D E A T H T A K E S CJS B Y SURPBJSE.
Death takes us by surprise,
And d a y s our hurrying fe«t;
The great design unfinished lies,
Our lives are Incomplete.
But in the dark unknown
Perfect their circles seem,
Even as a bridge’s arch of stone
Is rounded in the stream.
Alike are life and death,
When life in death survives,
4nd the uninterrupted breath
Inspires a thousand lives.
Were a star quenched on high
For ages would its light
Still traveling downward from the sky,
Shine on our mortal sight.
So when a great man dies,
For years beyond our ken,
The light he leaves behind him lies
Upon the paths of men.
— Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
The Elder’s
Burnt Sacrifice
Old Elder McEntee, as his friends
affectionately called him, was feeling
very cheerful and at times was moved
of the spirit to hum a bar or two of
some especially Quickening revival
melody.
Had he not held a successful revival
at the Towne school house? Was not
the campaign rich In victories over
the hosts of sin? And now to hasten
to a new and fertile field at the call
of souls In need? Right there, over
his heart, lay some of the new kind
of paper money that would help the
wife, tried and true In all the dire pri
vations of pioneer life, now at home
some fifty miles away.
"Thank God for His Infinite mer
cies!” said the good old Elder, aloud.
The crisp stars sparkled down on
the snowy road. The old moon hid
behind the horizon's thither verge,
clasping her dead and darkened self
In crescent arms.
It was war times, the great Otvll
War, now little more than an echo In
the halls of history. National danger.
M S
*
M A S H
o r
N N A K J .l N O
D U O S .
carnage and death wrought the souls
of men to mighty spiritual throes.
As the old Elder strode sturdily
«Jong the roughly hewn out highway
through pine and hemlocks, he lifted
up his voice in one of the popular war
songs of the period:
"T im e with the column and charg'ng
In the storm.
As men go marching on;
Glory, glory, hallelula!
jUlory, glory----- "
Hark! what Is that answering cho
rus far down on the road behind him?
Silence! Maybe It Is a belated "tote"
team,” hauling supplies to some lum
ber camp. Ye«, no doubt that was the
d river'» answering song; those "lum
ber jack «" are ever fond of song.
Cheered by the prospect of a ride
when the team caught up. the Elder's
Blind turned to a review of the revi
val closed the night before. Again he
fervently thanked God for His mer-
eles a« he thought of the dozen pio
neers who came to the "anxious seat,"
asked for prayers, and. under Divine
conviction, made a profession of faith.
At his return four weeks hence he
world administer baptism to the lit
tie i>and of saints, his brands pluck
ed from the fires of sin.
Then his mind turned to the urgent
cail that came to him, a hopeful call
from the unconverted asking him to
begin « revival at the McCall school
house the next Sunday evening.
Strong and self-reliant at three
•core and five, accustomed until well
past 15 to buffet the ocean ctorms, a
sailor before the mast, he had sturdily
refused all conveyance through
the
twenty miles of forest roads. Now, at
midnight, he was still five miles frooi
brother Smith's.
but this was the last long stretch
of woods, the last turn In the road
was at b a u d . A u«i!e iaiih er mud u#
would come to the first "clearing." Be
yond there the cabins of the pioneers
were frequent »11 the way.
Then his soul warmed as he re
called the genrrous collection taken
un for h m and put his -hand over r
pocket where one of those new and
handsome greenbacks" kept hla heart
aglow with gratitude toward his fel-
lowmen.
THINGS YOU MAY NOT KNOW.
But, Isn't it time the team overtook
him? He turned to listen.
Night!
Darkness! Silence!
A ton of water contains 224 gal-
Perhaps he could rouse the driver
ons.
by power of song. He poured forth
Tha United Kingdom manufacture«
the fiercely triumphant challenge of
160,000
tons o f soap yearly.
an old-time revival melody:
Germany's four super-dreadnoughts
• ill each have a crew of 1,000 men.
"Satan's mad and I am glad,
braise the Lord----- ”
New Alaskan copper fields may re-
luce the price of electrolytic copper to
"Ow-w-w!" came a long drawn wall > cents a pound.
from the road he had so lately trod.
In the forty years 1868 to 1908 Ja
From the road twenty
rods ahead pan’s yearly foreign trade Increased
came a shorter reply. To the left a
from »13,000,000 to $407,000,000.
chorus broke out In wildest fury.
Prof. Lankester says there have nev-
W olves!” said the Elder, aghast.
Tha long drawn ^a^T of the leader >r been any large flying animals, and
again chased the mournful
echoes *> there cannot be any large flying ma-
deep In forest gloom. No time to lose. ' shines.
The Elder broke from the track, worn
Japan's principal mineral produo-
deep by "tote” teams, and hastened tlons are. In order of Importance as
through the deep snow to the tre es ! named, copper, sulphur, silver, Iron,
beside the road. There was but one coal, petroleum and gold,
tree of climbing size at hand, so tar j T (je turbine derives Its power not
as he could discern, amidst that murk from the expansive pressure of steam,
and gloom.
J is In a cylinder engine, but from Its
This was a pine, possibly six or sev- [nomentum, impinging at high velocity
en inches through. Some falling giant oa vanes attached to the revolving
of the woods had broken off the top, ibaf^
perhaps ten feet from the ground.
Hea]th Commla()Ioner R itchle of Bog.
The Elder paused an instant, then hi. ((m dec,ares tfaat
onla lg now
sailor training served him well as he
. . . , , .
.......
B
^ Che most fatal disease in his jurisdic-
climbed the quivering tree, and none
.
..
.,
. „ , _
H
cion. According to the present figures
f (ft) n/ui n
• k
uu
af the Board of Health, pneumonia
It was a mere stub with only on#
_ . .
.. .
B
. » ...
. . conies first, heart disease second and
limb strong enough to hold up his
•
. ..
“
. . . Cuberculosls, which was first In 1900,
weight, and near the top. ¿ven this ^
seemed alarmingly near the earth, and
of brittle pine. The first w o lfs eyes
A British gunboat returning from
glowed In the darkness below as he Bering sea reports new changes In the
seated himself cautiously and threw j Bogoslov Islands, which were created
one arm over the broken top of the
the Alaskan coast five years ugo
friendly tree. Others came loping, by a volcanic upheaval. What were
hunger driven; or slinking cautiously at fir8* two separate Islands are now
In dread of danger; some high sped made into one by the rising of the
by youthful Ignorance and courage.
^ceau floor between. Vegetation Is al-
Soon they rushed, a frantic, grue- ready beginning to appear on the new-
some band, leaping high in air. The born Islets.
Elder drew his feel up on hla slender
The railway station of Bragulla, Ser-
perch as the lithe leader sprang high via, Is so Infested with snakes that
and closed his Jaws with a crash of | special precautions are taken when
gleaming teeth no more than a foot irains stop there to prevent the rep-
j Hies from entering the compartments.
und a half from the Elder's feet.
They were now a mass of snarling An Englishwoman coming from Con-
dogs standing up beside the tree to stantlnople was appalled to find a
tear Its bark with cruel fangs;
or small snake coiled round the handle
Jumping on each other's backs to g e t 1 0f her traveling bag. The consequent
nearer the coveted feast. The Elder j search resulted In the discovery of sev-
could think of no comparison more fit eral other snakes among the passen-
than a revival meeting led by th e 1 ?ers’ rugs.
evil one with fiends on the "anxious
The news that the King and Queen
seat!"
■ have consented to allow their names
He was terrified In body and soul. [Q bf) a88lgned t0 the we8tern towsrs
but soon his resolute spirit calmed the 3f Truro Cathedral „ extremely wel-
body s terror as he poured out his come. Many of our cathedral towers
trust, his hope, hl3 faith and resigna
bear names connected with some saint
tion, In fervent prayer to God,
or some great local notability, but we
The ravenous beasts becazne more
believe it is a new departure of re
noisy In their fury as Immunity to
cent years to give them a royal aspect.
danger grew apparent A t
last It
The kindly action of the King and
came to the Elder like a flash of In
Queen w ill be much appreciated In
spiration, even like a divine answer
Cornwall.— Lady's Pictorial.
to that Heaven-piercing prayer, that
The province of Prince Edward Isl
wolves are terrified at the flash of
and, Canada, has ceasea to produce to-
flame and fire,
He drew from his pocket a match b3000, all attempts having proved un
box, relic and habit of sailor days J Profitable. The rest of Canada pro-
But, what to use for tinder?
| Auced 11,266,732 pounds In 1908, near-
Searchlng his pockets he clasped
a11 ln lbe Provlnce3
Quebec and
his Bible in hand. Ah! the leaves are ; 0ntaHo
The domlnlon turned out
Just the thing!
1 $15,274,293 worth of tobacco (manu-
Then his soul shook In strong re -1 factured), cigars, cigarettes and snuff
In 1908, besides Importing $3,385,348
vulslon as he cried aloud:
Better death than desecration of worth of whlch * 3.247,429 worth was
Thy W ord!”
j from the United States. Consumption
He reverently returned the Bible to ' of tobacco Increased from 1.755 pounds
his coat pocket and slipped his be- a head ln 1869 t0 2 257 P °unds ln ^OS-
numbed hand under his coat.
Ah!
A cairn and cross have been erected
that vest pocket and the treasured on Killingtrlngan moor, near Ballan-
"greenback."
| trae, ln memory of Robert Cunning-
Wlth fingers slightly warmed
he ham, postman, who perished there ln
gathered a bunch of pine "needles" the great snowstorm of last winter,
and carefully placed the crisp ten-dol-! A t the unveiling the postmen from the
lar bill within, scratched a match and surrounding districts attended In uni-
held It beneath his treasure.
form. Into the cairn Is built an In-
Tlny flame; a glimmer; a hope; a scribed block of granite, and along
th illl of keen despair; another tongue with a memorial tablet ln Ballantrae
of flame from a new match; a burst parish church, it Is the outcome of a
of light.
j public subscription. The cross Is a
Already some of that coward crew gift from the postmen's federation ln
are skulking shadows,
cautiously memory of a comrade who lost his life
breaking off a handful of twigs and on duty.— London Globe.
branches he lighted them and dropped
___ ___________
_____ at
The
American ____________
vice-consul-general
them all aflame among the besiegers, Calcutta. India, reports that a great
now retreating toward the outer dark- j business Is springing up ln that
n e s s .
J
i n
metropolis ln securing and preparing
Down the road a rifle shot rang out, the skins of brown rats, which are
sharp, Imperative command; rousing used for many purposes, such as bind
the slumbering echoes to Insistent re ing of books, the making of purses,
ply. The wolves vanished like phan gloves and other articles of feminine
toms ln wterdest dreams.
use and adornment, and the traffic ln
"Hello, there! Anyone ln trouble?" this commodity with ureat Britain
rang out a voice In the distance.
amounts to $250,000 yearly. It Is re-
"The wolves had
.
V
. e * nad 'ne treed !" said j quired that the rats shall be trapped.
1 n*
but' thank God’ they have ! or- at least, no virus shall be used ln
,
j killing, as the peculiar eruptive effects
. . .
*
ree armed rescuers ar- 0f poison depreciates the value of the
rHed
found ,in»
the
9k|
n. The
of rodents at v Cal-
from they
the tree
„ good Eh.er down
. |—
.........
— supply ~
»,-
the snow
pouring firth hi
h * ° CU*U '* 881,1 t0 be ,lllmltabl*- while
the demand for rat skins, particularly
ness ln praise to the Great Deliverer
v
T
in fe rv it » e r a . »x i
i
erer- : of the brown species, Is constantly In
in fervid words the inspired psalmist Pr»«.|ne
might have spoken.
creasing.
For many winters, around the cozy ! Chocolate creams, eacu one of which
farmhouse fires, a favorite story was ts guaranteed to contain at least ten
that of the burned greenback which mllllon carefully isolated lactic acid
good old Elder McEntee sacrificed — or ma88ol bacilli ln the highest state
E. Hollenbeck.
of activity, have Just been placed on
sale ln London stores
They are a
British bacteriologist's solution of the
' l o r e IM auftlble.
A young and enterprising Kanmj« problem set by Professor Metchnlkoff
lawyer was trying one of his first of the Pasteur Institute In Paris who
c««es, relates a writer Iti the Kanins urged the imbibing of sour milk or
City Journal He desired to Illustrate lactic acid for the arresting of old
his contention by means cf hypothesis, age. but who omitted to say how the
nauseating effects of this substance
and began:
"W e will suppose, your honor, that upon delicate subjects could be avoid-
your honor were to «teal « hori
ed. The blue massol bacillus is not
HOPE
f r i e n d s W o r k i n g t o S e c u r e H e le n » #
o f C o n v i c t e d V a p o le o n o f F ln e n c e .
Efforts to secure a pardon for |
Charles W. Morse, the fallen Napoleon j
of finance, who has begun to serve a
sentence of fifteen years In the federal
■
The eruptions of Vesuvius greatly
penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga„ for viola- lQcreage thg ferliU ty of the ground in
tion of the federal banking laws, have
begun. His counsel, Martin W. Little -1
’
.
. . , , 2e Bel.
ton, and his wife, who has clung to her
Into the trade school a
t
“
husband with great fidelity and who glum, there has been Introduced
fostered by
disposed of her jewelry and most of J course in cigar making,
her personal effects a few- months ago government subsidy,
to aid ln the fight to secure his free-
Hundreds of the houses of Minneap-
dom, w ill lead in the movement. Every | oils and St. Paul are equipped with
Influence, political and other, w ill be outdoor open bedrooms, where
the
brought to bear to procure a Presiden-, owners sleep in the coldest weather,
tlal pardon, for that Is now the sole j
TbB p e n d in g noise of steam pipes
avenue of escape before the dethroned j caQ be obviated by attaching to the
Ice king.
| plpeB a gmau check valve, set to ad-
In the great federal penitentiary j mR alr but not t0 reiease any prea-
Mor8e has been assigned to work as a gure
tailor, and ln this occupation he will
Kegearcheg ,n 0ermany Bhow that a
be obliged to put ln eight hours a day.
“
tlt of rea-hot coke will ab-
Early to bed and early to rise I . the *
«
the amount 0f water
rule of the prison and Sunday, with
... ,
.
00ite
the few holiday, which are Inter- that will be absorbed by the same coke
spersed throughout the year, w ill be | °°*d'
the only day of rest. The food, while | The detailed formula of every patent
wholesome, w ill be of the plainest and j medicine has to be filed with the Aus-
wlll be a remarkable change for a man | trian government and other require-
who has for many years been accus- ments fulfilled before Its Importation
;omed to the delicacies of the most lux Is allowed.
uriant restaurants In New York.
Experiments are being made ln En-
Convlcts ln the prison are divided j giand and Germany in cultivating the
Into three classes. As long as Morse
beaDi which Is said to be nearly
remains tractable he will be ln Class 1 three times as rich ln albuminoids as
and will be allowed to draw books j ^ t s and wheat.
from the library, receive visitors and
Q recently compieted and placed
write letters. I f he become, bad. in ,n X)mmlBBlon the (aBte8t passenger
the prison meaning of the term, he 8team8hll) ,n the Haclac. o a ruel and
turbine engines give It a speed of
twenty-three knots.
The total length of railway under
construction or Immediately projected
ln India is 3,222 miles, of which about
one-third is by the British'governm ent
and the rest by private companies.
The estimated cost is over $12,000,000.
Miss Helen Gould has given $150,000
to the American college for girls at
Constantinople. The college is about
to move from Scutari to the European
side of the Bosphorus. Dr. Mary Mills
Patrick, a native of Canterbury, N. H.,
Is the president.
A remarkable suspension bridge
spans the R iver Apurlmac ln central
Peru. The ropes of this bridge are
composed of pliable roots and vines,
while the planks are made of branch
es. In the humid climate of Peru It
would be by no means extraordinary If
this vegetable bridge were one day to
start growing.
toplofty parlor car conductor It J
O’R ell; and he did It by burstini]
with a threat to pitch him thrj
tbe window, about the openiot]
which they disagreed.
It Is not the highly placed o M
however, but the petty jacks l n j
who are the most bumptious; thej
lie f ln their own importance apj
to be ln direct proportion to their]
ciflr levity. A smart young clerl
a certain suburban city hall once i
to snub and make needless troublj
a quiet, shabby, elderly man whej
requested an Item or lnformatl«
his counter. T o the young fellow'll
comflture, the old gentleman rerJ
so far as to free his mind as folio]
"M y friend, let me ask If I
your service or you ln mine, pj]
ways supposed my tax money h
pay you and these other chaps he
work for the city to the best of
ability. And as I am a citizen of
city I ’m one o f your bosses, and
Ject to being treated as If i wai
better than dirt; besides which
your own account you want to
little more civil, or some day yoot
hunting another Job. It never it
you ln Just that light before, nu
but it's so all the same."
A little plain talk o f this sort,
veylng a wiholesome lesson, Is ac
much oftener than It Is given,
of us submit to domineering rg
than make a fuse, being surprised
deed, If we don't get It. If the pok
man on the corner, when we ask
a direction, responds with anyti
better than patronizing oondebceiy
we are absurdly grateful.
We I
proach the box office o f a theater
even the desk of a hotel, as »u
cants, ready to cringe at the ex
rudeness or rebuff.
In the (-
cars, of the large cities at leek
avoid personal Intercourse wliw
men In charge, and look for onT
curtest replies If need forces
Interrogate them.
However, there Is something
said on the other side, and If
feel moved on occasion to put orJ
these hlgh-and-haughty officials In I
proper place, let us do lit good-i
peredly, not forgetting the hint
by a certain street car company It
printed notice to the effect that it
courtesy Is to be desired from the |
ductor, Its practice Is not unbecoj
ln the passenger.
W A R ON W O LV E S A N D COYOfi
C o lo r a d o W i l l E m lp a v o r
in I n a t o I V * t * t o H a v e
t o En|
Game.
State Game Commissioner T. J. ]
land w ill have a dreaded name am'
the coyotes and wolves before he
out of office, for he Is determtn
wage war of extinction against
"varmints.”
Commissioner Holland believes j
coyotes are responsible for destruc*
of more game ln Colorado tha:
will Sink to Class 2 or Class 3. and £
'“ T r
^
army of pot hunters thirty time,
those In the latter grade are deprived * * h“ lder
* * * » ‘ lcan^
*• Prac- large as those which annually
of all privileges.
tlce the medlcal PTOfe“ lon-
the deer sections. A ll during the
The rise and fall of Charles W.
The Daughters of the American mer and winter they are chasing;
Morse forms an interesting chapter [ Revolution are taking steps to organ- deer, pulling dowij young fawns la-
in the recent history of New York's i lz® chapters of the society ln all the
late summer and capturing hel-
financial methods.
As a young col- large co-educational and women's col animals in the deep snow when
lege man in Maine he engaged in the j leg®8 of the country. The first and ter comes.
Ice business and prospered, and with j at present the only chapter Is made
Therefore he will Issue lnstruc#
a good working capital came to New ! UP of Barnard undergraduates and
to all game wardens to poison
York, where he formed the Ice Trust, was organized through the efforts of
and wolves. The government hasl
with a capitalization of $40,000,000. Mrs W illiam Cumming Story and Mrs.
fected a new wolf poisoning sys
Then he branched into the banking j Donald McLean. It received Its first
that Is said to work very effeotll
business and soon owned or controlled public recognition from older chapters
And the old strychnine carcass wlj
twenty different financial Institutions, during the Hudson-Eulton celebration,
worked to the lim it to deplete]
using one bank security for securing j
a woman has Just been
made a bands of killers which range all J
control of another. Not content with | judge ln Denmark, and the Danish
the mountains and plains of Cc'oiT
these triumphs, which netted him | women are boasting that it Is the first
In the early days, according to '
many millions, he organized the Con- : time In the history of the world that
missloner Holland, coyotes rarelyj
solidated Steamship Company, with a BUch au office has been given to a
quented the mountains. Hardly a
capitalization of $120,000,000. Had not woman. The suffragists of the United
trapper or pioneer remembers
the panic of 1907 occurred. Morse state3 repiy by pointing to Mrs. Es-
having seen coyotes in the moun
would have been able to swing his ther Morris, of Wyoming; Mrs. Cath-
Sustenance was far easier on
great enterprises but he fell one of erlne Waugh McCulloch, of
Illinois,
plains for two reasons, the game
the victims of that disastrous financial and Mrs Mary ^
of KansaJ1 Tbe
more easily caught and the coy
crash and In a night the title of Ice
Jewish women add to this list Debo did not have man to depend
King, Banking K ing and Steamship
rah, the w ife of Lapldoth, who not When men went Into the moun!
K ing passed away from him forever.
only Judged the people o f Israel for the refuse they threw away from
In an endeavor to save himself he mis
forty years, but led their forces to livin g would keep a coyote aliv# .
appropriated funds of the National
battle because the general refused to long time.
Bank of North America, and It Is for
go without her.
The mountain coyotes now
this offense he Is now a prisoner ln
In olives Italy has the name, Spain around ranch houses and towns
he Atlanta penitentiary.
the game. The cultivation in Spain than anywhere else, and ln the
A p p re c ia tio n
t o r a P o e t.
covers the largest area of all countries time steal ln to p ilfer and gorge,
always find plenty to eat eith
On the day It was announced that In Europe, with about 3,200,000 acres
the body of poor John Davidson had I of whlch about 1,800,000 are ln Anda- k illing game or stealing from
been found. I read a brief paragraph lu8ia- Eating olives are delivered dry Commissioner Holland thinks tf
showing how such a calamity might t0 the factories, where they are soaked can do much toward preserving
easily have been avoided.
The in- in larBe vats with a solution of caus- and k illing coyotes by using
especially as the new game law
habltants of Tourcolng, ln the north tlc
90(13
unt11 the solution has pene-
vldes bounty money.— Denver
of France, are very proud of their trated to
the stones. After a washing
local dialectic poet, M. Jules Wat- ln ,resh water the olives are put into llcan.
teun. Instead of waiting to erect a j hogsheads of brine for two months of
A D is a p p o i n t i n g ^ W i t
«tatue to him after death they have fermentation. When they are bottled
Deacon Stephen Potter, one
made sure that he shall be put be- new brlne 18 U9ed. hut the output from
>’°nd the reach of financial worry, the factories Is usually in hogsheads pioneers o f Utica, N. Y., was a
great eccentricity but high moral
that bane of so many poets great and boldln8 160 gallons.
acter.
"The deacon w ill speak
small, during his lifetime.
There |
________________________
truth and shame the devil," w asJ
was a demonstration In honor of M
O F F IC IA L INSOLENCE.
said of him.
Watteun last year and a public sub-!
--------
On one occasion a friend wM
SCription Was Opened. The sum col- Am erican . »«a n a w ith « n „
H a n d ” H efore H ire d M en.
gaged ln a lawsuit ln regard to
,9rted has now h**“" utilized to build
land a few miles from Utica. H(
the 1,081 a house' whlch 8ha11
bl*
^ x . SC° h Wh°. boarded a British
d,,rin* hls »fe tim e and then revert ® ar8bi'P a° d , 8ent WOrd to lts « P l a i n the land at a high price. DurtqT
,0 the fommune- and ln addition to lhat 0n® “ V * 18 owners’' wished to see trial he called Deacon Potter i
* ‘oure Mm an annuity; while If hls bim
ted a fact wlilch few ° f us ness, to prove how valuable the
death Precedes that of hls wife an bav8 the backbone to stand up to; that was. The deacon was sworn and
annul,y of ha>f the value w ill be paid tb # b u “ ble masses 0W1> ‘ he earth by ed If he knew the land.
right of having paid for It with their
"Yea," he rep lied ,"I know eve
to her so long as she lives.
more or less hard earned money, it of I t ”
P e rfe c t C o a t t n « fo r H a m a .
seem as
proprietors of
of
"W hat do you think lt wortlij
Mraslin" ts the name of .
x would
.x
. If we, ’ the
e Proprietors
Potter?" was the next question.
stance that ts used In Bohemia to cost ly m eek'in°reaardiePUbllC'o?re 9P<* ‘ a1'
The old man paused a moment!
hams. It 1. pliable as rubber
‘ ,1 1 t '* ! * * " *
° Ur ™ red
as our mas- then said, slowly, " I f I had as
less and harmless, and keeps'The hams te ™ "m h e r *th «n noiirOWn’
..lo- meat», - eggs,
___
.
our Pa‘ d '® rTant8- dollars— aa my yoke of oxen—d
— alto
etc,
perfectly P ™ ratner
! * « s t tnan
i
draw— on a sled— on glaze Ice— l]
freali almost Indefinitely
th em r-cT w
'J ' **lckn* 1 1 “ Y* In L lp p ln ro tf.
lln can be peeled fro m 'th e hame al- by nuWlT Z
T Z
V
br0w b* at8“ — I would not give— a dollar an |
most as easily as the skin from a J P
d ^as.-publlc official» to for I t ! "
an extent that amazes the foreign er.
banana,
Miss Ivy E. Woodward, M. D., has
been admitted to full membership ln
the Royal College of Physicians, of
London. It is the first time ln its his
tory that this body has conferred the
coveted M. R. C. P. on a woman, al
though some women have obtained the
"No. no. n o '" Interrupted the Judge.
th* f° * ° f th* red »« m iu * —col-
"N ot at all, not at all sir
--
communis, or
or putrefaction
mitref..-tinn mt—
X—
Not ■ a lus
Iu8 c-ommunl*.
mlcrobs
suppc&able
te-aahU -wee, sir."
~^>nt !t» undisputed maaur. The
Very well, begging your honor'. b' U* army of h*0" 11' lt
ur»«d. have
pardon
■don." said the eager lawyer, with ao 8°oner been liberated ln the human
more seal than prudence; "very welT system by the swallowing of a bon-
immediately to
»»»*■« luiuieuiaceiy
xo| r»ur Idea of a fnoli.n
i
^ titled Englishman recenGy wasted
then supposing I should steal a horse bon than they begin
declare war on the red army of putre- - h o is ^ r a i d M
W° man U 0nt " UCh,
,n learnlb*
that an
■s. until at th
the . m
end i of
,» Wb0J * a,rald o f a moU88 and '»n7 American railway conductor 1« allowed
Ah, yee, yee." said the Judge, “that faction microbes,
_______________
b* a>most as autocratic as tha cap-
° f * m>"-
la a very different thing; very 41ff«r a few week, at moat, by the aw T low -'
Ing of three bonbons dally, tha "reda"
Many a man falls to arrlva because
,f7 an ^ « n liner. Among the
ent, Mr. X. Proceed, sir."
few "strangers In our midst” who
have been routed.
|
»tartad with cold feet
hava really succeeded ln silencing a
Tbe
F le s h
F ig .
The housefly lays eggs, but tha]
fly, known as the bluebottle, pn,l
livin g larvae, about fifty at a tlml
Many people seem to
claity of doing Uie wrong thing
right time.
1