Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 28, Number 38, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 March 1898 — Page 3
Fish BetnrnlDg to the Thames.
If we do not soon see salmon at London bridge, there is a fair prospect of our catching sea tront there before long. The main cause is the gradual cleansing of the Thames water, largely through the action of the county council in securing better treatment of the London sewage while a minor contribution is made by the efforts of the Thames conservancy to make the Thames not only a navigable waterway, bat a clean one. The sure and certain indexes of this improvement have been the successive reappearances of certain kinds of fisb, creeping np annually higher and higher from the sea.
The writer has noted this process for some 11 years, with increasing satisfaction. The first indication conveyed to his mind that tcme change was taking place was the appearance of a couple of porpoiEes at Hammersmith bridge early on the morning of the fateful day when Mr. Gladstone's home rule bill was rejected. Walking back to Cbiswick, after witnessing the memorable scene in the lobby of the bouse of commons at 2:80 that morning, he t?aw tbe porpoises, and though Roman annalists would have entered this as an incident full of political omen—monetra maritima in Tiberi visa —he guessed that they Lad come up in pursuit of fieb. So they bad, for shortly after it was announced that the tubes of certain torpedo beats had been choked with whitebait on their way down to run the mile at Lower Hope. A few years later tbe whitebait and shrimps were swarming at Gravesend.—Cornhill Magazine.'
"Brewed Up to the Nines."
I beg to offer a pure guess as to this expression. Perhaps others will guess something better. I think that it is merely a variety of the phrase "dressed up to the eyes." This is a well known expression. Tbe "H. E. D."gives an examploof "mortgaged nptothe eyes." We frequently find the plural eyne. In fact, it occurs in Shakespeare and Spenser. We also find neye for eye. I give a quotation for neyes (i. e., eyes) in "A Student's Pastime," page 21. Tbe "H. E. D." gives the plural nyen (i. e., neyne), but without a reference. Halliwell gives a still more extraordinary plural form—viz, nynon, with a reference to the "Chronicon Vilodunense."
The form neyne arose from the use of my neyne or thy neyne instead of myn eyne or thyn eyne. But it could also be used with the dative of tbe article, of which tbe Mid. Eng. form was then This occurs in such phrases as at theu ale (also atten ale, atte nale), at then endo (also at the nende), for theu ones (also for the nones), Mod. E. for the nonce). Hence to theu eyne is a perfectly correct phrase, and to the neyne is a perfectly admissible variant of it. If this be spelled to tho nine, tbe sense is lost, and the addition of "s" becomes necessary for suggesting the plural of the numeral nino, for the populace always insists on an etymology and prefers an obvious one, even if it gives no sense.— Walter W. Skeat in Notes and Queries.
United States Mall Protectors.
The United States government is sometimes served for years by valuable servants who are not even boarded at the expenso of the goverument. These servants are oats. Rats are one of the persistant dangers that threaten tbe United States mail. They destroy the bags and the mail matter. The postoffice building iu New York city is a large building and now many years old. It is said that there are 60 cats in the building cared for by the clerks. Some of tbe cats have never lived anywhere else others have come in from the neighborhood. Tho oats who have known only this home are very shy of strangers and will come only to the clerks in the building. So you see that the government is served without pay by these faithful servants who prevent the destruction by rats of valuable property, and all that is given them is shelter.— Outlook.
Changed His Occupation.
Time's a young man newly come to town as a congressman's clerk who began his carter as a traveling sales-man for a Boston firm. His first trip was into Mniuo, a Ptate he had never before visited. His employers did not bear from him for so long a time that they began to be worried, finally a letter came from the young drummer. "I have been somewhat unfortunate on this trip, tho letter ran. "The salesman of auother house having preceded me, I have lueu unable to make auy sales. As business is so dull I took a sail today from Bangor down tho Penobscot, and 1 must say, gentlemen, the scenery is magnificent."
By return mail he received an answer from tbe house. "Come home," was all it said, and that first trip was his last.—Washington Post
The Chine#© Painter.
A story, which if not true is not badly told, runs to the effect that while tho bark Cape City was at Hongkong a Chinaman was engaged to paiut the necessary name on each bow. He produced on one bow the legend "Cape* city," without a space between the two words. Then he noted that the Y" was nearest to the ship's stern, and, re~ membering this fact, he afforded an excellent example of how severely logical his race can be, for in a little while be bad painted ou tbe other bow tbe striking pemntation "Yticepac," to bis own delight and tbe crew's amassment.— Chambers' Journal.
The Prime Coi»Sderation.
De Palmer—What did Mrs. Lakeside my when Jumble ton proposed to her? Van Pullman—She said she wanted time to consider.
De Palmer—Time to consider what? Vau Pullman—How much alimony bo could stand, I suppose.—New York World*
A Scotch Term.
In Scotland the last day of tbe year, or New Year's eve, is called Hogmanay. —Atlanta Constitution.
Friday His Lucky Day.
"I've quit ber," said Gritly as he smoked a good night cigar with his chum. "It's fill off. Henceforth it will be like tbe memory of a dream what tbe novelists call a passing romance." "But I thought you were engaged?" "So we were. I bad seven warm encounters with the old gentleman before I gained bis consent She wears my ring, and I'm paying for it on tbe installment plan." "What's gone wrong, then?" "It's ber superstition. She's bright and cultured, but she's tbe most superstitious girl that ever came within my experience. I wouldn't believe it, yon know couldn't at first. I proposed to her on Friday. A fe#bw in love is lucky to know the year, to say nothing of tbe day of the week. Nothing most do but we break off so as to escaff the bad luck. We happened to make this shift on the 18th, and I'll be blowed if we didn't have to break off again in order to kill down the hoodoo. Yes, sir, engaged three times and never had a quarrel. It breaks the record. "We never started any place yet that she didn't forget something. Do you know that girl would always go to tbe end of a block before she would turn back? Did it every pop all superstitition. I raked up my whole pile to take her to tbe musical event of the season. Passing into tbe theater she stubbed her toe. That settled it. She must get right home to avoid a catastrophe. Had to hire a coupe and the driver carries my watch yet. "I looked my record up and got Word to her that I was born on Friday, in the dark of tbe moon, and vwth an unlucky star in tbe ascendant. She promptly called tbe engagement off, and that's what I was after."—Detroit Free Press,
Hindoo Cruelty.
The correspondent who sends tbe fol: lowing to the Calcutta Asian states that his information came to him on unimpeachable authority. During a royal hunt iu one of the Rajpoot states an excepionally fine tiger was caught—netted, no doubt—and lured into a cage. His captors then proceeded to noose his feet and draw tbem through holes bored in the floor of the cage, and a blacksmith was directed to draw his claws. The tiger's legs having been secured by ropes, the royal sportsmen had a sliding door in the cage opened, and when tbe captive put his head out they shut the door down oa bis neck while the blacksmith, with mallet and chisel, broke off his teeth. Preparations were concluded by muzzling the poor brute with strong wire in some inhuman fashion. The tiger was then released, to be baited bj dogs, and, despite his maimed condition, he killed several before tbe "sportsmen" wearied of tbe game and shot him.
If this story is trap, and the information is said to have come from an eyewitness—and there is nothing impossible in the crippling part of the business —one would dearly like to take each of those Rajpoot royalties in turn and read bim a lesson with a cutting whip.— London Sketch. ,* v*!?
The Long Journey.
In a certain township not many miles from Cleveland the good man of a local household was laid away in the little churchyard on the bill. After the inneral the relatives, both near and distant, returned to the family home, and the officiating pastor came with them. There they enjoyed a good dinner aud afterward gathered in the best room lor social converse.
Naturally their talk turned upon the serious event of the day, and presently the good pastor, drawing a deep sigh, solemnly remarked: "Well, onr departed brother bus gone along journey."
There wan a brief silence, fend thc-ii cousin of the deceased, fussy little woman with an intense desire to bear share in the conversation, suddenly ve marked in a tone of profound wisdom: "Well, you know, brother, tbet tbtj all say thet travel is snch an cddicatcr 1* —Clevelatfc Plain Dealer.
r'
A Stroke of Diplomacy
Applicant—I have called to ask yen, madam, to use your influence on r..y behalf. I am au applicant for a positicu in your husband's private office, but 1 bare one dangerons rival. He seem* it prefer—
Madam (interrupting)—I'm sorry, sir, bat I nover interfere with my husband's business.
Applicant—If I were as pretty as she is, I might— Madam—She? 1
Applicant—Yes, madam. My competitor is a most bewitching girl. Madam—Just call tomorrow, sir, and I will have tbe position for you.— Strand Magazine.
Kentucky Fisherman*
"I am a tender hearted maD," eaid Colonel Stihvell, "and as a rale I don't care much foh spobt, bat there is one exception to my rale—I enjoy fishing," "Doesn't it seem rather cruel to yon?" "No, sob. When I think of saving those creatures from having to pass a lifetime in all that watab, I regard myself as a benefactor, sub, and a humanitarian. "—Washington Star.
Interested.
f'
Social Student I presume, with your abundant leisure, that you are interested in the most important question of tbe day?
Perry Patettic—You bet your life I am. An wit' me, same as anybody else, the most important questions of the day, when all is sifted down, is oats and
Cincinnati Enquirer.
Spanish and French women of tbe higher class are usually expert swordswomen. They are taught to fence as carefully and accurately as their brothers, and there are numerous schools in tbe two coon tries where young women are taught not only to fenoe, but to handle tbe broadsword.
ffS
1
A Kotea .lntboicHf Workshop. "Mrs. Florence Morse Kingsley's study is at tbe top of her Staten Island home. Under tbe eaves and from the windows she can look ont far over into another state and see tbe great ocean," writes Laura M. F. Lake of "The Author of' Titus, a Comrade of tbe Cross,' in Tbe Ladies' Home Journal. "About ber are tbe pictures painted by herself, as well as ber artist parents. Books of reference—those in Greek and Latin, as well as in English—books that are simply a delight, not merely tools and pretty bits of bric-a-brao that collect themselves in the room of a refined woman, surround her everywhere. But the door of this room is never closed against any member of the family, and the busy worker is never too busy nor too tired to listen to some childish story of woe or happiness from any one of her five children. "With her, while ber work with her pen means much, still ber duty as a wife and mother and a clergyman's wife, comes first. Two afternoons in the week are devoted to teaching poor girls how to sew. Much time must necessarily be given to her home and the little people iu it, and yet she finds time for social duties and is always a charming, intelligent companion to her husband. With a smile she tells bc+v, when iu doubt as to ^reek and Latin, she goes to him for help."
Woandlns the Feelings of Others.
Moral hygiene expresses the state between the mind aud tbe condition of the body. It is only charitable to assume that the condition of tbe body must leave much to be desired in the case of those who' deliberately lay tbemselves out to hurt the feelings of others with perfect indifference and without a vestige Gf compunction. As regards the nature of such people, it must be on a par with those who pride tbemselves upon their "bluntness" usually a brutal way of saying singularly unpleasant things and which some are wont to dignify by tbe term of frankuess. It will usually be fiend that these persons are wanting in any of those finer feelings of our common nature and particularly iu that delicacy aud refinement which mark all the difference between the gentleman, properly so termed,and the boor. Those who are considerate of the feelings of others may undoubtedly at times inadvertently hurt the feelings of others, but So do so deliberately would be as impossible for them as to commit intentionally one of the cardinal sins.-— New York Ledger.
-'Leaves of a Life," relates bow he was engaged with Sir Hardinge Giffard— now Lord Halsbnry—in an important election petition at Shrewsbury. At their lodgings Mr. Williams Jbegan to smoke. Sir Hardinge protest .1. He said he "never smoked," and ev jtually his eminent junior had to pufcfejn a mackintosh and smoke bis cigar in a snowstorm. Mr. Montagu. Williams did not bave to wait long for an opportunity to retaliate. Sir Hardinge carried bis habit of punctuality to a height that was only equaled by bis politeness. He would bave breakfast ready to a moment, but wonld never commence without bis junior. That morning Mr. Montagu Williams tarried so long over bis toilet that be did not enter tbe breakfast room until tbree minutes before tbe hour at which tbe court sat. He writes: "I found Giffard seated in an armchair before an enormoas fire. Tbe breakfast—grilled fisb and other delicacies—was placed on the fender. The tea hai not yet been brewed. My leader looked in a rage. He must only have been acting, however, for in all my life In "»r saw bim seriously out of temper ^new be declared, just as well as be din. what bis rales were. 1 knew that be had been waiting breakfast for me It was my duty to be down in time and make tbe tea, and in consequence of my laziness be would bave to go to «art without any breakfast at all. 'But,' I casually remarked, 'I never eat breakfast. I don't care about it.* 'Well,' he rejoined, 'you are, I think, the most selfish fellow I ever came across.' *Ob, dear, no,' I said, 'yon forget the smoking yesterday. You don't smoke. I don't see tbe difference.' He burst out laughing, and we proceeded to court. That nigbt I remained by the fire when the meal was over and smoked my cigar."—St James Gazette.
Different.
"Maria, you look simply ridiculous with that tremendous ostrich feather in your hat—as elderly a woman as you are." "I know it, John. I borrowed it from the big hat jpou wear when you go out marching with the Resplendent Knights of the Ancient and Honorable Order of Fuazy nodes."—Chicago Tribune.
Hcax^jr X^joyweat.
"Are your children fond of reading?" *'I should say so. There isn't a book in tbe hoase that has back oa it"— Chicago Record.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENlNtt ATI*. MARCH 19,' 1S0S.
4-
:'X
Carious Customs.
A carious marriage custom obtains in the island of Himla, just opposite the island of Rhodes. The Greeks, by whom it is peopled, earn their living by the sponge fishery. No girl in this island is allowed to marry until she has brought up a certain number of sponges, which must be taken from a certain depth. In some of the other Greek islands this demonstration of ability is required of the men, and if there are several suitors for the hand of a maiden her father bestows her cn the man who can dive best and bring up th% largest number of sponges.
M'l have been using Salvation Oil for backache, stiffness in the neck, and pain in the side and found it an excellent cure. I keep it constantly on hand. Chas. Haller Union Hill, N. J."
Asheville.
"duly Through Car Line is via Queen & Crescent Route and Southern R'y from Cincinnati.
Tit For Tat.'
Montagu Williams, in his
Site?
Spring Medicines.
Clara Barton, President of the Red Cross Society, indorses Dr. Greene's Nervura.
What higher commendation can a medicine have, what more convincing proof, what more positive assurance that Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy will surely cure, than the recommendation and indorsement of the world wide known and universally loved and honored, Clara Barton, President of the Red Cross Society!
Such is the world famous Clara Barton, President of the Red Cross Society, and her words in praise and recommendation of the wonderful curer of disease, Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, will be a new hope to thousands upon thousands of those who are sick, out of health, weak, nervous, or who suffer from headaches, rheumatism, neuralgia, or other painful and distressing disease, nervous affections or poor and devitalized blood.
Clara Barton says: We have tried Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy and although the remedy has been in our hands but a short time, we judge that the remedy has all the merits which are claimed for it. We shall still continue its use, with the expectation that we shall be able to endorse it still more highly.
CLARA BARTON,
President of the American National Red Cross, Washington, D. C."
Belva A. Lockwood, foremost woman of her time, cured by Dr. Greene's Nervura. There is no word so powerful among women, no influence so great, and no authority so high as the utterances of a recognized leader when speaking to her sister women for the good of womankind.
When, therefore, the voice of Belva A.
iyAnn-inzio's Art.
The Italian correspondent of Literature, in discussing Signor d'Annuazio, alludes to the fact—if it is a faot—that in spite of "his putridity and morbid sensuality" he "compels even those most averse from bis standard of taste to acknowledge his power as an artist." Well, suppose he does, compel this acknowledgment. What of it? The writer in Literature goes on to ask if when artists "seem by preference to linger near putrefactions, and morbidities is there not oause to conclude that 'there's something rotted?' Bnt apparently be is afraid to answer tbe question flatly and to add that rottenness in art should debar it from farther discussion.
We are well aware that tbis kind of proposition always wakes a shrill yelp of protest in certain quarters. To deny tbe right of "art" to do anything it pleases is, we are told, to write oneself down nut only a Philistine, bnt a gibbering idiot. Nevertheless, tbe great shining faot remains that a man like D'Annanzio never got anything like a permanent foothold upon Parnassus, and all tbis talk about bis "art" might just as well ceaso. It will never make bim a classic. Those talkers who tbink it will, and hence go on talking, must be ouriocs individuals. Like Cbarlea Lamb, we would like to see their bnmps. Bnt we are not sure that even this trivial attention would not be more than they are worth.—New York Tribune.
A Wellington Snnb.
The Dnke of Wellington had bad iu Lord Combermere oue of the best aids tne army ever produced, and be bad oiteu expressed his appreciation of bis comrade's good qualities, but when bis former lieutenant, who bad taken to tbe habits cf a gay man abont town, called upon bim at tbe Horse guards in later times of peace be treated tbe visit as follows: "What does $bat d——d old pained jackass want with me?" His military secretary, aghast, whispered, "He will bear yon, sir." Then tbe old duke used tbe words so often quoted: "Do you think I care a twopenny tinker's d—n whether be hears me or not?" Poor Comber mere, jauntily though be might carry himself, was not. proof against tbis, and when tbe secretary entered tbe anLeroom tbe brave old dandy bad fled.
No Cause For Enmity,
"That's very nice," said tbe spectator. "1 am glad to see those two politicians go out of tbe room arm in arm, chatting pleasantly." "There is nothing very extraordinary about tbat." "But from what I bave read I supposed that they were antagonists aud rivals." "Ob. yes, they are antagonists and rivals! But tbat is no excuse for their hating each other. They don't belong «v tho same party."—Washington Star.
•••••''More men," remiirked tbe observer of men and things, "would doubtless sell tbemselvoi to the devil if tbe devil oouid be taken in with green goods."— Detroit Journal.
MOST FAMOUS WOMEN IN THE WORLD
Recommend Dr. Greene's Nervura Blood and Nerve Remedy as the Greatest of all Cores!
Illustrious Women, Like Clara Barton and Belva A. Lockwood, Who.Are the Leaders of Women, Tell You to Use Dr. Greene's Nervura|| if You Wish to be Surely Cured. In the Spring You Need the,f|
Wonderful Strengthening, Purifying, Invigorating Effects of| Dr. Greene's Nervura. Take it Now, For it is the Best of All
Lockwood, of Washington, D. C., who is recognized among women as their mightiest leader and champion in all woman's movements which mark this generation, is raised in the interests of women when this representative of her sex to such an extent that she has been twice nominated for President of the United States by the Equal Rights Party, publishes the fact to the world that she owes her present good health and strength to the use of Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, it comes as a positive proof, a revelation of the way to health to the thousands upon thousands of people who droop and languish under the burden of ill-health, over-taxed strength, nervous disorders and the weaknesses, pains and aches of female complaints.
Mrs. Lockwood says: I have used Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and am pleased to say that it has improved my digestion, relieved the sleeplessness under a great nervous strain, during which I believe that sleep would otherwise have been im-
possible," and seems in every way to have ^0.
I can freely recommend it to all persons afflicted with nervous disorders, or that tired feeling which is so common. I recommend it also to nervous people, aged people and to all persons in delicate health.
Reference to tbe register showed tbat tbe youth did hail Irom the metropolis, 'and be left wcrd lcr his trail to be sent to wa address cn tbe Eowery.—Philadelphia Record
An English XSoy's Reading.
built up my general health. The attacks Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher, whose name of faintness to which I had previously been subject have entirely disappeared. It increases the appetite, tends to cheerfulness and general good: feeling and leaves no ill effect.
BELVA A. LOCKWOOD, A. M. & B. L., Secretary American Peace Bureau."
Vice-President of the Massachusetts Total Abstinence Society Cured by Dr. Greene's Nervura.
A Uowery Boy In Philadelphia.
One of tho gnests of tbe Hotel Lafayette, a young man who was evidently very much bored by something or other, sauntered up to tbe clerk's desk last evening and asked, "What time is tbe first train in tbe morning?" "The firfct train?" repeated the affable clerk, somewhat staggered at the broadness of tbe inquiry. "In which direction?" "The first train out," replied the young man impatiently. "But to what point do yon wish to go? Tbey run in all directions, yon know," suggested tbe^hotel man. "To New York, of course," said the other, and npon receiving tbe desired information be left orders to be called in time to n.ake the connection. "There's atypical New Yorker of tbe class who F»:eer at Philadelphia," remarked a bystander as the clerk reached for a pitcher of ice water. "He thin» that Gotham is tbe only place in tbe world with which this city is connected by rail."
When yon bave to play football aud go in for house runs end do prep., to say nothing of spending some boars a day in form, you don't get very muo'ij R. time for reading. Besides, it's ratber emegpisb to read much out of scbool. Tbe thinfe to do is to read in form, which is quite easy when yonr form Established tueimaster is Ehortsigbted. Just stick your book in tbe lid of your desk, under '1 jtf Jr
your construe, and yen can read away
as much as you like. Only it has to 1 a thin bcok. Tbe best for this parposo is the "Bed Hovers of Mexico," because it is printed 011 very thin paper and bus a paper cover. Besides, it only costs a penny, and even tbis expense may be diminished by tearing out tbe pages and passing tbem round as you read tbem. Every chap in tbe npper fourth has read the "Red Hovers of Mexico." It's— •well—ratber steep, you know. Yon can't believe all of it, but it really isn't half bad.—Academy.
One of tbe highest shot towers in the world is to be fonnd at Villach, in Carta thia, where tbore Ia a fall of 249 feet.
The Tartars take a man by tbe ear to invite bim to eat or drink with them.
Biliousness
Is caused by torpid liver, which prevents digestion and permits food to ferment and patrify In tin stomach. Then follow dizziness, headache*
Hood's
tasoxnlna, nervousness, and, not relieved,b!B«is fever ||A or blood poisoning. Hood's III 9^ PfBs stimulate tbe stomach," room the fiver, cure headache, dhtzinesa, eon* Tlkeoi^Hlis totSke^h£^s%nsiMdlls.
3
Igff/-!'-' ,,
Vice-President of the MassachusettsTotal Abstinence Society, Mrs. S. Louise Barton, of 4 Union Park St., Boston, Mass, says: I am glad to give my testimony in "regard to the great worth of Dr. Greene's Nervura. Two years ago my husband and myself, both slowly recovering from a severe illness, found ourselves unable to sleep, and becoming, by reason of this, so nervous and weak as greatly to retard our recovery. By the advice of a friend (after trying various other remedies) we began to take Dr. Greene's Nervura. It acted like a charm, giving us refreshing slumber and also returning strength. I had been troubled with dyspepsia and found, to my surprise, that as my strength returned I was being cured of'this disease also. I have relied on it ever since when wearied with my brain work, and found it the best thing have ever tried."
Mrs. Henry Ward Beecher, wife of tne Greatest Preacher and Divine that ever lived, knew and told the wonderful good
e„ne
^5,rvl',njJs
is revered and honored by everybody, wrote to the people out of deep regard for humanity and an earnest desire to restore the weak, tired, feeble, nervous and suffering, again to health and strength: "I have given some of Dr. Greene's Nervura to several friends who I thought would be benefited by it. They speak highly of it, and feel they have been much benefited by its use. These people are very re* sponsible witnesses as to the beneficia' character of the medicine, and I am ready to vouch for the honesty of their approval of Dr. Greene's Nervura. If needed in my own case, I certainly should use it."
Remember also that Dr. Greene,
148
State St., Chicago, 111., can be consulted free, personally or by letter.
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Inconwratcd 1888
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To tho Young Face
I
Posxosn'S Cotouaiox POWDER giro* tnwber charms to tbe old, renewed yooth. Try It.
I
TERRE HAUTE
