Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 19, Ligonier, Noble County, 29 July 1909 — Page 6
T 1T RBR A BT P N 7 ; o o Yk S X - (.J DS}E VB D= = ANCISTINE - % PN 1 1 e ot T GRS . : T KN AR T, .\ ¢ b INI & AR H@h
P # § 3 ¢ X 5 18008 firitinl ot Af “ LM fehi Ha , » ¢ A gavas ety .‘ 4 i $ A & / \A t - - : ”. ” wh o : e Peonioon? {1 i 7 5 e ¥ ¥k v : vt 4 < ! £ =% 5 tes K- £ |S - 5 4.L¢ißl e ¥ ¢ A ¢ . % ¥4 e GRSy Botae § i Lis ¥ Gt Ipeig 5% : Eoor e : : thal iveg : ayitia ; Rl Braa 3 3 k 5 § i £
- . o L il : : . - e i ; T . Frass g A ::f P ’L B AR e . 3 - / .\-‘ o i 2 . 5 . W ’ ’,’" ‘:‘v ’ .\“ ' ; « :eN ) ; e N s 1 . ' eil - VAR ' v e Ll ' ARG s R et : ’ SR RE g - i AR « Pew vy - L W - S S Nee % s 4 &e; f?&:{ifi" ]“i ‘ N ‘fl‘_z e?"- gl e 4 eSR ey et v g N B e A Wy : %"* g, o§ o SRR S Jaif o o . ERAP TR bk Y R R W s W RSN B e Ty Y SRR . 2 SR oSt v T A : . *l‘”?&%‘%’ b . E .eAR B £ P - ot it s - s 2 T O g i T YRy y O o ee R e, e ~s £ 5 AV fi-,, ?} S &g“ }v S £,{ ‘ § /Y FIYTING (%R s P x e LY Ting S S . : L ‘_4\-_),(,« 7L Y R LEe. %
taieehoonis BE BEE SRR B 8 tning of Bribing M‘” vants sk 5F SMEEEE i Ihut for fhi suke of a hribe G 9€ ot wi il 592‘.%1&* fnventing faldeboods tor the M eR e uanih of Al st M veil: vil npstl BEE ULy Bows Lo & geiect patheriig fi%? ans AL 8 A xA T keep reparieps from fi%:%;% e s cIUBE thee be o roasl suptoer thdt (I BEE WUE BUY gel che formcr Amiveinn w;; e o - W““;#mmfi*fifimflmmfluw his views etk rE e R eS e D on ,#»w«,g hings shich will as onish sl P s(’—??\"6*"»»*s*'# e e S mgfi“xfi&f@*fl‘m‘“’%*fi"mk‘nfi e o 2 g‘”’*mf 1t Ty said to be the hunters Lo oel S e s bernid TinRE ikl e, imirod ondisturhed by saper news.
K eet i oy oy o 2 paper xn,fl‘fitfmmgnn his trail every duy. bub they Keep out uf kgt s e Entering the port of Mombasa, Theodors | Hoosevelt and his hig atick made an mstantaneous hit He was sirensous Britishers are slow ‘of movement and - thought; they afe dt‘“ffl%flt‘#»xfit & with the American here. He thought quickly, . spoke quickly - and = said things which made the inhabitauts stand up and shout . ‘ He talked about the grat country which the British hid bullt and ab most civilized in Afriea e made other potnts which tiekied his hosts and he was solld with them from the minite he put foot on the gang plank of the steamer which brought him from: Beseh WU gl, toid his East African friends that he wanted to be treated like a regula tion - American ecitizen, obt like a
former president of the United States This, the British seemed to think, was a first class invitation b treat him Hke a king, which they did : With his entourage riding in the ppssenger comporimoents of & primitive Uganda ratlway coach, Mr Roasevell gave a real strenuosity exhibition by danng Acting Governor Jackson to ride with him on the coweatcher, He said there was more hreeze on the front of the train any way. Mr Jackgon and Mr. Roosevelt then stapped the outhit and took positions of vantage ahead of the tiveman aud engfncer, . This tickled the Britishers. Nobody had ever thought of riding on the front of an engine before in East Africd. They had always done the most commonplace thing by seating themselves on the “cushions” 80, because he was different from their kind, they liked the American frowm the start 5 _ : ~_ The ride that day lasted 50 miles, when the engine, being a union.engine, refused to work over eight hours and gave out. The next day the ride was repeated and to-day half the British East African highbrows ride on the front of the engine when they want to make an impression. - Once on Sir George MacMillan’s ranch the real sport of the expedition commenced. MacMillan’s ranch is & notorious hangout for man-eating lions. They roar around the ranch at night and tear up things generally. Colorado mountain lions were easily beneath the hunting prowess of Mr. Rogsevelt and he proved that African lions are also-rans alongside of the American brand by depleting the kingdom of lLeo by Bix in two days, theteby setting a new record for huntsmen in this section of Africa. e
A big. hungry hippopotamus chased Mr. Roosevelt one day.. Formulating his plans as he sped along threugh the jungle, the ex-president led the enraged animal to the open and set two steel bullets crashing between his eves when the hippo was only 100 feet away. Kermit had a similar experience with a rhinoceros and, displaying the family traits of his father, stood his ground and succeeded in dispatching Mr. Rhino
TO MAKE CORNSTALK OF USE
Government’s Experiments for Mak.ing Paper Out of These Likely to Be Valuable.
Professor B. T. Galloway of the agricultural department at Washington, who has been experimenting with cornstalks as a material for making paper, announces that great progress has been achieved along this line. While he does mot say that ‘the experi-
[P GERALD A. RODERICK
W AN VA? el pr
ing and before the expedititon weighs anchor fir other shores probabily 1,000 more will bhave reached the taxtdermists. - Liong, wildebeosts, antelopes, giraffes, hippo potnmi. rhinoceri, tigers, monkeys and dozens of other varteties are among the trophies of the chase. ' To Kermit Roosevelt the expedition has been a source of wonderment and pleasure. Everything was new to him. He had read about the mysterfousness of darkest Africa but had never been givén an opportunity to even peer into the confines of a real lion hunting camp. - At the present writing ‘both Kermit and his father gre in the best of health, both wearing & swarthy tan which is darker than the jungle stninédrfiaki' suits in which most of the hunting is done. ' - A short time ago Mr. Roosevelt visited the ‘American mission near here and he expressed pleasure at the work which the organization is doing for the African savage. The morning of the day he visited the mission he spent in hunting Culubra. monkeys and succeeded in shooting several, which were added to the list of specimens. - ‘ ; Otiicials here have expressed the belief that Mr. Roosevelt's bagging of game is justifiable in view of the fact that his specimens are being secured for the purpose of stocking up the Smithsonian institution at Washington. : - Perhaps the biggest test of Rooseveltian strenuosity came when the party crossed the desert west of this city. In this instance they were compelled to go for more than a week without procuring water. All the liquid refreshment they had was carried with them in great water skins; suitable for this purpose. e
Bwana Tumbo, which is an African expression of reverence, was the nickname which Mr. Roosevelt's native servants soon attached to him, and when 1 met the ex-president at Kapiti Plains station, where he was obliged to stop during his travels. he seemed pleased to be reminded of the fact that he had struck a responsive chord
ments so far prove that the thing is actually accomplished and is a commercial success, he is very hopeful that it will work out satisfactorily.. The paper workers are greatly interested in the experiments because, if it turns out that this great product of the farm can be turned into good paper it will have a marked effect on the paper making industry. Cornstalks are about the cheapest
e A S e el b ‘!:-y ,f W a em! S R i # eTe i 8F Vi U | 8 G B B e A BRES ™ &,}:_‘ s‘f ¥ S o : ““":,7, ef . 4‘} % s "1& ; T T Y | : : / - o Shpdsa. - . \ Pl . h’w f 5 s UNTING GRY — AR OHE 1
al 40 yards The Beast Was charging him in dangerous fashion, . Not long ago Mr Roogevell captured two baby antetlopes and - sent hem to his duughter, \ifi Nicholas Long worties who by this time doubtiess has received them. "More than 1580 . specl wmens had been cap tured by the Roosevelt party up to the time of this writ
product grown on the farm, and while, not entirely useless as stock food, mil- { lions of acres are allowed to go en-| tirely to waste every year. Paper-making wood is becoming somewhat scarce, although there is no such famine in the northern woods as some alarmists would have us believe. llf, however, the government succeeds in making good paper out of cornstalks, the wood will last longer and the price of paper will not be advanced to a point where its use would necessarily be restricted.
fn the mibkeup of (he semisstage e Bty four wesis - comprized the mmall army which Mr Reoseveit teok With biw from Mombass, Bwsos Tambo dressed his aides 9p ln Amer dean made foore shints and Khaki Mrousdrs Of their own cholte Were gresr Hitie skull caps decorated with eathers hed tusssls o
i q M‘!’ ‘-;'A’;"\'\‘[. v\u:- < "“‘T' i Q\L b\i | = || .. N g i - %(\l:’»::f{ g? : : 1,.,./ ‘v',_ | DR T eet AT
were a present from Kermit, marked him as & man to be epvied amaong hig fellows The ex-pres-ident sald that whenever he needed Kermit for any matier whatsoever, it was onoly necessary to scan the horizon for Juma's gay headpiece . During his hunting, travels and speaking Bwana Tumbo never has Jost sight of his writing He s writing & chapter here and there, whesever he has the timae or inclination to devote a few hours to the book of travels which he has half completed, . : _ ' ¥Mr R D Cuningbame, Mr Roosgeveit’'s hunter, is typical of the African sportsman and is declared 1o know more about game in this wfimn of the world than any other game expert L No maore unique sight was ever presented to 1?1(? casual observer than that which met my eye when ] alighted from a Ugsnda railway coach at Kapiti Plains, where Mr. Roosevelt and his army were grouped. The station is on Sir Alfred Pease's ranch or estate as it is known here i - “The Plains” consists of hardly more than the signboard which tells its name Mr. Roosevelt's “army” was drawn up about him, the ex-president was conversing with Hunter Curninghame and the former executive's gunbearer, Abdallah bin Said, was awaiting orders from his chlef. Of the army Abdallah §8 most devoted to, his master and the frequent lashings which the heads of the expedition are often compelied to administer to gueil impending mutiny are never necessary with this character. He s a unique type of African and be cause of his good qualities he commands better pay than the rest of his fellows. : . The man who aided Mr. Roosevelt in getting his expedition ready cautioned him against asking any of his servanta to do duties for which any of the others were hired. : e . ~ The labor union instinct is second nature with the attache of the African hunting expedition. Let a gun bearer try to do the work of a porter or bush heater and there is war in camp at once. Neither may the game carriers beat the game into sight. Perhaps thils system is for the best after all for the reason that every man specializes and therefore is able to do his own allotted work to a better advantage . : : ‘
It is sald here that Mr. Roosevelt's entire expedition will cost between $15,000 and $20,000, which to an American hunter may seem an euormous price. But hunting wild game in Africa is a heavy undertaking and in order to go through with such a task that amount of money is actually necessary. But the party is getting results and that is what they figure is the proper viewpoint. : Having arrived in the Stoik district Kermit and his father had pienty of game upon which to exhibi their prowess. The younger Roosevelt immediately set about establishing a hunting record by bagging the biggest lion which, up to that time, had found its way to the taxidermist of the party. In the Stoik district Mr. Roosevelt shot many buffaloes, their skins being preserved for the Smithsonian institution,
: Wall tents thae : BAe na hitne ueed By Amer % can - artmy o | erra. | provided the r»x,;,tfifig. dent’s . pioeping " guartent and hie - pairintism was fully shows by " the fact that the Lmerioan siars o mnd stripes Sout e feown Ahe Dan poie Defare Roosevelt's . fenl The eadors wWere dippsd At mun. §i%e and }xff!‘-‘vtf i aeconianee cwith ahe Upited Xixies Gray ocus iy The HRooseyelt | camp presented e inlgae. gectie Rituatelt’ In the camterwas M Hoose eit's adohes. which Gist Monsed Kermi Hefore it fAoated the American flag. and grouped careisd it sivng mininature TRlregts” Wl the soup tents” of the poriers g'e}',‘tu-;sr»-.m, bush bedters, cooks apd other peryanis. Kermsit Roosevelt's personal gervant Juma by name becane g 5 ddevoled . hLis Youneg HlARier aH though . the latler were ol regal heri tage He followed him everywhere and was at his side during the rhinoceres incident in whieh Ker mit's life ‘wag per iled i Juma’s gaudy tur ban, khaki haithose and American-made calfskin shoes, which
The government has done many great things for the benefit of the farmers, but if the cornstalk experiments prove successful this achieve ment will rank among the most beneficial. . 2 It will be a great day when the farmer can read the news printed on paper made from the cornstalks grows in his own field. _ One of Life's Sad Facts. Pay days come and pay days go, bud bills go on forever. A
Romances of Progress . . By Albert Pavson Terhune ROGER BACON—A Man Who Lived 600 Years Too Soon.
A Prascisean monk Hoger Hacon by name, in the middle of the Ihir tesnth century, found himself to grave danger of Weing burted to death as & sorcerer, He had devised and de scribed many things which, according 10 the ofthodox theology of his time, jmplied bhlack mazie and sodue o quainiancestip with Satas e - Fur iostames, ke declared that by Erinding charcoal. saltpeter and ul phur and mixing them in equal guanth ties & force would be genrrated which, when sot afire. would riesl the thun ders and lghitnings of the hKeavens This powdered mixture placed fn & vylinder wouwd alsp propel 2 ball of iran some distance and al unhesrd of welocity. Followers of Pacon called the substancs gunpowdsr The menk alra showed that by placing lepses in & cortain position toward sarh other or by grinding them in pecaliar wars, they would magnify ohlects seen through them This like gpuspowder savored of magic | s the perfocting of teicscupe and speciacles was by churchly docree, forced 1o walt unil 8 later and satier century, The calendar and the modes of computing time In vogue o the this toenith century was ladicruously innd equate. Hacos, by his knowledge of sstranomy, worked out 8 true method of compiling calendars, bul Ihis, too. wak frowned upon iis gentue was even constrieting what promised. to be a practieal fiying machine, when au Hallan who was laboring on & sim. Har lnvention was buarned st the stake am a magician. This pit a stop to Bacon's experimionts in fiyihg and delnyed the airship and dirigible bal loon for anether ball thousand yia{‘i. Roger Bacon was born of an impov. erished noble faniily in 1214 M 4 was graduated at Oxford and went 19 Paris, whirh was then the conter of onrnl whore he Persecuted as a i:imw:;&zq-f i:;;;::y = Qnmcmr. " years longer. Rt wag an age when the chureh was ail supremis. apd when people who disa greed with that institution's decres Were promptly pot to desth fn the most horrible manner human fngen: ity couid devise. " Am such- churchly bellofs were not founded . on Fible teackings, but on a marwmade creed which dencunced as sorcery all things it could not npderstand, invention anid Progresg were at s stamdstiflt,. o The church did the thinking for the world.: Hut Bacon was not content with this. His wonderful brain issisted on thinking for Hsell. The re. sults of these thoughts he published, winning renown and clearing up much. of the ignorance and superstition of those dzir_k ages. Hut he ran foul of the church. The powerful Franclscan
JAMES WATT---And the Series of Accidents That Changed All History
~An English nobleman, imprisoned in the Tower of London on a political charge in the latter part of the seyenteenth century, noticed one cold day that when he clamped down too tightly the lid of a water kettle on his cell stove, the lld wounld sconeér or later fiy off. The prisoner, marquis of Waorcester, had much time on his kands. He fell 1o studylug out & reason for these explosiong. In time Le had figured out their reason, The heat of the stove boiled the water (n the kettle. The bolling generated a vapor, known as stéam. This vapor was so powerful in its expansion that it forced its way ont of the parrow confines of the kettle and pervaded the room. Experiments later proved that .steam would fill 1,642 times the space occupled by The water which had formed it It was a new fores, a new and tremendous power, of which the world at large was wholly ig. porant. The marquis made many experiments alopg his chancediscovered subject. And the fame of them reached the ears of Capt Savery, a military engipeer. - Bavery, soon after hearing of Worcester's theary, was one day sitting in A tavern., He had just finished drigk ing a bottle of wine - He tossed the bottle with {ts few remainiug drops of liquid into the open fire. Presently what was left of the wine began o fssue from the mouth of the bottie in the form of stenm. Savory snatched up the bottle and thrust {ta neck into a pail of cold water that stood close by. Water rushed up into the bottle almost filling it. This pbenomenon set Savery to thinking. He made experiments and. in 1638, took out a pat: ent for a device for “Raising water and occasioning motion to all sorts of mill work by the impellant force of fire” In other words he made the first. practical application of steam power to mechanical use and, by fol lowing out the idea evolved by the - - bottle in the tav'Blyoz::;lq Diy- ern, he constru_cted : S a crude steam engine or pump for taking water out of mines. To this raising of water by pressure he joined the principle of procuring, by condensation, a vacuum. . This was later improved on by a steam engine in which (through the vacuum made by condensation) a piston, or plunger, was forced. Savery's idea was taken up by Thomas Newcomen, an English mechanic, a year or two later. Newcomen made an engine in which steam was let into a cylender from below, a piston above being thus driven up in such a way that a pump-rod (fastened to it by a
Serious Affair. Alphonse—Sacre bleu! Ze duel was serious—sanguinary—terrible! Gaston—lls it zat zere was someone hurt? ‘ Alphonse—But yes. After ze affair was over, one of ze principals broke ze rib of ze ozaire in embracing heem! Sometimes. Dinks—After all, you know, fame is but a bubble. i Winks—l think it's a mistake to say that, because fame is really never attained by blowing. v
{#ent Bim to prison for len yemrs at | Paris, depriving kim of ail books or | writing matoriale, snd thereby doing Leveryihing in it power to block fe i ture vivilization - . 1 The pope at last ordered bim sel froe { He burried back to Onford. where In JEusneed the igporases and monk tid fden stupidity of his time He alsc ‘pul forth & pew philosephy which i puinted 1o s higher, waper fife; and I resamed work .on his investiogs | Foremost among these inventioos i ®ax the formula for gunpowder, 1 Combustibles of various sorts had fhesn in use from lime to time) prin 1 ripaily In the orient, since hefure the lideginning of the Clpisttan era Crude explosties had eves been huried by band or from catapuits in hatiles and {AL sloges Thia custom had bevg com {mon among the Araba for denturies For 1o the early days. all eixliizatios i ad thvention came from the ealit. Onl | ture and progress Wére rife in India {China and Arabia st & time wher | Kurope, was groping 1o the darkness jof semibarbarisen. ~ - {1 Dut there can be Hitie doubt as 4 i Bacon's devisiog real gunpowder In | dependent of thesé earlier discaveries ?t:ige"hwué that equal guasiities of . . saltpwter . chareos %m‘ Discovery of 8 sulpher formed | Suepowder. . . wigh explosive /_};x;g:;_ma vt long hefors cappon of § Wood, Lodnd with fron hoope or o fleather, bound with ropes, were g % wie These were casily suffcient 1< i pesist . the expansion of wich gowde (A% Bacon bad tovedts)l -iron balls o 1 Ereal slopes were the prifestilen. The % Bawer of chivalrs found they cocl imake svunt hesdway aeaiost saeh mis Leilen, which smnshed the moutest tarmar lke egeshélls Thuw the per i 3&;;1&%3 Hoger Hacos striw’k s deat? ihlow 1o foudalism and other silwort éj‘;xfi?&;iwzh‘*zf Toeustoma Ha alen . indi L rectly, aided progress by decreasing gii;eir fregquency with which warg weors {waged ' For powder. &s 1t improved ¢ enlled tor pore intricste guns and § fhese at last so increased the cost of E®ar as o render |1 onn longer & thing §to be entereil upon, as before, st any i alight provoeation. : - g :‘;‘i#«.'{lt}fi-‘i sudactous writings and lee j tures daused the chorch once mere © i imprivon bime—-thig time for 14 year %;jezflmi to burn most of his writings 'zxzmmxm 8 formuly for prolonsdd {HHe) and bis inventions. Soon after é}zl‘a”s«‘msad refeass he d,{f’»dwpfim‘; din | Braced, shunned as 8 sorcorer—at the Fage of §O. Jiis was the doubls crime iof secking to kelp humanity and of x,},ming £OO years 100 soon ~ Sh ACaprrighted )
| balance arm) was forced downward ‘{ A vhcuum was formed by pouring L cold water into the condensiog oyl inder, the atmospheric pressure form Wwithout drawing the piston down lntc | the cylinder. Dy thin action the pump ‘rod was forced upward. ; L -At about this Umé James Watt a | young Scoteh mechanic, was pleking }up & scanty enough liviog as instro ment-maker for Glasgow university. i A model of the Newcomen engine was sent 1o him to be repaired. Every one had looked on that engine as little | short of miraculous. It had been ac L claimed as the highest possible type §m’- machinery Watt did not agree P with this idea. 3 The first and gravest fault, bhe found. was the necessity for aiternate iy heating and cooling the cylinder, in respectively admitting and condens | ing the steam. The letting 1o of | steam and the subseguent cutting oft §o£ communication with the boller while the steam was condensed in valved a great loss of time and steam The remedy came to Walt as an in spiration. Wkhy not do away with all this delay by condensing the steam fn some other vessel than the cylin. der ftself? Then the condensation i Berviiols with temperatore could & L Boverty. always be kKept low | . and the eylinder always be kept hot. He put the jdea into execution. Then he added an alr ‘pump, to maintain the vacuum, and other {fmprovements on the original. Now that the work was done and the modern condensing steam engine completed, Watt sought to put it on the market. But here fresh misfortune awaited him. No cne would take up liis invention. Countless millions of dollars lay in its future, but no one could see that it had any special prac tical value. The making of his model had consumed so much time and material that Watt was penniless and In debt. Then followed the long period of poverty and hopelessness that is the portion of so many progress-ma-kers. i At last an ironmaster. Dr. Roebuck by name, consented to finance Watt's engine on the. condition of recelvirg two-thirds of the profite. Watt closed eagerly with the offer, and his years of hardships were at last rewarded by prosperity and fame. F . To a series of accidents the steam engine is due. But, if these accidents had not been seized upon and used to their best advantage by men of genius, steam might not yet have been uti lized. Thus, Accident, plus Genius [is credited with the steam engine. . (Copyrighted.)
. : And Danger. “I should think a man like you wha is fond of excitement would have an auto?” : “I get more excitement out of dodging them than I would out of run. ning one.” : Consoling. Wifey—Henry, did you get any consolation from the sermon this morning? - Hubby—You bet I did. I was made to realize that I might be a whale lot worse than I am.
OGRAPEDNOTED MEN Jacob Hysler of New York Has Shaved Five Presidents. Has Strict Ruies on Subject of Conver Sation for Mig Mes—Genercus angd WellKacwn Peracrs Who . Have Palronized Him New York Tohewe ahigrest Ove pregl entzoithel Bilew Bratogia v ean Aoy Gectiog. This Bisor belongs o Jacod £y a.; % siddiend 5l st Nigid - #ireel and Promde a B LD renrs BEO Thirty five yéars g o Lo woesd 130 , TR ~":-\é,,a:.t'.‘ ""‘k w hadre & remained 3 Yeste, By e ¢ bigg Eiawn idels ATy 8 % ET pesinl 1 . o - # b years Hestly, ang v adist AR mlYery W IERsL 5 & 3 >3 T { lua : a 34 BRiekE Ihe .oan i 1w tics """z': IS %5 % - s W , wants i Brivs 3 Ly €43 g ‘ 5 A | 2o\ - o e o bS o f § e h "3% o !5e > A b N ‘ e &4 «wf‘-'«f < - A o A ' IS i . Jaceh HMysres . : Artt r WWilitaen 800 f % Ay x,." Rooseyvelt sad Willias i gt i Kag & s¥eal Vies Pre 3 Fair banks and Bhermag and Willam J Iryan snd .';:."-,‘L 1 Parkes ) Among other potable men who havs submitted 1o "of: v}?;- CTR f TR OBre Moses H. Grignell who back a%a Kent Kane's search Tor the north pole Sir Hepry M. Staniey, the Afr X plorer; Gens Fraokiin Smioh o and Banks. and the nresend commander of the. department .of the likes Gen Fredorick ¥ Grant also Gens AL A Chaffee, H. C: Corbin and Nelson A Miies His older cumtomers inclided Pierre lorillard, Cornelivg Pellows W - Whitney, Jay Gould, Willism . Van derbilt, Corneling Vanderbilt: and their aous -H':irry’” Payne Whitney, George, Edwin, Frfif’:i‘ and Howard Gould, Alfred, Corneling . Regipald, Frederick, George W » Wiltiam. K. and Harold Vanderdilt continue o pat ronize him The late Jobn T MeCall of the New York Life lusurance Company. FPaul Morton of the A sal, and Henry M. Hyde of the Equital iié,"};;n'v' aunt an his chairs ) her distinguished . patrons Have been Mark Twain, Frank Munsey, James Gordon Bennett, Wiltlam Han. doiph Hearst, Willam and . John. D Rockefeller, Jobn D Archbold, Andrew Carnegie, Charlés M. Schwal, George Westinghouse, Thomas Ediscn; Joseph H. Choate, Whitelaw Reld: Gen. Stowsrd L. Woodford, J. Pierpont Morgan, JYeorge Perkins, Prince Aversperg, who married Miss Hazard. Frank H Hitehcock, George B. Cortelyou; the tate Bishop Henry C. Potter, Rishop ureer, Rishop McFail of Trenton, and Bishop Duane of Albany, Ogden Mills, A. H. Kissam; M. C_ D Borden. Presi dent Diaz of Mexico® Govs. Odell, Hig - gins, Flower and Hill of New York and Douglas of Miussachusetts, - i Speaking if tips, . Mr. - Hysler re- - marked that the men in his employ are. treated generously by customers. ““The {average Up Is ten cents. Sometimes they get a.quarter. - My barbers re celve two dollars a day - wages, and each averages with his tips-a fairly | good income. ; o : i “One of the most generous men who ?came to me was W. . Whitney, who, ' besides giving a present to his barber ‘svery month, presented him every sum. ‘mer with $lOO for his vaecation: An_other very liberal man was H. H. . Rogers, who, every Chrlsim‘ag Eave '@ generous gift to each of the barbers ' and manicures.” ; : ; S : § Seeks Funds for Indian College. . Rev. Dr. William Carey, a great- - grandson of the first Baptist foreign ~missionary to India, himseif a British missionary to India, is in this country ;mnsémng with the American Baptist Missionary union concerning a plan to raise in this country $1,600,600 of a $10,000,000 endowment fund for Ser. ampore college, in -the province of } Bengal. o , | Wiiling to Help. s “Mistah,” whined the beggar, “1 know 1 have been a bad man, but | want to blot out the past. Won't you nelp me?” , j . “Sure,” responded the official of the 2ig insurance company with a jubilant smile, “you are the very man we are looking for. Here's a blotter. It is a dull day, indeed, when an insurance company dosen't give out a blotter.” 3 e oy Asbestos in Warship. : ~Asbestos is being used now in. the construction of warships to a considerable extent, to replace the inflammable wood an¢ the heavy iron. @~
Maider Weil Knew Lover Could Net Fesst Culinary Bait She Had ! So Cileveriy Cast. Janet had molded the Sianestic gf faire -the Isd ¥ 118 nEcm sbe Hied for w 0 many years Ihsl the news o Eer PURE srt sge bad muaxd the 'f:,' ! 85 ecatitaouaks iiaxe you snd Dmodd beesn sogaged JongT sentayreg, (ha #irees of the hLhouse kold 7 ” (roe ol wher next Sabbhath ¥ O 3 it Bs Ty S : A 3 wny 5t ght of BiglTYy £ g e Ihat T askes]l Ler RO treas i - e o 5 ] had sgrd ties | Bad polt ™ ree & #t. “nE ARy P % 3 . wee Bit f the cake iI4 1 ; i ; § he gaig * TiLg 1 F o 3 i 8 . § § 3 Y i % iE® s 8 ¥ 3 ! ! sAawW - n . - s Bsx WHY PEOPLE SUFFER. © Too often the gidnevs are ! CAuse and the e Lol sw < 'l‘{? { g ¥ % % t i 4 ) r foom * 5 3 4‘_ A;", ¢ 3 ¢ % y 3 , / . : _ /L : i the fa Dosn'a. Foe # . : s WKk, THAT FROZE HIM. {f‘? - Ivg 75 4 i - T N ) "5? t i‘ % : ~ BTy S S : \ Ao A Fr - !f F Y gDM oo - . < : ¥ iY7 \ LR i \ 4 . I )&3 : ..“\ é \_.\ N Q ..' " 2 &;: ‘f_ g'»‘, 'l“'. €y ! g t there don'l seem 10 TOLD. TO USE CUTICURA. After Specialist Failed to Cure Her Ine tense ltching Eczema—+ad Been Tortured and Disfigured But Was Scon Cured of Dread Humor, “I contracted eczema and suffered fntensely for about ten months At times 1 thought I would scratch myseif 1o pleces, My fate and armis were covered with large red paiches, so that I was ashamed to go out. | was advized 1O go 1o & doctor who was a: specialist in skin diseases, but § received very little rellef 1 tried every known remedy, with the game results. 1 thought | would fiever get bet ter unt!ia friénd of mine told me to try the Cutjcura Remedies. Bo ] tried them, and after four or five applications. of Cuticura Olpntment [ was rellieved of my unbearable ftching. 1 used two gcis of the Cutlcura Remedies, and { am completely cured. Mliss Barbara Kral, Highlandtown, Md., Jan. 5, ‘08" Potster Drug & Cher. Corp., Bole Propa, Bostos, New England English, Complalnt was made to a local man by one of his emsployes that boys whe were swimming in 8 pond were caus ing guite-a nuilsanee. The owner of the properiy gave the man the privi lege of putting up a sign, as he had asked permission to do it The notice reads as follows: 5 “No Loffing or Swimmig on Theas Growns—Order by ———_ If Catched Law Will -be Forced"—Berkshire Courler. . Spectacular Oil Fire. " The most spectacular fire ever witnessed in the ofl industry was at one of- the Des Bocas wells In Mexico. About €OOOO barreis of oil were burned up daily for nearly two months:. The flames rose to heights of 800 to 400 feet : fmportant to Mothers. ‘Examine carefully every bottle of CASTQRIA a safe and sure remedy for ‘infants snd children, and see that it ~ Dears the- - of 1n Use For Over 30 Years. ~ The Kiod You Have Always Bought -~ . A Series of Breakages. . “Banks had his engagement broken.” “Did he take it hard?” . "“Yes; after it was broken off, he was. all brofken up, and then he broke down.” 2 S Innovation, Stella—D#d she have an unususj wedding? Bella—Yes; the church was decorated with common tropical plants instead of the iare. : A Bare Qood fsm “Am using ALLEN’'S F -EASE, anq can truly say [ would not have been without it so long, bad I known the relief it would give my eching feet. I think it a rare good thing for :mi:ne havi sore or tired feet.— Mrs. tilda H:ftwefl, Providence, R. 1. Sold by all Druggists, %¥c. Ask to-day, A man may I‘ve justly by avoiding what he blamesinothers.—Montaigne, It’s the judgment of many smokers that Lewis’ Single Binder 5¢ cigar equals in quality most 10c cigars . e e et et The battle without goes as goes the Sattle within, - :
