The Syracuse Journal, Volume 3, Number 32, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 8 December 1910 — Page 7

INAUGURATION OF NEW PRESIDENT OF BRAZIL • fe * MIL fafe.,. .■, ...j., i ; / • ■ \ X -reaw. ,„, >nOT , fff uF&f t V w ' ‘ • As *' $ wk-\ v- X ■ ft /n T gmSfeiwtAfr ■ b ul Ilf — V 4 f' T? - C-Z z , - ' ’ * -~ - R fcV /\)SS3I£ ‘~ —•. ■• 1| . A. w -jSßjfe ■ Ms ?: MllHlMßiMiiHiiiri MMI 'C\V.‘.’, * IMBgg _ Psi F-ONStcn — /A _— RIO de Janeiro. —Ths inauguration of Marshal Hermes da Fonseca as president of Brazil took place on Novem her 15. The cl remonies were witnessed by a great throng of Brazilians and foreigners. Marshal da Fonseca was born in 1855 and, has had a distinguished military career. He returned only recently from a trip to Europe and North America.

OFFERS FREE FARMS

Motley Horde Seeks Man Who Promises Home Comforts. 8 Texan Advertises for 4,000 Settlers — Promises to Furnish Expert Teachers, Seed, and Tools for Working Land. New York. — Manager Copeland * Townsend of the Imperial, is trying to figure out whether Theodore Hook, the practical joker, who almost a century ago sent half the tradesmen of London > to the houses of modest citizens, with wagons and drays, bearing everything from hairpins to pianos, has not come to life in the person of a man, who described himself on the register of the hotel as “O. L. Williams, of Texas.” Meantime George Burrell, the room clerk, and Adam Lauder, the Scotch laird who presides over the informa‘don desk, are growing gray telling inquirers that Mr. Williams has left the hotel; that they know nothing about the 4,000 five acre farms iii Texas which Mr. Williams says he is giving away. ' Letters and notes accumulate by the stack every day, and citizens of every origin under the sun and would-be • cltize&s who have been here only a ■week are making the lobby of the Imperial look at times like Ellis Island Bust after a ship from Libau has disF charged its human cargo. Mr. Williams arrived at the Imperial on October 27 and took a modest $2 room. After a few days, he was changed to a large room and bath, and then he notified som*< ot the papers that he was in town and had some news. He paid his bill about 5 o’clock on the afternoon of the day before the story appeared and has not since been seen. When he left he gave the address of a little town in the extreme north of Texas near the Oklahoma ling. In an interview wfth Mr. Williams which appeared last Saturday, he was described as the representative of an alliance of commercial and industrial X organizations and boards of trade and said he wanted to find 4,000 young men who were not afraid to work. “Our association,” he said, “will give each a deed to a five acre farm and expert farmers will teach him agrlcul-

CHINESE “SUGAR-CANE” DAY Observed In Chicago Chinatown by Consumption of More Than Ton of Saccharine Article. Chicago.—“ Sugar-cane” day was observed in Chicago Chinatown tha. other day by the consumption of more than a ton of the saccharine article, which is the Chinese favorite confection. When the first shipment of cane arrived from New Orleans every Chinaman in town came to Clark street to gorge himself on the sweet stalks. In some of the stores where cane w*as sold there were contests among the gourmands as to which could eat the most. “Chinamen seldom eat candy,” said Frank Woy, the mayor of Chinatown, “but I never knew one who wasn’t crazy about sugar cane. “Chinamen have a weakness for chocolate ice cream soda, perfumed soap, sugar cane and having their ; photographs taken. It is nothing unusual to see a Chinaman buy perfumed soap at 25 and 50 cents a cake. Some of them take a trunkful of it back to China when they go or a visit” Fat Policeman Quits. Kansas City, Mo.—Herman Hartman,, who weighs 305 pounds, quit the local ■ police force the other day because he became too fat on his job. “When I joined the force five years ago I weighed 260 pounds," said Hartman. ’‘Regardless of my efforts to keep down to my normal weight I put on flesh. I am turning in my club and ■tar and am going into the Ozarks, where I can train down." One & Hartman’s duties was to attend drill squad meetings. He Quit just In time to mlra m ,

« | — turd, horticulture and the art of getI ting enormous crops frpm the Texae soil and not only land, but a four room cotfoge with each five acres, without a dollar of expense. Z /‘Besides, we will furnish teams, tools, seeds and other equipment for working the land, supply provisions, medical attendance and library facilities! for one year free. The title to the; homes and lands is to be permanent." Ihquirles for Mr. Williams started coming to the hotel early Saturday morning,. The earliest comers seemed, 1 according to the clerks, to be just the kind of colonists Mr. Williams said he was seeking, young men of American birth. Some of the local foreign papers copied the story Saturday afternoon and Sunday morning and the result was that a steady stream has been pouring into the Imperial lobby ever since, and then out. One caller was a long-whiskered man, from the lower east side. Hi said he wanted a farm. He was told there was none in the hotel just then. “Who has the farm for you,” asked the clerk. “Villyums," was the reply. “He’s in Texas,” said the clerk. "Vere is dot?” “On the railroad.” ‘Den I get a ticket,” and he was directed to a railroad office down the street. Two young Italians came in. One could English, the other could not. The first said that he had been scurrying about among his friends and had got a colony of fifty young men, including a doctor, who were prepared to accept the farms and gp to Texas immediately provided Mr. Williams would add the railway fare tp other allurements held out. First Aerial Stowaway. Berlin. —A workman of the name of Hase has achieved the distinction of becoming the world’s first stowaway on an airship. Impelled by a longing to experience flight through the air Hase crept under a tarpaulin covering the benzine tank of the Parseval VI., which ascended here bound for Keil. ! He crawled out in the course of the voyage and apologized for his presence. 4 <. ..

EUGENIE TO SELL PROPERTY

Former Empress to Convert Estates Into Cash to Save Prince Victor Napoleon Worry. Paris. —Ex-Empress Eugenie, who Is now in her eighty-fifth year, is selling all her property in the country over which she once held sway, in order that Prince Victor Napoleon, who was married the other day to Princess Clementine of Belgium, may have no difficulty in gaining possession of all that belongs to her after she passes away. It is an open secret that she ntends making her nephew, the im>,ferial claimant to the throne of France, the principal heir to her great wealth, which has been estimated as high as $30,000,000. To relieve him of a repetition of those long drawn out and costly legal proceedings which worried her so much, forty years ago, when the newly formed French republic wanted to keep all the fallen emperor’s domains, she wants to turn her landed properties in France into cash now, and leave him money. Among the estates is that of the famous Solferino palace, In the south of France. That former imperial residence was to have gone under' the hammer here recently, but the sale has been postponed, owing to a difference of opinion over the minimum sum which should be accepted. The ex-empress does not want to part with the palace for less than $120,000, but that is considered excessive by her lawyers in view of the dilapidated condition of the chateau. Solferino was built less than half, a century ago to commemorate a celebrated French victory in the war

EXCITING TIME WITH BEES Little Honey Gatherers Capture Grocery Store, Driving Proprietor and Customers Out. Troy, N. Y. —E. J. Bouchard, a grocer of Cohoes, had an exciting time with a swarm of bees in his store Mr. Bouchard had on hand 100 pounds of honey and was attracted to the rear of bls place by the continual buzzing. Several customers were in the store, and the grocer excused him self until he Investigated. He was greatly surprised to see the great swarm flitting about his honey stock, and for a few minutes watched them come In and go out through a small hole In the rear window. When Bouchard endeavored to drive the bees away they retaliated, and succeeded not only in driving back the grocer, but in clearing the customers out as well. The grocer was obliged to resort to a smoking process to drive out his unwelcome visitors, and after they had gone he found that all but one or two of his boxes of honey remained untouched. The bees bad evidently been working some time and were buzzing their approval at the completion of the job when the attention was attracted. COW MOOSE IS QUITE TAME Wanders Far From Usual Haunts of Big Game in Cobbosseecontee Lake Region of Maine. Kennebec, Me. —A lone cow mooss far away from the usual haunts of the big game animals, has for some time frequented the Cobbosseecontee lake region of Maine. Deer are occasionally seen in that part of the state, which is In Kennebec county, about half a dozen miles west from Hallowell, Gardiner and Augusta. Cow moose are perpetually protected, and not being legal game they have Increased In recent years far in excess of the bulls. When not molested they become very tame and, will walk into a farm yard just to mingle with the cows or join them in the pastures, where the moose seeks out any delectable browse that trees or shrubs may happen to offer. Harvard Man Given Medal. London. —For his researches on the determination of atomic weight the Royal society has awarded the Davy medal to T. W. Richards, professor of chemistry at Harvard.

# of 1866. Originally In a bleak part of the sparsely populated department of the Midi, a whole village has since sprung into being around its walls. The emperor was hardly ever In residence there, and all its fittings and furniture were long ago taken away. CONTINUES SMOKING AT 98 Venerable Pennsylvania Woman Declares Tobacco Is Helpful to Her —Pleasing Pastime. Earlville, Pa. —In Amity township, that gave America the early ancestors of Abraham Lincoln and Nancy Hanks and sent Daniel Boone to the Kentucky borders, there was a gathering in honor of Berks county’s most remarkable living woman, Mrs. Sallie Shirey. She celebrated her ninety-, eighth birthday, and five hundred other Berks countians helped to maks the event a happy one for this venerable woman, who had reared twelve children to manhood and to womanhood. She could "hardly believe that she was so near the one-hundred-year mark, and said it seemed but yester day when she saw some of her sons go to the Civil war to fight for their country. Five generations were present and saw her light her old clay pipe, for smoking is her pleasantest pastime. To the use of tobacco and frugal liw Ing she attributes her longevity. Gas Struck Near Hamburg. Hamburg.—Natural gas has bee* discovered at a depth of 650 feet neat Bergedorf, ton miles east of thia city,

, MANY WOMEN UP IN BALLOONS A Recounting of the Adventures of Feminine Aeronauts Before the Aeroplane’s Day. Paris. —The interest shown by women in aerial navigation in these days : is no new thing. Women in the past ■ have done their share in conquering i the roadways of the air. ■ | Mlle. Tible was the first French woman to make an ascent. On J'ine 4, 1784, she went up in a balloon from Lyons and landed safely in Belfor. In the following year Mme. Hines and Mme. Luzarche, in Paris, and two French girls, the Sis.ters Simmonet, in London, made successful ascents. The first of the women whose daring was repaid by death was Mme. I Mlle. Dutrieu, Daring Bird-Woman. Blanchard, wife of a famous areonaut. While sailing over Paris in a balloon jn July 6, 1819, she set off a rocket, the balloon caught fire and she was killed by falling on a roof. Mme. Rader, in 1863, was caught in the ropes of her balloon and suffocated. Among the attempts of women to conquer the air none was more exciting than that of Mrs. Stock, who in 1824 went up from London in company with the balloonist Harris. The journey continued without incident until an attempt was made to descend. Then the apparatus for emptying the balloon did not work properly and ths gas escaped too rapidly. Only lightening the car could save the two balloonists, and all the bal’ast had been thrown out. Then Harris and Mrs. Stock looked each other in the eye for a second. Then Harris threw himself from the car to save the life, of the woman who had been brave enough to share his peril with him. Mme. Flammarion, wife of the famous Camille, made a honeymoon trip with her husband in the month of August, 1847, and landed happily after fifteen hours at Spa. This successful example was followed by one tragic imitation, when Giuseppe Charlemont, in 1893, started out from Milan with his bride and two others to make the journey to Paris. The first day passed without accident. On the second day, as the balloon was crossing the Alps, it was caught in a whirlwind, met a snowstorm and fell more than one thous-and-feet in a few seconds. The storm drove car from one rocky peak to another and dragged it over the glaciers until all the gas had escaped and the car was left on a mountain. It remained there all night, and the next day the four, with no Implements and no protection against the cold, started to make the perilous descent. A snowstorm was raging and the young husband slipped into a crevasse and was dashed to death at the bottom. It was three days before the party found refuge in a hut. Sarah Bernhardt made an ascent in 1875 with the painter Clarin and Goddard, the balloonist. Among the most daring aviators who recently gave exhibition flights at Doncaster, England, was Mlle. Dutrieu, a young Frenchwoman. Her flights in midair were really remarkable, and she is the only woman in the world who has steered an aeroplane with a passenger aboard. PRONUNCIATION OF ARKANSAS Recognized as Correct but It Brought About a Dispute rn the Senate. Little Rock, Ark. —In the Unite* States names of places are pronounced according to caprice rather than according to rule. The people of Quincy, Mass., as well as the people of Massachusetts generally, say “Quinzy,” while western people say “Quingy.” In the same way New Englanders are much amused should any one pronounce the name of their famous town as every one pronounces the common word that Is spelled In the same way. In other word, the inhabitants of Concord, Mass., give the second “o” an obscure sound and omit the “r” altogether. They live In “Concud.” ( Most everybody knows that the correct pronunciation of Arkansas is "Arkansaw,” but there are still many persons who call It Arkansas. The name was formerly spelled Arkansas and Arkansa. The final “s” was added by the French, and is silent. In the state Itself it is only visitors and newcomers who say Arkansas. At the same time it seems to be true that usage has not always been uniform. When Millard Fillmore was vice president of the United States the two Arkansas senators disagreed as to the pronuniatlon of the name. Each Insisted iat he was correct, and Mr. Fillmore. ; president of the senate, compro ised the batter by recognizing one s “the gentleman from Arkansas” nd the other a» "the gentleman from krkaaaav/ s

WEIGHED ONLY 80 POUNDS. How 9 Severe Case of Kidney Trouble Was Finally Conquered. Byron Bennette, 1018 St Clair ■ Ave., East Liverpool, 0., says: “Six

months I was helpless In bed with kidney trouble. Kidney secretions were painful, my head ached tefribly and my body bloated. I ran down until I > weighed but 80 pounds 1 and everyone thought I had consumption. A

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specialist gave me up and so did my home physician. Surprising as it may •eem, I was able to leave my bed after using six boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills and for six years I have remained free from kidney trouble. I confidently believe Doan’s Kidney Pills saved my life.” the name—Doan’s. For sale ~y all dealers. 50 cents a hox. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. She Covered Her Head. Scene a country church of Episcopalian denomination in process of being decorated for the Christmas Beason. The rector, who has a strong leaning towards forms of all kinds Is fastening a festoon of evergreen about the baptismal font, when, enter Miss Dymple, who unceremoniously flings her hat upon the seat of a pew and comes to his assistance. The rector suddenly observes that she is hatless and remarks severely: “Miss Dymple, it is particularly forbidden that women shall come into the church with uncovered heads.” “Oh, bother, I forgot!” responded the young lady Irreverently. “Well," grabbing up the rector’s derby and setting it jauntily on her pert little head, “will this do?” TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn’t Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c, SI.OO. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, SI.OO. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murl ie Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. No Unioft. Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont, at a luncheon at the Colony "club in New York, urged an women the necessity for union. “If we are to geF the vote,” she said, “ws giust stand together. Too many woi'jen face this question as they face all others —like the elderly belles at \he charity ball. “ ‘Whtu a flatterer Wooter Von Twiller is!’ the first belle. “ ‘Why, did he teU you you looked nice?’ said the second. “ ‘No,’ was the reply. ‘He told m« ro didl'“ HAD TC BE POSTPONED. ft I A- ■ I - 1 v I His Friend —I t’ought you wus goin’ to commit suicide, James? The Rejected—l wus! but when I got to de river I remembered I’d forgot me swimmin’ tights. END STOMACH TROUBLE NOW Dyspepsia, Gau, Sourness or Indigestion Go Five Minutes After Taking a Little Diapepsin. If your meals don’t fit comfortably, or you feel bloated after eating, and you believe it is the food which fills you; if what little you eat lies like lead on your stomach; if there is difficulty in breathing, eructations of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belching of gas, you pan make up your mind that you need pomething to stop food fermentation cure Indigestion. A large case of Pape’s Eiapepsin costs only fifty cents at any drug store here in town, and will convince pny stomach sufferer five minutes after taking a single dose that Fermentation and Sour Stomach is causing the ■uisery of Indigestion. No matter if you call your trouble Catarrh of the Stomach, Dyspepsia, Nervousness or Gastritis, or by any other name —always remember that a certain cure is waiting at your drug store the moment you decide to begin its use. Pape’s Diapepsin will regulate any out-of-order Stomach within five minutes, and digest promptly, without any fuss or discomfort, all of any kind of food you eat. These large 50-cent cases contain more than sufficient to thoroughly cure any chronic case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Gastritis or any other Stomach trouble. Should you at this moment be suffering from Indigestion, Gas, Sourness or any stomach disorder, you can surely get relief within five minutes. Tliere is not a vice which more effectually contracts and deadens the , feelings than the desire of accumulating possessions.—Mant. Ready in a jiffy, delicious brown cakes, .Mrs. Austins Buckwheat Flour. A true friend is a link of gold in the chain of life. I

"Beer” in Kansas. A certain Kansas editor always puts the word “beer,” when printed in his paper, in quotation marks. “Why do you do that?” a subscriber asked him. “It is for the same reason,” he replied. “that we put quotation marks around the word ‘ghost.’ We don’t believe there are any ghosts.”—Kansas City Journal. Mrs. Winslow’s Soofhlntj Syrup. Forchiiuren ivetcing. softens the gums, reduces 1R« naiu. cures wind colic. 2ac a uotUe. At'sixteen a girl thinks about roses and poetry; at twenty-six her thoughts run to cabbages and money. Ready in a jiffy, delicious brown cakes, Mrs. Austins Buckwheat Flour. Too often a piano stool ia the seat of discord.

Aids Nature . The great success of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery in curing weak Stomachs, wasted bodies, weak lungs, and obstinate and lingering coughs, is based on the recognition of the fundamental truth that “Golden Medical Discovery” supplies Nature with body-build-ing, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in condensed and concentrated form. With this helo Nature supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest food, build up the body and thereby throw off fingering obstinate coughs. The “Discovery’’ re-estahlis:hes the digestive and nutritive organs in sound health, purifies and enriches the blood, and nourishes the rifevea —in short establishes sound vigorous health.

it your dealer offers something “lust as food,** it is probably better FOR pays better. But you are thinking of the cure not fbe profit, so there*s nothing “lust as good** for ypu. Say so. Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Anvisor, In Plain English; or, Medicine Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-date Edition, cloth-bound, sent for 31 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of wrapping ■nd mailing only. Address: Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. -- - ■ ' ' '---4 Auction Sale, by the U. S. Government, of Indian Lands in Oklahoma . ■ % " 1 "■ • 11 ■ _l J Beginning Kovember 21, 1910, and Continuing Until March I, 1911, There Will Be Offered for Sale at Public Auction by the Government About2,ooo,oooAcres of Indian Lands in Oklahoma. Much of this is high-grade forming land and is especially adapted to the growing of Wheats corn, cotton , vegetables and fruits* The climate is ideal,' withan abundance of rain, insuring a crop each year. Why suffer* from cold six months a year when you can enjo/ outdoor life the year around in Oklahoma, and on a small investment speedily become independent? Homeseekers’ tickets at special rates on sale’ ist and 3rd Tuesdays of each month from all principal points. For full particulars regarding! the sales and how to get there cheaply and comfortably, write to A. HiLTCN, General Passenger Agent FRISCO LINES 1537 Fristo Building ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI ■v . . IUREKT ' Harness I 11 anuroo as a si®. v ® HARNESS a-s ■ I Sold by DeaUrs Everywhere Illi STANDARD OIL COMPANY - |g gg (Incorporated) w. l. doul clTas *3 *3.50 & *4 SHOES &WOMEN Uh i Boys- Shoes, 52.00, $2,50 & $3.00. Best in the World. Wl [7he benefttn off ran hides, which apply '•4's dpaliy to soleleather, and the reduced tariff . £££'. A?// on sole leather, now enables me to give the , j&K* V jtdf wearer more value for his money, better and longer wearing $3, $3.50 and $4 shoes than . v . J \ I could give previous to the tariff revision,! for over 30 years, that I make and sell more 83.00, $3.50 and $4.00 shoes A ' /fk than any other manufacturer In the U.S., and that Dollar for Dollar, AL /Hb, I Guarantee My Shoes to hold their shape, look and fit better, and \J wear longer than any other $3.00, $3.50 or s4.o* shoes you can buy ? V F Quality has made my shoes The Leaders of the World. raft_,\yS3 You will be pleased when you buy my shoes because of the n . - Prttidm! fit and appearance, and when it comes time for you to purchase f/z another pair, you will be more than pleased because the last “ vltanu* ones wore so well, and gave you so much comfort. “ — CAUTION ■ nameand price stamped on the bottom.TAICE NO SUBSTITUTE It your dealer cannot supply yon with w. L. Douglas Shoes, write for Mail Order Catalog. W. JL. 11OCGLAS, 145 Spark St., ISrockton, Mao, Vgy price. Constructed of solid brass; nickel plated—easily kept clean: a* __ ■■ ornament to any room in any house. There Is nothing known to the art Tnc of lamp-making that can add to the value of the RAYO Lamp as a ligMSTEADY giving device. Bvery dealer everywhere. If not at yours, writ* to* descriptive circular to the nearest agency of the STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Jncotva'ated) ’- DISTEMPER FiiiKX //AL_ AA \ \ Bureenreand posltlvaprevantlve. no matter how horsesatany stage ar* lnf«rt*< fol I- il hill OT‘‘exposed.” Llquld.glven on ths tonguei acts on the Blood and Glandsi axpelstbO l—l IS J*' “J DHI poisonous germs from tn* body. Cures Distemper in Dogs and Sheep and Chol.rai* \ 1 JQ? Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy, (hires La Grippe among human being* w vyTt-iaJFk 'dr /xy and is aline Kidney remedy. Wo and *1 a bottle; 15 and M 0 a dozen. Cut this oA Z'-y Keep It show to your druggist, who wlllget Itforyou. Free Booklet, "Dlstampa* Causesand Curee.” Special Agents wanted. SPOHH MEDICAL CO., BaotSriolosiatt GOSHEN. IND., U, S. A.

MICA

Important News FUR DEALERS and TRAPPERS CEND FURS and SKINS direetto MEN who KNOW thelrvalue. We save you money, ( because we KNOW the Fur Market, and pay highest prices on liberal assortments. Price list especially arranged for your Territory. 1 ‘ '• It is YOURS for the asking. Convince YOURSELF by making us a trial shipment. JPe pay ail expressa*c, charge na > commissions, and remit promptly. LEOPOLD GASSNER FUR CO. 34 East 12th St., New York City Capitalized .t 250,000.00 I Corme '-Sl-antor! for sale or rem: also town lot* railnS iffaiirJU and homes. Clients prepare* to buy. Send particulars and lowest prices, Ferguson National Realty Co. SOo Fifth Ave.. New York. Coon, Possum. Mink and Squirrel Hound* thoroughly trained: FRKU trial, rd-pagc iliustrUM catalogue, 1U cents. J. E. Williams, Selmer, Ten*. W. N. U., FT. WAYNE, NO. 49-1910,

AXLE GREASE Keeps the spindle bright and free from grit. Try a box» Sold by dealers everywhere. STANDAND OIL GO, k