Indianapolis Journal, Volume 53, Number 306, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 November 1903 — Page 3
. 3 eC0O3OQ99iSOO3 C33C0080000 actress. Miss Dorothy Shcrrod. The en WORKERS AND WH1NERS RIGHT USE OF THE BODY gagement Is for to-morrow night oniy.
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, MONDAY,' NOVEMBER 2, 1903..
To) J
o c o o o o o o o o o e o n o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o 9 I o
9 O o 9 O o o o o o u
ISTADLbBED iS53 INDIANA'S GREATEST STORE We take great pleasure in cordially inviting all the Ladies of Indianapolis and Vicinity to attend, on the Fifth Floor of cur store, a FREE COOKING SCHOOL which will be conducted by the well-known principal of the Chicago Cocking College, the much appreciated Lecturer and Entertainer, Mrs. Nellie Duling Gans beginning MONDAY, NOVEMBER 2, and to continue daßy from 2 p. m. to 4 p. m. for one month. Mrs. Gans's phenomenal and repeated successes in Cleveland. Kansas City, St. Paul. Chicago. Minneapolis, etc., have mads her so popular, that we confidently rely upon the Judgment of our ladies no matter how proficient in cookery to stamp cur venture with the great seal of their unqualified approval. The first week's programme will be as follows: Monday, salads; Tuesday, puddings: Wednesday. . meats: Thursday. uY.tr, Friday, tread; Saturday, vegetables. Programme will be published every Sunday. O o o o o o o o 0 o o o o o e o 9 O o o o o o o o o et o o u a o o o o o o e o o a o o o e o A o o o o 0 o a o 0 o o o - o 0 o o a O o O o o o 0 "Cooking is not the mena work of a hired person, but the PREROGATIVE of a lady!" Htllit DuUnv fans. o s o 0 0 1 o o 5cle Agents Eutterick Patterns. o C OOOOOOOOOOCC3 00 90 0 0000 0000 Jf you pay more than wa chargo for repairing your Vatch you pay too much. K'a!n Springs SOc Cleaning ................. SOc Crystals 10c Fletcher M. Noe, Jeweler, iOS Worth Illinois St. Accordion Dress Plaitings 5 I SUN BURST AND KNIFE ACCORDION PLAITING CO. Mrs. M. C. Pago itoom S Odd Fellows Bldg., Pen a. Jt Wash. 3ti Tel. Main 23 17. 66 ABSORB" Carpet Cleaner Cleans Everything Kach bottle cleans 63 to 80 varis. SiSo The Hygiene Co., 128 Virginia Ave. THE THEATERS. To-Day' Schedule. GRAND. Iligh-clasa vaudeville, 2:13 and S:15 p. fp, PARK. -Driven from Home," 2 and 8 p. m. EMPIRE. Burlesque, 2 and 8 p. m. UNIQUE. Vaudeville, 3 and 8 p. m. SM The Grand's vaudeville bill for the week. opening this afternoon, will be headed by Charles Prelle with his wonderful perform ing dogs. This act, which is understood to be the most extraordinary animal exhibition ever seen on the stage, comes from the European vaudeville theaters where It created something of a sensation. Mr. Prelle haa not been content to teach hU perform lng canines the usual clever tricks but has Instructed them In "the art of pantomlne." as he calls it. and several little farce-com edies are enacted toy the four-footed players. La Cannonteila will be a feature of the programme In her new contortion act with Its elaborate stage setting; and the Fleury Trio cf French dancers, trom the Parisian musle halls, are also down on the nro gramma ror an important act. James J .Morton, the well-known monologuist, will contribute a specialty made up of stories end jokes, and Claries Vance, who is one of the best singers of negro melodies now before the public, will apear with a new repertoire. Others on the programme will be Carl Sanderson, a comedy pianist, James and Sadie Leonard, in a singing and danc Ing act. and Mclntyre and Primrose In a black-face specialty. The bioscope will have a new set of moving views. XXX The Park will have thl3 afternoon what elves promise of beins an interesting pas toral drama, "Driven from Home," which comes for a three days' engagement. The play Is a new one and Is said to be in the hands of a good company headed by Patrice, an emotional actress, who Is not unknown to Park audiences. The play contains a Wholesome love story which plain, honest characters unravel, and It turns upon the mistake of a hard-headed old farmer in Coubtlng the loyalty of his daughter to the young man whom he has chosen to be her husband, la the white heat of anger the father drives from home the daughter who, backed by a good education, seeks her fortune in New lork and seeks it successfully. Time points out the mistake the old father has made and he speedily sets about to rectify his error, seeking out his daughter and restoring her to her country sweetheart. The scenery of the play is said to be rich, giving as it does rural scenes along th picturesque Hudson river, where the love story has most of its action. x n In generations yet to come Joseph Jefferson and his "Rip Van Winkle" will be a tradition to the American stage and a tradition all too soon, perhaps, for the two can hardly delight American audiences for many more seasons. Rip Van "Winkle is one of the most unique of stage characters. And Jefferson la not Jefferson, but Rip Van Winkle himself, when appearing in the play. The odd whimsicality of the part, the humor and the pathos of it. all of these the veteran comedian has mastered as only an actor of first rate powers can master a part after long years of Intimacy with it. Those who have sen Jefferson's performance this year say that the old actor is Just as good as he ever was. With a company that U notable for the tnany capable pluyers it contains, Jefferson will be seen at English's Wednesday evening for one performance of his most celebrated play. The sale of seats will begin at English's box office this morning. X The first attraction of the week at English's will be Tim Murphy, in "The Man from Missouri." to-morrow evening. The play, which Is by George V. Hobart and Edward E. Rose. Is an original one and not a dramatization or adaptation. The scenes are laid in Washington and reflect the International features of life at the nation's capital. The production is said to be by far the most expensive that Mr. Murphy has ever put on the stage. Much admiration has been cxi resstd here for the artistic lithographing used in advertising the play, some of the pictorial matter being well worth framing. The genial comedian brings a large and comptfent company with him this ceason, his supporting layers being headed by the charming
xxx "The Wizard of Oz." with its funny
scarecrow, tin woodman, Kansas cyclone, cowardly lion and other original features. U booked to play an early engagement at English's. This extravaganza has enjoyed highly successful runs In Chicago and New York and has rien received In both of tnese cities as a most refreshingly original rnusical and Spectacular producetlon. "The wizard or uz abounds in so many genuine novelties and so many unliuo surprises that ilaygoers welcome It as an unusual theatrical attraction. The original company will be seen In Indianapolis. XXX Harry Uryant's Burlesquers will open a week's engagement at the Empire this after noon. This combination Is popular with Empire patrons, and If It gives as good a show as It did last season the week will prove a successful one from the box onlce biandpoint. Harry llryant is known as a comedian with original methods, and nis shows are usually somewhat different from tee usual run or burlesque attractions, associated with him this season are the fol lowing burlesque and vaudeville perform ers: The liacketts, in a musical act, Kennedy and Cameron, in a fcinging specialty, Cassamore and Florence, hi a comedy sketch, Darmondy, the juggler, and the Imperial Japanese Troupe ol acrobats, iwo burlesques will be given, with Mat Ken nedy and Harry Bryant as the principal funmakers. XXX "Martha of the Lowlands." Harrison Gray Fiske's beautiful production from the Spanish of Angel Gulmere, closed its successful engagement at the Manhattan Theater, New York, last Saturday night, and will start on tour next week. The New York critics praised the play as a great dramatic novelty and as a drama of prime Interest for Its artistic treatment of a theme of' universal appeal. It proved attractive to New York theater-goers just as it had to the theater-goers of the Latin countries, where it was tirst produced, and the integrity with, which it was presented struck the Spanish colony in New York a remarkable. To them It was a vemauie reproduction of a native subject XXX The children playing with Maxine Elliott in "Her Own Way" are all remarkably bright younsters. One of them, Donald Gallahcr, will be remembered by Indianapolis theater-goers as the comical little "bad bov" in "The Little Princess," seer here last spring. He is about eight and in thp niw nlav ha to ride a. hobby-horse in one of the scenes. One day last week Miss Elliott, think ne to nlease the youngster said to him. "Donald. I'll tell you what I'll do If you're a real good boy 1 11 buy you a horse Just like this one, all ror yourseii. The IuvmiUp actor looked at her rather pityingly. "My dear Miss Elliott," he said. "you must understand tnat l cu tnis noDuyhorse business because It Is in my partnot from choice." xxx The story of Tolstoi's "Resurrection," which will be seen at English' Thursday night, is brutally strong and absorbingly Interesting, with the central figure of Maslova one of the most exacting parts ever written for an actress. In this character Blanche Walsh is said to display wonaerfnl emotional shilltv and to elve a cerformance throughout that holds the audience breathlessly Interested. Masiova nas to so througn the mire or degradation ueiore me resurrection of her soul takes place. The prison scene is considered one of the most tr.mTir!nnslv effective ever - aiven on the s,rÄr,s'SK tiwrnnrrow morninsr. XXX The Unique Theater will begin its fourth week this afternoon with a new vaudeville bill and a new set of animated pictures to offer for the entertainment of its patrons. The programme will be headed by the Empire Trio in a farcical sketch and Cook and Howard in a musical act entitled "Kidding the Professor." Several other new performer will mntrihute to the show and Manager Thorbus announces some interesting biograph views never snown in mis city Deiore. The entertainment at this little theater lasts -aftiv nn hour. A show is elven every afternoon beginning at 3 o'clock and three shows are given eacn evening, me nrst beginning at 8 o'clock. HOME DRESSMAKING HINTS. By MAY MANTON. Coats that provide protection against rain and dampness are essential to the little girl's comfort and health as to those of her elders. This one Is smart and simple and can be made with or without the applied voke. The model 13 made of mixed tan color rain proof cloth In light weight, but all waterproor rabrics, or wnicn mere are many, are appropriate. The coat consists of fronts and back and Is fitted by means of shoulder and under4363 Q Ill's Bain Coat, 6 to 12 years, TO BE MADE WITH OR WITHOUT THE APPLIED YOKE. arm seams. The yoke, which Is optional, is applied over it on Indicated lines. The sleeves are ample and finished with shaped cuffs. At the neck la a turn-over collar and a belt Is worn about the waist that can be passed through the under-arm seams and under the fronts, or over the entire coat as preferred. The quantity of material required for the medium size 110 years is 2 yards 44 inches wide or 2i yards 54 inches wide. The pattern 43C3 is cut In sires for girls of g. 8 10 and 12 years of age. P1TTEHN COUPON?? For patterns of garments illustrated above end 10 cents (coin or stamps.) Cut out Illustration and Inclose it in letter. Write your name and address distinctly and state number an1 site wanted. AdJress Pattern Dept.. Tne Journal, Indianapolis. Ind. Allow one wet-k for return of pattern. The Carnival Oat of Place. New York Evening Post. Outside of Us native habitat the "carnival" is an uncertain proposition to deal with. St. Paul recently tried to hold one In aid of a deserving charity and lost $$.000. But the trouble Is more ethical than financial. The revelers, unless carnival merrymaking has been a part of their primary education, are almost certain to go too far In one way or another. In St. Louis, for Instance, a young woman barely escaped being blinded by mustard and pepper thrown on the night of the Veiled Prophet's parade. Kansas City's experience has been worst of all. When one portion of carnival week was set apart as a "night of misrule" the populace took it altogether too literally. lU-glnnlng with confetti, they took to throwing flour, paint, lampblack, ink, varnish and at last brickbats. So the city has given up the "night of Jocund festivity and merrymaking." Just at this season are beginning the series of "gala weeks" and carnivals In the Southern States, which furnish one way of spending the money received from the cotton crop. They are conducted so smoothly and so successfully that Northern communities are perpetually trying to imitate them, and fall In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred because most of the people think the attempt is foolish, and either ignore it or turn the festivity into a general fracas. Kdnnrd' VUU to Nicholas. ST. PETERSBURG. Nov. 1. The British embassy here is at present being renovated for the occupancy of King Edward next spring, when the British monarch Is expected to pay his accession visit to Russia. The Infant i Takes first to human milk; that falling, the mother turns at or.ee to cow's milk as the best substitute. Borden's Eagle Brand Condensed Milk is a cow's milk scientifically adapted to the human infant. Stood first for forty-five years.
MAX WHO IS IDOL OF TO-DAY MAY I1E FOOTI1ALL OF TO-MOIUtOW.
ThoiiKht Outlined lr the Rev. Albert llnrlstonc In III Sermon at Roberts Park Church. Dr. Albert Hurlstone preached at Roberts Park M. E. Church yesterday morning on I Sam., xxx. 24. "But as his part Is that goeth down to the battle, so shall his part be that tarrieth by the stuff; they shall part alike." He said in part: "This is one of the most interesting chapters in the life of David, the kingly son of Jesse; in it we see his strength and tenderness. Returning with his men from Philistla, flushed with Joy at the thought of happy greetings at home, they come to ZiUlag and are greatly disappointed to find the town a heap of smoking ruins. The Amalekites had smitten and burned the city and carried captive the. women and children. Instead of the sound of voices welcoming home the noble soldiers of David, they found silence, desolation and ruin, and we are not surprised to read that "they lifted up their voices and wept until they could weep no more." These men who were not accus tomed to turn their backs upon the foe are completely overwhelmed with grief, and then by a sudden revulsion of feeling they imagine David was to blame and they turn upon him. His loss was as keen as theirs, doubtless he had suffered more than they, but they are ready to stone him. How true It is that 'nothing in the world is so uncertain as popularity.' Ministers and politicians need to know this. There is no solid anchorage in popular feeling. The man who i3 the Idol of to-day may be the football of to-morrow, and people who are ready to die for you one day will be ready to sell you the next. It was the same crowd that we hear crying, 'Crucify him! Crucify him!' that on the previous Sabbath had greeted the son of man with cries of 'Hosanna to the son of David!' "David had learned where to go for refuge in the time of storm. Like Joshua, Gideon, Havelock, Gordon, Stonewall Jackson and Howard, he was a playing soldier. He received marching orders; moved his forces to overtake and punish the enemy. Two hundred of his men were unable to go with him; so he leaves them to guard the baggage, and with 400 smote his enemy and recovered all that had been carried away, and David took the spoil. On their return David greets the men who had been left on guard, and proceeds to divide the spoils with them. This gave rise to complaint, eome of the surly, wicked-minded men who went with David said, 'Because they wrent not with us we will not give them out of the spoil that we have recovered." But David said: 'That Is not my way; ye shall not do so, but as his part is that goeth down to the battle, so Fhali his part be that tarrieth by the Btuff; they shall part alike.' TWO TYPES OF CHARACTER. 'There are two types of character here, those who work and those who whine. The fighters and the grumblers. Discontent is the mother of rebellion. Whining paralyzes effort. It spoils the effect of good 'clothes, spoils speech, spoils good temper, spoils good looks and good habits. The complainers represent a class of people who greatly hinder the Lord's work. Difficulties cause brave men to take heart, but furnish fuel to the growler. Small men may harass great men and retard good work. Achan was as nothing to Joshua, but he brought disgrace and defeat. These whlners brought David much trouble. The man who does not use his own dollar wisely Is usually the one who could use the other man's millions to such good advantage. Are you a whiner or a worker? A helper or a stumbling block? Religious grumblers are said to be the worst. The religious devil is the most cruel. The enemies of Jesus were so religious they would not allow his murdered body to remain on the cross over Sabbath. They must keep the fourth commandment even if they did break the sixth. We see this in the men who stoned Stephen and in the leaders of the Inquisition. Men often steal the livery of heaven to serve the devil. Complalners have been in the ranks ever since David rebuked these narrow-minded people. They complained when Mary anointed the feet of Jesus and to this day are as thorns In the sides of those who are trying to do good. Let us keep our bitterness for sin and our swords for the enemy. Whiner3 are In all organizations. In the church these magnified personalities imagine they are the only people the pastor has to serve. In the home they constantly distract and disturb the peace and harmony. Let us guard against this spirit of complaining. 1 would commend to you the sound philosophy of the 'Cabbage Patch story if you are one of the murmuring Israelites In the church of to-day. If you want to be cheer ful, Jes set your mind on It an' do It. Can't none of us help what traits we start out in life with, but we kin help what we end up with. When things first got to goln wrong with me. I says. "Oh, Lord, whatever comes, keep me from gtttln sour!" It wasn't fer my own sake I ast it some people 'pears to enjoy beln' low-sperrlted It was fer the chlldern an Mr. Wlggs. Since then I've made it a practice to put all my worries down in the bottom of my heart. then set the lid on an smile.' How hard constitutionally hard It Is for some folks to believe that cheerfulness Is usefulness. TWO KINDS OF SERVICE. "Much complaining arises from the fact that people overlook the two kinds of service noted In this text. Those who etay by the stuff and those who go to battle are alike doing good. Milton In his blindness learned that 'They also serve who only stand and wait God needs the fighters, He also needs the watchers. The active type of service and the contem platlve watchers, Peter, the bold, outspoken, underestimate the service of the contem platlve watchers. Peter the bold, outspoken, Impetuous disciple, may not see the great value to the cause of the meditation and reflective work of the loving and lovable John. The man In the quarry may create much more, but the careful placing of the flnlßhed stone, without sound of tool or hammer, is no less important. The soldier does the fighting, but the base of supplies must be guarded. Luther faced opposing devils and men In his effort to reform the church, but the scholarly work of Melancthon is no less important. Who shall tell how much we owe to men like Jerome and Erasmus and Tyndale, who in seclusion translated the Holv Scriptures for the church of today. Wesley and Whitfield stormed the enemy's fortifications In the eighteenth century, but no less truly did Butler and Paley write their defenses and evidences and analogies to strengthen the foundations of the faith. In the life of to-day God's varied type of service aims to use all in the church. The minister in the pulpit, the Christian business man In the world, the motner in tne nursery. Teaching, praying, almsgiving, sick waiting, teaching little ones, bidding up wounds. the good Samaritan, all are needed. God wants us to 'watch and fight and pray. He used Washington in tne field and Ham ilton to grapple with financial problems in the formation of our government. He used Lincoln In the White House and Grant in the army. He uses the father at the forge, the boy In college; the soldier In the field of battle and the wife watching the family at home, as his part Is. that goeth down . to battle so shall his part be that tarrieth by the stuff, they shall part alike.' JUST REWARDS. "So we have two equally just rewards They shall part alike. David establishes a law. It is the Christian spirit before the Christian times. The motto of the world is; Every man for himself and the devl take the hindmost. Not so in this story. The poor Egyptian, left by his owner to die. Is cared for and saved by David. These sick and faint soldiers are treated with fair ntss. This is Just and godlike. The nations are learning the lesson. Heathen people leave their sick and wounded to die. Christian nations, even in war, care for their own, and. If need be, their enemies, wounded. There was a Juet reward for fighter and watcher. As in tne parable they each received a penny. God will give justice to all. But some men will have the capacity to get more out of what is given. God will r.ot overlok the lowliest toiler in this great scene of connict. w nen tne battle with sin and sorrow is ended, many a great leaderwill j&ale Into Insignificance before the crown-
--... i , - ' - '.::..:-- ":: v - -r - Ifi "o: ( v e V -UIm A)m. Aft-pi Yr, r . t 1 h -' i :m Hpt 11 1 Himß I I 1
The above picture represents the Rev. V. C. Hotle and family and a native girl of Inflla.. Rev. Hotle Is a missionary of the Tentecost bands, and is now in the city. Last night he delivered an address before the local Tentecosters on North New Jersey street.
ns splendors of some humble watcher, who through years of suffering and work in ob scure places, comes forth In Jne reward or he faithful. Love and loyalty to God and His service will meet with ample recognition in that great day; no matter where the field of labor has been. In that unique book, 'The Story of My Life,' by Helen Keller, fhe elves a description of an inter view with Bishop Brooks, which is most pathetic and Instructive: 'As a child I loved to sit on his knee and clasp his great hand with one of mine, while Miss Sullivan spelled into the other his beautiful words about God and the spiritual world. I heard him with a childish wonder and delight. My spirit could not reach up to his, but he gave me a real sense of joy In life and I never left him without carrying away a fine thought that grew in beauty and depth of meaning as I grew. Once when I was nuzzled to know why there were so many religions, he said: "There is one universal religion, Helen the religion of love. Love your Heavenly Father with your whole heart and soul; love every chtld'of God as much as you can and remember that the possibilities of good are greater than the possibilities of evil, and you have the key of heaven.' " May that key be yours and wherever you toll, you shall realize that there is a crown of rejoicing not for the great only, but for all who love the Lord. 'They shall part alike.' " CHAT OF THE MORNING. The Sociable Fnp. "How's your Newfoundland pup?" one man asked another man on a suburban car. "That pup, oh, goodness," exclaimed the other man, "the day I took that pup out home I told you I wouldn't sell him for fcX) didn't I?" "Yes, you did," agreed the first man, "What alls him now?" "I bought that pup, that beautiful little Newfoundland pup, as company for my wife. She said it was lonesome out In the country all day without anyone but cook to speak to and no-cook on hands sometimes. and we agreed that a nice, little, lively puppy would be Just the thing. You can put a puppy out of doors when you get tired of him, you know, but you can't do invited guests that way. "Puppy behaved pretty well for a week and we both enjoyed him very much. He had a good bark and I felt safo that no tramps would molest the place or frighten my wife while he was in sight. One day this week we had a woman come out to wash lace curtains. A lot of them were dried in the morning, but the parlor cur tainsfour of them, worth ?50 were left In the back yard, In the frames, all afternoon. "My wife's cousin telephoned for her to come in town to a matinee so she hurried off early, leaving the $50 pup sleeping on the front porch a perfect picture of a good dog guarding the house. When we came out in the evening, sir, that good $50 pup had chewed up and partly eaten $30 worth of lace curtains nothing left in the stretchers but the edges. So wo gave pup away as soon as we could and I'm scrimping on cigars now to buy new curtains. Nobody to blame but pup." Menu for n pay. Suggestions furnished by Table Talk to housekeepers of moderate means: Breakfast. Grape Nuts Sugar and Cream Broiled Bacon Latticed Potatoes Pop Overs Coffee Lunch. Sliced Cold Meat Corn Fritters Tomato Ketchup Cocoa Dinner. Carrot Soup Harlot of Mutton Boiled Rice Baked Tomatoes Endive French Dressing Wafers Cheese Chocolate Blanc Mange Coffee Some Flctlonnl Heroines. Brooklyn Eagle. "Do you think my book Is strong?" asked the girl. "I think It Is feminine," replied the friendly critic. "In what way?" asked the girl. "Well, you make your heroine 'gurgle,' " replied the friendly critic. "When she gets very coy and kittinish and tantalizing she gurgles' something to her lover or her best friend." "Does that make the book seem feminine?" "Surely." "But some masculine authors do that, too." "Possibly, possibly, but It has the effect of throwing a doubt on their sex. You feel that they ought to be women, even if they're not. and that possibly they are and have assumed a man's name for literary purposes." "But the word i3 so expressive," she urged. "It conveys an idea that " "Precisely," interrupted the friendly critic. "It conveys a meaning that no other word does, which is a fortunate thing. You picture a girl as being vivacious, whimsical, dainty and in every way delightful, and then all of a sudden you have words flowing from her lips with a sound that makes the reader think of a housewife emptying a Jug into the kitchen sink." "Oh!" wailed the girl. The Cook's Work. The House Beautiful. The conventional arrangement seems to be that the cook shall have no care of cleaning the house, except such as belongs to the kitchen, back stairways and cellar; but this distribution of the work is often found to bear somewhat heavily on a sin gle housemaid, and an arrangement is here suggested which distributes the work more Justly. Except for the ordinary daily dustlug, the care of the diningroom and of the servants' sleeping rooms should be assigned to the cook, whose Friday duties are otherwise extremely light. In some households the cook always washes, be sides her cooking utensils and the kitchen
dtehes, the platters, vegetable dishes, and large dinner plates from the dinningroom. A great point is gained when the housekeeper, refusing the conventional, if it is not adapted to her needs, has secured an even distribution of the work to be accomplished. Justice and tact, these are the oils to be applied to the domestic machinery. The dinningroom should be kept In spotless condition, and its careful weekly cleaning' is a necessity. It should be accomplished Friday morning, leaving the afternoon for the care of the maids' rooms. If the maids have separate bedrooms, each should care for her own, and If there Is a servants' diningroom the care of it develops on the cook. Should time hang heavily on the cook's hands on Friday, certain preparations for Saturday may be made. Butter and sugar, may be mixed for cake, and kept in the ice box until morning, sauces may be prepared, except for the addition of eggs, and this will be found In summer an excellent time for making pickles and preserves. A Woman's Shopping: List. New York Times. "You can't imagine how much easier it Is to shop when you make out a list beforehand of the things you have to do," said the woman who looks for bargains. "Why, I used to think I could get along by carrying everything In my head. But I'd go to one store for something and then suddenly remember I had to get something else two blocks away at a place I had already passed. It's a great saving of time to have a list. Then you can cross off the things as you get them done." "I suppose you only put down the things you might forget?" said a friend. "Oh! certainly. For example, just to show you. here's a list I made out yesterday."
By the time she finished reading the list the laugh was on her. ihis was the list: , Write to Carrie. Mail letter. Match ribbon. Three-quarter yard of lace Ilk sample. Get candy. Eat lunch. Stockings for TVUlle. Manicure. ' Come home. The Vernacular. Chicago Tribune. This was the conversation between the girl with. the gum in her mouth and the other girl with the gum In her mouth: "Alnchä hungry?" "Yeh." "So my. Less go neet." "Where?" "Sleev go one places nuther." "So dy. Ika neet mo stennyware- Can choo?" "Yeh. Gotcher money?" "Yeh." "So vy. Gotcher aptite?" "Yeh. Gotchoors?" "Yeh. Howbout place crosstreet?" "Nothln" teet there. Lessgurround cor ner." "Thattledoo zwell zennyware. Mighta thoughta tha'tflrst. Getcher hat." "Ima gettlnit. Gotcher money?" "Yeh. Didn'cheer roe say I had it? Allready?" "Yeh." "K'mon." j HUMAN CANNON BALLS. Cannon for Firing Carloads of Pas sengers Through the Atr. Lovers of sensational experiences should find their ambitious gratified to the utmost in the late Invention of a genius who promises to literally fire them through the air from the mouth of a cannon. The contrivance he has devised for this purpose is a mammoth metallic cannon of THE HUMAN AMMUNITION CANNON.. high bore, which he plans to mount upon a high trestle. Within the cannon are tracks upon which roll cars which are to be occupied by pa?sengere. When these cars are loaded with their human freight they are to be violently propelled into midair, alighting at a distance on tracks on a somewhat lower trestle and continuing their progress down an incline to terra firma, which doubtless will be welcomed by th more timid adventurers. The bodies of the cars are to be so weighted that in their flight through the air they will maintain their upright position and the relative position of the cannon's mouth and tho secondary track are to be such that there will be no danger of the cars missing connection. Prince Is u Good Horseman. BERLIN, Nov. 1. Crown Prince Frederick WilMam yesterday showed himself to be an excellent horseman. At the head of the second company of the first regiment of the guards, of which regiment he was recently appointed colonel, he visited the park of Sans Souci. where Is the famous castle of Frederick the Great. From the park, behind a large fountain, broad steep stairs In six terraces lead to the castle. The Prince, fitting high on his horse, and followed by the entire company, rode up the stairs, and when he had reached the highest terrace, dismounted and showed the men around the castle. Do you like Mrs. Austin's New Press? '
SUSDAY EVEXIXG SERMONS FOIt THE
YOUXG PEOPLE. Dr. II. W. Kellogg, of the Centrnl-Ave-nue Church, riegln n. Series An Interesting: Discounte. "The Right Use of Ourselves," Is the sub ject on Which Dr. II. W. Kellogg is to de liver a series of Sunday-evening addresses to young people at the Central-avenue M. L Church. He will treat, in the course of the discourses, the various abilities and facul ties of the soul in their practical relation to success in life. The tirst of the series was delivered last night on the topic. "The Right Use of the Body." He said In part: "The formula for a man among the Greeks was A sound mind in a sound body.' In working to this that wonderful nation did what has possibly never bt?en duplicated by any people. They produced at least twenty great men In a single century. Great menmen who towered above their fellows as the snow-covered mountains rise above the common ranges. They are the eternal masters of the world. They instruct us to-day in art, literature, law, philosophy and methods of thought that have made possible the achievements of modern science. When we seek models we turn Instinctively to these men of Athens and we seek not in vain. By any other formula this result would have been impossible. Socrates, in the athletic sports and in the military drill, was preparing for the arena of intellectual struggle where he would win the laurals of the ages. No educational plan is worth considering that does not Include the training of the body and in this we are coming back to the better way. To despise the cultivation of the body is neither good education, good sense nor good religion. "I take it to be a most reasonable proposition that the achievements of life dopend finally on physical strength and endurance. This is the same as to say that successes of life rest unon work and work Is limited to the ability of the body to accomplish and endure. Carlyle was right in saying that 'Genius is the ability to do an infinite amount of hard work.' The difference between men is not so much original endowment as a difposltion and qualification to carry out the hard tasks of life. As men become successful they acknowledge it. Name the great of all the ages and every one answering to the call will bear witness to this truth. SEVEREST TOILERS. "Even among great artists, poets, musicians, where what has been named 'genius' that indefinite. Indescribable something that has deluded the world Into failure, would be expected to reign, we find the severest tollers of the world. Who has not been impressed with this fact when looking upon tho unfinished statue of Michael Angelo In the Cathedral of Florence, upon which this aged worker was engaged when the evening overtook him, but it found him still working and had the time been longer he would have completed it. All the results of time worth mentioning are the result of work; and work is energy applied. "This age has no sympathy with weakness. She makes her call for laborers early in the morning and If for any cause you are indisposed she moves on without knocking the second time to the one who is ready and scorns your excuses, turning you overt to heartless fate. Physical ability Is the demand for the hour. That boy or gjrl who has had the opportunity of country life is almost sure to go to the front. When It was told Mr. Beecher that a young man by the name of Richard ßtorrs was to occupy a neighboring pulpit and he must look out for his honors Mr. Beecher made a very sensible reply, 'How much does he measure around the chest?' When told the probable size he replied, 'He will never take my honors. "A few things may be said concerning the ability of the body. The endurance and power of the body does not depend upou the size of it. It is doubtless an advantage to possess a large body, but if it lack fiber for endurance, or has weak places, its size may be a burden and an embarrassment. The world's workers are of all sizes-, from the giant rhillips Brooks to the dwarf John Wesley who, working more hours and more days in ceaseless toll than possibly any other man, never weighed more than 120 pounds. Napoleon was a fine specimen of enduring littleness, while Webster, whom Sidney Smith said looked like a cathedral, is a fine specimen of enduring bigness. He was majestic, but no abler than Napoleon. "More depends upon manipulating the machine than the size of li.. The body is a wonderful Instrument and may, with proper use, produce vast results. It is also a delicately adjusted Instrument and needs careful treatment. One weak place, a single break, and it becomes worthless. It is capable of development and adaptation and hence needs training. Take the hand and the eye and what wonders they may be brought to do if properly managed. Every boy or girl should be furnished opportunity at least to such training as will qualify them for proper direction of the various physical organs. Manual training in schools is but in its Infancy. Manual training is the coming method of education. MAY ACCOMPLISH MUCH." "It should be said for the encouragement of many that through proper care and direction a poor and weak instrument may be made to accomplish a vast amount of hard work. Many of the successful men and women have labored throughout life handicapped with frail and crippled bodies. Some one remonstrated with Joseph Choate for overworking and warned him that he would break his constitution, and the great lawyer replied, 'Sir, the constitution has been used up for twenty years and I have been working on the by-laws.' How few men have sufficient physical energy to sustain the work required in these times and the only possible way to measure up in any degree to the demand is to conserve at every point what energy they possess. No young man can hope to succeed to-day who Is wasting in any way his body's strength. He must not only preserve but he must learn the art of restoring and recuperating lost energy, or he will be laid aside early. Care of the body to one who hopes to excel becomes a fine art. He must not dissipate. He must keep free from alcohol and narcotics. Detter do what you can with your natural strength than go on borrowed capital, for all must be paid back and with interest. One of the unaccountable things we meet with Is how any young man of spirit and hope will wate his strength on cigarettes. Hours of sleep must be observed. Cheerfulness has more to do with keeping up the working forces of life than we are ready to credit. Mr. Stead thinks that faith in the providential order of God was what sustained Mr. Gladstone and made it possible for him to continue so long at the head of his great nation. Lincoln would have been crushed but for the cheerfulness of his great soul. The mind and spirit has more effect on the body than medicine, which we are fast learning. It Is not for success alone that we are to learn the right use of the body, but for happiness as well. "Who can be happy tied up with an old broken-down, disarranged body? All that a man hath will he give for his life. But more t-han this, the body Is a sacred thing. It is holy as a temple of the divine spirit. Let no man defile it. Any sin again t the body is a sin against the soul an 1 against God. It is the Instrument by which we are "to glorify God, and to do less is to prove unworthy of a vast trust." A XEW 3IOTIVK. "Reconciliation" the Theme of the Her. 12. K. Xewbert at AU Soul. At All Souls' Unitarian Church, the Rev. E. E. Newbert had for his theme, "Reconciliation, the New Motive in Religion." He quoted Browning: Thl world's no blot-for us Nor blank; it means Intensely, and means good: To find its meaning Is my meat and drink." He said in part: "To find the meaning of life, this should be the concern of all. It Is for every man to ask, 'whence and 'why' and 'whither?' We exist as units in the measureless whole. Life Is like a plain without bounds, save everywhere the skyline. From this plain the individual thinks outward Into limitless time and unending space. When was the beginning? When shall be the end? What worlds roll beyond ours, and what systems like unto our solar system multiply in ppace? Think of a simüle fact in astronomy ana u.en wonder anew. Read the record of the comet of 1811 whose fanlike tail stretched out for Tt2.000.0u0 miles. It visited our solar sys tem to return In thirty centuries. Moving outward from the view of our planet possibly at the. rate of two hundred miles a sec
Ridden From Severe Heart Trouble. Pale, Weafc and Constantly Tired. Dr. Miles Heart Curo Cured Me.
"I write to thank you fer the crre I received from your remedies. When I tefxn taking your medicine I wif confined to my bed mot cf the time. Our best home doctors told me there was no cure for necn account of the weak condition of my heart. I was pale and weak, constantly tired, had ao appetite and could not sleep. I was exceedmly nervous and easily irritated ia consequence. At last I began taking as a lat resort. Dr. Miles New Heirt Cure tcjether with Dr. Miles Wine cf Sarsaparilla. I was helped from the start and I cannot say enough in praise of these wonderful remedies. I can truthfully say they are the best medicines I ever took. They cured me and I am now nblc to work on the f arm every day. I gladly recommend your remedies to all snd erers.' Wm. 11. Campbell. Mantorvüle, Minn. . "For years I could not turn my head to the riht but it caused fjcat ruin in the back of my neck and it seemed at times my head would bur?t with pain. I would sometimes lie down, and could net Qtt up without help my neck was so stiff. About once a week I would have to go to bed with a very severe headache. By u?injj one of Dr. Miles Nerve Plasters on my neck and occasionally usinjr the Anti-Tain Tills which always relieved the headache irutar.tlv, I completely overcame my trouble, and both headache and stiffness have disappeared." Miss Lucy 11Jlows, Cleveland, Ohio. All druckst fell and guarantee first bottie Ilr. Miles' Remedies. Send lor free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Addrcu Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart. Ind. ond. think of the profound depths of ppare into which it wiil Journey beyond the reach of the telescope durinp thirty centuries! Such an illustration Inspires us to try aain to read the riddle of the universe, to return to the ftudy of the world-old problem of our human blnjr and the belnc f God. But some will argue that all thl belongs to science and philosophy. So It does, but it. too, falls within the province of religion, for fundamentally pclenoe is relijrlouß, philosophy is religious. Roth deal with questions of passionate interest. "Faith has feared reason, and religion, narrowly Interpreted, has been afraid of science and philosophy, while the new psychology has come to help and inspire unbidden by doKTna. The old fnlth is inadequate. Special providence requires a small world, and the creeds of religion dry up under the light of a million suns. The little theory of life has made atheism possible. The universe, as science helps us to know it, suggests the being of God in Its every atom, nor can one turn away from a htudy of endless space and llmltlrss time without some idea of Infinite intelligence and immortality of man. "The old motive in religion was fear, the controlling: force superstiton. and the cloud that darkened human life was supernaturalism. Men have talked of estrangement, of alienation, of sln'R curee, end cf an atonement, while man and nature have been thought to be in antagonism. Rut the old motive gives way to the. new, and despair becomes hope. Reconciliation is the Idea of the hour. The prophetic voices of our time call to men to readjust their thought and belief and life to . the new worKl conditions. Reconciliation as an idea in religion, menns harmony restored between nature and man. It means confidence, it means a glad acceptance of life Just as it appears to be- Intelligence has turned away from religion, but this new motive is big enough to demand a renewal of interest. Let religion be taken to mean the large interpretation of life, not In the half light of myth and legend, but according to all the facts presented, and the intelligence will stop to consider, hope will inspire anew and atheism will have no ground for existence. There is an ascending energy in the universe. Life is everywhere rising. Nature is good, and means well by every creature. 1 pass death with the dying, and birth with the new-born babe; I go to graves with friends and. join lovers in wedlock, and everywhere I find that life In its natural conditions, regardless of definite or dogmatic religious ideas, has much of hope and Joy and worship and glad homage and love." Yesterday at All Souls' Unitarian Church articles of association were unanimously adopted. At an adjourned meeting nine trustes will be elected and the organization perfected. The Rev. E. E. Newbert made feeling" references In his prayer and sermon to the awful accident of Satur day. m i i i - AT SECOND I'IIESI1YTEIUA. An Extract from Iter. Owen Davlea Udell' Mornlnic Sermon. The Rev. Owen Davies Odell, of the Second Presbyterian Church, toeik for his text yesterday morning, "The God of Israel will be your reward." He said In part: "The Bible gives to us many beautiful thoughts of God. It Is a common and beautiful thought that God goes ' before His people, prepares the way for Ills people; It Is not uch a common thought, yet none the less beautiful that God Is be hind His people and they prepare the way for 111m. This thought should give rest to us, should cure us of feverish despair, of the coward's haate of retreat. The rearguard is an army's security. Napoleon always kept a few brave, daring, able horsemen for the critical moment, for that physiological second when the most intrepid soldiers weaken. At that moment he nent his reserve men at full speed to shout assurance and command heroism. God closes the rear of our lives; the realisation of this truth is the soul n best reinforcement, and this truth emphasizes and illumines another, the gift of human Initiative. The battle is ours, it is given to us. It is God's way of educating us, of perfecting the race. Our freedom should be Impressed upon us as a gift of God. It Is true our freedom is limited by the bonds of the rights of others, by the subtle slavery of our own minds. Nevertheless we know we are free, it is the mystic part of our personality. God Is behind us, but somehow, in eome right real and tragic fashion, we are sent on before. He -could break us and change us. but He rends us on. I had rather be a fighting man than a formal angel. There is more glory and grandeur In a willing, suffering, struggling, attaininghuman than in a temptationless, sinless host. There has been given to us the ma Jestlcal power to either conquer or capitulate; to stumble forward or fall backward. Peter stumbled forward, Judas fell backward. One was reinforced, the other waa not. To repudiate divine relief Is to fight without reserve, to battle without a true estimate of antagonists, to be in the fated minority. There Is no majority without God. "Now the time when we need most strength is not when we are putting forth all our powers, not when we are running fastest, but afterwards, in the retreat of victory, in the rests of life. The Master was tempted In the wilderness and that waa Satan's choice of a locality. It la easy to lay aside our evils amid a cloud of witnesses but difficult in the solitude afterwards. Then we need a rearguard. God alone can save us when we are alone, from the Parthian arrow that strikes in th back. And from the enemies of our past w need deliverance. The memory of sin is the most overcoming of the foes of our retreating days. The ghosts of forgotten actions come floating before the sight, and things we thought were dead things ar alive with a terrible might. We need th Divine interference to stand between us and the pursuing rabble of our sins. God Is our rearguard. He puts them behind HiJ back, and God's back is the only lost place la tha universe." One ot Dlshop Potter's Stories, New York Times. Rishop Potter's latest story has a Western setting. At iha end of a day s Journey a traveler stopped for the night at a small rancher's shack in Montana. As he sat oa the doorstep with his host a troop of children began playing about them, and h "These all yours?" "Yep." "How many?" "Let's see," and tho rancher hesltating!y began counting thm up oa his fingere. Pretty soon a drove of hogs came Into view. "Yours?" afked the traveler. "Yep." "How many?" "Jest rA to a pig," was the Instant
