Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 15, Ligonier, Noble County, 1 July 1909 — Page 7
PETER AND NUMBER SIX
Vetoy Bromn--tleve'ling ihat wan all that Sehpson Ihe forsroan of t AT BhERTE CRYE B 1N Fanyp £t ol works voeaiil it s ihe tabs g i dinty,. magged i 3 with R g PR o g ‘n’o!f.flw B "§~ Fraoi Boeatner o of gne ol The iy jlat 5 By thie @ il Birhse oy he Lk 31l FE LGne Rh Bl and il Hel 810 to Work at Nunler P | @ ; tiy L Gl h b £ gi s £ F i Ty i¥ ¥ Ry iy LS ¥ 1 Boowl SRy BDg lot wit ¢4 yoogd Baamban ymaial @ : d vy eliatn ot Vairo Bl sther chefiieals nto th 3 ¥ it el IRe Heowr of 0N e iy h el U UE fands T Yt v : v_;('g‘ Wity ‘5.,; 3 L 1 \ iR of gaR o waleh passed B i t $ hied Ji%e ag . 2 i ¥ i { oM h eyl 8 ) ST a e NNE R 5 /1 : e . cdie 5y 2 53 ; ..ov’-\ o ," D ) R [ \ \ i \ e At / ; e { L i i,‘:, !. . : \ s ] § ety 4 ,/', e ‘ prt Zay \r(‘ ‘i{j‘ . A /N't AN P | ‘;3‘;3 i // }\.‘% &: 2 Nt // 8 a;\fl“fé ; ) \\‘S' '{l : ! ! I;\E \ gt o B e i .' i o g_ = : L/t e L% s e o 3 » : 7 4 ’ & / .- v e st sl . g o - ““What're 4 Doin’ There, Peter?” - ©Asked Johnson., half expoctad &n arm of flame ,M' stroteh oat sefee him, and drag him into that glowing wauit By and hy, however, ‘he eame to watch the fur © naces with fenrful joy. ' © Bt this was after he had Yheen "broken int by the bove "Pote's easy.’ wag the \s<»r:i_ Ard “Pote” -was “ensy —for a‘time. They tricked him into picking up tiny test-caxtings while they were hoti they to iehed & match to the blow-hole of the gas pipe when his back was convenient., and «the humwming spurt of flagie made him shriek: they let bars of iron crash on the floor of meaetal b hind him Peter \vm{' in constant c,:vw'.;i The best ol 4t froan their point of view, was that he dld not rewalinte v s he ~would not feht. "Pele's pot no nerve was thHelr Serdict--a verdiot. in which the mwen shiared.:. They could not understand a boy who didny ¢ SUiCk up for himself with his fists lohngon aione measiured Peter fairI Fhe fereman, watching him «!Z‘:ws evening-«for they wore on the night shHt nowr<remarked to McNally, his assistant: "Fh bov s al right ] wish he'd Hok one a them other hova But if he won't, it don't show he can't Some a these days Peter'll surprise But Peter gave no sign then that | heé would fullfil this praphecy. He | was a silent boy. His face, most uf; the time, wore an old, drenmy look. The plenty he got to eat gave a better color -to his skin, but it did not fill in his cheeks, The unpatched clothes which Johnson gave him—'t" start him, off right'—hung on him; ‘his “jumper” could almost have been wrapped about him twice. “Scraggy” was what MeNally called ‘him. The younger generation christened him. “Skinny.” o - Peter's one manifest pleasure was to watch a furfnace being “tapped.” When the chance came, he perched on & mold or sandpile out of the way .but close enough to see everything. - 1t was his unspoken ambition to be one of the men who, armed with the long “tapping-irons,” picked at the seal of fused sand which stopped the “tapping-hole” in each furnace. He soon was able to foretell from the change of color In the seal as it was chipped away the moment when the first thin stream of liquid metal wquld spurt out into the great ladle in the pit with a thousand iridescent tints. Then Peter's eyes danced, and he twined and untwined his fingers in excitement. : : ;. “What're ¥ doin’ there, Petor?” asked Johnson one evening, overseeAing this pantomime. : . Peter's face fell; he dropped his hands {loosely in his lap. “Nuthin',” he said slowly. “Jus’—watchin'” It was only a few nights later that a “heat” was nearing completion in Number Six when Mr. Baxter came strolling by. Suddenly he halted back - of the furnace. Mr. Baxter was the. head of the department. So, when he called sharply: “McNally, come here!” McNally responded on the run. Johnson was off duty, and McNally was in . «charge. o 4 5 S ‘Peter could ' see Mr. Baxter, and ‘heard what was said, or part of it. Mi. Baxter pointed to a spot mid‘high on the back wall of Number Six.
Looks nasiy ™ke spld "Too s aa o it were rooping i 5 Wee giraid sl wouldn't srangd s.;;;t,;?i\;: B At -l %A bedi 48 pie i 88l ol di el on e Ll Bonn U MtTengd siow . ot ¥y brighkivned . Biilii s Rl thmeeah 2andtiln e Eavagg way miy Ty B Mr jimater Gl not gAYy thal eee ra L the Beals fhegnl & ih e ae Ghiy fof e work bat Potir know that ] 1 T »"i .3 fi'“,‘, ::‘a\) : L ¥ _Z.::,,,': ¥ He sraioivd s Cinew sho gUK 4 bunn! Pix trelobag 188 iar Rt Aary the fir aulelll” Be vomman e i 4 % ERs NG oW iy 1 5 - MeNullv ran of SEL o 8 a 0 o Lia ten In iwe mitintes tha greal lewse WAk WrHLing & 2 Lhe oot Melad b oand anather Rl beid Ithe 1 K Ers gl ddle HGTdR Wrace n hAGEE T R e PR L YBUlage o & noaiu 4 1 Rt i Wl DGR eiin 4 o ol Water 5 1 Beh g sl Tt hy Pt apd farned L s By wAR RLEYY Xy B.N Pl S R Shvas Al gt Nett vl i . ¢ USRS Biruck M i X S R =-~ Mo mav A BRI D PR ang el A voiley i i s Diown RGour the Lis o iiiy Yieh i ety o Lo % POB i e P hRLe were ol Wil 8 oty ol Biats the oihe men dropned the poszle a6l rab g iy ®as Simiost cortate denth : - For oa mosielßt Ar Baster was slunbel Lo slrenm fromn the bos squirted Idly Il e pit 4 T ol 1 i toaiy Ited sud shawod the Bpal on the wail glowing angrily ratned n Irregsidr Cracks Then Mr Baxier fovnd Lis valee *Came back e roand B urn the hose on her! MWell save her yot ' : ‘i‘ i Ba one m:;r:-a!' Samething stronger than the bßidding of their ‘mester held them where they werse You rowarde: You eowards! ' yelled Mr Baxter He trigd to crawl to. where-the hosepipo lay. Then into the cirele of Hght cast by the msrojamp overhead ™o a - small fgure and grablield the pipe, " Peter!” gasped McNally, And Peter it was— Peter, his eyes SBDIRIDE, his mouth working in an odd, spasmodic way, though none of them saw that : . The hose twisted a 8 ho picked -t A the nozzie jumped and knocked Lhim down. He gerambled to his feet and seized It Ei‘;{lfi!{, He wrestied with it: and agaln Ht threw himm down Then he dropped to his kneos, and gripped it between his legs and held it The stroam ol waler ¢rept up the wall and ventered on the glowing gpot " Again came a tremendoos hissing and a burst of ateéams In a moment an expiosion and another and another Bits of brick and splipters of metal were thrown ot a 8 frof o pun. They ‘whizzed over the Ruceling figure and over Mr. Baxtor, ! : Hut in the glare of the electiric Hight they saw @ dwarl silhouétte of thin shonlders and bullet head standing ont against the rosy enrtain of steam which shrotuded the wall of Number Six And the streqimn of water held true to its jark. : - A half minute went by: it scomed an hour to the men: The explosions ceased, the cloud of steam paled. Only ‘the hissing on the hot bricks told that the fight went on between fire and water, and that water was prov ing itself the master. w . And then shame mustered McNal%!y's courage, and he ran to where | Peter kneeled. DBut the wall was saved, the metal checked. Peter gave up the pipe. i | He danced up and down. “It's done! It's done!” he cried, twisting his fin g gers. “Th' water did it, Mr. Baxter!” - And with that he ran back to his old ' place on the mold to see what else ' would happen. : { And that was all he did and all he 'said. Peter always was a silent fel ilow. ne . ‘ SN g—— 3 Different. \ } It was the bachelor girl who stood at the door when the woman opened it. “l thought,” she said, “that you didn’t allow your neighbors to put their milk bottles in the hall. The last time I was here you were raising Cain about it. And here I had to walk through a forest of them to get ‘to your door. What change has come over the spirit of your dréam?" ‘ ~ The woman took her by the hagd and drew her into the flat. ' “Talk a little lower, pleasd,” sghe implored. *Those milk bottles don't belong to my neighbors. They belong to me.” Lo . : v Charm of Inward Beauty. Love is the great beautifier of the face. However shaggy the brows, oblique the eyes, longitudinal the nose and straggling the mouth, it is possible for even such a woman to possess an Inward beauty which perishes not, which will flash out in the eve, glow | in the face, tune the voice and wreathe the countenance in charms. The ‘beauty which is only surface deep is likely to prove as evanescent as the passing cloud.—Exchange,
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Plicher Christy Mathewson has had a 5 inleresting Career Boe Yeurs AgO Cipeinngfl - ronched ot lapsaldly, pathered Bin in deliyed m tryoul and fit i?"_x *:;pfw‘,'?sfiz't; v New York for a ecott Batul belt ae srf;m@;{?fisw' ot 'that st The repgey pavieh Sas sent inlo two games in the fall of 1860 and e oul plastersd with defeat pach timie. . 1o mannged fo Ball over, Bow. ever and Bt the spring of 15901 hatded the antiasl cpener I Yale 51!}' @ fi;fifi:fi’ i ihes ronth InnGre Then the curinin Pkl on . thoe r;«,-gi;%mfi Bfii’;&}:‘wm sonson’ and wiibeos axn:'g‘ ‘8 gresl !Tixn;&--formatiun seene wad sprung upon the palile o The erude ;i»rt:b;"}é%;}-ffltsrn heded the wiah and wilioned fl!fi big clubs, onc aiter the other @ Tha heavipat slugenrs were like fofante in his hands. He had the kpfl&d of 4 Hasie, the control of & Yousg, the endusance of 8 Nirhaols and eurveg that were he yond any other piteher . Mis degialve victories. his perfoct stvla and the ro mance of His i’;{i‘i“{"fi“‘f f@fi?@?‘rfif*d ’fi}(g ny tention of the estire sporting worid on Mew Yiwk's represestative in the old National Jengue = . ~ That dnclen! ludy wan facing perhaps, what theeatened 1o be the ploomicst season o 108 History but the exploits of the bmfim}rn:n'eaimgfi bos Hehtened the sky for the Hime be ing and put an end to.all worry con evrning the layaity of the “fans’ of thesmiétropiis - - , P : At wifl be reealled that New York fintshed in seventh place in 1901 alter a grand start. Theé following season wis still more dismal, the luckless Glants brigeing up In the extrenie rear without a struggle. Mathewson held up bix end, but internal affairs were s 0 rotten that real endeavor found po reward. With ‘i;i;ingslt thelir worst MeGraw and Rrush came to the rescue The alr was disinfected; the dead wood replaced with sound tmber. In 1903 the New Yorks jumped seven notches Into second place and Mathewson began his climb to the highest pinnacle of pltching fame He had, to begin with, that _serenity of temperament which 18 so often cater cousin to the tralned mind =~ It oceufred to him early .that he was not making the most of his fm:
T 7 i WHITE SOX SOUTHPAW. | 4'/ : K, (o f'\_g) . e A‘ \\ /'/ L . N /'/ : : ’ : \\‘ f F 5‘«,‘% ‘\\\ & g < M ‘xfi . % B & j > R | | =G | . - 8 | m O % ‘ ' | “Doc"” White has been the left- . handed standby of the White Sox for . several years. He is considered one | of the best pitchers in the league and ' his work so far this season has been excellent. : | Queer Baseball Play. | One of the queerest baseball happenings of the season took place in a | recent Baltimore-Newark game. | Hearne, playing first, was credited | with an error in the ninth, when he | caught the ball. This is the story: { Meyers slammed one into the infield | and was off with the speed of a grey- { hound. The throw was perfect, but 'at the very instant that Meyers | touched the bag the ball bounced out iof Hearne's mitt and then dropped { back again. Umpire Kelly was right | in his decision. and not a murmur of | protest was heard. C
e N Ry s S e S SR 3 §£‘:’wr;&&4‘* resasreen. He gave ap ear 1o the sstule Metiraw and the wily Mo Ginniy He lesrned opne ihing and nvented something olie. The vslne Lt Yestrainl - ax wur i:g{.i;réi‘ feivnda wouid osay, wos duly recognised and Bis fopwrtodre wak enrichod 1o Ihat ex - tent Duarivg the entnpnden of 1954 Motitonity was r’t.};.« pominal leader, g;‘fuf Bone Knew %e}vg’aia:'jt.h%&‘ tha "2:3”‘»."‘““ §§§:afi" Bluiseld thafoa far greater force than he was gradiizily and surely Hit fuk the Neow A onk clih 10 the proudst tation In tlia;fi domain bf profes E,&ixmui sport So fouch has been writ ten sbout the whrld's series of 1905 that further reforence plmply smounts 1o 8 wasie of ink Every one conndm thervfora Tthat Mathewson, 51_7.' : that desperate x:;gi;‘mw. hunig up a mark f_fur the pltchers of the future to shy AL, Indeed, %0 ‘_:‘hi:g‘mz « was his - trlnph that the grizzied Epoßesman of the opposition way stirred into wheork: f!‘mg' the ost finttering and COmprehensive tribute ever pald by a writer 1o a player. Strange 1o say, the two seasons that fn?‘lswfl! revealed the | tremiendous scenk of Muathewson's E;mwur‘g‘». It was a term of convales Ecexn ee Yor him. Thin, drawn, Rashiess, he was covering the tedious route that leads from antitoxin to nermal bealth, %And ¥et, 50 profound was his knowledge of the sclence of pitehing, o ac ?t"‘\:r:fl‘i{ his ‘eénfeebled. arm that he managed to lead the Glants' twiriing staft as usual, and stand well up io the genersl lst, each year. ! . Last year found ' Mathewson once gmm*e sound and ‘ready. It was one | Jof the best years of his amazing ca- | E;ra-mr'.; in fact, it was the very best, ali‘}owz_ng that he was not backed bLy a standard’ téam. Credit him with that gmlr!yléarn»d win over the great Cubs, | Jater declared a tie, and he again topped the pitchers of America. He | averaged less than a single base on i bails. per game His total of strikeouts far excelled that of any other Ex»hc‘ber in either league. And 1t may be added that some of hls most bril- - g:mm perforinances are recorded lin gmu lost column, chiefly because the long arm of fate guided a number of | his oponents’ puny splashes fnto sate territory at critical moments. :
r T (OSSP x?b ‘v;i vfio : ol d )y s .‘tq:‘\-». - ofl R D X, v h ) : ’ Wheeling has relonsnd Abe le zofte and’ guspended Dick Nebinger Boston i planning ‘a field dav for wajor and minor leagie Ball jlavers Kanzas City has relessed Jueo Mil, st one time & Cleveland plaver, to Mobile ; : ‘ Ray Demmitt {s doing some hitting for the Hisi:l:::::h;rs since hLe took Reeler's place in right @eld . President John I Tavlor has closed terms with Piteher Ray W Collins, a University of Vermont pitcher, and he will join the Boston team ‘BOON, Kid Gleason has succeeded Eugene McCann as manager of the Jersey City club of the Eastern league. Glea: son was with Jersey Clty for a short time In 1807 ' The archaic Jake Beckley s bat. ting 390 in the American association and is a better first baseman now than some to be found in the big leagues. : Hicks of Harvard Is hiding his light under a bushel on a college nine. Two no-hit games in one season is likely to make him a target for the eyes of professional managers. s Aside from their batting . ability, Wagner and Cobb surpass all their rivals in stolen bases. Wagner has 18 to his credit in 40 games, while Cobb has purloined 24 in 29 battles. Pitcher Chappelle, who was .purchased from the Boston Nationals ten -days ago by the Reds, was sold. to the Rochester Eastern leaguers. Chappelle is the man Joe Kelley had such trouble in landing while he was in the Southern league last year. ‘Mclntyre of Detroit, although batting 276, has still to make his first sacrifice hit. . Sam Crawford has made three bome runs this year and leads the Amert can league in this respect. . Artie Hoffman never hit so hearvil; as he is doing with the Cubs this spring. His whacking makes up largely for the absence of Chance ané the failure of Evers to bump the ball. Keep your eye on Arkansas. Argenta of that commonwealth came to the front with a triple play the other day, and on t&e same day Hot Springs wit . Dessed a 17-inning gama. :
Romances of Progress et~ ———— e ————————————————— By Albert Paveon Terhure ~ GALILEO—The Man Who Wouid Take Nothing for Granted.
A ISyearald Dalian boy—small &l Sa e o sas et (R study st dreaming in the gray shad. | oxs of the Ples Catbedral oos day In 152 Asd froms Wi dresma arose some of (he greatest investions and discovirien ever scoomplished The buy was Galileo, eldest son of an i poverished Fiorentine pobieman, 1% Bad spest his obildbood deviking clever oechagical tors oul of the reuntiest materiais: had dabbled b lerature and pailiting as B grew p. had sought (o become ‘m‘;‘f and had bees persuaded by Bis fe her 0 stady medicine tnstend. =~ | ¢ The young medical student os Be sat in the cathedral fell fo mfig% the grest bronze chatdeiter’ that husg By 3 fong rod from Ibe pool §m§d§ o remaining motioniess the chande fer vibrated simost pmperceptibly (o) a 5 fro Galileo wondersd why, Tén thecmand other alians had éeen that enaying anp snd had taken Ha mo Gan {or granted fiut Galiiea ;sw‘gu, i Wiy of taking eothiog for grasted ‘ Vreddi idly watching the bionge lamps Wovaments he hegan o oote them more carefully = He. saw Ut ther were rhvthnie 54 that whether the rEings were far or siight all f:;:r:awré& Loy same bemgth of Ume Aeal Ghl Heo winder why e sot himestt e #lidy the rauss The r,if-in,sita;if‘fléf hii Eindivs were pradual and oee mm:! % midre than BAIY 8 ventire 1?3\15:}?% conventdnee thos will here he fi?Y}SM’ SHEg Knew pothing of n,&’}zmxfiis‘z: Bal tn 15e workitg ont of the wibent | fng-lamp probfen, mathemation would be necordary, 8o be threw over tned e - and beeame a 8 mathenatician, The threh ol that eatbedral {&Efifi lier started him to pondering over a e . thedry propotinded The Swinging Thay l‘ txwg bfl?fitzw hamp and o leh Ghod What 1t Taught. Coperticus, name Iy that the sun «tands suill and g'i,i%‘fi;tfi the earth reveives about 2 a\h%fi‘ tiat the various stars and the moon Bave B oshmilar svetent of r@m‘téfimg Might not this alleged motion of the exrth mecount for the yvibrating of | the chapdelier? Galileo. rwfiflflf& e know more of the matter. He was not cafitent’ to take for granted the'old doctrine that the earth stood still and | the sun circled abpat i 1 But (o gol furtlier fnto the matr it was neces. sary to study the heavens. This he kad no competent medns of daing | S 0 he went to wark devising 'm&giffh_ ? means, Somie Years eariior o ;a;!iamg;}w; burg opticfan had ground bits of glas in such a way as to magnity ohjects . seen through themd. The saperiment | had not awounted to much Tt Gal lleo thought he saw a 8 wiy of imp‘rm”«% ing on it - He fgured out that by i placing a convex lens and a coneave | lens in certain position toward each
BERNARD PALISSY---Who Didn’t Know When He Was Beaten.
A curious crowd gathered outzide a little house in the Prench town of SBaintes one day in the middle of the sixtoenth century. In the throng a woman was weeping and wringing her hands, stoppiog now and again to stare through the open doorway of the dwelling : . Mo s mad! Quite mad!” she walled. To feed that miserdble fur nace, what do you think he has done? He has spent every penny of our ssyings and has sold the clothes off his back to buy fuel. We are starving y¥et he pays oo heed to my protests. He has ripped the palings from our fence; our door from ite bhinges the boards from our floars. He has broken Gp esery stick. of our furniture. And all for what use? To feed his furnace that it may sttain a greater heat and that his wretched bits of pottery mwmay bo #lared! : : : And as the potter's wie resumed ber nalling march the aelghbors mur mured thelr sympathy and amazement Meantime, within the house, a 8 hollow. eved, emaciated man was ocrouthed before a roaring furnace, into whieh he had fust huried the last combustible Tragment of his bhouseliold fivwair«‘ : i : This man whom his wife and neigh bors declared mad was Hernard Palis By, son of a Prench glass painter. He bad followed his father's trade comfortably encugh in Raintes, where he kad settied down and married. But one day he chanced upon an old earth: enware cup of Moorish make He noted that it was covered with a glazed or.enameled substance that gave it a rare beauty. He made in- : quiries, but could Undaunted by, joarn these Three Hundred ... nrocess where . Failures. by the Moors had produced this enamel. Then he began experimenting. It was quickly proven to the satisfaction of his fellow-work-‘ers that he was on the wrong track and that the art of enamelling could not be rediscovered by any of the methods he employed. But Palissy alone could not realize that he was beaten. He figured out that soon or late he must come upon the correct chemical mixture to produce the white enamel he sought. He was utterly ignorant of the materials which go to make up such enamel, yet for ¥years he labored on the problem, making no fewer than 300 mixtures, all of which turned out to be wrong. With despair in his heart Palissy placed in the furnace the pieces of pottery. he had prepared. After four hours -he drew them out. They were eeeeOo P o s e ol
To Sterilize Water. : . Water, water everywhere, ahd every drop of it may be made drinkable by the mercury vapor lamp; whose ultra violet radiations have bactericidal properties. Courmont and Nogier have recently used this in sterilizing drinking water. A Kromayer lamp with a tube of quartz was suspended in an iron cask filled with water. All bacteria within 12 inches of the lamp were killed in two minutes. ' A long series of experiments proved conclusively that one minute
(PESer AuYihing seen throogh fhe teo Would bereniarged This 8 e poia itk o ihe: mstern mweszgiiie. e dr maarvelois ackiovement did pot sat enses al various angles of fefraction SBL he had perfected an dusirament Ahat would magnity 81 foid dn erder ‘m be hsd made. R Wlescope Tursiog this on (he Beavesly Lodies, B st ohos revolutionized sl pairon e . Europe wen! will R ihe stessing ibvention, hut W oslireed Bp eouniless Hivale and enewies for he mvepue Bulsioo's xßariog declarstion that the Rt maveld was seped e o these :flt’ifi% Swhie earried B mm;g GulslHon with the claine that I onded 10 deny cerinin passages of Soripturs BBd wnk ;;émfla:fifi;« %wralém.i“?‘zfiv s %%fi&fi% Biwayd mmw éi‘iminw b Put o death any sowvalled heretic warned Gallleo 1o advabiod pe mom Buch dspgerous theortes. 1B weply Be Weote a tamk kativizing Bl oppenents f{g»,nd #van Rinling that {he :w;”a s et Sncked the highest intelimens A% & resgit he promptly fousd him. #el! in tioubic He %A agalp broaght N Gah - trisel Awy Dy tne penaity 1o (R amzygmiag.tm» ture m'rhn‘ Treuth, - L ENR {higjawmc nt &1"&‘% the enrth moves | Outen was Rrowing oid and Teshds, agd foursee menglly departs with sirebgil He he Peaniod on hig kbess admittieg. (iat Ahe carth was slationßey. 88l as he !‘K}E‘w* o Riw ffi"t.f"l_, Ha fifswaii“fii& & Syoud et Wt wrath o Cdowl (he same ft 148 Rovet” He was impeisoned dn the o guistiian dufigenis for an ndifinite period, but through the Soßacs of Cpowerful riends wxs laler sllowed ?im go Tree ; S - ! gt aties Wi tromehios 'gs%éj{h_‘ the I Aulsition. the o inventor’s gpirn and Bealth gave way. His cbfldren died many of Lis friends deseried Bim e went bdpelessiy Biind Yot eien g ?‘,i}i‘&"{}%"-f!‘;«t?tu».é atd old sgs Bis uind ‘h#&‘”imi hack b the ;a!*;,ig;t}gg‘gjggr_gfix;z; it ih*‘ Ewariog ealhedral mnm:; Fhat had Ancited his whole dareer. Working om the pame theory of rhethm he o ventod the pendulum aid applied i use .to cleckmsking. This was his 1%! sehiovement boelore i!; ."fléii‘; e died. He bad been born on o the day ol Michelangelo's death. Aad the day of ‘his denth also iwitnessed thic bind of the great Sir lsaae Nowton . To the Fithedral “dreamer” we owe ‘mimost wholly the telescupe, wirro mufw thermometer and cloek pendo tem. To him, above all We owe our knowledge of astronowy and of ihe Emtrikfi mddon. . 00l - ClpraNNY
coated with the beauatifal white enamel he hdd o logg and vainly seriy en 1o Bnd: His discovery was miade Now ail that rewmained wan to per fect it ! ’ Four more years wers thuos con sumed. Every stick of farniturs, every wooden housefixture went to e super-beating of his furssce. He sold his ri-.s:h_-*fl__'fi!.ar“we! hffi family, grew thin as a skeleton Mot in the end success came’ ; ) Pesigning enlored p!a!-'s‘ and placgues and coating them with his wonderful | enamel Palisay opened s shop in Paris. Rixteesi years he had labored to complete his fnvention, and pow tardy triumph erowned His! work beosme the mge al court Cathiorine de “'s!s-e’sz.-r!, the gieen otk er, and Henrt L. the kigg declnred themaelves hifs fatrods ; o The Protestant religion. deapite all efforiz: of 8 Cathiadle Ring, wag swoep ing Fratee., Paligsy, though he wéll > koew that such an lmPrmoflmeflt' the Ret owould wreok ; Reward of Serv: YH!‘AI i“i,fi;f! favur, trg 4 ice. : CAILY BB Ol Ccun vert o the new ersed. He not ooly deciared bimselfl 8 Proteatand . but ‘alsa, o the surprise of every one, wtudied philosophy and patursl bhis tory, excpliing even the most learned men of !g’:;.ssw on both gubjects, and, incidentally, winning in this way new enemios, L I ‘ All this combined to undermine his standing at court. Henrl 1l was re luctantly coerced into signing a war rant committing him to the slate pris‘on of Paris, the Bastile. There, in his cell, the king secretly visited Palissy, begging him 1o recant Protestantism and promising him freedom. 5 - ;),,ily you,” added the King, “but as long as you are a heretic 1 am compelied to consent to your lmprisonment.” ; i : “It {8 your malesty who deserves pity; not 1,” retorted Palilssy. “You say you are ‘compelled.’ You are less a king, then, than I; for no man can compel ME! All the power of France cannot ‘compel’ this ome potter to bow down to clay images'” . The king. too weak to save his old friend, permitted him to be condemned to death; but, in 1589, before the sentence could be executed, Palissy died in prison. He was 79 at the time of his death.. Nearly 50 years he had labored in poverty. Then, when glory and worldly wealth at-last were at his feet, he deliberately thréw both away —for the sake of a principle. ' ; (Copyrighted) -
suffices for complete - sterilization In ‘ordinary cases, and two minutes when the water is greatly contaminated, either naturally or artificially. But the water must be clear in order that the rays may pass through ft. The elevation of temperature is only a fraction of a degree, and the water, after treatment, is harmless to ‘plants and animals. So it appears practical to sterilize the water supply of a city by distributing powerful quartz mercury_ vapor lamps in the reservoirs. R -
» ok, . - LONDON'S FEW FRAME HOUSES oid Wooder Strustures That Possess | Histor:ical interest Scom 1o B £ Torn Down. : et Kerosas Hiiged "‘ AB¥E L ‘v‘“’“ 5 OETU P3e inctes’ mallk oz % F oty Rigd paw 3 Choid - tice Gy 4 ‘ St fnak : e £ s%i ¢ Thie togs ay s Y " * oy ) i , : . - -‘ r “;‘:‘%{‘3 1!. ‘\» w % - » 7 . n \j‘—h&!‘f‘!’ i o el e 4 - : 5 X i .\;_ s g \ i b e & ], N e 8 i 1 : > e 2 AR B 4 3 - i §EE - Jet Bt l‘ - . 1 ‘}"fif@g i>| 3 :; ,; ”’__- ‘4‘«%’:‘ | g /” - fi" \7 o “ . - . ;,'al" - z - o 5 e - 5 _/—_ Cnaly Frame gd. girngs ’;';,"-i‘ . AN SSy :,. ‘l‘ i ) ; - ; : st e prie A B obs-gall that Ko Hied gided tiene: sod ot ~_:f‘,;f:..v,r',:y~ { also jived DUmßrous famous actors and Coaetresses, GQaTizk, Mrs Shidogs 14'.'. SBseridan #l one lhme fved ogi e south xide of the river and even n ';»' ;_.‘;_l“: <'&i ieh ’ ,s"v ,"! the majority of alares -stog in. Uie teighiborhico ¢f Hlackfriars bridge | PRINCESS SHOD BY AMERICANS Massachusetts Firm Fills Csi!’) Cr der for Footwear for Royal Dutch - Baby. s Hrockion, Mass When the’ babdy Princess of Holia g puts .dung ber /" A CT T AL Qfi\% ' :- # ~'v;;; . : F s 1 ‘. s ::‘« ;. fy , i\ [ } i 1 /'l / e i /‘ ‘ f‘f/ g g_ ' s\} » L - : o ““"I 3 ; - P i‘( . i 9 WNy v WK, / d ' Nal ;(‘. \\ 7 "o i ~‘ \' i ¥ - - 2 Shoes Made for Queen ’W!!hel!fina's i Daughter. . royal foot by way of u:::;'p:'.;-.ma che will enforce her Dutch will with the most beautiful American footwear that ever graced the sole of a prospective monarch, Her royal highness boasts 17 pairs of such Cinderella slippers and booties as would make | the tveriest fairy wonder. : ) To be sure, they have been sent here to be desighed and cut and fitted as only the American shosmaker knows how, but the materials of which they are compesed ure- the fin. est vghit@ kid and calfskin from Paris, | brocaded satin, silk, eloth of gold. so that when it pleases thé queen. in embryo to suck the royal toe it may be clothed accordingly. . =~ ; ' The loveliest shoes of all this daz zling collection are lined from a plece of Queen Wilhelmina's wedding gown iand cost $2OO. All the 17 pairs are ' made Wwith soft soles, o { e SRR S ; = Skepticism. - {9 kind of agree with the, folks who i say that story about George Washing{ton and the cherry tree is & myth” ésaid .Farmer Corntossel after " a ;thoughm‘{ll silence.. L . | ‘For what reason?” inquired- his | wife. : = | “Well, human nature is purty much { the same in all generations. And it 1 ‘had a boy who picked vp an ax an’ | voluntarily went out to cljop wood, I | wouldn't chide him. I'd hand him a | medal.” e . e taw, | The client—How much will your ioplnion'be'worth in this case? The lawyer—l'm too modest to say. But I can tell you what I'm going | to charge for it.—Cleveland Leader.
JC3 WIULD KEEP M 4 BUSY " ) v S —— Gresrhora §3lcr Rea'lzed the Caplain Hag Given Mim 3 Big . B Ceontrast. Ctn e ?(?‘;g‘h‘. of the recent whext tp st freker Pallen - fisiaaving 1O gureraments wbasl salitates with 8 perortar sald 4'.?.77:.131" 7 ] - “Hal sntse of 158 ppen t¥e phrere ment lakes ftB Szires fron 7me green Wesrsk, Perfaet greenherns. As bad ‘aB the Dolheh eliig, 09 ¥how T Tie eartalp o st o the salio when the gD oilpe o vt ) TIREe 8 Lig? ros pabore and 5‘3" = wre worth of yepciatien’ = SThRe sallny Sldat Feaaw whal veg® Pa%ica » -'({ -#c &% soan &n he «ruchk %2 3 B & i A Froian e% e o y .J.ié"‘;‘ l ‘r ’ 3 £ 1-,!l\ - z' .-vf,w” Sty Afed pase o fer fsisace” O -S e o S 3 Tt PRV abent Bis (WS &eiias s Buge Eaik Sf Jdried peas tag s g e Bigr g '; afifiih‘ with Bin legd e Eapdain called bl Prove the Boides Ve o hassed lag gal thies YOpe tatisw : o< gxo wir pald Yeacuniicr G 3 thie. vaitals. Band e, b g joOEE B tivhe v % ey £ g * »3id the Bl ¢ gt B St iiTe e DUW, Q“-_ iy kRt a § 5 ‘ ACLENT CN THE “PUS™ A
) . D e . e N | e IS g« ~ o B ‘vt i . 8% 3§ . ik T 4 T EARR : ot o aIT TR | i 3 LN { 63‘& 2N ) % iA xS 3 A Ty i : ; e Lali o 5 1 { z Xt S bad a - i-% e - Vs 8w ’f;si l" x, ¥ . », - 3¢ £y (;n‘ - iy o 4 G 3 & £ 1R AR =gt i cat . - - Tubersulosis AMicts Japanese. ranasad E% gg lag e 1@ Ddaps eI . £ £ 2 Z B GyETEE that e B % & Py sk R irvee of 8 tivly ¢ cafese Wmerchants and of- ¥ - 5 & HEPETEIAS f iaborere % E i vt hark 1 Fatann LY ? T B sTiY ass § R Are 7 ' i it s eainned by the > e iBT e y ',.s)‘;'"‘: this rratier hat ihroupgh the lack of iy & . ful s s rn Ty an_ Ri:oH Sk 1 & il inpogeatl thal a Ai:‘-s‘ s¥slesn be emPloved i Wimg witir the wmick 10 theme catheg, SRR Japaness Are geite gnarant sheven the ot sl v HEE Raleghgras ' A Difference; There 38 time i esvry man's life when the goftiy hréathe!l “Yes™ of B CFAUNY RRTA grvinds as loud-to his ears azx the noles ol Dabriels rympel Alvorveard there poties 8 Yimne when ghe-hua 14 yell 8t he v of Lor volos: “Johkn John, g timme 1o get up” geventdan thmes before he becotes aroused enourh %o hear i, © - Use Alen's Foot - Fase T is the oniy relief for Bw den EmartTeg, Tired! Aching,: Hot, Becatiag Fesk, Corns ab HWunlons Ase for Alion's Fonls Fasse & perwdier - & miake nis the . 3 Alite § WaTE. AT aii irußEisis ant Bhoo Bioges B i t avaepl any substPule. Sample sedt FREERK Ads Gress, Align B Gimstad, all N X, Without Saying Anything. e They aiways 13k who never think -—Pope = ) ) Mra. Winslow's Saathing Syrup, Por o 4 ren Loy & wttegs the @uoce, Tedoree e Sansiat o, SLAF Pak TErEWPINE G, B a okl And orcasionally a man tells lles by keoping his mnouth shut 1 Single Hinder, the _famous ookt FaP-alnasi saie BN Your .country manufactured 25,000 planos A —————————————————————
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Interesting Facts The only- effective and reliable remedy known for Gout, Dyspep--1 sia, Jaundice, Kidney and Bladder troubles, Constipation, Headache, Biliousness and all disorder of the bowels is. DR.D.JAYNE'’S - . For several generations they have been 2 bousehcld necessity for reiievingand curing complaints of tzis kind. They are safe and sure in every instance. As a laxative, purgative and cathartic they are unexcelled. Sold by druggists everywhere in 25c and 10c boxes
SICGK HEADAGHE
Positively cured by these Little Pills. Ther also relleve Dis trefs from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste:nthe Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER.
CARTERS ITTLE IVER | PILLS.
’E%T;mielmv 'furr.'ly Vegetable. SWALLPILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, f Genuine Must B | “flums Fac-Simile SignatureI e | fewiZioont | REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
