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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" {farrrtAeiM'fat**}\n* A%:\nNO.    210.    UNION   COMOX   DISTRICT,    B.   C,   TUESDAY   NOV 17th,    1896.   $2.00   PER   ANNUM.\na^.2e**a^i&-->*-\ufffd\ufffdj\/*^^^\nUNION   MEAT   MARKET\nChoice fresh and salt meats, headcheese, bolonga, sausages\nandvegetubles, fruitand eggs\nALWAYS ON HANI)\nSHI\"PPI3STO-   SUPPLIED\nSIMON    LEISER\nggeg^g\ufffd\ufffd- S\ufffd\ufffd&s!&$@Pl\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd& yy^^ryy^p^\nA succassfui me-'cliant and we will show you\na man who keeps throughly posted and\nwatches tha cost of eva y single article We\npurchases.\nane Mb Applies ta ficonomical Hj ^ijk\nThat's (he reason the women of Union use\nour prices as a stand-ird for whit 1* ley should\npay for goods elsewhere,\nPRICES   ON   APPLICATION   AT:\nH.AMBTX.RGKEJ.R\/S.\nFALL SUJTS.\nTempting \"Prices   at\nT, IDUn>T2srE'S\nYou will find in my selection of this\nfall's o* ods bargains never offered you\nbefore. Fine black worsted suit\n|35.00, nice nobby Scotch suits $25 00\nAnd Overcoats From $20.00   up.\nLOCALS\nGills' School Uultcn Ilools for 90 cu\nat Lei\ufffd\ufffder,.s\nA publio Mii'iul \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdntertiinne-it wll lie given at Uuni'ierUiU Ii til in ths oourae of\n0 tuple of V.W.S. 't'nare will b 1 two dritt-t\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ndumbbull drill hy the buys, anil a broom\ndrill by the girls\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd mil other interesting lea*\ntare**, suoh a, ditlogu**., mo .dm songs, etc.\nThe clearance sale at Leisers ts now on.\nLook at their bargain cimntcr.\nUeorgo M.-Keiio, half breed, \ufffd\ufffd'M arret*\ned at Union  Wharf ou Thursday Imt, by j\nofficer Hutchison and takeu to C llliot ou  j\nfriday to answer to a charge of theft of sev. j\noral articles stolen from Annie Muck  Wall,\nan Iudian woman from Cape Mudge.    He\nwas found guilty liefore   Messrs   Drabble\nand MoK.fruie, .1. P's and sentenced to pay\na Hm of $10.00 and ousts; in deftuit, tao\nmonths.\nAt the same court Hubert Slanders, well\nknown at Courtenay, and recently employ\nml at the Riverside Hotel, was found guilty\nof snpplyiug iutoxicants to Mrs. (large, an\nIndian of the Coniox tribe, and find $50 00\nand oosts, or in default two months in jail.\nBuy your sugar at Leiser's $5.25 per ow\nMiss Bertram, teacher of music and\nsinging has vacancies for a few more pupils. Miss Bertram has opened a Draw\ning and Painting class at the Public\nSchool for every Wednesday afternoon\nat 4 o'clock.   Address Post Office.\nThe best thing this season\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Home\nand Happy Humes.' \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdby G. K. Maxwell\nM. P.\nLeiser's bankrupt sale\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Holmes' Old Stand\nMiss B ltth Si npsou, daughter of Stipen,\ndiary Magistrate Simpson, was married on\nNor, 10th to Mr. lli'inilil Clifcou Ursn*\nnuin of the C denial Audit D .partinent, Sum\nerset House, K igUud. by the venerable Arch\ndeacon Soriven.\nMining Shoes at Leiser's for $1 a pair\nKi'inember tho great sale at Leiser's.\nAdmiral 1'illiser of H. M S. Imperieuse\nbefoie he left the Bi>'i addressed a note to\nMiss M iggie Maudouald co npliineiitlug her\nou the correctness with wliich she received\nuud transcribed dispatches cabled him.\nHoys'clothing for$! at Leiser's.\nBachelor's 'Farewell.\nD.in McLeod, the merchant tailor,\ngave a farewell pary to his bachelor\nfriends on Tuesday night of last week\npreparatory to joining tbe noble army of\nbenedicts. . His friend, were entertained\nat his residence in the soutliside of Cumberland in good style. There were\nabout two dozen present, and what wilh\nmusic, story telling and speeches the\ntime flew all toe last. About loo'clock\nall sat down to a sumptuous repast.\nAlter that whist was indulged in. Among\nother appropriate songs rendered was,\n\"Oh! he's a jolly good fellow,'' which was\ngiven with a will. When ready to depart they all stood up and sang.\n\"Should auld acquaintance be forgot.1'\nI;atestby Wire\nFearful Floo.li Along the ~. & N.\nHallway\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBridges Washed Away\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSteamboits in Place of Cars\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nHon. Mr. Tarte to ba Banqueted\nat Victoria.\nE.&N.    Bridges    Demolished.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\nWord his been received here [Victoria]\nthat the E.&N. Ky. Co's bit< railroad\nbridge across Niagara canyon, about 24\nmile**, from Victoria, and between Gold-\nstream and Shiwuigan Lake- has been\nundermined by the high water and completely washed away. The bridge is an\nimmense structure of trestle work, over\n200 feet high All along the E.&N. Ry.\nline the track is Hooded and in some\nplaces to a depth of three feet. In the\nmeantime the steamer City of Nanaimo\nis making special trips between Victoria\nand Nanaimo until connection can b*\nrestored. A gang of men has star.ed to\nwork rebuilding the trestle over Niagara\ncanyon.\nA Banquet kor Tarte.'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTarte will\narrive Wednesday evening and will be\nlendered a banquet by the citizens He\nwill spend the rest of the week here\nthen go to Nanaimo.\nRivers   on   the   Rampage.--The\nrisers at Sooke are running .tt a tremen-\nd 'us rate. Two bridges are gone ami\ntelegraph wires dnrn. A aerce westerly\ngale swept up the Straights. Muir bridge\nis gone.\nEngineer drowned -J. Furlough.\nmining engieer, was found drowned Nny,\n14th off the C P. R. whirl, Vancouver.\nHow it happened is not known.\nMilk ranch flooded\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe milk\nranch on the Nanaimo River has been\nflooded and cuttle drivii toym thg, flat*!\nto thc hills.\nMink accident\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd While riding a car\nin the mine, Sunday night, Kichaul\nSpear was thrown off and run over, break\ning four of his ribs.\nNanaimo shipping\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdH iwaiian s. s.\nAztec is loading, bark Wilna and ship El\nwell are chartered\nWellington Shipping--Loading: City\nofEveret, bark Gatherer, Glory ol\" the\nSeas, and ship Two Brothers.\nNOTICE.\nEsquimalt and Wanairao Ry. Oo.\nUntil further notice steamer City of\nNanaimo will leave Comix for Vicioria\nat 5 a. m. on'Thursday of each week,\nTrain will leave Union at ; a. ni. connecting with the steamer.\nVictoria, li. C Nov. 16 [896\nH. K. Prior, Gen'l F't & Pass. Agt\nMAXWELL*J LE^rTFRE.\nThe lecture of the Rev. G. R. Maxwell\nM, P. of Vancouver which has been\nannounced for Wednesday evening ol\nthis week has been unavoidably postponed. It will take place on Thursday\nevening Nov. 26th at the Presbyterian\nChurch, Union. The deserved reputation of the gentleman as an orator will\ndoubtless fill the church to overflowing.\nThc lecture at Courtenay announced for\nThursday of this week #lll necessarily\nbe postponed until the evening of Nov.\n25th, as the visit ofthe Hon. Minister of\nPublic Works will necessarily prevent\nthe member for Unirarrl District reaching here before th.t time.\nACKNOWLEDGEMENT.\nWe arc indebted to Mrs. Hanks for a\ncarrot pie which so nearly resembled a\npumkin pie that we were unable to\ndetect the difference. As people can\noften obtain carrots when pumkins are\nnot to be had and as the one furnished\nus was so excellent we append Mrs.\nHanks'\nRecipe for Carrot Pie.\nScrape, and stew, your carrots, and\npress through a colander the same as\npumkins; and for one pie allow one and\na half cups of carrots, one cup boiling\nmilk, one teaspoonful of butter, half cup\nof --sugar, half teaspoonful of salt, one\nsalt spoon each of .-.urrants, nutmeg and\nclones. Add an egg, bemen separately.\nFill yonr crust and bake,\nMcPhee & I.ore,\nGenenal Merchants and Butchers,\nUNION and COURTENAY,        -      -      -        BO\n(fatter.\nThe merry tinkle of eleigh holla,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdeilver-balU\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd and \"the heautiful,\"\ncovering aud hiding the barn branches uf\nthe trees, aa well aa many of tbu blackened\nUoion stumps aunounce that Winter iu here!\nAnd really Winter haa charuia which equal\nthoiie of Spring or Summer.\nInfancy, I hear acme critical reader ex \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nclaim:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''How kind to enlighten us! \" Or\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"In thia a school composition ou uno of tho\nfieaaouti?\" Aud iu fuuey too I cau enjoy\nwith him or hor the delightful little gurgling laugh which may follow. Speakiug of\ncritiuiam, leads up to a subjdt whicli I\nthink very eutertaiuiug.\nUow few realize tbe unenviable politico\nof a reporter of amateur perfornuueea. I\nshould perhapa have aaid entercainmeuts by\nhome talent, Tho reporter ia expected by\null participant in the the performauce to\ngive unstinted praise to themselves or\nfrienda. VVneu oue dues put judgment and\nconacieuca away, and recklu.si.ly .shower\nsweets oo the performers, Misa Koow-it*all\ntays: \"It is very evident that reporter\nknows nothing of mime, to praise Mrs.\nJouea Bi-owu R.-binsou'i performance!\" Or\nMra, Brown Juues Rjluuaou, exclaims,\n\"Do listen to this stupid thing io tho paper,\nlauding Miss Know-it all's acting to the\nskies; it is really disgusting!\"\nIf the reporter who has seen better things,\nrecognizing the goo.it, alao the weak points\nio acting or singing, should ia kindly interest, suggest where an improvement might\nbe made, what a storm of anger is roused! Some offended talented creature\ncornea iu, pays up, und mouu the paper;\nbelieving the career of a jmrual ia crushed, checked by the loss of his $1,00 or\n92-00 per annum.\nEvery born Journalist rejoices in discovering merit in other people or things\nIt is \"grist to his mill,\"affording the opportunity to record him or herself a discriminating judge, a discoverer of talent,\nperhaps genius, and with pride will watch\nthe future progress of his protege. On\nevery occasion available, nonces which\nare helpful and draw the public attention\nwill be freely given. But sometimes it is\nneedful lo be cruel to be kind, and a hint\nor notice ofa fault may prove more help\nful than untruthful flattery. Quinine is\noften better for people than caramels.\nWe are too prone to accept the saccharine adulation, without question resent\nthe slightest adverse criticism.\nIt means hard work lo produce either\na concert, minstrel show, or cantata, and\nis deserving of liberal patronage on the\npart of the people.\nUniemiles are truly most generous and\nappreciative audiences.\nRe we\nMCLiSOD -TURNBULL\nAt thu reiidenoe of the bride's parent?, on\nthe evening of tlm I2;h Inst, Mr Daniel\nMoLioil and Mias Biusibath Hon.facta,\ndiughturof Mr. and Vlrs. I'hn Turnbull\nwere united lu niirnagaj Wiv- Mr Huks\nof the M-jinodu. IJuareu agisted by J. A.\nLtgin p^riorm j-1 the corn n my. Mm Kuz\nall*!ui Maoduuald was brtdeiinud, and Mr.\nOuorge L'nrubutl bojt mm. O.ily thu reia-\nlivQ-j and a fu v friend j wera pi-e.-n-.ut.\nTho bridal gowa wat of nruain color, taste\nfully made.\nThe room was Imntifally dsoorated with\nfbwBrs, the gift of Mr. Miller of Little Riv.\ner liir.li'urt.\nTno happy young people are both well\ni known; Mra  M.L-.'od being ouo nf our m -it\nt popular musicians, and Mr.   M.L:>nI a pop\nI ular merunanfc tailor.\nA largo nuinbur or valuable preaauta *ere\nreceived both useful audoruainontal.\nMr. and Mrs, VioLjod navogiae to house\nkeeping in tltoir ad-viy furehtied aeGBage ou\nAtlea avouuo, Cue J-Te-vn ext ud. uo*,ig at-\nulattous.\nSUBSCRIBE FOR \"THE NEWS.\"\n$2.00 FEB. ANNUM.\nTH 3 CAN.TATA.\nThe Cantata \"Under the Palms\/' by\nMr. Geo. l\\ lio-tt, will be rendered in the\nMethodist Ch irch, on the 25 h inst, by a\nchoir of about f.irt> voices. Toe .vork is\nintended to represent the return ot the\nJews from captivity in Baoylon, during\nthe reign of Cyrus; the repose of the pilgrims on their way to Jer.1aie.1t bv\nAhava Kiver; and the triumphant cele\nbration of the Feast of the Tabernacle\nafter their return.\nTlie music is by no moan*? difficult, but\nis ofa very pleasing character, and the\nchief characters are Men am, Zillah,\njeshua, Ezra. These will be represented\nby Mrs. Evan Parker\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsoprano; Mrs.\nT. Banks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdalto; Rev. Jas. Hicks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtenor;\nMr. Gideon Hicks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbass. In order, as\nfar as possible to cany out the design of\nthe author the platform will be decorated\nwith terns, flo.ver-s, evergreens and\npalm trees, and .the performers will\nappear in uniform dress\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe ladies in\nwhite and the gentlemen in black.\nAdmission 50 cents. Commencing at\n8 o'clock.\nThe F.e Social.\nTbe Tie Social at the Methodist\nC uir..b Friday evening was rather an\nuo que affair, and as pleasant as unique.\nTn .re w is a splendid program gotten up\nh irn'edly, but having the flavor of freshness, and which  wa.s throughly enjoved.\nToe Pie and Social came in during\nthe interval between the first and second\npaas of ihe program aud this interval was\nsufficiently lengthy to give time to the\nsocial feature and to discuss the pies.\nTiiere were a number of kinds of pie all\ngood, bui the pumkin pie particularly\ntickled the palate of the writer. It had\na tender crust and plenty of filling, and\nWith the best ofeoflF\/i to wash it down, it\nwas simply im.uense. Why can't there\nb * more pic s icfals? we he ird m my say.\nWay not indeed? Another feature of\nthe entertainment; wts the introduction\nof a real live ghost. The audience\ndidn't app ir 'scared; but that only\nsh iws that numbers give courage\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand\nthere were large numbers prusent. But\nwj would like 10 see tae individual\nmj'iibern of that brtve assembly meet\nthat ghost alone by moonlight! Then we\nop ne thne might be seen the white\nfeatlv r Tiu- following is the\nProgram:\nDuet\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLarboard Watch-Messrs Hicks.\nInstrumental Mis*;  Bertram.\nS.mg Miss    Daniels\nSoii-s' ami 1 rio \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd My llontue -Mrs. Park\ner and ^l.essrs, Parker .tnd Hicks.\nSong\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhen Sparrows Build\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMiss\nB 1 tram.\nRecit ition '\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Miss Abrams.\nSong\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTrue Till Death\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMr. Dickinson.\nReading Mr. Denton.\nIntermission and Pie Social.\nRecitation\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMy Uncle\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfin which the\nghost appeared)-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Mr. Dickinson,\nSong\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKilUrnev\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Mrs. Parker\nReading\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe Insurance Agent\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRev.\nMr. Logan.\nSong\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdBlue Alsatian Mountains\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMiss\nBertram.\nRecitation Mis* Webster.\nSong\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLight far out at sea\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMrs.\nBanks.\nSong\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDublin Biy- Mr. Parker.\nAddress\nPRE5--TE3IAN LECTURE OOURSE\nThe young people of St. George who\nhave tlieir Lecture Course at hand are to\nbe congratulated on their successful\neffort in securing the Rev, G. R. Maxwell M. P. to deliver the opening lecture.\nThere is no more ponular man to-day\nin Vancouver than he, whether it be as\npreacher, lecturer or politician, and we\nare sure that every person in Union who\nhears his lecture will be delighted. We\ntrust thata full house will mcci him on\nhis first appearance m l'nion. \\s*\nVx%%\\%\n'\nTHE WOMAN A-WHEEL\nWHAT SHE WEARS WHEN OUT\nFOR A SPIN.\nPetticoats    Hold    Their    Own     with\nBluumern inul   Outnumber   Thr in   in\nMost Citie\ufffd\ufffd- Voluminous Wardrobe\nof the Sport Inu Lady.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Thine*  in Cycle Pklrta,\nICYCLING has\numde the athletic side of the\nfashionable woman's life to be\nquite ns Important as tho purely\nsocial) Imt in no\nphase of her va-\nr i e d existence\ndues she ever divest herself of\nthe never failing\nquery: \"What\nshnll I wear?\"\nNor Ih It possible\nfor the most mildly athletic woman to\nprovide herself with n single costume,\nsaying, \"This is my gown for athletic\nexercises,\" for such costumes are ns\nvaried as the flowers of the (leld, even\nwhon designed for the same kind of exercise. There -are ns many different\nkinds of cycling costumes, for Instance,\nes there are bicycles, and as mueh dlf-\nN0VBLTIE8 FOH   THB niCTCLE GIRL.\nference of opinion as to which is correct. Tbe comparative merits of two\nwheels form a sufficient topic of conversation for any two cyclists, be they\nmen or women; and tho corect costume\nfor women -.a-wheel ls discussed by everybody, regardless of wheeling propensities. It Is tho person who does\nnot ride who is most critical. The\nbloomer hns come In for the greatest\nshare of criticism, and the effect of\nnuch criticism is beginning lo show lt-\nto Interfere with the free management\nof the pedals and to prevent Its catching on the wheels. The skirt Is practically converted into a pair of bloomers by drawstrings running up and\ndown the middle of the front nnd bnck\nof the skirt. These strings may be\npulled aa tight as is desired, raising (tr\nlowering Ihe skirt at will, and they are\nprovided with catches to hold them in\nplace. The skirt may thus become a\npair of knee bloomers, or be allowed to\nhung loose like a divided skirt; and\nwhen worn amid \"lhe busy haunts of\nmen\" It appears as a plain, ordinary\nskirt with never n suspicion of masculinity about It.\nThe divided skirt comes In two varieties, tints making up the four mentioned nt the beginning. These are the\nregulation Jenness Miller skirl, and the\nune that Is only divided in the back.\nTbe latter style Is the special property of a large Ncw York slore. and has\nmany qualities in Its favor. Off the\nwheel It hangs like an ordinary skirt,\nand on the wheel It slays put, In exactly\nthe same folds each time, being cut ami\nfashioned to fit tlie saddle. In the front\nthis skirt usually has a broad box pleat\nto admit of the free action of tho knees\nwhile pedaling. Some of these bicycle\nskirts arc surprisingly full around the\nbottom, being stitched down In box\npleats from the top, and then allowed\nto flare for about fourteen Inches,\nThe girl who rides a diamond frame\ngets no advantage from this Louis\nskirt, as It is called, because of the undivided front.    Nothing but. bloomerd\nself by the gradual wane in popularity\nof the bloomer. Tnke tlie percentage of\nskirts and knickerbockers in any large\nelty, and the petticoat will be found to\ndo much more than merely hold Its\nown.\nFirst, there Is the ordinary short\nskirt, not very full, and without any\nun feminine modifications, In spite of\nassertions lo thc contrary, this Is tbe\nskirt which is worn ity the general run\nnf people. Prominent fnshlona. 1\" women have nol been riding the wheel for\nvery long, nntl are mil ready for the\nadvanced costume yet. Nor dues ihe\neveryday woman wish fo make herself\nconspicuous by appearing In public In\nthe much criticised bifurcated eoxlumo.\nMrs. John Jacob Astor wears a skin\nwhen she rides. Sn do oiher ladles of\nfashion. Tins much must be snid for\nthe bloomer, however, that 11 usually\ngoes with tbo pettlcoul but does nol ap\npear except In eases of emergency.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSoms women have adopted tbo practice\nnf wearing a skirt while riding in tie-\ncity nud tben removing it and rolling it\nup In the currier provided for lhe purpose by enterprising Inventors.\nA more convenient arrangement than\nthis Is the new Bygravc skirt, named\nafter its Inventor,  who is au Knglish\nor wholly divided skirls will servo her.\nOne can buy bloomers just like a pair\nof trousers, separate from the rest of\nthe suit.   The best material is alpaca.\n\/r7*>^'*>^\nKXTnrcMKfl IN CVCLINO   C0STUM3$\"k\nwoman. Tbe skirt is the product of her\nown experience and ls very simple, yet\nvery effective. Tbe Idea was to arrange tbe skirt ln such a manner as not\nA TV 1*1 CAL KNdl.lsil  WHEEL WOMAN.\nbut lhey are made uf satin for the extravagant few.\nThe Knglish tweeds in pepper and snlt\nmixtures .are the favorite materials,\nbrown and white being the fashionable\nas weli as I he serviceable colors. Whipcords, cheviots, hrilliantinos and corduroys are also popular. .Mrs. Langtry\nwears a corduroy suit with leggings of\nthe same. Some of the prettiest corduroy suits are double breasted, and button up diagonally to each shoulder.\nThis style Is more sensible than the\nEton jacket, which Hares open and\ncatches the wind. The Norfolk jacket\nis very popular because, besides being\nwell adapted to the use for which It Is\nIntended, it affords such good oportunl-\nty for the display of the new belts\nwhich are so pretty and bo plenty this\nyear.\nLeggings usually match the suit with\nwhich they are worn, but they can be\nbought separately In any material desired.   Most of them are buttoned up\non the outside. Others lace up part\nway and are then fastened with Foster\nbonks, with a couple of straps at the\ntop. It seems to be the general verdict,\nhowever, that knee shoes are preferable\nto leggings aud low shoes. As to hats,\nthe public favor is divided between the\nAlpine hat and the Tan. O'Shanter.\nA pretty hat that combines the advantages of both is now on lhe market.\nIt bas n rolling, narrow brim that Is\nstitched to make It stiff, with a Dresden silk Tara O'Shanter crown. It Is\ntrimmed with a couple of quills standing up on one side. These hats nre\nmore becoming lo most people than\nthe Knglish hat. and at the same time\nfurnish a good shade for the eyes. Bicycle caps seem to have entirely gone out\nof use among feminine riders.\nPerforated gloves are among the novelties Invented for the comfort of luxury-loving wheel-women. An experienced wheehvoman recommends an\noutfit for a feminine cyclist which\nseems very reasonable: A full suit of\ncheviot or tweed, with an extra pair of\nbloomers and two pairs of equestrian\ntights. With these a pair of high bicycle shoes anil one pair of low shoes with\nleggings to adiuil of changes In the\nevent of being caught in a rain storm\nWhile riding at a distance. A couple of\nhats and one pair of gloves especially\ndevoted to cycling, whether perforated\nor not. complete the outfit.\nThe sweater is worn by enthusiastic\ncyclists, and tliere are many new designs thnt are very attractive. Some\nof them are made with a blouse effect\nwhleh is rather prettier for the purpose\nMARK HANNA'S   BIG  JO&\nSonic   of the   TMnijH   Dctnnnilcrt of   n\nCnrapaijcn Director.\nIn accepting the chairmanship of the\nRepublican National Committee Mark\nllnnna has undertaken a big job. He\nwill be one of the busiest men in thc\ncountry during the next four months.\nFortunately he is of robust constitution.\nOne of the chief duties of the campaign\nmnnugcr is to raise a cnmpaigu fund.\nThe greater part of the million dollars\nused iu a national campaign belongs to\ntlie national campaign fund and is distributed by the national chairman. It Is\nsent to the Slates where ii is most needed and the national chairman must exercise good judgment in the distribution\nof It, if the parly Is to achieve the best\nresults In a great many campaigns\nmoney hns been spout uselessly In one\nState and withheld from another State\nwhere it would have done lhe parly\ngood.\nIn severnl Stab's there is an elaborate\nsystem of canvassing ami keeping n\nrecord of the doubtful voters. This\nwork Is collected by townships and\nthen Is entered In a large book for the\nguidance of the Slate committee. The\ncommittee compiles a list of the doubtful voters who mny be 10,000 or even\n20,000. To all tbese campaign literature is sent and after n time a man is\nassigned to see each of them and argue\nwith him the necessity of voting the\nRepublican ticket.\nAll of this Involves n great deal of\nexpense.   The missionaries ns a rule do\nsaiiaH   BERNHARDT   OH   lIKtt   ntOTCLE.\nIntended. They can be bought for almost any price from $1,08 to $5 or $G.\nAny costume, described may be worn\nfor other purposes, hut iu geueral lt Is\nbetter to keep it Tor its special use,\nthough it adapts itself to hunting and\nmountain climbing better than other\nathletic exercises.\nA lady's sporting wardrobe bids fair\nto become very voluminous. What\nwith her yachting costume, her tennis\ngown, her yachting rig, her bathing\ncostume, her golf, rowing and hunting\ngowns, she will need several trunks to\ncarry them, and not have much room or\ntime for the old delight for gauze and\nribbons and lace,\nThe Bullet  Trick.\nTlie probability was ninety-nine to\none that be would be shot, yet an Indian juggler took that one chance rath-\ner than acknowledge his inability to\ncatch ibe bullet Doctor Hoffman, the\ngovernment ethnologist at Washington,\ntells tbe story:\nThe bravest act 1 have ever known\nwas performed by nil Indian juggler.\nA favorite trick id' his was one that has\noften been performed by white magicians.\nlt consisted in permitting himself to\nbe shot at, the hocus-pocus being an arrangement by which the bullet fell out\nof the barrel into a cavity in the stock\nbefore the weapon was discharged.\nMeanwhile the man had another bullet\nconcealed In his mouth, which nt the\nInstani of tiring he pushed outward\nwilh his tongue, su as to malic it appear that he caught the projectile between bis teeth.\nNow il happened thnt Mils man had a\nrival, who wa.s engaged iu the conjuring business In a neighboring village,\n(tn une occasion wheu lhe trick was to\nbo performed, the Juggler having announced as usual that he wns ready to\nbe shot at by any oue present, the rival\nstepped forward and said that he would\ndo the shooting; bill he demanded permission to use his own gun.\n.Naturally the juggler objected, but\nhis protest was overruled. It was decided thnt the rival magician might\nuse his owu weapon. This meant almost sure death to the performer; yet\nhe did not blench. To refuso tbe test,\nwould have l>een permanent disgrace.\nThere was one chance out of a hundred, perhaps, that the marksman\nmight miss, He decided to take that\nchance, and so permitted the volunteer\nexecutioner to tako deliberate aim and\nfire at h'm from a distance of half a\ndozen paces. An instant later he fell\ndead; the bullet has passed through his\nbrain.\nnot labor for nothing, nnd tbe clerical\nwork Is costly. There are traveling expenses, tbe hire of horses and vehicles\nto drive through tiie country, stationery and printing and postage. All these\nexpenses are legltimnte and necessary\nfor tbe conduct of a systematic campaign. Then there are thc expenses of\ncampaign orators who receive In sonic\ncases also large salaries. Finally, there\nare campaign writers, For the notional\ncommittee and the State committee as\nwell keep on their pay rolls many trained newspaper men, who furnish editorials to the press for the benefit of the\nparty iu the campaign. There are other\nuses of money not so legitimate, but\nrecognized ln doubtful States as necessary to one party because the other party adopts them. The national chairman also has charge of the candidate\nnnd regulates to n certain extent his\nconduct and travels and no letters are\ngiven to the public b.v th*\ufffd\ufffd candidate\nwithout consulting with the manager.\nThe college \"yell\" Is the silliest thing\nsince Thompson's colt swam the river\nto get a drink.\nA woman who is too old to wear a\nsailor hat Is also too old to wear an\naccordion pleated skirt.\nJUDGE LYMAN TRUMBULL.\nThe      U.allnf-rnlibed      Jurist       Wns\nlermcil \"America's Gladstone,\"\nJudge Lyman Trumbull, who recently passed away at his home In Chicago,\nwas fortunate and honored In life.\nHe wns contemporary with thc begln-\nIng and the end of Ibe great anti-slavery contest. He saw that sorrowful\ntime\\ so eloquently pictured and deplored by Webster, when States were\ndissevered, discordant, belligerent, and\nthe land was rent with civil fends nnd\nand drenched in fraternal blood, and he\nlived lo sec his country restored, regenerated und disenthralled, Its flag\nfloating over thc land and over the\nsea, bearing on lis ample folds the\nblazing Inscription, \"Liberty nnd Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable.\" In all this Lyman Trumbull\nbore n great and distinguished  part.\nIn a contest for the stpiniorshlp of\nIllinois he was elected over Mr. Lincoln, who withdrew In his favor, nnd\nfive yenrs later he wns one of the foremost ndvocates of Lincoln's election to\nthe Presidency. Then come the civil\nwar and all the complicated questions\ngrowing out of It, and Senator Trumbull brought to the solution of those\nquestions a sngnclty, a knowledge of\nlaw and a dispassionate temper thnt\nmade him the wisest of counselors and\nthe most patriotic of statesmen. During the eighteen yenrs of his senatorial tenure he wns the peer of Sumner\nand Fessenden, of Grimes and of Seward, of Chase and of Wade. No man\nln all that famous catalogue of statesmen deserved better of his countrymen than Lymnn Trumbull.\nJudge Trumbull was born In Colchester, Conn., Oct. 12, 1813. At the nge\nof 20 be had charge of nn academy at\nGreenville, Gn. In 1837 he was admitted to the bar of thnt State. He\nshortly thereafter removed to Illinois,\nand In 1840 was elected a representative In the Legislature; before the expiration of bis term he was appointed\nSecretary of State and fulfilled the\ndutleB of the latter office for two years.\nThereafter ln the practice of his pro\nfession he soon became the peer of tbs\nmost eminent lawyers In the State and,\nas a recognition of this fact, be was, In\n1S4S. elected one of the justices of ths\nSupreme Court of Illinois, and In 1862\nwas re-elected for nine years. In 1853\nhe resigned from the supreme bench,\nand In the following year was chosen\nto represent his district tn Congress.\nBefore he had laken his seat tho Legislature elected him  United Stales Seu-\nJUDOB  I.YMAN  TIll'MHI'I.I.,\nntor for six years from March, 1855.\nHe was re-elected In 1861 and again\nIn 1867, making In all eighteen consecutive years' service In the Senate. At\ntho expiration of his term of service\nln the Senate be resumed the practice\nof his profession In Chicago. With no\nman In our public life to-day can Judge\nTrumbull he compared, but In Intellectual force he may well be likened to England's grand old man, William IOwart\nGladstone.\nIn 1848 Judge Trumbull was married\nto Miss Julia M. Jayne, of Springfield,\nwho died In Washington In 1808. On\nNov. It, 1S77, he married, In Saybrook,\nConn., Miss Mary .1. Iugraham. Six\nsons were born of the first union and\ntwo daughters of the last.\nOur Consular Service.\n\"Tbe consular service Is the practical\nand business side of our foreign Intercourse,\" writes ex-President Harrison in thc Ladles' Homo Journal.\n\"There are more than twelve hundred\npersons in the consular service of the\nUnited States. These nre located in\nthe important commercial cities and\ntowns of thc world, and are described\ngenerally as Consuls General, Consuls,\ncommercial agents. Interpreters, marshals and clerks. The duties of a\nConsul are various nnd multifarious.\nHe Is thc protector and guardian of\nAmerican commerce; provides for destitute American sailors nnd sends tbem\nhome; he takes charge of the effects\nof American citizens dying In his jurisdiction, having no legal representative;\nhe receives the declaration or protests\nof our citizens in any malter affecting\ntheir rights; he keeps a record of the\narrival and departure of American\nships nnd of their cargoes, and looks\nafter vessels wrecked; he reports any\nnew Inventions or Improvements In\nmanufacturing processes thnt he may\nobserve, and nil useful Information relating to manufactures, population, scientific discoveries, or progress In the\nuseful arts, nnd all events or facts that\nmay affect the trade of the United\nStates, aud authenticates Invoices and\nstatements of the market value of merchandise to be shipped to the United\nStntes. Kvery Consulate is a commercial outpost; and If the service could\nhe given permanence of tenure, and\na corps of men of competent equipment. It would become n powerful\nagency In extending our commerce.*'\nPuzzle\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFind tin   Fisherman,\nCome in   Handy.\nShe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdJust look. dear. I bought 200\npnpers of tacks for 50 cents.\nHo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat In thunder did you do tbat\nfor? They arc cheap enough, but what\narc we ever to do with 200 papers of\ntacks?\nShe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhy\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdah\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdoh! Maybe some day\nsomebody you don't like will get a bicycle.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Indinnnpolls Journal.\nHad His Wish.\nThe late Sir Henry Turkcs, the Australian statesman, h\ufffd\ufffdd n great opinion\nof his poetic gifts, and on one occasion,\nwben addressing a Sydney meeting,\nhe said; \"I would ratner be known as\na third-rate poet than as a first-rate\npolitician.\" Here he paused for breath\nand odmlration, wheu \"the mnn In the\ncrowd,\" seeing his opportunity, exclaimed In strident accents; \"Well,\nand aren't you?*' TRIPS UNDEKTAKKN FOR HEALTB'D ,\nSAKK\nDANGER IN BARBER SHOPS\nUTttl be rendered more beneficial, -and the fa-\ntlguesot travel eouiltoraoted, ii the voyager\nwin take along with hini Uostettor'a Stomaub\nHitters, andubo that proteetlva and enabling\nlotlic, norve Invlgor&Ut and appetizer regularly. Impurities in olr and water is neutral-\nLaud by ii, and it is a matchless tranqulliaer\nan*l regulator of the stomach, liver and bowels.\nIt euuuttiracta malaria, rheumatism, and a\ntendency to kidney and bladder ail men is.\nThe members of tbe Huston Aeronautical Society have decided that the\nkite is an instrument of value.\nPiso's Oure for Consumption haa saved\nme bugs doctor bills.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd0. L linker, 41J28\nRegent 8q., Philadelphia, Pa., Lee. 8, '95.\nMOW'!*   THIS?\nWoofr*prOnoFTti\"'ired Dollars llflwaril for any\ntun,- of itiiarrh lhat cannot tiu cured by Hull's\nCttlnrrli Wire.\nF. J. OHBNBY A CO., Toledo, O.\nWe, lhe under*'(pie I, havu known k. J.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIienev for Iho last Hiyeirn, and believe hfm\n(tt-rleellv honorable in all bun ness irillivncttoiia\nand llnaiielnJIy able 10 curry out any ubltgitLluua\nmade by ttnlr Ilrm.\nWkkt ATitl'ix,\nWholes* e liruetfl'K Toledo. O.\nWai-dimi, KINHanA Mahvin,\nWholesale Prng-Uts, Toledo, 0\nHall's (Catarrh Curt, i- lulteii iuiuitiallv. a<*t<na\nUrciHIy npin. the oloo 1 ami nnu'ons hikIho -h ot\ntht> M-yalem. Tr*UnioniiU*. sen t free. t-riue 76c\n1-4T Indite.   Cold by all drug. Mm.\nlfall'h Family fills are the best.\nllpinalii Renault, the Frenoh Helen\nlist, has discovered fun-ail micbrobes in\nMm earliest ffealofricl formations\nLoo\nSharply to ihe condition of your blond.\nAt this reason peculiar per Is assail the\nsystem. There are sudden clrtn-riH in temperature ; fogs und dumpness, chilly\nnights, lowering aloud*), drenching rains.\nThese sudden changes bring un colds,\nfevers, pneumoniu, bronchitis nnd othtr\nailment.-;. Koep tbe blood pure, rich and\nlull of vitality and you wilt be well.\nnooos\nSarsaparilla\nIs the Best\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIn fact the Ono True Blood I'urlfler.\nUnnil'c Pilla |ln' 'be best n'tcr-dinner\nDUUtt 9 rillS   \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdpt\ufffd\ufffd, ,ii,i ,i ,r,.s ion.   _(..,\nCancer\n01 the Face.\nMrs. Laura E. Mims, of Smlthville.Ga.,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdays: \"A small pimple cf a strawberry\ncolor appeared on my cheek; it soon\nbegan to grow rapidly, notwithstanding all efforts to check it. My\neye became terribly\ninflamed, aud was so\ns-vollen that for quite\na while I could not\nsee. The doctors\nsaid I bad Cancer of\nthe most malignant\n, type, -and after ex-\nt hanstiug their effort*\nwithout doing me\nany good, they gave\nnp the tfase as hopeless. When informed that my father had died from\nthe same disease, tbey said I must die,\nas hereditary Cancer wns incurable.\n\"At this crisis, 1 was advised to try\nS.S.ii.,and ina short while the Cancer\nbegan to discharge and continued to do\nso for three months, then it began to\nheal. I continued the medicine a while\nlonger until the Cancer disappeared entirely. This was several years ago aud\nthere bas been no return of the disease.\"\nA Real Blood Remedy.\nCancer is a blood disease, and only a\nblood remedy will cure it. S. S. S.\n(guaranteed 'purely vegetable) is a real\nblood remedy, and never fails to permanently cureCaucer, Scrofula, Eczema,\nRheumatism or auy other disease of tbe\nblood. Send for our books\non    Cancer    aud     Blood    Diseases,\n(nailed free to\nany ^ address.\nSwift Speci6c\nCo. Atlanta, Ga.\nss-s\nThe best they say\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdf other bindings\nis that they are\n' just as\ngood \" ^\\0\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd %>\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.**\n*-r BIAS\nVELVETEEN\nSKIRT BINDING.\nAsk for the new\nS. H. & M. CORD EDGE.\nIf your dealer WILL NUT\nsupply you wc will.\nSamples showing labels and materials mailed five.\n\" Homo Dressmaking Made Easy.*' a new 72 pago\nbook by Miss EmmaM. Hooper,ofthe Ladies Home\nJournal, tells In plain words how lo make dresses al\nbome without previous training : mailed for 2oc.\n5. H. e M. Co., P. O. Box Ooo, N. Y. City,\nuiu en cure t\ufffd\ufffd \ufffd\ufffdny \ufffd\ufffdm\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, our\t\nMAILtU rHtt  si.H*-i\ufffd\ufffdi I'rloe Li.t or\nHOU8EHOLD COOPS, ETC.\nThis circular is htmied for the benefit o[ our\nOountr, customers who canuot avail tliemselve.\nof onr Itallv BpTdnl Hales,   Semi ns your mi-\ndrew-   You will find lKithi.*oo,'fiilid i>rl,*e.right,\nHll.L A KINCK (*0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n81S-820 Market street. 8ml Fmlirisuo, Cal.\nSURE CURE for PILES\nItottlD, .nd lllipd, HLrdlni*. or l'r*Mru,ll[i,PII,t ,1.1,1 .i\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdu\nER.BQ-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY. .*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,.,*.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd..\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdM.  D.uuUuwm-Jl.     UK. HOtiNkO. fkUfc, Pt*.\nMicrobes Lie In Wuit for the  Heads\nof CtiRtomero.\nIf there'a one place where germs of\nall sorts swarm more thickly thau nuy\nother plaee It Is in a barber shop. Hundreds of people come and go and are\nbrushed aud cutnbed and lathered and\n1IACI1.I.I THAT t'AIISK IIAUISP.SS.\nshared with the same Instruments, Every customer brings In IiIh private stock\nand leaves contributions for the future\ncustomers. When business Is slack thc\nbrushes become stock farms and gardens by themselves without outside assistance.\nBut the more dangerous pests of the\nbarber shop are much smaller. Some\nare microbes, but several important\nones are vegetable parasites, minute\nplants or fungi.\nThe principal diseases of hair are\nringworm, barbers' Itch, favus and\nbaldness. Ringworm of the scalp ls\nculled by the skin specialists tenoa ton-\nsums. It causes one or more circular\nbald patches of various sizes on the\nbead, covered with scales looking like\nashes, with numerous small broken-off\nstumps of hair. Sometimes tliere are\nseveral sueh patches. It Is a highly\ncontagious disease, and difficult to cure.\nIn fact, It is only curable by shaving\nall the head and pulling out the diseased hair hy the roots with a pair of\npincers, whicli hurts. This treatment\nmust be kept up for months.\nThe cause of ringworm Is a fungus\ncalled lehophyton tonsuras, wliich\ngrows In the hair follicles and the skin,\nand flourishes iu barbers' brushes and\ncombs.\nThe secon-d disease of hair Is barbers'\nitch, also called tenea sycosis, or ring*\nIIAII1S PliilM llllt'sll  WITH OP.RMS.\nworm of the heard. This conies chiefly\nfrom lather brushes, and causes an Inflammation of tin* hair follicles, with\nthe formation of dull and fleshy tubercles. The redness and scaliuess aro\nat first slight, but Increase until the\nhair becomes dry. brittle, and finally\ndrops out. The skin becomes thick and\nsensitive, so that the unfortunate victim would like to take chloroform every\ntime he is shaved. Barbers' licit lasts\na long time, antl often gives rise lo\npermanent disfigurement. The cause\nls another fungus somewhat like the\nringworm fungus. It is always caused\nby the brushes antl lather cups, whicli\nbecome Impregnated with the fungi.\nA third disease ls favus, less common\nthan the others, forming yellow, crusty\nexcavations In the hair, looking like\nrats' nests. It ls distinguished by all\nphysicians by Its odor, which suggests\na rat, or the lion's cnge in the Central\nBOOT OF HAIlt HKINO PKSTROYKD IIY\nRINGWORM\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCAUGHT IN A HAUIlKlt's\nSHOP.\nPark menagerlo lu the winter. It\ncauses permanent baldness, ami ls usually Incurable. Unless powerful acids\nare used lt is apt to spread.\nBarbers either take no special pains\nwith their brushes, In which case the\nbrushes become zoological gardens, or\nelse they do what Is almost as bad\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nwash them every day wilh soap anil\nwater. In the hist, although free front\nwild beasts, they become famous botan-\nleal gardens. It is the result of a botanical nature that gives rise to the\nmicroscopic plant collections, whicli\ncause the three diseases\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdringworm, |\nbarbers' Itch ami favus.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdNew York'\nl'ress.\nA MONSTER SNAKE.\nIt Has Been  in the  NetKllhorliooil   of\nGorln Four  Years.\nA snake that measures from twelve*\nto fifteen feet hns for four year's past'\nbeen more or less of a nuisance to the\npeople of (lorlu. Mo. People whose\nveracity could not be doubled have told\nwonderful stories of this marvelous\nsnake. Kvery spring some oue runs\nacross It. A year ago \\\\r. Rodney\nLease crept np to Its den and watched\nfor an opportunity to shoot It. but be*\ncame so fascinated with the sight of ltiJ\nsuakeshlp that he forgot to shoot until\nIt had crept back Into the dense uu-.\ndergrowth.\nEvery person who lias ever seen the\nsnake gives the same description of It.\nIt Is black hooded hend, at least fifteen\nfeet In length, and ns big round as a\ntelegraph pole. Recently, ns Mr. William Gilmore came along the track to*\n\ufffd\ufffdfefS3l\nTHK DltAGON-LIKE MONSTKIt.\nwards Gortn, he met it stretched out its\nlength on the bridge; he thought to get\ndose to it und either kill It or at least\nget aeo urate measurements of it by\ncounting the ties it was lying on. hut'\nas soon as his presence became known\nto the monster it quickly coiled itself,\nand  the sight so frightened  Mr.  (!;!\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;\nmore tliat he sprung backward down\nthe embankment and lost no time lu\ngetting to town.   The dimensions ho\ngave of it are too large to report; however, his word is us good us gold, and\na party is being made up In town to\ntry und capture this nameless species1\nof the reptile family.   Taking all reports Into consideration, some lielieve'\nit to be an escaped boa constrictor from .\nsome show, but its head Is different\nfrom any known snake's, resembling\ntliat of a dragon.\nSuppressed.\nThe bitterness of contests long past\nbecomes occasionally in the retrospect\nmerely amusing. What young American does not to-dny think with respect\nand admiration of Wendell Phillips, us\nu mnn both good und gifted, nud how\nmauy times annually ure extracts from\nliis speeches delivered by ambitious\nand girls hi school! Yel, in a ro-\nuiitoblogruphlcul article, Miss Allen ItobblUS, tlie Mower-puililer. tulla\nhow it neighbor, happening to Imiulrd\nof Mrs. Hobbins, her mother, in the\ndays when pro-slavery und abolitionist\nfeeling ran highest, where her daughters were, was answered thai they had\ngone to hear Wendell Phillips, The inquirer was overcome with astonish\nment and dismay: sho gave a grotin of\nhorror and exclaimed reproachfully.\n\"Those beautiful girls!\"\nThe girls did not suffer from the experience; and one of them, Miss Rob.\nbins herself, was present one nigh I\nnot long after, when Theodore Parker\ndelivered one of liis trenchant addresses before an audience in which\nwere elements both friendly uml hostile.\n\"There was,\" she relates, ''it sort ol\nsulphuric atmosphere, an Indescribable rustle In thc audience tu large\none), \\v' en a boy with a face that seemed to suy, 'Do you winit to light?' stood\nboldly out in the lloor in front of Ills\ndesk iiii*l glared nt Mr. Parker, ids cap\non one side of Ills head .\n\"Mr. Parker, looking ut hl\ufffd\ufffd through\nids gold-bowed spectacles, paused, and\nsuid iu very quiet tones, 'Utile boy,\nIt would be good inuiuiers if you Hill\ndown.'\n\"The bpy dropped into the Iron: seat\nas If a string hnd beon pulled.\n\" 'And.' said Mr. Porker, 'it would be\nstill better manners if you took off\nyour hat.*\n\"The hat came off nt once, and the\nspeaker went on undisturbed.\"\n-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, tss\ufffd\ufffd(\\  *eB\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA S-V-x-\\Jl';Jl      '-\"' \\m-i. <f~\ne*>\n'trffl\n.cican\n1\no\n*\ufffd\ufffd.\nNOTHING;\nBUTTHE\nGENUINE\nTou will ll ml ono coupon\nInsula cut li two ounce bug\nand two coupons Inalde each\nfour ounce bugof Blue It well's\nDurham. Duy a bug of tlila\ncelebrated tobacco nntl rouil\ntho coupon\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhirl) glvea *\nlist of valuable prasenu aud\nhow to eet them.\nP\nU\n*JE5Bta*M*i\nHERCULES Gasoline Engines.\nHOISTING Engines\nPUMPING Engines\nMARINE Engines\nSTATIONARY   Engines.\nMINING HOIST,\n4 to 25 H. P.\nHtiirtfit Tn\ufffd\ufffdtimtly.\nTube or Bleotrlo Ignitoi.\nCloao,  Bute, Bun\nThey Arc tin- Bent to Hoy.\n<'lM*\ufffd\ufffd|)t'Ht to Opemtn.\nMn*l. Batltfuetorj.\nMINE OWNERS\nOannot afford to uso Boists tliat\naro wu'eliaUc. Tho BZ&CULSS\nBOIST io Absolutely Safo. Always Heady. Cno man oporatei\nEn;lno and Scist. Satisfaction\neruarantoed or your monoy back.\nHercules  Gas  Engine  Works.\nGa., <>l! iuul Ga.'iilti.' Bnglnei* i tu BOO.horia Powar.\nJfflco, 405 and 407 Sansomo Streot,     -     -     -     San Prandsco. OaL\nWORKS. 2ili-2ll-2lt-'1i '2\ufffd\ufffdt-2lt>-'ftt.'23-f'i BAY ST.        Writ\/i for Citnloitni*.\t\nIlia Method,\nMicks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat makes yon go to a tailor\nto get your olothes? You can get them\nready made, just lis good, for half the\nmoney.\nWicks\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdYos: but If I got them ready\nmade I should hnvo to pay for thom\ncash down.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdLouisville Journal.\nFRAZER c*xl|e\nBEST IN IHE WOULD.    VUVSnaS\nIU W(*Rritig(|ilRlltlcHHrouiiiur|iaiife'l,iii!timll7\nOUtlullllB two boxes Ol anv other liran.l    Free\nIrom animal Oils.   8KT TIIK UKMJINK.\nKOK 8AI.K BY OKEUON AND\nCVWASMINGTON   JIE1K IIANTS-^M\nand IioHlism uuiiurally.\nLucky.\nSho (angrily)\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWhat do I get by cooking for you?   Nothing.\nHe\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDear me, you are fortunate. I\nalways get ludlgesilou.-Uoston Globe\na\nFOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SICK or\n\"Juat Don't  Feel Well,\"\n?M81!S.UVER PILL8\nan ths Onr Thins to use.\nOnly One for a Dosea\nBold by DnigifiiHA at 25c. a box\nBftmpli'H mn|].'d free*     Addroaa\nDr, BeMfiko Mod, Co. 1'LiU. I'u.\nWHEAT.\nMako   11 y   bv  lOCC ibf'il fponiltitlon   la\nCliH'Hk'ii.    Wc Imy mill sell -aheM (hero oil mftr-\nKitis. f-'oriu cs hnvc been mtxlo on a pimh.ii be-\ngititilnit by trriiliiiKin future*. Write for full\n|iarttmi)ti.-i. Host of reference given. Never\ufffd\ufffdl\nvcHid exi>erlciiL'C on tbe Chicago Hoard ol\nT\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdinii' aiul a iimr u\/ii knowledge Ot the huil-\n1)6811, Downing. Ilon)tIn*&<.o., Obloaso Hoard\nof Trade Hr\ufffd\ufffdk.-r-. Ufllcea iu I'orlkiiid Oregon\nand Spokane WhbIi.\nPISO'S. CURt*.FOR-\nCURES WHERE ALL ELSE MILS*\nit touKb Byrup. Tutee Good. Um\nIn tlma   Hold t*T dnigiia,\nmsiamgrci\nN. P. N. U. No. (171.-8. F. N. U. No. 71i TIU'.    WEEKLY -NEWS    NOV.    17th.    1896.\nTHU MffiLI NEWS\nIssued  Every Tuesday\nAt Union, B. C.\nM **A\/iiitney, Publisher\nTERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION.\nIN    -WVANCE.\n'Ine Yoar  ?S00\nSix Months      1 35\n**HhkU) \"Topy         0 08\nRATES OK ADVERTISING:\nOne luoh iioryoui   $1800\n..   ..   month      1 50\neighth col   per year     25 00\nfonrili   ..      .WOO\nMeek. .. line         10\nl.oiul r.otl**UR,por line            -*0\nNotices   of  liinlis,   Marriages   -tncl\niJeaths,  50 cents ench insertion.\n\\o Advcrtlsmeni inserted for less than\n50 cents.\nPersons failing lo get Thr News regularly should notify the OFFICII,\nTuesday, JOY. 17,1898,\nIt should he remembered iliat stibscii\n(ions to The News are payable in nd*\nrnnce.\nThe exchange of compliments between\nMcKinley and Bryan did honor to both\nof tbem.\nAny failure lo received THIS Nl*:\\V*j\nregularly by our subscribers sli.nild be\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdreported to the OFFICE\n\"I'he town or settle neat which lias an\nearnest advocate in every inhabitant is\nsur; to go ahe ul and to prosper.\"\nBryan will be taken care of. A boom\nhas been st.ined in Washington looking\nto his election as United Mates Senator\nfrom that state.\nOns good thing the recent U. S election has done is the political burial of\nAnarchist Allgeld of Illinois and South\nCarolina Tillman.\n'Ch* Colonist does not approve of tho\nidea of running the next Provincial election on party lines. However, we think\npolitics will, hardly be kept out of the\nelection, There are no reasons specially\nappertaining to liritish Columbia why it\nahouhl remain an exception to the rule\neleswhere.\nIt cost money to run a newspaper.\nTut News has commenced its fifth\nyear of publication and many subsrnp\nlions are now du\ufffd\ufffd, and prompt payment\nis requested to enable us to meet our\nobligations. Please don't w..ii to he\nCalled on but call at the officii or send in\nthc amount due as most convenient.\nMcKinley may nol have a majority in\ntbe Senate; if not, be cannot change the\ntariff, though some measure to increase\nthe revenue may be devised which will\nmeet the approval ofa majority. If it\nturns out tbat the Republicans have a\nclear majority, a session of Congress will\ndoubtless be called in M-rch to pass\nrevenue measures.\nHereafter all notices in advance of\nlectures, entertainments, etc., where a\ncharge ol admission is made, will have\nto be paid for. Thc charge is lo cents per\nline for locals, but nn notice ofany kind\nwill be given for less ihan Jo cents. In\nthe issue following, as a matter of news,\nsuch noiice will be given as meiit deserves. The failure tosend complimentary\ntickets will be laken as an indication\nthai no notice is desired.\nkleptomaniac.\nMental derangement is responsible for\nmuch of the crime which is committed,\nThis view is steadiK g lining ground, and\nas a result in some states provision is\nmade for a transfer from prison to an\nassyluin.\nCOMOX   BAKERY\nSupplies the valley with first ckss bread, pies, cakes, etc.\nBread delivered by Cart through Courienay and District every\nTuesday, Thursday and Saturday.\nWedding Cakes made and Parties catered for.\nH. C   LUCAS, Proprietor\nMS REVIEWED.\nLnrtl Salisbury said at the London\nbanquet Nov. 9th 1 hat it was his belief\nthat the controversy between the United\nStates and Great Britain with reference\nid the Venezuela boundary was at an end.\n Mrs,   Walter M.   Castle of San\nfraud SCO was sentenced :i. London to\nthree months imprisonment but almost\niminedUiely released. Her imni-i for\nstealing\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdshe Leiny rich\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdis beleived to\nhe a result of mental derungement\t\nJustice Field of the United Suites\nSupreme Court celebrated hii 801I1 bir.h-\nday Nov*. 5th The Miowera and hei\ncrew have heen awarded  $26,200 s;dv ige\nfor her services to ehe str, Slrathnevis\t\nThe Canadian Government lias granted\nfrom $15,000 10 20.0110 lo be expended in\nEngland with the object of introducing\n-J.tnadian products into British markets.\n....There are prospects of rt terrible\nfamine iu some ol the districts of Ire\nland ihe extensive   rain has ruined the\ncrops The  Hawaiian   Government\nhas granted a full pardon and restoration\not her civil rights to ex Queen Llliouoka*\nlani The  Montreal   Board  ol Trade\nhave petitioned the government for a\ntwo cent per ounce inland postage in\nCanada \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd The signs of a strong revival\nof business throughout tne United Suites\nsince the election are already manifest\nand the effects are being Ielt in  Canada.\n The  Harvard crew will  compete in\nthe Henry regatta in 1897.*.,Mr. Ed\nward J. Poynter, who if not a great\npainter is master of the necessary social\nattainments, h is been elected president of\nthe R lyal Academy.... The Province of\nVictoria and ihe Mail of Nanaimo favor\nrunning the next Provincial campaign on\npirty lines; while ihe Col mist of Victoria\nand tiu C.ilu n'jian ot New Wes.minister\noppose the plan. The Paystreak published at San don, B. C. savs: \"Bid as the\ngovernment n.py be, the Opposition, as\nsuch, has proved, if anything worse, so\nthere is nothing to be hoped ior from\ntint quarter.\" Fraser, who conducted the oil bjringi n^ir EJaumon for the\ngovernment will do nothing more until\na new location is struck next spring.\n... .General Lje, American Consul to\nCuba has been ordered to Washington\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ngrave diplomatic complications exist\t\nliis said iho Japanese cheap Roods are\nunsuiteel lo the market of this country\nand that imports to that country, arc\nmore likely to increase than exports from\nthere.\nF*OU SAliF\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA good dwelling houso of ix\nroom, lluu looatloM, K(>'\ufffd\ufffdi   well, pinion\nai d milium* &   Amil*  to   Mr*,   rl.   Al.\nWilliams, oppooito Methodist Church, uuruor\nlNiniiih Avui.uii and Second. 207*210\nauvaiser.   Euquirt-\n\\17ANTED~Agin-doi\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd * \ufffd\ufffdl \"Nkws 0ffiuk\nT^OR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe content* and furniture\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd of ii hiiikU In.Une. All utw. Apply kt\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKjtvra Office \"\nT^OIi SaLK, RANCH-One mile and h\n* lull frum Uniou, uuuUimt H>0 uum*\nnud n ill ttji rliNpiwed nt ul a low lisu v, ti.i*\ni|'Oio o( .l,\\Mt;s ABRAMS\nv;OR SALK OR LEASE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThe  Lindvaj\n* II aiao uii IVioitn Avcuul', ouummiint\nt.fteuii ruonni\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdKuoheu, I'au.r,, Utituuutit,\nWtkh-house, etc   Apj-ly uit  the (uhuiol-j.\npOR SALE\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCl'wred tioruer lot on Wu.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd I itti A\\ time, ef 11 ulieilp*. Ul'lild Crib),\nIviquheitt \"ft JEWS Ut'HCK \"\nNOTIOB '\"\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nNO riCE is hereby given that a Court\nof Assessment and Appeal under tne\n\"Assessment Act,\" ana a sitting of the\nCounty Court 01 Nanaimo will be beld in\nthe Court Mouse. Comox,. on the loth\nnay ol December, 1896, at the hojr ol\neleven a. m.\n(Uy order.)        W. II. ANDERSON.\nConiox, Ii. C. I Gov't AGENT.\nOct. 3.., 1896. \\\nSociety     Cards\nI.   o.   O    F.\nUnion Lodge, No. It, meets e ery\nFriday night at ti o'clock. Visiting brethren cordially invited to attend.\nA. Lindsay, R. S.\nEsquimalt  and Nanaimo  Ky.\nSteamer City oj\nXanamo\nL, P, LOOK IS, MASTER\nThe  Steamer CITY of NANAIMO\nwill *ail as follows\nOALLINQAT WAY POUTS an pitwongors\numl freight mny otjVr\nlaiato Victoria, Tuoadfly, 7 a. in.\n\"  Nanaimo for Contox, WedtiObdtiy, 7 a.m\nLeavo Comox for Nanuimo,       Fridays, 7a.m.\nNanaimo for Victoria    Balurdey, 7 a,in\nFor freight or state rooms apply on\nboard, or at the Company's ticket office,\nVictoria Station, Store street.\ndveiside l l tel=\nCourtenay, B. C.\nGiant & Mu.* i.fhar,, Piopv\nLcsi ol Licjui :\nKim-si (*l Ci*. in\nand\nGootl 1 al \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.\nCourteous  l\\\\ e .\n< \ufffd\ufffdy\nThe Famous\nDOMINION  P.ANT\ufffd\ufffd  , t\nm .v M si. Juir.os -1\nMON'IKE .1.\nHear Kev. O. R. Maxwrll al Si.\nGeor({o Ciuin.li on Wednesday evening\nat eij*h[ u'cloclc.\nNOTICE.\nThe time for subscription to the st'-.k\nof ihe Cumberland aiul Union Waterworks Co. Ltd., has been extended until November *Jo!h, 1896.\nFor particular* .-tpply to\nFrank li. Smith, Sec v.\nOct, 31*1,1896.\nCumb.rland Lodge,\nA. F. & A. M, B. C. R\nUNION*, ii. C.\nLnd*.;o meets iir.il   Snliirday    in   eacl*\nnuinlh.    Visiting brethren are conn,,!!*,\ninvited 10 aiu-un.\nlA.MKS McKIM. Sec.\nHiram Lodge No 14 A.K .& A.M..1I.C.K\nCourlctlay 11. C.\nLodge meets on every Saturday on 01\nbetore the lull ofthe moon\nVisit inj; brotheis   cordially requested\nDrs  Lawrence & Westwood.\nPhysicians and surgeons.\nXTiTIOlT 3 c.\nWe have appointed Ur. James  Abrams our collector until  runner no-\ntieo, to whom all  overdue   accounts\n**-ay be paid.\n7 Nox. 1805.\nDr. JEFFS\nSurgeon and Physician\nj  (Graduate ofthe University of Toronto,\nL. C, V & S., Oiil.)\n! Office and residence. Mary port\nI      Ave .next door to Mr. A Gram's\nj Hours for consultation Dtolo am,\n210 4 and.V 10 10 p m.\n''?0 Hide.\n\ufffd\ufffd13\nI AM\nAanaimn Saw Mill\n-ANO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nhi\\\\ aiiii Boor\nFACTO   R  Y\n-0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:o:6- %---\nto attend.\nH. S. McConnell,\nSecretary,\nAT*\nAwDBRSOM'fi\nProvincial Secretary's Office.\nOctober .nth, 1896.\nHis HONOUR the Lieutenant Governor\nhas been pleased to appoint Walter Hir-\nnie Anderson, Esquire, Givernnicnt\nAsent at Comox, to be a Deputy ofthe\nRegistrar of the County Court of Nanai*\n1110.\nThe best tiling this season\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"Home\nand Happy Homes\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdbyC. K. Maxwell,\nM. V.\nCumberland Encanipiuent.\nNo. 6,  I, (i C* I'    Union\nMeets every altera ue   Wednesdays **:\neach month at 8 nViork p. in.    Vs.. ,.-.^\nbrethren cordiulh invited t:: attetul.\nC.  WHYTE, Scribe.\nNOTICE\nAny pel son or persons destroying 01\nwiihhildiii^ tlie keys .md bnri'ei.*, nl 1 ;-.\nUnion llre.very Comp.iny Lid of Nanai\nino, ivill be prosecuted. A liberal reward\nwill be paid for information leading to\nconviction,\n\\V,  I'.. Norris, Sec'y\na. OF T.\nUnion Division No. 7. Hnn^ of Temperance meets in free Mason's Hull,\nUnion every Monday evening at 7:30,    t\n\\'isilin*.; friends cordially invited to\nattend. i\nTHOS. DICKINSON, R. S.        ]\nME\n77\n-< f\n1 Is\nn\n'Oh\n7t\n' s\nT\nie <\ni\nilcv.'i\nicprc\nsent\nin'es ;\ned\ni'i1\niVatc!\nl*S,\nclock\n- an\n!       I\"\\\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdell\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr\\\nfin, si\n1\neel\nran. 1\nnd *\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffd\nirl\nA. HASLAM, Prop\n(OI'TICE-MILL  STKEET.)\nII'. 0. Drawer 30.   Teloplione Call, 1,11)\nNANAIMO, 11. G.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd;.*\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd A complete stock of Rouuli and\nDressed Lumber nlways on  hand.   Alsc\nShingles, laths, Pickets, Doorn,.V\\*iii\ndows and lliind-.    Moulduif;, Scroll\n!        Sawiny, Tmniii);, nntl ;ii:   kinds\nct wood tiiiishmx (\"tirni .lu-o.\nCedar.  White Pine.   Redwood.\npi \"fSSr\nGuns and rifle , repaired\nPlumbing in all its branches,\nPumps, sink.**, ancl piping,\nElectric bells placed,\nSpeaking tubes placed\nHot air furnaces,\nFolding bath and improved\nAir-tight stoves, specialties\nOffice and Works   W^JSJJ' \"\ufffd\ufffd\"r\nSUNDAY SERVICES\nSi'. Gkokue's  Piin.suvri'.itiAx  Chukch\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nRev. .1. A, Liiyan, pa.tor.   Services at 11 a.\n117. and 7 p.m.     Sunday   School   at'J.*:tO.    ,sv\nY P H C K   at cloae   of  oveniug   service.\nMkiuodisti.hi'Rcii\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-   Survicea   at  tho\nus'ial hoiira morning and eveuing.   Kev. V\\*.\nII olts, pa.ter.\nTniNirv liit'itni\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd Sorvicea in   lho   ave-\nniug    R-v. J  X. Willemar, rector.\n;v^*\/:'*\/*\/*\/'\/'X^v^\/'^&^y^e''\/'?\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdS ~\n\\& F. Curran a\nSCAVENGER   1\nUNION, B.C. |\nI\nL>eyp:yy:yri^*jr*:.y\/7Kyy:\/p^j;yj2.y:\/!\nCHOICE     LOTS\nhlh imMkk\n%wr*; vA fm~mi\nPlumbing and general\nSheetiron work\nPROMPTLY   OCT * E\ner Assent for the\nCelebrated Gurney\nSouvenir Stoves and\n Ranges\t\nManufacturer of the\nNew Air-tight heaters\nH. J. Theobald,\nWe have received a letter from Mr. I\".\nPartridge concerning thc article which\nappeared in our lasl issue relating tn Ins\nbein\ufffd\ufffd robbed by a Chinaman. Our\nfriend appears to think he has been\nridiculed. Not a bit of ii. There isn'tifi\nword in it which reflects upon his genius\ncharacter, or good ionks. In what way\nlie has been \"exposed\" we do not under*\nstand unless it be that thc Assessor in i,\nincrease thc rate on that \"tub icro pouch.\"\nThe case of Mrs. Castle who was sentenced in London to three months\nimprisonment for shop lifting is not\nueculiar. She was undoubtedly properly\nrelease*! bv thc   Home  Secretary as  a\nNOriCH.\nAll panics Indebted to the undersigned\naie requested io make settlement before\ni lhe lst  dny ul  December  1S96,   *s nil\n; accounts, unsettled niter lha' date will\nj be placed in the hands of my solicitor\nfor collet tion.\nI Union, B, C.  I James McKim.\nNov. 10 1896 f *io 21 \\\nWednesday night e.t 8 o'clock.\nAt Private Sale.\nTho following is f'\ufffd\ufffdr wale.    Persons inter-\nOHted can inspeuc aud puruhasu i>>* ualhng at\nthn Liu.Inn. ti\ufffd\ufffduse,\nOae bedroom 1*0*.,  blanket., comforters.\nJ Mingle she-itii'g, aix doul-ie hox spring nut-\nj tresses, tliroo heatera, chamber sets,  chair-.,\nj window blind.i, curtain poles and fixture*.,\noirpets, oil cloth, stair carpet,  rubber door\n* mats, two arm chairs,, hat t-tcks,  umbrella stand., tmutiug, clrlil's cot with uiattre**.\npreserve buttles, lamp., otc\nNO riOB\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdI horohy give nutioe that I in.\ntend to a-ii.lv to the Board of Lioenclng 1      For SALE Oil Dunsmuir ave;\n1 oiir' f-\ufffd\ufffdr ,N l,i,(i   Dfstrtet at it*, next tslttln**\nf;:X0\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdn0,!,;,tt\ufffd\ufffdou; and  5 in\nCwn (2) bl\ufffd\ufffdek eiah' (H) on Dunsmuir aven ! , ,    , , ,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd*,,,\nne in tin town of Cumbsrlt.il,  Nelson Dia    DlOCK  I 5,. lots 7 and 8 in block\ntrior., Purd'iiawj Ottnonios.    j\nUnion, b c Nov. 3ni 1800. j 16, lots .-j, 4 and 5 in block IO,\nNOTICE -I hereby give notice, ih\ufffd\ufffdt i in- j and other lots  in Cumberland\ntend to apply to thn Board of Licensing *\nI'oiin for N'-i.ou Di\ufffd\ufffdtriot at ita next .et- j Townsite. Bargains,\ntine, for a license to sell spirituous and for- *\nmouted liquora hy retail upon the promiso*, fsvtpc   Ani'isic\nknown as the New.England re.taiirant,  lot ja.mi.m   .mika.m.*..\nthree, block 'nree, Dunsmuir avenue, in the\ntown ef C'utnherlaud, NoIboh dietriot\nWm. OmiASON*.\nUoion B. 0. Nov. 3rd. 1896.\nSchool and office stationery\nat E. Pimbury St Co' drugs\nstore.\nSUBSCRIBE FOR \"THE NEWS.'\n$3.00 PER ANNUM.\nSB and Sip Painter,\nPaper-Hanging, -Kalscminirg\nand Decorating.\nGRAINING A SPECIALTY.\nAll orders Promptly Attended to\nUnion, B. O.\nL\nNOTICE.\nMrs. O'Dell is prepared to imttei't-tkf-.\nentitlements during the Winter Sea so r\nfor concerts, fiances, e;c. Mrs. O'Dell\ncontemplates opening a class at Courtenay for adults consisting of singing and\nthorough musical training, a so a class\nfor children comprising musicil training,\ndrill, and exercises. For further particulars see bills al Cnurtenav. Address\nMrs. O'Dell. Comox Hav.\n1VERY:\n^\ufffd\ufffdW&\/^__\nI 0411 prepared to\nfurnish Stylish Rigs\nand do Teaming\nAt reasonable rates.\nd. Kilpatrick,\nUnion, B. C.\nII EAMING-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd 1\ni \ufffd\ufffd\n1\/\nW-C.TJJ. IDEAS     j^Ther2isNothing\njNot One Man in\n i rATiirrv 0ne Hu ldred\nLIKE   I   H ll I  Mr*!!'        i*\ufffd\ufffd invest* hi** money thnt it yields,  iu\ntwuutj ><\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd!>, ttiiythiug like tlto pn.iit\nj atl rdeu hi it pulivy of Llie ludurftnee.\nj HISTORY i Tne iicrceutage t\ufffd\ufffdf individual**\nUll  l.lIMIItii-.\nALCO 301..-.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdInternally the action of al-\neohol ii both local sad goneral. It' ftllotfed\nto coma di.ectly into contact witu the walla\not tie atouiica it irritates them, caudng\nthem to assume an inflamed appearance.   If , ,- f\nih.4U.uqr^.ic.MHkW\ufffd\ufffdM..\ufffd\ufffd>]i it is \\|b11 Put Tugetliei'iiH^--i rJ:;\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdr^!_L\"\n  No old-liuu mutual Iif\ufffd\ufffd iusuraoce oi>uip*ti)\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd     , ..  . biuoverfliled.\nSo here it is : : j\nSingle Harness at $lo, $i3f $i, per set j Pfl0TECTION J I INVESTMENT\nand up.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSweat Pads at 50 cents.        ;\nWhips alio, 25, 50 and a good   Raw-J LIFE (  IS\t\nhide for 75 cents, and a Whale Hone\nleu continuously applied* actual iotUmation\nof the lining of the surface follows,\nWheu alcohol is taken with food, and mix\nei with the couteuta of the atomaoti, it is\npartly deoomposod into substances whioh in\nturn decompose the jj4s-.no juices rendering\ntbem imert and chus depressing digestion.\nWhatever may ttumutimes he said in favor\noi the use of stimulants witu meals, it is very doubtful if the slight temporary stimala-\nting effect uf aueh drinks is compensatory\nfor their interference with the aotiuu of tbe\ngastric fluids.\nAlcohol enters tbe blood unchanged, and\nI* distributed by it to the various orgaus\nand parts of the body, where it is rapidly\nabsorbed, and where its action is nearly the\nsame as in the stomeh.\nIt tirst stimulates the organ to increased\nactivity, but at the aame time causes the\nthe chemical ohange in the substance of the\norgan by which it is weakened.\nAlcohol robs the stomach of its power of\nchanging food into its proper forma of nourishment.\nIu these days of prepared foods and gen\"\neral advance in science, there are many\nways of scouring the only benetioial result\nwhioh alcohol gives\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstimulation without\nresorting to its use.\nriifitit'dgt;\naJ ._ \ufffd\ufffd. L ' i ,\nID\nm i   \\J ft   i\\WI\nat $1 and up to $2.\nI have the largest Stock of WHIPS\ntown and also the\nINSURANCE\nBest Axle Grease at t\n03=:E3\nHear the well known p.each, r and pol.\ntician to-morrow night at Sf. George.\nHELPFUL HINTS\nBums'.nkst pudding.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdEight apples pared aod cored, one pint of milk, two table\nspoonfuls of sugar, oue tea-speonful of lemon\njuice, Uttle salt, aud urated peel of oue lem.\nton. Put the apple in a dish, mix tbe other\ningredients and pour over the apples. Bike\nthoroughly.\nPop ovkr9.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFive eggs, oae quirt milk,\ntwo eggs, one and a half tea-spooafuls of\nbaking powder, Beat eggs with sugar and\nbutter, add the other things and bake 30\nminutes in little tins.\nSuQAH cooKim,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdCream together three\nquarters of a pound of butter, oae pound of\nfine emulated sugar: aid alternatuly oue\ncupful oold water aud two cupfuls of flour\nin which has been mixed one half tea-spoo 1-\nful of salt. Scir in one scant tea-spoouful\nof soda dissolved in a little warm water,\nthen add flour to make a very soft dough.\n1 urn on a well (loured board, roll, out in\nsmall cakes, and hike in a quick oven. If\ncrisp cookies aro wautei aid more flour,\nroll very thin.\nAustrian coffee.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdMake strong drip of cof.\nfee, set away nntit cold. Before serving put\na table spoonful of vanilla ieo cream in each\noup.\nA soientist recently tested the air of a\nlecture room that was uot pr.ipurly veutila-\nted and fouud it contained two millions diseased germ t to the cubic yard.\n\"My dear women \"' exclaimed thc settle\nment worker \" how can you give yonr poor\nbaby such things to eat ?\nThe mother had just given an eighteen\nmonths old baby his morning meal, consist\ning of a cup of coffee, plate of cucumbers,\nfour greasy pancakes, and a slice of melon.\n\" Oh! them victuals is all right \" she re-\nd, picking up the pitiful looking child;\n'h&'aint vory well, that's a faot; hut it aint\nhis food. I nover no lnck raisin' boys any*\nI way ?\" \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdW ill Carlton in Every Where.\nLilla D. Mndson writing on \" Mother*\nI hood \" says : All professions arc ennobling,\n> but motherhood is the grandest and best o\nall, \"mother \" tbe sweetest and dearest name\non earth exeept\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd baby.\n FopTwenty-Klvj   en.;\t\nTrunks at Prires to Suit\nthe Times,\nininnr J     Promptly and\nHill-g }     NKAL'LV DOm\nWesley Willard\nJAMES  ABRAMS\nNotary Public.\nAgent for the Alliance Fire\nInsurance Company of Lon\ndon and the Phoenix of\nHartford.\t\nAgent for the Provincial\nBuilding and Loan Association of Toronto\t\nUnion, B c.\nPEIVALLID\nmr LESS THAN\n Ten Cents a Day^j\nWill buy t,ir a man 3& years uf uy,*  A\n$1,000 20-Paymont Life Policy, one\nui ihi; \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:*'.;\ufffd\ufffd: iur.11.1 ul i.uvraf.CJ ***>*<>nuuu\nin the\nUnion Mutual Life\n:i.surance Company\nOf Portland, Maine\nA SuuihI, Sife, Ably Managed, i ixcoitron\nUnliable tJulManiUI lustitutiuij -     A'i'KD\nWhich SEVKIi STANDS              (       I-S-W\nUPON TEOUNICALITIBS \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"'' '\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"\nJ. E. EVANS, Provincial Mauatwr,\ni'.o. box tiU3 Vancouver, B. C.\nfor further luIoiuiation call on\nF. J. DALBY,\n' With Juti.es A brains.\nDAY'ID JONES, Proprietor,\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        MANUFACTURER OF        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSODA WATER,  LEiV.ONADE, GINGER ALE,\nSarsaparalla, Ctnnipogne Udei   Iron Fhot-phatee md Bynipi\nBottler  01  iiinerent  hiuuiie  ol   Lage,   heer,  cuani Bier  Ssst tet.as\nAtrt-nt for tho Uuiou Brewery t. ne.nuy.\n~S& -BEEU SOLID 1PG&. CJLSXZ CNLY\nCOURTENAY, B. C.\nI\ufffd\ufffd\n~~\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd~-\n,_,    I !\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd li.'.,t Uhil-h svniH.\n;QTH.-u<,H.;,,.d. iM'la'llmk\nsis\n:f.'<io-n*sg.TviP.tioKi\nI presume wo have used over\none hundred bottles of PiBO'g\nan Cure for Consumption in my\nfamily, nnd I am continually advising othew\nto get it.   Undoubtedly it is tho\nI ever used.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdW. C. JlaTENDEnoER. Clarion   Pa,\nDec. 29,1894. 1 sell Piso's Cure for Oousurap.\ntion, and never have any com- ____\\\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,_--__.\nSlaints.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdE. Siiorev, Postmaster, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT*W*^.*yg^Xlaift^<BBa\nhorey, Kansas, Dec. 21st, 189-4.  HSW-i^-Sj\"^!!\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  in\"*'.\ninery\nMISOASH'S\nFOR THE      \"WHsTTZI! Ei\nLATEST        Novelties\nA Fashionable Trimmer\n(Ute of Sloan & Scott'.)\nIs turuiuf-j OUC A.I.II-: I), tf.e Cetsa inn** ill\n, HATo AND QONNETi:\nCumberland Hotel.\nUnion, B. C.\nThu finest hotel building\nFixtures and Bar\nNorth of Victoria,\nAnd the best kept house.\nH. A. Simpson\nBarrister V Solicitor. No's\nCommercial street.\nKA2TAIMO     E.   c.\nJ. A. Co\nARCHIT!\neen ai\n**,   I*\nM~\nGO TO\nFOR\nB--*S===i?\ni PBESBTEBIAN LECTURE OOURSE\nThe young people of St. George who\nI have their Lecture Course at hand are to\nI be congratulated on their successful\nI effort in securing the Rev. G. R. Max-\n| well M. H. to deliver the opening lecture. !\nThere is no more popular man to-day\nI in Vancouver than  he,  whether it he as\nA choice    election of Flowe\nJet Ornaments a, d Ribbo\ndust Received.\nJOHANWSaiiUHa\nThis Inu. located ahout three miles out\nfrom Union on lhe Coii'teuay Rtaad\nii now npen fnr business A go>>c'\nnr will be k^pi, and the comfort of tlie\n: i-rsii carefully attended lo. (live us a\n.-Hli.\nJOHN PIKET.\nSpacious Billiard. Room\nand new\nBilliard ancl Pool Tables\nBest of Wines and Liquors.\nY->> ye-yyy.yy r-yy-y.rsy^yyy.y.y:rzti!\nSW.S  DAL3Y. D.D.S StlD.&l\nS   -   .. .     \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-       .       iSi\nDentistry In ell its Bran he;\nV'a-t worlt, mii,*\nasonable Prices.\nCUMBISBLAi*\/;.'    3HOE   SHOT\nI hnve mnve-fl into my new\nDunsmuir Ave ute, ^lu'rel fun\ntn manufnciure iml rep i'r I'\nmen's, woivh n'-*>tan 1 chil Ireu'i\nGive nie. a calj.\nNELSON 1'A\nShop n\nj.reii.irc\nL P. ECKSTEIN.\nBarrister, Solicitor, Notary Pub*\noalce:\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdFirst    Street, Union, li.\nNOTICE\n'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdAn Act to  Frevont   Certain   Ani-\nn Us from fiaaaing at Large   I89Q\"\nStick owners ^re herebv notified to\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdjeep all Swine, Stallions of one year old\nmd upwards, and Bulls over nine months\nild, under proper enclosure, as all aril*\nlals :)f ihe*.e descriptions, found running\nit larye will be dealt with under the pro- nO'ltCSt\nvisions ofthe Act referred to.\nComox, B. c.      W. B. Anderson,\nJune 7ih, 1896. Gov't Agent.    I .\t\nJVJOJ^EY J. P. DAVIS,\nI have an unlimited supply Florist, Seedsman and\nWe do all kinds  ,\nJob Printing, anything\nfrom a Dodger to tht\nusiness Car\nor Circular.\npreacher, lecturer or politician, and we | of money for loans Oil    the   se-     T      \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd| r*     . |\narc sure lhat every person in Union who -,*  r       \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd,\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd_,,,   ...     *L\"UlUSCtipL Vj3l tl\nlarc sure lhat every person in Union who\nBiears his lecture will be delighted. We\n(trust that a full house will meet him on\n[his first appearance in Union.\nLEOTUEE.\nRev. G. R. Maxwell will lecture at\nCourtenay Hall on Thursday night Nov\n|tQth, at 8 o'clock, subject of lecture: \" I'he\neven stages of Matrimony.\"\ncurity of farming property at\nio\\v rates of interest. Loans\nput through expeditiously.\nMortgages  purchased.    Insurance effected.\nMARCUS WOLFF.\nNanaimo, B. C\nP. 0. Drawer 17\nener\nSeeds, Ornamental  Trees and\nBhrubs alway a.\nAlao   bulbs   iu   variety,   including.\nHyacinths,  Narcissus, Fuchias,\nTulips and Lillics.\nMATSUKAWA      1\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ontruci; anrl   *.y Wr\nWrtN rau\nAddresi-M,ils.,li . ,, J.,p.i\nB i.irding. II msc, nexl lit   *-;\nnit\nNOTICE\nWe (he uadersiijncd hereby authnriz\nInhn llruce in collect all accounts due Ihe\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstale of Robert Graham.\nI: Grant)\nH. Hamburger j* Trustees\nj\n\/>'\"\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd''\nshop\ntruer ,\\\n-  AND\n.* :    Bat hi ny\nEstablishment\nO. H. Fechner,\n'er.oT'\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdA\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.'TO\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nSUUiCRlUE ro\nI'ER ANNUM.\nI'm: N'.-ws\nA FINK ITO !K0 -*\nCocks, watches, books\nand stationery.\nT. D. McLean\nJEWELEIii \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\"zovr, \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd. c.\n\"'  \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd1 11    'r   11 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nYAHW00D &   YOUNQ\nBARRiFTKliS and SOLIllTOhS\nOemcr of Ua\ufffd\ufffdtioo and CommtrMftl   *\nStreets, Nanaimo, B. C.\nBranch Ontos, Third Strut and Duonmui*\nAvemif, B, C.\nWill be in Uniou the 3rd  UVdh.-di)  o(\neaoh un ntli aiid n-nmin ten fiu>n\nConiox,\nB. C.\nSubscribe for THE  NEWS $:.oc  per\nannum.\nBARKER & PITTS,\nBARRISTERS,\nSOLICITORS, NOTARIES.  &e.\nIluo Room!, Mel'hee & Moore ll'ld'g nnd i\nNANAIMO. I). (*.\n)' I). DKAWBR   IU.\n<\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd   I\nNai aimo Cigar factory\n1 * * :*   and Co., Proj 's\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd    Nan a taif B. c\nf    Manufactures   Ik  fini 1 cigan  tnd\ncmplo'.es none but wll K l.il-or\nWhy purchae inferin      reign cigan\nwhen you can obtain a miKittci' akh\ncue foi the .'.nie mone\\\nBaetlui  Street\nManufactures\nJAMES ABRAMS,\nIRBAL ETATE   & IKriSCRANiAi The Weekly News.\nM.    WHITS KY,\nUN10X\n.BRITISH UOi.UM.B1A\nTliat legless man who wus married in\nMilwaukee the Other duy Is in luck; his\nWife will bave lo foot all tbe bills.\nIn all climates cleanliness is anions\nthe primary conditions of health, and\nhealth means the lirst gift of U->d lo\nman.\nNiagara wus astonlshcu ut Id Hung\nOhang'ti queue, and Ll was astonished\nat NMagara's waterfall. Honors an-\neven.\n.!. J. Corbett is running for Congress\nlu the Charleston, Miu-ss., district, if\nthere is anything In a name we predict\nHint he will win in a talk.\nIt Is announced that i.i Hung Chang's\nname lilerally translated means \"Plum\nBlooming Literary Ability.\"  Then it's\na misnomer; id Is a pou\ufffd\ufffd*\ufffd\ufffdi.\nTmo charity does not consist in dispensing what we no longer need or have\nloat our liking fm-, but lu giving tbat\nwhich necessitates some self-denial.\nThat Ohio girl who took arsenic to\nremove freckles will never be bothered\nby them again. As a ireclde remover\narsenic knocks the spots off most cosmetics.\nTreasurer Legg, of Tike County,\nOhio, is a defaulter for several thousand dollars and a fugitive from justice. Pike County's Legg should be\npulled at the first opportunity.\nThero are but few people wbo live\nby rule. Tbe majority neither eat,\nsleep, work, rest, pray, meditate, uor\nreach a conclusion of any kind except\naa lt suits tbem. Method is tbe means\nby which expectation reaches the top\nof the ladder of life\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdtbat is, tbe summit of real power aud Influence.\nA dispatch from Fort Seott, Kau.,\nsays thnt Allen Six of that place bas\nbeen arrested and locked up for having\nten wives simultaneously and no souvenir collection of divorces. Perhups\nAllen deserves to he disciplined, but it\nmust be remembered that although be\nlias bud ten marital partners each of his\nwives bus bad Six.   Six semper tyran-\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdte.\nThere bas recently been furnished\nperhaps tbe severest test ever made of\nthe practicability of bicycles for military purposes. An officer and eight\n(soldiers, heavy accoutred aud carrying\nfour days' rations, wheeled nearly a\nthousand miles, including the passage\nof the Rocky Mountain range, In bettor\ntime than foot soldiers or troopers\ncould have made on a sustained march\niu a mountainous region.\nThere is a striking antithesis in the\nrecent newspaper\" headline, \"Papooses\nto Become KtudenU'.\" The title is over\na paragraph telling of steps toward the\nerection of school buildings for Indian\nchildren on the northern shore of Luke\nSuperior. There is now in the United\nStates no frontier of civilization In ihc\nold sense, und there is no human being\nwithin its borders that cannot enjoy\nmost of the substantial benefits of civilization.\nA large proportion of the deaths by\nlightning every summer occur in cases\nof persons standing under trees. Emphatic warnings against Ibe danger of\nseeking protection in such a place during the prevalence of an electric storm\nare contained in almost every practical\ntreatise ou atmospheric electricity. The\ncaution seems to be unheeded, however, by city people and couutry people alike, aud Rgain aud again In ihe\ncourse of the season of thunderstorm-s\nthe newspapers are called upon tn record these distressing fatalities, which\neould probably have been avoided in\nmost Instances if the victims had ouly\nkept away from trees.\nOne safeguard of the country is a\njudge who refuses to grant naturalization papers to up llcuuts unable to comprehend our form of government or to\nread English. The Supreme Court nf\nthe District of Columbia is reported to\nhave set. nu admirable example iu recent naturalization cases, one applicant frankly admitted thai he did not\nunderstand the Constitution, ami the\nJudge refused to admit him to citizenship. The safety nf tbe republic demands thai naturalization tests should\nhe made more rigid, rather than easier.\nThe time is past when tbe subject can\nIn* dismissed with the careless assertion\nthat our body politic Is proof against\npoisonous material - the form of citizenship indiscriminately conferred on\nIgnorant immigrants.\nbetween the acts.\" The adoption of\n'\".\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsumo of these sensible ways'* would\ncause the churches of Kngland. the\ncorrespondent thinks, to be \"generally\ntilled, even in spite of tbe hot weather.\" This Imaginary picture could have\nbeen made appropriately complete if\nthe writer had added that, \"while taking a turn outside,\" the overheated congregation occasionally shoot a boar cr\nindulge in ihe luxury of a brief 011*4\ncounter with Indians,\nA  DREAM  OF  HERRICK.\n[Scene: Tin; vtrnrayo garden at Dean Prior.]\nLo, in my tin-am I saw 11 -shady lnwu.\nWhereon I lay at swout totiguod Herrick'fl  wrapped up iu her servants, began talk*\nhold my tongue till  the busiuess was\nover.\nLater on,  Mrs.   Yongbal, wlio was\nfeot,\nA i;niiiii of mnklen*, (,'lorioua na tho dawn,\nPlcnishtitluHiiow white board with duintiea\nsweet\nA correspondent of a London religious journal solemnly avers that It is\na \"regular custom\" for people iu San\nIfrancisco and other hot districts in the\nUnited Slates to vary tlielr summer\nchurch services in this effective way:\nThe worshipers \"get up ami stretch\ntjiemselvos, and even take a turn outside, after the fashion of the theater\nAs a persistent and tireless questioner it is probable that Ll has few\nequals. Instead ot beiug interviewed\nto nny great extent hi1 bas interviewed\neveryone wlio came within his range,\nand willi appalling capacity for greedy\nabsorption of fa ts. lie asks the railway magnates whnt salaries they arc\npaid for their official services, He\nasked the president of tlie Pennsylvania Railway- Company to give him the\ngauge of his railway ami rebuked him\nfor not giving It accurately to the half\nInch. When a tady newspaper correspondent attempted to interview him\nlie nsked her what salary she rocelvcd,\niiow much she saved out of It and if\nshe ever had any of her articles rejis-t-\ned. Instead of accepting banquets and\nother silly aud unprofitable*atomach-\ndestroytug functions Li has requested\nto lie taken through factories, shipyards and locomotive works, where he\nasked comprehensive and practical\nquestions.\nOvor tho ivied wall I spied Tap's bend,\nWho Bold his liiuther'.s spectacles for beer;\nIrreverent! Gryll, who ne'or a graco hath suid,\ning at houses where she called of her\nparagon among saises\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe man who\nwas never too busy to get, up in tho\nmorning and pioL flowers for tin1 breakfast table aud who blacked\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdactually\n^^^^ blacked\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthe hoofs of his horse like a\nAnd Bunco, who owes tbu poet still, stood  London coachman! The turnout of Miss\nDoar' ! Youghal's Aj-ub was a wonder and a do-\nTheso all agapo surveyed tho table spread       1 light   Strickland\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdDulloo,   1   mean-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nWith country tUsnos-*- crosses from the stream\nPlRakod by rioh piles of berrIos,hlaok and red,   found his reward  in the pretty things\nAnd Bllver  jonbot   crowned with golden : that Miss  Yougbnl Baid  to him when\norL'am\" j she went out riding.   Her parents were\nThe rustle banquet o'or, fair Julia ran\nwithin the hnuse the poet's lute to bring;\nThe maidens sitting round ns Hewed and span,\nAnd in their queenly manner hado us King.\nI took the lute frnm Julia's shapely hand,\nAnd sung of her whosu plighting ring I wore.\nMy Phyllis\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfairest maid in all tho land I\nInspired, I sunn as m-'er l Hang beforo.\nThen Ilerriek followed, and with easy grace\nHo BUHR of Julia's breath, Anthea'H damns.\nOf Uianeine's term, Klectra's face,\nAnd all the gracious curves of Btlvla's arms.\nWilling I was to ow 11 the master voire,\nUnwilling thutmy love should share my fall,\nWhen Horrillk's Whisper  mado my heart nr\njuice\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\n\"Thy Phyllis doth, I own, excel tbem all!\"\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdT. Bruce Dllks in Temple Bar.\nj back and take up his wanderings and\n; his disooverit s.\nSome day X will tell you how he broke\nhis promise to help a friend. That was\nlong since, and he has, by this time,\nbeeu nearly spoiled for what ho would\ncall shikar. He is forgetting the slang,\nand the beggar's cant, and the marks,\n1 and the signs, and the drift of tho nn-\n; derourrents,  whieh,   if a man would\nmaster,   he must always continue   to\n: learn,\nBut he fills in his departmental returns beautifully.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdRudyard Kipling.\nFOR LITTLE FOLKS.\nNatural gas has proved n mnst vnlu-\nable fuel In Western Pennsylvania,\nOhio and Indiana and throughout the\nregion within easy reach of the welU,\nand its use has been of especial Importance to the Iron Industries. At\nfirst It was supposed that the supply\nwas Inexhaustible and great enterprises\nwere projected upon the basis of this\nsupposition. Experience has tdiown\nthat this is not the case and the decline\nlu the supply, evidence by tli.? rapidly\ndecreasing pressure, has of lato Ire-\nguu to excito alarm, lt is shown hy a\nrcceut report that the value of tho kiis\nconsumed in lYnns.vlavnia, which roso\nto $10,000,000' in 1888, has since that\nyear gone down nt a decreasing ratio,\ntill it was less than $0,000,000 In 1895.\nTho supply In Ohio and Indiana has\nlikewise fallen off, nnd though manufacturers have learned the need of\neconomy, so that there is mueh loss\nwaste than formerly, it is apparent; thnt\nnatural gas cannot bo counted upon as\na fuel of tho future. Still, lt Is not exhausted yet and It has served already\na good purpose in diminishing the consumption of coal and thus prolonging\nto some extent the store of. that fuel.\nThe scientific men are warning us that\nthe coal supply also is not inexhaustible, but berore the eoal gives out no\ndoubt some other fuel will be discovered, or science wili have found a way\nto make a litlle fuel produce so much\nmore heat that posterity will uot be\nleft to perish.\npleased to find she had forgotten all her\nfoolishness for young Strickland and\nsaid she was a guod girl.\nStrickland vows that thn two months\nof his servieo were the mnst rigid mental discipline he has ever gone through.\nQuite apart from the littio fact that tho\nwife of oue of his fellow names fell in\nlove with him nud then tried topoisou\nhim with arsenic because he would huvo\nnothing to do with her, he hiul to\nschool himself into keeping quiet when\nMiRs Yongbal went out riding with\nsome man who tried to flirt, with her,\nund he wns forced to tret behind currying the blanket and hearing every word]\nAlso ho had to keep his teinperwhon he\nth-tch* VAlintl ll 'Q U-iTQ   yn* Blnl-K-''1 \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd \"Benmoro\" porch bya\nlUluO  IUUIXlliVL o toAXO   policeman\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdespecially   once, when   he\n  j was abused by a Naik  he had himself\n,        .,   .,,        \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd       .   : recruited from Isser Jung village, or,\nSomo people say that there Is no ro-1^ ^   whe]i  ft ^ mh.M(,m\nmtmco in India. Thoso peoplo ore wrong. * caU(,d him \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd pi(? for nut __illg way\nOur lives hold quito us much romanoe   quickly enough.\nas is good for us.   Sometimes more. Thus ho served faithfully as Jacob ;\nStrickland was iu tho  police,   and . served for Rachel, and his leave was\npeoplo did not understand him, so Ihey I nearly at an end when the explosion\nsaid ho was a doubtful sort of u mau   eamo.   Ho had really done his best to\nand passed by on the other side. Strick-   keep his temper in tho hearing of the\nA VOUNG SWIMMER.\nChubblnt Healy Hii.  Jolly Tlmri OD   tha\nUubblnlE IIorHu Bt Coronadit.\nCoronado Beach people all say that.\nChubbins Healy is the younge*-**; swimmer in the world. If sho isn't, she\ncertainly comes pretty close to currying*\noff the banner as a baby swimmer.\nChubbins is 4 years old, fat, rosy and\nJolly. Sho ennie to California with ber\nmother ubout a year ugo for the health\nnf an older sister. When they flrsc located at Coronado, Chubbins was entranced by the charms of tho big swimming tank of the great hotel, and it\nwasn't long before she took tm experimental dip. The swimming teacher\nlook groat pride in his baby pupil, and\nChubbins eould soon  swim with the\nnoon\nr_ffl_~\nland had himself to thank fur this. Ho\nheld tho extraordinary theory that a\npoliceman in India should try to know\nas much about tbe natives as tho na*\nflirtations I havo mentioned, but hoi\nbroke down at last. An old aud very\ndistinguished general took Sliss Yongbal\nfor a ride and began that specially ef-''\nSi\ntivos themselves.   Now, in tho whole of I f\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdsj\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ''you're onlya little girl\" sort\nupper India there is ouly one man who' \"        \"'\"^        *\ncan pass fer Hindoo er Mohammedan, ,\nchumar or fakir, as be pleases.    He is\nfeared aud respected by the natives from\nthe Ghor Kathri to the Janima Musjid,\naud he is supposed to huvo the gift of\ninvisibility and executive control over '\nmany devils.    But what good has this\ndone him with the government?   Nono j\nin the world.    He has never got Simla\nfor his charge, and bis name is almost\nunknown to Englishmen.\nStrickland was foolish enough to take\nthat man for his model, and, following\nout liis absurd theory, dabbled in unsa- ,\nvory places no respectable man would |\nthink of exploring\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdall among the nativo riffraff. He educated himself in\nthis peculiar way for seven years, aud\npeoplo oould not appreciate it\nHiscrowuirig achievement was spend-\nIng 11 days as a fakir in tho gardens\nof Buba Atal at Amritsar, and there\npicking up the threads of tbo great Na- ;\nsiban murder caso.    But peoplo said,\nof flirtation most difficult for a woman\nto turn aside deftly and most maddening to listen to. Jliss Yongbal was\nshaking with fear ut the things ho said\nin the hearing of her sais. Dulloo\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nStrickland\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdstood it as long as be could.\nThen ho caught hold of the general's\nbridle, and, in most fluent English, iu-\nvited bim to step off and be heaved over\nthe cliff. Next minute Sliss Vottghal\nbegan crying, and Strickland saw that\nhe bad hopelessly given himself away\nand everything was over.\nThe general nearly had a lit, while\nMiss Youghal was sobbing out tbe Btory\nof the disguise und tbo engagement that\nwasn't recognized by tlie parents.\nStrickland was furiously angry with\nhimself aud moro angry with the general for forcing bis hand, so bo said\nnothing, but held tbe horse's head and\nprepared to thrash tlie general as some\nsort cf satisfaction, but when the general had thoroughly grasped the story\nand knew wlio Strickland was, hob.\nlull i\n~k_X&~\ufffd\ufffd~i-\ufffd\ufffd-_\ufffd\ufffdfs__*''\njustly Hm-ib, \"\"Why on earth can't | \ufffd\ufffd putt and blow in thosaddlo audnear-\nPersons who huve regarded Central\nPark In New York as a sort of umbrageous fringe for otli avenue, through\nwhich pleasure ground wind roadways\nin a large measure devoted to the equipages of the smart set. are to experience\na distinct shock. By special order of the\npark com mission a motley assemblage\n(*, invalids is to be allowed to walk\nbarefoot over tbe north meadow, simply that this contact with mother earth\nmay cure individuals of certain ills nf-\ndieting thom. since the day on which\ntli.* Central Tark police arrested .Ton-\nipiin Miller, the poet of tho Sierras, for\nwalking on the grass of thai sacred\nprecinct, park sod bas been hold sacred '\nin New York. Hoys have been reared\niu Gotham who bave uo distinct notion\nof what would happen should thoy stop\non green grass with hobnailed shoes::\nthey have been schooled Into tlie belief :\nthat It would bo something dreadful. I\nNow, willi shoes and stockings re-1\nmoved, the public may walk on the |\ngrass within a certain prescribed area j\nand at certain hours of the day. provided tliere Is something the mailer\nwilh ihem: all well persons would be!\nyanked up immediately under any circumstances. AU of which promises to\nmake Central Park shunned id' society,\nunless the advent of winter shall discourage this barefoot brigade. The;\nidea of driving around, tbroiigh and'\nacross an out-of-door sanitarium, bos-!\ni ital and eblropodlst'H lawn combined\nIn all probability would discourage'\nNew York socleiy from airing ilself and t\nils poodles 111 (bat beautiful reserve.    .\nStrickland sit in his offloe and write up\nhis diary mid recruit and keep quiet,\ninstead of showing up tho incapacity of .\nhis seniors?\"\nSo tho Nasiban murder ease did liim\nno good departmental!)', but, after his\nfirst feeling of wrath, ho returned to his\noutlandish custom of prying into native\nlife.   By the way, when a man once ao- ,\nquires a tuste for this particular uiuuso-\nment, it abides with him all his days.\nIt is the most fascinating tiling in the\nworld, love not excepted    Where other ;\nmen took ten days to the hills, Striok-\nlaud took leave for what ho called shi- i\nkar, put on tbo disguise that appealed ''\nto him at the time, stopped down into\ntho brown crowd uud was swallowed '\nup for awhile,    Ho was a quiet, dark\nyoung fellow\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdspare, black eyed\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdanil,\nWhen ho was uot thinking of something\nelse,   a  very   interesting  companion, i\nStrickland, on native progress as he had\nBeen it, was worth  hearing.    Natives |\nhated Strickland, but they were afraid\nof him.   He knew too much.\nWhon the Youghals oome into tho\nBtation, Strickland\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdvery gravely, as he\ndid everything\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfell in love with Miss\nYoughal, und she, aftor awhile, foil in | With blanket and bead rope, was asking\nlovo with him because she could not ' u11 t!in :npn ho k,1,*w. \"Fnr heaven's\nunderstand bim. Then Strickland told | Hllko __*_& mo decent clothes!\" As tho\ntho parents, but Mrs. Youghal said she\nwas not going to throw ber daughter\ninto tho worst paid department iu tho\nempire, and old Yongbal said, in so\nmany words, that he mistrusted Stride*\nly rolled otf with laughing. Ho said\nStrickland deserved a V. (!., if it were\nonly for putting on a sais' blanket.\nThen he colled himself names and vowed that lie deserved a thrashing, but he\nwas too old to tako it from Strickland.\nThen lie complimented Miss Youghal\n(ai ber lover. The scandal of the business never struck hhn, for he was a j\nnice old man, with a weakness for flirtations. Then he laughed again and said\nthat old Youghal was a fool\nStrickland let go  of the cob's head\nand suggested that tho general had better help them, if that was bis opinion.\nStrickland knew Youghal's weakness\nfor men with  titles and letters after;\ntheir nanus and high official position.\n\"It's rather liko a 40 minute farce,\"!\nsaid  the  genoral,   \"but, begad, I  will\nhelp, if it's ouly to escape that tremen- j\ndous thrashing I deserved.  Go along to\nyour home,   my  sais policeman,   and\nohange into decent kit, and I'll attack!\nMr. Youghal. Miss Youghal, may I usk\nyou to canter homo and wait?\"\n\ufffd\ufffd * * * * *\nAbout seven minutes later there was\na wild hurroosh ut tho club.   A sais,\nDawn to nn African Village,\n! slept in a litHlfU) belonging to the\nAfrican Lukes Company, a creepy sort\nor habitation at night,    tints galore'\nraced about the roof, chasing one nn-1\nother, and squealing most piteously. I\nI  was awakened in the morning   Ity:\ncocks crowing*   Thero was a hush of i\nnight Insects; the houses In the dawning light were nu indistinct, dull brown;\ntlie grass was wet willi dew.    I heard\ntho shuffling of reed doors slid to one\nside, or their grating on clay flooring\nwhen tiling open.   A few natives begin '\nto appear, exchange morning greetings,\nand start to blow up tires; men, women\nand children crowd around the tires,',\nthe gilded clouds in tlie east withdraw,\nthe sun peeps on the horizon, llros are\nsoon deserted, and daily work begins.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nCentury.\nIt must; be pleasant to be a dog's uose\nin summer.\nland's wayH und works und would\nthank him not to six-uk or write to his\ndaughter any more.\n\"Very well,\" said Strickland, for he\ndid not wish to mako his lady love's\nlife a burden. After one long talk with\nMiss Youghal he dropped tho business\nentirely,\nThe Youghals went up to Simla in\nApril.\nIn July Strickland secured three\nmonths' leave on \"urgent private affairs.\" He locked up Ids house\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdthough\nnot u nativo in tho province would wittingly havo touched Kstroekin Sahib's\ngear for the world\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand went down to\nsee a friend of his, au old dyer, ut Tarn\nTarau.\nHere ull traeo of him was lost, until\na sais met mo on the Simla mull with\nthis extraordinary note:\nDBAU ObD Man\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPIwihw givo boarer n box of\noheroote\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfluiwra. No. 1, for iireTtTL'nco. Thoy\naru fn'Klic*nt (it the olub, I'll repay when 1\nrwipixiar, tiut tit, preuunt I am out of BOOlcity,\nYou\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd, 15. Stuiokland.\nI ordered two boxes and banded them\nover to the suis witli my love. That sais\nwas Strickland, aud he was in old\nYoughal's employ, attached to Miss\nYoughuTs Arab. Tlie poor fellow was\nBuffering for an  English   Smoke   and\nImam lhat. tahntfWQI'    lulTUHUled I flllOUld\ni men did not recognize hini, there were\n'. some peculiar scenes beforo Strickland I\nI could get a hot bath, with sodu in it, in j\n' ono room, a shirt here, a collar there, a j\nj puir of trousers elsewhere, and so on. !\nHo galloped off, with half the club:\nI wardrobe on his back und an utter\ni stranger's pony under him, to the house i\n! of old Youghal.\nTlie general, arrayed in  purple and :\n' flue linen, was before him.   What  the1\ni general hod suid Strickland never knew, i\n[ but Youghal  received  Strickland with\n'. moderate civility, and Mrs.   Youghal,\ntouched by tho devotion of tho trans-:\nformed Dulloo, was almost kind.   Tho\n| general beamed and chuckled, and Miss\nYoughal camo  in, uud, almost before\nold Youghal knew where ho wus, tho\nparental consent hnd been wrenched out\nand Strickland hud departed with Miss\nYoughal to tho telegraph oflleo to wiro\nfor his kit.   Tho dual embarrassment\nwus when un utter stranger attacked\nhim ou the mall and usked for the stolen\npony.\nSo, in tho cud, Strickland and Miss\nYoughal were married, on tho Btrict, understanding that Strickland should drop\nhis old ways and stick to department\nroutine, which pays best und leads to\nSimla. Stvicklnud was far too fond of\nhis wifo just then to breuk his word,\nbut it was a sore trial to him; for the\nstreets and tho bazaars aud tlie sounds\nin them were full of meaning to Strickland, und theso culled to him to como\ndeftness of a rock cod. Peoplo uow\ncomo long distances to see Chubbins\ndisplay herself as water queen or rido\nthe big bobbing horso that floats about\ntho tank.\nOnlya short timo ago Ohnbbins dis-\ntinguished herself by swimming twice\nacross tbo tank, a distance of 40 f* ot or\nmore altogether. Sbo swims with tho\ngreatest case and apparent delight, ftnd'\nonly smiles with pleasure win n iho salt\nwater spatters ber or finds iU way into\nher mouth. She swims frequently out\nto the bobbing horse aud ean climb up\nto its back without assistance, which is\nsomething of a feat.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdSan Francisco\nExaminer.\nA Oatno For ttie Kventng. i,\nGames, though no longer fashionable\nat gut hi rings of young people, aro still\ndelighted in fir homelike entertainments aud for the pnstimoof rainy days\nat heme or abroad. One which will tax\ntbo ingenuity of boys ami girls is called\n\"Telegrams. \" It ean he played by any\nnumber, and a pencil and paper for each\nguest is the only preparation required.\nEach one in turn gives u letter of (lie\nalphabet until tho list includes ten.\nThen each player must write u possible\ntelegram of U n words, using each of the\nletters in the order given as tho initial\nof a word. When Ihe results are read ft\nvote is tabu as to the best lelegram,\nand ihe pri*\/.*- s are awarded uccordiugly.\nTo illustrate Ibis, suppose tho list of\nletters is w, 1, b, t, e, m, t, t, o, t.\nForm these a telegram can be made:\n'\"Will leave Boston ihis evening. Moot\ntbe ten o'clock train.\" The ofteucr tbo\nsame letter occurs the more diflieult tho\ntusk i.s made.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdPhiladelphia Ledger.\nTwo MnlilctiK.\nI ifnnw ti winaoniu little maid,\nBo fiiii* to fee.\nHer fcuv In liko n tliihity flowor. \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\nlio lovingly\nBho look' upon thin world of oum\nAnd all who pus;*\nThat BWOot rnnti nt makoH boautful\nMy littio lass.\nI know nnothor maiden well.\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdShe might he fair.\nHer chc. tc la liko a rone haf tujft.\nLike [[oUUtor balr.\nBut. ah! lier facu is niiirrcd by frowun.\nIter eye* by to:n\\',\nFor nono enn pleaso,   I dread to think\nof comhiu years.\nWould you, (.ear, grow to Wanly rum\nIn thought uml deedV\nThen learn the )\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd* *shi those two tench\nTotlic-au who heed,\nAmi bi vour lie: rl. as l\\fn hogl\ufffd\ufffdB,\nGlvnthlB truth ; Inoo-\n'Tm only lovely thonghta \"'an moke\nA lovoly Un:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdGurtruilo Morton Cannon tn Bt, Nkh'-Jui.\nShallow Dufl\\ '\nTo play shadow buff you idvmld fuston\nft sheet Up at one end of tlio room ho\nthut it will hangquite smooth. \"Bnff\"\n(not blimh d) seats himself on a low\nstool, with his face to tho sheet, and a\ntable, on which is a lighted candid\nplaced about tive feet behind him. Tho\nrest of tho lights in tbe room should b\ufffd\ufffd*\nextinguished. \"Buff's\" playfellows next\npuss in succession between tho candle\nand him, distorting their features in as\ngrotesque a manner as possible\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdhop\nping, limping und doing everything to\nmake their shadows as unlike their natural looks ns possible. \"Buff\" must\ntry to guess to whom tho shadows bo-\nlong, and if ho is correct tho player\nwhoso shadow ho recognizes takes his\nplace. \"Buff\" is allowed but ono guess\nfor each person.\nt  il\n'-\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd iti\nOPENING OF SCHOOL.\nMISERIES OF   YOUNG   AMERICA\nIN THE FALL.\nAllghty Preparations Made bj Parent*,\nand Children\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdThc Effect Upon Trade\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdTbe Woes of Careful MamiuiiM and\nMacro-Tried Teachers.\nGetNilff nn Kdncnt'on.\nPeople of mature age do not always\ntreat with proper consideration tiie\nwoes of children.\nIt is common for grown person.** to\nexhort their Juniors with tlie worda,\n\"You are seeing the happiest dnys nnw\nyou will ever know,\" and. to do tliein\ncredit, tliey beltere what they sny, bat\nthere never was a greater mistake, for\nLAST YFAtt'S noOKR.\nthe miseries of childhood are Just as\nreal, and, in proportion to tlie ability\nto bear, Just as heavy, as the woes endured by tlieir fathers and mothers,\nThe little girl who has lost her doll suffers Jnst ns much as forty years later\nshe will when she loses her husband,\nperhaps more; the boy wbo breaks his\nwagon is Just as much concerned as bis\nfather when th.e latter loses money;\nthese things are all comparative. This\nmatter of going to school, for instance,\nis to boys nnil girls a source of real\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffduttering, anil, though tlieir elders laugh\nat it, the approach of tlie fall term represents to the childhood and youth of\nthe hind as much genuine misery as the\nshake It off. When ' e school term Is\nended\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdwhether In tbe lower-grade\nschools, wrestling with the mysteries\nof grammar and spelling, od In the\nacademies and universities, where algebra ami geometry are dished up in dally\ndoses and Greek and Latin from tlie\npiece de resistance\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdand the youngsters\npack tlielr books and start for home,\nthe world Is full of brightness and the\nvacation seems to have no end. So\nmany plans are laid, so much pleasure\nIs anticipated, that the youthful mind\nentirely loses sight of the fact that\ntime has a habit of Hying, and that\nthe autumn term witb its pedagogues\nand books will come as surely and as\nsoon as the season can roll around.\nAliout this season the fact becomes emphatically Impressed on the juvenile in.\ntolled by the preparations In his behalf\nmade Iiy the parents and others inter*\nested in his welfare, and the liberal\nadvertisements by wide-awake and enterprising firms of their fresh and stylish supplies of school clothing and\nshoes for youths and misses. Then It\nIs that the boy begins to realize that\nthe dreaded hour is near at hand, and\nthe miss Just emerging from short\ndresses finds tlie tears welling up to her\neyes as she reflects that no matter what\nliberty she may have enjoyed during\ntlie vacation, the time of permanent release Is not yet.\nBut everything has its humorous\nside, nnd the humors of the term opening are Just as pronounced as those of a\nvariety show, says the Globe-Democrat The old-time district school has\nbeen the subject of many Jests, and not\na few writers of marked ability have\nexercised their talents on the comic\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdphases of school life in the country,\nbut no pen con do anything like Justice to tlie first day of the fall school\nterm in days gone, lu tlio first place,\nI here was generally n new teacher, for\nllie wages were so low tliat few teachers could afford to stay more than a\nfew months In the same place without\nrisk of starvation. Thc new pedagogue\ngathered his flock before him on tlie\nfirst day. and n motley (lock It was. He\nattended \"preaching\" most likely In the\nsame building tlie day before, had n\nadmitted, the switch was used only ss\na last resort, for when applied vigorously enough to produce the required\nresults it left perceptible marks aud\ncontusions ou the young rustic exterior,\nmarks tliat could afterward be exhibited at home with dire complaints\ngrades of youngsters, to none Is It pro* I\nduetive of more genuine sorrow than I\nthe youug girl Just budding Into womanhood. She Is Just beginning to realize what Is meant by growing up\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdIs\nJust leaving dolls and taking to beaux.\nSchool In lhe fall has due horrors for\nLieofs\ufffd\ufffd.sl \/^>l *kr=-=3\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd.' =^S=)\nI.*,*w\".\ufffd\ufffd\"\ufffd\ufffd    lue^'iJ j% h\\     ~-'-   W\ufffd\ufffd3i~\nfg^wi) \\\\fi\/\/\n~%^>\n\/\/,,,<:\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdWfg^*^\\M___% 8SW1B\n^^*&^fcK^zm'    Wt- I,\nflu \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd  f\\ I\n~--i\nA   NECESSARY   PRELIMINARY.\nand would possibly result in a subsequent visit of an enraged parent to tlio\ntemple of education' The elty pedagogue hns now learned a trick in this\nconnection that emphasizes strongly\ntiie advance of pedagogic science.\nWhen It becomes desirable to rectify\ntl e Idiosyncrasies of his pupils, he\ntakes hnlf a yard of rubber hose,\nwherewith he can extract ear-spllrtlng\nhowls and excruciating yells from the\nyoung Ideas without leaving on their\ncuticle any outward or visible sign of\ntheir having undergone unusual punishment\nBut if tlie country pedagogue wns\nthen behind his city brother lu the matter of birch, be was n long way abend\nof him when It camo to classification.\nIn the city schools all this is done by\nrule nnd precept, so that the city teacher has nothing to do but follow the\nprinciples laid down for his guidance\nby the board. In the classification of\nhis pupils tbe country teacher was In\ntlie old time a law unto himself, fettered only by the number of pupils and\nby the variety of text-books. By the\nexercise of a little Ingenuity he could\nget twenty pupils Into forty classes,\nand hear them all lu the course of tiie\ndny. But the feat demanded thought,\nfor ns the school was conducted on the\nprinciple that every scholar ought to\ndo both his studying and ids reciting\nwithin the limits of the school hours,\nno little calculation was necessary to\nenable one to find time to study his\nlesson while another wus reciting, and\nTHE   NEW   TEACHER'S   ADDRESS.\noutbreak of a civil war. According to\nthe statistics furnished by the Bureau\nof Education, there ure in tbe district\nschools alone of this country over 18,'\n000,000 children enrolled, wlrile probably enough are entered In nil other institutions to bring tho number up to\n*'   16,000,000.   Fancy tlio misery endured\nrillSTIIKI'AUTI\/'lli: F110.M HOME.\nby 10,000,000 young of tlie human species Ut being forced to go to school; the\nbarrels of tears that are shed, tlie millions of complaints, the trillions of sighs\nand objections, the quadrillions of wishes that they did nol have to go. Thc\nfact thut the misery endured hy the\nlittle folks Is small misery, nud about\nmatters tliat their ciders do not regard\nns worthy of serious notice, makes no\ndifference, to the children it Is real and\nexceedingly hard to bear.\nTheoretically, youthful woes should\nbe In complete harmony with the old\ncopybook maxim, \"Knowledge is power.\" Practically, the average youngster far more heartily coincides Willi\nthe opinion expressed by tlie author\nof the book of Eccleslastes, \"He thai\nlDcrensetk knowledge Increaselh sorrow.\" There is something lu the nature\nof childhood antagonistic to trouble,\nand very little if auy effort Is needed to\npreliminary survey of the lambs of his\nfold In their Sunday ralnment, and\nprobably wus well pleased with the\nlooks of his future pupils. They were\non dress parade and made n creditable\nshowing, tile boys a little uneomfortn\nbie In their Sunday clothes, but hardly\nmore so than their fathers In the stiff,\nhot. black broadcloth that had done\nduty lu the liousc of prayer for half a\ngeneration; tiio girls a little shy, and\nall critical of the new teacher, but\nfriendly and hospitable as country peo.\npie are wont to be. On the Monday,\nhowever, any Illusions lie may have\ncherished were dispelled. The boys\nwere in llieir everynny clothes, with\ntheir pantaloons tucked into the tops\nOf their boots, and each was equipped\nwitli a pile of books I liat were used dur\ning I lie term of I lie last pedagogue, Of\ncourse tlie new teacher made a speech\nand In diplomatic language outlined his\npolicy, and equally, of course, he read\na long set of rules and regulations for\ntlie government of the school, and\nnfter rending mom he put tliein carefully away, to he seen ami heard of no\nmore. Occasionally tliere would be\na vague reference to rule 1 or 11, a reference that was commonly lost on tho\nHock, but further than this the rules\nwere Inoperative, nnd the teacher,\nniter a few appeals to the sense of propriety of Ids charges, scoured order by\nmoral suasion aided and abetted by a\nstout switch, whicli, when not in active\nuse, slood conspicuously in the corner.\nAs n general thing, however, It must be\nher sensitive mind. She does not see\nwhy she sliould be compelled to attend\nwhen other girls, scarcely older than\nherself, have long dresses and beaux\nand a good lime. Nor Is she to be comforted b.v the suggestion that only two\nor three years will elapse ere she ls at\nliberty, for two or three years uuder\nsucli circumstances look as long as two\nor three eternities.\nThe young man in file case docs not\nPlMtin'-tliHlii\"** Shade*..\niiy a scientific experiment Professor\nCut tell of Columbia College has determined that the average person's\neyes are able to distinguish about twenty-live different shades between black\nand while, lie employed no loss than\niwo hundred shades In his experiment.\nIml lhe great mnj u-tty of these were too\nnear alike to be distinguished by the\neye. Tliese were nol shades of different ,-olors, hul simply gray surfaces\npassing gradually from white to black.\nI'vpnnti.ni nnd FcnHieknen*.\nA French physician reported nt a\nmeeting of the Society of Hypnology In\nParis a few weeks ago that he had\ncured three persons of n strong tendency to sen-sickness, by means of\nhypnotic suggestion. Ills method was\n! lo throw them Into a hypnotic sleep and\nthen cause them to believe that they\nwere being tossed on the ocean without suffering from seasickness. After\na short course of this treatment he\naverred. Ids patients actually made\nlong nnd rough voyages without seasickness.\nThe Cholera Microbe\nMuch unnecessary alarm might ba\nspared nt times when invasions of\ncholera are threatened If the simple\nfacts about the microbe n*ich causes\ncholera were more widely known. In\na recent book on cholera In India theso\nfacts are succinctly stated lu a form'\neasily remembered: When It Is outside the liuuinn body tile cholera microbe, so far ns known, only lives and\nreproduces In water; It Is too small to\n: be removed from water b.v ordinary domestic filters; both boiling nnd drying\nquickly kill It; acids also kill it; It l\ufffd\ufffd\n. not always equally virulent\nVV BEPOBE THE I'K1XCIPAI\ufffd\ufffd\ntnke matters quite so hard. To be sure,\nhe hates to go to school, but he recognizes the fact tliat the \"governor\" says\nhe must, and is ready to concede that\n\"what tin? governor says goes.\" But\nto the boy at school, or college, there\nare open many avenues of amusement\nand sources of Instruction thnt nre\nclosed to the glri. He may hnve an Immense amount of fun out of tbe new\nThe Unknown Month.\n!    The International Geographical Congress In London a yenr ngo declared\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd that Ihc greatest piece of geographical\n' exploration remaining lo be undertaken\n! I.i tliat of the Antarctic regions.   Since\n* then a number of small expeditions to-\n: ward the South Pole have been planned.\nbut little has yot been accomplished,\nand Doctor Mill reminds English renders in Nature that, although fifty-five\nyears have elapsed since Captain Ross\ndiscovered the two  giant   volcanoes\nj which he named Mounts Erebus nnd\nTerror,  they have never again been\n, seen, ami no important additional facts*\nI hnve been learned about   tbat mye-\ni terlous part of the globe.\nButterfly Mimic*..\nIn the South American forests the\nbutterflies and the birds arc equally\nbrilliant In their colors, but the butterflies being wenker. fall a prey to the\nbirds. One very bright-lined species of\nbutterfly, however, is not disturbed by\nthc birds, on account of the disagreeable odor which lt emits. Singularly\nenough, some other groups of Uutter-\ntiles, which resemble thc species lost\ndescribed In color, also escape persecution by thc birds, although they emit\nno odor. It Is evident thnt the similarity of color deceives the birds, and thua\nserves ns n shield for the butterflies.\nThis sort of mimicry of color and form,\nwhich iiaturali*ts call \"protective resemblance,\" Is uot very uncoinmiw\namong Insects.\nGETTING   READY   FOR   SCHOOL,\nwhen this problem was multiplied by\nthe number of pupils nnd of lessons, ll\nmust be conceded Hint tlie country\nteacher needed brains In order to solve\ntlio difficulties that lay before hlin.\nThe opening of tlie torm was, for him,\na time of mental exertion, and he wasted more phosphorus In the effort to\nclassify his young peoplo than would\nbe needed lo organize n campaign.\nGreat ns Is the burden of   misery\nbrought by tlie school opening to nil\nstudents by hazing Ihem; be may stand\nthem upon the floor, nntl compel them\nto dance for bis edification, or may Insist that one shall sing a comic song,\nwhile nnonier weeps at the suggested\nIdeas, and In many other ways may\noblige llietii to contribute to his entertainment.\nEvery unmarried woman thinks that\nIf she bad n husband, she would be\nmighty gootl to him.\n\"Mor'n You'll Keep.\"\nSome yenrs ago an old sign painter,\n\ufffd\ufffdlio was very cross, very gruff, and a\nliltle deaf, was engaged to paint the\nTen Commandments on some tablets\nIn a church not live tulles from Buffalo.\nHe worked two daya at It, and al the\nuul of the second day tbe pastor of the\nchurch catoe to see bow the work prog.\nicsseil.\nThe old man stood by, smoking a\nfihon pipe, as the reverend gentleman\nran his eyes over the tablets.\n\"Bill\" said the pastor, as liis familiar\neye detected something wrong in the\nworking of the precepts; \"why, yoo\ncar\ufffd\ufffdess old man, you have left a (tart\nuf one of the eommiiiidmelits entirely\nout! don't you see?\"\n\"No; no sucli thing,\" said the old man,\nputting on tils spectacles! \"no; nothing\nleft ottt-whereV\"\n\"Why, there,\" persisted the pastor,\n\"look nt It In Ihc Bible; you have left\nsome of thnt commandment out.\"\n\"Well, whnt If I linveV\" snid old\nObstinacy, as he ran ills eye complacently over Ills work; \"what If I hnve?\nThere's more tliere now than you'll\nkeep!\"\nAnother nnd a more correct artist was\ni employed llie next day.\t\nA Good   Thing.\nA Lewlslon (Me.) confectioner has ark-\nplied fora patent on n process by which\npasteboard boxes mny be so treated that\nIce cream packed In them will remain\nsolidly frozen for twenty-four hours.\nMen nnd women are not as good ns.\nengaged people think tlie.v nre, nor n,\nbad as married peoplo consider them. G. A. McBain & Co.,   Real Estate   Brokers, Nanaimo, B.C.\nLATE LOCALS.\nWho owns that oow?\nBum after the concert Friday night!\nCoal Oil SI.55 per tin at Leiser's,\nBoys School Books 75c! at Leisc^s\n.Remember the oeocert Friday evening.\nWin. Saw. Davis returned Wedi e\ufffd\ufffdday\nIrom Ktnauno.\nOooda going oil like bot cakes, Huhneu'\nOld Stand.\nMr. Irwin and Frank Williams left for\nthe Kooteuay uooncry Friday,\nHamburger ii utill selling T H plu&g a\n90vta.\nCap*. Freeman of tbe Ijllnry of tlie Sens,\naad Mr*. Freeman lett uu Friday.\nMen's new styles in Maid and Soft\nH us at Leise's.\nThere will be a tine program pre ented at\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdfillet's Hall, Friday evening, Nov. 20th.\nNov Jaukt.its and water proofs for ladies'\nat Stevenson aud nompativ's*\nlt will pay you to get your Xmas ailver-\ntiaing done at the News.   Give us a call,\nMr* Uobert Watkin, late principal uf tbe\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdohool here, is nuw at liinity Culture, Oat.\nReceived at Willards, a tine line of buggy wtiipn, rasgiugur fm ID tu 25 ceuts*.\nNew millinery at Stevenson & Cut\nMrs. Willard of Viotoria, is visiting hsr\nson Mr. W. Willard, the popular burneus*\nmaker.\nLidiwt' long aud short coats from $1 and\nap at ttseveuson and company'*\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdUn. (Capt) Logan, sister of Mrs. J. A.\nLugan, returned to her iioine iu Vaucuuvtr\nby the last boat,\nKew fall goods nt midsummer prices at\nHamburger's.\nThos. Cairn* does not pnddle round his\nhtuter, but there is a growing demand for it\naa it haa no superior.\nSee Ml. McKim for nice boys' suits, at\nHi.Uues' Old St;uid, Union.\nVV. C. T, U. will meet in thc school room\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd( Uo Methudiit Churoh a; :i p. in. Tuur**\nday tbe 19th mat.\nSale of bankrupt atook commencing Sat*\nunlay \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdcontinues at liolmes' Old Stand uu*\ntil tha goods am disponed of.\nWe are in* receipt of soma very fiue veni.\nsou, the gift Mr. Laciiu Ciifftf. It was\nmoat acceptable.\nEverything being sold at way down prices\nby Leiser at Holmes' Old Stand.\nWe are pleased to learn that the police\nhave taken steps to prevent tobogganing oa\nthe sidewalks hy juveniles,\nIt will pay you lo consult the Nkws advertising oolumns.\nLadies, have you seen those Uoo shoes in\nN*. Parks' wiudow!\nBid you taste those delicous pies at the\nPie Social They were made by Mr.1. Bmtu\nfrom carrots   grown by   Grant & Sou.\nThe Sloan and Soott bankrupt ntouk goiug\nat 50 cents on the dollar, at Stevooaon aud\nCm. Union.\nMrs. Butler, haft been visiting ber daught*\nar, Mrs. Scharehmidt, tlie past two mouths,\nleit for her home in Sumach last woek,\nChoicest lot of men's hats and caps,  at\nUolmoa* 0 4 Stand, Union.    ,\nMr. J. >laokBon of Toronto and Mr. Lee\nof Viotoria, officials of the Canadian Invest*\nwent aud L \ufffd\ufffdan Co., paid the town a visit\nlakt week.\nIt doos not matter what prices you see\nadvortuted, Vou oau buy uew dry goods,\nolothing, boota shoes and groceries, cheaper\nthan anywhere olse iu tne city at Hamburger's.\nNov. 7th at Viotoria, Commander E. J.\nFleet, K- N. of H. M. S. loarus aud Misa\nElythe Mary, daughter of Senator aud Mrs\nW. J. Maodouald, were married.\nPint lot of blanket.) at if times' Oid Stand\nOnion.\nMr. R. P. Edward*, formerly manager of\nCheap John's etore hare, has bought a few\naores, of fine laud near Hugoyne IUy, Salt\nSpring Island and haa oponed a general atoro\nWay dowu prices at Holmes' Old Stand.\nWith every dollar's purchase, you get a\nguess at tbe pumpkin-, the lucky one gets\n$25 00 worth of goods at Steveuson aud Cos.\nThe applications for licences to sell liqu-\nour at tho Bay indicates great faith in the\nbtjuefiu to be derived from the expootud\npresence of tne wurstiip-) iu Comox harbour.\nHolmes' Old Stand, Union, ia tho bargain\nitore.\nr*OE KENT.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd4 neat oottagq with alt\nJ-  necessary out buildiuge anrl live or teu\naorea of good laud.   Apply to S.  F.  Craw*\nlord, Sandwick, B. C.\nBargains in while and colored Shirts\nkt Leiser's.\nLeiser sells lard at 11 cts. per pound.\nThe oonraets for supplies for the warships at Comox have been awarced as follows: H. C, Lucas for bread: Johu J. K.\nMiller for vegetables:and McPhee & Moure\nfor u.eat.\nNew dress goods just arrived at Leiser's\nMr. L. P. Kukste.su went to Vanuotm-r\nou Friday, and expects to movo bis fa inly\nto Uiiiou. It is pleaaaut to wulumn \ufffd\ufffd\ufffd ai ott*\niz-Du such acquiditions tosouial aud buaiut-ss\ncircles as Mr. aud Mrs. Eokstein.\nNow and stylish millinery juat arrived at\nMias Nt-ili'd\nTbe inaynr nnd aldermen of Nanaimo,\nwbo vuted Kev. I) A. MuR v 'a uxpeusus as\na wituesi from I.01 Auguks, *u the Police\niiivesligatiou, havu bin n sued to recover\nbaok tne amount into tht: oily tiea-airy,\nMr. Wm. L>.vi*t showed us the ailver\nmedal jn\\*!nciiU'd by Mr. Iluutur M. P. P.\nto tbe Comox Agricultural Exhibit o i for ihe\nbunt exhibit of lailith work. Mi-b Sarah L w\nii received the medal  which is very pieuy,\nFlour is still advancing in\nprice. See your flour bears the\nbrand of Lake of the Woods.\nSome merchants will try and\nsell cheap brands as being just\nas good; but they are not so.\nLike the pudding the eating\nof the bread is the proof thereof. To' save disappointment\nand loss, see that you get Lake\nofthe Woods, $6.00 per bbl ac\nthe Union Store.\nTEVENSOM\n-2eS\ufffd\ufffd35*3e eiyyyl FJetggcezdiSS.\nCOMPANY'S\nGrand Guessing Contest.\n$25 WORTH IN GOODS WILL\nBE GIVEN AWAY.\nGiven Free to the near\nest \";uess to the num-\ni ber  of seeds   in   the\nI Pumpkin in our Window.\nTliis is low we Advertise,\nIf you want Dry Goods, Millinery, Mantles Dress Goods,\nMen's and Boys' Clothing, we\nhave: them at Bedrock prices.\nWe lead, those who follow\nmust come behind.\nSRMSOI 81 CO.\nUNION. B.C.\nJ. F. DOYLE, Manager\nTake   E.   Pimbury &   Co's\nBalsamic Elixir for coughs\n.un\ncolds\nM, J  HENRY,\nNURSERYMAN\nFLORIST\nPOST OFFICE ADDRESS\nMount Pleasant    Vancouver B. C.\nSend fnr dial'-gue before placing your\nordeis for Fall Plnnimtf, if you are interested in saving money for yourself and\ngetting hoikI siock of first hands.\nMost complete stock ol Fruit and\nOrnamental Trees, Si.rubs, Roses, Etc.,\nin the Province.\nThousands of small Fruit Plants and\nVines of leading varieties, suitable for\nthis Climak-.\nThousands of Bulbs now on the wny\nhere from Chin.:. Japan and Holland for\nthe Fall Trade.\nFertilizers, Agricultural Implements,\nSpray Pumps, Etc., best to be had.\nNo Agents, List iells you nil about it.\nEastern Prices or Less.\nGreenhodse, Nursery and Apiery\n604 Westminster Road.\nM OT1CE is hereby give thut npplica*\n* Mi.m   will  be   mnde to   lhe  Legislative Assembly of ihe Province of British\nColumbia, at its next session, for an Act\n1 to confirm the incorporation nnd powers\nI ofthe Cumberland and  Union   Waterworks Company, Limited Liability, con -\n| firming   the said   Company in   the pro*\npert.', privileges   rights and easements\nalready   acquired  and   nuihonsmi\"   the\nI grant   in fee   to the Company   of such\n1 lands and   lands   covered   wiih   waler\nas it may hereafter desire to acquire upon\ni Mich terms as may seem just, declaring\n1 that the water privileges ami all other\n\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd rights privileges and easements now held\nby the Company or hereafter acquiredby\nit may be held and enjojed as appurtenant to the whole or any part ot the Com\npany's property as the Company may\ndesiie and 10 extend the rights and\npriviltgs of .the said Company. The\nwater is to be obtained fiom\nHamilton Creek and Its tributaries and\nfrom Hamilton Lake near the Townsite\nof Cumberland and from other lakes and\nstreams within a radius of five miles\nfrom the centre ol ihe said Townsite of\nCumberland\nDaied this 22nd dny of October 1896.\n:i>7 213 L. P. Eckstein,\nSolicitor lor the applicants\nIspmalt & Nanaimo Ry.\nTime  Table  No.   27,\nTo take iffect at 8 a.m. ui. Mf<uda>  KtT.\n2nd. lMiti.   TittiiiH ruu uu Pnoino\n.Standard time.\nGOING NORTH\nI Hull)*. ISnt'dy\nl.v. Victoria for Nairn into and I A. M. | p. M.\nWellington  | u.tiu |  3.20\nAr. Nuiuilmo   I   11.10 I  -s 38\nAr. Wolllimton I IM |  6.64\nGOING  SOUTH\nI   1, M  !  ]' u\nI Dull-**. I Snt'd-r.\nI.v. Wl'l iti|(lon for Vi. lor in  |   I. Jo   |   3.S0\nl.v. Kniwino for Victoria. .   I  840   |   3.45\nAr. Victoria  |   i'2,'20 |   7.00\nFor rntea nnd information apply at? Com*\npttny'd ofliooa.\nA.DUN8MUIH, JOSKI'II HUNTKR.\n'   President. ticu'l Supt\n11. K.I'l.lOli,\nOen. Freight and PnRRcnKer Ant\nH-\" '\nSubscribe for   THE\n$2.00 per annum.\nNEWS\nIII       liO.tllsm\nI iilftl\nf.yyj..'.\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd\ufffd:\/.y -\nAnd all the children will want presents, ana su will their elders.\nHow fo get them?\nand Where to get them?\nTHESE ABE THE QUESTIONS*\nAT   THE   UNION   DEPARTMENT   STORE   YOU   CAN   GET   THEM\nFrom the issue of this circular, anyone purchasing dry goods, boots and shoes,\nclothing and gent's furnishings, can obtain a ticket, which, when all the amounts\n1 are punched, is worth Onk Dollar to the purchaser.    Save  thc  tickets, and\n, bring them to the store, not later than December 24th, when you can get the\nvalue of your tickets in fancy goods and toys.\nThis is a grand opportunity to obtain your Christmas presents without additional cost, in fact free of all cost.\nAll you have to do is\ufffd\ufffd\ufffdto save your tickets, and bring them to the store, as\nstated above. There is no additional cost, no frame to pay for, and no express\ncharges.\nNext month we shall show a splendid assortment of fancy goods, both useful\nand ornamental; also a display of toys, that will make the children jump for joy,\nand long tor the visit of Santa Claus.\n1     Remember, that the Union Department Store, is the only store   in the dis- \ufffd\ufffd\ntrict, where you can obtain an assortment of goods, equal to anv city on the\ncoast, at the lowest prices. SPECIAL NOTICE.-20 percent, off all Mens Clothing\nBoys'Clothing, Boys' Overcoats, Men's Overcoats Men's Pants, For one Month only.\nBuy Your Groceries at the Union Store.\nWe head \\\\\\ Groceries, as We do \\x\\ Everything else.\nfine, Spirits and Beer-Wholesale,      Agents for Victoria Pknix Brewery,\nSijnop Leiser\ni^\ufffd\ufffdg^s","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. 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British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Weekly News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. 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