Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 16, Ligonier, Noble County, 8 July 1909 — Page 2

The Ligonier Banne; JIGONIER i’ o | Latest News Told in Briefest and Best Form. WABHINGTON NEWS i+ . % S ol# s & ¥ 51 ¢ S e i/ i 1 HnE ! : X f £ ol ¢ edn ¢ . s ' $ e By : PERBONAL. t ; ’ P ¢ : 4 : ¢ ‘ 3 $ 5 3 3 L X 5 ¥ wl ikl i i Wil “ : : P ab TRI altended the oot L LA Inatnl > .',, " i 3 A '7 §555¢ g xf‘,,’, Wi ; Ol sl A P LnaANTo el e [ i New York after 8 t f the W T i 3 ¥4 oricntal et 3 faows v e an Amner) Carit 24 COmn i Rl is B . Sherburne M. Recker known ag th *Bov mavie of Mitwaubke (rrived in San | il v oin Bis o return fromm a Tisit 1o th il Fon on the invitation of President Talt GENERAL NEWS : -The Repulilican party must * Reey fts pledpes (o the posile o be rele gated 1o Ihe n garity. sßald President T Taft in an address to Yale graduats Fuliv 15,000 emdayes of the Ameril CAnl Sheot md Uin Plats (Coanpany went oty i frik arainat thn G shop order in the (rust's miil Prof Juiin B oMivelos told 'a - e markabie story of bow the ghost of R. Swain Giftard. a 4 gront ary "fi?,.;\ taught IFrederiek 1. Thompson, a gold smith. to paint mast rpleces Tennessee's “"dry’’ jJaw went into ef. fect at midnteht June 26 and all bt two saloons weore closed | Calvin Littlepage. who killed hig wife's parents at Valley Junction, la. committed sulelde wihen near capture By a posse Russia is ypreparing to. send troops to Teheran, capital of Persia, which is threatened with invasion by bandits Three boys Were hurt several firemen overcome by smoke and heat and - $250.000 dumaged caused at a fire in the Kiechhefer Box Company's plant fn Milwadkee ~ The 116 suffragettes who were ar‘rested for rioting in London were released from jail without bond and must appear’ in court on July 9, A verdict for $3,145 was awarded at Laporte, Ind., against the estate of Mrs. Belle Gunness in favor of the administrator for the estate of Andrew lHelgelein, one of her several alleged victims, ¢ Five persons died and more than a score were prostrated by the heat in Minneapolis and St. Paul. An operation for appendicitis was performed on Mayor Fred A. Busse of Chicago and for more than 24 hours his condition was eritical. Justice Dowling 'in the New York . supreme court granted a separation "and $26,000 a_ year alimony to Mrs. Howard Gould. - The Illinois and Wisconsin Retail Coal Dealers’ association began its fourteenth annual conventior in Chicago. t William Kage, employed by the Pnited States Express Company at Green Bay Wis, confessed that he, and not a robber, as he first reported, stole $4,600 from the company. Thirty-four deaths from cholera and 99 new cases were reported within 24 hours in St. Petersburg. Striking car men attacked the barns of the La Crosse, Wis., street railway company and a demand was made for militia to protect the property. = Albert Reese, a negro murderer, was taken from jail and hanged by a mob of 15 masked men at Cuthbert, Georgia. - . B Charles F. Hansen a blind organist of the Second Presbyterian church in Indianapolis, saved the sanctuary from fire after it h?,d been struck by light ning. e v A cloudburst did considerable damage at Vall, la, and two men and a ,baby narrowly escaped drowning.

Jomeph Jurette, 8 farmner near Alton i, kas trained docks o&t bupgs of Plaiimiy whd Dlans £a hite then out »e afe doliar & dBy By vacd duik W flean potats feids of the peat rung Dulzingsiowss 5 New Yotk engitenr, bse dgveltell aB o minebiy Whirh will sither 8y 6r run oo the Eraund i : © 1t Lk besn didcosered that Arka: Ene Has ‘; Bow law rnllibiting the sale i cannon crdckers oF oy Pistols sy deaiers are diapomsng of Pourth o Lo driving Bl &m%w-~*- r throurn Nia Heble near 1 eal Okie . iohn Nich ols ran over and killed Bl bzl daup? ter wi ®as guioed Eiretiin Wright alter thrve unsuc wesliol aliempts, ascelided 1o the new perapinne and olrteied Ihe perodrome 8l Fort Myer et tn Niw York on the chatee ol ine ehy it rnootlog with (e Lrover comed o Kidnapiag Bix atepsan in 4 ¥ | affeialn decisred the head fHiraring i the ob ot iras ! v hue bvon oatablished Al Alliacy, Ind B ieaud rdx tralled twe of (he han Yite » Leig up B Lansdian Pacit ra i ot og (hoek 0 an abandoned 3 & $ _:.', 4 5 Thi ‘ £ £ oedf # % = ey g M Wy 3 i - i & A iy & lnnt iy 3 5. Y X i# ¢ LA 3 8 e 5 175 £ 3 %t 3 i e i V 0 L ¥ A e :,,‘ ‘, .‘ Lo 3 ¢ oo it 1 Lers daih i G by which the ol will Lo moved Uik one hour frol My 1 1o (O V‘x‘. h o the fiing of B 80l In New York Ly Mra Mand Howard fevan ¢ focover $5O bent Ulont Craky, 1t 3 B the LRy liryen rotuatiios iias fonn Naimuis 6LI Bor fu a Now Orleabs botel, has been jeft $4 I i e will of Rare H Niehtle & New Yorker who 8 short thihe before Lis death viened the bolel and fook o faney 1o the lad : Bou wWere expioged in two thea tere in Barcelonn, Spaln Ao otie there wWas & panic asd ohe man was (aty ';) award Cocley was Kilied and threo Bther 1 NoWere DUrt 0 B Buteinonae gecident o Elizaboth N ) A burst ing tire eauscd the @machine to Lit ' a As the result of a desaperate knifo dusl which took plaee belween Awo Indians mwounted on the same borse o the Colvillie reservation in Wash fngton little Tom kg I Alicn LY nen i¥ severing bis head from Lis Bs3 - . s the strike of the Pililaburg street ar mvn was setied throsgh the . ef. forte jof Mayor Magee &fter a 8 twoday sfrugele - which - cost. mwore than §204 000 : Fhe Jary in the Woodill murder fgsc at SU Michaedis, Md, left a douybt as 1o the woman's real slaver when it jecided that Robert E Eastman kKilled her or was an ACCEESOTY A'strong wind blowing at the time the test was to be made prevented a flight by the MWright Dbrothers .at Washiugton and disappolnted a large i_':(’)’x\ ii’tv . : 2 The New York police began workiß on a new theory 8 the Sigel murs der case which is that Leon [ling also was slain and was pot her murderer, Attorney J 1. Webster, arguing before the federal court at Lincoln, Neb, declared the states bank law providing a guarantee to depositors I 8 unconstitutional. ; Thirteen persons were hurt. A. H. Cook of Akron, the most seriously, when an Erie passenger train was derailed at Sterling, O. Counsel for William Green, who weighs 358 pounds, says the prisoner {s too fat to have committed the rob bery of a man who was dragged through a space 9% inches wide at White Plains, N, Y., and has asked for a new trial L George R Huntington has been appointed general manager of the Soo Line to succeed Edmund Pennington, recently elected to the ‘presidency. Pending a decision in the check-off dispute 6,000 miners have guit work in the north end of the Pittsburg coal field. ' i Services: in several Pittshurg churches were suspended because of the street car strike. ' - A mutiny in the prison at Vilna, Russia, resulted in the deaths of four warders and seven convicts. : About 700 delegates are attending the American Library association's annual conference at Bretton Woods, N. H. . : ‘ . Robert Eastman, slayer of Mrs. Edith Woodill at St. Michaels, Md., killed himself when surrounded by pursuers. ‘England will send three warships to San Francisco in October to assist in celebrating the rebuilding of the city The 'American Institute of Homeopathy changed the code of ethics applying to its members by releasing physicians from professional secrecy when silence is injurious to innocent persons, C. Rudolph Brand applied for a receiver for the Huebner-Toledo Breweries Company at Toledo, 0., claiming the president of the concern, by his conduct, has been aiding the “dry” campaign. A ferryboat, fitted for the care of victims of tuberculosis and donated by Miss Mary Harriman, was turned over to the Brooklyn Red Cross society. - : ~ The inland waterways commission started from Buffalo, N. Y., on a trip of inspection by lake to Duluth and from St. Paul down the Mississippi te the mouth of the Ohin i

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CBhe syprossion Pannas bat” oas in dicalive of the aripl of thig cole Hrated: sriicie of !‘.»,ef:-&xigzi{;{r,f mOoan evih dent mbinoapner,” iuastpueh as (hese Fats Bro mads in the Ereatieatl pesfen fion i B idot, Pers kel Cblombia Formery the eubies duf ol of thiy proguct destined for the foreign trade, wog g v Bl 3' orinetpal et of the fsthaiug of i‘;fiif;a?;‘,;i, whleh perame :',‘.' Crent piart z;{u‘% ntermedintie o positore o ;3'4§!'s fsivmer tant articls of Routh Amarieus *‘“*,.i‘:!‘,zi"i‘";ij‘_. s(0 ke onrss 6f tine (hese franous kid much solgpE it iar Lale were dßapnronrictaly desigrated, o ihe _sts.'a':"ki“?% of the Pansmas hatse For many sears. Pannma enjoved e énviable gistinelion of bng Ahe rhint ;izw!— Kot far b sale and diefribution of these hats, bat Gussaguil Ecusdor, long dgt Wisted that bhonor from thé iathmian ety and remalss today flm grest emporiooe and distribuling cen ter ol the Panama batl industiry of the worid in Latin Ameriea these hLats are not pow porliave they ever been, Known as Panama’ Bate hut are unl versatly’ called - “fipilaga . in hoenor of the ftown in Ecuador where it i 3 sutd they were first manofactured. In Burope. and especially in France, It 15 generaily supposod Lhat the siraw ot of which Pansioa hals are mang factured 1 w 0 expensive in the coun tries producing the raw material that hata made of 1L are articles of Juxury beyond the means of all except the well to do or vieh. Thie s a populsr error. gince Panama hals are in common use by rich and poor alike in the South American countries which en. gage th oahy considerabie oxtent in thelr manufacture © The Bigh price of Panama hats in foreign countries ik fnrgely due to the import duties placed spon thent and {0 the Taet that they paws throogh the hands of 8 consider. able numnber of commission merchants before reaching the ullisgate . pur. eliasir, The price of the hats {0 the places where they are manufactured varies greatly, according to the qual ity of the waterial used and the skill of the workmen employed. A fine guality of jipijapa or Panama hat made in the proviance of Manabi, Ecaador, out of a particalarly strong, soft and silky straw, is seldom seen in the United States, because the planters alohg the Fouadorian coast are will ing to pay $BO to $lOO for a hat so phiant and fexibie that i can be fold ed up and carried in the pocket with. out the slightest injury. One of the finest Panama hats ever made was sent to the prince of Wales some years ago, and U was so deiicate and exquizitely woven that it could be folded into a package no larger than his wateh. . ; The raw material, or toquilla straw, out of which Panmua hats are made, and to which is due their compact ness, lightness of weight, durability, elasticity, imperviousness to water, and ease with whish they can be cleaned when soiled, comes chiefly from Ecuador. The shrub, Carludovica palmata, from which . toquilla straw {8 obtained, I 8 from six to ten feet high, and grows wild in the hot and humid regiens of the Paelfic coast of Ecuador and Columbia, and in the forests of the Upper Amazon in Peru. There are five or six spe cies of the plant, some of which have been more or less successfully cultivated, but the main supply of the fiber or straw ¢omes from the plant in its natural state. The price of the straw varies according to the place of production, color, length, thickness, and number of threads to the strand

Diseases of Wireless Operators. A French naval surgeon has observed facts which he thinks warrant him in attributing certain morbid conditions to overexposure to the electrical waves employed in wireless telegraphy. For the most part they have affected the eve, generally in conjurrctivitis, though in one instance there was keratitis. Eczema, too, has been observed, and the author thinks that many cases. of neurasthenia are attributed to the current. He remarks that induced currents are a common product of the action of the apparatus, and intimates that these may cause trouble among other persons-than those immediately concerned in the telegraphic operations. He recoxpmends that operators be provided with blue or yellow speetacles. - Avold Aviatorial Hysterics. The biggest thing about an airship is the quantity of superheated air that inflates it, and much of the talk of the day about aidships is of the same stuff. The mighty dirigible, invulnerable, lightning-proof and winddefiant, loaded with its mortars and

Py skein The plant resembiex the j',;;,-g p.sz,im&i?:w, afe §§'{M'mm '_ L tust bofare ripesing. when (he ghrub attaine & height of stout fve Cfeet ft 4E oomt %T"QZM! in- bl waler fapd Bller helng thoroughly drisd and iwmrsm ik rendy for nse n the Lonae of the Blghly priged sbrals that Lprow i the damp aod gloaomy depthe | uf the tropieal foresis, a siighily ait Cfereni proeexs of gathering and cur tnp the Sher s x».?‘;':!@"fi‘?ff’}, i'ymxzmrh a 8 Pthe laboshaped leaves are ell from Lite trunk of the shrub ust as they Lare iy the act of opening, arestripped el thedr outer Siamiofta immoerned for & few scoonds fn & vat of bailing wa [ter, then withdrasn for & moment And again sohuierped for sn. bustant, Plaken oul digoronusly shaken o and Leardlally suspendid oo o 8 sirlng 1o LAy 6 the ehade and A day iater hleached in the intense raye of the ~ji‘¥%"vz;:u §1 son o Greatsr whiieposs of L atraw g:ngs he wecured By originally ll)(';;i;;;;g,i tho fiber in watey conlatning a ic"urfm,n proportion of lomol julee i A central m 00l of bat making has [ been established &t Pasama pro ivided for by government funds Fourtéen schalirsbips have been oo tablished two from cach of the seven Cprovinees of the republie Puplls L must not be lenk than 15 vears of age, Lol good conduct and heaith, willing and desirous of learning hat weaving, have good eyesight, and contrict an é chligation to teach (he same industry f wherever - designated by the Kovernsent. . The school was opened lune 15, 1905, and general interest is tuken in the result of this new cnterprise. - On the Pacific slope of Ecuador, ' Panama hats are made in the provinces ‘of Manabi and Guayss, the forther producing the celebrated jipijapas of Montecristo and Santa Ana, capd the latter those of Santa Elena and Manglaralto. In the inter Andine ?refg;:m 06f the republic, the mapufacture I 8 confined to the provinces of g.fi.‘zzm'y, Canar, Pichincha and Loja. In i the firstnamed provitnce ovey 3000 | persons are engaged in he hat indistry. The celebrarted Sigsig brand of Panamu' hats are made in this provLinee out of & fiber so durable that bats made of it ure sald to stand without injury the most violent crushings. In the Amazon region of Ecuador, | Panama hats areé mßhofactured at [ Santa Rosa out of straw brought from ;Na;m. - The province of Manpabi, how%y:w:«’r‘.' Is the great togutlla straw-pro ’z(ji‘:cing region of the republie, most of %t:;_e hats wanufactured n Ecuador Leing made out of this straw,_and large immntmm of it are exparted to Plura, - Pebu, notwithstanding the heavy export tax to which it is subject, to be used In making the celebrated Peru | vian catacacs hats. Antioguia I the principal Pasbama bat manufscturing center of Colombia, : | The United States is lhe largest ;Dflf‘{‘hnlfl‘r af Pansma bats, having {mported from Ecuador in 1906 jipiJapas to the value of $600.801 ° Germiany, Great Britain and PFraoce, 'in the order named, are next in importance in this tratlic, ‘ - Tue straw exported from Ecuador to Peru is shipped in bales weighing about 85 pounds each/ a pound of the straw bringing from 70 to B 0 cents. according to grade, Germany aiso takes a small quantity of straw, The manu. facture of a Panamsa hat often re quires the labor of a skilled weaver, working five or six months in the late twilight or early dawu, the only time ‘available for making the finer grades of hats. S e 3 A o ——————— " i . One Grin. Hers Tes the boldy of Jim Pyles | Bewnare, young map, of quafing! : He started out to “take a smile ™ . And now he's dled of Inughing: f‘ ' The Easiest Way, Loy My owife's in tears” : | . Hald Mr Peck. e o sudes 'H oslgn Rk o Another cheok.” : s k. A Promise. ' The recording angel wrote fn his book ~ And said: “T'H remember the man i,‘lj_flt’h a patient heart and a Pagged coag, . Whom the world calls an ‘also ran'*™

paraphernalia for raining down deathdealing bombs, is still a rainbow which all the world can see, but may never reach. ‘Perhaps it will some day become a practical means of tranaportation: without doubt it may be used as a spy, a lookout to give notice of the approach of an enemy; doubtless, as well, it may be used as a messen‘ger to carry a few men from camp to camp or from ship to shore. But it is not going to accomplish all the hor rors now being claimed for it o To Count a Billion. To count 1,000.000,000 would require a person to count 200 a minute for a period of 9512 years, 342 days, five hours and 20 minutes, providing he should count continuously. But suppose we allow the counter 12 hours daily for rest, eating and sleeping, then he would need 19,025 vears, 318 days, ten hours and 40 minutes in which to complete the task. : The Way of a Woman, o Oh, woman, in your hours of ease, - You keep us wobbly at the knees. . You tell us things, then show your gall, By swearing ‘twasn’t meant at ail 3 —LOB Angeles Express |

The Philippi 1h lippl ‘ Jailerp o Sondsy Schoel Leasen for Jaly 11, 1909 © Scevaly Ariasged te Thia p;m TR TERT cActs W OBME Memory Yareew 0% } ‘,“ LAENR TEXTY Tietisws wn the Leord Jes e e ped 3 ahxit be saryed &Tt 3 & 5 & s ? Tiw , t A D 1L The e il s § iy Seaaus PO3 A Phiipn i Macelsasis Suggestion snd Pragtical Thought. L the Hisey of the Prensied Girl Hor Mental snt | Poasteal Troubls, Pautis Paith fler Delivepenice -~ Ve 118 The mbasbnsries [reqguently went from Lrdlss bouse within the ey 1o the tlsce of praver ivond the walls by the river zidel 1 soversl ‘oebasiots (e ol = the sirecis T Ixroonl Swdsapan! WiTH § Bpdrit of divinatan™ This gir! gave ot strange tergneed and hrsterd €3} s I 8 rer Treniiad onndiiion whirh Ber mssters intertiretod & Shey iyt ; Cried. saricg Those men are Ihe gorvacis of the momt Righ God ol Hhe seemy o kave beog lmpalingd o toll the truth, 88 woone demonilos Rete 15t el being prisved matd ia 150 spleit’ as vipet froem tiw it N it ¥ he gnd g 5 oaway from;m her. not oel "And he came 00l B ahee Mo 11 The Misstonsries Theast lets Frimet Thetr sailt TRt s ety ag ance % TA3B Fhe mastiers Bay Ing et thelr soures of galn, lke Ihe sußkore o silver shvines n Eobe Lig B iryasst ¥ X Pt 4o tha PR n A magistrals T hargn - presenied was ‘hst AR et 1 hoa peid ; s pmsiien faston and anar trying 1o (" Yerl lhe - HOmANSs 19 a Bew e igion The clothen of Paul ahd Sllas were tarn oM nl tha yoive Wers Phend gams 1y Eißg #L3CKS aain (B paked boedy (von 2 Cor 11: 35 1 Thew, * & il thelr backs wers torn by the merciloes means of thelr Roman citizensiiins. o 8 thev -did the next mornisg? Pebabiy the clamor of the ol gace them no popoartanity tn be heard. and i ‘.‘fiv profested . thear srotosts would e dis regarded by the axelited pe nin Then. all mangied and Weeding as they were, they were thrust into the inner prisog and their feet placed iy Ihe stocks Songe in the Night —25 “Paul and Sllas prayed and sang pralses’” “And . the prisopers heard them ™ This was the beginning of the turther ance of the gnepel through the sufler ing of the misslonaries ; 26, “And suddeniy there was a great earthauake.’ This was the l[ord's ansgwer to prayver, whether it came by miracie, or was timed by special provl dence, “All the doors wers opened, and every one's bands were loosed ™ Either by the activn of the earth guake, or by the same supernatural power which ;c‘mii:-v’»"«i the ' earth quake 111, The Conversion of the Jalles, De Byerance from 8l and Death, Throueh the Faith of the Jaller Vs 2934, “The keeper . \ . would have killed himeelf” bocause by Roman law he was responsibie for the safety of the prisoners, and he would avoid by guicide the disgrace of an execulion ; Loag ~Raul celad . we are all ‘here Thus saving the laller's iife, for there wns no longer & reason for his committing sulchie, | 24, “Called for a light” The Greek {8 plural. lights, torches or jamps “Fell down before Paul and Slias.® 30 “Brought them out.” of the inner ';=r:s~.sn. into the open court, or into his own houke What was the laller’s motive fn asking, “What must I do to be saved?’ The 'motive was & con sciousness of sin, of danger, of peed, and of the goodnass produced in Paul and Silas by thelr reiigion. 41, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shall be saved ™ Saved from sin, from its punisbhment, and to holines and heaven. “And thy house ” By leading his family to the same faith IV. The Missionaries Released and Bent on Their Way.-~Vs. 2540, The next morning the magistrate, learning what had taken place, sent officers to quietly release Paul and Silas. as the easiest way to save trouble. But Paul knew a better way, and stood upon his rights, quite as much for the good of the young church as for himselfl “They have beaten us openly, uncondemned,” without trial, and legal declgion that they were guiity sccording to Roman law “Being Romans,” and exempt from stripes and torture. “Let them come themselves and fetch us ont” _ . 38. “They feared, when they heard,” etc. The crime was regarded as tresson, and those who committed it wers liable to degradation from office, confiscation of property, and perhaps death. As the result, the magistrates apologized, and requested them to leave the city, which they did with dignity, and for the peace and good of the infant Philippian church. Had they remained, there might arise useless opposition; while by leaving Luke with the church (as we learn from the change of pronouns “we" to “they”). there was a peaceful but large growth of the Cbristian community. From a , comparison with what follows it apgem that Timothy went with Paul and Sllas. “Two words of Jesus in this lessom can mean everything to every one of us,” Follow Me. What will your answer be to-day? He calls you now. Will you follow him trustfully into danger, into safety, into glorious servfce? . : 2 i i § Three Things That Give Strength. Three things will aid in going forward in spite of every difficuity. Stronger faith in the word of our Master. To live well is no easy task, but to attempt. to live without the sincerest faith in the living Christ, within us and above us, is to curtail life of its powers and to draw the curtain of destiny. Another inspiration is more earnest conviction of personal duty. Christ speaks to us and asks for our service in behalf of a world. Love for Christ and for humanity js another inspiration. o

» f : 5 ‘ UNION PRINFERS’ & , e \7 H()MBAT COLORADO SPRINGS 2 ————, || —— A : ; , ko VYD ; "\ ,;' } g o AT 1 o !

1Y V ; , B !‘ "y g T TR mfi;w'wzflé}_ NP - F 18N vl a . \'3‘ "R AT A "’_ eaq e r e ‘}J '~ i ; f N oy A N g II A g P SRS O GRCENDS. W

The union printers of Ihe Dnited Blatiy and Capads, dnt with pride 19 the Union Printers Home 81 Colo Fade Noringd aa one of thelr most no Siie schjeverents Thik medel bome Bl mani mrisim has the {,;:;ir;{v,sa! distine Yo of twing the anly institatian of e Nind maintained by a alwr o '.r.' Bl I, this coantry Ohe manale of i‘;f&"fin»."sc*'i%i: e e £y duy i waal oviry uiioe pribler i NOIE America gives as hbs mite o ®anl the smaintenance of the Uslen Printors’ Howme at Colbrsdo Baaioes Lo .Efl‘u?‘ ¢ month ekery ak of the 450050 members of the Inlerpalional Bypographicn! Unlos pava' #n asuess Mient n! i 5 cenise-Rail s ot & e or less thab (he smount the aterags printer will curn 1o 'R minuls 8 wors Ing e’ It ooa sl ml_éf?i?}-i,";,v‘:uit H ol this smail sacrifice, coming from BREry an, WOrking in voqgeration with his fellow laborers whith gives i_‘im howse &n anpusl fuiil .af 3i‘*'=:e'a:~ for maintengnce and hprovements The prifters Bave byl A 8 wain tained the home themetives—and le; are pirosd of the fact ilt 18 their home. every tman Sas an-egusl share i it mo esual right to partske of iis bounty if the time sheamld eome when oid age or Piness shonid make it pee essary for him o felrdat to the vhel ter in the rearing and rx;a,t:s%a%:;iza.: of ‘w%;m:.he;.- has done his small part I the bedinning George (W, Childs and A 3 Drexel, probrietors of The Philadelphia Ledger, toade & gitt 4 $10.U60 1o the International Typo graphical Unton: With this a 8 the pudleus. the home Tund was gtarted Bince the fowidation for the main bullding were lald in 1951 nearly $2OO. 040 has been spent in bulldines, Turnisbings, fwprovements and, main fepance. Fyery cenl of this. with the gicrg;:’s(:tx' af the Childe Dresel gift and the ncome from the Julia A Lasdsd endowment of $1.0068 has been con tributed by the printers themselves Mot only has the Unlon Printers’ Home proven to the world s splendid example of what can be accomplizhes by harmonious cooperation. butl it has peen to other labor unlons and fra ternal organizstions an jnspiration be euse of 13 humanitarian features It has been the ploneer institgtion in ita fleld and has beosme the model from Whh."lh' wthers Py tdfii and methods - Flgures may tell a part of the story of the Union Pristers’ Home Pat it 18 pot sufhciént to Know (hat the prop erty, which stands o 8 8 commanding esisence east of Colarado Springs, s to-day valued at §1.000.000 when 20 Yoars ago this tract was barres p‘f,axric land which could bave beon bought for & few. dollars an acre; or 10 learn that there are now six bulldings on the grounds, the main bullding, the tuberculosly ' sanitarium, the supetiniend. ent’s muag{l the laundry, bestng plant and barns, besides the $36.000 addition, the beginaing of which has just been authorized by the trusives. It is not enough 10 Know how these 80 acres have been reclaimed from barren waste until they form one of the garden spots of the continent: nor to be told that In all more than 1000 men have been admitted to residence since 1892, thatl the average number #t any one time {8 145, and {hat the average cost, per resident, is §s33 a month, this sam covering all ordinary expenses in connection with the prop It ia far more significant to learn bow this home has been so managed that it has become indeed a sanitarium where the sick may sojourn for a time td bulid up, ih Colorado’s healthgiving climate, their broken constitytions and restore lost strength and vi-

. COME AGAIN. There is .no cause to doubt it The evidence (s plain 3 In mercury and in fedling The heat waves here again: Folks may frosts be predicting, But really they don’t chime 5 With the sureness, we have with us The good old summer time, But many things are coming ; With the season most dislike, Which things we gladly welcome, ‘That make with us a great strike, Such as strawberries and roses, Dollar shaws had for a dime,’ Trolley rides. suburban plenics, With the gooft old sf&mmer time. Thef the belle of all the yeartime, - ; Soft of cheek and gold of curl, All fluffs and ruffs and frivols, Is the charming summer girl And the moonlight strolls of lovers, That with joy bells rapturous chime— Oh. there are compensations In the good old summer time! : Beware. Who dearly loves a ‘witching mald Is apt to find some day, When all is done and all is sald, She'll 'witch his wad away! 3 ' Concrete from Mill Refuse. Concrete is made from the refuse of a soap mill at Calcutta.

t3li’y. 8 baven whers Iz!s'r: hped and 1y firtey Ay redieat 168 Pesoefal coosink of & Hfe Ihat Banm been siwad in G nod Hati 1B wirld of lavor wed Bl }»2“»&{7.s#* s ri‘:g'»,‘m“‘afi,”t ¥ik wod g Eal e e ';é';'_,;g:.«;._,- Peagirireg s lgepee Liove £ -the 341,;573'&('1. -.i?,;«"i :.“ 37 '& A Tew b iR vesdnrs ohat sr. 1 Ere ‘7;.‘@;' denin and &8 i 'x#;” -;;;z‘", A od ke mvthods S 8 tep 5 sarin. w oo ‘( the «Brienl Imats Mans -of e pUlßteaw ‘ff‘_&;;, & -brlb-' E :fi “ ,'ei”._‘"grokiond TR EEtme BEN tim oot ptie of 2T f £55% '%" P ean Fz RIS ‘ ~x::-, haf Iwise deen hild - ¢ ¢alirradiy Bprings I opder 45 g the sismbe shEn &t MArRe 8 Sriader ey ‘-{;‘;;»;2 g f the '&’f"“":t" ""& BEET % L are ,fi“:;h Pt ing P o ¥ 1B Faeidtenin v:-;“:» ( there ‘:'Z,TA“ ¥ g Sre felnmles . weitee ‘v o “:;"'i_ <% sty Bre nil oans ‘ thar ey hnyy P »:-‘;; ©f bowith g deaty oty efi i g Tod e isbrva i sk BFe wivw y el it €3ly T ;{'-':‘:”w" 'f-’ Ry in %51 15} Lk s e b L':. ~f }-‘» S 5 CRt ey IRg , ;"J:,‘,;“ Rt A woekis oors gl T o,‘ §Bl L Ehcery- T ik tanen B seenring o feedoeap xialt, fh of the begll MUE 2l opg o 0 tre cured S the Bomes s n Jaly ssd iy fnete oAs exXreliont - HpTAry ' AIEIN BT Y ‘.»‘""é‘&!!f}*i' £ M %“’*” f?" ifi"f“" faciiities for &Y kinda of H.vcts] white thore &re fenny Qviin »L 38iaive, €9 B , ax the Fourth of Jaly baris b Al nual plonie (B Nerth (Bevenne CRoas Cthe Christiias tres and the wiontdiy wlitter night ententginments - - . lncthe tuberesiosis saniiatiam 3 L E' procegihon B taken s L";r;,,,&_“»f thee Cpatient afd 10 sssure him 0f the bowt |of *treatment Reg lad - habits _and hours are veguired and (Re drinking @ %_‘;fi*.‘xn BTN, is Kerietiy prolibited, AR 3 saniiary regulations are 1 ‘,;-vtt._,;‘v.-f, oy éflmr'v‘-i amd the baildings .are ;—ls‘;@’; i'f;f:ff;a;;i"wl'%f Ti;f}’ff,?!","tzr . . ’ " R ?‘:#N Bailding .te Yous _;':'.;72_.,;‘ in height snd s .u!" white -java s"r | with red sandstone trigimings .. 10 oo taing Th roolps, with the ofies kit en, dintag rocm and s The patiding eriginaliy cost §75000 The twoslory addiiton wili aiibin rhe Cmain bullding on the wHcthoand wil increase the tibrary and houwing Ta. oifties. The fabereuiosis - ssniasbum is to the solith of the maloe bwilding and riear iU are the 20 ents of the wEcinring | This bullding v three ato ries in hadght the tatinl eent }‘»fljfféi‘_!:: (6. The mi;wflfi%e-':;eh-:a',’a: cottagas ta ;:mrlh of the mata bailding, whils the laundry. beating plant and hirne aré {n the rear A maznificent #lone zate .way spans the entrance ' the grosnds . The trustees have within the last feow yesrs devorad especial atUentiop 10 the treatment of furbercniosisy s diseass to which printers are pariie iumriy fizfl;j'mzl becauss of %,.’,aep(fiss?um of their work., The fiethods emploved. by the Usnfon Printers Home in ita successful battle agalngt the “white piague” are atiracting éllsntioh all oves the country. At fhe luterwationg) con gress on tuberculosis, held fn Wash ;i:.;z(m fast fall, the Pristers’ Hotpe was represented by a prize winning «x. hibit, and the mode! lent was present. ;m, spoa roquest, to the maliopal ‘as | soctation for the prevention pf tuber | culosts, for display durtng the winter l tour of the principal éities of the Unit ed Htates. During the last {ew years 3 special commission has nade a [study of the disease, and as a result of its investigations the miost approved ’and scientific ‘methods have Leen itdopt:*d.v The results Kave been e ‘less than marvelous. So salUsfactery have the results been in the "City of Sunhing,” as Colorado Springs is fa miliarly called, that -a . proposition made at the Boston couventicn last August for the transfer of the tiber--eulosis sanftarfum to Arfzona was de. itateq by a decisive majority, . In 1304, ten tents were erected near the sanitarfum bullding. They have proven a valuable acquisition to the hos~pial service and their efciency bas ‘been so thoroughly and satisfactorily ‘demonstrated that the number bas recently been doubled. The expérimental stage in the tent treatment.of tu berculosis bas long since passed.

: Pa ig Perplexed, Pa looked at sister’s hat and then looked : at the one which ma had: hought, And for & while he seémed o be engaged in deep and earnest thaught; 7 Then Hulda, who had dressed for c¢hurch, came in the room to speak to ma, And I could notice that a doubt had rise en in the mind of pa. : ’ He looked at sister's hat a- while and . then at ma's and Hulda's, 100 They were this funny basket style—the same from any point &f view: - I knew that pa was thinking hard when Hulda started on her ‘way. e And it was easy to be seen heé'd something that he wished to say. At last he turned to ma"-an_dv said: “There’'s something I can't understand: : e Your hat and Bélle's are fine: I s'pose .~ that Hulda thinks her own is grand; Don't: think I wish to criticise: I wouldn't do that, bless your heart, £ But if you got the three mixed up, how could you tell the things apart?” ' Effective Treatment. Asked the progressive woman - of the beauty culturist: e “Don’t you think women ghould exercise the suffrage?” e : - “Certainly. My mesthod will increas it two inches."—Puck L :

WHEN YOUR BACK ACHES Itis a Warning That the Kidneys Are S:cx and Need Melp. A had bark ms s every dar 8 dull p s & 58D i Wiy fievore HE Al fieh 48 z 1518 >L3«B % T 8 3 c“ : $ . L i, "' T BRCERCE 4 dizzy 0 1 5 and nary oy i : 0 % % i was A. Z - - . - € : Lol a 4 no P asanh's ' ; . o o cured »v-. s 3 s Q r ' nts A BOX. Foa 5l e ; Bu . N. ¥ 7 EXFERIENCED ADVICE i ¥ ’ —Tu iT- t . ! s £ 08. A R ?. o :\ \.:é: e y gy 8 i 1 | bl Fot > s I ¥ ¥ ¢ i, i wd - % Ha § Y b J 3 ~. e . e @-‘ 3 L & vhe, : : INTOLERABLE ITCHING. Feart Ezzema Al .——'fia!,,'l.Flcn —Protessiong Treatment Failed. A Perrtect Cure by Cuticura, *When 2y X ‘he o 3 i ot i v s A that i ¢ £ e biny S i 3 4 t : : ut - 2 4 Y. v r wi saidd 1t was » i e n pave o v oint ment which 4id oot Belp either. The diseaxs spread all over the face ind tho o e 4 . . swell ‘&f? ~,'g Frey int & it it wan a terrible gight ¢ =4 i s tedd & i s for T ntha but they wera unahle 10 caore e taby 1 pald cut from 320 to $3O Wit reitef te evening | began ' v t 8 Remedis The BEXL I g the baby's face was all white instead of red. | continned until thi rera entirely dlsanpeared Mre i 3 g, Sheldon, la, Julv 13708" Polist inug & Chem, Gerp, 8006 Propa, Boston e Sl 18y GQrant 3 ¢ I.il ap glt : ar; ot Cievela i bhe on : s § srtificat and that of ' the § s ¢ , ‘ iving to 2 - ‘I wasnt thir ¢ along i . -Ke! sight of Tusintanoee ; ¥ od But Grax wrant,. g ; i God Seek Prevention of Consumption. neumnptive UL I 8 T gnized that,, : 16 ! i t sloue cannot pe with t fraen [hey have resolved. theref to devole more ats Dull. “My! the paper is dull and uninteresting this moroing” “is that so! Can’t you find the dfvorce column ™ —Detroit Free Press. Tell the Derler vou want & Lewis’ Single Bindet gar for its rich, meliow quality. Don't offer odds to the elevator boy or he'll take you up. . Y A Friend In Need : There is absolutely nothing that gives such speedy relicf in Dysentery, Diarrhea, CholeraMorbus; Cholera-Infantum, Colic and Cramps as DR.D.JAYNE'S - . . . It is a friend in need, and you shouid always keep it in your bouse, Its vaivable curative properties have made it a necessity for both aduits and children, : Sold by all druggists at e #s¢ per bottle ' 3 | Positively cured by CARTERS) :ese Licte Pus. They also relieve Dism tresafrom Dyspepsia,in- = digestion and Too Hearty - 'VER Eating. A perfect rem- " edy for Dizziness, Nau--3 'l us. sea, Drowsiness, Bad 2 Tasteinthe Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, m m Genuine Must Bear e | Fac-SimileSignature WNER| ers . A