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Flesherton Advance, 1 Aug 1889, p. 3

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i ' t= 'J • :•> I !i I KU« Her aad Tell Her So. YoQ'Te a nea: litiie »ifc »: home, Js^, Aj s veet u yoa d vuh u> tee ; Ai f&iiMol &nd gentlft-tM«nad. Ai food u a Tile oaa be : A Keoaine, bome-loTiog womaa. Not Cknog {or (as* acd ihow : She t deaxer to yoa tliui lite. Jobs ; Then kiu her and tell her lo. Tear disnen are promptlT aerred, John, At, likeviea, jroar breakfast acd tea; Tour wardrobe ia al va;i in order, WiUi oattona where battoaa ahooJd be. Her booae ts a eotj bome-neci, John, A hearea of reat below : You think the s a tare UcUe creaaore : Then kiai her and tall her aj. Bbe'a a good wife and tme to f on. John, Let fnrttice be foul or fair ; Of whatever comee to yon. John, She ch«erfullT bears her share, Tou fee! she's a brare, true helper. And perhaps far mors ibac yoa know. Twill lighten her end U the lo&d, John. Jost to kiss her and tell her ao. There s a cross-roai somewhere ia Uls. John. Where a hand on a K-.::din< stone Will 4i^nal oae â- â-  OTer the riTer. And the other mnst ^ on alone. Should she rea h the last mileatooe &nt John, Twill be comfort amid yoixr woe To know that while lorinc her her«. John, You lussed her and tcld her ao. â€" LuiisSHeilon. ThaOlrl ia a Calico Orssa. Though Quaens of Society try as they will To dauie and charm as by dreaaisg to kill They oannot lo-jk ever, we hare to oonfeas. As sweet as Uie girl in a calieo Ireas. Ko framework of satin, silk, jewels and lace Can set aH her pactara of beaaty and craoa Like a calico drsss of neat patters and shade That her own willing hands hare so tastef ally made There 9 ssmethins s) welcosie. so homelike, so clean. ^ hones: and usefn!. so modest of mien In a caUeo dress thai :u wearer we kn^w. Partakes of its virtues and is them will grow. Uo tai'.ormads eirl. be she erer sj smart. And decked in the fashion ot dreasmaking art. Can h,>lJ ay a candle with an? sueoess To the sensible girl in the calico dresa. And none, when it c.-<me« to the datiss of life. Can make for a raan sach a helpmate and wife And build him a home that he proodiy will blcas Like the brare little girl In a calico dreaa. All praise to the girl in a calic:> draaa : A marriage with her is a certain sac^esa. A kitchen or parlor -each one in lu place â€" She. like Ciaaerella. will e<]aally grace. My tihlpa. If all the ships I hsre at sea bhoutd oome a sailing home to me â€" Ah â-  well, the harbor c,-<uld not hold One-half the sails that there would ba If all my ahipa came home from sea If half the ships I bar* at tea Should come a aaiUsg home to meâ€" Ah : well. I should hate wealth as great \* suT king who tiu in sta:«. So rifh the treasure* there woali be In half my ships now oat at tea. If jast on* ship I hsre at sea Sboald come a sailing bccie to maâ€" Ah 1 well. :be storm-cloud then might frown. For If the otbars all went down, S3 rich, so prouJ. ».' flaJ I d be. If that one ship came home to me. Ifthat one ship went down a: sea .Vnd all the others came to me. Weighted with wealth UBtold. The ivwreat tool an aarth Id b« If that one ship earn* not to me. Oh. ski** ba calm. oh. winds blow tree, Hlow all my shins saf* horn* to m* . But if tbou senaest home a wrecX To never more come sailing back. Send anv. all that skim the sea. ha: seiid my lov* ship bom* to rar. â€" flJa IT'ueler-R'tlottx. WHAT A CLOCDBCRSI IS. A Lake of Water Acnially ^asprnded in Mid-Air. The phenomena ot a cloaIb::»t. which can oiily ooear in a tornado or vhirlvind. are not generally aadersiood, tavi the New York Hrraid. The whirl in whi.hiJ fornu is not a very broad and shallow diak. hot a tall, oolamaar mate of rotating air, irimilar to that Ic which the Atltntic waierspoat or the famoas pillar-lihe dan (term o! India is §«=erated. While this trmrelling aerial pi l i a r, perhapi a few hundred yards in dia:neter, is rapidlj gyrating, the cen- irifTigal forc«. as Prof. Ferrel has shown, acts as a barrier to prevent the iov of ei ternai air from all side« into its interi:r, sioepi at asd near the base of the pillar. Their friction with the earth retard! the gyrations and allows the air to msh in be- low and eacape upward throogh the -ne- like interior as powerful ascending eorrentt. The phenomenon, however, will net be attended byierric: doods unless the atmos- phere is densely stored with water rapor, ai it was on Tuesday in the Cayadaita valley, and as it was on May 31st in the Conemau^ valley. When scih is the caae the violent asoending earrei:ts i-iienly lift the vapcr laden cloads several thonjand feet above the level at which they were previonaly doaiing, and hurl them aloft into raricsi and oold regions cf the atnos- Shere, where their vapor :s instantly oon- enaed into many tons of water. Cotild the water fall as fist as -oniensei it wc-ld be oomparaiively harmless. Bst the oontinn- oai nprnshing ctirrents snppcn this mass of water at the high level, and as their own van voiaznes cf vap.^r rising are con ienied they add to the water alrettay accamiJated thooeands of feet above the earth s inrfaoe â€"making, so to spe^, a lake in high air. As the whirlwin.; weakens or passe'S from beneath this vast body cf water, which its asoendmg cnrrentt have generated and np- held in the upper itory oic the atmosphere, the ajaeoas mass, no longer snprcrted, drops with ever increasing gravitaticnal foroe to the earth. In aevere cloud bnrsts the water does not fall as rain, bet in sheets and streams, eometimes snbrcken for many aeconds. The cloai bnrrt cf 1$JS at Holidaysbarg, Fa., exaavaied many holes in the greand, varyiiig from '2o to 30 feet in diameter, and from 3 to 6 feet deep. Id a similar bat mil.ier storm, vhicb visited Bo:ilc^De last Kay. fistares were cm in the streets eight feet deep an.) ings made large enongh to ecgulf a and Ho Prayer To-XIsht. N .^ prsyer to^aight .So s'ldeo hea.1 To he :n m.v lap with glittering light ; But a br-keu heart, and a <i,;h lastead â€" Ah me: ah me! no prayer to-tughL N.-i liipiag tongue no dimplM bauds. To siDg and strike in keen deligbl : No hair to plait in glistening strandsâ€" Ah me : ah m* : no prayar t<.>-ni4:bt. No prayer t.vnighiâ€" no 1'r.ght eves shine: No cra-lle^l head to catch my sight , No ro*y li(^ prats«d olos* to min*â€" Ah uie ' ah 111** no prayer to-night. Xo trusting love no pesrly t«ars : N o smile : no laughter loud and bright ; No little voice to tell iu fearsâ€" Ah me : ah me : no prayer to-night No prayar to-uighi an achina b*an, A life that is full of car* and blight, .\ life that hat t.-rrow in every partâ€" Ah lue ' ah me ' ao prayer to-nigbL â€" <.'V^•n^erf' /.*%m.il/.v Jhly. m Oantaat. Hsppy the ii.aii that, when his day is d.>n*. Lies down to sle«t> with nothing; of revre, : The battle he ha* f.'Uijht luay uot be won. The fame be toagbt be oust a* Seetlog y«L Folding at la*l his hands â- .ip\>n hn breast. Hspi-.» It he. i( hoary and foresiwni. Be sinks into the last, eternal re*t. Brsathing th**e only wvirds " I am content. ' Put happier he. that, while his bkvvl is warm ^e<<s hop«s an.l friendships dead aN^at him he. l\itivi his prave br»>a»t to envy s bitt<«r stonu. Nor shuns the poia.vi barbs of cainmny ; And lutd II all, stands siurdv and elate Uirt only in the armor tioj hath ineani For him who neatb il\e buflstir.ga of fate Can say to cKxl and uisn " I am eontent." â€" JSaiWM Fwl.1 %n I'hi.M^i .Vmes. A. Royal Kpltaph. Here is sa »pit«ph coml\^s«•d tor rrederiok X/OUis. IV.noe of Walee. and Viinc* of Gamblers â- ' Here I tee Kred. Who wu alive ar.t is dead I1a<t it been his father. I ba<t uiuoh rather , Had it l>een hi« brv'Uier. Muob tetter than anoLbar: Had It l<een his sister. No one Wv-'uld bare luisae,! her : Had i: l^eeu the whole generation. Rull bettor for the nauon. Bat since u* ,>nlv Kred. Woo was alive and i» dead. There * no mere to 1-h» said." " ^lO^^^>»T/â-  W* say it tor aa ho.ir or for r**r« : \Ve sat- it iiiiiling tav i: ch,>ket with tears ; \Ve tay ti colMy. tay it with a ki«* : And yet we have no other worvl than Ihl*â€" â-  Oood-by. â-  Wehaven.> dearx^r w."vrd f.T onr hearts friend To htm wno Jouraers to the wvwld's far i»nd And soars our sou. with goiiK . thus we say. As unto him who steps but o er the wayâ€" â-  Good-by. • Alike to tho«e we love and tb^^•# we hale. We say no ui.>r*ui parliui: .V! life s gat*. To hitii who |<as*es out t^eyond earth's sight. TV* cry, a* to th* wanderer tor a nightâ€" • iKvS by.- -i?'Mo» ri"»io r.iio'i^si.t A new Kreuch invention, the thormo- ^raphio press, is made for printing on wood by means of hot type. At neat an impres- sion is olaimed as ii obtained in lithvigraphy, and by the use ot a speoially prepared ink it is said that ivUd type may be need with Ckiually giv.l elTect. IM spe«<.i is 400 im- prostiont an hour on flat wood. A onstomer mav abate his milk dealer in the most toanda^nui fashion for tnppoeed aafair dealing, bat in the end the milkman oriU m»k* him take water. open- hcrse Temperance 2Cotea. In his gpeeoh at the Freebyterian Synod, the Bev. John McNeil, of London, the " Sooatiah Spargeon. ' created quite a aen- saticn by telling the following tale : He was speaking of temperance, and said that last Sonday ^wben he preached a temper- ance eermon at the Tabernacle ) he recetved a letter that had been whiten by a lady en the danger of the ate at commimicn cf fer- mented wme. The lady in her letter tcld a sad story cf an inbent»a psiesion for drink Ihera ware fooz or five ot them, several brother! and two nttert. and the children of intemperate parents. The sitter had. nnfortanately, inherited the craving, and before she was foatteen had taken to dnnk. The other* became converted, and ild all in their power to care their titter : bat it w&] of no nse. The sister at length married comfortably, and children were bom. Bat the craving for drink gr-.'^? greater and greater, and at length the w-as sent to a home for inebriates, where she >tayed a year. She left appar entlv. said the tisier. a changed woman. Soon after, however, her hatbsjid can^hl a severe cold, and before iN'ing out one morn- ing drank a glass of hot whiskeyâ€" taking care, hoirever, not to do to i:-, the presence of his wife. Then, its was his eastern, before leaving, he kistod his wife. At onoe the fames cf alcohol paaaed into her, and in an hour she was a dmnk and roaring womitn. She went from woree to worse, and at last loft her hosband and her chil- dren, one ..^f them a cripfile. through her dronkennees. The hosband died two years ago, a white haired and broken hearted mar. thot^gh only •t.'i years old. Need I add," said the sister ic her letter, " what beoame of her ? Her story is that of .Vnnic Chapman, one of the recent Whitechapel victims. That was my sister 1" •• xTTUL Tora R^-t." Daring the Christian Endeavor Cciiven. tioo at Chicago, one of the delgales. a yotmg butinees mac, dreeeed in a natty rough and rv<ady sail, every movement alert and estger and telling of bottled energy within, cams suddenly apon a red faced cili.ses> who evideotlv bad been patronising the hotel bar. Bnttonholmg the deJeioite a tride anceremonionsly, the latter said l •â-  What are yon fellows trying to do down at the halteri' ? Yon ate hci en temp*rw3oe, 1 see by the papers. Do yon think yon could make a temperance man of me '? " No." replied the delegate, looking him over from hestd to fool with a keen glance, alightly oonteniptucns, " we evidently c>.>mdn't do mich with yon. but we are after year boy." At this unexpected retort the man dropped his jocular ton* and sai.l serioaaly. • \\ell, I gn<«a von have ^l the right of it there. If sotneWdy had b«*n after rae when I was a boy 1 ahoald be a better man today." The yoong tuan gave in a natshall the inm and subatance ot the Christian En- deavor movement. Mr. Simmons, Governor of Csnterbtiry Frison, is aalhorily for the following , • The ntimher of prisoners who havs been cwmmitted tvi the prison with which I have been cvinneoied during the last ter, year* amoants lo '.'J.i'lOO. .\moDg them 1 have come in contact with ministers o! the gospel, nnmbeirs of persons who were onoe members o! Chtittian ohnrches, as also children of piont parents ; bnt, 1 i^i-er tvt Sfif* .1 |>n»i'n/r w*,' v.:s .i tfd. Ui'tfr. HK ariCKS TO IT. Dr. MeGlynn TelU His Friends H* Ha* Xothlng to BurarT The third annaal eicirton cf the Anti- Poverty Society, like ;ia predeotssors. aoocriing to the Netr York Jf.;u it_i Ezjr-eu. was a bij saeoess. Or. MoGlynn spoke to 3,000 of the faithhil oo his favorite theme. Amnttg other ihi^ige be said : â- â-  We have nothing to be ashamed cf. We have nothing to apologise for. We hare nothing to explain asray : and. least cf all have we anything to take back. If at »ni' late day there is some benighted, beUi^ person. »:â- =€ one who has nev€r reai the newspapers cr forgets all he reads, or some one perhaps who oannci re*i at all, 1 oare not who he be, who vJA ask the mtisiy. the stale, the ^noih-eaten. the chestnnitv old ;nesiioa, • Why diint Dr. MeGlynn go to Ecme:' a sniciertly adequate answer to that is in the fact that w-.in the oonnnaand to go to F.cn:e was a oommand to condemn in writing the doctrines that I have maintained. So help me Gcd, whom I venerate as present here ;n this, one cf His irst templr; stnoe the grcves were God's fir*t temples, whence men locked np to the dear sky beyond and said oar Fatherâ€" sc help me God, I wcnid. this or any cibtr mcment. »xner be homed alive by slow Ires than retract what I kn.s to be the very tmih of God. Appla^ie. 1 For me nnier such circani»tanc*s to rtiraci creo tc Rcme were to be gthlty of an infamy. To retract nnder snch circnmstincii. to ccnieaa the tmih thai was God s. wcnii have been net merely a blasphemy and sacrilege and per;ary. a monstrons ;:ime against God, against my own seal, and against the precicns rights cf hnmanity. hnt. tc cpeah metaly from a wcriiiy point of ^.ew. ;: were a blunder worse than a crime. If I had the rare g.»d fortune tc be led cm amid thcusands of jee.ing. mocking, in- suiting, oorsing. howUcf enecuee. alone unfriended and naked, to be burned at a stake fcr this truth. I should go smiling tj to victory. I shcald nucun: the scarfcld as if it were a royal throne. I should !e<» that from such a soafiold 1 saw the heavens open and that was the best ladder by which I ooald mount tc God. And if I ooold permit, as I shcnii net oare to cc. any mere worldly thcughlcf personal glory to enter into my mind. I should feel that I was not sc much makieg a prophecy as applying the teaching o' all h. story when I shoald say the very spot that you would make infamous by the ashes of a man whom you »culd bum to death for the truth shall be made memorable hy this day s scene, and seme after geaeraiicn. better minded, shall come and ccnsecraie the spct to liberty forever. " A Omm. SKJTTBT. Coolaaas and Bravery of a Private Soldier la the Cnnaca, The trae soiiier esteems :i a prlvue^ to serve his cc:intry ia word and laei "Hii resclve is to do his duty, oome what miv, and to do it ever in the iari where his self -devotion oan meet wrlih no recogmiicm, moch less with reward- Hew such a deter- mination e:nnoDies a risn and lifts 'r'~' oui of the ilou^h of selishneas is illustrated bv a story tola by Lore Wolaelev in his â-  Fort- nightly Beriew article, •â-  Is a ftcliier s I-ife Worth Living i' The plaoe was in the Crimea, the time durin; the â-  >â€" al winter of 1>54 5 and the biro a British pr.vate. Oct night the Ruisians forced their wsy mt: :nf Znilish s^r-ocnd parallel drcve cm the -;n :i jia.-i mi fc: a snort time held ihe f>:^.i::i T-en the Eniiish trccps drove baci tie own lines and rs.;-;:; On the extrez:; Ufi : where it i.p?eo dcwn Unglish sentry was f to their : .= - '.ne parallel. .' the parallel. ito a ravine, an and ai his pxi. the ?.us Tbey had reach his post. where he hii remained duxi sisn assault and occupation.. not spread out sc as lo though they had xme very near it. His ocm.-ades hid ded in a panic and ne knew that he was in danger cf being iurrcnnded and taken prisoner. But he fiocc there waiting to tw attacked before he ret.-*ated When disocvered by his ccmraiee he was .-c-oiiy locking over the parapet toward the Redan, he having been crdersd tc watch that Rusrlan work. Cn >»'->r' asked why he had net run when the ethers did. he answered that he had been posievi there hy his c£.se: and oculd not leave hii post until rel.evri :r driven away by the enemy. His ^xâ- lness ind high seni-e cf duty." write* Lcrd Wolse-ey. â-  made a deep im- preii.on upcn my mind at the time. Uo marihal'i baton was in his knai-jack. he expected nothing, he pet nothing" h was by accident ooly that his caUaci occdnct on that dark winter » night was ever known to any cue . hut he mrii have had the satisfactory conscicusness in his heart that he had dene his doty. Ecw many are the hereic deeds which are never he»rd cf. WOKJLD-3 TORACCO TOELS. It It LacrTAslsg Kor* Ka>t«l'y Tkaa of Kttker ir^**i or C*rK. The wturld t annual ooipct a( tcb^eoo i* increasing, perhaps mere rapidly than that of either wheat cr oam. Keotttcky is tb« greatest factor in the tcdaooo market, aad her prodael steadily grows. ThM of Vlr- gicia does likewise, aikd seregsl of dM NonharD States are ruiti*Mtac it waetmm- folly. Cuba has \otni been famoai for beat cigar wrappers, and ia macy parts . f the island the plactert are abanr.iyirg tujir and turning their attention lo fcoaacoo, Indini thr .siier much mere prcftahle. Zven GT.--ir.r fieri â- : r.ng to raise it. Bzwti ^T-.k\-:: -.t::\: \: ij.tend eultiva- t.cKi of tcbaooo are be.ng made in the East ln:^=s. Soih the sc- and the cl.maie ot the greas isiaads near the Asiatic aoast ara adourabiy adapted tc the weed, and it has long been saaoeadul.y grcwn inert but ao* until reeee t tly hive a'ttempts been made M f rcduoe it on »u;h a lar^'soale. B-olh th* Dsich a&d the F.ng't" are heavily mter- sited, and the iadustry is not condscaad hj small farmers, as here m Henrucky, bat by great oom panics en ;==:enie pisjcttginns, working a iheuiand or mere occlisis aod ilaliv;. &loa Bye Slxhed. Siota is proncunsed Soos. therefore Sioa would be â- â€¢ Soo. £ye u princnnaeid • i." n.vd ai 1 and iiihed is pre: â-  side. Tet Si o- uih 50el» woald Statue of ^Vallare In Baltarmt. On May '.^4ih a magnincent statue of Sir William Wallace, th* freai j^ooltish patriot, was anveiled in the Public Gardens. Ballarat. Australia. The statue was a gift to the city from the estate of the late Kusiell Thomson, a native of Scotland, who wai long identified with the place. The Kolptor was Mr. Fercival Ball, of Mel- boame. Wallace i* rerresented as Hand ing upon Ihe Abbey Craig, watching for the precise moment when a blast upon the horn hanging at his side will give the signal for his foroes to fall apon the English as they cross Stirling Br.dge. The ngnre is of heroic size, standing ever eight feet m height. Hit powerful frame is clad in a clo*e-£tticg suit of chain armor, which well displays the muscular development ct the stalwart frame. The arms are bare to jest above the elbow, and the large mu>c.es stand cut in cords through the armor. Beth hands are grasping a representation cf the immense $<rotd that in Wallace's hasdi wrought snch havoc among his foes. i."'>er the igTire it a light turc.->a«. with lion of Scotland eniblaioned on Ihe breait, an.i .-n the head is s simple morion, so that the fealorei* are ncl hidden by a vi. or. These are n-.ost expressive, repreeenticg a sttm reeolve lo do or die. col unmixe.: by anxiety, and fall cf vigilance and cbserva tioc Thsfoseis natural and eS?cliv« and the :-: c-M^i'.i is pleasing lo the eye. As might be imagined, the nnveiling cere monies ware attended by the ^coiiish resi- denu for a great distance aroun i BaKarat. and prolonged and enthuiiasf.c cheers greeted the hgare when it was unveiled by Hoc. J. Nimmo. BoC Milk *8ot>stitntrfor Ll>iaor. Mrs. Hayss always declared that a per- fectly adevjaate subetit ate (or li :30r when needed as a ttimalaci oculd be foand m hot milk, aod after ary cold or welting the gave them this in place of the wine ot whiskey which other* would have occ tidered -.ipoeesary. This is, by the way a eastern of Mrs' Cleveland's also who d;» .x'>vered after the tatiiue* ot the many long ai'.d wearisome reoepliens she was obliged to go throBgb, standing tot bears on her feel and shaking han.is with hundr^s c! people, that nothing nonld restore her so quickly as a copfal of boiling milk broaicht to her by her maid, and which she drank m little sips at hot as it possibly conld be taken. The Washic^ton girls oaoght the idea frv-im her. and ^i-iiog bow .jaicJily ii helped them after a har.i day of calls sixi social dnties they beaian to tobstitute it for the varions malt prepto^liocs they hsd beien in the habil of talsing, ot the bet wme av.d water which their maids nsually ad- ministered when they came in icv.^ tired cot to dress (or their next engajtemeni.â€" .V.'w H*«t Had Kxperlenre, Merchant--" \"oa want a plaoe in my store you say '" Applicantâ€"" Yes, sit." •• kver worked in a store belore?" " Yes, sir." •' Let tne try yon. Suppce* s lady shoald come in with a piece of doth, and waul to get a namber of yards to niatoh it, what woald yon do?" "I'd setid her \d lh« nejii counter." I " I gsest yoo'va had sxparisoos." Apoplejiy. pneamooia. theumatisr.i are prevented and temoved by Warner's Sale Cat*. Why ' l''r. t.1*.-. Jcihnto:-.. of King's College. London. England, sa\ » " There is wide spread eulargeruenl cf the mnscclar walls of Ihe small arteries in chronic Bright's Pissase, not only in the arteries cf the kidneys, bat also in th.-ee of the pia- mater iin\-«stiug membrane of the braini the skin, the intestines and the mascJes. at a resnll of a tnorhidI> chanted cv-vBditio.n cf the blood dne to kidney ditase.' If the kidney disease is not cared, apopIe.ty. pcen nxwia or rheumatisni will result. Warner's Sate Cute doe* cure kidney di»ea»e. Ihns enabiin^ them lo take cat of the bloovi the morbid or aiihsalthv matters Before and After. Evening Callerâ€" " I have been wondet- ing who these companion framed ponraits are, one a beantiful young gitl and the othet a wrinkleni. sad-faced old woman." Trelly Uostee*-- " Oh, that's ma. before and afiet marriage."â€" \of IVri »'«*.'». A Ghon itorj. The late Dr. Fowler. Biihcp cf Glouces- ter, and Justice Pcsell had freeueni alter- cations en t)»e sub;eci cf g'ncjis. The bishcp was a ceialeui defender cf the reality of them the ;u»tioe was somewhat soepti- oal. The bishop one day met his friend, and the justice icld him that sinoe their last .conference on ihe iub..ect he had had ocular iemonstraiicns whieh had ccnvinosd him cf the existence of ghosts. 1 rejoicie at your conversion, replied the bishop . give me the circsmiianoe* which pro- loed it, with the particulars. i.^nlar demooslraticiE. you say : â-  Yes. my lord. As I lay last nighi in my bed. about the twelfth hour I was awakened by an nooon.mcn noise, and heard something comins upstairs-" Go on, sit." •Fear- fully alanacd al the noise. 1 .it«w my curtain ' " Frcoeed. - And saw a fami gUmmering light enter my cham- ber." " Of a bine color was it not ' inter- rogatevi the dcotor, " Of a pals blue, and this pale blue light was followed b;. a tall meagre, ivern ngnre who appeared as an eld man cf TO vears of age arrayed m a loo^ licot'Oolored rag gown bound with leather girdle . beard thick ; hair scant and siraight; face cf a dark sable hue upon hii head a large fur cap and in his han.i a long sia^. Terror seiced my whole frame. I trembled till the bed verily shc»ok. and cold drops hang uv>oc every lin-.b. The igure advanced with slew and solemn step. â-  Pid yen not speak to il " There was mcmey hid .-r murder committed without a dcubi. ' said the bishcp. My lord. 1 did speak to it ; I adjcred it hy all that wai ho.lv Ki tell me when."*, and for what purp.->se \!e thus ap- peared ' " And in Heaven s name what was the reply " " Before he deigned to re- ply he lift*i up hit staff three timet, my lord, and smote the 5.vr even so loudly that verily the stroke caus»i the room to reverberate the thundering sound. He then waved the pale blue light which he bore in what is called a lantern. Hs waved It even »o rr.y eyes . and he told me, my lord, he U-ld me lh»: he was -Yes. my lord, thai he was no cere nor less than-- the waK-hma:-. ' wbohai come to give me noti.'e that mv street dcot was open, and that 1 mishi ^e robbed befc^re morning ' The ;-.istio« had no soccer concluded than the bisicp disappeare.i. be regarde«2 as a most peculiar way of i ing isKsce Ii u an &gly ihis^'ho ycu spell il yet ibcusanus of women aca pricnec.'.'i guilty :'. ::. Day after day, week after week, ihey endure that dullpata in the bs^ck. ihat lerriole dragging down" sensati-n that tells cf weaknees and fa»o- tioaal iii-erder. and do a'c>sc.iiiejy nothing *• efeci a cure. In a few years a brct^B- hearted husbattd and z^iberiess ciiudia* w-lll Jclicw her tc Ihe grave. False deliaacy prevents oontulting a ptysiciar. but erea this i! net necessary Tr Fierce s FaroriM Frascr.pticn has curec thousands ot suoli womec. To icSer and tc die when this wculd cere it plain, unmiftakable ineiic It is g-uaranteed tc give jatijfacten, oc ooaev V aid fcr :i refunded. Klectrlr Light on the XjtA. W;ihin the pan ten ysars thirty ptecpla, suffering from a peculiar disease of th« eyes, have come under the ebservatton of a Cronstadt coulist The trmptoms were tba same m each aikse. aud all the pauenu had. owm^ to their implovment been acous- tcme>a to remain fcr hours at a time near eleatr.c light apparatus, ^he new iiseaa* is called 'photo electric opiihaimia. Tbs patient is apt to be awakened m the night by great pam about the erhis, accom- panied with prcfuse lachrymalion. Ia- tense pbctobhchia it another characsenstia of the malady.â€" v..--.; jrwrv^a UtinAk .lsstoi.ic, .'"•1. Th* Beet Time to Battle. It 11 best to bathe ;usl before going to bed. as any danger of catching cold is thus avoided, acd the complexion is improved hy keeping warm for several hours after leav- ing lb* hath. A cwuple ot pounds of bran put into a thin bag ar.i then into the bath tub is eioellecl fcr softening the skin It shoald be left to soak in a small .juanlily ci water several hours before being used. The internal aid* to a clear complexion are mcsl cf them well known, itna the preseni season it the best tor a thorough deanting and purifying cf the blood. The oldfaahioced remedy cf tulpihur and molasses is oon- tidep^i amorg the be*:. Charocal. pow- dered and taken with water, is said k' be ex.>ellect. but it it most difficult K- take. A strictly vegeuMe acd frail diet is followed by tnany for ojce cr iwc week*. â€" TW 1..^ Snccessfiil BasLae^s Hen Who are cur m.-it suooesiful bualnew men '. Go out on the street and lock tbea over. You wen : una thecn men who haes pale ch»ek.s They are not ihin. amacialsd men They art not nervous, irritable men. Tbey are men whc« face* . iioate robust health. Men with gc<c»d bl.vvd and plenty of It. Thai s the secret cf their sucoaaa. A man whoee klcod is thin and weak and peiscned with ixpuritie* is never tucoeas- ful like his healthy ne^ilh^cr. Ycu cannot expect him to be. for withoat nch. strooiE. noutiahing blood he will lack the - vim'* and •â-  push " which the man must hara who would socceed. Such men aheuld see Dr. Fierce s Goldee Medical i^jooN-ery to restore their impcveriahAd bleed K' its nor- mal condition. By the use of this great blood poriisr and builderup of the trstera. they may pal ibemselvrs in a condition which will enable them tc win the rucoass they are anxious to achieve. lo^rd Wolaelry an the Oerotaa Araay. The Crerman nation may be thankful M the German army for other reasons thaa simply the defense of the fatherland accord- ing tc Gen Lcrd Wc^lseley. He writes: 1 take the German army a* the highest e:xisting type of the ouliiary system aad organieation, which th* changes eiTectevd ia armies by the French revolution have led vp K- . and much as I admire thai army as a soldier 1 admit* it still more as a citixeo. Great as it is for war. it is munitety greater at a national <£chc<o' fcr the moral, mental and physical training of the people. I'^esigned ex.olcsively for war, il hat beoocns the most imp.-'rianl cf j*ace inttituiioua. In It all (.rermant are trair.t\5 to tlrecgtk an.i laoghl the f.rsi pn-c.ples ef perse aal olsanlioess and of health. ITbete they leara to be honest and manly, an.; are taught lbs eioellenoe of those virtneis which ttr>-e to make men aK>od subjects aad law abiding ciliiens. It IS Ihe Khcol of th* :iaiic«Q. la which deep love of fatherland is fctstered and cherished, acd where all classes learn that there is hc.not in obedie.-.-e aad no- bilitv r.-. self sacrinoe. A Library tVlthont a MoveL Or.e wonl.i s-iareely believe il possible f.-vr a circulating librarv to exist withoal works of flctica on its shelves. Yet. the Friends' Library. Germantown. Fhiladelphia, con- tains no novels whatf.-evet and Icvaci eul fourteen thoasand and some relumes yearly a;id about twenty Sv» thousand people annually ate it* reading room.- V-t Jfrtul, St. Z.oau ifj,-.:fme. A Hard Maa. Job Comfort â€" If yoa'te in snoh hard luck. Jack, why don't yoc go to yoat Fnole Nathaniel and tell him the whole story '? He's rich enough i.> help von. Jack N. Aighp* igloomih)â€" It would be no use Job. He'* oce cf those chap* who say " the Sabbath" when they mean Stindav, m rrtparlng for a B*<*ptioa. Yonng Ccac.hman ^lo keeper of livery stablei -Id like K' get kicked bv a male il yoav-e got one. Stable keeper â€" \Vhal for " â- â-  Vni going w ask the Kvis it I ean marry hi* daughter, and 1 want to see it I'm in loondition to receive hit reply." iri- yva tMl-.c^n and .ivr,-*p5-:." ' r^«>*s yocr liver t'Ogigiar. seeui ' If roar'slnail^T often frotcr !*y s hid^'-.is. nittir.iar* .Iream * FneEJ. be wise The r.easar: reliet* Made by l>r. l"^««\v itv^iire, Ai:d they 11 biin* T.ii iNac^ the sunshine Of g'.v^i beath v.mi n:ay be rars Two Warvlr»t*e*. Loving Wifeâ€"" My summer wardrobe is completed and I am now needy for New- pert. ' Hasband -" Well. I U siee if I oaa arrange my aSairs so I caa |^^." " Qraoa- oas ' 1 .ia:!! uXi yoa along. Yon bav«n*t a suit of clothes ?.« to be s«?«"n."â€" .Yr» Tar* • â€" Omaha Yonlhâ€"" Are yoa ia favor o< annexation f" Soath Omaha belleâ€"" Yes.iI yon can get papa's consent â€" iV-.ak.t W^rid. â€" The language ot a deaf mate is a thing that g.x>s wnthoci saying. n o w L :«i !«s>. DUNN'S BAKING POWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND ^ X iv *â-  • :^'"^ -r

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