr f which holds the world's record for largest sales He'll Get Caught Home Day. A smooth bachelor in Kansas City keeps himself arrayed like the lilies of the field, by betting suits of clothes with the other fellows that they will be married before he is. He hasnt been caught yet, but thats no sign that he never will be. II Stood tor Sovo Days. When the seal of a lumber car waa broken at Plainfield, N. J., recently, a much emaciated man tottered out He had been In the car for seven days In a space so small that he was compelled to stand continually. He entered the car In Ottawa, Canada. ChurrbM Offend the ESTEY Writs for Illmlratad Catalogue rilh pries, to Eslcy Olgas Company, Uraltleboto, Vl. SURE CURE mh HMiuw iMftiinf Br. Hiiad, RGHSAN-KO'- S FOR PILES PILt RKMKOVTmm! non a k a. e fc iu,i.T t Tbs Sal. Fourteen of the local churches, half of all In the city of Ishpemlng, Mich., are advertised for sale because of delinquent sewer taxes. The congregations have temporarily Joined hands la an effort to find some way out of 'bo trouble W. N. U- .- DENVER. NO. When writing to advertisers, please mi tb- -t you saw the advertisement In this paper. 897. 1 |