Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 18, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 July 1909 — Page 6
» - - I'he Ligonier Banner LIGONIER, S INIMARSA MOST IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK TOLD IN CONDENSED FORM. ROUND ABOUT THEWORLD Complete Review Bf Happenings of Greatest Interest from All Parts of the Globe-—Latest MHome and For ceign ltems. O WABHINGTON NEWER - Pre<ident TR Bummosed Senator Aldr ahid Heprosentaldy= Payne 1o the WEOe HMooes and deciared the tarif buftie must be foarht 1o a finish X trihi slO Of "i nxahira | - Expe t & o weded gt Washingion by & & L, BOW migtioned gt Vientia " kKer tanpon refused to appant B sierse on the Larill, Heprescl tative Bl wha was chosen Ly Pre i iy & vote af 317 to 14, all of thoss G a’,..}. ong }i‘; shHens i the } ¢ adopted @ pesslntion ralanitting th, e auestion o state log * Lures for 8 eonstitotional smendmens Prosidont Taft officiated al the cere ,“"i:;‘f ng the cornerstone lay frig for the new lngram Congregs tioual chureh fn Washington : Hoerbert KAOK Rigith, commiss iner ! rprntivng. BE-A teport o rfes febt TRTE Sitntet pt the lack of 3 : : ; - > f *he v : ey malerway systeme iLt (e of the Replililican senatlors "";—Y"' ¥eitedd mpainel the tart® bl sald Pres stent Talt puked bßim to o 11okG 48 to sfropigthen Bis band in the Oght for res } Hownwardg [4e tariff bßill reached the house { I tlix v Hate spd thefn WAs kent 1o ; forenve whers it may b cotniie ted i ted davs : PERSONAL : - ) von Bethmann Haollweg was ape o hagoeilor of Germiany 1o s CEt Prinee von Duelow Fi e Fdward M lwnne of ¢ hieago newlvapsointed bisbop of " Pooria, tonk e oath of ablegiance (O L haiy g gl Waßshington - }o ) Sammis of Lemars, la, was ‘ ted grand ~‘-Atx;-!:-fl-, riler of the Foiks apd letroit was soleoied as the eeting place of the grand iodße ;Z? _Gov Johpson of Mintesota becamie geriously 1 in 8t Paul and it waa feared aspother operation for append} 1t would bone LRERTY Edward Payson Weston the vel eran pedestrian, reached: San Fran clis five days behind his scheduled titne of O duys l:i'. his walk from .‘\«.:.\"fh . Witliam Jennings Bryan wrote a 1;" r to President i‘is;" Urging A aendment providing for election of United States senators by the peeog o Mrs Theodore Rooseveltl 18 How ,”1 Geona, Tltaly. She took a drive through that eity aeccompanied by her gister, Miss {arow. - : John D Rockefeller has given an other $lO.OOO 000 to the General Edues tion board, making $42.000,000 in all he has contributed g King Edward, Queen Alexandra and Princess Victorin were gufsts at a dintier given by Ambassador and Mrs Reid at Dorchester house. GENERAL NEWA - In a riot of steel workers at Me Kees Rock, near Pittsburg, 100 men were injured, six of the strikers being -seriously - wounded by sliots from ‘rifles fired by deputy sheriffs and guards, : Wyatt . Ingram, Jr. trust oficer of the Hiberian Bank & Trust Company .of New Orleans was arrested on- a- charge of embezzling $lOO,OOO According to Clitnese of Denver the Chinese ;_‘:m'cmmbm will render the United States no aid in finding Leon Ling wlayer of Elsie Sigel, who i 8 being protected by the Masons: : Formier President Roosevelt and his. party, after an all-day walk across an African desert, were forced to go without water and suffered much from thirst. The body of Claude Hunt, who was drowned in Klinger lake near Sturgis, Mich., with Miss Mary Loretta Davey of Chicago, was found by searchers. “T'm going to pull off a little stunt to-day,” said Tim Thomas of Oshkosh, Wis, as hée took his suit of clothes from a tailor and then went to a boarding house in Aberdeen and committed suicide. . / Secretary of the Interior Ballinger said at Seattle that he had not clashed with Secretary Wilson, but that he and Gifford Pinchot differ as to the law on forest reserves. The Argentine Republic has or dered its envoy to leave Bolivia unless “satisfaction is immediately given for the attack on the legation at La Paz. Anna Kaston, daughter of a farmer at Bavaria, Wis,, was killed by O. W. Kinklesou, whom she had refused to marry. Finkleson committed suicide. Fifteen of the suffragettes who raided the house of commons in Lundon, June 29, were sent to jail for a month, having refused to pay fines. - Charistian C. Johnson, who was believed to be Joe Madson the ‘“profes sional fiance,” was sent to prison for seven years at San Jose, Cal. Isadore Wulfson, chief inspector of weights and measures in Indianapolis, estimates that New Yorkers lose $10.000,000 a year by short weights. The hearing in relation to the sanity of Harry K. Thaw was resumed before Justice Mills in the supreme court at White Plains, N. Y. . The American crop for 1909, according to a government report, promises to reach 3,000,000,000 bushels, which will break all previous records. Philip De Griff, a resident ,and six Italian railroad laborers were killed by a tornado which struck Ortonville, Minn. SR et :
A report from Tok)o said Darom Tukahira, ambasgeador (o the Usited Flates Ironn Japan, I 8 0 be succeeded by K Uchida pow st Viesna - Mrs. William Olyphant of West Branch, In . polsoned four of her chil dren and berself Killing one of the chiddren it in provable that the Wright brotheérs, because of arcidents 1o their acruplane, will ssk the goverm ment for g further extension 2 time In which (o romplets \!‘}:.vrir speed and endurance trigle ‘ The Northwesiern Haliroad Com pany has made plans o Laiid seversd branches In the wheal regious of Souith imkota . Jobhn D Rockefeller bas defented Intkeopor John Melln at Bisepy Haol fow, N Y. and the latter will sell has galonn The &l KIBE boughi aii the nndg surrounding Mellns place apd installed absiaining tenanis Naval officers gt Apnnsieaiis say H will he shown 8t the coming inyesth gation of IJ‘HJ'{ Hatton s death that he shot at another when he kijled himuei! 5 - : ¢ War betwesnt the Rmerican Soclety of Equity in Rentueky and fhe Purie Tobacen soviely, over the 1509 pood, s threatensd - Jotin W ffrown, bellered to he froag ilndinnapolia, wak Xilled by an- automo Lile in law Anpeien : Mra (ecrpe Lynas, #ald 1o be {rom € Hiohgn ;::z%;z.tl.?f,, B recard Lo Rob Rox 11, a Uhinebilin Fersinn oat in London ; No trace of Clande Hant compan o of Mamis Imvey of wheme bosly was diecoversd in Kiing er lake near Biurgis, Mich, could be found by searchers @ Physicians satd the ;f:;'—i gied of frapht but anctber theory was she comtliitted suicide and Hunt died in atlemptiog to save hey Both the widow and daughter of g 1 Havier the l‘."?.w-f,? 4'~'~‘x i) banker who was sigin Ly 1 W R A 1 L f.‘a:’t:zi the phssician acted in seifl delense % 3 The Mississippl Yver reached a glage of 328 al Bt Jouts wing thres feet above the Bocd mmark Hutlding along the levee were foacded Thirty Bive mien l:)“"‘n".a}‘ g the foreign guarter of Vietor Uol and stemptod to drive Hungariata sway frenn thetr work, (ine forelgner was dangerously wounded in the fight Hatthing \{"i“f’?i chamnion light wolght pugilist of the world, was bad Iy beaten in & teniround fight with Ad Wolghst of Milwavkee at Lox An geles - : Lrville Wright made two unsuccess ful Si}fl’!,‘;]:‘(.fi 1o iy in bis acroplane at Foert Myer and the tnachine WHs broken again in talling 1o earh A letter written to a BHloamington soman by Col - Tom Snell, the Clinton fHi} millionaire whose will is being altac k"r*d in court, showed him in the role of the wooer and not the wooed. Beventytwo guests at a private din ner in Toledo. Spaln, were. poisoned”’ by few eream James J 0 HiL after a fishing trip, Feached New York He sald crop con ditions. were excellent He gaid low prices for cereals were at an end Secretary Dallinger of the interior departivent has arrived in Seattie on hig Inepection of the government re ciamation projects and indian agen’ CIOR, g Prof. George A. Ferguson of Colum Bla university Bas reported, after an expert chemioal analyvsis, that -Elsle Sigel, who was murdersd in the room of Leon Ling, 8 New York Chinaman, WHE Dalroned. x Efghteen Japanese prisoners are held In Honelulu and- they probably will be charged with resisting an of ficer, following a strike riot on the Waimanalo plantation, 12 miles from the Hawailian eapital : Fithian, il, was wrecked, Alton and Venlce were badly damaged. St Louls was swept and 20 mourners in a funeral procession ‘near Hamtlton, O, were hurt; by eyelones. Pourteen members of the crew on the steamer John B Cowle lost their Hves when she was sunk in colliston with the lsaac M. Scott off Whitefish Point. lLake Superior. _ The credentials committes of the Interpational Longshoremen's association, which began its seventeenth annusal session in Galveston, announced that Danfel J. Keefe, formeér president of the organization, but now federal commissioner of Immigration, would be denied a seat in the con vention. - Persian rebels invaded Teheran, the capital, and a flerce battle with the shah's troops was begun. ‘ Miss Stella May Dunn of Blooming. ton, I, committed sulcide by jumpin from the window of the Milwaukee (Wis) rdscum in view of hundreds of of persons. Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Short, who is prosecuting Ella Ginglés, the Irish lace-maker in Chicago, received a letter threatening assass!nation, - The sixth annual Glidden tour—a reliability run to Kansas City by way of Minneapolis and Denver—started in Detroit with thirty machines in the contest. ~ i Prof. Lawrence Marshall Byers of Des Moines, la., who died in a dentist's chair, was the victim of a misadventure, according to the London coroner's verdict. : Convicts .from the Missouri penitentiary at Jefferson City were sent out to aid farmers -in saving their crops from a flood. Railroads at Kansas City found it necessary to an‘nul several trains to Chicago. ~ Wth the arrival of 300 new speci ~mens expected from Europe in a day }or two, the Bronx zoo in New York will have the largest collection of ani'mals of any zoo in the world. The American cruiser - Charleston was the trophy winner in the cruiser class of vessels participating in'record practice during the last year.. Her mark was 64. ‘ . New letters of a spicy nature written by women to Col. Snell whose will is being attacked in court at Clinton, 111, have been found, but, under the supreme court's ruling, cannot be introduced in evidence. Edward N. Detzer, teller, arrested - for stealing $B,OOO from the First National bank at Fort Wayne, Ind., said he took the money to maintain his ‘wife in a high social position. ~ John R. Early, who after being held in Washington for months suspected ‘of being a leper, gave a reception in a ‘New York hospital where, it is said,
LEADFR OF THE FITTSBURG PIRATES
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Here fa Fred Clarke, the pliot of the pirate crew from Pittaburg, Fred has beon in the game ;,}m:a, while, but from the way e Redpa up bis spend 1t wiil be many moons before 8 young slor is melocted 10 ‘_;}fi-nnp!mi Bl Ularke Las carried home severa) pen. nants for the Smoky City aggregation It was under the late Billle Barnie in e old Louisville dafs that Clarke woade his entry into xm%nr learue cors. pany. He soon succesded Darnie as lender of the Coloneln, and later when the Pittshurg club bleught out the Loulsville (ranchise anfl merged both clubs, Clarke came tod Pittsburg and
ONE OF THE GIANT TWIRLERS ) A | e ‘ ¢ '_‘ | %ig ; 3 ).',_f*-,* “ ) R £ V. g N ‘ ! F " (Ol / 3 Af ’ 3o " \ ! &-I\-- e ,"’ ’ Seon . - ffi?‘t T E P S | j:; ¥ B kL : & g ty'f"v_/ t: g g ia4 : % *‘“’ & C 3 “,« i ¥ ? 7.; ‘;‘ ..’: Ry ‘ f e H b ‘ %"t N Pl - 2 &bmg‘ Pyt 2‘ P BL% . by LY \, \} . S \/ | { i - | 2 :i; ‘ . Bl win ° EaTVERLY L . 5 : “ - ‘\, Jfif .;i ,3;‘; : A N ok e ‘“_fl b e ‘ . “ 3 % «» f Leon Ames has done acceptable work for the New York Giants in the box this season. While Ames has never been ranked as a star; he has developed into a first-rate twirler dur ing the years he has been with the Giants, : | Pulligm Back in Harness. : ~ Harry Pulllam is again the directing head of the National league. After a leave of absence of six months the National league president has re‘sumed his duties. When Pulliam ap peared at his office in the St. Lou's building in New York he was as brown {as a berry and looked the picture of health. Though they had not given the information out in advance, the office assistants were expecting him. Jobhn Heydler, who had been acting as :presidem turned over everytking to Pulliam and resumel his duties as secretary. :
\ »\ . P [ l £ ALDAL M ) g \\\"‘\\ .]\Q \\\\\v "“f ‘ Catcher Heckinger, secured from Minneapolis of the American association, has reported to Manager Hendricks at Fort Wayne.
has remained ever sinee, piaying left field and managing the team. Jugt pow the Pittsburg clan ts sall Ing siong at the bead of the National league raced and the hustling manager bas Nis men in good shape Of courss he bas the able sssistance of that mighty Dutehman, Hans Wagner, and iy what a bundle of assistance that big protzel hunter is to Clarke. The latter says its the pennant for hia this time, and he further avers that a warld's chawpionship goes with it 'FL"{ he fecls that his tear will be able to trounce thz Detroits, whom bhe picks to win the American league flag.
WWMWM,N,M,,,.“ MOST BASEBALL PLAYERS ARE LIVING MODEL LIVES High-Salaried Diamond Aftists Real ize That They Must Keep in Best of Condition, The lite of the average basehall player is as close to the model a good titizen should follow ms ean be. He I 8 generally - married, and, except when bLe ig tray cling, spends hix gpare time &t home. On the road he is at hig hotel most of the Hme when he is not at the baseball park. Onee or twice a week, ‘perhaps, he gUovs to the theater, but generally he spends the evening in the lobby of his hotel talking over baseball and other matters with members of bis own ténn and friends who drop In to see him Nine timeés out of ten he Is in bed and asleep by 16-30 o'clock. : In the old days of baseball it used to be quite the thing for the atar player to spend his nights In drinking with friends, baskiog in the geniality of popularity, and mixing in rowdy carousals. Buch actions are a thing of the past : Nouwadays the basehall plarver is first of aill & gentleman. No team will put up with a man that drinks excessively, save In rare cases. Now and then there is a 2 man who can spend his eveutngs in hitting the high spols and then play good basebsll the following day. Such men are few and far between, however Most of those who try it discover that their mrgfru as ball plavers in bigleague company ape. short-lived. ' It Is a matter of commeon sense, The ball player knows he cannotl do his best when he i not taking care af bimself. If he does pot know it the fans and Lis manager will point it out to him with unquestionable fores. He knows that to hold a 38b on a big league baseball team he. must be in possession of the ability to use the best his brain asd muscles contain, He can have this ability only by ob serving the best rules of life * Furthermore, the baseball player in the last few years has come (o rentize better than ever before that when he is through with baseball he can ex. pect nothing from the public that once applauded him, nor from the manager that once begged for his signature to & contract. He must take. care of himself, and {f bé has not provided for the future during his days of success and money-making he is in & bad way. . There are probably no men receiring such high salaries who take such good care of their money and save so much of it as baseball players. Al most any wellknown diamond star ' that has played In one of the big leagues for a number of years has usually laid by a big proportion of lits salary, and when the inevitable time for his retirement comes he {3 in a position to take up some other business, or i he does not wish to do that at once he finds himself in circumstances easy enough to be free from care concerning the future for a number of years at least. A ————————— % Umpire Cusack Loses Job. John Hevdler, acting president of the National league, has dismissed Umpire Cusack, whose work has been unsatisfactery. For the present the National league will go along with seven umpirves, Johnstone working alone. o »
Jimmy Slagle will, according to the commissiqu, have to return $155 which he received from President Murphy of the Cubs and to which he believed he was entitled in the terms of his contract. ' , Hugh Duffy says with two good players, an infielder and outfielder, his Providence team would have something ou the Eastern league. He says that Blackburn, his shortstop, is a real wonder. : Owner Hedges of the Browns de clares that he has no intention of turn ing Manager McAleer agdrift :
WHY PITCHERS NEED : REST. ~ 8Y ADDIE JOSBS Peosgie sometimen lalk abogt the obftimers who pitched day after day and Irequesily won & majority of their games. Al that time masagers on all the teamns sers accustomed 1o work ihelr pllobers often. so i wax even ail slosg Morse recent managers have dlscovered that the pitehers arm 15 doad the next dar sfter he bas pliched Bome ops started the e of emploviag several pitchers and Fivieg a long rest between gamos. That forced all of the managers o 40 the same fo compete successfuily with the toam with seversl pitchers 1§ ry o pitch Ihe day fol Jowing a game in whick | have worked 1 find that sy speed s spparently just ax greatl 1 can carve the ball, and | have gindd contral bat they invariably Bit e Sometking s missing No one knows just what least of ali the piteher. We all Roow what slectricity wili do bul we Bever saw it 1t is the mame with the pitcher Bomething i missing Wa dantl kpow what it is We express B by paying, “iHe didnt hßave any. thipe on the ball .
COUGHLIN IS DOING NICELY. N\ /! N :\ o e . .“' % o i ‘\"fl ; £@‘, » '\Q v 4 WM\ 4 F _-\;»‘w' one \.. Y » oe & ) . ‘w".sn"' o i L ‘u\, . G ¥ g £ < $ S e C L . : \_y‘- : P : o - \T%‘N . ! TS Although Hill Cougblin's Willlams port team Js fourth in the league standing, be I 8 being well supported in the Penbsyivania town for colb lecting & fast and scrappy bunch, Hy hard, consistent. work, Coughlin who for several years was captain of the Detroft team, has installed an excellent team idea of teamn play into his tmen Coughiin incidentally Is heading the third basewmen in the TriState as the appended figures show: _ G PO AE Ave, conghiin, Willlamspeirt a 8 W 3 9 Cimmerman, Harvisburg 2% 8 & 2 e Srapsbwrry. Willlamsport.. 5 & § 1 %9 Donovan, Juhinstows ....02% M- 588 7 9% Tiemyer, Altoona ; 2Oy B Ratl, Reading R i oM bivsa \".‘.'-f 16n % g i B'Z ¥ii Wetzel York. . M B a 8 3 213 Miell, Reading ..., o o 4 oan Litachl, lancaster . ... L 1.8 % 28 NEW PITTSBURG PARK READY. Million Doliar National League Grounds, Named Forbes Field, Com pleted—Can Seat 25000 Persons. l’;!!fih’.l?fi'fi millton dollar ball ground, the present of Barney Dreyfuss, presi. dent of the Pittsburg Baseball club to the fans of that city, was dedicated the other day The new park, appropriately named Forbes field, after one of the founders of Pittsburg, s sald by competent critics to be the finest of ity kind in the world, iz beaatifully located in the exclusive residential section and 1= architecture corresponds with many of the adjacent senilcountry homes of Pittaburg’s eéxclusive sst . Halt circling & natural greensward has been erected a mammoth conerete and steel amphitheater, 888 feet jong, with an estimated seating capacity of SEOOO persons. Accommodations - for 160,060 more are already planned for next season. Besides the excellent seating arrangements, whereby the lowest priced seats in the bleachers are in as commanding a position as the higher priced box chalrs, rest rooms for ladies and promenades be tween boxes have been bullt for Pitis. burg’s women fans, The clubrooms of the “home team” are par excellent. Each member of the team has a private bath and locker, a rubbing table and a shower. A model quick drying laundry for the cleaning of ball uniforms is also a povel feature. : As Barney Dreyfuss has said: “The best is none too good for the loyal fans of Pittsburg, and it has been my humble desire to give them the very best ball park and the very best ball team that is within my power.” The general consensus of apinion at present in Pittsburg is that Dreyfuss is living up to his “humble degire.” e e e et : Protest Against Umplires. Formal protest agairst Umpires Perrine and O'Loughlin of the American league, officlating at any more games in which the Washington team is engaged this season, has been filed with President B. B. Johnson of the league, by President Noyes of the Washington club. In a telegram ;to Mr. Johnson, Mr. Noyes said that the two umpires were working against the best interests of the national game in that city, and that their work was “not even decent.” Manager Cantillon of the Washington team and Jesse Tannehill, pitcher and outfielder, who were ejected from p game .in Washington with Boston the other day for making objection to the work of the umpires, received telegrams from President Ban Johnson of the American league, indefinite-
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© Tetiarifist LEy What delightiu! memories crowd foto my mind as 1 wrile the nams of that besuty spot in the Canaries for the recollection of the fiix‘ wpnks ] kpent there wif nivays be an abiling ohe with me - In dampaigning one nsturaily ex pects things 1o go awry, but =nhey holiday making one demands that ev ervthing shall go smoothly Happlir for me ail did go well-from the mo ment | went by the Jondon and North Western's' famous 5.830 1o Liverpool; until | disembarked from the steamer st Santa Crux, where | was ‘met by my friend Adamson, repre senting Messrs Hamilton Thusx | set foot ‘on the Fortunate lsiands of ‘the ancients, those isles whose beauty brought to them the name ap piled originaily to a land that was but A myth~the Fuortuoate lsiands Is Diands of the Blestor Happy Isiands, xet in the weslern ocean, o which the souls of the ULiest were made happy. . And yery glad I was that jealousy af the- charms 6f the place {8 DOl we KTeat now as it was when the men of the floet of Carthage, under Himileo, found them s 0 dellghtful, and described them f{n such glowing linguage, that the aen ate, fearing a general exodus from Carthage, forbade any to visit the Furtunate Isiands on pain of death, jest, secing them, many should be templed to stay on them. - Santa Crus itseif is one of the most delightful places In which anyone can desire to spend a holiday, for it is pieturesque, full of handsome baleon: fes and guaint nooks and corners, while the “view towers” placed on the roofs prevent untormity in the ar ehitecture. This beautiful town has been the capiial of the Canartes simce 18521, and this year celebrates 1t Jubile¢ as a city. - . The city contalus many matters of historieal interest w 0 the Englishman. QOue of the most striking is undoubt edly that connected with Nelson, who attacked the city in July 1797, and met with the Only defeat recorded in - his. career. Banta Cruz is remark able, too, for the fact that it was ghfl'e- that Nelson's arm was shattered by a cannon-ball. Having anchored some two miles off the town on July 24, he made a feint to draw the gar rison away from the fort, and at mid: night some seven hundred men In - boats were directed axainst the Mole, . where they arrived within half a gunshot before the enemy discovered - them. e e FPorty guns at once opened fire. E‘!‘be cutter, contalning some two hun dred men and several boats, was sunk, ' and many of the other boats were ?duhed to pieces by the surf, which was runnipg high, as the man Ejnmped ashore. Nelson's arm was iahu‘nered by & cannon-ball as he . stepped on the jetty, and he was carried back to his ship by the men. E In & glass case on each side of the altar in the parish church of the Con[ejepuon may also be seen two flags
Work to Save Chicago Bables.
The United Charities of Chicago and the city's heaith department have joined forces for a summer campaign to save the lives of babies. Maps have been prepared showing where every baby died last year, and the efforts of 500 workers who will be in the field will be especially directed to these districts. The progress through the early part of the summer is expected to be so effective that last August's record of 719 deaths of bables under two years of age will not be repeated. The city will be mapped into 24 districts, each under the particular supervision of some organizaticn. There will be 21 free milk stationy, numerous day nurseries and five teat hospitals for babies. : The Family Tie. Not 'a great many years ago the Family Tie was regarded next to the Bible. But borrowing from relatives and employing them has so weakened the Family Tie that it isn’t held in as high veneration as an old teapot with the spout knocked off—Atchison {Eun) Giobe
wh&R were mbtained om. that night Ni\i‘fi:!i? for BE::;T:A&-! 8 -3 !t’%'.?v‘;*v they cwere gnot lENAD by the eneiny. They were jost %{hbihe Boata wont ’ian And were i’u{!‘i‘mzzmz‘::&r warhed axborm A preservyeEl as trophies . There 18 B SIOTY 1o UNG effect Ihat when a Britol manof gy 3 faited the ot & fow YEArE gD, fwame z‘;{:.i‘-‘x“; tiyen jaaded, and goidgd the it vt i Whers Ihae | flags wire then exhibited asaaily j sncteed el N, getilng thene away Tie { fore tha Bipgieft the. port hawever * hner i‘-“"s!i:_ A% g?.m"{fl (;:!'w.:’_ End the ren resentatives 8 t¥e Spanish aathort Lien ®ent on iaa?r‘, and g. viintned the ’ posmition tv‘i!&q captaln He ab wnce Clesued aft Corder’ that the fagw. Wers tr b fopthwith pestoped THis was done, whils the captaln F"l;i’t*gsq«é many regrats at the pecurrence. Close to the chapdl in which '_!-,a“ flags are Nept I 8 wnother’ cier which P bangs 8 cross encicsed In & giass case with a degoriptive tabist benekth ra mr%zsfi'&! “Here (8 snciosed the ernss pl e by the vousqueror of Ten arifle. h:fi'!‘:\innpé Fernandez do Lugo, on the gHar befurs which he vele brated mgx ol !ha,!’::»:i,n'm".%xfl:fi:t’. for the frat Aine on the shire of ‘Anaga con the Ird of May, 14347 Anara ls the ancient pame given by. the orig ' nal ishabltants of the fxland o tha partion of the shore on which Hania Cruy stands S e R [ Historical interest and heaity of situating snd climste are Marww ar. lnter bound to pall-on the hafidar. - maker. unless Le is able td obtain | that material comfort in his tempor ary hahbitation which gives htm as { the sawing ix “A home from home ” The . Grand hotel Quisiana is situated some four huadred feet above the level of ‘the sea, and commands - & beautiful [ view of the Darbor, and of the famous i peak which is to the island almost i\rhm}’g Is to Jagan. . o i ("huxx;ag 8% the hotel and its ar- [ TAngemends dre, there are Nowever, | certaln improvements which might he { Introduced. One of -these fs a MfL i Ita absence is due to the fact that the { owner did not want to encourage the i o | presence of Invalids, ‘ij‘ha winld, t_)(h: [ erwise, be tempted to patronize the ghntfl, on account of the excellence of { the eculsine, for he -reailzed that { heaithy pgan!r do ‘not care. to Have { fiiness brought pronifnently to’their inotice at all times. 8o greaf, how{ever, are the demands for greater { convenience that, 1 was told before i 1 deft, it is Intended to extend the ; hotel on a large scale and to ipstall ! lifts, while bungalows will be efected § in the grounds for the accommodation { of invalids, who will not therefore mix | with the ordinary visitors. Another | drawback, which Is, however, proof | of the popularity of the house, ts that ‘t!;a tourists who land st Santa Cruz { for the day and go to Quisisana for lancheon or dinner invariably find that there {8 no room for them: When | however, the hotel is extended, a new diningroom s to be provided for | these visitors, while a large’ ball-room }ts aiso to be added, together with little suites of bed-rooms, “{réssing. rooms, and bath-rooms, the- bedrooms being buiit with balconies so that it will be possible to sit on them and-enjoy the view, .which fs a ‘never-falling source of delight, for the harbor is as full of animation as the land is full of picturesquéness.— MelFavored Steady Occupatien. = There is nothing worse for mortals than a vagabond life—Homer.
Seek to Prevent Noise in Cities,
The German Society for the Prevention of Noise, which was founded in 1908 by Dr. Theodor Lessing, in Berlin has in preparation lists for distribution among the people who rent houses and aparunenz “which will contain information as rest-disturbing noises. These lists will be printed on paper of various colors. One color will contain the addresses of noiseless houses; one where there is a little nofse, and still another where much nolse may be expected. It will soon - become kpown when a*&muse is classifled with the noisy enes and landlords will try to improve conditions so that thelr house may receive a good color.” Warfield's Stage Career. » David Warfield was born imr Ban Francisco November 28 = 1%68, and made his first appearance on the stage at Napa, Cal,; in 1886, as Melter Moss, in “The Ticket of Leave Man.” He first appesred in New York in 1890 in a monologue at a concert hall. Mr. Warfield married Miss Mary Gabrielle Brandt on October 5, 1899, Mrs, Wan field is not an actress i
AN st Added to the Long List d .c.,toflt ¢ Long List due to This Famous Remedy. | Camden, N.J.— "1t {s with pleasure that-{-add my testimanial to your already iong Ust —hoping that it may fuduce others to avail themselves of — this vaiuable medi. . g cine LydiaE.'ink. ol har's Vegetable ] (’afzz";w.'xt:.';a{. I suf. o .. - bl fered from terribae R % = 4‘{ _: b aiaches, pain in ? - e ] Yy back and right S -SR side, wag tired and L. fW | nervous, and. so L eB O wealk Joould!? ardly B B Istand Lyia E as e N § Vinkha m's V egeta \’f’_;i‘ffifl;.’ :?5 “\‘ bie € Higw 'u:a.i . el #rorad eto health B maede mw feel 1132 A DOw Iw ,'xng«\ gnd 2 shall always have Iy pralse’ Mre: W, P ValLexTing & ."lA::.(‘\,’!D Averins Canvlen, N, J. Gardiner, M# “*1 was a great saf. forer feoan a fommie dlisesse. The doo tor xaid ] would bave 1o go to the hosrital for anoperation but IydiaE Pinkbham's Vegelabls Compotind comlely cured me In three months ' — &(z'« XA Winniaws, K F.D. Neo. 14, Box 38, Gardiner Me Because your case is a difficult .oe, doctors having dones you no good, do not continue to- suffer without piving Evdia E Pinkham's Vegetable ? poursda triall It surely hias cured marny cases of femaie (s such as infammation vlerration, displacementa, [ibrold tamors, irregularities, periodio };;:- s, tackache, that waringdown eviing, indigestion, dizgziness, and pervous prostration. It costs hut o trifle to try 1t and the result {s worth mib Lons 1o many sullening wolnen e e e ee S et Ae e A Burning String in the Sick-Room, %! tha 3 Nt in & K Trowr have 7_.«‘.,. £ 5o f Ihe simnlest o 1 2 &fl ¥ ¥ w ¥ Liirnng & string to purify O ' phera, Tuke & ft siring i gtiek it with L to the back of a iir: after ghting, blow it peatly, leaviog Lh {iny Al K " : “ create * ke o 1 gh o make ads ted dif ference In the MMlBOsphere Harper's There's a lich ety ing ity im e sihpte Hipder that s found o no cther & =wat 2 Tie eofter a 8 mans head the more . he !a inviined to by In e e e e ee2e A, A e ee AN
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SICK HEADACHE
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