Ocean City Sentinel, 13 April 1899 IIIF issue link — Page 1

VOL. XIX.

NO. 1

OCEAN CITY SENTINEL. OCEAN CITY, N. J., H.C. ROBINSON Eiilor ani Propneior.

ISRAEL G. ADAMS & CO. Real Estate ■ Insurance -A-GrEHSTTS, Roods 2,4 4 6. Roil EsUU 4 U> ButltflofS. ATLANTIC CITY. N J

J.M. Chester&Go. v REAL ESTATE .Insurance Agents.

OCEAN CIT*^ N. .

DK. J. s. WAGGONER, XI.NT Physician and Druggist, ill Ksburj Are., Ocean City. S. J. 7. C. HUTCHINSON. M D. No. H21 Ocean Avenue.

B. T- ABBOTT, M. I) I’hj Nician hiiiI Nurg^un, OFFICE -Cerur Ctolnl ud Eieuth Streol.

IVI* >kgax HAND. ATfORNKY AND <'or*si:i.i.oit tr i.tw. cai'i:' may”. r^T L AVV OFFICES SGHaYUER C WOODROUU.

JONATHAN HAND, OotinHellor-nt-Ln>v. i’apk may ixtimr lioiw:, n. j.

RAILROAD SIGNAL LIGHTS. , NORWAY AND SWtUt

STATUES OF SNOW.

rs ti-rw. and Bin tolb

hm. hn-n “»ny yw

Uty of a.

■I of Sw

7[. ,f. V, !il-|.>lnr —■

II thr Knell'll nyrton of night I the Svidei to g

. in |.l«rr ..f thr Ainrrioan. At , growing intrrart Tha NV.Twagian ran : > t a whit» light . dii-iilarrd aloDK atitotton date* hark to ISII, and tbr I

•on roar f|,r Itw of an Aineriran ralhond ahtnl Norwegian. i«t they wttbhrM oertain : I

M— ”«afrty v aU well.' while a red light right, which tb. swede a«rr were mr >

leg. oi.d ''danger. !...k out." and a i lendered to the comm mi monarchy ]i "■ I • green light •Vantlou. go .low. • Thnr j almig ^ith the right of the king of <

" '■ J are the 1-talili.hed rignale. the red he- j Sweden to declare war.

:C the lie let <:

VIMIICATED.

I’U EATMKN T E l GENEc - C °LE.

INHALATION 1112 Girard St.. Phila.. Pa.

When M de liom

nrt in Prance he war new irired The king refus'd to i. j At hi. aHeefheartbou«-. i j de. Saint. Prr.w the d‘.ir wi I hi. face He wa» tille,l will i mrnt and grief, both of whi, creaaed »Inn he went to war

| All looked aakance at

i to hoiHW the I uiUngly. an.l i

n,. tonight. - wild the conn nan d-iwrled with the ingle, t more than an Inmr bad |»i

daptwl for

1 light I. i

n Eng-!

raw. of danger: hot in-trad of aawhi Ugh! for aafeiy ■ gre.-n light ia na, anil inatead "f a green light for caoti a yeUtnr light 1. uaed. the three Kagii'h |

railroad l»ing low iiudead of rerl. Ofiai for like imilaer

raili wd men

The pro

HKil-h I id yel-

ican to the enmnt Engli. ii ha. !.•« diw-nwed. leronunend ■pmed knd . xi>rriuiraited npm for idaT of year, with the reanlt of

a. Hi.iXpela. Calarrh. Hug r«r. Headnche, Dcbllltg.

■ hirf all Chronic and

Nervous Disorders.

G. A. BOURGEOIS, Counsellor-at-Law,

I ^ ri^.Sre.Jo^NeaeJrne^, t*blladrl|>bla a

jATLANTIC CITY. N. J. ALBERT A. HOWELL, A.ttorney-at -I^n \v. V loner .nd Sol Id lor in Chaneery.

nd n.

n he ~

iwlf The h

n tin.

Conveyancing. Real fstate Insarance. Mortgages and Cnllections

F. P. CANFIELD Real Estate ^ Hnserance Agent - No.iUs isbury fvenrie OCEAN CITY. N. J.

JOSEPH M. CORSON Real Estate Agent PALERMO. N. J.

cite* rbydcUa. Will »r!4r~ o. aifUeaUea.

Dr*. NTAKKEY A PAI.KN. 1112 Ginrd St.. PMIafflfWa, Pi. 120 Siltli SI. Su Ptiuatct Cl

ants

Bedding Plants

lieraoiiiiiis

FRED BOERNER. FLORIST CAPE MAY CITY. N. J.

RALPH L. GOFF, GIVIL ENGINEER. SURVEYOR. CONVEYANGER NINTH AND CENTRAL AVENUE, OCEAN CITY. N. J. H. H. RftE. AKCIHTKCT, Rourtte RiilldiUK. OCKAN CITY. N. J.

look.

i Hia face waa drawn and haggard, hi. i >km wrinkled, hi. er.-. were dnll ami I aad. while acrom hi. left cheek a long : ili'hgnring acar told where a .aUr bad , ent deep He*left the mirror and .at down de ■ jectedly "I am grown ogle." he wild 1 "and |»mr and therefore they .hor. ! me ■ He tbongfat of hi. life, offeied to > hia country ami to glory of* hi- hard i campaign, in America amf tlie IndiiV hattlea

Yandreuil "Bnl a

a they i

i.. 'he t old b The king.

The only faithfnl one .

I them all—my horae who Died to lie I my band and neigh gladly at my con j ing—he. too. ia gone, for I have aol j him No one—nothing ia left to me" One black tbonght waa anrceedial t another, and hia gloom and melanrhot inerraard till life aecnied hot a horde to be got rid of He waa a man , promptitude and deriaion. and. hart

pro

HOTEL ATGJ.EN OCEAN CITY, N, J. ' c'ao THE ILLINOIS

THE EMMETT

GARWOOD HOUSE,

yaa CeotrHt A venae.

OCEAN CVTY, New Jeraey. neltabum loAum,. Alt the LeMI I no oirlnrllU. H6uar HrWted UiroUKtKHlL

MKK.lv UAHWiHIII. Pnip.

6. 0. AOimt V. « ACirr.i E. S'OMhill. ADAMS & STONEHILL PLASTERING, RANGt. SETTING, BUCK LAYING, ETCo ETC. All Work in Mason IJnc. Promptly

Attended To.

OCEtN cm HOME-MIDE BiKEflf BIS ASBURY AVE., OCEAN aiY, K. J.

J. N. JOHNSON', R.R.SOOY A SON

PLUMBER,

Steam and Gas Fitted.

rraatinate Hia yd.l.il lay reedy to hihand—one ahot and the deed waa done t court they aaid. "M de had the ferer ' Weeks and month, pained and they rpoke of him no more But there remained to Boarne an old time friend After arrring in 8|iain fat rm aad growing diaconteut rd with hia work M le Comte dc la Pnyaaye returned to France and to the He gained yireatlge at Mmea de Bonfliwa'. De Chaarelni'a. De For gere'e and Lnxembourg'a. aaked m w aervice of the king, and solicited a n-gi He railed hiniaelf a friend of • "Poor frllowl" hr Hid "Only BO yearn old ’ What could have Hia face clouded when he beard tbi ttory. for be waa a brave man himself "A coward!" be cried ‘Tiupoasiblet' "BuL yea." aaid hia informer "We repeat only what the re|.Tta aaid—re 1 («,rta which were sent to the king di reel M. de Boaane. it aertua. dialiked the enemy too greatly—au inneb ao. in facL that he conld never tiring hiniaelf

to approach him '

"Uoaane a coward!" cried theomut "He moat have changed greatly, then Mar nut thcae rey.lrt. Iiaie been f«l~-r’ "WelL the marahal hiniM-U and » on La Pnyaaye heard the .lory repeated a score of ttinea, and fnand that the mention of Bewane . name hrunght forth only curaea or n-pruacbm lie ended ly renonneing him "BnL" he uid to himarlf one day -“I can I forget him I loved him well. And I believe I love him still Very well. I .hall allow uiyarlf this little <ar centririty—that of loving a dishonored wretch B«oe nuuaina my friend, and of all the World I alone shall recall him with something other than disdain He hong the dead man a portrait on bit wall once more But the portrait

uniform, in ineae. the g

.1, with the),

order, their

ual :

ra fell :

-It. ai

_ to ordinary light, naed f„r illnmi1 nation and the fart that a railroad Ian-

ordered to bold hi* regiment ; , rtn bhAern give..®! a white light ■ M ■!.- la Pnyaaye c.ndu, i- .l; |, then-f.ire. a. i. argued, a red lantern I a c-Uaiii . inbankment then | j,„ n ld broken on one side and the . go after hi. bone lint In- : cUw . fall onl. it would emit a opjied him Not now they ( w |,iie light which would indicate aafeiy ■e place i*e*|»eid * on would j ,1*. ongine..,. whereas tbe real sig ; V.rttr life n4M1.-i.lr : nin.-.u., ..f tb.- .ignal w». dangri the •ay nvtamed to hia plare and I exact .-..utrary. Recmtlv tbe New to hia v. ration "Miaeral.le Vorfe K,.„ ||.e.. n and Hartford rail-, he i-rie.1 "Mr h<-.rw ! s ---1 r.aid lut. mad. a cliange in it* night ■a. done with my botve | j n a.-oodan,-*- with the Kngh.h etelaimed a captain in n- ; .y.iem. and it is gradnally potting it

rions diri.ion.

Fro

n did yi

The

• one of the great

he officers uiireeled .mo'll an Ideo! they wid e. tliat we may ol—rve

■n light is

II that trench over there, which ia t«*ed My orderly moat have U-ru k to leave him in aneh a place ” >h," cried an .ffio-r. "I loive no Bawne’a horw-l The bona- of a

n the hnllcl.

He ,

] Mfe

I doi

proudly, defiantly, « Uor-e einergni He ali.al alone in the middle of the field, in a great open

tai k the hit in

yellow .how. very well in the dark and 1. easily di.tinguiahable along tbe road Moreover. Mice the adoption of the molern method of electric lighting on P«..~-Iigcr i-ara white is tbe general cnVw for such interior illumination, an additiemal reai-in why it shonld he discarded for signal purposes. The objectlon to ,4he change, however, comes i tbe fart that railroad men from image have become accustomed to the igreeiil American system and that some confusion might perhaps resnlt from the attempt to substitute one light for another without general knowledge of the change. -New York Hun.

Jr

d lowered hi

follow

trembled a. with

i in the silence

clothed It

IS tbe 1-1

•v in gold He raised h

G. THOMAS, No. 108 Market St. PHILADELPHIA,

Fine Family Groceries.

i-ow mioEs.

| Repairing a specialty, i Bath Tubs and Plumbers’

] Supplies.

THO Anbury A. venue.

H. A. W. SMITH & BRO., 848 flsbury flv«nue, OCEAN CITY. N. J.

plumbing,

J. T. BRYAN, L., 1007 R»lg« Ave. Phllaatelrhla.

Restaurant and

Lunch .Rooms

24. 26 MB 21 SOUTH TWFIFTH STREET

PHILADELPHIA, IPA.

IRA S. CHAMPION,

Wbolaaale and Ketall Under In ICE CREAM.

LEADING NILE DEALER OF OCEAN CITT; All klnd.nl ttofl brink, and OootrrllonetT, <-<»! and airy rnmai parlors, where a TOrpanf

.lienlive waiters are in attendance. Strut* Street ud Aibirj Aruie FR/^NK HERR.

VTUlIVlkbR i JERF.LER MWi.lalElllltUILnillMH.

bled anybody La Poynaye. discuntent

d for

had u-ed He

thought of the borne "Where ia he now T They tell me that be sold him That borne carried poor Bo..n« for ten yean I mart find him Once, while bis friend still nerved with him. he had even tbe bon*—m carious beast, of a dark yclkiwbdi color tbe product of a maw between a H|ian isb herb and ao Indiad pony Hr wa. able to foraiah descriptions of the ani

ind the rider

him to ailrance; then boldly, eagerly Joyously, he charged on the city at a gallop Deaf to tbe thund*-r of the can Don. indiflenut to tlie alad that whia tied alamt him. glad to sniff again the amoke ,-f powder, to feel mice more the earitement ,.f the rombat. the gallant bonw dashed on and on—a sublime tacle fu*S whole army to witnow \\ bat nioiovl him to rush on tlie eue *mr so inadlr. to affront death no grand ly T Waa it tie- tuemory of Bmwne a gloriona hattlnaT Was it the firce of a habit aninin-d after a wore of engage tnenfs—the remit of a b—.II leanied They w-ho followed swiftly after him did not know, but they .wore after ward that they had srrn a hand on hibridle, feet pressing his aide*, a shad

Mr. Mary B Throckmorton, who has jn.t died In Wa.hlugtou, was the darghtrr of Charlrw Pendleton TntL who served in the war of 1*12 and whe was a warm friend of President Jackson At the ontbreak of tbe civil war Colonel John A Throckmorton, bn husband, a native of Virginia, joined tbe Confederate army, while hia son tbe present Major Throckmorton, was appointed a lientenaiit in tbe United

ettle of Boll Run the net on opposing (idea, le learned the fact Mr*

At tbe first

tie might be avoided Mr, Thnarkmurton retained her rer drnoe in Washington throughool tb* pa riod of the w»r and devoted herself t looking after the welfare ol tbe prime era in Ibe old eapitol building -Nat York Tribune

nenil equipment, has ju«t b»en introdared into Portland. It ia inthenatnre of a casket Towering device which does away with the pallbearers lowering tbe body into the grave. By this nei

done enough he whose lease dicated li-e—t. From tbe Frcn.

The author of “a war artiri asya that, after Maine. Father could be seen K

Ibe fro

In Ctiba.

-strnrtion of the irk. her chaplain ither and thilb-v.

The men were away three month* One day La Pnyaaye received noth*

that a horse aniwering to tbe dc rip tur fcoji,

lion given had been foand in a field in ; M . t | jn|C all possible Artois He went to tbe place and I w |,icb might lead to their iib-ntiBcation. bought the animal at once It was in Hobfr. hi- aealoas and indefatigable deed. Boaane a extraordinary 1-a.t the | .„,., UIlt , nK ,ng the wonnded and

friend of hia friend, old and thin w, rn j j,,. f,,,.. pp. , j Hr „

hard aervice lief, re the plow .ud j vv b en b , was dying in hnqduL Aiip

igsher aaid a few cheering wmib

and bcid ont bis hand

the ill treatment of the f.

There were the white legs, .till fine a. those of a racer, tbe long, black tall and mane and those eyes dark cold r|eai and fixed that made one uneasy "Strange animal ’ tbonghl La Puy He had il fed gruomed and Md tied ual set out for Paris at a rather halt mg gallop' Much fatigued, be arrived

j

But t

from tbe bureau of war awaited him informing him that hia request for a regiment bad been granted that it waa to be known as tbe Grenadiers Puy ■ays au.I that'he mtud Iran It near Fn bourg a« soon aa poosible Taking hardly time for the writing of a letter aad the aaving of an adieu, he

"Ah. my lad." aaid the capta "yon-haik the wrong ship when j cbisre the Maine’"

i after

nothing to regrec"

"Didn't your ahacuuding cashier leave you any mesaaigr?" "Yre. He left a line in the cn»h box trauafi-rring to me hi* puhi up memberahip in a Don’t Worry club."—Chlcag" Record.

intoniatic in it. oiaration. and n|iei time tlie nudertaker touche* id the la^iet is. by invi.ilde •ered quietly into the grave, science smooth our passage and silmt tomb.—Portland

'pfini

aerie of tests .g the Brown gnu, of three waa made at Birvlahorn a days ago with most intrtesting res

re inch. Tbe gi

an open

tbe force of the < omnssl plate <g tlx, mount w ho|ta two iin lire thick, it to til* f-iindation. w, —Atlanta Journal.

•ad car. and ao great'waa

inted on eatvwaa the l-ed

a hrok«

rhit-b fastened e snapped off.

.Ih Hven Hedin. who i- -.n to atari f,.r Tibet, will make Kashgar, in (Tiine-e Turkestan, hta starting point, and will again rroas. by a different ronte. tb- Takla-Makan dre'-rt. In which be nearly lavished of thirst <oi bis last journey. Hr expri t. to spend next wiut-r in p-irthem Tiber, and this bgtieet plat,-an in the world from nuitb to south, emerging in India.

Riane is envious of Ikaton’a subway and will atari one of her own through the Qnirical hill to the slopes of .the Yimliialaml Eeqnillnr. Hie tunnel will he &B feet wide, with tracks for carriages- electric rata and fiail pareengera. An elecbic street railroad from- the Porta de) Pupulo to the Porta Han Giovanni will PM thnmgb it. The angiOcia give out that it will lake only ie* cu rn unto, to build the tnnael

tract alliances, send and receive eiuhaa sadine and manage the foreign affairs of tbe two kingdoms. Tbe exact polit teal relationsbetwenn Norway and S«e den were not v.ry clearly defined, and a*n result of this indefiilitcnwa and the aiubienity of the laws concerning: them there baa recently hern a great : deal of friction The mret remit cause tempt of the king of Sweden to reduce

igtb ol the Norwegian army iny for nae in tbe event of trouble Tbe area of Hwedru I* !*?,0OU s-ioare

mi Ire. The area of Norway n U4.0U0 square miles, or onoaidurably leas Tbe popolation of Sweden la nearly 6.0UD. | UOO The pnpclaiiao of Norway is 2.000.000 The. population per square mile of Sweden la 24; of Norway. Ill log total papa latino at &.000.000 in Sweden the excessu! females la I00.0UU It la just as large to Norway In a total popnlation of only 2,000.000 Sweden has one large city. Stockholm, with a

population of nearly 800.000 Tb* Ur

geet city in Norway u Ghnatiania, which ia only half aa large Tbe exceaa of btAtba over death' in Sweden ia 60. ■ 000 a year, in Norway it ia 80.000 The total emigration from Sweden in a year ia 48.000. mostly male; from

"0^

Practically i

States There . Sweden; into Norway none at all Th« population of both cunutnea'ii mainly rural, bnt more largely ao In Sweden than in Norway There are nx times a* many Swede* In Norway aa there are Norwegian* in Sweden There were 1.600 Americana in Sweden by the lari oeurna, bnt no American* to speak of in Norway. Financially Sweden la much the stronger oountry of the two, and tbe Swedish army U generally regarded at more formidable than the Norwegian army, which number* 80.000 Thr Swedish army nunibet* about 40.000 on

a peace footing

Tbe total debt of Sweden ia 800.000. 000 crowns, or about $70,000,000 Tbe total debt of Norway D 160,000.000 rrowna, or nearly $40,000,000 The revenues of Sweden are from cnatomr: and excise chiefly, from an income tax 1 audfrom tbeaaleof rtampo. The income : of Norway It from cnstorai chiefly I Tb* poatofflee receipt* are relatively greater in Norway than In 8w and the internal revenne taxes are larger in Sweden than in Norway TheSwedish army roaU about Si per ,ocnl of Ibe total national outUy The Nor j wagtail army net* about one-aer. nth Norway sprada mure relatively for Ur, navy than Sweden, and the civil list of ; Sweden is, of Bourse, very much Ij/pcr than that of Norway. Seventy-lbrte par' cent of tbe forest land* of Norway are pine forests Sweden by Ibe lart censur bed 80,000 miners In tbe iron and ooai mines chiefly. Sweden's chief exporn are to England. Tbe chief imports u Sweden are from Germany. The United Statea does very little bnaineaa with Sweden. Tbe chief exports of Norway are to Great Britain, and the chief imports are from that country. There are 6.600 mi lea of railroad* In Norway, and a rmaller mileage in Sweden. There are 16,000 milee of telegraph linea in Norway and 6,600 only in Sweden.—New

York San.

encr id drawing rinma in the Freatrh capital. To all intent* and pnrpnw* partly welded fierce. Aa a matter -d fact, they are only coaled wiJJt enow, tlie under ]isrt bring made ojiid copj*-r

pi|Vs. thin and UgbL

The discovery, which has resulted In a mam of <»■!• r» reaching tbe amlp(<-r ami a rimerqnrnt anbatanHal increai! in his rev.-nnes-f,iT be cliarg,* “top •tory” prices f.g hia prudm-ts -egme in tin- nature of an accident. It wad while the artist waa living shown tbe met hid of in-making by machinery that tire plan present**! itself to him. The liqorfi—l gasea. be noticed, in their trip through the copper pipes produced on the outside an appearance nnuiiatakably that of snow This had been canard by the depeitiou of the water vapor of tbe atinoepbere on the metal and the freeting of il by the action of the acid. This system reasoned the acnlptor. might Is, applied U> statuary. And be applied it. A statue id thin copper waa qnicklv < iinstructed and a box of liquefied carbonic acid placed in the boar. When tills gas evaporated, tbe effect of freccing wae’prodnced ; the moiatnre in the air waa attracted to tbe copper si'i'-s and quickly frosen into tbe armblanreof snow Many l.antiful deeigu* have been turned ont in pursoanre at this principle, and tbe acnlptor ia aaid to Is- reaping a golden reward fur bis

Tbe British is-ennngrapfaera who were cipi..ring tbe intermediate depth, at the Atlantic some 850 miles weot of Ireland last an miner have left aa in painful doubt as to Ibe meaning of an int* resting phenomenon which they observed. There waa some rnrioeity to see what would lie tbe effect at pressure Upon wisid in tfard.-ptba of tbe aee. and so a piece of commoei deal match hoard- ’ mg waa sent down on a wire to a depth • d a.tKKI feet It came up apparently ^ openly derided, as Mr. George Murray ! writes, "by some of the mure frivolous

' member* of the expedition." Tbe piece of wood waa left on deck,

id on tbe following day. aa it wa* dr- ; sired to aacert*in tbe drift, it Was I thrown overboard. Instead of keeping afloat and performing tbe service expected of it. tbe board aank like a shot, and three end* tb# utory. The men of science might hare ventured the theory that deep sea pressure bad forced water > all through thr I sire* and then smashed ! in the ends thereof, leaving the board 1 permanently waterlogged, but they

j cautiously ve-crYed judgment.

It ia believed by some historian* that coal waa uaed by the Romans on the continent and by tbe Britons on tbe ia ; land before the arrival of Oeaar. As ^ early as 1284 Henry III granted a li cense to dig coal near Newcastle, but a; few yean later the nae of coal wa* for bidden in London, the smoke fating 1 deemed prejudicial to public health. In 1806 tbe Koodoo gentry petitioned tlie king against ita use. declaring that in apite of hia royal order, certain malicious persons persisted in burning it Coals began to be brought frnn>! Newcastle to London In 1361. durin;;; the reign of Richard il By the yeai 1400 rue I waa commonly burned In; London aa a fuel though *00 year, I later, in tlie reign of Charles L it* us. waa far from bring general throughout j Anthracite coal, which, except tb*-. diamond ia tbe purest form of car!,. :-, known, waa first used by a Connecticut blacksmith named Gore, in 1*68. and! at a domestic fuel by Judge Jesse F< 1 !

of Wilkeeberre. Fa. in I turn

DO ROCKS GROW!

Is it indeed true that rocks grow in tbe s-a ? Are there reefs in coarse of rapid formation' A circular recently ieamd by the minuter at marine calls at tention to unknown rock* along tbe eeacuast and offers premium* to fishermen who discover rock* not shown by tbe charts An inhalant of Biarritisriilos "What i* taking place at Biarritt 1* probably occurring along other rocky shores and may well explain tbe de- ; Brienciee of our charts. Submarine rocks grow, and in Ibe course of a few

' years a reef may be foul

When 1 was a child, sumthe rocks lying fartbret a of rock* surrounding pi

told n;

tide.

- that when be w

years old be waa on a Biarritz boat near this rock. His master showed him tbe rock, then cover***! by several feet of water, saying, ‘Child, if you live to be 60 years old you will see this ruck ont

of wsler.’

"Today tbe rock, which, in tbe cbildboqd of tbe old fisherman, was covered with water and in my child hood was hardly uncovered at low water, is *6 "A more recent fact Fifteen year* ago a fisherman perceived at a dutanca of 200 metres from the rock jnat mentioned. beyond the belt that prelect* us. a new ruck which w«* beginning to ■grow.' Today thie rock, which wa* not in existence 26 years mgn shows itadf at high tide It ia at a spot where tb* charts indicatisten metres of water at lowfnt tide and endangree navigation " Evidently our rharla are not revised

Although women In Paris had t right for tbe first time tbe other day vote, few exercised the privilege the arcond arrondiimneut only three voted, and a similar number in tbe eighth Much tbe same waa the result

of Coamoa. re-

vi.ion should I* made every Ion year*. , Bnt do they grow t There i* no doubt that the aeacvwet naea andaiuka Thera j ia a pronounced aeeeaw movement along tbe Atlantic shore*, hot is it auflicient to cause rock* to grow oat of tb* walac in half a century t The question ia in-

the (Jtiariicr Lat'u. wind might be thought the Trey sanctum aancUvum ol women’s right*, not a tingle member of tb* fait aex took tbe trouble to rota The sola exception to tbi* otherwise general indifference waa tbe Brat ar

ent which oomprhae the market*, where aeverel tun-

* would be criminal in a matter ao runs h> navigation aa submarine —Current Literature.

Halle*, a dred woe

•* their Tt

“What apj-ear* to be tb* matter with your father- inquired the doctor aa bs hastily put hi* clothes on "He a got tlie plumbago.’’replied the boy "I think that * what maw aaye it it." "Pain in the small of the hock. I raatuaef “No. •