% sig %, me ie F ee Ph 26 RP D ie aan 0 eng anne FAR L w en teens | ones M@t-petit Pierre vivront bons ee sortante énenni ani detente —spmte es Nes RU eo : E— rs Tin ae RER S— 2 ge le hquens vis tt to tiennent oieer-poeret tend rntomisnnt ete pamape rires eyes ne mn dm pm Rp om gg nn tm mme en Lei mt te ro rh L'IMPARTIAL FEUILLETON. | TAKE À SURVE Les Causeriss | A D'UNE VIEILLE MARMITE. MT I INTRODUCTION We invite business men to take a survey of otif We have nice Job Types, an A1 Job Press and first-class joh jyaper, We are in a püsition to print all class of work —frouw a card 66 the largest pster. ER Re NE os "me L'Tmpartial Printing Office. Tignish. Sept. And. 93. amis, le voulez-vous ? j‘em- mène lenfant. —Prenez-le Jacques, dit le curé, aussi bien personne mieux que vous ici, n‘en saura faite un homme hounête et craignant Dieu. | — Veux-tu venir avec moi? me dis-tu. Je me souvins qu'un jour tu m‘avais donné un beau sif- Farmers. T'have all you desire infthe shap- Of Farming Imn'ements. PLOWS HAZ2ROWS, SCUFFLERS etc, My prices arefright. J'entends encore sonner la : cloche de notre vieïile église, Hélas ! Hélas ! Ma pauvre cabane, comme T1 n'est plus la le pauvre vieux lé pauvre bon vieil ami que ‘Le petit Jacques, comme ils l'appelaient tous, ritable Jacques auraient-ils | du dire. | ge dre iron 40 JOB+++PRINTING °+ écornés, voilà sa lampe qui a ses longues veillées, ses mé- 4 ditations, ses souvenirs de Æ | Ses d-Gès 2-62-Gd-5 25 Dodo DFE EE SISRS D FR SE SE-GE-FIGE me parle de lüi, l'escabeau | n° Ha no EUR qui souteriait ses piede, et le favori:là, contte la pierre, cette marque naire c'est la nu et lisse comme flivoire jaui. | b ] Ë 1 s— “ “tt . e santes pensées qui remplis-| Je garderai tout cela reli- 'ences, tume réponers dans ce salent ta tete, mon pauvre, m À . d'ivoire et le buis de l'an pas- G Le isséet la nuit D ou gl u! fi encare la m rmite. Tu venais de passer la sé. Pauvre Jacques: tu niras aus Le le me quand viendront les/*0n cœir se dilater et btre plus Te ue dre, oùl'on menux, faire bénir la petite | “nent P ET 1 branche que tu cueillais toi- out j mais 6 6 seuls an lis, Mas . , cloche avait sonné comme | iies par là fumée, tout. "indou ; cux q L ont éé obligés de aisser Fcli Mer dans leur cœur les l‘enterrement, et ma mère é- |: : LS Lp: confidences qi leur thüntaïent aux tait sortie ‘du logis, portée | aimait comme toi, petit Pierre | lévres ; ceux qi ont appris à é :ou e: + ; ; du vent et Ie 1 é.illement du bois, l:s pe S1X 0 et Je Dress : Mais oublieux que je suis, ‘rmures de l’eau qui coule et le tic- ien fort. Tu vins trouver le : :,,1,.:. CR j'ällais ne pas penser à toi, À | Jront la joie de petit Pierre, car il Te un bon vieux, et {U | Gente, à toi qu'il soignait lui-| Aussi, quand vint le s ir, au lieu de .— | même, dont il connaissait les | 489€ sn lit, il resta prè du f'yer. M. le curé, tous ceux qui é- iues branche: rt les piede sur les à sur le banc de l‘atre, je vous ‘henets, se mi à s Re 2 taient venus au monde avant J | » causer avec. la vieil « 7 lui, s'en sont allés, c’est l‘ordre | e udes surl:s geuoux, la têe das. . Sur: sur la pierre, à Li place mol, jai vu partir tOUS CEUX | ses mains, le front penché vers toi, ir | ru le fren° de Jacques s’é ait appuyé Le | conter ses confidences et #25 sec:è.e: seuls tous deux, petits tous puis il écoutait, il tendait l'oreille; pensé s. x eun par un bout. Petit Jaques | pas Quels mots renfermaient tes ne parlait plus d':puts quelques ins- | glous glous, qui me sembiaient vides tants, quand minuit vint à sonner. prenait bien. Aussi comme il t’aimar, je t'aimerai, ettu seras toujours lu- d'aplomb sur tes ‘rois pieds, vieil. To The A cet endroit de son m'nolgue, Pierre s'arrêta, et posant La 1é:* dans ment celle qu'il venaitd ‘appeler l'amie la confidente du peut Jacques. | de fonte, vieille et usée, mais propre, | 1 | ï Dr uue paysan € hollindaise. Nice clean Tinware make the, * * à filet de plomb, et je te dis: | se de bonne humeur, une tournure 4ock consis'ing o' Plain and : Je veux bien, petit Jacques. | inspirant la confiance. ed tinware Grasse ware 154 ——. , . mon pauvre ami, quinte ans | Coubées et postes sar «es hanches sans se qüitter. Mais hier la | | le glas tinte à mes oreilles, tu me sembles vide et grande! j'ai perdu. Le bon Jacques, le cha- Voilà son lit, tant de fois éclairé, le soir, : . @ à > | À. A A N 4; + | CHLRITE À : "Y Ÿ vieillard Hélas! Hélas! Tout | fauteuil de cuir, son siége place où il appuyäit son front Oh! les bonnes et bieufai- e | Bieusement; ton crucifix (#35 qui cunprenait, dis, di-- amis Jaques. | 4 c e Al "8, Pierre rele ê - - appuyé sur cette pierre releva la & : et senti plus, Qui ne comrr:nd'a c-la ? Ceux qu' a mul L : - atin-li la 0 . L m'avait gardé. Ce m "| même, tes livres, tes gravures eux qu ont con u l'iolemenr, l'i- . . ’ . aujourd'hui, l'agonie et puis] ne me dit-il pas : il nous, _ 14" 3 reste avec nous ärde=nous | ces m le voix de li soli pat quatre voisins. Moi j'a- près des toi » | L itude, le bruit ac de l’rorloge; ceux là compren- curé, un vieux comme LOI. | $oj sa vieille amie, sa Confi- wé-ait pas seul, il av-it une ame. = Voilà Î in. | | | 4 . jeta sur la braï-e as: 6 : u Voilà un petit orphelin, pensées. Que de fois, assis j une brassé: de me regardai tous deux, lui les le marmite Sin front maehin ile Lac D 1 longtemp;, et lui i it à ri- que j'aimais: nous SGMMES | murmurait des paroles mysérieuses. PRE ETS LUN ee DuE deux, enfants tous deux, Cha- : que lui disais tu que i: na dis:mguais | L: feu brulait toujours, petit Pierre de sens? Il le savait, lui, et te com- (a continuer) sante #t propre, toujours bien prisé. amie du petit Jacques, sa confidente.. | ses mains, il se met à regarder fixe- | C'était une grande et beile marmite Elle avait, sur ses trois pieds, un |kitcren look bright. Call and see = fl y à quinze ans de cela, | Son ventre rebondi, ses ans:s re- Gérard Dow, son couvercle un peu! mort est venue, il 2 fallu par- | de cû.é elle ronflait en ce moment à tir. Hélas! Hélas! intervalles réguliers langant à chaque Ton héritage est à moi ta | fois un petit jet de fumée, comme un hi $ei s da | fumeut paisible- : cabane, vs Le sure en | Pierrese prit à la considérer lon soin Va : JaMmals le vent n'en- | guement. I] cherchait à deviuer le lien | trera par les fentes du mur; jamais la pluie ne péalertire | PONS RIRES RES | Lous ce toit béni. Tu l'aimais | ere vs Een got clones ta câbane-je veux aussi Îa | cette langue inconnue. | chérir; et ton mobilier vieux comme toi, ton grand lit, tes rideaux de serge? Ai-je pas- sé tout, petit de longues heures à regarder leurs des- sins auxquels mon imagina- tion d‘enfant prétait un charme indicible; tu me les. | mystérieux qui avait uni si longtemps petit Jacques et sa marmite. | | Î My pedler carries a genaral assort- ,, | ment of the above goods also — N'as-tu donc rien à me dire? s'é-| > . | cria-til, après quelques instants de | SROÇPRIES, Give him a silence ; ue sais Lu rien pour me con- dE en. soler? Je suis seul, tu le vois, jacques | FRE est varti. Ne m'aimeras-tu pas comme 1 t’aimait? Giou glou ! fitia marmite en soule- À. J # Bernard, vant son couvercle et en laissant re-|,. . tomber bruyam@ent, glu giou. Tignish, June122 ,93 tf —-M'as-tu compris? dit Pierre, avec | good expliquais longuement, c'é- rs mou vanent de joie, m'as-tu} Ripans Tabules relieve headache, : pure: «_ | répondu. taient des histoires LT Giou glou ! fit-elle. L |: Rain Fabules-care: érspensis: ables d‘enchanteurs et de} _Ty seras mon amie comme tu! bonnes fées | étais la sienne, tu écouteras es con- Ripans Tabules eure faundice Re EGGS paid the higaest jé. ven Ft “= ms mme . Railroad Across the Sahara, If the United States could cross ôtr | continent with railroads, or if Russia can span Asia with a line of rails, why cannot Fran&e cross the Sahara desert with a railroad? Possibly it can, A | beginning lias been made in that mam- | moth undertaking. But the difficulties are incalcunlable, As soon as those that [are now known sn.1l be overcome others : will arise. Consi er for an instant the | enormous obstacles to makin,; a railroad 11.500 aules long throux:h a territory ‘without wood or ties, withont water, | Without evervihing required to #üstain life. Hailrouds have been cotistructed tarough countries to which all the | nateritls required have had to be car- red, But here i- a country which does |. eveu supply water Éor tlie inen who do the werk. Te sand storims that have Luried à thousand ciravans are liable to | arîise and wi out ail faces cf man and [bis work Yet tiis supendous work is now seriousiy conitéemplated by the | Trench rovernment; When it is under- | taken the rails wi. be laid from oases to oise, whi h lie lié isiands in the great locean of the désert, {As it approaches the south the trim lire may be divided, une atin t6 rdti to Lake Tchad, and the other to sttike the Nizer above Timbuec- too, from which point steamers could ! descend to Senezambia The work may cost hundreds or even thousands of mil- lions of dol'ars; l About L'oking Glasses,. The annual manufacture in Europe at the present time, according to the late-t statistics, is somcthing like 1,850,000 square rards of looking glass. lu the mitrors o! to-day the light is re- | flected by 4 laver of silser or an amal- gun of tin, but à proportion of light is lost in the process of reflection, and the : ipage is less lunmsinous than the original, The value of na iooking giass is usually estimated by the thickn ss: of the glass, because the th ck:r they are the stron;er they must be: but, speuking scientifi- callv, thick glasse: are defective, because the outlines of ti image ivctlected are less cleurly defini, Tuere are really three reflections; and, consequently, three images in &ëvery glass mirror, one from the upper surface of the lass, the second from the lüwer sur: face, and the third from the metalié laver at the bacx. An ideal mirror is one witha per£ectly flat surt:ice, but it is only po:siste to ab- tin this result in éomparuiivels Small glasses. The lar::er glasses do not feflect a true image, bec:rixe is is not pussibie to make tem quite flat, _— À This Ouiy One Moutlful, Every oyster ha: a mout .. a heart, à liver, a stomach, besides many curiousiv devised dJittle inse:tines, and other or- gans, necessary organs such as would ba bandy to a living, moviug, intelligent creature. The mouth is at the end of the shell, near the hin.:e, and adjoininz tie toothed portion of the oyster's pearly cuveril: — — Farm Notes, Timothy hay and oats are expensive feeds, It does not follow Lecause à far- mer raises these crops that he should feed them, when : ther produc‘s, equaliv useful, may be purchäsed at a ss oost per pound of atiual nutriments. The feeding value of plants differ, Outs, corn and hay possesses different food values. Some kinds of food pru- duce fat, some r'uscle and some wool, hair and miik. Nature cannot be fool: d in the matter of 1eeding, The successful stock fveder must study the different fod values. With an ordinary grass crop, the loss of water while curin;z; hay in the fi-li may be from 2105 tons per acre ; th: loss is larger in the clovers than in tlie grasses (Illinois Bulletin 5). The loss in weight by c“rving after storing may Ls from 200 to 400 Ibs. per ton. Eugenie’s Faithful Friendship. The ex-Empress Eugenie exhibited some amibility of chäracter in Paris the other day by cliubing five flights of stairs-iu an apartment house to call on Victor Duruy, the Academician, who was ill in bed, Duruy was one of Napoleon IIL's miuisters and the do- voted friend of his family. No More Native Costumes, to make the world monotonous. Wher- | ever in Asia ot Europe her influence is at all strong it operates te divest the nutives lof their customary raïñent and fit them lout with English shirts, elastic braces and tail-coats. You no longer see the |gondolier of the Grand Canal in the picturesque garb memorialized in old paintings; he has learned from the In- | glese how trousers in4y be held up with | one suspender; how a nail may serve for | the inissing button and how effective it is to go about “in shirt sleevex” In the Alps, in the Tyrol, and along the Nile, no pative wears the old native costume any more than sailors wear rolling collars and flapping trousers. Some of the hotels make the ‘national dress” the (livery of servants, which is the only |sight a stranger gets of it on main traveled roads.—Providence Journal, | Xts Origin, | The origin of ‘‘a feather in his cap” is thus explained: In Hungary, in 1599, it was decreed that only he who bad killed a Turk should wear a feather, and he was | permitted to add a fresh feather to his cap for each Turk whom be had slain. | | no more al.out ii, Li:inxings dt very. smarf | . | va the part ol ie softer. and never oguin trieu it.—Hjure Moments. À Work of Time, Mr. MeSwat—liive you packed your trunk yct, Lobeli: Mrs. McSwau— Not yet. Mr. Mchwat {ivokinug at his watch)— Then vou iaven’t any time to lose. ‘Lhe train leaves in cxuctiv thirty-six hours. The major, où learaing the truth, said | | ST mme + a ge te ue ec Ît seems to be the mission of England .in the least interfere . À WONDERFUL SEARCH-LIGHT: et L Ok the Summit of Mount, Washington Visible Over n Hundred Mil-s#, The use of the electric arc in search. lishts is familiar to residents of New York and adjacent towns, At tin! election returns, racing and sportin,;-r: turns and other announcements aw ait. with curiosity by the public have been shown by a preconcerted system of flushes from the search-light in the dois of the Pulitzer Building. The revolvin4 search-light on the apex of the Madisoi Square Garden tower is also à fainilint sight. Butihese are only miuor ex amples of the aré in search-lighting, One of the great sriutmphs on this line is o7 the sunimit of Mount. Washington, 6344 4 | feet above sea level, Mount Waslungton is the highe:f mountain of the White Mountajiu range and many difiiculties had to b: co:.quer- ed in the sctting up of the plant, the highest ever erected exeept in mining operations in the far west À towrr Was tirst put on th? verv hizhest point of the mountain, Ji is 90 feet high and tap rs to 14 feet at tune top. 1v : was built of eight ÿY-nch spruce timbers, reaching irom tie foundation to th top, aud tie whole tied together by iron straps «nid bolted, aud the frame work c:.aiued d''wu 10 taie rocas on Liu mountain, With a.l the pricauiiort which have been taken, 80 severe uig the rain ami wind storims, the moistura penetrates tue vuidinz and makes thé conditiou 6f cperating the dynuino ex- cessively severe. he dynamic is Of the Lnoin-oa-Houswn spherical armature type, aud in spie ut the severe con dituiuns Oswinig te. Lie damphess rives Coin plete satislaciion, The search-light ig one Of tue aliractive 1eaturcs of the sutm- mer 8>asou in tune White Mountains, bLe- sides this, poised ut this extreme eleva- tion, it is ut great -cieutihic interest and many new proble 58m signalling and tu study of tue sciclil.fic use Of searChers may be solve.i by its aid, it is diflicult .ù ;uther accurate figures as to the distuace from Wh.Cùu tue Mount Washizygtou Ligat nas been seen. At Por.luad, e..hiv-tive mils awur, telegrapnic conversations have been held, the searrh-1: :üt Hashing out a me:-. sage aud tue vierator rep'ating it uy ordinary te.egsrap back to the mm ue tuin, Many tonus 100 miles away ave reporteu seviug 11, and un one occasion it was veell ut Pi:cou Cuve; Cape Auu, o:1 the court ot M:ssacnuseus, 116 miles distauts Aciwe:iy inmiles tue L,:ht is su bright £hat type cau be clesrly read and the time où à watch eusi.y told. At this ditance t:e light is almost tuo right to be louuked at comforiaviy.— N. Y5 Worid. PFhotograyhinz in Colors, Photographing in colors has been suc- cssfully accomp:ished in Berlin, Tue method is based upon the fact :hat all effects of lisbt prueed from three pri- mary Colors—yuilyw, red and biue, Br means of colore-d screens or by dycins the photozraphie plates three uezatives are obtained of the saine object, each be inz sen-it: ve 10 ligat only vf one of tug primary Colurs, Ît seems wonderful that, with all the ranu:e of hues and tint perceived by the eye, à prinun;; of three siruple colors is all that is required 19 givetie necessary etfect. The reasoy why three hnprexsious are suflicient ta roduee the natuyal Colors of an obj.ct in ail their delicacr of tint and shaint proceeds from the fact that every por- tion of eac' ‘in 77 color that in any ss imprés-iu.a Upott HS Curre-pondius negative, and thu< with the three colors reproduced we hüve the etle:t of the original, faithf.:ly reproduced in ail its infiuite va: ilalious LÉ Unit. Light und Diseuse, Dr. Thomas Guisler has recently made some interesting ob-ervations of tig effect of hght upon bacilii is experi- ments were co:ducted with both sun- light and the electric light, and, while he has establisheu the general effect of both kinds to be the same, he has: been. unable to conimare then He fouud the germ of typhoïl fever tw be greatly affected and rétarded in growth by light, and he determinel in addition the relus tive effect of light of different colors. . The advisibilits of having suulight about and within our houses has thus received ‘confirmation from a new standpuint, while the use of the electrié light in the ‘ sick-rcoimn nx,r prove to be a valuabls sanitary adjuncut, # Wood Onilusts Detail, One of the must curious things about wood is te fact t'iat in some instances it will outlast meial, in others the ‘inetal will stand ti,ree or four fittings of wood. : A good hickory handle will outlast a spade or a hoe, while à wagon tire will outlast two or three supplies of spokes. It might be supposed that the wagon spoke goes suoner because of the constant jarring, but no use is harder than that of a hoe, which is in constant danger of be- ing shivered by an unusually hard blow. À dr as, Some farmers attribute the vital force . infused into the hoe-handle from the: human arm, while others laugh at this notion, but whatever the cause, the fact is well known. : Gad, Telephoning on Telegraplh Wires. An apparatus has been constructed for telegraphing simultaneously over tele- graph wires. The system has %eer in operation for some time on the telephone jiné from Budapest to Szegedin, 2#'#iss tance of 124 miles The resulté &ere- satisfactory. The apparatus can easily be inserted in a telegraph circuit. and used at once. It is said that simultane- ous telegraphy along the wire does not with telephonin and that the effects of induction and all re noises are completely re noved. V4 + = td Habit, ‘Colonel Bioodyfield’s old w ptill cling to him "+" FI “How 807”. “I dined with him last night gaye the waiter no quarter” te fs »