Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 11 July 1895 — Page 3

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1895 JULY. 1895 Sn. Mo. Tu. We. Th. Fri. Sat. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 •30 31

PLKASUKK TRIPS.

Numerous Kx*ursloiis tJie Coining Summer at Reasonable Kate«. Whether the tourist's fancy directs him to the New Eaglaud States or the Atlantic seaboard to the South or to the lake region of the North or to the Rocky Mountains and the wonderland beyond the Mississippi, he will be given opportunity to indulge his tastes at a small cost for railroad fare this year. Excursions for July include low rates over the Penn'v'ia to Baltimore for the Baptist Y. P. Union Meetiner to Asbury Park for the L. A. W. meeting, and to Boston for the Christian Endeavor Convention, and to Denver Col., account the National Educational Association meeting. In August excursion tickets will be on sale over the Pennsylvania Lines to Boston, account the Knights Templar Conclave. The sale of low rate tickets will not be restricted to members of the organizations mentioned, but the public generally may take advantage of them.

The Asbury Park excursion will doubtless attract many to that delightful ocean resort. Atlantic City, Cape May, Long Branch and all the famous watering places along the New Jersey coast are located on the Pennsylvania Lines, hence this will be a desirab.e opportunity to visit the seashore. The Denver excursion will be ju^t the thing for a sight-seeing jaunt thro' the f\r West, as tickets will be honored going one way and returning a different route through the most romantic scenerv beyond the Mississippi and M:s="nri rivers Variable route privileges will al-o be accorded Bobton excur sioniste. them to visif Niagara Falls, Moml-cal, Thousand Islands and St. Lawrence Rapids, the White Mountains, the Hudson River territory, and to return by steamer ou Long Island Sound, after sight-set iag at Newport. Narragansett Pier, Naut uckec and the Cape Cod resorts to Ne.v York and thence through the agricultural paradise of the Keystone State, aloug the Susquehanna and Juniata rivers, over the Alleghenies, around famous Horse Shoe Curve, through historic John-^own and the coke and iron regions of Western Pennsylvania. It is also expected that Boston excursionists over the Pennsylvania Lines Avill be privileged to return via Baltimore and Washington if they so desire.

In addition to the above, there will be plenty of other cheap excursions over the Pennsylvania Lines to various points. As the season is some weeks away, arrangements in detail have not been consummated, but it is certain that to railway will offer better inducements ihixn the liberal concessions in rates and privileges that may be enjoyed by travelers over the Pennsylvania Lines. This fact may readily be ascertained upon application to any passenger or ticket agent of these lines, or by addressing F. Van Dusen, Chief Assistant, Gen. Pass. Agt., Pittsburg, Pa. aprGwd-t-s tf

BEUUGEI) KATES.

Excursions over Pennsvln:\nia Lines During Season of 1S.*)5.

Liberal concessio is in fare .over 'the Pennsylvania lines have been] granted for numerous events to take-'place this summer in various pirts of the United States. In addition to local excursions tickets at reduced rates will be-sold *over tb«se lines as given in the folio wing'paragraphs. Excursion tickets may be obtained at ticket offices on the Pennsylvania System and will also be sold over this route by connecting railroads.*Some of the points to which tickets will be sold and dates of sale as follows:

To Baltimore July 16th and lTth^good returning until August 5 inclusive account the Convention of Biptist Young People's Union of A.merica.

To Boston, July oSh to 9th, inclusive for tbe National Christian Endeavor Meeting. Return limit may be extended by special arrangement to August 3d.

To Boston August 19th to 25th inclusive account Trienaial Conclave Knights Templar. Return limit extended to October 3d by special arrangement.

To Louisville, Ky in September, for National Encampment, O. A. R. One cent per mile. Reasonable return limit.

The reduced rate9 over the Pennsylvan* ia lines will not he restricted to members of the organizations mentioned, but. tnay be taken advantage of by the piiblfc ^federally. Any Pennsylvania .Lintj Ticket or Passenger Agent will famish desired information concerning,fates?,r.time of trains and other dettfttS"tt applicants,

the same may be obtaineda^aKwiMLdirfiSSing' "W. H. Scott, ticket agent?, Greenfield, Ind., or F. Van Dusen, Caief Asst. Gen.

Pass. Agt Pittsburg, Pa. may21dwtf

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R. A. BLACK,

•A-ttorney

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jtantoiv-Ti' 1.0 C.tv .. h'H ra O'.v »vil 0.... liivith jr^'ilsiown' inr .iiovillo uluiul, •!-'i io ii l'lriiUtolpiTl'.ii" Ce. :l'/t!l'luiul I ,'viliiton.....' I |.fi ,n.:!idlis... JlV

ndianapo!is 1IV DUIOll .. (Iiiin^erlaJid' I'hM.-uUJt.iUi.V' eelifltild"" OlevnL 0ha-l,)ttj7ille 'V Kirglitsto^n D'.inireltliS— L*\visvillo ... SMMWtlS Dublin flimbrjigsawy •••yi' O'-rmiifitou'ii"

Law

Booms 5 and 0 L. C. Thayer Block,

Notary Always in Office. 6yi

ELMER J. BINFORD.

LAWYER.

Special attention given to collections, settilo, estates, guardian business, conveyancing, rfn» Notary always in office.

Ollice—Wilson block, opposite court-house.

DH. J. M. LOCHHEAD,

HOMEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.

Office at 23K W. Main street, oveEarly's drug store. Residence, 12 Waluut street.

Prompt attention to calls in city country. Special attention to Childrens, Women^ and Chronic Diseases. Latf- residen physician St. Louis Childrens Hospital. 39tl*

C. W. MORRISON & SON,

UNDERTAKERS.

2 7 W. MAIN ST.

Greenfield, Indiana.

COPYRIGHTS

CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT For a prompt answer and an honest opinion, write to BIUnN «fc CO., who have had nearly fifty years' experience in the patent business. Communications strictly confidential. A Handbook of Information concerning Patents and how to obtain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechanical and scientific books sent free.

Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice in the Scientific American, and thus are brought widely before the public with-' out cost to the inventor. This splendid paper," issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the largest circulation of any scientific work in the world. S3 a year. Sample copies sent free.

UuildiuK Edition, monthly, $2.50 a year. Single copies, '23 cents. Every number contains beautiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show the latest designs and secure contracts. Address

MUis'N & CO., New York, 301 BitoiDWAT.

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Indianapolis Division.

Schedule of Passenger,Tr^ins-C©nir?l Tinjp,

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N Ma.li-.on *'17 9 Weavers ville

CAUGHT IN THECRASH

Over a Hundred Elks More or Less Seriously Injured.

COLLAPSE OF A BUILDING.

One Thousand Persons Thrown to tho Floor ISuneutli, Crushing Fully Two Hundred People Assembled There—No

One Was Killed Outright but One Has Since Died—Details of the Disaster.

Atlantic City, July 11.—The social session tendered by Atlantic City lodge to the visiting Elks ut tho Baltimore avenue Casino last night ended in a terrible disaster in which fully 100 persons were more or less seriously injured. The session had just opened and only one of the speakers had been heard, •when, without the slightest warning, the building, which had not been used for several years, collapsed, and fully 1,000 persons were thrown to the floor beneath.

Many women, the wives of the visiting Elks, went down in the ruins. Fully 200 persons, who were on the first floor of the building, and immediately beneath the banquet hall, were crushed beneath timbers and lay helpless. The fact that all the electric lights in the building went out at the time the building gave way, added to the terrible situation. A double alarm for the fire department was at once turned in and the city's fire force of 200 firemen and every police oliicer in the city were called to the scene as a hospital corps. The police ambulance3 and carriages cf every description were utilized to convey the injured to the hospitals and to their hotels.

When the police and firemen arrived ou the scene the excitement was so intense that they scarcely knew where to begin first. An immense crowd of people had be,in attracted to the place 1)7 the noise of the falling building and rlui groans of the unfortunates who were pinned bonoath bricks and timbers. The streets for several blocks were choked. The air was full of anxious inquiries for friends and relatives who were thought to have been in the building. Within a few minutes the police, a in a in immediate neighborhood of the building and placed ropes around to keep tne crowd back.

In the meantime the firemen had set to work to extricate the wounded from beneath the mass of timbers, and they were aided in their work by the liotel^ keepers and residents near the scene

reception of the injured, and eve-py, available conveyance was pressed.Ityio service to carry them to their liyteti..,,' Meanwhile physicians were oh' rnW' scene, and were doing everytft??fe itfv their power to aid the unfoJ¥.uiia$&r"' who had been caught in the ctfasfiv quickly as the unconscious -.-.for.mr.of

Tho excitement

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Li'the excitaaioiit.1 of: the'AllsaWt-err.'ii was ., alnipsit ini possible vt(h proo'tive :ic-f ouuttj},.detajls.

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Every liouse^ was thrown open for thai! ing i^ tt^(^6tleUA(^t«o|Viithk.dii3}ureO Wesc betygee#

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victim was taken out of tha,r\iii|%,fys(UJra adopted atr Atl^ii.tic-. Cility 5-l4istt 3»jtf ing hands bore it to the nearest place, and everything that surgiq^J^lv^l could do to alleviate their sufferings was done.

:..ieporfe]t

beenraat piogrcsH iii.uhe bmMirlg,'«iiid.4l id4«fc.l/ asr/paid-ito 'tht? njfcttiar 'gPftTftf'i thaloiiti itt "^11 Wje-lihoo.d^ti4. the..'|, lodgp. -(it'he qoesfcinipot'" «yinfciDrills hn-^est ca,E-teiH!^i(J. e^ent ot-.vthe cur^l by• tiifeaJauiesto\V5Bt:ihiutapn «wasl

pf tlii injml'-WA.

cai^|wx'^ cfijijpiied, but the foljiow^^are pLp,inore seriu^sly^hjj^ ed:^,'/ ,, .Tallied J.' ^-iuSti oii^'NeW York, both,. legs brolteii.'

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Mavoi,: Wolfe,ri Atlantic

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City,: liglit-1

lioust} engineer, injured internally. GharJcs W^SL'olwell, 'Gamdeii^-leg aliid arm broken i:

Frederick. (Claproth, both logs.iand botJ^ arms. brykeii,i has cilice pdietjl. F. ^ckmai^, .Ganideii, leg a^id.arin britken.' .,

of Hfrt el' Tl'ily-'

moi?(f,-this 5ty',-' sfeouldt&r'' badly crushed and ot^iei-wise injured. Charies W. Foote, Minnoa]xjlig, .maimed and bruised.™"-™

Detective JtuiM* -Bcfyle, JiTiiiirej^Slis, badly bruised and injare(i internally. 1 Mm^Arjnstrong, ,his daughter,.aged 11, hrokeii. -j ri ,• .-ii p. W, Jjuuibju'd, l^oston, leg.broken,

HQr^*"4,nxdC Kiifit Oirange,-'^.,J baciv.uVoKeif!

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7. Ml-#. 'Fl^ioliman, -'Philaael^hiav bdth' Jegsbrokcai. :r#?:

G.u^I-jFocrte^afni broken. j. -Bufce, ta^r^jndvbody.

Leb'fftitd ifw Yotfc" H^h^^Gai^eyVwffe ana- Phlila•''delpftia^^ ..".0 -nRcr 4 -ci a Mra. Livesleyj iand dbiiglitfer, (Pli ilao 3de^i^ox,triw.}f *3 -ai -i *it ^v.r%^§rri«gerj wrr r,

Mrs. Japtha, Newju# Miss Fredenthal, Philadelpnia. Miss Guriugen. Detroit. Mrs. W. Bl^i(^,,mw8Y6Kfk-:

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injAW'iiifibrnrilljK1 -»ri (J^rtPrM)to, t5«ndetti Antonio: fEhainonil, Philadelphia

PreH#8 Eckni,ttH^ M.ouiit Holly, 2J ij ,. W. J-Ji^e, Giuud^en

Piu«aade, BrooMynjwiiil '0 ntmlj

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New York city, e::alted ruler of Ifcvr York Lodge No. 1, both legs broken. Mrs. Henry Herring, Rochester. .. "Mrs. Rudolph Glasser, Pittsburg.

Miss. Cornelia Glasser, Pittsbnrg. Mrs. F. M. Newbury, Pittsburg. Fred Shultis, Pittsburg. A. B. Conn, New York. M. Richmond Beringer, New York. rs. Fleischman, Philadelphia. "William Henry Rice, New York. Jennie Rockwell, Philadelphia. Mr. Gardner, Philadelphia. Mrs. L. Frey. Philadelphia. A number of the members of Jennings' band of Camden, N. J., were injured.

The members of the Washington Elks and their friends escaped without injury.

The first victim to succumb to his injuries was Frederick Claproth of 840 Kimber street, Camden. Se died shortly after midni |.ht at a neighboring hotel, to which »e had been conveyed. Claproth had been in the crowd on the lower floor of the building when the crash came. Both his legs and arms had been broken. He never regained consciousness.

ELK LONGER,

O N O E N O

cistlsvll -i 1- ••aooa Gtetad Bxadted'ziRulciJtiEffljy,

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moment ot my re^ult^f my prayers and euaeavors ior years, and in welcoming Mr,,,L)etwi}er we welc0"f5W?'M?'tl%1iClK^ffi ''tlle dotintry"^,

TliBftei^nsiapOU- i^hifeh th'^'Sftlgr ^-as umttJdl prarddfes -tMife £th^ :cdii8t!i:MnSoiii ksu^nii ^eiir5o.,th.^,wb^i'd#.^ue rli5dge /«.«^i

if

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anidst::ithe'

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bled crowds was even gi'etit^i 'tliaiiI,tK'^t' in tiie ini media to1: neighborhood ot'-tll&'f buildii'ig. All polite,.OtV «'!.werej rife. It was fiiwt

that .ttiej

building liad qt^i^ht tfxfc i^il. th^^j.-.* the oonsequt}ji|j" mine juhiuy7'.!,l^v^s Jaud been crushefV-but iiahio that the entire ^dl'lic^iiadJ'^liap.s^d/tA^ it had beon'^enm-affy Icndwri, h'o\y6VM .'|' W' f: that, tlifMSoouifl l^ssfon,"ot- tln owier h'^'t'

Detroit wjy.1 be eftoct

aiiapSgiVgfi3 'Be^niiin|p

I« tl30At3ia.e'i of.tho: twJa PaaixsutftSWn e.^

(P%b h^«#i(:-:Pii3:it#-'. wMtili. iatojiaBct

wipja jjij^stpwiA, ^a(^y/i-iu^idr !iitr

otli^r .^nth 'tKe.. AtlanJio, ,Cij.v- £a«tioiw

the-^\m:iiesed\Vir'.^aii'dI6d^\yiil-"bl

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on the second pallet ahd Siiprehie Judge tic, are d^paBlo and do not easi}y tear. Given State Su^eHirtehdeht Sabin ami With such a list of virtues, tlioy fail to .Railroad GdintoiSsioiier- l-Oi-king \vvv6 niak& their1 i)hicef The pulp yields tci

renominated^ .ev/cscv'tc -"J" Senator Allison was pcesi• nt and was, receiyecL. %ij^. wi}d.,. and,. snthiasiaMtio, demonstrations when his nanje,

lwiia

mentioned in connection-with the presidency. r. •»*. ,* The re^ol^vtiona^.wjEfpe, aoiu^Fati^gft inainly reiterati,ng tha^fi^p,ubjican tional platforpi on "tarift" ^nCsliplis.

currency

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JUenvj Jiaiu.lu jMexjhpot- ..c,

Ai-HUftySKQVJSt

muulvv. damage:: was doae iiy waslwuts

Tj^Ki^y i31nlyi!.dl.Tici^adinga-:co]33redc|ri^ imftit. ija-,. -IvAUMiii arerraiMUir HIAUKKtiuid*

Jie years'•'lernP that a^M^fci a few»day»i

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'Ailed, BttRJkl^tf.

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USES 0¥ WOOD PULP.

HOW E O E S S A E E O IN

RAPIDLY DEPLETED.

A Tast Industry—How It Is Supplanting Other and More Common materials. Light, Strong, Elastic, Tough and Durahie—Process of Its Manufacture,

[Special Correspondence.]

Arlington,

Vt., July

to visit these mountain or woodland dis-

tricts and to some in contact with practical

woodsmen to realize in overrun approxi-

mate degree how vast an interest is that

of making wood pulp and how completely

tho product is supplanting other and more

familiar ones.

Scene of

The Two Pactions United Amid Great Enthusiasm. Atlantic City, July 11.—Yesterday morning's session of the Grand Lodge of Elks witnessed the completion of the peace negotiations for the uniting of the two factions of the great order. Itwas the result of a secret conference lasting the greater part of the previous night, at which Meade D. Detweiler and several representatives jL the Buffalo faction and the grand exalted ruler and grand lodge of- the Atlantic City faction were present.

A committee was appointed to escort Mr. Detweiler, who was the.roeogmzod head of the Buffalo faction, into the meeting hall yesterday.

1

His "arrival

was announced, and as lie entered the building the entire grand lodge rose in a body, and with hands elavped sang "Auld Lang Syne." -.Cheer uftefiGheer' rent the air, hnts-nwena. -thrown/ to.' the1 ceiling, and the vvij(!e«t_.kind p&je#*

thusiasni reig^gd,,, T^pre us nr brief cessation when. MrvPe.ipw.p,iler.ascejulyd-1 to the staj{e/''!a§ 'graspeiV.tliQ jli,un4.„',9£. around us, however, are the hills \yith ii'ii-v- I tlioii* spruce growth, and the agthalhiapaif

'Xirtle^""Hay, '4ii'd bpt'li

Grand men wer& visibly After.: addit)ssii-l'g Mr. Hay as- -grand'' exalted ui«r:&mi& aaotlter- .autbiii^C ofcliaor^Hgj iU#r.3)ufci,jauid. by rovxewingthp/diffe£«nu^4h|!it sepap&ted lod."

,ver&'visibly-aftectM!

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Jnd- -others tht^^ri

''vsf''

The simple statement, made on undoubted authority, that the daily supply of cue New York paper ruiuw».s,fwn,ac^es of available spruce lumber, or the yearly consumption 3,500 acres'js in itself sullicient to startle tho average reader andto account for much ofSB??!ft%?W^ialiwinrit

is heard on all sides*.-In tip&^Mijfted there are upward of 2^, per^Hic^, ap|l their combined jyn§j$nfl|iotyifi fometjjrfrqg enormous. theje figures, big as'tliey {ire," represent olljly thfe newspaper demand, can he wonder apprehension felt lest in time wro have no forests?

Tho average householder is-familiar with, wood fiber iii a hundred convenient forms, and the term instantly suggests...,to him lightweight utensils, convenient boxes and. the like. To-learn that the same product' is utilized for sails, for bo for shoes, stockings, bicycle tires, bricks and rake teeth is to sustain a surprise that is almost a shock. Yet all these ohjcrts'aml lh'ofo are already on the. market, ijnd.,daily experiments are constantly bringing to light future possibilities and adding to the 'list.

!th(i

1

RERUBLICAN^.

a I a 71. '3'lirt-foriwvAiir.ovud Of. y.) %v. Des Moin Krf,:rJuly:11J-^-Thy Repubil caii'Stato cxjiiveHtion yesterday wntf 0116" of the largtat and most MeiiiOral-iuitlie history .of tliei. ipartyj in

Jlo\va.

Theite

wejJerlU candidates for •governor aiid 'siS ballots: were uecessajy to decide the con.test^^sulting in..the1iwniination-ot\(xott--i eraLCi. M., L)r#ik,e.of fjiterviile fiir.gover-. nor.' iIo^. Mfjitt .P^ipcjtt. of Waterloo. wa"4 no^nixidted for lieuteuuht goyerho,r

hardest rain fox^years ,vi.sitpd:.tk^-l^r1vjf.puI^ judges the^n^ro.s.^"(nce 21,^4 receives ,U gut

«uponajkBviaiOTIfle»tvrt^iidiaoi g^wnt^^ifthro^^^cmYAU^

7,

Clotli Prom IV.xnl Pulp.

England, Germany and France all -hto ahead of us in manufactures and have applied the pulp to more uses than we hnvV. but one has only to indulge in an hour'* chat with a clever woodsman to discovepthat our vast forests are fast melting away. Just at this spot there is no factory, bur. I am told local interest has been aroused and there is to be one built etose bv. ~Att"

faeture- is "how going on .not'.^a^yjihil^.:.,!1 away. A piece of thb cfiitiy damp papeJ*.-! just out of the 'prefe' as put, ty'ty 'My liand's otrly a few days ago," and it 'is indeed difficult to realize" trliat^this lujni'msflbrans sulistancn/ exlrAliVvg jt\(Tcdi(lcid\ocii9iv\oif.. ttfio wcrtidsj, 6an, ih' 's,lightly.dStferjjnt-fpriji, Jbe mfid'e iirfd a dlb'fh ''so 'fcldsel^ r^esen^hilhg.1 cottfoii'itf? to p/fSs^oi'(Sttch..tb ihexperidiiceil eyes

1

Toe tiCr Snro,

nijiriuf(iptuf6'of olbth

froni wood pulpf is ^s :r«.t,Ux its^j^fiiicyj bu^ ja, 'rce0jgiiiJze3..orkaii^oX the 'ih^. idu'sti^ tefls-lisJ that .sainplcs hayo ccpno aim_.|luit tho iabfitj'' is bey tain' to bb nu|i iVpmi'tji^ "f. loiig, rthd thtit at 'p«9ie"^^^fc^.asfQipv. ishingly cheap.'*' ^TJitt^&ail'is put through' some chei^jftpl pjjQQes# Wahjie-h^feduifBS it to

90CTd?flTO&6i. K£p(^^uii^j^'ar|^ily,]^!ii)^. ad to a

¥i

sh(W.lijpo tjiijtft la^t qi^vpl^fe,v,-41L]w,. rei

^'^erift ail^gooa, auraine stocjiiiigs-a,rp,

alreadj* made, and shoes-two befng experi-

mented with .sit. is not

iinj^ji^blctisrejinivy-yi'C beI.rdktheU AiiUJ®b witJi nr.q,dM?t#3 -liiatio wlmlL^f V) 11 i:Bbe \\-oi-Jd pulp** ..:ii ,v ajiq b«ing:3iiad«^tE( )i ti at iffready/- -i) or rather substitutes for brick.-v^aiidi.'O'no -f Engld^hoja j} o| a pitmiet'rii-BgfraiiTe'.of iniild is .^iiij[ t-q-iia^jjoimtrtic ed.h is iawirR.11 hot]iowilJjiij: and. Witliout, ftfom'the jjulij iii its .yjirious form*,,' v:l .i si

Horses are already shod with, the heavy subsfur.tial-, paipes, so-itiiliod, and itn-i's

claiiiied.tli».it:tih(J natTisboes:iiava'-nuiny-.lid*v-vaiUas) s^c-iy the, old'. They £i.massuredly-'" lighi or, whicth fact tho horse musfceousidfeir-: a great gain, and "they have tllCTgroat ..advantage 'citf'WdKlmiJg V'better fooling" 011 slippery road's-:

IfiJpcrtoratetl1 'with the- necessary libles' while-damp', ttliej" dniv be nailed to'the hoof after the Usual metftdd, but are frequently made fast with- •:^lue,-! a 'pbssifMHty which in itself ..civmmefids them to the hum'aiie 1 niindi IJuriling-the hoof and driving nails intuit may be painless, but' surely a light slioe felued f.ist ivf an iniprovement.'i

Durable Window Panes. I

Sails made from it aro airtight, are elas

doog no

oiitS are rypol^M ii^oth^r-plttCrai rifle\,slm..out,fyijr^i9' ,nseL the-ieliarpshooter of this :city, (SU- the banta le roiid,

CHU

aI)irm

on the Silver Gity branchf product can be made pferteftly translucent, doz^n »m^H,^bridgea ar^repo^ted,- goii^ j8 unbrftakahlo, Or practimlly'Sf^ inid 'i'S'iu^'' .bet-vyep^,. .Rincq^^.anji Ll|eju^ngr ^§or^ diffemnt to-'dtiho^jftertdr-dBfen^6sl ^x^G.9fe4'.-».sr.i *}(. ••imdelil)eii(i5toiy1''dflstrQiABd a Jihtcfiotv'i(

10'"-

pressure5 h'nd r5trur^s to its normal stat-o .1. from-, poor 'printing 'and tho cheap paper ai'te'r-'fho irraMtibr of rubber, wliilo at the used, for he imitated many bt tho Kngliah sametimoit is much lighter than the lat- papers in these .matters, and poor "stock" "ter substiyjce, so that. nails .madeifrom1 it and'too' rapid prudsftork will not go in- the gotall jthe advantage of tho elasticity: vjrith United States. Perhaps it is not generally -1 -none oOho aismlvantage of \veighi. Gun known, but tho successful weekly papers turrets, "Tiy "Jiieans of this saxne, quality of }t0f this country average higher in medianr,^elasticity, have been vastly improved when jcal beauty than those of any other cOun[a made of pnlfif .tvad aa if to,addsfcMl!anfrth- try in tiie world. If tho comic papers of er toK^lf^o^m^dvern warfare, the p.u}i» ren^ America were as badly printed as Punch, ders?[^e snarp^hooteiij ,tkppro^ima,tely_ if ,. Judy Fun and the other Knglish comics not£pri^irely safe,, cjige, so^tp sgeaki -j' arc, they would find it decidedly hard to

the j,

shot^ '.as ,j»re aini^d,,ats thq

Rio PuertoJbndgg,oxi^..tl^, Atianto ^4,WitMn^ .I| fe.soft yi.eUliiig, yet^rpi. Pacific \VnsHvashea aw^y, detainmg all jt tlVolbulTetL which imbeds itself train's fi'dmaiid ^everiir.wash^ laml

r^pr-

1

8.—One

has need

1

shape, and each pane can either bo nailocl in place or set in with putty or glue. As it is extremely light in weight the framework does not -require to be so heavy, in addition to which advantage the cost of freightage is greatly reduced.

Use of tin !li:fuse.

But of all the discoveries which have led to the exalration of the spruco the recent ones as to the utilization of waste appeal most keenly to the economic mind..?* Heretofore, and indeed at the present time, 75 per cent of the entire field is left as waste in the slab pile and the sawdust heap.

The latest scient'ifie investigations go to show that from this, enormous proportion marketable materials can be produced, One of the leading French engineers has just made a (TtSCOyery by .which tho whole of the wood.'caii" he converted into gas/ The apparatus- for so doing is claimed to" be both simple and cheap, so that without great expense it can be placcd convenientto sawmills and forests. As jet the dis'covluy 'has'nof'becn pnf fo'practical use!"

Vast Quantities of starcli are also contained in this.15.per cent of waste, and it? is saki ,th lt onceWfryxperiuient for free-

,|,vin*.!.it"*'aro .complete that indu-ury alont* should Wtotli nearly if not quito as much as tho^iVi^:

To the laymtHJ itseeiy,s that beforo long the tree can be inadfc-to supply all human j' needs, excejit^liatuf l'oorl, and in spite of thy local feeling ofassu'tance that our forests can be trusted to reproduce themselves the looker on can but wonder how long thes, supply will equal the demand and marvels? that more caiv' iS "not taken to preserve a growth of such immense and such increasing value. fe present the one use to which the spruce pulp is put which in any way counterbal-& tu6c.cs -the immense demand upon forests* land is the making "6f telegraph poles.as I They are rapidly supplanting the tall trees that hitherto have been deemed e^iential and so iH-some degreo compensate for tho general devastation of spruce hind. The?* poles of paper have iniy merits. They are light in weight, tuey can bo molded® anyAieigJit.j.aijifl.ras they are hollow, wires" can be entered with ease, in addition to all of-which they are far moro din-able than tho na' ara.I wood. CLAUL 15lCE.

JULIAN RALPH.

get

barin.1= 'fWih-lheJloophole or

pUr,sno his deadly vyqrk and feel little

because of return fire. This new

U]is nnd TvowiT^F T11 tH« Tjifo of a M"«»1I Known Journalist. ,,-.^.-,.,^-.^-^-^81 [Special Correspondence. I1

A^Su'ry ^?KliK, July 8 —Julian Ralph, whb&tr -ardfelt's trn vel" and -moro ini rcquent sketches of—New York life are attra,cti,n^ nuich attenfiun the magazine-of-late, is a native df Red iBank, a small town not many mites fro'ni here. His summer homo is thorn also, farcin spito of ins familiarity with many parts,, of t,lm world, ho- likes- that part of 'l"?ew Jersey that is near the shore much.hctter.than any other section of the Avorld's crust.

Ralpli'^s fainify wiis 'iii sonic way connect- |J| ed witli 'railrSatKiig, flespittt'-fho'fa'ct that Raipli hiiMs«'l-f, when teweling or at work as,a, jQ^rpalj^/loqk^iimofp lsijke a dressed up farmer than like anything else. This is not to his discredit, of course, for' very mhSiy-snoccssfttl'! inert" ai?f rather chrele-s height of fc.cl-o.th ing imus^ng n*-

prv~-^PH mil lengrp,, nnojogranns, tp re^d.. his critici*Ms tip^4he'fr« Worn by

th-d3eftn^-ei«fiaro^-v

on.

P'A s-.p^pjjerty pf, ftJ^,S:i

to

sexpert,

panes

'jiiy*

JH*pd

fh,e«j- .li^ no

-'"Q" s^rej, ^hpseij* Vq^lld), |or' ifSi

t-i ,uw .. 1 h»t ^hltt fBliglitixlMadvaotageifts-'

"0097%inceof soft, pleasaiVt li^jtffrhn% i^'frefedom

^i^^rn^^i^^hitS0^froin liability.to breaJ^^SattwU boys whose

undergoes'MEi^^ii^

it becomes a substit$tfl»fa0 glass, but as and

•'ietoqdr. sto^V%heaemiwl*atijtoidtt*ittl*ofl'i6l*^^ •^kin^^iphi^nH iswiaJi^-i^doiaieus

"fiJlqrjRdThe stock can bo aSSo1'*

a..-I c,J

And

Wiiut is.tlio secriife of Jils succiesd? -Hettfe jf ^L/entl»ushiatic. He looks .«t» the things ho t,fki |haSl|[0 wiittiabout witli tho oybsof acliild,^-U.. ^feht ',and,f#hus diseUvars a lot ofj.facts, intSfVeAt- .1 t.ling (ito.f erary-iiutHi, wiiichawttMrs WlthtMitc:.'!. his, cnflntsiason ittnil fro.Aff eyaA miss »U»* #c--')getbeFoa^'heivijjraa.!iflO)iioil tol thitftofcf hiosti spensfe^Dihiiiien ifiJUWKflry JM0 ow^dl 'theicc Rtifccess tow hilinr :entliu.sia&tQ, a'Att-oQ., inostiauinfeireee.sifuJj men

rinoliairs.

ns&i *t?sxx&S:i v.».

fflfflKffi&Bm §w«Sisii§^^

tYftf

It

•i

f-

Uphyrh is

Ralplv^und ot#Whil^yefrhe Was a U6y that fclieiibn'^-WayiSfer -'hah to'be-happy-"v would bo :1id g&vinto? tho:

:production oti

"copy." Tiierefpf^^s.^vligrii 'stillquifcer.r youngr-ho

:we^ijb.

ll

to-N«w York, whore he

got.^niplpyj«f}*f,§n[|yi^^un-sw a rep^teR.-,^.'' He.(did,g^pd5jh^ii^st wrk: pven .tlter^ -hii%3, failed' tc^js$vo ^vny- great hit ., an^l.- alt^r aw,iii"le J-elt Dana's paper. b«:ai-t,-y for.. The.Woiild,^ then uydor tiie n\anage nuvpt o|. jitV-iiiiwn- JJynryJ-l.urlhwt'.,-! ^v'hen, Josepli uiit zer liought -the ,pap^ri: bly, hi4'o,iai).R -.^plf .left it. ,anil( returnedtp The Suii.. I-lis, i-ir.-at notwork, was done 5.. in ^^'rica(of,a£ti(d^,53ii^ripl,iYe ofjfhe-iqit,.^ carnival at- Sfuntj^'al ono winter. Theyt.:i wero ^o thorowghl^j ^l^criptjve as.tOj.make his i'eputation as oiie who c.ould nliiiost make tlio reader Kee-th-m-»u«'h the writer's eyes, and sinees that time ho has l^eCn regarded by newspaper men as one ttf thi fj| best en picturers living.- .•

A little. Jnter he hegan to writo. for-tho. syndicates -, .wliere: hp, obtained, "signature, and this nuido him known to tho general public as well, as-- to the profes- ision. Then he went abroad,- where his pen a*c found plenty of things to d( s:'ribe in new and interesting though perfectly simple ways, and so his fame grew. At about tht y' same timo lie,.began- to iii»d an-occasional place for his work in tho periodicals, and |g| then, liko so many other masters of tho art of word painting, he became seized of the desiro to be a publisher and established aft weekly in New York under the title of Chatter. It was. a success artistically, but as a business venture it failed utterly. I *. liavo always thought, this came chiefly rf

iu

V'

Chatter died,

retdrn to Ralph

!andhe VWait back to The Sun, remaining

thereiuntil atiout six or eight months ago, when ho left the field of journalism for thaLof iJpriodicalwritihg, tlie inducement §i being the oiier of a big salary—how big is not.a part of the public's knowledge—by ono.GiVjtho.bost known publishing houses ?i in tho land. This house-Bet Ralph to traVeling tQ and- ifro- butwe'dn the uttormGkt^ parts of tho earth. China.alid Jnpan Wore ^included inhisilatiist jaunt,, but, singularly* enougi» he-has never ybt visited Maine)ofr1"' :Texds .twQ X)f. tho most^interesting stales Jin his native land. ...

antt: 2al\*«ay^

lniyirrbceBaBltJioistltthatl^tfelityi') •/,' uiiiXiX. norj

r:vr,i x'r!l

^f» Mi^lUttSCTaiROto^

'2 mi "T?—-jrorrpraisOTO 'di -4 x#retty'

jt