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THE MACON TELEGRAPH} SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER
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In Selecting Christinas Presents Get Something of REAL VALUE.
Our Hagnificent Stock of
PIANOS, ORGANS » MUSICAL MERCHANDISE
We are prepared to show a superb stock of Pianos and the largest stock of high-grade small Musical Instru
ments on the market. We carry in stock and sell about twenty different kinds of Pianos.
No Such Stock in Anv Other Store in Georgia.
We are agents for Stein way & Sons, The Weber, Solimer & Co., Kranich & Bach, Ivors & Pond, and the Lester
Pianos, in Mahogony, Oak, Circassian, Walnut and fancy woods.
CHRISTMAS SHOPPERS
Will find our stock of Fine Violins, Guitars, Banjos and Mandolins larger than that carried by all other stores in
Macon combined. In fact wo carry in stock everything usually shown in a music store. Our stock of Sheet Music
is complete. Come to see us. Let as help you in the selection of Christmas presents which will be appreciated.
F. A. GUTTENBERGER & CO,
452 Second Street.
We have a complete line of Talking Machines and a large supply of Records.
EXPECTATIONS
OF A SETTLEMENT
Believed There Will Be an Adjudication
In the Plant Estate Matter Within the
Next Few Day*.
Since the announcement last week that
there would likely be an early adjudica
tion In bankruptcy In the estate of It. H.
Plant, the locai public has been watching
the proceedings In the federal courts of
this city, and eipeclally during tho ses
sions of tho past week. Nothing has been
done In the courts touching upon tho
matter, but many of the creditors havo
In the past two weeks, expressed a desire
for the settlement which wns proposed
somo time ago by Receiver Corbin, and
nparly all havo consented.
It Is now stated that all parties are
adjusting themselves and making prep
arations to join In the agreement, which
Is said to be one which will save thous
ands of dollars to tho.*** wno hold claims.
If tho final agreement among all the cred
itors Is reached, procedure will take place
at once In the courts, and there will »>e
an adjudication. Those who havo had
the proposition of settlement in hand
have expressed great satisfaction in the
progress which hss been made, and thero
are Indications that the Anal transactions
will bo mail© during the coming week.
The interests of many people have been
involved In the settlement, which was
R ropoeed some time ago, and every one
as moved forward In a most -cautious
manner. In the present condition the
success of the proposed settlement is by
no means assured, but the creditors have
in nearly every Instance, s The Telegraph
has been informed, agreed and there is a
general understanding which justifies the
statement that an adjudication of the
estates of R. H. I*!ant is near at hand.
It will mean the distribution of nearly
one million in cash to the creditors and
the settlement of over five hundred thous
and dollars of the Indebtedness of the
Rod Cypress Lumber Company.
Phone 223. The Red
mond - Massee Fuel Co.
Coal.
Snow Storm In No wYork.
NEW YORK, Dec. 10.—A snow storm,
accompanied by a high wind, descended
upon New York esrly today. Nearly two
inches of snow fell. Traffic In the city
has not been seriously impeded, but craft
of au kinds have been delayed.
AMERICA INVADING SCOTLAND.
Uncle Sam's Enterprising Citizens In
vesting in Industries Around Glas
gow.
From the Detroit Tribune.
The hoary quip concerning the
Scotchman, In which he figures oh
being ublqutlons even to the ends
of the earth, will soon have to suffer
a new adaptation. The American,
having invaded every other Held, has
at last broken soil In Scotland with
the dollar as a soil-buster, and the
mysterious legend, “In This We
Trust,” has lost none of Its efficacy,
Americans have within the year in
vested considerable money in indus
tries around Glasgow, Including the
purchase of a well-known distillery.
But the Invasion has chiefly been of
American machinery. Reapers, bind
ers, thrashers and other advanced
farm machines and implements have
been Introduced with such success
that ”the auld sod” is getting a shak
ing up that It has not had since
graves were dug for the covenant
ers.
A Port Huron firm has built n big
grain elevator at Leith this year, and
the American method of unloading
grain barges Is the admiration of the
old port. An American sewing ma
chine company has expanded Its in
terests nnd has gone into cabinet-
making In tho Glasgow vicinity, and
more recently American agricultural
motors have been Introduced. The
acceptance of American manufactures
by the Scotch Is a tangible victory.
For not only must American workmen
compete with the long hours, the In
herlted skill, and the Infinite patience
of Old World workmen, but they must
compete with tho natural prejudice
against Innovations. There does not
seem to be much the matter with
American Industries that can start a
steam-gang plow up a Highland hill
without a government bounty, and
from the vantage point of an Ameri
can factory, make two grains of bar
ley grow where before there was one
and a 4 tradition.
Queer Farm in Pennsylvania.
From tho Farm and Field.
Chinese Pottery, Jap
anese Gongs, all new.
Come see them. Taylor’s
All Night Drug Store.
Napoleon at 46.
From Maitland’s “Surrender of Papol-
eon.”
Napoleon Bonaparte, when he came
on board the Bellerophon on the 16th
of July, 1S16, wanted exactly one month
of completing his forty-sixth year,
was then a remarkably strong, well-
built man, about five feet seven inches
high, his limbs particularly wall form
cd, with a fine ankle and very small
foot, of which he seemed rather vain,
as he always wore while on hoard the
ship silk stockings and shoes. His
hands also were very small, and had
the plumpness of a woman’s rather
than the robustness of a man's.. HU
eyes light gray, teeth good, and when
he smiled the expression of his coun
tenance was highly pleasing; when un
der the Influence of disappointment,
however. It assumed a dark, gloomy
cast. His hair was of a very dark
brown, nearly approaching to black,
and though a little thin on top and
front, had not a gray hair among It.
His complexion was a very uncommon
one. being of a light, aallow color, dif
fering from almost any other I ever
met with.
From his having become corpulent
he had lost much of his personal ac
tivity. and. If we are to give credit to
those who attended him. a very con
siderable proportion of his mental en
ergy was gone also. It Is certain his
habits were very lethargic while he
was on board the Bellerophon; for,
though he went to bed betwsen 8 and
t o'clock in the evening and did not
rise till about the same hour In the
morning, he frequently fell asleep on
the sofa in the cabin in the course of
the day.. Hla general appearance wae
that of a man rather older than be
then was. His manners were extreme
ly pleasing and affable. He joined In
every conversation, related numerous
enecodotes. and endeavored in every
way to promote good humor-
Coke, Coke, Coke.
Remember our price is reduced to
$4.00 per ton until Jan. 1st. Now la
the time to get in your supply. ’Phone
146.
MACON GAS LIGHT & WATER CO.
Advice for Bachelors.
Agree with the girl’s father In poli
tics and the mother In religion.
If you havo a rival, k'eep an eye on
him. If he Is a widower, keep two
eyes on him.
Don’t put too much sweetstuff on
paper. If you do you will hear it In
after years when your wife has some
especial purpose In Inflicting upon you
the severest punishment known to a
married man.
Oo home at a reasonable hour in the
evening. Don’t wait until a girl has
to throw her whole soul Into a yawn
that site can’t cover with both hands.
A little thing like that might cause a
coolness At the very beginning of the
game.
If. on the occasion of your first call,
the girl upon whom you have set your
young affections looks like an Iceberg
and acts like h cold wave, take your
leave early and stay away. Woman In
her hour of freeze la uncertain, coy,
and hard to please.
In cold weather finish saying good
night in the house. Don’t stretch it all
ths way to the front gate, and thus lay
the foundation for future uathma,
bronchitis, neuralgia and chronic ca
tarrh to help you to worry the girl af
ter she is married.
Don’t lie about your financial condi
tion. It is very annoying to a bride
who has pictured a life of ease In her
ancestral halls to learn too late that
you expect her to ask a baldheaded old
parent who haw been uniformly kind
to her to take you both in out of the
cold.—Chicago Journal
A fine assortment of Ladies’ and
Gentlemen's Traveling Cases in
Seal, Sea Lion or Alligator, rang
ing in price from $3*0to *5™- rSjSSM 5?
H. J. LAMAR & CU. I weakling.—John Ft
Two door* Irom Exchange Bin** | World* Wort
The death not long ago of Iaanc
Swelgert, an aged resident of Lancas
ter county, Pa., brought to light one of
the most remarkable cases of unnec
essary thrift and saving on record.
Isaac Swelgert, with his twp sisters,
had for half a century or more been
engaged in raising large und profitable
crops from the fertile sixty acres which
they Jointly possessed, but, strange to
say, none, or very few, of the farm's
products was ever sold. It cost tho
family but little to live, and after dis
posing of ns much of a season's crop
as would bring them in the necessnry
money to buy their provisions and
clothing tho rest of the harvest would
be laid aside ns carefully as a miser
puts by his hoard of gold.
The family Is descended from thrifty
German stock. Isaac Swelgert's par
ents were among the first who turned
virgin forests of that section of Penn
sylvania Into productive farm land.
The Industry and the savings of the
parents were apparently transmitted
by heredity to tho son and daughters,
who tolled for years early and late In
the sowing, cultivation and reaping of
their crops, hut who failed through
neglect or Indifference to realise tho
commercial value of their labor.
No outside help was over hired at
the farm, the nrduous work of sowing
and reaping being performed by tho
odd trio, for the two sisters Joined with
their brother and turned to every form
of labor In the fields. Tho brother and
sinters allowed but little sunshine to
'* | brighten their lives. They rarely vis
ited any of their neighbors and wore
seldom seen at any public gatherings.
The only change In the oven tenor of
their simple lives was when the broth
er brought a wife to the old homestead
nnd the prattle of a child later lent a
new and strange atmosphere to their
cheerless home.
family lived almost exclusively
on tho products of the farm and wero
seldom seen making any purchases at
tho country ttoren. Ah yearn passed
the brother and sisters were reputed
have accumulated considerable
wealth, but continued their hnrd toll
and economical methods of living. In
stead of disposing of their crops as
formerly they began stacking their
grain at different points on tho farm,
where It was allowed to rot by years of
exposure to tho elements.
Visitors about the premises will find
about seventy-five of these stacks
scattered all over the farm, between
fifteen and twenty being located near
the house. The loss from this source
aggregates thousands of dollars,
late the brother and sisters were con
tent with threshing nnd cleaning only
enough of their crops for Immediate
wants, storing the surplus of grain
each year In different rooms of their
house. The* house now contains great
quantities of grain, especially the low-
story, where Its great weight has
caused sagging of the floor, and the
valuable product finds Its way through
cracks to «he cellar beneath. The stor
ing of • grain has proved a rich
treat te ties* hordes of rats nnd
mice, *. T . . „ trlve and grow fat on It
e *.inatlon of the numerous
stocks of grain showed that the once
valuable product Is worthless either ns
food or t>eddlng for the stock. The loss
represented In these rotted stacks, In
cluding the Immense quantities of
grain stored in the house, nnd which Is
stated to have also become unfit for
use, would, It Is said, be sufficient for
the purchase of one of the largest
farms In Lancaster county.
now have a phaeton, n thing he In his
childish old age has long coveted.
Samuel A. Wlngel hud struggled for
years against poverty on his llttlo
farm near Parker City. His incomo
had never been more than $500 a year,
nnd as his children grew up he longed
to see them get a good education, but
had almost despaired of that. The
drillers came and put down a lest well,
which was a success. One month later
the rural mail carrier brought Wlnget
an envelope containing a check for
$650. Ho hnndled It with trembling
hands. He reallxed that If the well
held out ho was a rich man; nnd that
meant so much to his wife nnd child
ren. He Is now rtfeelvlng checks
monthly of from $400 to $500. So In
tense Is the Interest In the develop
ment of the oil field In that section
that James P. Goodrich, chairman of
tho Republican stato central commit
tee, nnd the right-hand man of Vlco-
Presldent-elect Fairbanks, spends at
least one day each w4ek Inspecting his
leases and the drilling operations. Oil
Is making the political lender a rich
man, Mrs. Fairbanks, wife of the
vice-president-elect, recently officiated
at a “shooting” of one of the best oil
wells In tho region.'
No spot is sacred to the drillers.
Front and bock door yards, church
yards, and school yards rire the scenes
of operations. None has yet been bold
enough to sink u drill In the cemetery,
hut even the homes of the dead will he
Invaded If good territory adjoins. Kind
fortune has smiled, not on tho wonlthy
speculators, but upon scores of hard
working farmers. Men once wont to
scan only the hog and grain markets
now receive tho oil quotations by wlro.
It Is a sure-thltig game for them.
Hufferers from sciatica should not
hesitate to use Chamberlain’s Pain
Balm. The prompt relief from pain
which It affords Is atone worth many
times Its cost. For kale by all drug
gists.
The Plight of Russia.
Autocrat among autocrats, and grand
beneficiary of a tremendous system of
oppression. Is the Ctar Nicholas D.
Fearing for bis life, he Is like clay In
the hands of the Grand Dukes.
Diminutive and Insignificant, when
he stands at full height he must peer
up to see the eyes of a woman. He has
an Inborn weakness that approaches
effeminacy. Hfs vol-e squeaks In a
high fatsetto. His education has been
grievously neglected, for be has been
bred entirely by women. The exar of
all the Russias In weak and VAcUlat
ing. frightened by signs and dreams.
To sum up. Russia stands at a great
crisis in an evil plight. Its aristocracy
is rotten and tyrannous. Its people sod
den In Ignorance, without moral sense,
dull and brutish; Its priestcraft often
degraded, extortionate, and sensual;
Its land of natural resource wasted and
consumed; its imperial line countlr<*
souls and bodies as bullion for
czar a grotesque
Oil Saves Coupls From Poorhouse.
From Leslie’s Weekly,
Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Goff of Liberty
township, Delaware county, will now
not have to give up their farm and go
to the poorhouse. Mr. Goff Is B4 and
his wife Is 84. For years they had
been hopelessly In debt, and less than
three monthe ago their guardian was
contemplating the step of taking them
to the Infirmary. The guardian, who
it also the county auditor, ehrank from
telling Ms aged charges that the mort
gage-holders would wait no longer and
that they must leave the home which
they had fifty yeare *go found In the
wilderness. On© day a party of oil
drillers came to the farm. They ob
tained the guardian's consent and then
sent a drill down through the earth.
i ^ r the drill pound©d
away. The old man and hfs wife sat
In their front yard nnd watched the
work. Mr. Oort : mild , i0 t quite com
prehend what was being done. One
.day there*wx* a shout from one of the
drillers. They had Mru- < oil. The
!-asef On the term ,,f &(ty„ n ix arris
will yield the old m <n ami his wife an
l meoate of $250 a month. Mr. Goff will
The Home end the Hotel.
From the Philadelphia Bulletin.
The statement that Chicago Is to
have a new $10,000,600 hotel, morn
than twenty stories high, and equipped
with every luxury nnd convenience
that can be found In the most up-to-
date of modern hostelrles, Is not un
likely to arouse again the customary
chorus of criticisms aimed at what Is
doscrlbed ns the growing “hotel habit’”
in the United States.
Utterances of this kind are far from
uncommon. They come from the pul
pit nnd a considerable section of the
press, which, on occasion. Is much
given to warning the American people
against the practice of Indulging In
senseless and costly ostentation ttt
huge Caravansaries whose glitter nnd
ceaseless animation Mirant the curious,
and whose accommodations Inspire so
many persons with the desire to be
come either transient or permanent
guests. Yet It does not by any means
follow the erection and filling of great
hotels Involves the abandonment of
separate homes by the vast majority
of the citizens of this republic, who
always have had. and presumably al
ways will have, their households under
their own roofs.
It Is doubtless true that more people
are now ncrustomed to live In spa
cious and ornate hotels than was the
cane twenty or even ten years ago. On
the other hand, it is worth while to re
member that even In the Utter period
the population of the country has In
creased by twelve t»* fifteen millloi
that the percentage of individuals
dwelling In urban renters has grown
faster than the population, and that
the number of persona who can afford
to pay hotel prices has likewise ex
ponded notably with the gtmral pros
perity of the nation. The IdOs, how
over, that the American »hameter or
the American home Is seriously threat
ened by this development win hardly
bear close examination. The families
which habitually prefer hotel existence
to domestic life form onl.v an Inslgnlfl
.cant minority of the eighty mlllk
or so of the citizens of an 'prlstt
racy” or a “plutocracy” In the Unit
State*. Practically the same things
have been said ever since the nation
nchleved Its Independency and they
have often been expressed with far
more virulence than le ordlr.uiiy th
case now.
Tet the republic has tn*r-ng©d
dure In reasonably good xhap
f l:r* present hour, ■• ! *h©r-
fround for suppose 'h.if either, the
civic virtues or the home lovln
Itlea of its people, K'.m-r:.!|y speaking,
have been sapped hecj.ur-- ; t r©bit . -|y
infinitesimal fraction of their
hers have chosen to Rny tribute
modern Boniface.
Separate Cars for Women.
From the New York Evening Telegram.
The Health Protective society of
Brooklyn has been meeting again, and
If some of tho Indies connected with
that estimable Institution can man
age It, wo aro to bo reformed with a
vengeance. It appears that thoro aro
qulto a number of matters that tho
women object to In the present Imper
fect scheme of things, and they do not
hesitate to any so. But the crying evil
Is that workmen are permitted to ride
on the street cars. Mrs. McFarllne,
who did the verbal grappling with tho
workman evil, Is quoted ns saying:
“They carry a pickax In ono hand
nnd a spade In the other, and their
clothing Is covered with mud and
slime, which rub off In contact with
the garments of others. Why can’t
thero tie separate earn for these work
ing people?”
When another member. In whom
somo sense of the practical side of at-
falrs seemed to abide, nsked whether
It was proposed to bring about this
change by running separate cars on
which hut a three-cont fnre was charg
ed, the consensus of the best opinion
of the society was that it didn’t In
terest tho organization what was
charged so long as theso objectionable
toll-stained persons were kept off the
| ira. *
In the specuUtlon that followed It
Was almost agreed that It might per
haps be necessary to Step Immigration
to eradicate the evil complained of.
hut even tho most sanguine of the re
formers doubted whether murh could
ho done along that line. Bill!, they
have appointed a committee to take
hold of this snd other matters that
heed looking after, and that body will
begin work at once.
But, merely by way of suggestion,
why does not the committee, instead
of trying to get rid of the laboring
class by the method suggested, urge
the providing of separate cars for wo
men? Many men would favor such
an Innovation. For Ono thing, tho
nervous man In a hurry does not look
with a wholly favorable eye upon the
time lost In loading nnd unloading wo
men on cars. Their presence, too. In
terferes with Indulgence In the graci
ous solace tobacco affords. Besides.
If cars were made specially for wo
men, feminine Ingenuity might sug
gest many little comforts and conven
iences that the Inconsiderate rushing
and crowding of the present mixed
system renders Impracticable. Has
socks for shopping-wearied feet, hand
mirrors, with every seat In the Inter
ests of solving that ever present prob
lem of the oternal feminine. “Is my hat
on straight?"
Many other little conveniences could
he suggested. In fact, the more It Is
contemplated the more alluring the
suggestion becomes. Why not separ
ate cars for women?
7% Gold Bonds.
A bond is the most perfect form of Investment ever devised by the mind
of man. It combines In the highest dogreo all of tho dements essential to
the absolute safety of both principal and Interest. We are now offering
at par, with accumulated Interest. These bonds are secured by $60,000 of
first mortgugc-K on Improved real estate, worth $100,000. These securities
will bo deposited with the Union Bav IngH Bank and Trust Company, as
trustee, which will mako nesuranco more than doubly sure. Cali on or ad
dress
EQUITABLE BANKING & LOAN COMPANY,
GEO. A. SMITH, President. 370 Second street, Macon, Qa.
A Very Crooked Railway.
Between the mining towns of Clifton
And Metcalf, All., there runs the steepest,
narrowest, and most tortuous railroad In
tho world.
Passengers, ns well ns long trains of
ore, are raced down dizzy grades, dragged
tip rieep Inclines, swung around sweeping
curves, and carried In perfect safoty In n
snakelike course over one of tho most
picturesque bits Of mountain land In the
country.
The compact nnd sturdy llttlo engines
which draw the precious uietsl from the
one town to the smelters In an-
which ptlff snd stenm up to the
front or hack doors of the homes of mine
wners and "workers,” there to await tho
nlet!<•*}, rj; the house ns she prepare*
Oti J — ‘ — *—-— ‘
n of
aUge.
It will be rendlly seen how narrow Is
his railroad, which winds up to tho very 1
•cakes of high mountains, hangs sue- I
end' d "■ - - -I• • i• ■ ii .ii.I I nr*
littering way through miles of solid rock. 1
rhen the twenty Inches are nut side by j
Ido with the Standard 4 feet 64 Inchea
From the mines to the smelting works!
It h pretty much down grade. The pluck
little engine, wltn Its train of eighteen 0
v< uiy heavily loaded ore cars, carl
larded by a minor In picturesque gorh
ho takeH thin opportunity to secure 1
little fresh sir and sunlight, hugs
Bti ‘ " 1 stretch, t
...— desolate ft!
along a river bank until It Is
arced to climb a slight Incline to a bridge
vhlch stretch©* ov*
A Popular
Favorite
13.1 feet In height.
Ive, although a powerful l|tth
eldorn calls,! Into service on
rsrd trip, which Is made fo
he twenty miles with hrnkes
Automatic dumping I
mpty.
toy to
thought.
When you want a pleasant nurgntlve
try Cbnmbyrlaln-, Hlom.nh and t.lv.r
Tablet.. Th.y nr. may to toko and
produen no nnumn, griping or other
dlengremblo effect. Vor nlo by all
druggists.
Fortune Saved From Dust.
The money-counters In the United
Btntes treasury were startled one day,
says Theodore Waters In the Novem
ber Everybody’s, by the appearance of
a remarkable-looking “fat man” who:
entered the department and told a
strange tale. He said he waa an Ohio
farmer and did not bellve In banks,
and so had buried his money In the
ground for safe-keeping. He had dug
It up, and was horrified to find that It
was slowly turning to dust, as notes
will when long buried.
Panlc-itrlcken, he gathered the dis
integrated money Into an old pillow
case, bound It around his waist be
neath hls clothes, and started for
Washington. He travelled part of the
way on horseback, part of the way on
an Ohio river steamboat and part of
the way by train. During the Jour
ney he never once took off the pillow
case. He even slept with It on. The
officials of the treasury department
found It difficult to make him part
with It.
He did not want to go with a clerk
to a hotel for fear the clerk might rob
him. hut an It was manifestly Impossi
ble for him to disrobe in the office he
hsd finally to submit. They got the
money at last, and the condition of It
wss so bad that Mrs. Leonard, the
treasury expert, had to be called to
decipher It. Ho great waa her skill that
the fartner lost only a few hundred
dollars out of $18,606.
I*, up. Up. thn train
■ r I,, |i / ! Ginn
tenhes In sections iHHPIff
'ruin turn* dizzy nt the mere
■ - * MaHon In tho volley. In
tbs iTttle village of Metcalf, the cars scent
|to be clawing the mountain side* in a
perfectly perpendicular line, and na the
lanterns tyring out when the tmln takes
n, loop the traveller seeing It for the first
time would b© readily excused for nam
ing It some new mountain teiror.
The trip back to the mlnte consumes
nearly four hours, for the little engine,
|which was literally pushed down the
mountains by the weight of Its train, la
^OMIge^o jjiill the empty cars tip
eit.
which teal its tlmbei
full-
sill
The Redmond - Massee
Fuel Co, Coal. Phone 223.
An Wea of how winding Is the rot
be gained when It Is known that
Is but five mils* from Metcalf nn the crow
files, bill as the railroad Is obliged to wind
Its wny It Is a trifle over twenty miles.
To get the circuit evsn within this limit
whole mountains of solid rock havi • ri
tunneled.
For nearly one mile the Morencl rail-
road carries Its trains through Inky
blackness. Jagged rocks sra overhead and
on e«*h side. A passageway wss lit- r »lly
hewn and hacked .through theee rock
mountains, for It waa desmed dangerous
to use dynamite In many pi
nature
were unkn
took to complete this tunnel, "hut whe
SILVER TOILET SETS. .FINE
CHINA.
JNO. 8. HOGE DRUG CO.
Father’s Strange Manner
Up Child.
A 1 hi U..iM I-* >' r r
tlon at Budapest, write)
correspondent of the Ln
A Hungarian governt
named Berg b »«♦ foe sor
kept hln S"!., & boy of S,
large cage.
This cage hni
provided with *
for food and i\
of Bringing
^nt official
• time pest
unfitted In a
rinded floor,
Ch and
©ptfirle*
Ih placed In 4
the day. and In a room
1 n mattress and bed-
Ided for the child,
summoned before the
that he was nt liberty
t" k ' (• 1.1m > hil i u
added that he we a
In tho cage.
Tho child wax et
OUS medical Insperl
to Ii*- il' h> Olid
respect. The Judl<
hr
Of h i
rho
Signs of Long Life.
The woman who desires long life
must have eye,, round snd wide, rath
er thtr» long i»nd narrow, and If they
are brow or hazel life Will be longer
than if they be black or violet
The brow must bo ample and slopo
bark slightly from an absolute per
pendicular. The head must be wide
behind and over the eara
The brow must he wide and full and
well set and the chin square and firm.
The noe«- must be wide and full
through Ita whole length and have
open, a -v. dilating n >tn - This in
dicates a good heart and good lungs.
If the orifice of the ear Ih low. Indi
cting 1 deeply seated brain th-ro Is .1
better <h .r ■ of long Ilf-.
Th** w
proport h.
1 whe
idlng hss a *.
If the body
1 tho Umbo, tt
ting do
electric llm
met Up ths Jungfrau.
nt tunnel In Hump© Is un
lit of the r,MW Jungfrau
which I- to rench the
he mountain According to
rtn the ti.nri'l. which l*
Htructlon, h »s paased the
3,f>00 meter ft s miles),
t Ih entlr- , underground
mg the .1 !* ' ml© of 5.400
l it may he s.'ifel/
tie th© highest tunnel In
i© work, which commenced
.rn ago. Ih u iv slow. The
thi
of R<
ock.
I to the public on the 2d of
1* 1ST) ind th** third, the Elger-
ind station, not until the Ut of July,
OS Th*- next station, that of M©r
(Hire, will not be opened before
xf M’lmtr.er, ami perhaps only In
The grrnt length of ttm© n©ed*d
r th- construction lien in th© fact
■*t the ro< k la especially hard and It
hnpoMHlt.l© t.» use quirk-working
Ills. S- >nttrtr American
Toys, Dolls, Gams*.
An elegant aeuortment «t the McLvoy;
. Bvok ami Stationery Co.