The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, May 06, 1908, Image 3
1IM lINul
The Wonderful Wilderness Counl
i Ready to Travel With Rod and
tible Supplies of Trout an
Canadian Regions--Oi
Wo outdoor pastime that takes th(
devotee away from home is so universally
enjoyed as fishing. It is ai
exhilarating, carc-deft roying sport
that is practiced practically from on<
end of the earth tc the other; and ir
our own country hundreds of thou
sands who never indulge in any othei
form of outing and exercise religious
ly set aside at least a few days in th<
year for the enjoyment of this time
honored anvisement.
Every section of The United States
has its peculiar kind of fishing. Ir
the Gulf of Mexico the mighty tarpoi
is king; in California waters the leap
ing tuna is the special quarry of th<
angler;, along the Atlantic coast th<
bluefish tempts the skill and tries th<
patience of American citizens as il
lustrious as ex-President Cleveland
and nearly everywhere throughou
the land some species of the mos
popular of all fresh water denizens
the trout, is found, and in many sec
tions the lordly and much-prize<
salmon.
Nowhere on the continent, now
ever, is there a most distinctive!]
"fishing country" than in the State o
Maine. New England as a whole, in
deed, might well come under that des
ignation, for the marvellously ricl
fishing country of the Pine Trei
State is admirably supplemented wit!
the lake and river-gemmed Common
wealths of New Hampshire and Ver
raont adjoining, while in New Bruns
wick, Quebec, Nova Scotia and othe
portions of the great Canadian wilder
ness contiguous, the opportunities fo;
the angler are practically unlimited.
Even as this article is being writ
ten, a great host of fishermen (an;
not a few of them are of the fair sex)
are quietly and eagerly making th<
necessary preparations for the annua
dpRoent imon the New Eneland o
Canadian wilderness, their brains 01
fire with visions of the "big fellows
they know are waiting for the cast o
the fly or the trolling of the bait.
One can get ready for a fishing trip
even to the wilds of Maine, withii
a reasonably short space of time, bu
there are lots of Waltonites who pre
fer to devote weeks to those deliciou
preliminaries, because it adds just si
much to the long drawn out sweetnes
of the "spring'fishing fever."
Down in Maine the piscatorial sea
son will be in full blast about the firs
of May, for it is about that time tha
the annual telegram which gives ti
thousands of Americans such an elec
trie shock?"the ice is out"?finds it
way into the newspapers of the coun
HhB n
ll llsB'' jBSfc^
w^HRv r ' * ]|K>, & < flraSj&j
^7l?H!!k 'i iiR'V^vfl0^
! ?S? I
From the Rangeley Region.
try. or is displayed on straw-colorei
blanks in the windows of railroa
ticket offices.
And the railroads! How much the
have done-not only to popularize th
sport of fishing, but to make it s
easy a pastime, that even frail worae
may now journey into "the heart c
the ancient wood" and have just a
good a lime, and just as good spori
as their husbands and brothers, with
out the least tit of discomfort.
I'ilcrimfti'cs.
Of tbe big delegation of amaie.i
fishermen that will shortly be stait
ing north and east from the cities an
towns of tbe South and the Middl
Atlantic States, by far the larger pei
centage will go to the imperial Stat
of trout. salmon and "big game,
Maine. There are American fishei
men?some of them of national repv
tuition?who have annually been map
ing piscatorial pilgrimages to th
same fishing ground for twenty-fiv<
thirty and even forty years.
Of course, for those who prefer i
there is still the primitive lean-to c
branches, the canvas tent, and th
spruce-bough bed. with the nocturn*
reunion and story-telling around th
camp fire. The woods to-day, in fac
is all things to all men. and it is litei
ally a case of paying your money an
taking your choice
Nowhere in this great democrac
of ours is there a more democrat!
corner than the wt.ods of Maim
rrV?^M/\ -it" ?\?\ ?? f. ri f c r
j urj t r i/vu.t ir vaj a i uuiiuf, v i oi
rial f quality for the nonce. 1
?!' cl jJJ?e I'lSv 0 IjO* 0LJ) i J 't't Ui tiiiiO
to nature, but to human nature.
:pjf Whither Thousands Are Getting
Camera This Spring--Inexhausd
Salmon in the Maine and
? ? ? ?- pi 1 i d nnn
ic 1*1 an s nccuru u,vw>
5 Some of the perennial fishermen
- have "records" of catches that are
i nothing less than astounding. There
t is one authentic case of a gentleman
> who in thirty-four years, each year
1 accompanied by the same guide, has
- taken from the waters of the Ranger
ley region no less than 13,000 trout.
- Many of these, of course, have been
i returned to their natives element, on
- account of smallness of size, but think
of sitting before one's open fire on a
s stormy evening in December and rel
calling the capture of 13,000 fish,
) with their accompanying train of ex
citing or romantic incidents!
j If any one should inquire what part i
? of Maine is the best fishing ground,
i the answer might both truthfully and
- logically be. "any old part of the
; State." Watered, as it is, by such
t long and sinuous rivers as the Kent
nebec. the Penobscot, the Allagash, ;
, the Fish and the St. John, and
- gemmed all over its smiling surface
3 with, hundreds of water-sheets rang- |
JiJli iium 'wi LJ iiiiiv IVJU^
f' BjBflMHBiMiBKJHBBPWBMWWM
{ Five Trout Weighing 12 Pounds.
?
If Moosehead Lake down to the most di- j
3 minutive of ponds, Maine could j
t scarcely be anything but a fishing i
. country of highest repute.
s Its lakes and streams, naturally j
3 prolific of the finny tribe, are kept so i
s well stocked by the fish and game au- I
thorities that, to all intents and pur- j
. poses, they are practically inexhausti- !
t ble. For the thousands of trout, togue. j
t bass, pickerel and other game fish '
a that are taken from the waters of i
. Maine every year by the great invad- ,
s ing army of rod-bearers, hundreds of i
. thousands of "fry" are carefully put j
into those same waters by the em- j
ployes of the fish commission. This
is one reason why the fishing is al- !
ways good "down in Maine." Busi- J
ness panics and waves of prosperity i
I may play tag up and down the spinal I
i column of the body politic as they j
will, but the fishing goes on in the j
lakes and streams of Maine with the !
regularity of Tennyson's brook, and j
every resort in the State is "the best," |
if the word of its regular habitues is
to be taken at par.
The "fishing fever," like the grippe, !
is no respector of persons. Onp of !
the most ardent enthusiasts of the :
sport, and a regular victim of the j
"spring fever," is a noted United !
States Senator, who has a famous !
camp at the Rangeleys. Doctors, law
vers and Indian chiefs (the latter :
usually in the guise of professional j
guides), captains of industry, Wall j
Street bankers, merchant princes, !
gentlemen of leisure, bookkeepers, 1
railroad officials, journalists and j
i about every otner proiession ana can- ;
! ing represented in this strenuous
- j Amerh-un life of ours, are found upon !.
d j this outdoor roll of honor, sonaevOf ;
d them gliding in from the windy west j
in palatial private cars, the six-pound j
>" trout which they land, almost from i
e the platform of their Pullman, being !
o later done to a turn by a high priced i
n cbef of ebon hue.
f Outfits may be secured or com- |
s pieted jr. Boston. the great gateway
t. to the New England fishing, hunting j
i- and vacation country, or in Portland 1
I cjy Bangor.
I Present indications for an early j
opening cf the 1908 fishing season
I o w* vorv r*v/irr>iciri <r ori/-l of !
(j railroad ticket agencies are reported i
e to be hilly up to the average.
On account of the comparative ab- [
e seme of snow and slush last winter, i
" the ice in the Maine lakes formed !
-! very clear, which enables the warm
i- rays of the spring sun to penetrate !
t- For this reason the guides are pre- i
e dieting that the ice will be out of j
?, i Moosthead. Rangeley and the other j
IsJie? by May 1 or earlier.
t- To the comfort and convenience of I
modern travel by rail?(one may I
e nowadays leave New York or Boston j
in a parlor or sleeping car and be j
e transported to the edge of river or I
t. lake in the midst of the almost pri- j
> meval wilderness)?has been added j
" * ; me muueni usutug cmnp aou us j villi- j
century accessories, in which the |
y downy couch, the piano, the up-to- I
c dat? culinary department, in fact, j
' most of the luxuries of civilization
>- save elevators, arc to l;e found, ban- I
t ishing all the terrors that "roughing j
d j it " i!i?virt-s in the minds of nu>::.v,
I and n a king for ease and c cm lor;
\
THE PULPIT.
*N ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON B>
THE REV. L. 0. ROTENEACH.
riicim-: Dead Eyes OpcncC.
Brooklyn. N. Y?At Bethany Fres
byterian Church the pastor, the Rev
L. O. Rotenbach, preached the Hi ire
sermon in the series on "Miracles; th<
Wonders of Jesus and Their Lesson:
For To-day." His (heme was. "Blinc
Eyes Opened.** The texts were h
Mark 7:23: "He took the blind mai
by the hand and led him out o
town," and Matthew in 0:29 and 20
34: "According to your faith be i
unto you; Jesus had compassion.'
Mr. Rotenbach said:
The texts bring before us threi
scenes in the healing mercy of Jesus
The first is yonder where lies the citj
of Bethsaida. near the Sea of Gali
lee, close by the Jordan. Jesus is ii
that, city; you can see Him togethei
with His disciples. Now, notice tha
company of people yonder. See. the]
are leading a blind man. They brini
him *o Jesus and beseech Him tc
touch uim. Here is faith on the pari
of that company and neutrality ap
parently on the part of the man. Whai
he needs is faith. Jesus undertakes
to arouse that. He takes the blinc
man by the hand, leads him out oi
the city, one side cy tnemseives, tm
man and J6sus.
Now, notice the process, for such ii
is. The Master moistens his eyes
with spital, placcs His hands ovei
them and asks: "Seest thou aughi
at all?" The man looks up. Here
is faith's beginning: "Yes, yes, 3
see men, but I see them like untc
irees walking." Again those hands
are placed over his eyes, and now
Jesus makes him look up also. H(
sees clearly!
Here, now, is the second picture?
two blind men of their own volitior
are following Jesus. Let us get th<
setting. The Master is teaching wit*
Jairus, a ruler, comes beseeching
Him. "My daughter is dead; come
lay Thine hand upon her and sh<
shall live." He goes to grant th(
request, when through the throng ?
woman makes her way, reaches oui
her hand timidly and touches the here
of His garment and is made well. A1
the house of Jairus professional
mourners have taken possession. J?fS'
us puts them out. "The maid is nol
dead but sleepeth." They laugh al
Him. He goes in, takes her by th(
hand, and lo! she rises, and the fame
of it went everywhere.
That is the setting, and now as He
departs from thence, these two blinc
men keep following Him. We car
see them go. How pathetic the sight!
We can hear them creeping out aftei
Him. Listen, "Son of David have
mercy., have mercy, have mercy." Bui
He heeds them not. Now, at length
they approach the house where He is
to remain. He goes within. Crowe
remains outside. But these two blind
men, what will they now do? Thej
are keeping right on eagerly througt
the crowd. They are at the dooi
now.. What! they have gone into the
house and right up to Jesus.
He asks, as He looks upon theii
sightless eyes: "Believe ye that I air
able to do this?" Do they believe!
Why, He has healed that woman it
the way a little while before wher
she had but touched Him. He has
raised from the dead the daughter ol
Taimie hv cimnlv talHnf* hor hv the
hand, and they had kept followins
after Him all along the dusty road
though utterly ignored by crowd anc
by Him. Do they believe now wher
at last they stand by His side? "Yea
Lord," and as the answer bursts from
their eager lips, He touches them
saying: "According to your faith be
it unto you," and their eyes art
opened. Faith is triumphant.
Now, over there we have the thirc
picture. Again we need the'setting
to bring out the force and tfee beautj
cf it. Jesus is going up to Jerusalem.
It is the week before Passovei
??a week before the cross. As He
goes He takeB His disciples one side
and says: "Behold we go up to Jerusalem,
and the Son of Man shall be
betrayed; and they shall condemr
Him to death and deliver Him to the
Gentiles to be mocked, scourged and
crucified, and the third day He shall
rise again."
Then comes to Him the mother ol
Zebedee's children. Her request if
that her sons might sit one on the
right, the other on the left of Jesus
in His kingdom. The ten, you remember,
are incensed, but Jesus calls
them uuto Him, saying: "Ye know
that the princes of the Gentiles lord
it over them, but it shall not be sc
among you. Whosoever will be greal
among you let him become your servant;
even as the Son of Man c^me
not to be served, but to serve and tc
give His life a ransom for many."
After these two events Jesus, His
disciples and a great multitude depart
from Jericho. 1-Ie is in the midsl
of one of those great pilgrim bands
on their way to Passover feast. They
have come from Galilee, augumented
in numbers as they have drawn nearer
to the city of David.
Their people believed on Him?as
a prophet, and in a vague way as
Messiah and the coming king, whc
even now. when thev arrive at the
city, may be crowned, as once before
they sought to crown Him by force.
On sweeps the procession?a crowd
before Him, another behind, Himsell
and di6ciples with others in the middle.
He perchance engaged in teaching.
Suddenly a sharp cry breaks in upon
them. At the roadside ahead sits
blind Bartimaeus and a companion
begging. They hear the advance ol
the multitude. "What means this?'
"Jesus of Nazareth passeth by." A1
once all he had felt, hoped and believed
of Jesus burst out in one greal
cry: ."Jesus, Son of David, have mer? ?
" multitude imnntipni
t.y un no. ^ "v u.u.v.v.iuv, ?
at disturbance, rebukes them and
bids them be still. No, no, louder yel
rises their cry: "Jesus, Sou of David
have mercy on us."
That cry reaches Jesus. He stops
commands that they be brought tc
Him. Bartimaeus leaps forward
throws aside his cloak, a lane opens
through the crowd and now they art
before Jesus. "What will ye that ]
shall do unto you?" "Lord that oui
eyes may be opened." See the wondering
multitude, those eager blint'
ones and Jesus. Is it a wonder thai
He is moved with compassion? H(
touches their eyes. Aiiey receivt
sight immediately, follow Him. glorifying
God, whilst the multitude sings
praises unto God.
These three scenes are given us nol
so much to please or interest us, as
to touch our hearts and to instruct
our faith, mere is a iiiauuesi pi ingress
also. In the first the blind mar
is lead of others to Jesus. In the
second they follow after Him of theii
own eager volition, and in the third
Jesus has them brought to Him. In
each is an advance of faith, and faith
is the medium alone through whicl
we may receive divine things.
We have in the first scene the great
trvuh of the guiding presence of Jesus.
We rend: "Hp k ihe blind
man by ihs ha::d and led him. '
Tender a> d beautiful is this minis*
J try. Jesus Kimself leading the blind.
Can you catch the significance? Can1
. yen see the leveling force of the Cospel?
"All ye are brethren." Yes,
ami Jesus proves it by taking the
hand of the blind.
Can you also realize the positive
directness of Christian service? "Eeai'
ye one another's burdens," is the injunction.
and we have Jesus taking
- the blind man and leading him. He
for the time is eyes for him.
Your Christianity is halting,, my
brother, if you have not in your life
that first hand ministry, which feels
the infirmities ol another and touches
him where his need is.
There is here also the perfecting
service of Jesus. His dealing with
this man is a process. He leads him
by the hand. He moistens his eyes.
He places His hands over them, asks
then "Seest aught?" "Yes, but faintly."
Places hands over eyes again,
their sight comes clearly.
So He deals with you and me. Our
first experience of Him whilst joyous
and hopeful, still is inadequate. But
how patient and forbearing is He
with our weakness and hesitancy.
Renewed and closer contact of fellowship
clears the spiritual vision.
Let Him keep in touch with you,
whilst you yield your will, life and
love to Him. He wiU finally perfect
your vision and you will see Jesus
even as He sees you.
In that second picture we have a
startling manifestation of the all eufficient
power of Jesus. His question
is: "Believe ye that I am able to do
this?"
A great faith grasps this and holds
it tenaciously. Those two blind men
t followed Him along that weary way.
? They kept on until they came to Him
f inside the house. Can you see them?
> Their sightless eyes striving to look
s into His eyes? Can you hear their
r answer: "Yea, Lord, yea, Lord, we
i believe that Thou art able." "According
to your faith" is His answer and
- they see Him?Jesus.
i Do you desire the triumph of a
; great faith, a faith that sees Jesus?
t Then you, too, must believe that "He
; is able." You do believe it? Yes,
, to be sure you do?in a ,way. But do
; you believe it with all your soul by a
? faith that grips your life? Do you
i believe it with a faith that impels
t you, as it did those sightless ones
i along the roadway, weary roadway
t of your life, through the thronging
1 crowds whose carelessness and indif
ference besets you on every hand,
t right on into the very presence ol
t Jesus Himself?
>' You have been trying to do things
> for yourself. Hadn't you better let
Him do them, for He is able? Some
i tViincrc Ho alnnA ran rin for von! trust
I Him. Commit your way unto Him
l ?for remember "According to your
! faith will it be done unto you."
In this third scene we have pre>
eminently the compassionate persont
ality of Jesus. We read: "Jesus had
t compassion." In fact all through this
3 scene it is Jesus, Jesus, Jesus, and
I therefore faith, faith, faith. First,
I we have Jesus of Nazareth passeth
r by. Remember He is always passing
i by, in the great throngs to-day, as
then.
) Do you. feel your great Heed of
Him? Cry out to Him. Bartimaeus
did that and his companion. Are
i you being oppressed, hindered, dis!
couraged by the very ones from whom
i you have reason to expect? Cry out
t yet much the more?those two by the
3 wayside did that. They received
C sight and then followed after Jesus.
> Do that, iiint that, the wav will ODen.
; ^ Secondly, we read Jesus stood still.
, He always will, provided the right
I note is in your cry. Remember He was
i in the midst of a multitude going to
, Jerusalem ? perhaps they will crown
t Him King. Yes, palm branches will
, they strew in His way and cry: "Hoi
sanna in the highest, blessed is the
f King that cometh in the name of the
Lord," and yet?He hears that cry.
I Remepaber He is on His way to
; Jerusalem to accomplish His decease.
r As that conference'- upon the Mount
of Transfiguration revealed the weird
shadow of the cross already is creep(
ing over Him?and yet He hears that
( cry!
What is in that cry? Need? Yes.
s Suffering? Yes. But He finds that
i everywhere. There is something
i more in it. "Jesus have mercy," is
1 it? No. "Jesus, Son of David, have
I mercy." This one had faith in Jesus,
not merely as a great rabbi, but he
' had faith in Him supremely as the
i promised deliverer of Israel, the Mesi
siah. It meant Jesus?Thou Christ?
i have mercy. No wonder He heard
and stopped and called them to Him.
i Thirdly, Jesus has compassion. He
' always has. Let there be the cry of
1 conscious need, which believes imi
plicitly in Him as redeeming Saviour
: ?then always has He great compas
sion. It is always "the old, old story
' of Jesus and His love." .
> My brother man let Him be such a
Saviour to you as' we have seen Him
in these three pictures of tender min
istry. Let Him lead you by the hand
: ?a living presence. Let Him draw
i out your faith till you can say with
' joy: "He is able." Let Him hear
L your heart's cry of a great faith that
wine His compassion.
The King Revealed.
1 A weary, dusty traveler came once
1 to the door of a widow's cottage in
! Scotland, asking for food and shelter.
! Tt was a nerilous time, and the worn
an knew not whether to count the
| sjxanger a soldier in need or a trearh!
erous spy who sought her ruin; but
" when, by a few careful questions, he
was convinced that he could trust
her, he threw aside his cloak, and
there shone upon his breast the badge
: of royalty. Then the widow knew
\ that it was her exiled king, the noble
Eruce, returned once more to claim
his rightful sovereignty. Her heart
was opened wide, and she gave him
' all she had. of food, and arms, and
: her t^'o noble1 boys* to bear him com"
pany as he renewed his struggle for
' the throne. So to the few most trust|
ed oftes our King, who comes in Hi??
: humility, reveals His royalty, and
> they have the high privilege not only
to see His glory, but to help Him to
win His own.
; Visions and Ideals.
| Carrying with us a sense of divine
companionship, conscious of our heri[
tage from generations pasi. may we
never stand bewildered between our
[ visions and our tasks, out find in
them and in every opportunity for
human help the heavenly call 10 us
to be artists in divine things, making
real in human lives and institutions
our visions and our ideals.?Rudolph
FreemaD.
Think No Evil.
Remember that charity thinketh no
evil, much less repeats it. These are
" two good rules which ought to be
1 written on every heart?never believe
anything bad about anybody unless
| you positively know it is true: never
1 tell even mat uniess yon ieei mai /i
1 is absolutely necessary, and that Gori
1 is listening: while you tell it.?Heurv
1 Van Dyke.
The Dure ol i'cace.
High above ihe Ftorm? ridf?s th<?
I dove of peace ami iis lives
despite ih?- wirnl ai*d wave.
W- . ;
?-?/? I^hL^ ws. s!VS?*k *?
Eighty miles an hour is: the speed
of a hurricane movement.
Some of the larger boats of the
Atlantic service carry as many as
150 firemen.
The population of Greater Now
York is 4,400,000; of Greater London
G,] 00,001).
According to the Rev. B. L. Agnew
the average salary of Presbyterian
ministers is $700 a year.
"William Newberry, of Quincy,
Mich., is ninety-five, but he has never
used spectacles to read or work with.
Lamar JacksOn, a full-blooded
Choctaw, has been appointed to a
cadetship at West Point from Oklahoma.
Hezekiah Wilkins, who fused the
first heat of iron made west of New
York, died at Detroit recently, aged
eighty-seven.
To go further afield, mere children
of ten, nine and even eight
years of age are, by Indian custom,
often married. This applies to the
girl only, although native boys of
from twelve to fourteen become husbands
and the nominal heads of
households.
Consul Brittain, of Kehl, explains
; the new method of keeping clean the
! congested business streets of the
! larger German cities. Metal tanks
i are inserted at intervals to the level
j of the street, and covered with iron
i lids. Into these the offal is easily
' swept. In the night the tanks are
hauled to the dumping grounds.
I I
i
; While giving a geography lesson,
I a teacher called upon a precocious
i youngster named Johnny to tell what
: he could about "zones." Johnny re'
sponded as follows: "There are two
! kinds of zones, masculine and femj
inine. The masculine zones are temj
perate and intemperate, while the
feminine zones are both horrid and
| frigid."
The deepest well in the world is
! probably the one at Sperenberg, Germany,
some twenty iailes from Berlin,
sunk for the purpose of obtaining
rock-salt brine. A bore-hole of
sixteen inches diameter was carried.
I down to the depth of 280 feet, where
the salt bed began; after a further
descent of 680 feet the bore was reduced
to thirteen inches diameter,
and then continued till the extraordinary
depth of 4119 feet was reached.
The real name of Defoe, the auj
thor of "Robinson Crusoe," was DanI
iel Foe. His father, a butcher of
Cripplegate, was James Foe. Botn
father and son were busy men among
Dissenters about the year 1700, and
the son, to distinguish him from the
father, was always called Mr. "D"
j Foe. His letters to Lord Halifax,
written in 1705, are signed in three
I different forms?"D. Foe," "De Foe"
i and "Daniel De Foe." He after;
wards, adopted Do FOe or Defoe as
! his usual surname, and he has been
known ever since as Daniel Defoe.
i MOVING PICTURES OF CLINICS.
Prof. Negro Successfully Uses Them
I in Demonstrating Nervous Diseases.
Professor Camillo Negro, of the
j University of Turin, Italy, has suci
ceeded in using the cinematograph
I for clinical purposes. The attempts
i hitherto made in Paris and New York
j to apply this system of photography
j to the demonstration of nervous
i crises have not so far been success!
ful in clinical application, but Pro|
fessor Negro's demonstrations admiri
oKi? illnotrafo tho pharartoristir
j forms of neuropathy in a human subI
ject.
! While the professor is explaining
each case the cinematograph is at the
same time reproducing all. the peculiar
movements of which it is impossible
to give an idea by a simple photographic
plate. Particularly striking
have been his demonstrations of
cases of organic hysterical hemiplegia,
epileptic seizures and attack?
: of chorea. Professor Negro's films
! will shortly be shown in London.
Street Names in China.
The name proposed as a substitute
i for the present commonplace title of
Sixteenth street, in Washington, D.
C., is the Avenue of Presidents. To
this some persons object because of
j Its length.
Hnw would thpv like to imnort a
! few street names from China, where
! such poetic names as the following
i are in vogue?
Street of Golden Love. Street of
Everlasting Love.Street of Longevity,
! Street of One Hundred Grandsons,
! Street of One Thousand Grandsons,
j Street of Saluting Dragons, Street of
the Reposing Dragons, Street of ReI
freshing Breezes, Street of Sweeping
; Breezes, Street oi One Thousand
| Beautitudes, Street of a Thousandl
fold Peace. Street of Five HappiI
nesses. Street of Ten Thousand Hapt
pinesK, Street ol Manifold Bnghli
ness and Street of Accumulated
! Goodness.?New York Sun.
j
i ::
Living In.
Recognising as we have all along
' that it large number of shop girls are
! not quite" prepared to: the reform
j which we advocate, the significance of
I Messrs. Swan A: Edgar's example is in
i no way discounted because a few girlB
! are "terribly upset by the change."
) The work of education ip going on,
and this event is a pari of that work,
i ?Shop Assistant.
Tradition.
| Tradition is fotever vindicating it- j
! self. .Herodotus told of ih^ pygmies !
j in Africa and the supercilious modern
I scoffed until Stanley once more found J
} them So there was no Minos and ]
' no Labyrinth?t.li tivans unearthed
thv yi 'j'Sl.i?Oai; .itta.
/
9 m a a mi fl
M UIMt UANJ
! ' Many people persist in riding on cb<
I ;; clothing.
.! . They start out perhaps in the hea
;; wraps.
The rapid moving of the car cools tb
perhans they are slightly perspiring. Wh
chilleu. This is esDeciallv true when a de
t Beginning a street car ride in ihe mi
" ing almost invariably requires extra wra
;! cautions, hence they eaten cold.
Colds are very frequent in the Spring
1! vances, they do not decrease. During tfi
; riding on the car without being provided
A cold caught in the Spring w liable t
;; caution should be observed at this season
1' first few pleasant days of Spring, the lia
No wonder so many people acquire m
?' during this seasos.
I ;; However, in spite of the greatest pre
At the appearance of the first sympt
I ;; directions on tne bottle, and continued un
j; Do not put it off. Do not wqste time
!! to take Peruna and continue it until yc
'' disappeared. This may Bave you a long a
|
E&d Effects From Gold.
Mr. M. J. Deutsch, Secretary Building
! Material Trades Council, 151 Washington
I St.. Chicago, 111., writes:
I have found your medicine to be unusually
efficacious in getting rid of bad
effects ,/rqpi cold, and more especially
in driving away all symptoms of catarrh,
with which 1 am freqeuntly troubled." -V "The
relief Peruna gives in catarrhal
troubles alone is well worth the price per
bottle: I have used the remedy fcr several
years now."
Spells of Coughing.
Mrs. C. E. Long, writes from Atwood,
Colorado, as follows:
I U11TI - f 4. I -J?! Kii).
" WDen l wrote yuu iur uuviue my uiuo
three-year-old girl bad a cougb that had
been troubling ber for four months. She
took cold easily, and would wheeze
SHOES AT ALL ^
PRICES. FOR EVERY ^
-^MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND Ch
W. L Domafaa makma and aaUt
?*?r man'a 927SU, $3.00 and S3.&C
than any. other manufacturer
j world, bmcauan thay hold
ahapo, tit bottom, ww tonga
Msa arm of Qraatar valua than anj
&& ahoaa m tho world to-day.
| W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Canm
?- oadTIQN. W. U Donglaa name and pri
1 Sold by tbe be?t ?hoe dealers everywhere. Sboea 1
trated Catalog tree to an; addieaa.
Electric light was first exhibited outside
| the Gaiety Theatre in 1864.
FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervoua Diseases permanently
cured by Dr. Kline's Great .Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr.H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,l?a.
Goldfish came from China, and the first
were sent to England in 1691.
Garfield Tea, the herb medicine, insures
a healthy action of liver, kidneys, stomach
and bowels. Take it for constipation and
sick-headache. Write Garfield Tea Co.,
Brooklyn, N. Y., for free samples, t
I Eighty miles an hour ia the speed of a
f hurricane's movement. , .
| Mrs. YVinslow's Soothing Syrup forChildren
! teething,softens thegums,reducesinfiammation,allayspain,cures
wiiw colic, 25ca bottle.
One couple out of a thousand live to cel!
ebrate their golden wedding.
j Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's
, Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At c uggists.
j The rubber tip on the end of lt.J pencils
made its inventor rich.
Many Old People Snffer From
Bronchial Affections, particularly at
this time of year. Brown's Bronchial
Troches give immediate relief.
The coal trade of the United Kingdom
! in 1905 employed 837,100.
CHICKENS EARN It
Whether vou raise Chickens for fun or
get the l>e*t results. The way to do this i
We offer a book telling all v
ject?a book written by ai mhbb
25 years in raising Poultry, [
had to experiment and spend |f4
way to conduct the business? i
CENTS in postage stamps, .A
j and Cure Disease, how to
| Market, which Fowls to Save
indeed about even'thing vou must know on
| POSTPAID ON RECWPr OF 25 CENT
Book Publishing Mouse, 13
j
/AN IMITATION
$ PATTERN THE
| There was never an Jmitat
v tators alwfcys counterfeit the g
X what you ask for, because genuine
? Imitations are not advertised, bui
(ability of the dealer to sell you s
good" when you ask for the genu
on the imitation. Why accept im:
uine by insisting?
REFUSE IMITA'
"Hie Remarkable Part.
"What was. there so remarkable
about Hercules cleaning the Augean
stables?" asked the professor.
"The fart." said the student after
tome thought, "that so large a Government
contract could be fulfilled
| without anybody's being charged
1 with graft."?Washington Star,
j ,
| Three hundred Berlin streets are
ulanted with 4 4.000 trees, which are :
! said t.o represent a value of $190,000. j
| Nearly a thousand gardeners and as
rislants are employed to take care j
; of them. N.Y.?16 '
I There is Only One
"Bromo
That Is
Laxative Brt
USED THE WORLD OVER TO
A1 war* remember the fuL name. La
lor thi* signature on every box. 9
I
ILWAYS AVOID ^
miHVjnw*Yapv
Time, 8ave?
^-7 , Sine.
s street cars, insufficiently protected by 1
it of the day and do not tee) the need of 1
e body unduly. When thejr board the.car 1
on th? hnrlv in in thi? Minmtion it ]? easily 4
irson is sitting.
iddle of the day and ending it in the even- ;
ips, but people do not observe these pre- .
4 9.'
; on this, account, and as the Summer ad- 1 '
e Spring months, ne one should think of;
with a wrap.
.o last through the entire Summer. Great'
i against exposure to cold. During the < '
bihtv of catching cold is great. ;
macular rheumatism and catarrhal diseases <
(cautions, colds will be caught.
om/Peruna should be taken according to !
itil every symptom disappears. ; ?
; by taking otner remedies. Begin at once !
iu are positive that the cold bos entirely ;
md perhaps serious illness later on.
v
and have spells of coughing that would f
sometimes last for a ball hour. V
| Aiv/rr tt v vnu "V r vi vuuua t vu vuvuku
for the change you have made in our little
one's health. Before she began taking
! your Peruna slie suffered everything in the
' way of cough, colds and croup, but now
she has taken not quite a bottle of Peruna,
and is well and. strong as 'she has ever
been in her life."
Pe-ru-na for Colds.
Mr. James Morrison, 68 East 16th St.,
Patereon, N. J., writes:
"1 have given Peruna a fair trial, and 1
find it to be just what you claim it to be.
1 cannot praise it too highly. 1 have used
two bottles >n my family for colda* and -\:i
everything imaginable. 1 can, safely say
that your medicine is the best 1 bare ever
used. ' ' I
A Bt
loe li stainped on bottom. Trt?J(o
The estimated value of dairy pro-"
ducts for 1907 was $800,000,000, and
that of poultry $600,000,000.
WAS DEURIOUS WITH ECZEMA.
Pain, Heat and Tingling Were Excru- I
elating?Onticora Acted Like
Magic.
"An eruption broke out on my daughter's
cheat, i took her to a doctor, and hf ;
pronounced it to be eczema of a very bad
form. He treated her, but the disease
tv* hpr hack, and then the whole of
her head was afffectai, and oil her hair had
to be cut off. The*pain she suffered was
excruciating, and witfc that and- the, heat ; j A
and tingling her -life Was almost unbearable.
Occasionally she was delirious and
she did not have a proper hour's sleep for
many nights. The second doctor we tried
afforded her just as little relief as the tint.
Then I purchased Cuticura 6oap, Ointment,
and Pills, and before the Ointment
was three-quarters finished every trace of
the disease was gone. It really seemed like
magic. Mrs. ^T. W. Hyde, Brentwood,
Essex, England, Mar. 8, 1907."
Twenty minutes of rain in a year *
is sometimes all that Southern Egypt
gets, and there is no dew In that
country.
finMrvilf You Know Howt?
flUilCT . Handle Them Properly
profit, you want to do it intelligently^'and
8 to profit by the experience of others.
you need to know on the sub
man who made his living for'
and in that time necessarily
much money to learn the best
for the smail sum of 25
It tells you how to Dcteet
Feed for Eggs, and also for
for Breeding Purposes, and
the subject to make a success SENT '
S IN STAMPS.
'4 Leonard St., N, Y. City,
- v. ' r '-Mi
?
TAKES POR ITS%
DFAI ARTIfl F \
ion made of an imitation. Imi- \ \
enuine article. The genuine is j j
e articles are the advertised ones. \ >
t depend for their business on the " < J
omething claimed to 'Je "just as < , . j . ; ^
ine, because he makes more profit j!
Itations when you can get the gen- (\
ftamc get what you <>
llujno? ask fob! |
l.p" 1
! Hale's Honey
* ot Horebocnd and Tar
- /
1 ^TI
ueare
The Voice
Sold by Druggists
[Pike's Toothache Drops
Cure In One Minute
Quinine "
<smo QuSnttte
CURE A COLD IM ONE DAY.
i
> ?
'