Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 41, Ligonier, Noble County, 30 December 1909 — Page 2
GREAT LOVE STORIES —— OF HISTORY —— - By ALBERT PAYSONV TERHUNE Henry of Nvarre and Marguerite- of Valois
%\v’” 00l heture the el Sig Peubi ILye 5 g ek L M o e iple | e .Al s nobiiny L weree s 1) 3 . oot it S Hie S R eked 1o Prrin obt e ’;—'“«:»14 - ¢ that © poes thele marttage Yuis paw - e gmw’“ ch in the rere : s _3~”'¢\e4’<{z’q s o G *w’*r%:‘%‘" it mmake Ner re i " gpemke 1. b Bterguat (Henry. ,% F ke wubsntin 2ot ‘§s§§ ol -KyL BB oto the arch | . Kasune sßgeerid Ido to the arch we%f*’ Be would | - bishapls Gty ee g v R i e Valolsas BE AR Rk EE @ iw“‘evm; ey RN T kke i taaed by Lo WV’,“Q‘”«J‘“’?& fil’}t%«%}fiffifi : e s <t itnere i L eadiy ~&‘«fi'—}:}’s;.;:fii,) I SREg ,”’_33@:_,: G i S . e ankward paure . e el e : «%gfiw‘*flfi“‘" dosod man, gandily ORISR PR WIS e T e " %&”g“y { e it ORaght Mar Babds oLI T forsard by . S Rne 40l e . oShL d o it Be fmen 9L, it R Reg oot - e e hide g phaotacy sRS6 G na =P e R - ;«’H«w’fé% B b siory | S mreiutg e ReL e (e iR Rt S o e "”«"x ee L - mm@mww&%% w 0 BPE BN e g oeiy - el ”fi”@“&“{%\ L oquaroie L s fl%fifi g,fi;’z/'«;fl‘w?\mfl &M g | Sbt D dier at [ L R L nids ramstantay | e e shrand éfi:~fis§}¥«fif§¥!§%&é& §an o "3,:?? L G wEe ot % U v,«‘::;: o "‘f\«» ca dhad N R s Ciherine - - “%‘f Charien X aut! Medigd WERRET ul (o s o - ‘”f““”m filowing plan. o ier e denll = v o = ijgmzig* s of AT Hopienanr S t*“*’xfi’?@x o fzf: Gl ke ?‘{Qgi ifiits L §§’§ f Blarpio eAN the ! Lol BeE s g s b = D e ' Mgl i e myied o 3 iR ae \,'»'l{%‘:l7-,;:%;%} s N - o é%“““‘f”@i eiony - While they ESEE R I teieinon o s e e G .@%@ '.‘.L;,L!‘,jE,_‘._,;.}“;;r,,;.:»,} e ;M Sl o ee e A . l e m‘v‘j‘“f"‘vfl‘g‘ic’;“"xni’:m*h—f““i% eARSR R e # - *fi‘}’%& e o %V“‘y’“’%a _ctovgr matshe or« i "'\ A T ?‘\"f'b Rey e B :"Li}-};;"-g’;i - 5 kMR Bloot ol Ahe S e v‘u:{,c.‘.';‘»_‘;fl.».‘.:-g‘«:.,.:. o -’ i eßk eitle made o pown in otk Al o ciden ol bednig = : . Mfi”fliwa{vs Ber refisal L e rosponges . Yot e sctually over eI BB ber poser 1o s ot o NetaE L "im"’:_ftfii%,.zf%-%?'?ii;@ffli»“.'§ o 11 3:*¢,, ;“fi 0t L ean e N paful was slie fhat 2 3 AR OT e e o e e ate Henry e S Lee it kilied in the PSR v o R - Bar shoy R e ¢ Huguenots were ©oslisghtered in eold Bond and
LEICESTER AND AMY ROBSART
_ Aty Hobeart was a protty ponniry | girl dmughter of 4 lwenlthy ald knight whic yed in v kahice, Vug A A more B ahe Detritiied Yo Robert Dudley, one of the many sons of f.’:"},‘?::fi\ gike of Northumberland "!‘h' (!‘--k" v“*"‘l\' d Liarad o i oWI family & advancement He arranged A Z!l;{,"fif.s;[w hetwern one of his sons Guiltford Dudley. and Lady Jane Grey cousinto King Edward Vi of England _ln this serles the skory of Lady Jane Grey has been Loid s a resul! Jane - Guiltord and Nortbumberland were -all three beheaded. Northumberland's fathier had already been hebeaded by . Henry VI for snlawiul use of power It was while trying to arrange for his family s welfare thml the duke ar ranged the marciage between hig hand someat, cleverest son, Bobert, and rich ' Bir John Rohsart's daughier, Amy It “seemed at the time a good piateh, for Robert did not then dréam of the rank that was later to be his Ay loved him.devotedly, and be seems to have been fond of her in his own sell ish way. The early vyears of their v marzied lHfe~—thev were seared Iy more than boy and mirl--were passed hap . pity in quiet Berkshire, Amy Wit A Boy anit Girl zmu'n 3%‘;»:!11 “HH e i tent to lead a simLove Affair, e o : e CcOunlry exis tence with her handsome young hus band. But political temptations soon drew them apart. . e Robert received an office at court under Queen Mary. Then Mary died. gnd her sistor, Elizabeth, came to the English throne. Efizabeth, though .. she never married, had an eye for handsome, clever men, and often gave them higher positions at court than she bestowed on persons of real merit - Dudley knew this trait of the queen’s and resolved to profit by it. ILeaving his lonely little wife at Cumnor Hall in Berkshire, he took up his residence at London and devoted himself to winning fickle Elizabeth’s favor. . He succeeded. She loaded him with wealth " and titles, and undoubtedly fell deeply In love with him. Then it was that Robert's ambition took a new and - audaciously high flight. . Elizabeth was unmarried. She loved Robert. and he had more intluence over her than any other living man. Why not marry her and rise at a " bound to the dazzling rank of prince consort? The idex was daring, yet it seemed plausible. Only one obstacle appeared to block Robert's path to greatness. He already had a wife. Amy meanwhile lived on, lonely and : neglected, at Cumnor Hall, hoping “ever that her adored husband would tire of court life and come back to her. "She suspected nothing of his new - ‘plans, not even when one or two unsuccessful attempts were made’ to - poison her. These attempts failing, it WAS necessary to use surer means. Such means were employed, and the - finger of suspicion points strongly to " - Robert as instigator of the whole crime. e - One morning in 1560 Amy was found dead, her neck broken. The report - was given out that she had fallen "~ down a flight of stairs. A story that : ig more generally believed is that she ~ was told her husband was at last com ing to see her, and that as she rarc ~ delightedly to the stairway to greet ~ him a trap doos (previously loosanec
L R fi%@ 4 the € Bread. 3o Marguer to's he ptrange c owed hix oty *M » \Ek_»;‘:::;;:»g%%‘.iéin T L tadipie & “‘kwflifi: . ;zsv '7'_4;"3""3' AT f,‘:% e e e 2 o g#é J_v:';n?‘r.?:\fi"-";‘-_“ = Eiit iv ,"‘ St h 21 i . Em i : fi“',‘ ,—< @‘? i (ggiig ‘7‘ w?: Mm} ‘ Ry, St 23 fi\ z L the dart o g wife : susing ier e ware e F b ”w# Lister o fl% taile "*’ el oo %p% fi;z ke e 8 w%fi? . ? I’% AT ass bl g flfig - gk*%f W\ ifi:’%# i e F omn 5 het r‘gwmy Lose i = )g;g,&” o R s (e &b A 2hty ey fiffv‘l{t_‘ifl*fi‘:-w iy ‘;erjzin.s:azgfiiif-?f ‘}‘é“w‘fl?fih& - ‘H( e iy %fiwufg “%fiam‘”«; e T wfi%w crrokes ity 80t o o - o v that et ren i eirElir AR N ;-;9.:;; S ona i e ;“‘,’«3-‘.{"::1”"""" faed ‘ o a“fi . fit i s e¢ S ""‘lei 4 ?f—;tg» =l bl “3: . . . ’,,.'i:wfil-""‘ By 2y Gg e R o z {.'n““’”@‘ e syal Eifli‘:é ;@ g poves e e 5 8 ‘,”*‘f: furers I e ,)_;».-““3_;:7."37:(‘: e e m"’w,:"% IHhet Soh 2; Wtw% SEE ?wi%fi Hry »"?'“ &oo o - ffigy%fi thine. pl - A 0 span A. Ha ~,;,w_.';;,..x_» R 55 T e s o i) -st ‘ MEWTE, . M rgl gf»f‘*'“ e = mflm %* s e !\f% ;:;;i&%f?&f? ,” »;« séfi; it :xf‘% ; 'gfi*‘@i’ f'%%afi sl r,g?, Le v KNG Sby j{b“;,,'(;;:?i v:i“_"?,“:;::rf}-'i‘e &8 5 o 'T\".l,ffi.'f"‘»: ei : . ifif%m‘i jil fifr@;’* flin ‘:i ik 154 y e ;-: Sos Miipt i ....:-,n?fiw{}hyt:.”’fl“ biR ik : i o v W‘? . 6 wan @wgw ix tnerolh e PEERN i R Avy S i ety Gde ?f‘ : \“jf‘k‘ .Xv,;-gzikiflf £ b RERL Tragde, - \;‘) sey e v fitle fi»{i%fi;?? z ”iu e N":f ‘i W et vhe i tntns Rsfgfl ‘ife ton L N Fantetaln: AN 7 ~,~>-r-;'\~.'»,.>-':‘:fs§r'i‘%3‘f3;"""”"Nv! Bt wi b ik, wm& ¥ e fi Fesdrr b i ariE L s,‘ -Be ¢ 2% . égfi;i E' :fi’« “:I‘P ‘3':,’ iy 4 “;‘ ’Aif‘ i ,{J»” Fhis o o fuueh “’d“th‘, ‘;J«‘,‘ o £ Hisay Sty *»fw yo v 0 Py ,\.;_;».:3.'»,::.«~“->’xf§h§»a g o fri s e Mfi}xfi}?i xffijffi‘ - 00, ‘ *?fi% o 4 G dte enn eU T ‘,"‘ T and . ¥¢§s Tiir addie. 8 Yi&m ~1‘12',17""”[%\““; -3N {kg,:’:,figflfiuw Liiy if .‘ffi?f"l,ij | |‘j fi b “"&“N{y 2*« Yy o e 3 f*xu#f%;‘fi t{e:’fi—’,agw‘:‘%, k 8 oW Sasie 3' Wiy - 1'1\" L s ea . o oma ; i‘c e kit £ dni " votclie § . Vi, it o Med) *» eMt b i m‘»mJ‘ ‘i i it tive 1o B noa - S Bad a B tatiot wh IGt esL ' 5l .e s ; a ee st AL H}fi K 1) ngt g gfi““fi am;‘m hi&ma o fm .r“"‘;“ : .:‘Vflfiri:aa‘ :N‘f?y .‘,‘l ».:. E Yi” &1 Seh 3&& ary 7»;k ted him e i p‘ Ml B hipiltle g i i) =By wrdily) Syengen far b )‘mw - mm;m!
by Boti wlf' Robort's servinis Luave W sdve ey fedr, Lurling bLer o the floor Below and killinzg her in LY casetie It trasling girl was dead apd Robest was 0t free o mad ry Ellzabet! il he eoaid ‘ [tut often the He® laid V; fans meot with an unexpected hito! For some reason Elfzabeth !-"f:svw g 1o wed this man she profedsed to love above all the world: Strong as was her aflection for Rolrert, het selfizhness was prob A Crlis Thst .4. uor reiah Was Useless. 5 idei of aher ing her royal power with any one At any. rate. she remained single, and Amiy Robsart's vile marder was all in vain., Yet Bleabeth continpued 1o shower favors on Robert She made him & Rolght of the Guarter gave him the s#reat castie of Kenilworth, and in 1564 ereatid Bim earl of Lefcester ‘A vedrs went on she raised him con tinually to higher and higher posts of ‘honor. Roabert had numibition without ability. Thervefore he made thore or lesa of a faliure of pvery enterprise or diplomatie fask allotied to him and waus hated by the mopie - All of which did not ‘dim Elizabetli s affection nor apen her exes to the tuan's true char acter. In 15768 the éar! of lelcester secretly married a widow whose hus band he was sald 1o have peisoned Elizabeth at last was aroused against her favorite. Bhe threatencd to have him cast into prison--nol on suspicion of poisoning. but for daring to prefer another woman to herself Yet she later forgave him, and he remained one of her foremost advisers until hir death in 15887 ; - : ‘ln Sir Walter Scott’'s novel, “Kenik worth,” Amy Robsart {5 represented as confronting Elizabeth at Leicester's castle in 1575 The chief 'flaw in Scott's version is that Amy had been killed 15 years earller, and that Elizabeth in all probability never saw the unlucky girl ' . ! 2 e e E Girls and Outdoor Games. . Women, in their ambition to be athletic contend against innumerable qif. Eficumos. One of these difficulties is ‘skirts, a second is ‘waists, and a third —almost insuperable—is hair, including hairpins. - Watch a girl playing tennis or crickEet, and after a more than usually brilliant effort she invariably puts her ' hands to her head, as if she expected something to fall off if she did not. Energetic play is usually attended by dishevelment of the unruly locks and a shedding of hairpins that causes the pretty athlete distress. : Her pleasure in the game is marred by a sense of insecurity and a coniatant fear of consequences. No woman can wield a racquet or essay a run lwith an undivided mind. Half her brain is occupied by the fearful surI'mise that her hair is coming down—a surmise, by the way, which is probably too painfully justified by the fact —Black and White. - What They Look Like, The little boy bad been given oy ster stew for dinner. The oysters were unusually large. After peering intently into the bowl fur some time he looked-up into his mother’s face and said, “I dou’y like hoppy toads."—
e 5 e 3 v ——— T-w\ % : 2 ey m $ P¥23 e {illO v 1 P By A B S o ; . et =l e Y : : £ 3 :I' 5 W J:P‘ o i -,rm”’# .'i"":i . By {)1& o T RN ) ,@ Tohet 4 i Fil D & i } 758 3\ ‘; P A e LIV e\ 30§ P et Sag'w SLS L A 8 e L sWt ST»S‘Q< e ‘ T N R : L Tt MRS A .*fl > pTE i’n Nol - s o # ? & | #" 4 \é} ¥ . | e B 9’ o HYRI fi* e ‘ o B L s adelt &) e v £k %?P§ b e . < L g eLY & = ’ _5”;: ". Bi P iy : e g s s FOIANSELAR T AR - P Py T b % R | Ao B ey » o- B . " A EFA Tk, Al & b % . " gl % e - A P 4 _.-*-'s' el o 1 e, TbY L S ¢ Kl o A SR L 2 Wl Aby e o . e S P wv(};fi,; .' ; - gs ={T - " S o. 5 ¥ * e 3 x - * oo= "l 4’2\‘ Po sg&B ol i'f"' YL"’ § oot S "{: ‘o 2. . e2Bi, B P sd | T e B 4RN . s A ks * » : - § ;P,,™R w o .o 0 " . & i v b o R - 4 v T L» ' TR 4 2 eSN . Tal R, - f ol g P A b4O S A - :;.V .I*A7 LU ! 3{*? O EERN o b AT A e e TS | &AL eey fii LY ot Fo YRR o. { :&R"’IR N & N{ ity %4 % ‘ ¥ i é W '"‘:f' 3i7e : Pk ! ’«!“ r& » ¢M % s g 2a‘J-5‘ o £ g ‘ e g=7?iM ’ e b 3 ' 5 & ' ?f@v.‘t ®S AT R U R T g B i 5% % 4 % 3 o 4 1 ?iv-*’f?fgw ARRAEE .8 R 0 Q‘ i SRI f el ’“"’fi SRR e2‘‘*; “ B B > . '&* 55 ik PTe e : "3’ RE . % ¢gt B 1T o s o V"*\ '-‘-u ’,* ei¢ fi_ 1.-, ,‘* 4 ‘#’:“ gbT3&3 r e 2 g Bis e o bty s" S o43i‘ f P Pl Bt P ghes. ofvs oW§P L AR P soo% UL i * 3;{ T e Lok Lt SR di i e 4 ce S e TR BiRM L A ¢¥sofw £ 5 D i o bABi b e {f-*f? R e Ry DL eAR bbR &, OLe el &AySbo PR a 7 3 - ; , Pas gl s e g bore AT i- é BY3’ 4 . g R e el Bl Y SL 4 5. iy 128 9 L ‘?‘*B - TR ,;j e I "‘., L 3 ’ SBy %‘fla&;};«-- fm"‘ufi s § w 0 WP . AR .t | 4 m;«,u e SNGTeRE E ent ia; &fi £ % % 9 % # ,“X‘ ififit”fifl‘v $ : o : ‘ ; Wl e . " & i . 3 y €ll eis . g ‘arth Calave : :
- E grestest lovest in ihe worid s the Lianl fores! 10 Bet T runtain thare than FAgO 1o frrge than 260 teet i ‘Kigh, with girth exceeding bk feei. and ydmberisss ooh “re of the samie species, bnt ol small : €1 sige (Hher fanods groves Hre the Calavs A BBk ""imfi’v;: Tuobumbe Freeno, Giep Grant. Najlopal park and. Tale tiver wroves . & it ‘«3“3‘»\&\‘?.'s:s; giave wae diseoy eriad in 1850 nd was firer deseritied An the t;'flt}v!‘w:.&‘ Chrantein, ;m':f Hehed fn London. As the Lig Trees of the Slertae were sufnaged to be {OnE 10 R Bew genus Gf conifers 1 pro texuar In the Eniversity of London tinde haste 1o christen this genus Wellingtonla spertes “Gigantea” Soen afterward #t was proven that the plant trees of the mountains belonged to (he same penus &8 those of the Coast range, already named the Se quoia Sempervirens and this generfo¢ name finally prevatled, writes John I: Cowan in [Hustrated Sunday Mag azine. Tt s worth noting that this nomencinture fmmortalizes & Chero ke Indian of mixed blood, named Se. gquoval, also ealled by the English natiie Jobn Guess, who deviged an al phabet for hig people, and first re duced thelr language to printed form tie was a native of Alabama. but was exiled 10 New Mexico, where he dled f 1843 His achievement marks him as .one of the greatest of American Indians. 8o that it fs. not {nappropriate that bils name {8 perpetuated In that of the greatest of American trees On account of Its accessitility, the Mariposa grove [z the one most®frequently visited For 40 yenrs it has attracted tree lovers and sight-seers . Most of the very large trees in the grove have been glven the names of C states, citles, prominent men, or mare Cor less fanciful appellations, such as i the “Four Guardsmen.” the “Pillar of the Temple” and “Fellee” (the last 334 feet high ) - , i The real King of the Forest is the tree in (te Mariposa Grove known as the “Grizzly Glant™ This is 104 feet in circumference at the ground and 285 feet high Five feet above the ground it Ix 90 feet In circumference It lakes 22 men with oulstretched arms, and -finger tips barely touching, to encircle ft. It is clatmed that six Tmen can ride around this tree on | horseback, kéeping equally distant i from each other, and that not one can _gee another. The first Hmbs are 100 feet from the ground. One of these is more than 20 feet in cireumference, | or nearly seven feet thfmxgh«?arge enough itsell to be counted a great | tree anywhere but In California. Many ~other limbs are from two to five feet ' in diameter, so that {t has been said | that if the Hmbs were all cut from the © Grizzly Glant and placed upright in | the ground. they would make a very . respectable grove of really “big trees” { themselves. [ts age has been varfous | 1y estimated at from 5,000 to 8,000 . years; and Jolin Muir once said that | this is the only sequoia be ever saw ! that appeared to have reached the | zenith of its growth. Considering its ! height, girth, age and awe-inspiring appearance, this venerable tree may
Cling to Old S llver ‘ Wc;;;;:
. Until Recently Emperor Francis Jos | eph Could Not Be induced to Part with’it, | Up to a féw days ago Emperor Fran cis Joseph eclaimed the distinction ol ! being the only reigning monarch whe . wore a silver watch, with the excep | tion of the Pope, who also wears one. i He really had a gold watch, too; onc ! of the old-timers that wound up with . a key, but it got so old that the em ! peror abandoned it, and for the last | 12 months or so has constantly worn { the watch that formerly accompanied { him only on his hunting trips. This { was ‘a massive silver affair and sc 1 heavy that it incommoded the impe ! rial owner occasionally. | Windlly the Archduchess Frederick i 3 > ‘ > i persuaded him to accept a new watch | on the plea “that it would amuse the | children,” for the timepiece she off jered his majesty has all the latest - improvements, sounds the hours and ‘ quarter hours, snd besides, plays pop
Aoubtess be prafounced the grandest tree In the world The ré are others that are higher, and there are mam that are larger 8 elreumferencs - but prhaps thore ary none that enibrace g 0 wiany viements of lree greatneass The "Fallon Monarch” is 8 great tree in the liwer grove tha! has been fying npon the greind tor geberations but §s stil untouched by decay, A rendwny hns beon bulit (hal makes § ‘passible 10 drive a four horse stage voach up on the trunk, iraversing iis entire length to the “’iih‘flfi:{’i}’l.‘&‘ifiiflig toots: and & score or more of mountcd cavalrymen have been posed for their photographs gpon the fallen hole atl one time. A stmilar fallen tree s seen in the Upper grove, with a flight of 13 steps leading from the ground tix {ts upper gurface Two great trees, known as the “California” and the "Wawona” have roadways cut ‘through them, ‘ten fecl | square, through which the stages are driven. This serves well to glve «isltors 1o the grove an adequate ides of the trequendous size of the trees, Nearly all the Hig trees in the Mart. posa grove bear black scars of the forest fires of past years. The 'Tele seope Tree” hag been burned to & mere shell so that one cau stand in the hollow trunk and jook upward to daylight awmong the tranches, 200 feet from the ground Two youpg cav: alrymen, now statioped in the grove - to prevent vandallsm, have bullt for hemseives & camp that s unique among milltary camps the world over. | Thelr horses are stabled in the trunk of a forest patriarch that has been ' hollowed out by fire; and thelr tent {8 pltched in the shadow of the slo ping bole of & glant tree broken some distance from the ground, and sull resting upon the stump from which it ' was severed. To particularize the oth. ler notable trees in the grove would | be weartsome. = P . John Muir has pronounced the Rig | Trees of California Nature's forest masterpleces—the greatest of Hving things., Une dumi_ not appreciate their greatness until he has walked around | them, measured thelr girth, laln dowa on the ground and allowed the eve to ftravel slowly and comprebendingly up {the Imperceptibly \apfiflng trunks, . Then he {8 ready to take of his hat ito these green but venerable relics “af the youth of the world Prof Da- ' vid Starr Jordan belleves that some of them are 8,000 years old. They ante- | date the oldest civilleation of which i the archavologtst finds afiy trace { They were forest glants before Moses, jor Confuctus, or Huddha, or any oth- . er maker of laws or of religlon, whose ‘name history records, was born. They | were “old” before Christ walked the {earth; and reared their tall érowns %ln majesty toward the skies centuries | before Troy fell, or the pyramids | were butlded, or the foundations of : Babél were lald. Who can say how imany more ephemeral civilizations, i religions and soclal systems they will §_survive? - Barring accident and catas{(mphe, they appear to be i{mmortal | There is no evidence that they ever j die of discase, decay or old age. Some ~of them are dead at the top—but they gwm blasted by Ughining, :
ular melodies - when a button s l pressed. The emperor “tried it on the | childrén,” several of his numerous igmndchiidmn and grand-nephews and grand-nieces, and they were highly ramusedv So the pew watch was definitely installed in Francis Joseph's ’vest pocket, ‘ The emperor nowadays spends aigmnst every half hour he can spare from business of state with children, those |of relatives or friends. The other day a courtier whom he had sent on a mission to Munich drove from the ratlway station directly to the palace to make his report. “Why," said the emperor, “you are im traveling clothes. Didn't you go and see wife and children first?" The official explained he thought the emporor's business so important that he didn't dare stop at his house on the way to the palace. . S ——————— s Lots of rich young men who have inherited their wealth prove lhat the noodies are not all in the. souy, ;
- e .t ™ A > " ‘O3“ ‘.*f:,m Lo . g{x": g - . ,’{ il .¢ 3 wF "f —‘f' o e F ' a[LY - - I 3 \{‘.“ Ry o g ’ N T ~/ e LI~ e NLy Liled - M““m““"* r’ Cho lesWEdttell Loomis ; i i / ’ 4 ¥ ¥ -
fi PLY TOURAT, s atisticrsl. 5! Losclentint and 8 pugtiist found Whetmasivrs traveling togetber They ' were atl of & site snel ane was in tliped 16 be arrogant apd while they were outwardly polite 1o each ofber there %as nol &4 wan atheng them who did wet Jodk down upon the other three : : And a prolelsrisn waiked sfar off Beneath the contempt of any ope of thew e in “ & conrees of haly }e&;}v?'fiiffiz,fié 7 Ihe T sntered into 3 great buliding | Aevoted 10 teade and full of men of | Lusiness whn as gouts Ak they saw the miuticrat hegan bosing o hie asd askest him 1o comne and lake the Bighent pont “Por ™ asld they, T¥You eaan with cee ren! and pow ¥ou Bave 5 thoussnd millione” Mo srictoerat % the setentist shented aed the papilist snoried, hut there was no e bt Gt 12 that tf dvery dog has Lix day the phitoeml was pow huding His : ) But Ihe profetarian walked afse of beneath the remtempt of sny ose of ther > . - After .3 genron they foft the b 5:1 of e fnen of toade snd travels 4 to an gotigos fadonial mansion which they PhT e T And Bers the afistoera) tonk precsds o 4g, whkiteg thie oihv! T hivene : By treaty 4 with o vints it wnw be fo whon the Banors wers i For "ogald one “his Loe rans bhack masy pemeritions fraced in Ihe Linret bioodg e And the photorrst gt “Why, ] can buy bbb out. ‘ Amd they buowed the pladoerat oot T b jv“,',",;’ ieered gudibiv ar Ihe famiily prtensions sud B also was Byl Yo goo puteide The selentist s-!,v;’?:‘d in hKimaesif Bt be was suffered ta remaln, for an snesatar of the aristoreat. had heen a patron of 8 splentist of the Bftacnth contury aond there was a tra dition in the family that B was quite the proper thisg to condescend (o gelones ‘ ; A : Now the gelentist was plainly bored 8! the rigid equetie apd ceremiony it the place and after o time he refuined his companions who Ware walling out side amd inoa Mttie while the aristo crat came out also, being of & resticss temperatoent and loving travel But the proletarian walked afar off bencath the contempt of any vne of theny. ; o : It so Bappened that in their travels 'Hm‘,\ came 1o 8 university and all four entared 1 ; ‘And now it was the selentist who war honored and was Inviled to a chair, the chair of learning. Whereat the pugilist opéniy scoffed. : And he went out--with yndergrady: ate ixr}x: e ‘ ~ For tn those days pugiliem had not been recognized as one of theé fAne arts ’ . . And the plutocrat said: “What's the matier with my giving a mililon dol lars to this institution? 1 guess my name will then last as long as that of the scientist” ' . But he was not a good gucsser The aristocrat said: 1 understand the reason for these honors to obur good friend the scientist. What s pity the fellow has not blood as well as brains © : And the proletarian walked afar off, beneath thé contempt of any one of them. ? e - After a time they took up their trav els again and came to & great stadium where games and irials of strength - were in progress. And It was free to all in hopor of the birthday of the ruler of that country. Yes, even the proletarian wag there! . The pugilist had begun to swagger a 8 soon as he had come {n sight of the cstadium and when the multitude saw Chim they let forth great cheers and sald. “Make way ‘for the only champlon'™ And ke took a seat of honar ' glad that his three companions had Tived to see this day . . But the sclentist drew back In dis - gust and marveled that the world should worship brawn. 5 . As for the plutcerat. he sald. “1 eould give every man in this crowd a theusand dollars and never potice it” " PBut he didn’t do it A . The aristocrat was once more in his element. and he proceeded to patron- ' {ze the pugilist and took him off 1o in. troduce him to some of his titled friends. For it is known that for . ages the Bilucbloods have patronized | sport. : | On a sudden a great outery arose in the stadium. Smioke was seen and cries of fire were beard and men : rushed hither and thither and ‘the é crowd swayed backward and forward, ' seized with a panic that each moment ; grew more wild. And in the thick of iime crush was the proletarian, who g was as poor as the pugilist and as in- | nocent of muscle as the scientist and | as destitute of blood as the piutocrat | and as weak of intellect as the aristoi erat, i | But being a brave man he stood his i ground undaunted and called upon | the crowd to stop its mad rushing, anc | his volce was charged with magnetfsm, so that the crowd obeyed him i and a great disaster was averted. But { he himself was crushed to death. % That night the othér four were . summoned hence also, and it came to | pass that all five stood before the gate of St. Peter, who asked each one in turn to give an account of himself. | said the pugllist: “I've knocked out ‘more men than any prize fighter who | ever lived.” e - “Stand aside,” said St. Peter, stern--Iy, looking toward the nethermost reglons. - 1" said the scientist, “gave my whole life to the propagation of the theory that an apple cannot rise from the grass to a tree on account of theé law of gravitation” . - ~ “How did .that benefit humanity?” joked Bt Peter. . L ' “] was not thinking of humanity,” said the sclentist. =~ = - | The aristocrat advanced with be | ribboned cap in hand and. bowing Isuid: i FJ«\
“There ts oo doubt that 1 will be a 8 mittedd. |am Pervital Blostlhod. pa tron of learniog and the fancy and » gontioman . Please dirset me to the | Math v : COTRIand ashie ™ said 81 Poter Then the pinticest advanced and £5" 2 5 1? ars the tichest man o the worid atid T want A #xlta cogmuadicus sile ! Bave done 5 grest desd of god with my pwmey since 1 turned gy ™ o Titow mpmany pecple bßlessodd vy fod the way vou made your - fret blace? saked 8t Poter “Well 1o tell Ihe pxnet trutho o B wan . onpht 1o Ay A suck 3 Vime us this-- 1 wae coursed not a 190 t in my early sedrs, bt 1 gnve s ?t"?'fe‘mqi’! £s3 : : Hignd aside T ognld ‘f,é: Frotee ‘ Laxt of all came the projstarisn R gt are the & (xtiteatinng Bt Fratpet : ! g And 8t Peter said: - How IBr can voni Irars s9ar an ety bask®” "1 A ped know af 8 cestainty whe |y Inther vm.;‘:“" : "l wxid ¥ Yot v ¥ e s'?\, u 3 $ 3"“?: :1‘:, st b ;-V . I neser went o‘4{3; § . “Wirne ¥ woree " Wi B Petne oW fany Den by §75 koo gt oot i the apenl aF I bosiness? o st otriesd t 0 hoen within oy righin and! waaddiod wit B 9 AT vzb imeked irditiative 1 B alrmid” Lok gl e Paster el hvw murh money hasve soa glven to tha ‘I bad nove to pivy foeriod tn make il by : : 21 Peiar interrgpted Lip siicaw ahont that Hme ¥ guieled the panic at thé dadbem : o ) 70, that wasn® anything’ Any one woanld have done tha “How & thai® gaigd 81 Peter, ad dressing the four who had beesn told o ostand asuds T YHe owax worth oa handred men that duy.” L‘x?‘f the plogtoernt unab b ex press hitsel! mave in terms of oo oirative values . e whownd 8 selleacrites worthy of 2 sclentist” satd Ahe mspn of lesrn ’ ing . ) “He .arted Uke & thoroughhred” satd the aristocrat L “"He was a man all right” sald the pugitist, holding out hizx hand to the - pauper ! “Come in"” sald Bt Petsr 1o the proletariag, who left his companions and entéred in : 3 > "We might ‘as well continus our lourney hng«-!?urrfT sald the aristocrat, with a shrug of his shoulders » » » = 0 YOU want to know why the EL;) maid left after the third hot night® | may be mistaken hut f you will take me up o the rocm she o 0 :-f\x;niml 1 may be able 1o Bnd a clew, Land there is certainly oothing about Cmie thal resembies Sheriock Hoimes | What a large closet’ ) . No? Not . a closet? the maid's room T i . Ob, s, Ia? {As they may In France i : . Do you remember the biack hole Pof Cslentta? 5 © . Poor maid® . And what an apalogy for a window ' And haw hot the tin roof miakes the Croofn even this cool day. - ' F Wasn't it awful the way some people trested slaves? | Makes me stoply shudder to read S the accounts i 8o your mald stayed through the ! third hot night? I Courageous girl! {1 would have left after the first tpight's experiends ‘ i It was hot on your own floor with fall the windows open and a direct ‘draft over the bed But think of that room “EHzabeth or the Exiles of Sibe rial”™ ) ‘ Only they were cald | And both you and your husband pillars of the chureh . You might install an electric fan. ! That would belp. . Three nighis iu a hot-box! i Plew! . ' o vy ®» » | @2 HOULD a man give up his seat in ’S a car to a woman? {“lf ' woman has the same rights as ! a man {and she should have) the man %uefe\d not give-up his seat” because if {a man has the same rights as a wo i man (and he should have) it does not | follow that she shouid give up ber i seat to @ man who was standing. i But the question involved is not one | of rights but of chivalry and by comf mon consent of ourselves, the scram- ! bling. pushing, money-getting Ameri- | cans are the most chivairous nation on e¢arth in their attitude toward s woman. = ; ‘ {1 do not always give up my seat to | a standing woman, but I will confess I here and now that when I do not [ feel ' all through my journey, or as long as she is standing in’ front of me, that 1 am a particularly small and unattrac tive breed of worm. Sometimes this Lumiliation on my part results in my getting’ up tardily and offering her my seat; sometimes I fight it out with myself and say, “Sit still, you worm, | you have a right to this seat and 1t %you do get up and give it to this woman you know perfectly well that you | will have a ‘holier than thou’ feeling toward every other sedentary man in the car and it is better to be a rude worm than a polite prig.” And so Igo on sitting, but 1 am not comfortable and I don't suppose any true-blue American is comfortable if he is sitting while a woman stands in front of him. < ~ For in the last analysis we azare 1 chivalrous. b ' , {Copyright, b, James Pott & Co.) P ol “You are wrong; it is only her bus band that don’t speak”
AYS oF LARNING LIVBIIeOOD N ROPL: B 33 . ~ 3 | N DN EIW ‘ :’, .s ) - B 52 ;t;:'"’, 7i el . e e . P e ) S . W fi Tl L B\ o 3,". x 3 ; - W'. ; y v;- v' ;l‘ \ c‘/ o ‘ CHE l ' &,“/i !:‘/"' ~: N "‘, \3 ‘ Vil i | | S | ! AR L ||\ :.i _g‘ £ ;0 ~ ,319 1% ":‘-.;\ v g | i;;» g A = : ’”'} 1 { : |i — éi, \i s.’f:§\i“~ 3 iz i ;‘/./,- T_?’V' P ‘ ? 5 4 S i / o $ j A,n '.’ Aot i ;. g ‘;
| * . \\ ‘ ) * “\ )5 }‘-wv. } &~ 1 D d - WAL ¥ ! b i AL 12 7 i , ,/’." F ”,' il - ig ‘4 7 ! . AR . - i ] b - ~ K - Eich ] R w-z,i-.‘-—A /. i 4 g { | ‘ - i \ : ; - R , i —— 4 i 4 ,fi'f?gt"/fi # i w § B I - L. \-“ ! R 8 ~.“? E PA’/ I B (¥ 4 7 RN / s 5 b & - 5 < . o i ‘77;' , L*"_ ’ / t;;v "} 2 | v l-‘? 4 ”4"//1- e 4 = { T VT ‘ Riinihsicaomaivn e ————— e ———— PRNTiG GREASE MPONS O SO - i the pelighi v} A ’ ¥ ¢ * 4 eyl y 8 A man for ¢ 8 3 s Had his Duslrie but received only nega A washer-up, néever Jeft the restanrant was not Fren and had nothing but what he earced in the room behind finally necepteyrd an invitation to. sug per o a neighboring - restaurant which he himsell r mmended as be fnp “all right He gréw communica tive heford the meal was over i ¥4 id ¥ t £ ¥ey g Yooty 4 gaid because | know the soup's a right and the meat's pot painted. 1 tried to get n ere and falled, so | ght to know 1t 3 ¢ {nlo my kitchen -1 T * 1 Lt patror « TR ay o . ¥ : 5' t et ™ 4 i . Wi el-Bair brush from his pocket and held it up wilth § riGe That's making the patron’s fortune ar i I've got 1o slarye on 10 sous & day I dip this into a bit of bad fat and then int 2 bowl of hrioth Broth, indeed! The grease spots 1 make are the only traces of meat that are in it No Frenchman thinks broth 8 worth anyihing without grease spols and the poor devils that drink that dirty water think they mean meat. It's pot one man in 8 hundred who knows how to use that hrush—and nobody can do it better than 1.” ' A visit to his kitchen next morning .proved that he was right Esen venerable seats of learning offer temptations ocut of the beaten track to the man hard pressed for his daily bread | remember once when chance took me to ‘a university city \ near the Baltic sea, being struck by a very ugly, red-haired, red-weyed - stu- ! dent. who, though poorly dressed, always went around with the richest
Ten Strike by Electricity
. Can Be Seen Among Newer Emblem- . atic Signs_ of Electric Light Along ] . Great White Pike. | Among the newer.of the many em- | blematic signs of electric light that ghelp at night to make things bright ! along the line of ‘the Great White . Pike of New York one of the simplest | but at the same time most striking 'g serves to atfract attention to a bowl- | ing-rooni. ; { ‘This sign, which is attached vertic- | ally to the front of the building and . extends upward through two stories, ; looks in one of its phases like a tall ! column outlined in = electrfc lights. | Up either side of this tall sign runs a line of electric lights- outlining the ‘ecolumn, and then up at the top is a capital of electric lights, and at the bottom, formed of electric lights, the column’'s base. Presently aup at the top there spring into view ten electric lights arranged in triangular form, | with head pin to the front, like the
i B e e : e & oXat 154 g s £ red L 8L Pe iy ¢g2 xi & ¥4 * oY o ed 1 wit Fyipy Hince a deal with ( Szatk to get & powd far 1 g ¥yis? g 7 he Inkeas i z CUsStomer s passport? 12 { * gl oL : el A g, ’ > ) \:\'x, / C- NN 2 % / e\ \\ ' / oA ) | e 3 ) ; ‘ E AN G A 1/ 3 > i\ ¥ e, AN /./,.,‘. # Ty 2 : _ . H /\) y v (‘ }F " g u‘: % SR e e | N e ) . T A 1S -~ =3 a\lg MO3T BAPTIZED NAN IN WORLD - ing wax formalities with them and goes to a church, where he is quietly baptized. After receiving the certificate of baptism from the priest he re- | turns to ‘the police, has the word { “Jew,” which brings so many disquall- | fications with it, struck ‘out—and re- | turns it to its owner, who now has the | right to live where he likes.
,tenpins in a bowling alley. and then lat the bottom you see appear, outlined in electric lights, a hand holding a bowling ball of electric lights, and then you realize that what had at first seemed an outlined column is really an outlined bowling alley. | You see the electric hand swing the | electric ball and then this ball of | light rolling swiftly down, or in this | case up, the alley, and it knocks down every pin, which is to say that it extinguishes every one of the pyramided ten lights; in short it makes a ten strike, and at the same time the electric ball goes out, dropping, it may be imagined, out of sight in the pin pit. e - String to the Kite. = He—Will you marry me? ; 5 She—Yes, I'll marry you tomor TOW.. x 3 s "He—This is—er—rather sudden. She—Oh, not necessarily. Tomor
