Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 January 1908 — Page 3

GREKNCASTLE, INDIANA. THITODAY, JAN. 30. 1f)OH.

PAGE THREE.

\

E. B. LYNCH House Furnisher and Funeral Director GREENCASTLE, IND.

iffi HESS GliiER

He Is a Wizard. With Science For His Confederate.

WONDERFUL BATTERY WORK.

12 and 14 North Jackson St. V

(Telephones 89 and 108

WILLIAMS (&> DUNCAN Sanitary F^iLimbiniy Hot Water, Steam and Gas Fitting Electric Wiring and Fixtures ’ | ALL WORK GUARANTEED I Phone 650 No. !() N. Indiana St. I •

COAL COAT.

ANIMAL TAILS.

v./' v/ i \ I i Vu V/ a Y 1 j

The Functions of Those of Cats. Lions

/A 1 T

and Jcguars.

n

A cat never actually wags its tail.

ii

M by should it when It can pur? But

nevertheless it seems to serve tin* same

We are located on Ben Lucans old

purpose in permitting a temporary ex-

lumber yard grounds where we will handle all kinds of COAL. (Near Vandalia Station) We are ready to make you prices on Block, Anthracite, Nut, Slack or any kind or quality We are in business to sell you any kind of Coal that you may desire and we can guarantee you the prices. Give us a call or let us know your

wants.

F. B. Hillis Coal Co. OSCAR WILLIAMS, Manager F.B. HILLIS F. SHOPTAUGH

penuiuire ot excess nervous energy when the animal is under great strain. For instance, when carefully stalking a bird or a man. as in the case of a kitten or a Mon. the tip of the tall is never still for a moment ever curling and uncurling. We may compare this to the nervous tapping of the foot or fingers in a man. When an angry lion is roaring his loudest, his tail will fre quently lash from side to side, giving rise among the ancients to the belief

The Best

ICOAL

■ ■ ■

| Cheapest Prices ■ ■ ■' '■ '■«— • — ■ ■ ‘ :. A. CAWLEY Phone 163

i that he scourged his body with a hook j | or thorn which grew From the end of

the tail.

When a jaguar walks along a slen- 1 der bough or a house eat perambulates the top of a board fence, we perceive another important function of the tail, that of an aid in balancing. As a tight rope performer sways his pole, so the feline shifts Its tail to preserve the center of gravity. The tail of a sheep seems to be of little use to its owner, although in the breed which is found in Asia Minor and on the tablelands of Tartary, this organ functions as a storehouse of fat and sometimes reaches a weight of fifty pounds. When viewed from behind. (lie auinial seems all tail, and when this appendage reaches its full size it Is either fastened between two sticks which drag on the ground or it is suspended on two small wheels.-“-C. William Beelie in Outing Magazine.

interurran time table.

Uv. G. C.

for Ind.

Lv. Ind. for G.

6:15

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12:15

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1:15

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2:15

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4:15

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11:16

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. 11:30

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*3.27 p. * Freight

m. . . trains.

. *4:45

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Lv. G. C. for T.

H.

Lv. T. I

L

for a

5:41

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BUSHRANGERS. The Most Noted of the Later Day Outlaws In Australia. Bushrangers were originally runaway convicts who took to the “bush,” as Australians call the backwoods, and became holdup men. About the year IXitO the bushrangers became so numerous that they fought regular engagenumts with [losses and soldiers sent out to capture them, and this form of crime continued sporadically until within recent years. The most famous of later rangers were the Kelly brothers. After many daring crimes and hairbreadth escapes the Kellys actually held up the entire village of Jerilderle, N. S. W., which had a population of UOo. Ned Kelly looted the bank of SMO.OOO, while his three pals held the men of the village cooped up In their homes. Although there was a special bushranging act In force at the time authorizing the detention of persons supposed to be in communication with the outlaws, the Kellys were not heard of again for nearly a year, when they "stu<k up” the small town of Glen rowan. In Victoria. Here they were brought to hay, and three of tfie desperadoes were shot dead in a house they had barricaded, while the leader. Ned Kelly, was brought to the ground j with a bullet through the legs. He was hang's) in 1880. All four of the men were in the habit of wearing an armor made of plowshares and weighing almost a hundred pounds.—New York American. Hank Foolishness. •'When attacked by a cough or a cold, or when your throat Is sore, it is rank foolishness to take any other medicine than Dr. King’s New Discovery,” says C. O. Eldridge, of Empire. Ga. “I have used New Discovery seven years and I know It is the best remedy on earth for coughs and colds, croup, and all throat and lung troubles. My children are subject to croup, but New Discovery quickly cures every attack.” Known the world over as the King of throat and lung remedies. Sold under guarantee at The Owl Drug Store. 50c and |1.00. Trial bottle free. 3“

* Freight trains. To stop a train at night display a

light.

RUPERT BARTLEY.

Engraved cards—script —at the Herald office. One hundred cards and a plate tor $1:50.

Amazing Results Achieved by Our Coast Defense Experts and the Bewildering Array of Apparatus by Which Accuracy of Fire Is Attained. The war department makes little noise ulmut the condition of the coast ! defenses. Such activity as one sees al>out the fortifications reveals little. 1 he sun spreads a flood of gold upon the soft, grassy covering of their sloping sides, and somehow one does not think of them as Impregnable fortresses. Such guns as one sees look innocuous enough. They do not seem as formidable as one imagines they ought to look. In fact, however, these fortresses are mailed fists with a vel vet covering. Army officers assert j that no hostile war vessel could reach | the upper bay of New York harbor If It could la- seen. It would be annihilated before it reached the Narrows. Gunnery lias shared in the modem j tendency to specialize and to become I highly scientific In its practice. Gunj ners are now specialists. A battery is a highly organized mechanism, working almost automatically. In the old days the men who tired the guns used to see what they fired at. Today, with guns capable of throwing a thousand pound shell ns far us the eye can see on a clear day. the men who discharge the guns no longer necessarily see the object which Is to be struck by the giant hail they release. ITitil the shot Is fired the gun Itself cannot he seen

above the parapet.

Hitting the target has become almost an exact science. By mechanical means the striking of a target has become so nearly an infallibility .that the tugs which tow the lloatiug targets are separated from them by only COO feet of line. The men upon the tugs have no more expectation of being struck than if they were a mile behind the gun. They never have been struck, although the different batteries have frequent practice. The song of the shell to the men on .the tug is not like the song of the Lorelei, for death does not follow in Its wake. To he sure, like motoring, one has to become accustomed to face what seems like impending death. Faith in the gunner, us in the chauffeur, and in the gun. ns in the motor car, is an essential. What is done by the guns in some of our forts is illustrated by what has recently been accomplished at two of the forts along the Atlantic coast. At Boston a target four and a half miles from the fort and moving along the horizon nt the rate of five miles an hour was struck by every shot fired from a ten inch battery in less than four minutes, the numlier of shots being six. The following day a battery of twelve Inch guns performed the same feat, bunching the shots more closely than did the ten inch guns. The shots of both batteries were so close together at the target that they might have been inclosed In a rectangle 10 by 20 feet. Battery I’arrott, at Fort Monroe, recently was called upon to fire at a moving target an unknow n distance away. Actually It was about three and one-half miles away. 1’yramidul In shape. It looked as it moved across the water about as a leg o' mutton sail on a skiff would appear at a distance of four miles. Every shot was a hit. and the fourth and last destroyed the target. The eutive round was fired In 1

minute 9 seconds.

One of the firing tests Is called ‘‘tiro command.” In this test the gunners are expected to change the lire from one target to another of the three in the string ns directed and hit it w ithout changing the speed of the fire. The targets are supposed to represent the vitals of a warship. This mythical vessel is considered to have a freeboard, or height out of water, of twen-ty-four feet. In estimating the hits, the basis Is that of a representative battleship. A shot which does not actually hit the target, but w hich would have pierced a vessel had it been where the target was. Is counted a hit. Officers on the tug towing the targets work out the score by means of the “range rake.” This is an implement which looks like a garden rake with a short handle. The spaces between the teeth each represent a given number of yards. When a shot strikes the officers sight along the handle and note how many spaces to the right or left of the center the shot hit. A gunner of the old school would turn gray If he had suddenly to adapt himself to the new methods in the face of the enemy. Hair line telescopes, surveying instruments, barometers. thermometers, anemometers, weather vanes, tide gauges and stop watches are required to secure the requisite results. The accuracy of the fire Is obtained only by taking Into consideration such details as the curvature of the earth, the speed of the target or the hostile warship, the range or distance of the object from the gun, tin* pressure or density of the air. the speed and direction of the wind, the temperature and age of the powder when placed In the gun. the height of the tide at the moment of firing the shot and the “drift” of the projectile. There can Ik? no guesswork in securing such artistic results as making hits

will) successive shots.

Tlie effect of all of these factors In the combination under all possible conditions has been worked out by experiments and computations and the result utilized In devising apparatus which automatically registers the In-

f rfhaffon which I* essential'af Such * eed that half a dozen half ton shots i t in Is* thrown into a ship from a sin- | gio buttery In the space of less than j four minutes. The "drift" of the shot | is the distance to the rigid which a revolving projectile from a rilled gun will go in the course of a given distance. The range and the point where a vessel will tie at the moment a shot could reach it are reckoned in actual practice at least once in every twenty seconds. The establishment of twenty seconds as the interval when a fresh survey shall be taken is bused upon the fact that no boat could change its speed or Its course sniff, iently in that space of time to affect the probability of a shot hitting it. The gunner may have all the knowledge of what to do when a hostile ship appears and know exactly what ids gnu will do under any given condition, but there are two tilings which cannot be learned until the exact moment when the gun is to lie tired. One is the direction in which the gun is to be pointed, and the other is the amount of elevation or depression which must be jilven the muzzle in order to have the shot reach the exact spot where the vessel will be when the shot may be expected to reach there. Attached to the carriage of the gun and high enough so that the gunner can look through it over the parapet is a telescope with hair Hues crossing the | opening at right angles to each other. The telescope is set so that it can be moved from the left to the right by menus of a thumbscrew. Tills | erinits right and left corrections to lie made in sighting the gun after the range has been determined. The amount of elevation which is necessary in order to make the shot “carry” to the exact spot where the enemy will I e is "set off" at the gun by means of another mechanism. At other points in the fort are heavily built towers containing the instruments for securing the range and the apparatus for automatically working oul the calculations Instantaneously. There arc two of those lustrumeuts at a known distance apart. A hostile warship Is seeu in the oiling. The two surveying instruments arc turned u;• n it from their respective angles, while the gunner takes his place nt the telescope attached to the gun. Others are busily engaged in loading the gun. Tlie nian at the telescope shortly receives from the towers directions how to set Ids sight, while the other men charged with “laying" the gun in direction and elevation receive the data by which they make "settings" at the gun. They swing the gun around until the object w hich Is to be struck appears in the center of the hair line eyepiece of the telescope and set the mechanism which will insure the proper elevation when the gun rises from its cradle. Suddenly the gun springs up. The muzzle shows over the parapet. A cloud of smoke bursts forth, and the men who have not taken the precaution to rise on their toes and open their mouths receive a shock that disturbs their eqtblihriuni and threatens their eardrums. Tlie gun settles back in its place once more. Soon there is ocular evidence that tlie shot and the hostile ship five miles away have met. to the damage of the war shjp. The decks amidships are seen to open and men run hack and forth. Steam veils the hull, for steam pipes have boon pierced. Scientific gunnery has conquered, and at the expense of a few hundreds of pounds of powder and steel a vessel which cost $2,000,000 or $3,01 '.coo has boon Incapacitated.— New York Tribune.

A Change of Mannsrs. We hardly appreciate tbeni|rfd transformation of human nature mi its highest levels within a single generation, lu this consideration "the highest levels” are those attained by the great middle class, who constitute the main audience for the best literature. At least this Is the ease in America. Thackeray in his lectures on English humorists was addressing such a class in England, and in his lecture on KteHc, contrasting the Victorian with the Queen Anne era. he said, “You could no more suffer in a British drawing room under the reign of Queen Victoria, a fine gentleman or tine lady of Queen Anne’s time, or hoar wit*.t they heard and said, than you would receive an ancient Briton.” The lecturer had Just before referred to Tyburn mid remarked that a great city had grown over the old meadows. “Were a man brought to die there now the windows would be closed and the Inhabitants keep their houses in sickening horror. A hundred years ago people crowded to sec tills last act of a highwayman’s life and make jokes on it.”—H. M. Alden hi Harper's Magazine.

The Unlettered Learned. Crudity of diction Is not always Indicative of crudity of thought. Tile latter has been longer In the wiirld than language, for the primeval savage was not without the elements of mind when gestures and grunts were Ids sole means of expression. To rebel is as human as to err. and lie who defies grammar Is not necessarily a fool. How often we hear It said. "Oh, he's an uneducated man.” and so pay no serious attention to what the "unfortunate" may have to say. It may happen that we suffer more than he does by such assumed superiority. The round of the seasons can effect as much ns a college curriculum to an open eyed man, not in tlie same direction, not with equal artistic finish, hut a fool is he who sets down tlie untutored stu dent of the outdoor world as little bettor than a fool. By syntax and prosody we cannot solve the problem of an oak tree or that of the minnow in tlie brook that flows past its gnarly roots. Greek philosophy does not explain the color of a flower nor Roman sophistry why birds build nests.—Lippiueott's.

SFZLLI'.'G NAMES.

There Was No Doubt About "Hannah" When the English Lady Finished. A bygone generation witnessed an acrimonious controversy in the Irish family of O’Conor i:i County Itoscouinion as U> the right of any brunch of the ancient race to spell the name I thus—with one "ti.” That right, it was maintained, was held only by the O’Conor Don as bend ot the house. So prolonged was the contest between the partisans of tin; O'Conor and O’Connor titles that it was called the “N-Iess” (standing for ‘‘endless”! correspondence. Finally the question was referred to Sir J. Bernard Burke, the Ulster king of arms. His decision coincided with a decision in a certain other matter namely, that much might lie said on either side. The two disputing families had a common origin, a king of Connaught, and could with propriety and in accordance with tradition spell the mime one way or the other. Fortified by this "award,” the two families have continued to spell their name with one “n” up to the present hour. Equally firm on the question ns to how his name should lie spelled was the witness hi a case tried In tlie king’s bench a few years a ;o. Asked Ids name, his prompt reply was “John ’Awkiua.” "Do you," queried conn:d, “spell your name with or without an II?” The emphatic answer was, “J-o-h-n.” As a rule, however, hi \xe have said, variety in the spelling of the minus of people, as in that of tlie names of place ■, o’.ves lit oi-igin to people not being so clear as was our friend regarding how u name should he spelled. Two stories In Illustration of this occur to us. In the first Mrs. Quiverful was having chrlsii-iied her lat;—t baby. The old minister was a little deaf. "What name did you say?” 1"queried. "I said," replied the mother, with some asperity, “ilannali.” “lo you,” said the oilier, ‘mean Anna or Hannah?" "Look ’ere," exclaimed th ‘ how llioronglily e:.uspei;.:rtl lady, ”1 won’t be hc.xniniucd In this way. 1 inean ‘I la itch hay -hen-hen hay-ha itch’— Hannah!" Tlie second incident to which we refer is this. Here nl o there was "a lady in the ease." She v a a on an iB'rand, and she had to deal with the name of another party, in brief, s'.ie had bought a pair of sleeve Hi ks for her flainc when the sh - , inn asked, "Any Initlali ml e rest mey be stated thus: She Oh. yes; I fn. - it. Engrave a "U” upon them for his !ir: i nan Shopman—Yardou me. is it Uriah or Ulysses? Names with "U” are rare, you know. She (proudly)- His name Is Eugene.— Loudon Globe.

MY UNAVAILABLE EDUCATION..

“MOLL PiTCHE:'^/ , History of the Famoui Herr no of the Revolution. “Moll ntclicr" was the daughter of a Fi'imsy Ivaiiin Gorman family living iu the vicinity of Carlisle. She was born in 1T!S. and her name was Mary Ludwig, a pure Gemiau name. Sinwas married l<> one John i asper Hayes, a barber, who when tlie war broke out with (In* mother country enlisted in the First Pennsylvania artillery and w; s afterw ard ti msferred to tlie Seventh Pennsylvania infantry, commanded by Colonel Wiliiam Irvine of Carlisle, with whoso lainily Mary Ludw ig had lived at rervl 'c. Stic was permitted to accompany h husband's regiment, serving the battery as cook aud laundress, and when at the battle of Monmouth <l-'roehold), N. J-. her husband was T.-otinded at his gun she sprung forward, sci ; the rammer and took his place to the on I of the battle. After tlie battle she carried water to the wounded, and hence her pet name of "Moll Pitcher. ’ Hayes died after tlie war was over, aud she married a si ml husband of the unine of McCauley, and at her grave in the old cemetery nt Carlisle there Is a inonunieut that bears this inscription:

Molly McCauley. Renowned In History as “Molly Pitcher," t ho 111 rot no et Monmouth; Died January, 1!"!. Erected 1 y the Citizens of Cumberland County. July 4, !87G.

On Washington's birthday, 1822. when Molly v. us nearly seventy years old, the legislature of Pennsylvania voted her a gift of v 10 and a pension of $4o per year.

An Auditive Illusion. “What town Is that a few miles to the north?” shouted the aeronaut, loaning over the edge of the basket. “Oshkosh!” yelled the agriculturist over whose farm the balloon was passing. “What?" “Oshkosh!” “What did lie say?" asked tlie aeronaut's companion. “He didn't say anything. He swore ut me.”—Chicago Tribune.

Tolerance. George Eliot was once asked what was the chief lesson she ha.l learned in life's experience, and her prompt answer was, "Tolerance.” It might have been expected from a woman who once said that she regarded life as a game of cards In which she watched each move with the deepest Interest and turned as far as possible to her own advantage.

Common Factors Schoolmaster- Now. can any of you tell me whctliei there la a connecting link between tin .initmd and vegetable kingdoms? Sma I Boy—Yes. i ir, please; there's hush!—London Opinion.

[Original ) We women are handicapped in the professions by the fact that we may marry, it's like building on foundations that may crumble away. When a man chooses a career lie knows that the more of a family lu* gets the more proficient he must lie iu Ids work. A woman knows that even a husband is liable to prevent her taking advantage of years of preparation. Realizing tills, I determined when I began to study medicine that 1 would never marry. My friends appeared doubtful, saying that I was too good looking to remain single. I put this down to flattery and pursued my studies, then took hospital work. On coining out of the hospital l hung out my shingle iu a quiet street, resolving to practice only among women and children. 1 hadn't been settled a week before I received a cull from an old lady living directly opposite, who wished me to go over to her house and see her sou. “The poor hoy." she said, "lias always been strong and well till four or five days ago, when he had trouble with his heart. Do come and see him.” Supposing from her words that her son w as a hoy, I went over. There, reclining on an easy chair, was a young man not less than twenty-five years old. lie showed no outward signs of illness, his color being good, though wlicn I took Ids hand to test his heart heat i found ids pulse quite rapid. I asked him to give me Ids symptoms, which lie did in these words: "A few days ago 1 was looking out of my window. I remember the circumstances well. It was about 2 o’clock. A cart was lumbering up tlie street. You opened your front door and went out. Suddenly my heart, which tiad always beat regularly, l>egan to jump and flutter. 1 fell hack on tills chair and waited for the unusual aclloii to subside. It finally did so. Imf It returns every day and about tlie same time.” "Do you drink coffee?" “Yes.” “Stop it at once.” “Liquors ?" “Oivaslonally.” “Stop them too." “Smoke?” "He smokes all tlie time,” his mother put In. . "Stop smoking, hut gradually—two cigars a day for awhile, then one and finally none.” He looked quite cut up, but said presently, "Well, seeing It's you, I'll do It, but there’s no other doctor in Christendom that could persuade me.” "That’s the advantage of a woman physician," said the mother. "Men are dictatorial and unsympathetic.” I put my ear down on to the patient's chest to hear the heating of his heart. It certainly beat rapidly, but l could hear no sounds denoting any organic difficulty. I told him that his trouble was nervous and by following my directions lie would soon be free from it. I went away not expecting to lie called iu again. Within a week my patient's mother came over to say that her son, notwithstanding that in* had followed my recommendations, laid daily recurrences of Ids trouble. I asked her when they came on, and she said about 2 o'clock. This was the hour that 1 went out on my afternoon round of professional calls, and I agreed to go in the next day to see the patient. ! went the next day directly from my office aotoss the street and found the young man looking well enough, hut the action of Ids heart was certainly above the normal. Well, I attended him for several months, his condition remaining much tlie same. I found my visits to him a relict’, for instead of talking about his ailment lie seemed to attach little huportatico to it and chatted delightfully on otiier subjects. Many a time when visiting him I would suddenly discover that my time had been slipping away and I must curtail my afternoon calls. Indeed, there were times when I found I had neglected some imports ns case. One afternoon when our meeting had been especially delightful my patient said to me; "I have told you a great deal about my heart, but you have told me nothing about yours. Mine heats wildly whenever I see you go out on your round of afternoon visits. At other times it is normal. In other words, It lias heat for you over since I first saw you leave your office. I would know if yours does not beat for me.” I rose with dignity, not to say Irrlta tiou. and replied: “Do you mean to tell me that you have been fooling me all tills time?" "My heart is affected.” “For for me only?” “For you only. 1 can't love but one woman at one time." Opposing currents struggled within me. I was vexed to have been treated like a -well, like u woman Instead of a physician. Nevertheless I could uot keep down a delicious sensation that I was loved. However, I maintained a professional status. “My time.” I said curtly, "is as valuable when visiting one whose intention is to make a fool of me as a patient who needs me. 1 shall make you pay for this.” f strode out of the room. But i was M • late. The fellow had caught me. I tried to stay away from him and keep him away from me. It was no use. The paws of tlie trap closed about me. I married him and lost the results of six years’ hard work. And yet, while I don’t wish to dissuade others of my sex from studying professions. I must admit that my life with my husband aud my children lias been hi keeping with nature, and I have not regretted marrying. 1IELOISE AMES.

Warden's Home-Made

Nfsw Eiiyland BflXorii EAST SIDE SQUARE (Irecncastlc, hid. Phone 333

Greencastle r.F

Made in Greencastle by Greencastle men.

Kate to Pam lies 25c Dcr Hundred Founds

Telephone 136

Crystal Ice Co.

REX A L L Nin 13 -Three Hair Tonic 50c and $1.00 II LHXALL doesn't ^ive satisfaction come Lack anil get your money. It belongs to you aud we want you to have it.

The Owl Drug Co. R.ed Cross DrugCo.

Ship Your Freight By T. h. I. & if. Trac. Line Express service at Freight rates to all points touched by Tiactiou Line in Indiana and Ohio. Inquire of Local Agent.

FERD LUCAS UKALKK IN Real Estate, Insurance and Coal .Vo. 21 S. Inil. St., Greencastle, Ind Rhone tiS."!.

Dry Goods. Mot ions, Boc and Sciois, Groceries Hard ami .Soft Coal RILEY & GO. Phone AI . . 71.-, S. Main.

15c CAB 15c Phone No. 50 for Rubber-tired Cab for train or city ride. Price If c Phone 50 H. W. GILL