Wisconsin Weekly Advocate
Thursday, February 14, 1907
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Page text (machine-generated)
State Historical Society
WISCONSIN
WEEKLY
The negro must work out his own problem.
ADVOCATE
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE NEGRO RACE
ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
A. B.
THE GREAT EMANCIPATOR.
RT. REV. ARCHBISHOP MESSMER
VOLUME VIII.
ABRAHAM
THE GREAT E
RT. REV. ARCHBI
The penitential season of Lent will begin with Ash Wednesday, which falls this year on February 13. The day derives its name from the custom of placing upon the heads of the people the ashes derived from the burning of palms used on the previous Palm Sunday. As the priest places the ashes on the head of each person, he says:
"Memento, homo, quia pulvis es, et in pulverem reverteris"—Remember, man, that thou art dust, and shalt return to dust.
At St. John's cathedral there will be celebration of mass at 6 and 7 o'clock in the morning, and at 9 o'clock there will be high mass and the blessing and distribution of the ashes. It is expected
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that Archbishop Messmer will take this service, though it is not definitely arranged. At 7:30 o'clock in the evening there will be benediction and distribution of the ashes, for those who are unable to attend the morning service.
Sunday and Wednesday evenings during Lent there will be services and sermons, the archbishop taking the Sunday evening service. On Friday evenings at the same hour there will be the stations of the cross, and at 3:30 o'clock in the afternoon for the children.
Archbishop Messmer has issued the following regulations for Lent:
1. All Fridays and fast-days during the year are days of abstinence from flesh meat. On Saturdays, which by law are also
MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN, FEBRUARY 14, 1907.
days of abstinence, flesh meat is allowed by apostolic indulat at all meals, unless they happen to be fast days.
2. The following are fast days of obligation. All days of Lent (except Sundays); the Ember days; the Vigils or Eves of Pentecost, of the Assumption of Blessed Virgin Mary, of All Saints, and of Christmas; lastly, the Fridays of Advent.
On fast days only one full meal a day is allowed to persons obliged to fast. But indult and custom allow coffee, tea, chocolate, with a piece of bread in the morning, and the use of eggs, butter, milk, etc., in the evening. For sufficient reason, the collation (lunch) may be taken at noon and the dinner or principal meal in the evening.
During Lent, by Apostolic indul, flesh-meat is allowed only at the principal meal on week days, except all Wednesdays and Fridays and also the Saturdays in Ember week (February 20) and Holy Week (March 24). On fast days, flesh meat and fish (including oysters, crabs, frogs, turtles, etc.) are never allowed at the same meal, a rule which applies even to the Sundays in Lent and to all persons, however otherwise excused or dispensed from the law of either abstinence or fast. But meals may always be prepared with the drippings of either fat or lard.
Persons excused from fast may use flesh meat more than once on the days when it is allowed at all.
Catholics having attained the sufficient use of reason are bound by the law of abstinence. But when it is either physically or morally impossible to observe the law, or when it would entail serious difficulties, they are excused from it.
In virtue of the apostolic faculties granted us by the Holy See we hereby delegate pastors to dispense, in each single case, from abstinence the men actually engaged in threshing as well as the farmer families at whose place threshing is going on. 4. Catholics having completed their twenty-first year of age, are bound to fast. But the causes of excuse just mentioned in regard to abstinence, apply also to the law of fasting. Hence the church ordinarily exempts from fasting the sick and those in feeble health (whether by sickness or old age); women nursing children; all who are engaged in laborious and exhausting occupations. Persons in doubt whether they are excused or not, should consult their confessor or pastor for advice or dispensation.
In virtue of an apostolic indult we permit workingmen and their families the use of flesh meat at the principal common meal on all fast days and abstinence days throughout the year, with the exception of all Fridays, Ash Wednesdays, the Wednesday and Saturday of Holy Week and the Eve of Christmas.
5. Persons excused or dispensed from the law of fast or abstinence ought to perform some other good works of piety and charity in the spirit of Christian penance and sanctification. Hence the pious custom of giving Lenten Alms, "Redeem thou thy sins with alms, and thy iniquities with works of mercy." Dan. iv. 24. Also the custom of abstaining from intoxicating drinks, of staying away from theaters, dances, card parties and other profane amusements, etc.
Milwaukee, Wis., Feb. 5th, 1907.
N. B.-1. The collection for Indian and Negro missions is to be taken up on the first Sunday of Lent.
2. A box or basket may be conveniently placed in the church, where the faithful can leave their Lenten Alms or their contribution for the Holy Land (on Good Friday).
ABRAHAM LINCOLN
The Great Emancipator and Martyr to Sectional Hate.
THIS GREAT, GOOD MAN needs neither written or spoken eulogy, sculptured marble, or storied urn to preserve his memory from decay or keep his station among earth's glorious few.
of his humanity and genius. His is indeed
"One of the few of immortal names?
That was not born to die."
That was not born to die. A few days since the people of the nation—WITH THE EXCEPTION OF THE COLORED PEOPLE OF MILWAUKEE WHO SEEM TO HAVE FORGOTTEN THE BIRTHDAY OF THEIR GREAT BENEFACTOR—gathered from all sections, EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH to speak the note of praise and love to his memory, and record anew in burning words their fealty and devotion to those principles of justice and government that ABOVE ALL MEN in our country's history, his life and death has sanctified and IMMORTALIZED. And thus it will always be past the years, beyond the centuries, so long as civilization exists, and history is read and written.
HON. FERDINAND L. BARNETT.
Chicago's Much Discussed Citizen.
THE ADVOCATE MAN and the Hon. F. L. Barnett met face to face during a recent trip to the "Big Town on the Lake Shore" and as usual indulged in a brief chat. Mr. Barnett looks none the worse from the severe crucible he was so recently called to pass through, and which attracted national attention, and is as undaunted and as enthusiastic as ever in all that pertains to right and justice to his race. He is waiting with patience and hope the law's delay incident to the judgeship he was counted out, and whether seated or not, the future will find him as in the past, a stickler for his people's rights first, last and all the time. The editor of this paper has been tramping to and fro between Milwaukee and Chicago for many years, and generally makes it a point to call on Assistant District Attorney as altogether worthy of every honor that has come to him in life.
Earliest Boston Church.
The First church of Boston erected its first house of worship in 1632, the second in 1640, the third in 1713, the fourth in 1808, and the present place of worship was dedicated in 1868.
Why Should the Negro Business Man Go South?
The principal of Tuskegee Institute is the leader in the movement for an industrial solution of the race problem. "In spite of the disturbances that have recently taken place in Atlanta," writes Mr. Washington. "I advise the business man of my race to come South."
Copyright 1907 by Charities and the Commons.
I have in the past advised the progressive business men of the negro race to go south. In spite of the disturbances that have recently taken place in Atlanta and other cities of the southern states I believe I am justified at this time in repeating this advice.
In saying this I am not moved by any sentimental attachment to the south, though I do not deny that like others of my race I have a peculiar feeling of attachment to the southand. I advise the business men of my race to come south because there are, I believe, business opportunities here that do not exist elsewhere. As an evidence of this I might mention that there are now no less than thirty-three negro banks in the southern states, owned, controlled and capitalized by negro business men. Negro Masses Are in the South.
In considering this question one should bear in mind first of all that the masses of the negro people are now and are likely for all times to remain in the south. They were born there, bred there, and I believe they are better fitted to live there than elsewhere on this continent or in Africa.
Race Suicide in Cities.
I saw the statement recently that until the beginning of the nineteenth century, no city has ever increased in size by the natural growth of its native population. Where great cities sprang up, they grew and maintained their population by constant accessions from the country districts.
The same causes which operated to destroy the population of the cities a hundred years ago, are still operating today, though to a less degree, no doubt, in the crowded city districts which most of the colored people usually live in, in the north.
Negro Yet Unfitted to Live in Cities.
I do not believe the masses of colored people are yet fitted to survive and prosper in the great northern cities to which so many of them are crowding. The temptations are too great, and the competition with the foreign population, with which they there come in contact, is too fierce.
Farming Opportunities South.
But on the farms and in the small towns of the south, where the great masses of the negro population are, there are the best opportunities for negro business men. Experience has shown, I believe, even in the north, that the largest opportunities for the negro in business Courtesy of The Evening Wisconsin.
We would respectfully ask our readers to bestow at least a share of their custour upon those who advertise with us.
The various remedies and hair restorers advertised in this paper can be had at the advertised price at the office of this paper.
"THE SOCIAL HOUR." at St. Mark's A. M. E. church Wednesday night last, was a most enjoyable affair and was generously attended by the church membership and friends throughout the city. It succeeded the usual Wednesday night of prayer and praise, and was under-the direction of the following ladies: MRS. NANNIE O'NIEAL, chairman; Mrs. Sarah Tate, Mrs. Mary Simms, Mrs. Mildred Toles, Mrs. Martha Simmons. The refreshments, served free, consisted of ice cream, cake, coffee and sandwiches.
. . . . .
MRS. BLANCHE SHAW, 296 Sixth street, who has been indisposed within the last ten days, is convalescing...
MRS. DAVID WILLIAMSON of Albion, Mich., a cousin of Mrs. J. N. Freeman, 430 Cedar street, is expected in the city soon.
MRS. ESSIE OSBORN, the efficient collector and caretaker of the "Advocate's" suite of offices, paid a visit this week to Madison and other Wisconsin points.
The revival being conducted at CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH, we are pleased to record, is progressing with earnestness and Christian zeal. Pastor Fox is assisted in his labors by a band of consecrated workers, and the harvest is assured.
WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY next Friday, the 22d, will be duly observed at St. Mark's church. The pastor, Rev. Jones, will deliver a sermonette, followed by patriotic songs and readings, and Messrs. W. ALLISON SWEENEY of Chicago and Lawyer T. W. GREEN of this city will deliver addresses. The exercises will take place at night, and the public is cordially invited.
D
Noted Negro Leader Who Writes on the Colored Business Man's Opportunities in the South.
By BOOKER T. WASHINGTON
is the leader in the movement for an industrial
recently taken place in Atlanta," writes Mr. Wash
BOOKER T. WA
Noted Negro Leader Who Writes on the Co
the Sov
are in providing for those needs of other members of his race, which the white business man, either through neglect, or lack of knowledge, has failed, or been unable to provide. The negro knows the members of his own race. He knows the negro people of his neighborhood, in their church, and in their family life, and is able to discriminate in his dealings with them. This superiority in the matter of credits is in itself a business advantage, of which competition cannot easily deprive the negro.
Every condition which favors the negro in the south, the cheapness of land, of the cost of living, opportunities for work, and his natural adaption to the soil, favor also the negro in business in the south. Indeed the great need of the masses of the negro people for direction in the matter of buying and selling, saving and investing, makes opportunities for the negro who possesses training in business affairs. The negro banker who,
IN THE WINDY CITY.
IN THE WINDY CITY.
A Bouquet of Chicago Elks—I. B. P. O. E
The editor of The ADVOCATE knows a pleasant thing when he comes in contact with it and a bunch of gentlemen when he meets them. During his last trip to the "Windy City" in the hunt of new subscribers and an occasional delinquent one, he met in the persons of Lawyer LOUIS B. ANDERSON, MOST SHOECRAFT, and F. W. ALLEN, a brace of as fine gentlemen, genial, hospitable and popular as this old earth can boast of. "Louie" Anderson, as everyone in Chicago speaks of him, has been for a number of years deputy county attorney of Cook county and is a lawyer of brilliant parts. And "Most" Shoecraft, Chicago's prince of mixologists, who does not know him from New York to San Francisco and New Orleans to Duluth? So, with F. W. Allen of 2939 Armour avenue, a gentleman every inch of him and a "blood" without a fly resting on his anatomy. Each of the noted Chicoagoans are members of GREAT LAKES ORDER OF INDEPENDENT ELKS and are first class citizens, whom it is an inspiration and pleasure to meet.
The Ghost of Trichinopoly.
The ghost may be seen on most nights between the hours of 11 and 2 on the Tennur road. She is a most beautiful creature who walked out of the river with her clothes all wet, water dripping from her long silken tresses, and she carries in her right hand—no, not a piece of soap nor an antiquated toothbrush—merely a brass lotah. If any person attempts to approach her she merely points the forefinger of her soft hand at him and he dies! The ghost was originally one of the temple dancing girls famous all over the town for her striking beauty. The temple authorities raised objections to her bathing there and ordered her to creep out quietly at 11 every night and bathe in the river at Tennur where no one would see her. This she did for some time, but another temple girl gave away the secret, with the result that the next night when bathing she heard the tramp of many feet and on rushing out to see what was the matter was accidentally knocked into the river and drowned by the crowd of men rushing to the riverside to see her.—Madras, Mail.
It Pays to Advertise.
NUMBER 45
Man Go South?
I solution of the race problem. "In Washington. "I advise the business man
ASHINGTON.
Colored Business Man's Opportunities in South.
in the course of his business, finds it necessary to encourage thrift and industry among his people, the negro tradesman, who, for his own protection, must constantly discriminate between the honest and the industrious members of his race, is at the same time performing a service to his people and the community as a whole, which should and does give a dignity to his work and significance to his whole life.
Opportunities for Social Service.
The negro who, in the course of his own business, is doing something which at the same time makes the world better, will in the long run stand higher in the community among his neighbors of both races, than he who, making more, and spending more, spends it, as he is tempted to do, for the superficial things which make life in the great northern cities so attractive to large numbers of the people of my race.
MR. PALMER HOLDS LEVEE
Richard Montgomery Introduces Two Colored Ladies at Assemblyman's Desk—State Machinery Pauses. From the Evening Wisconsin, Milwaukee. MADISON, Wis., Feb. 14.—[Special.]—Richard Montgomery, colored editor and politician of Milwaukee, is at Madison, and just before the opening of the morning session in the Assembly, accompanied two ladies of swarthy complexion to the seat of Assemblyman Palmer and with a flourish and courty grace, presented them to the member. The Assembly held its breath for a minute.
TO SAVE 500 LIVES A YEAR
The railroads of the country are spending $100,000,000 to make the streets of Chicago safe, says Rutledge Rutherford in the Technical World. On an average 500 people a year are run over by passing trains or are injured in collisions with steam locomotives while using Chicago's streets.
Ten years ago Chicago decided that the elevation of all steam railway tracks was the only means of protecting her citizens from the deadly grade crossings. Now the railroads are footing the bill.
Last year more than 50,000 men were employed in the work of elevating the tracks, and it cost the railroads about $5,800,000. Chicago is not the only city which is making the railroads pay for the job.
Chicago has already accomplished the elevation of 800 miles of steam railway tracks within her borders and has made the railroads pay every cent of the $50,-000,000 which it has cost. Sixteen hundred miles of railroad tracks in one city is something rather difficult to comprehend without comparisons. Sixteen hundred miles of right of way is nearly enough to build two elevated railroads from Chicago to Philadelphia. It is more than enough to build a single line from Chicago to Boston, or to Galveston or to Santa Fe, N. M., or to Jacksonville, Fla., or to Denver, or even to Salt Lake City. This is entirely independent of any lines operated by electricity or by any power other than steam.
Excepting the lowered and walled in tracks of the Illinois Central along the Lake front, where there are no street crossings, every mile of this trackage will have been elevated when the work now in progress is completed.
GOSSIP FCR THE LADIES.
The Dreamers.
lfizh amd hidden on the hill-tops, in the
sunshine and the moonshine,
Through the long. warm days of sum.
mer and her silent, starry night,
Par above the busy valley, where the men
of earth are working,
in the cloudy ocean floating, He the Is-
lands of Delight. *
ol! the wonder of the silence, when the
Rose of Dawn is budding
on the garden-bank of shadows, silence
perfect and serene, *
As if God had laid his finger on his lips,
as ina token,
lest the people of bis islands should be
wakened from their dream.
When the House of Night, with windows
shuttered fast by bars of. darkness,
ifolds the ocean and its islands in the
tustnesses of gloom,
Cons the moon's bright, silver sickle, har-
vesting the fields of heaven,
Kouping sheaves of stars for weaving in
the pattern of her loom.
Iniy the faver of the highest, in the faith
that is the truest,
Through the gold-souled lotus’s symbol
nnd the blood-red poppy’s sign.
You may know the island people, you may
learn to greet and speed them
Yo the company of dreamers, in commu-
won divine,
“—Seribner’s Magazine.
A Welcome Guest.
Every one knows that to be a_sue-
cessful hostess, making one’s visitors
have a good time and be at ease, is a
talent, but I am quite sure that to be
n suecessful guest requires more tact
and art. There are painfully few _per-
sons whose departure is regretted from
the houses in which they have been vis-
iting, and it is all because the stranger
within the gate has taxed either the
nerves, resources, pocketbook or — pa-
tience, and, alas, sometimes all of these.
The visitor has not done it purposely, of
course, but simply through oe
selfishness or thoughtlessness. | Which-
ever the cause, if she wishes to be popu-
lar among her friends at a distance she
will do well to remedy this fault, else
they will ask her only at such times as
they must not to have ill feeling.
To be a perfect guest I should say
consists in putting one’s self thoroughly
in touch with the habits of the house-
hold, conforming to the hours and ways,
adding to the pleasure of the household
by being agreeable and appreciative and
at the same time not making one's self
too much a “member of the family.”
This is the error that guests who don't
wish “to be a bit of trouble” are likely
to fall into, and it is quite as bad as
upsetting the machinery in another way
by not doing one’s share. There is de-
cidedly such a thing as being too inform-
al for a guest, going into rooms where
the hostess would prefer one did’ not,
und by being constantly in evidence,
knowing too much of the ways and
means of managing. Every housekeep-
er has at least a few reservations she
would like to keep as to the way she
runs her house, and if a guest in a
most friendly desire “to help” insists
upon always following around during the
morning hours or asking questions, her
hostess must either tell more than she
wishes or else be rude in refusing. A
guest who puts a hostess in such a po-
sition fails utterly in the part of visit-
ing.
If one is staying in a house where the
servants are few and the mistress does
some small tasks herself, it does not at
all follow that a guest is a success as
such and helpful in insisting upon dust-
ing her own room or making the bed,
for example. That a guest does any
work at all may outrage all the ideas of
hospitality of ‘some hostesses. and, if
this is so, it is obviously silly for the
visitor to offend her friend by “making
herself useful.” 3
Under such cireumstances the visitor
would better retire to the sitting room
with a book or to write letters and leave
her friend to her own way of doing until
things are started for the day. On the
other hand, some hostesses are quite will-
ing thet a guest. especially if the visit is
to be a long one, shall get quite into the
family life by taking up certain small
tasks, and in that ease the visitor should
do whut she is permitted, offering her
services simply and frankly. If the
stranger is tactful and observing she may
find without asking certain small things
to be done, and then ask if she may do
them.
It is beeause hostesses differ radieally
in their ideas of entertaining that it is
impossible to Iay down fixed rules of
whai te do when one is visiting. One
van only generalize by saying, watch to
see what is wanted of you and then try
to do it. You are apt to know whether
or het you are suceessful by the fre-
quency with which invitations to stay in
other people's houses come in.
Punctuality at meals is one of the
requisites of being a successful guest. In
houses where the servants are limited to
two, or eyen one, tardiness in serving
meals will upset the whole domestic ma-
chinery and make all hard for mistress
and maids. If a visitor doesn’t like to
have an early breakfast, for instance,
and_her hostess has the first meal served
at 7:30, the guest must be willing to be
ready for it or she should give up visit-
ing in thet house. In other words, if one
is not willing to do as the hostess she
shonld eut that house from her list in
which to stay. It is grossly unfair and
a tacit criticism not to do as the others
in it.
There is decidedly such a thing as over
entertaining as well as doing too little of
it, and it is a fault to which both guest
and hostess are prone. Each, in the de-
sire to give the other pleasure, too often
leaves no time for privacy that each per-
son always needs at times, and at the
end of a visit both guest and hostess are
worn out by it. A guest should never
forget that a hostess will have many
small matters pertaining to housekeeping
and the like to look after and should see
that she relieves the housekeeper of re-
sponsibility of her presence for a time
that they may be looked after. On the
other hand the hostess is to recollect that
the guest will have letters to write, tri-
fling mending to do, or will have found
a book she would like to run through,
and in her desire to give her friend a
xood time the housekeeper should not
absorb her time so that the other has no
chance for any of these. Flatly each
should have a little while to themselves
every day.
Making one’s guest a financial extrav-
agance is a fault of American hostesses.
For fear that the visitor will not be suf-
ficiently entertained more money is spent
in the theaters, luncheons and dinners
than the family purse can afford without
economizing in another direction, and on
the departure of the friend the family
subsist upon plain fare and simple liv-
in~ until they ince made up the previous
expenditure.
This, in my opinion, is contrary to the
ethics of hospitality, which should be
to make friends welcome within the
home, giving and receiving such pleasure
that departure is a cause of regret on
both sides.
Cultivating a Sense of Fitness.
ae N cine, Mees Ale tint! ly ps 1 Se
A woman must haye an artistic soul
to really dress well. Not that every art-
ist could pose as a model of the perfect-
ly gowned woman. ‘Too often her very
sense of color and admiration of classic
ines lead to 2 bizarre and unconyention-
al form of dress that may be according
to the canons of the academic, but is
hopelessly at odds with prevailing styles.
For disclaim ker power as she may, no
woman can afford to totally disregard
that she aspires to being well dressed.
Slavish observance of the prevailing
modes is bad, but it is a question if too
great originality in clothes is not worse.
There is such a thing as excessive indi-
viduality. Outer dressing is always to
be avoided. Better, far better, be a
human fashion plate than an eccentric
‘extremist who achieves startling novelty
at the expense of becomingness and
ore taste.
The present season has a certain dan-
ger from the very iiberty of selection.
That liberty must never be permitted to
degenerate into license; as one woman
remarked, “you can wear anything you
like this winter and still be in the style.”
So you can, if you are sure you like
suitable things.
| Right here does the truly artistic tem-
perament get its innings. The happy
possessor of it has a well-developed
sense of fitness. She realizes her physi-
‘cal shortcomings and appreciates what
manner of dress is or is not becoming.
Wild extremes and undue originality are
‘barred ont as rigidly as would be loud
and garish colors or cheap finery.
| The artistic woman knows that well-
-gowned means becomingly gowned. Ney-
er, were she a dumpy, rotund, florid
‘danghter of Eve, would she be guilty of
‘donning a huge picture hat overloaded
with immense plumes, a costume just
one degree more bouffant than her neigh-
bor’s (often with trimming horizontally
arranged), of a vivid ne warranted to
mcenabos se every ugly purple tint in her
complexion, and then complacently deem
herself well dressed. She realizes that
Fnot even if labeled’ conspicuously with
‘that cabalistic sentence, “Made in Par-
jis,” could she hope to make the ordinary
observer deem her anything but a guy.
The artistic seuse forbids plumes tioat-
ing at impossibie angies on the shouider,
cover the ears or obscuring the nose—one
seen this season on a woman old enough
to know better fell far below the hips—
or that even more hideous fashion of
standing rearingly erect like a drum ma-
jor’s insignia. It also teaches that feath-
pers, whieh look as if. they had been
caught in a cloudburst with never a
| chance to dry off, form a trying frame
‘for the most youthful beauty.
The art-feeling gives its possessor the
intuitive sense that period costumes, in
the by-day of popularity though they be,
should be eschewed by the woman who
cannot afford the best designers; doubly
so, must her clothes do duty a second
season. ;
It teaches her that trying color tones,
accentuated sloping shoulders, overindul-
gence in trimmings, eccentricities of cut
and bizarre materials should be religious-
ly avoided. These things stamp the date
of one’s clothes for the woman with 2
small allowance, and lays even — her
| wealthy sister open to criticism as lack-
‘ing in the innate refinement which ever
‘forbids conspicuousness.
The best mediste can bat point the
way: the final selection remains with her
patron, Dressmakers are too often con-
ena when one’s own sense of fitness
is st fault.
Remember, you who lack the art-feel-
ing that largely prevents mistakes, that
conventionality, rather than originality,
pays best in the selection of clothes.
Exaggerstion is unattractive and bad
aor To aim at striking effects, too,
ofien means to attain absurdity of ap-
pearance and the ruin of beautiful and
costly materials,
The Importance of
Politeness at Home.
When an exhortation is given after the
wedding ceremony, it would be well if
the clergyman were sometimes to take
for his text, “Be courageous.” for more
estrangements, if not absolute quarrels
and separations, grow out of a disregard
of the common rutes of politeness in mar-
ried life than from almost any other
cause.
“Politeness,” says Joubert, “is one de-
velopment of ‘virtue;’”’ and in reply to
those who contended that it is necessary
for society only, not for home, he re-
marked that we should wear our velvet
indoors—that is. give those nearest to us
the chief benefit of gentleness.
The wife gets up and goes off to sive
a direction to her servants while her
lmsband is in the middle of a sentence;
if he were any other gentleman she
would at least say, “Excuse me for a
moment.”
The wife comes into the room and the
husband sits still in his chair; if any
other lady enters he rises and offers her
one,
If a guest is coming to the house the
lady of the house is dressed and at the
door ready to receive him; if it is only
her husband she has no welcome.
If a lady is at table as a guest, the
gentleman brings some topic of conyer-
sation to entertain her; if the wife is
the only lady he sits silent, or may even
take a leter or a newspaper out of his
pocket and read it to himself.
Friendship receives its crown in mar-
riage when love is mingled with admira-
tion and respect. Alas! this admiration
and respect, in the case of too many
couples, in time disappear, and then they
behave toward each other as they would
not do toward strangers and mere ac-
quaintances, not to speak of friends.
A really good manner is like our skin,
put on from within and never taken off
while we are alive. Nature's gentlemen
re ladies are always gentlemen and la-
ies,
Unless married people are so very sym-
pathetic that they grow together “like
toa double cherry, seeming parted,” the
never-ceasing tound of intercourse be-
tween them may become so exigent as
to cause abrupt, unvolite behavior. At
breakfast, at luneneon, at dinner, more
or less in the evening, at night, in the
morning—all “marriage.” This is the
time for studied politeness if we have
not the gift of natural politeness. We
should force ourselves to keep back rude
remarks and to say polite things. Let
us do what the photographer tells us to
do—‘Smile and look pleasant.”
It does not “pay” to be indifferent to
the feelings of a life partner. When peo-
ple are tied for life it is to their mutual
Interest not to grow weary of one an-
other, and the best possible safeguards
they can adopt are kindness and civility,
How the whol day is rendered dismal
and disagreeable when there has been a
“storm” in the breakfast “tea cup” be-
tween husband and wife! As far as hap-
piness goes, each must confess in the
evening, “I have lost a day.”
Courtesy from a child is expected: but
in too many cases no thought is given
to the duty of returning the compliment.
It is a fact, however, that the youngest
child in a home has a right to be treated
with politeness. When brothers and sis-
ters are civil to each other it is generally
becanse they have been respectfully
thought of and spoken to by their par
ents,
Especially is it important that the fath-
er, as the head of the house, should give
an lead in this respect. When you find
children loving and helpfu! to their moth.
ers you generally find the father at the
bottom of it. If the husband respects
his wife the children will respect thei
‘mother.
| Matrimonial word battles may amuse
outsiders as the skill of gladiators used
to amuse, but the combatants made them-
selves very miserable. Far better to be
incapable of making a repartee if we
only use the power to wound the feelings
of the one whom we have voted fo love.
There is an art of putting things that
should be studied by married people.
There is a story of a separation. which
took place simply because a gracious
announcement had been couched by a
husband in ungracious terms. “My dear,
here is a little present I have bought to
make you good-tempered.” “Sir!” was
the indignant reply, “do you dare to say
that it is necessary to bribe me into be-
ing good-tempered? Why, I am always
good-tempered; it is you who possess a
violent temper, sir.” And so the quarrel
went on to the bitter end.—Philadelphia
Evening Bulletin.
How to Find Happiness.
Make up your mind to bury all the
petty, mean feelings, to forget all the
injuries done you, to forgive all the un-
kind words written or spoken to: you.
Make up your mind that you are going
io try to speak only golden words. for
then you may be sure the echo will be
golden deeds.
Make up your mind to learn that if
one closes her ears to evil speaking one
is Very apt to forget to say the evil word
one’s self,
Make up your mind to be as cheerful
and hopeful as possible and not to allow
yourself to get in the habit of thinking
the worst rather than the best of people.
Make up your mind to think of what
you have in life that is good, think out
What the future may hold for you, and
then you will forget those petty worries
and your heart will grow light and the
world will seem full of sunshine,
Meke up your mind to be courageotis.
force yourself to be pleasant and say the
bright things that come to your lips.
Make up your mind when grief comes
to you—when the world seems like a
great sob—that you have no right to
sit down and nurse your heavy, ach-
ing heart. No one has a right to make
her grief a burden to the rest of the
world. To think this may give you no
consolation while the sorrow is’ fresh,
but when the intense grief has quieted
a little try and remember how many
other sorrows there are and compare
your own with them,
Make up your mind when you find
your heart is heavy and that you are
a sorrow not only to yourself but every-
one else around you that the only anti-
dote is work—good, hard, all-absorbing
work. ‘fo try and busy yourself in
making others happy, relieving some
other burden-bearer.
You will find your heart growing
lighter, the smiles coming oftener than
the tears and you yourself wiil be glad
because you are of use in this busy old
world.
‘That's the way to look at it. Whether
it is a heavy load to carry or a crown
of glory, be sure that it is wisdom to
litt it up gladly, bear it with a brave
heart and jay it down, if you will, tri-
umphantly.
That is the only way to find happiness,
—Selected.
Taiks About Women.
Samplers are treasured as heirlooms in
many families nowadays and the prob-
lem of their preservation is sometimes a
difficult, one to solve. Phe wool cross
stitch makes a dainty morsel for moths,
but if laid away in campher balls the
sumpler’s beauty is wasted on the desert
air,
One woman recently had a sampler
framed exactly as one wouid a picture.
For it she selected a convex mahogany
molding about three and a half inches
in width which harmonized most happily
with the needlework and canvas. It now
ornaments the wall of her library and is
an inspiration to many other women
with similar relics.
It is not always easy to secure ma-
terial for portieres that is at once pret-
ty and inexpensive. One woman who has
been searching over the town for a fab-
rie combining the two qualities was al-
most in despair when a friend, a deco-
rator, suggested that she get mocha
canvas for her sleeping room doors and
velveteen in a soft reseda shade for her
library doorway. As the walls were
green the colors harmonized charmingly
and all told did not cost more than $12
for the two pairs.
The canvas is loosely woven and_re-
sembles burlap in appearance, though
much softer, and hangs much more
gracefully. It costs 56 cents a yard and
is very wide. The velveteen, which is
also double width, can be obtained in a
number of soft colorings and, — while
handsome, is not so rich looking that it
kills everything else in the room. It is
especially effective with mahogany or
dark oak and with Circassian walnut.
A womar who has had the good for-
tune to retain two servants in her family.
one for tweuty six and the other for
nineteen years, was asked recently, th
the presence of her husband, what was
the secret of her success. While she
was ruminating on the, question, her
husband answered for her:
“That's easy.” remarked the mere
man. “All that is necessary is to let
the servants run you as they have done
my wife and you will have no difficulty
in keeping them forever. There's ne
trick about that.” .
‘A Japanese woman in this city has dis-
covered a way of hiding from sight the
ugly steam radiators inevitable in flats.
A cabinet, the face ot which is grill
work, is built about the radiator, the
top being utilized as a shelf for pieces
of china or bronze, or it may take the
place of a stand fer newspapers and
magazines.
In one room a radiator, which was
very low and extended across an entire
side of the room, was covered by a low
settee of matting. The front has slid-
ing doors of Japanese wickerwork in
summer, while in winter the doors are
pushed back, allowing the heat to escape
through a delicate partition of grill
work. The idea can be adapted in a
dozen different ways and with different
materials, bat is’ always. effective. in
that it transforms an ugly necessity into
a practical bit of home furnishing.
Artificial grapes played an_ important
part in an effective scheme of table dec-
oration recently seen. The entire chan-
delier was prettily festooned with the
vines, from which depended big bunches
of gree. and purple grapes, in the midst
of which shone out the incandescent
lights covered with pale yellow paper
shades, For a_centerpiece a_ basket 0!
wistaria vine in yepenese design held
grapes, the real article, the two blending
and making a decoration that was et
aniy effective. but also unhackneyed.
Cultivate Love.
By daily cultivating an_ attitude of
love, the love emotions will become a
part of our nature just as light is the
nature of the sun. To whatever the sun
turns it turns with a ray of light. So we
shall turn with love to all whom we
meet. Love in all its myriad phases will
be so intrinsic a part of as that we can-
net but speak, think, act in its terms.
As this love assumes an active, post-
tive aspect we shall find ourselves forti-
fied against many griefs. The great reme-
dy for sorrow is occupation. The mother
bereft of her child, the widowed wife.
have long been counseled to seek S0-
lace in some work, to get an orphan
child to love, to espouse some benevo-
lence, to forget their own distresses by
occupying themselves with some one
else. The heart that is at leisure from it-
self to soothe and sympathize with oth-
ers is far less likely to be subject to
moods than is the heart that tries to live
to itself alone, that turns its attention
constantly inward upon itself,
Be absorbed in a work of moment to
others, to the world, and our ewn small,
betty pygmy concerns lose their over-
Weening importance.
A young newspaper man home from a
night with a metropolitan daily found his
mother upset over some domestic eca-
tastrophe. He sympathized with her
distress, but could not take her tragedy
to heart. “Why, down at the office.”
said he, “if we made mistakes, 300,000
people would be without their morning
paper. There are only half a dozen of
us at home here to suffer by this. Come
you make too much of trifles.” So. when
we take the larger viewpoint, our own
tiny private personal pains will pale
away by conutrast.—Washington Star.
Separation a Good Thing.
The happiest marriages are undoubted-
ly those where a certain amount of daily
separation takes place between liushand
and wife. They both mix with outsid-
ers; their ideas are enlarged and fresh-
ened; they have a chance of missing each
other, which is one of the truest secrets
of preserving affection, and when they
mect again it is with renewed pleasure,
and a certain restored sense of noyelty,
which lasts them till it is time to part
again.
And when there are lite absences,
what a renewal of charm succeeds! We
never value a thing till we lose it; and
even the temporary loss of another's so-
ciety makes us think it more attractive
than if it were always with us. So let
the marricd resolve to spend at least 2
little portion of each day apart. Do not
understand by this that I mean to ad-
vise such an amount of separation as
shall produce in them a difference of
tastes, pursuits or friends. But it is
wise to lead just so much of the daily
life apart as shall lend a new zest
to the time spent together. One grave
drawback to seeing too much of each
other is the tendency in human nature
to treat with slight respect the thing
with which we are too familiar. A bus-
band and a wife are apt to lose that
courtesy in their mutual intercourse
which is the very salt of happy family
life.—Woman's Life.
For the Children
.
A Disconcerted Scholar.
When little Arabella Krupp first started in
to school,
She found it very difficult to follow every
rule.
Of course, she tried her very best that
teacher should not frown,
And swift obedience she | gave, when
teacher said, “Sit down!”
But the next thing that she said to her
was, “Little girl sit up!”
Which greatly disconcerted little Arabella
Krupp. —St. Nicholas.
BETSY BRANDON’S GUEST.
A True Tale of How a Little Maid En-
tertained Gen. Washington.
| It was a bright spring morning in
1791, and the sun shone as bright over
the Brandon plantation as it did in the
county town of Salisbury. Yet little
Miss Betsy Brandon, sitting jonely and
disconsolite on the piazza of the great
plantation house, did not think of- the
sunshine, did not notice the gay tulips
nodding good morning, did not listen to
the merry songs of the birds, for her
thoughts were in Salisbury, ‘and she
longed to be there.
For uot more than an hour ago all the
family had driven to the town to see
Gen, Washington, who was to be re-
ceived there with great honor, and with
us handsome a demonstration as the
brave, patriotic folk of the town and
county could make for him.
It was a wonderful thiag, this South-
ern tour of the general—now President
of the United States. He had traveled
in his family carriage all the way down
from Virginia, through the Carolinas and
was now returning through the ‘“up-
country,” stopping at Augusta, Camden,
Charlotte and other towns. All along
the route people united to do him honor,
and war-worn veterans who had fol-
lowed his standard pressed near to grasp
his hand.
| And now that he was coming to Salis-
bury such grand things were to be done!
‘Capt. John Baird, in command of the
Rowan Light Horse Company,” had
gone to meet him at Charlotte and escort
him to Salisbury. A company of boys—
one of whom was Betsy's prother—were
to meet him half a mile from town and
march as his escort with the men. And
the boys were to be in uniform and were
to wear buck tails in their hats. And
Betsy's sister was to be one of the little
girls, ali dressed in white, to scatter
flowers before the general when he en-
tered the town. Oh, it would all be
beautiful. Yet Betsy must stay at
home.
Wes it not a little hard? And was it
altogether strange that 12-year-old Bet-
sy. in spite of the self-control taught by
the strict old-time discipline, must, from
time to time, wipe away the gathering
tears ?
Yet not every one lad gone to Salis-
bury, for, after a while, Betsy was sur-
prised to see two gentleman riding up
the avenue. On reaching the house they
dismounted, and one—a gentleman of
very grand and handsome appearance—
bowed low to the little maid and asked
if she would be kind enough to give
breakfast to two tirea wayfarers.
Betsy curtsied, in a pretty, old fashion,
and said that as all the grown people
had gone to town to see Gen. Washing-
ton, she was afraid the breakfast might
not be very nice, but she would have
something ready in a little while, and
would they please be seated on the
piazza.
“Lam a plain old man,” said the gen-
tleman who had spoken, “and only want
a cup of milk and piece of cornbread.”
The “plain old man” was very dignified
and courteous, and there was something
in his bearing so noble that somehow
his little hostess felt that there was a
man fit to stand with the greatest. “I
promise you,” be continued, “that you
shall see Gen. Washington before any of
your people do.” L
How that might be Betsy did not
know, nor did she question. For there
was something about this unexpected
guest that won her trust from the begin-
ning. So she hurried away to_ the
kitchen to interview old Dinah. Then,
while Dinah was making ready the hoe-
cake, and Cindy was setting the table,
panes herself ran down the hill to the
spring house for the milk and butter. In
a little while the simple repast was
ready, and the guests were bidden to
partake of it.
Betsy was pleased, as aay hostess
would have been, to see how the break-
fast was enjoyed. Encouraged by the
kindness of the gentleman who had
promised that she should see Gen. Wash-
ington, she talked freely of the great
doings in town that day. There was to
be a grand reception in the afternoon
and a ball at night. Her mother had
the most beautiful gown for the ball, and
po doubt all the other ladies had beauti-
ful gowns. But her father would wear
his old uniform. and then she told of
how her father honored and loved Gen.
Washington, and of how he said that he
was the greatest man and the best in all
the world.
But now the guests rose and le who
had asked for the breakfast thanked
Betsy for it. “The milk you gave me,
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
189. He is essentially a self-made man.
He was left an orphan at an early age.
his mother having died when he was 2
years old, and his father being accident-
ally killed when he was 6 years. At 13
the boy was compelled to enter the
mines at Braidwood and work for his
living. He stayed there three years and
then went to Colorado. He worked in
the mines of Colorado until 1888, when
he returned to his native state, But he
did not remain long, in a_ short time
returning to the west, this time to New
Mexico.
In 1891 he returned to Hlinois, which
state he has made his home ever since.
He studied law by night, read on eco-
nomic questions, and gathered informa-
tion on questions of organization by con-
nection with organized labor from 1G
years of age. He was secretary-treas-
urer of a sub-district of the United Mine
Workers of America in 1895, and’ rose
steadily to the position of president.
which he attained in 189) and has held
since that year.
Since 1898 Mr, Mitchell las been one
of the yice presidents of the American
Federation of Labor.
BISHOP A. W. WILSON, one of the
ablest ministers of the Methodist denoni-
ination, was born in Baltimore, Febru-
ary 5, 1884. His education was received
in’ the public schools of iis native city
and at Columbian college, Washington.
He was received in the Baltimore confer-
ence in 1853 and joined the Baltimore
conference of the M. E. chureh, South,
when it was organized. In 1878 he_be-
came secretary of the board of missions
of his church. Bishop Wilson has made
five trips to China and two to Brazil,
and he and Dr, Lambuth have been
elected to attend the centennial celebra-
tion of the landing of the first Protes-
tant missionary in China at Shanghai
during the coming summer. Bishop and
Mrs. Wilson will next month celebrate
their golden wedding.
JONATHAN P. DOLLIVER, whom
Iowa has just re-elected to the United
States Senate, was born near Kingwood,
W. Va. February 6, 1858. He was grad-
uated in 1875 from the West Virginia
university and was admitted to the bar
in 1878, after his removal to the west.
The first few years of his residence
in Iowa were spent in building up a big
law practice and im gaining a reputation
as a finished and able orator. Beginning
with the Fifty-tirst Congress he was
regularly re-elected until —_ appointed
United States senator in 1900 to suc
ceed the late J. H. Gear. In 1902 he
was elected for the six-year term.
Mr. Dolliver has a national reputa-
tion for his original campaign methods.
When campaigning for Congress he held
his meetings in a large tent and made
liberal use of an advance agent and
posters in cireus-like fashion. He is a
member of the Methodist | Episcopal
church, and it is said he caught the idea
of his original campaign methods from
the eamp meetings which he attended in
his early days.
MRS. BRITANNIA W, KENNON.
great-grand daughter of Martha Wash-
ington and a descendant of the last Lord
Baltimore, celebrated her ninety-second
birthday at her home in George-
town, D. CC. She was born there
and has lived in the same place all her
life. In January, 1843, she was mar-
ried to Commodore Beverly Kennon,
who in the following year was killed by
a gun_explosion on the warship Prince-
ton. Mrs. Kennon, who is still active.
has always taken great interest in chari-
table work and is an officer in several
organizations.
ROBERT B. MANTELL, the well
known actor, was born in Ayrshire, Scot-
land, February 7, 1854, but was brought
up in Ireland, where he won a medal at
school for his proficiency in declamation.
This turned his attention to the amateur
stage, where his first appearance was
made in “Richelieu.”
Under the name of Hudson he made
his professional debut in 1874 at Roch-
dale, Lancashire. The same year he
came to America, and procured an en-
gagement with the Museum stock com-
pany in Boston. But he soon returned
to England, where he remained for four
| years. acting in the provinces. In 1878
he returned to America to appear in the
support of Mme. Modjeska. His first
real lift into popularity arrived when
Fanny Davenport engaged him for the
part of Loris Ipanoff in “Fedora.” His
suecess in this character established a
vogue for himself that paved the way
for his stellar career of several years
in the one play “Monbars.”
Tn late years Mr. Mantell has added
to his professional reputation by his ap-
pearance im numerous Shakespearean
characters.
RICHARD WATSON GILDER, the
well known author and editor, was born
at Bordentown, N. J., February 8, 1844.
He was educated at a seminary at
Flushing, L. L, which was conducted
by his father, Rev. W. H. Gilder, a
Methodist minister. He has received de-
grees from Dickinson college and from
Harvard and Princeton universities.
He began his editorial career as man-
aging editor of the Newark Advertiser
and as the founder of the Newark Regis-
ter. He became managing editor of
Scribner's Monthly in 1870, In 1881 he
became editor-in-chief, retaining this po-
sition after Seribner’s Monthly became
The Century.
Mr. Gilder has been very active in re-
form movements in New York city. He
has been president of the Public Art
league of the United States and of the
New York Kindergarten association. He
has been an active member also of the
Civil Reform association.
Mr. Gilder is well known as the au-
thor of a number of books of verse. His
sister is Miss Jeanette L. Gilder, one of
the pioneer woman journalists of Amer-
ies:
GEORGE ADE, the popular youns
author and playwright. was born at
Kentland, Ind., February 9, 1866. He
——_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_—S—SXSXSX—
he said, “is the best I have drank for
aS re Oe a ee ee ee a ee
he said, “is the best I have drunk for
many a day, and the hoe-cake is deli-
cious. I thank you for your kindness. I
must now bid you farewell and go on
my journey.”
“Farewell, sir,” said Betsy, curtsying.
“But when——” for now the question
would come—‘when do I see Gen. Wash-
ington? :
She raised her eager eyes to meet
those of the stranger who had given her
the promise. With a kind smile he
answered simply: “I am Gen. Wash-
ington.”
Like other wonderful things it had all
come about very naturally. The general
was fatigued by his journey, and know-
ing that he would have little opportunity
of rest during the day, left his party for
awhile, and, with one attendant, rede on
horseback to the Brandon house for some
refreshment before going on to Salisbury,
six miles further. And so it came te
pass that the little girl in the North
Carolina farmhouse rot only saw the
great man but entertained him at break.
fast.
SEE ass
| Advertise in Your Home Paper.
was graduated from Purdue university
in 1887. His jirst work after leaving
college was to exploit a peteat cure for
the tobacco habit. This he did with the
aid of a black-face singing comedian. In
this way he traveled about the country,
accumulating information that afterward
stood him in good stead.
It was three years later that his ca-
reer really began, when he secured a po-
om as reporter on a Chicago newspz-
per. He became the writer of a daily
‘column entitled “Stories of the Streets
and of the Town,” which gained him
considerable of a reputation. It was
about this time that he first brought eut
his famous “Fables in Slang.” Later he
graduated into a writer of plays and in-
‘stantly met with great success.
| His plays include “The Sultan of Su-
lu,” “Peggy From Paris,” “The County
| Chairman. “The Sho-gun.” and “The
College Widow.” It is estimated that
‘during the past few years these plays
have brought to Mr. Ade royalties ayer-
aging at least $5000 a week.
| ADMIRAL LORD CHARLES
BERESFORD, who has just arrived in
America to settle up the estate of his
brother who was Killed in a_ railroad
wreck in Dakota last December, was
born ia Ireland, February 10, 1846.
_ He is the second son of the fonrih
Marquis of Waterford. After receiving
his education at private schools he en-
‘tered the British navy as a cadet >in
1859. Since that time he has had au
exceedingly active career and has. been
rewarded with the highest honors. One
of his most notable exploits eccurred in
1882 when he commanded the little war-
ship Condor in the bombardment of Al-
-exandria. In 1884 he served on Lord
|Wolseley’s staff in the Nile expedition
sand subsequentiy he was in conmand of
the naval brigade at the battles in Up-
per Egypt. For the ~alllantry he dis-
‘played in several of the engagements
in the Soudan he received a vote of
‘thanks from the British Parliament.
| Lord Beresford has had the command
‘ef the Channels sevadron and of the
Mediterranean fleet, in fact, he has held
the highest commands in the British
navy. On no less than three different
oceasions bas he been awarded medais
for saving life.
Beer in France.
The consumption of beer in France
has increased by more than 40 per cent.
during the past five years, and reached,
during the past year, the imposing total
of 12,000,000 hectoliters, or 317,040,000
gallons.
This result can hardly surprise any
one who has noted in Paris and other
large cities of France the rapid develop-
ment of the “brasserie,” or cafe restau-
rant, where beer is sold. Much of this
beer is imported (or purports to be so)
from Pilsen and Munich, though most
of the leading breweries in other Ger-
man cities have Paris agencies and dis-
tribute their beer to retailers. This en-
tails high prices to consumers, as there
is an import duty of from $1.73 to $2.31
per 100 kilograms (220 pounds), weight
of cask included, on all foreign brewed
beer brought into the country, and under
the stimulus of this protection the brew-
ing industry of France has devoted rap-
idly both in respect to quantity and
quality of its product.
It does not appear that the increased
use of beer has dimmished in the slight-
est degree the consumption of wine and
cider, and the one encouraging feature
of the situation is found in the fact that
the consumption of alcohol, especially in
the perilous form of absinthe, is slowly
but steadily decreasing. The statistics of
1904 show that during that year 177,-
489 rectroliters (4,687,938 gallons) of ab-
sinthe were sold for drinking purposes in
France, whereas 1905 showed_a falling
of to 172,503 hectoliters (4,557,529 gal-
lons); or 2.8 per cent. This is not a
sweeping or conclusive reform, as the
absinthe habit is still one of the gravest
perils that threaten the manhood of
France;, but the statistics show that the
maximum danger eae has been passed,
and the decline of even so small a per-
centage in absinthe consumption is ac-
cepted as ground for encouragement and
hope.—Daily Consular and Trade Re-
enmaaban
Pastor Says Pulpit Ignores Real Evils.
“It is the habit among ministers
throughout the country at the present
time to attack continually matters of
slight consequence,” said Rey. Cyrus
Townsend Brady, celebrated playwright,
author, and pastor of Trinity Episcopal
cherch in Toledo, O., in speaking of
the recent crusade inaugurated against
dancing.
“Among the school children the dance,
theaters, and the like are the object of
attacks while the real evils of society,
such as murder and robbery, are allowed
to go unnoticed and unscathed.
“It is the abuse rather than the use
of almost anything that points to real
evil and exhibits the real danger. Even
church going can be made a dissipation,
but few over indulge that way. I do not
urge dancing and I do not object. to
anyone's opinion against it or against
card playing.
“A man gambles as surely at church
fair raties as he does at cards. I like
to see young people dance, but if it has
a pernicious influence for anyone they
should avoid it.”
At this juncture Dr, Brady voiced a
statement similar to that made by Bish-
op Potter in a recent address to Episco-
pal clergymen. <
“Nor should any man ascribe to young
people in general what might be his own
personal consequences. Such an insinua-
tion is a deliberate insult to mankind and
womanhood.
“Such statements were made by the
reformed dancing masters ef Los An-
geles and held up as statistics showing
dancing the cause of the social evil, are
slanders aud deliberately untrue. I am
surprised that they were quoted from the
pulpit. 1 would have expected to hear
them come from a lunatic asylum.”
Man Givec $31,000 for Tovs.
In the will of George B. Nutt, who
died at Pittsburg recently. a bequest
is made that his entire estate, estimated
at $31,000, is to be spent for toys and
gifts for the poor children of Allegheny
connty at the death of his wife. By the
will of Mr. Nutt, he provided for the
wife’s interest during life and stated
that at her death the estate is to be held
in trust for the purchase of playthings
for poor children especially for those in
institutions.
By plans for the disposal of the 31.
500.000 fund left by Henry Seybert in
1883. a model village for children cover-
ing 300 acres and the first of its kind in
the world, is to be built at Meadow
Brook farm, thirteen miles north of Phil-
adelphia. There will be cottages, for
1000 poe children and school training
facilities. The children’s bureau, creat-
ed as a clearing house for a model vil-
lage, will begin business on February 15.
Self-government will be practiced and
various special departments will be ran
by boys. Engineers and architects are
‘at work on plans now to create the mod-
el child city. Seybert was a chemist
and the son of a distinguished chemist.
He led an eccentric life. studied and
traveled abroad. left a bequest for the
investigation of spiritualism, and gave
the city the bell and clock which mark
the, hours in the belfry of Independence
hell.
Native Wood for Ties.
Every effort possible is being made to
use native woods for ties in building the
railways in the Philippines.
THE WISCONSIN WEEKLY ADVOCATE.
R. B. MONTGOMERY, Editor and Proprietor.
The Wisconsin Weekly Advocate after three years' residence at 79 Fifth street, has moved its headquarters to 430 Cedar St., where we will re-
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EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS.
"I know of the bravery and character of the Negro soldier. He saved my life at Santiago, and I have had occasion to say so in many articles and speeches. The Rough Riders were in a bad position when the Ninth and Tenth cavalry came rushing up the hill carrying everything before them. The Negro soldier has the faculty of coming to the front when he is needed most. In the Civil war he came 400,000 strong, and I believe he saved the Union."—President Roosevelt.
Arthur Pue Gorman, state senator and a Democratic leader in Maryland, will be a candidate for the seat in the United States so long held by his father.
Rev. David B. Sewall of South Berwick. Me., the oldest graduate of Bowdoin college, has just died at the age of 90. He was in the class of 1830.
---
Rev. Dr. Rainsford, who broke down in the midst of his devoted work in New York, is now in Florence, Italy, and is reported gaining, though far from able to work.
---
San Juan hill is not to be without its memorial of the war. Mrs. Katherine Tingley of Point Loma, Cal., fame owns 100 acres of land there and will put up a monument.
Commander Peary, in a talk at Princeton, let out the fact that one of the flags which he unfurled at his "farthest north" point was a Princeton flag. He will soon give it to the New Jersey university.
---
Austin Quimby of Salem, Mass., has sent to Congressman Gardner of the Sixth district two penholders, one made from wood from the Kearsarg on which Mr. Quimby served during the Civil war, and the other from wood from the old frigate Constitution.
The destruction at Cripple Creek, in a fire, of documentary evidence against the murderers of Gov. Steuenberg of Idaho, is a repetition of an old trick for the covering up of wickedness. Public records have fed the flames in many instances to save men from prison.
---
Thomas Wrightman, pioneer glass manufacturer of Pittsburg, has been in active business for three-quarters of a century and now, at the age of 90, is to be found in his office every day. Mr. Wightman is interested in two banks and in other business enterprises, taking a active part in the affairs of all.
Judge C. C. Cole of Des Moines, Ia., for many years dean of the Drake university law school there, who is 82 years old and has been for forty-two years a teacher of law, has received a Carnegie pension of $1280 a year. Judge Cole was graduated from the Harvard Law school in 1848.
William H. Goodyear, curator of fine arts in the Brooklyn museum, has been elected an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Milan, in recognition of the contributions to the mediaeval architectural research in Italy which have been made by the Brooklyn museum.
A Minnesota legislator has introduced a bill to prohibit secret fraternities in the high schools of that state. He is in accord with popular sentiment, but there may be a simpler way to extirpate the "frat" evil than the enactment of a state law. Local school authorities can put an end to high school fraternities if they so choose.
The mural paintings by John W. Alexander for the new Carnegie institute building at Pittsburg are almost completed. There are no less than fifteen long panels representing the sources of wealth of Pittsburg, and these show grimy workmen engaged in the iron, steel, electric and other industries of the Smoky city.
TRYING THE THAW CASE
CHEW SWEET PLUG
THE DOWNSIDE JOURNAL
IS THAW INSANE?
A PARENT'S PLEA
My little boy is eight years old,
He goes to school each day:
He doesn't mind the tasks they set
They seem to him but play.
He heads his class at raffia work,
And also takes the lead
At making dinky paper boats
But I wish that he could read.
They teach him things botanical,
They teach him how to draw,
He babbles of mythology
And gravitation's law;
And the discoveries of science
With him are quite a fad.
They tell me he's a clever boy,
But I wish that he could add.
—Life.
Romance of a Fan
---
Outside, the leaves rustled beneath the starlit, frosty sky, and the wind moaned fitfully around the solitary old gray house. I knew that the sky was cold and star-gemmed, because I could peep up at it through the unshuttered window from my resting place on the little table. Inside, the firelight danced on the oak-paneled wall of the low-ceiled room, and Joyce, from the cozy depths of her chair, watched the play of the flickering shadows among the gleaming old silver on the tea table before her.
Her lovely face, framed in its halo of dead-gold hair, was very sad and wistful. I could read her thoughts, for I possessed certain occult powers, owing to my eastern origin. She was living over again the sad events of the last two weeks.
She seemed still half dazed from the suddenness of it all. Perhaps she could scarcely realize even yet that her dear mother, her loving lifelong companion, had been taken from her forever.
"I cannot go on like this any longer," her thoughts ran; "the loneliness would drive me mad! Was any girl ever in such a sorry plight, I wonder? Of course, I always knew that mother's income was only for her lifetime; but then I never thought of her dying, nor did she, except in the dim future.
"And now here I am, after the funeral expenses and the doctor's bill have been settled and the servants paid off, with exactly a ten-pound note between myself and starvation—literally starvation! The house is my own, truly, and I have clothes to last me a twelvemonth or more," glancing down ruefully at her plain but dainty mourning.
"There's all of granny's lovely old silver, too. That is mine now, of course; but even if I sold it I should only be staving off the evil day. And it would be almost a crime. I must bestir myself and think of something tangible. If only Jack! If only——" And she broke off with a sigh.
At this point in her musings my eyes caught hers in a flash of sympathy, and, stretching out her little white hand, she took me up caressingly.
I was the first love offering he had made her, and in my way was considered a rare curio of intrinsic worth and great beauty.
Well! I have said that Joyce took me up caressingly. She did, and pressed me a moment against her pretty lips. She was thinking more of Jack than of me, I knew. But where was the use of looking back? It was all nearly two years ago now, and the mystery was still unsolved. She had never been to another dance since that fateful night; consequently neither had I.
That fatal night of the Hunt ball was our last glimpse of galery. And he was
there, and he had never come near us; he had carefully avoided meeting her eyes whenever the mazes of the dance had brought him into her vicinity. Her pride had forbidden her to make the slightest sign, and she had borne up bravely until we were back in her pretty bedroom, quite alone. And well I knew then how much she had really cared!
A few weeks later she heard he had gone abroad—gone without a word or a sign.
A few days later Joyce journeyed off to the smart little country town some three miles distant, and the next morning the following advertisement appeared in the county paper, for I heard her read it out to our one faithful maid-of-all-work:
"Lady desiring residence in beautifully situated country home can be received on moderate terms. Apply The Cottage, Mereton."
And a week later, after the usual formalities had been exchanged, the lady arrived, and was duly installed—an exceedingly prim old lady of quaint and dignified demeanor, with gray curls down each side of her face and her eyes partially obscured behind smoke-colored glasses. I detested her on the spot.
One evening, a few days after her arrival, Joyce and her paying guest were chatting amicably over their teacups when the latter suddenly exclaimed, in the gruff voice I disliked so much:
"What a very pretty fan that is, and how those two emeralds gleam in the lamplight!" Joyce rose from her chair and handed me over for inspection.
"Remarkably well cut stones! I do
A
LIVING OVER AGAIN THE SAD EVENTS.
not think I ever saw such perfect imitations!"
"Oh, but they are not imitations! They are genuine, I assure you!" corrected Joyce.
"My dear child, are you not rather unwise to have anything so valuable lying about? Real stones of this size must be worth quite a sum of money!"
"I have never thought about its monetary value. It was a present from some one for whom I had a very deep regard, and is associated with many very dear memories. I think it is quite safe. You see this is my own private sanctum, and very few people beside myself ever come here."
In that same night, just as the clock in the corner had ceased chiming 3, I heard a stealthy step outside in the hall, and the door of the room I was in was cautiously opened.
I could just discern the figure of a man groping his way toward the tea table, where the beautiful silver service rested on its tray. He commenced quickly to transfer the silver pieces into a large canvas bag. Then clutching me roughly, he thrust me into the darkness of an outside pocket, where everything became blank.
My next recollection was of being jerked violently out of the man's pocket and landing in the mud of a silent gaslit street. He hurried on—he was running—leaving me behind, a prey to many fears, splashed and begrimed, and wondering what my fate would be.
Later on the sleeping street began to arouse. At last a postman saw me, stooped and picked me up, muttering
something about a "queer piece of mum bo jumbo." And, wiping the mud care fully from me with his red handker chief, he put me into his pocket, and once more everything became blank.
One evening a few days later there was a knock at the door of the little parlor, and a pleasant manly voice explained:
"I have called in reference to your advertisement respecting a fan."
Where had I heard that voice before?
"Well, sir, if you can describe it satisfactorily, as I stated, you can have it!"
"You said a curious fan, entwined initials, J. J. It was the coincidence of the initials which struck me, as I had them carved on the fan myself when I presented it to the lady to whom I fancy it belongs."
That voice! Of course, it was Jack's! My green eyes glowed with suppressed excitement.
"If it is the fan I suppose, it is carved out of ivory, with two large emeralds set obliquely in the first stem."
"That is your fan, sir! Half a minute, sir!"
And in less than that time I was in Jack's firm clasp.
There was a little chinking sound. a surprised and grateful "Thank you, sir," on the part of the postman, a brisk "Good night" from Jack, then off once more.
Where was I bound for now? And what would be the sequel to it all. I wondered! But I could almost guess.
I was back in my dainty little sanctum; was clasped between Joyce's dear soft hands; and they were crushed against her throbbing heart. I could feel how fast it was beating!
I was very interested, and kept an eye on each of them. She had only just come into the room. He stood on the hearthrug facing her, and she was staring with lovely wide, startied eyes up into his own. She had taken me mechanically from him; scarcely, as I could see, grasping his explanation.
"I—er—saw the little beggar advertized, you know, with our joint initials, and—and—all the rest of it!"
No answer.
"I heard of your loss, Joyce," glancing tenderly at the little black-robed figure; "and that you had not married Marsden after all!" he went on, hurriedly. He was very white and agitated, I could see.
"Married Marsden!" she echoed, faintly, trying to calm herself. "Marsden never proposed to me!"
"Never proposed to you! Do you mean to say that she lied? That it has all been some hideous mistake?"
"Who lied? What has been a mistake?"
"Hilda Marsden! She told me you had accepted her brother that night of the Hunt ball. You remember? Joyce, darling, can you ever forgive me?" And so the mystery was explained at last! Hilda Marsden had been Joyce's most intimate friend those days! The old, old story of love and jealousy, I suppose. Of the thief who stole me nothing more was ever heard, or of the beautiful old silver tea service, or of the paying guest, for she disappeared the same night, leaving her black silk gown, with her cap and ringlets and spectacles behind her.—Modern Society.
One Thing or the Other:
"Yes, Dubley's wife died while you were abroad."
"Ah! then he's either going to extremes in his mourning or he's looking for a new wife."
"How do you mean?"
"I notice that he's dyed his hair and mustache a deep black."—Philadelphia Press.
Valuable Just the Same.
"Miss Dustin Rox writes the most childish kind of a scrawl!"
"Surprising, though, how much she can get on it at the bank, isn't it?"—Detroit Free Press.
Too many men speak twice before they think.
THE
HOUSEHOLD
Orange Marmalade.
Do not peel the oranges, but slice two dozen of them and take out the seeds. Slice and seed two large unpeeled lemons. Do this work with a sharp knife, as the slices must be very thin. Save all the juice and measure it, adding enough water to make three quarts of liquid. Put fruit and liquid into a stone crock, cover and set in the cellar all night. In the morning turn into a preserving kettle and bring slowly to a gentle boil. Simmer until the fruit-rind is very tender. Now allow a pound of sugar for each pint of liquid and add this to the fruit. Boil again until the rind looks clear and is very tender. Take from the fire and when cool turn into jelly glasses.
Corn Puree.
Drain the liquor from a can of corn, chop the corn very fine, add to it a quart of salted water and simmer at the side of the range for an hour. Rub through a colander, return to the fire, add a teaspoonful of sugar and when this melts stir in a tablespoonful of butter rubbed to a paste with a tablespoonful of flour. Stir until smooth, then add slowly to a pint of scalding milk into which a pinch of baking soda has been stirred. When near the boiling point remove from the fire and pour gradually, beating all the time, upon two well-whipped eggs. Season and serve immediately.
Sonffle Potatoes.
The cook who will not take great care in her preparation of souffle potatoes should not undertake to make them. Pare and slice raw potatoes very thin over a bowl of ice-cold water, so that the slices will drop into the water before they have time to discolor. After all are cut, drain and dry in a towel. Fry in deep hot lard, skim out, lay in a colander for half a minute, drop again into hot fat, when the slices will swell or puff up; skim out and serve hot.
Chocolate Eclairs.
Melt a half pound of butter in a pint of boiling water and stir in gradually three-quarters of a pound of flour. Stir until the flour ceases to stick to the sides of the pan. Take from the fire and when cool whip in one at a time eight eggs, well beaten. Set on the ice for an hour, then pour into greased eclair tins and bake to a golden brown. When cold cut a slit in the side of each puff and fill with a cream filling. Ice the top of the eclairs with chocolate icing.
Baked Spaghetti.
Boil a half package of spaghetti for half an hour in salted water. When tender and well done, drain; put in a buttered baking dish a layer of spaghetti, sprinkle with dried bread crumbs, cheese, grated, and bits of butter, put in more spaghetti, and proceed like this until the dish is full, having the top layer of crumbs. Pour in enough milk to fill all interstices, and bake to a good brown.
Celery and Nut Salad.
Shell and blanch a cupful of English walnut meats and set in a cold place until dry and crisp. Cut into bits of uniform size enough crisp celery to make a cupful. Mix the celery and nut meats together and stir into them enough mayonnaise to moisten well. Put into a chilled bowl lined with lettuce leaves, pour mayonnaise dressing over it and set in the icebox until wanted.
Corn Sponge Cake.
Slift together two cups of corn meal, one cup of flour and one level teaspoon each of salt and soda. Beat three eggs with one level tablespoon of sugar; add the egg mixture to the flour; pour in two cups of sour milk and mix well. Bake in one loaf.
Tbln Sugar Cookies.
Mix four slightly rounding tablespoons of sugar with three tablespoons of melted butter, two tablespoons of milk, one egg, two level teaspoons of baking powder and flour enough to roll out very thin. Cut in shape and bake.
Plymouth Cranberry Ple.
Chop one cup of cranberries fine, add one cup of sugar and one beaten egg. Beat all together and bake with two crusts.
Short Suggestions:
Try swallowing saliva when troubled with sour stomach.
Clean paint smoked by kerosene lamps with kerosene and rub it off with a fresh cloth.
A few drops of alcohol rubbed on the inside of lamp chimneys will remove all trace of greasy smoke.
In cleaning papier mache articles, use a sponge moistened with cold water. They may be polished with flour and a flannel cloth.
Lime-water will sweeten jars and jugs, which soap and water fail to cleanse. It is admirable for cleansing milk vessels and nursing bottles.
Half a lemon dipped in salt and rubbed on discolored ivory knife handles will restore them to their original whiteness. After doing this wash the knives once in hot water. The fishy taste in wild game, if objected to, can be removed by putting a small onion, cut finely, into the carcass directly it is cleaned. Remove this before cooking and burn it at once. for it will smell very offensively.
THE LIQUOR TRAFFIC
SHORT, IMPRESSIVE TEMPERANCE SERMONS.
Many Dangers Lurk in the Flowing Bowl—Bright and Influential Men Have Been Dragged Down by the Demon Drink.
A recent writer in the London Spectator, says: "It is now becoming generally recognized that the alcohol habit is one of the main factors in determining the length of life. No life office will knowingly accept the proposal of any one known as a hard drinker. Evidence of a very striking kind is rapidly accumulating which shows that even the moderate use of alcohol is prejudicial to health and longevity. In England about a dozen life offices recognize this fact in one of two ways: (1) By giving a reduction of premium to abstainers, or (2) awarding them a larger share in the profits. Last year one of the oldest life offices, established in 1810, opened a special section for abstainers, giving them a reduction of 5 per cent on their premiums. When the company announced a reduction in premiums for abstainers, the Financial Times, commenting on the fact, said: 'A battle has long raged round the figures of those offices which keep their men in separate sections and always show a higher bonus to the longer-lived abstinent. Strenuous efforts have been made to minimize these important statistics, and it is quite likely that they do not mean all that has been claimed for them, but when we see a first-rate company offering a direct and immediate cash bonus to abstainers, it looks very much as if the case had been proved.'"
Stop the Best Saloons.
Probably you would say, "Break up all these filthy and low haunts, all these places where the habitually intemperate, the degraded, the wretchedly poor congregate, and let these beverages be sold only in respectable places and to respectable people!" But is this really the best plan? On the contrary, it seems quite reasonable to maintain that it better to sell to the intemperate than the sober, to the degraded than to the respectable, for the same reason than it is better to burn up the old bulk than to set fire to a new and splendid ship. I think it worse to put the first glass to a young man's lips than to crown with madness an old drunkard's life-long alienation—worse to wake the fierce appetite in the depths of a generous and promising nature than to take the carrion of a man, a mere shell of imbecility, and to soak it in a fresh debauch. Therefore, if I were going to say where the license should be granted in order to show its efficacy, I would say—Take the worst sinks of intemperance in the city, give them the sanction of the law, and let them run to overflowing. But shut up the gilded apartment where youth takes its first draught, and respectability just begins to falter from its level.—Dr. E. H. Chapin.
Street Railways Against Drink. The Central Railway Company, London, England, has issued a circular to its employees insisting on strict abstinence while in duty. The circular says: "Employes are reminded that it is strictly against the company's rules to obtain or take intoxicating drinks or enter any public house while on duty; neither should they, when off duty and in uniform, loiter about the station or frequent places where intoxicants are sold."
The employes of the "tube" railway in London are strictly forbidden to indulge in alcoholic drinks, or to enter a public house, while on duty. The effects of intoxicants are said to be greatly increased by the atmosphere of the "tube."
Temperance Notes.
The Russian General Congress of Medical Men, assembled at St. Petersburg, adopted resolutions that a campaign against the evils of alcoholism was not possible because the government owned the spirit monopoly. For this very mild statement many of those involved have been arrested and banished to Siberia.
Mayor Badger successfully closes the saloons of Columbus on Sunday, and compels them to close promptly every night at midnight. And what greatly augments the importance of this good news is the fact that when Gov. Harris was asked for his views on the subject, he promptly and positively declared himself in favor of both Sunday and midnight closing.
There seems to be no doubt that for some reason whether moral or economic, the consumption of spirituous liquors by Englishmen is steadily decreasing. The chancellor of the exchequer recently stated in Parliament that the annual imports of wine from the principal sources of supply had decreased 4,000,000 gallons since 1900. The amount now drunk in the British Isles is but three pints per capita.
Bishop Warren tells of a father of a large family who was a drunkard. All his children except one died of the inherited curse. This one, though an abstainer, had an obstinate form of dyspepsia, attributed by physicians to hereditary influences. His children suffered from the sins of their grandfather. A daughter died of consumption, a son of delirium tremens, another son shot himself on the verge of delirium tremens.
Good roads advocates want New York State to spend $6,000,000 on highways.
Bad Symptoms.
‘The woman who has periodical head-
ioc « ae dai
or specks ting or dancing before
ber eyes, ynawing distress or heavy
full feeling fy tomach, faint spells, drag-
ging-down/{eeling in lower abdominal or
pelvic region, casily startled or excited,
frregu/af or painful periods, with or with-
out pelvic catgerh, is suffering from
weakneeses angfcrangements that should
have eafiy ntion. Not all of above
sympto f likely to be present in any
case at ope Aime.
Nes ei or badly treated and such
cases Ayn run into maladies which de-
man surgeon's knife if they do not
Pail.
No medicine extant h uch a lon:
pd numerous record of cures jg sac.
es as Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescri
on oO medicin has suc! a strop
professional judarement of eacn or iis
eral ngresienis—worth more thanany
uber of ordinary non-professional tes-
ona) he very best ingredien'
own to medical science for the cure of
woman's peculiar ailments enter into its
composition. No alcohol, harmful, or
habit-forming drug is to be found in the
list of its ingredients printed on each
bottle-wrapper and attested under oath.
In any condition of the female system,
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription can do
only good—never harm. 1ts whole effect
is to strengthen. invigorate and regulate
the whole female system and especially
the pelvic organs. When these are de-
ranged in function or affected by disease,
the stomach and other organs of digestion
become sympathetically deranged. the
nerves are weakened, and a long list of
bad, unpleasant symptoms follow. Too
much must not be expected of this "Fa-
vorite Prescription.” It will not perform
miracles; will not cure tumors—no med-
icine will. It will often prevent them, if
taken in time, and thus the operating
table and the surgeon’s knife may be
avoided.
Women a from diseases of long
standing, are invited to consult Doctor
Pierce by letter, free. All correspondence
is held as strictly private and sacredly
confidential. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce,
Buffalo, N. ¥.
Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser (1000 pages)
is sent ae on receipt of see one-cent
stamps for paper-covered. or 31 stamps
sn clalteond cay. Address as above.
KANSAS RAT AMBITIOUS.
Keeps Busy Piling Wood with a Haste
That Is a Mania.
The Kansas wood rat is small, no
larger than a common rat, but his ambi-
tion and acquisitiveness are insatiable.
His one insane desire seems to be to in-
crease the size of his pile of sticks. The
neigboring ficld is placed under tribute.
First of all the nearby sticks are gath-
ered in the pile. ‘Then, as these are
cleaned up, he gets farther and farther
away from home for more sticks. And
in this huge pile of sticks he stores his
winter supply of nuts. Many _ times,
when we were enjoying farm life by
living mostly on sorghum and cornbread,
buttermilk and Missouri dried apples.
have we gone to the woods with the
other boys and taken nicely hulled wal-
nuts from the nests of a wood rat.
POR CEE TS EOEEE
REFUTES THE OSLER THEORY.
Levi P. Morton Is Busy Every Week,
Despite His 83 Years.
Ex-Vice President Levi P. Morton. of
all the old men in the financial district,
is believed to furnish the most emphatic
rebuttal of the Osler theory of termina-
tion of usefulness at the age of 60. Mr.
Morton’s span of life is more than dou-
ble that limit—he is now in his 83d year
—yet he has never apparently as much
as contemplated retirement and is to be
seen at work as president of the Morton
Trust company three or four days a
week. To all outward appearances his
pda! condition is as strong as when,
‘or instance, he ended his term as goy-
ernor ten years ago.
—————_.
RISE OF M. MUELLER RAPID.
Newly Elected President of Switzerland
Has Historic Career.
M. Mueller, the newly elected president
of the Helvetic Confederation, was one
of Switzerland’s young men. Although
belonging to_a good Bernese family, he
was born in Dresden and spent his youth
in German universities as a law stu-
dent. Returning to his own country his
rise was rapid. At 26 he was president
of the Berne Tribunal, and for twenty
years he had represented that city in
the Diet. In 1895 he entered the federa!
ministry and for three years had had the
direction of the military department.
———___—_—.
Considerate Highwayman.
Lancia, the noted Italian automobolist,
was asked the other day if he did not
think motor racing too dangerous.
“Dangerous—yes,” M. Lancia replied.
“Too dangerous—no. For nothing that
benefits mankind—and automobiles bene-
fit mankind inexpressibly—is too danger-
ous for a man to undertake.
“I have a good deal of contempt for
men who are not brave to the point of
rashness. I am like a highwayman who
held up a gasolene runabout on the out-
skirts of Rome.
“This highwayman stopped the run-
about with a shot in the air. Then he
ran forth from the tomb that had con-
cealed him—the hold-up happened on the
Appian Way—and found, to his surprise,
only a woman in the little car. :
“‘Where, madam, is your husband?
he demanded, sternly and suspiciously.
“ ‘He's under the seat,’ she answered,
flushing.
“*Then, said the highwayman, |
won't take means. It's bad eee to
have a husband like that without being
robbed into the bargain.’ "—Baltimore
News.
Se es
GUIDES CHILDREN.
Experience and a Mother's Love
Make Advice Valuable.
An Ill. mother writes about feeding
children :
“If mothers would use Grape-Nuts
more for thelr little ones, there would
be less need for medicines and fewer
doctor bills.
“If those suffering from indigestion
end stomach troubles would live on
Grape-Nuts, toast and good milk for a
short period they would experience
more than they otherwise would be-
lieve.
“Our children have all learned to
know the benefit of Grape-Nuts as an
appetizing, strengthening food. It is
every evening, with few variations, like
this: ‘Mamma, let's have toast and
Grape-Nuts for breakfast; or, let's have
eggs and Grape-Nuts’—never forgetting
the latter.
“One of our boys in school and 15
years of age repeatedly tells me his
mind is so much brighter and in every
way he feels so much better after hav-
ing Grape-Nuts as a part if not all his
breakfast.” Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the lit-
tle book, “The Road to Wellville,” in
pkgs. “There’s a Reason.”
ONE OF COLORADO’S WONDERS.
ee Bo
: pd 5 Ris £ ie
ie ee ee EO BE eee
ond vs 3 re Ae
an
— e ge : es
ae a a Ss ¥ ill, v4
: : af 2% eee io 4
MOUNT OF THE HOLY CROSS.
Justice bas only recently been done to one of the most majestic moun-
tains of Colorado. For some years a persistent rumor has been afloat that
the famous Mount of the Holy Cross bad suffered an accident in the shape of
a rock slide which had destroyed one of the arms of the cross, or rather had
filled up one of the transverse canons and excluded the snow therefrom, thus
obliterating a portion of the cross. Photographs showing this defect have
actually been made, but a short time ago the Denver and Rio Grande Rail-
read sent its photographers, W. H. Jackson, the noted landscape artist of
Detroit, and George L. Beam of Denver, on # trip to the wonderful Holy
Cross region, for the purpose of proving or disproving the statement as to
the partial destruction of the cross.
Leaving the town of Red Cliff, after an immense amount of hard trav-
eling through an almost unbroken wilderness, the summit of Notch Mountain.
a long and jagged eminence directly opposite the Mount of the Holy Cross,
was reached. and from the first point of view one of the arms of the cross
did appear to be missing. However, on bearing to the right and rising higher
a fine thread of snow became visible on that portion of the sumuit, and after
continuing in this direction for some distance the entire left arm appeared
and it was found that the cross was as complete and beautiful as ever.
A comparison of the new photographs with the first one ever made, which
Mr. Jackson took thirty-three years ago, shows practically ao change even
in the spots of snow on the mountain, to say nothing of any alterations in
the masses of rock of which it is composed. Evidently the story of the
demolition was started by persons who had not ascended to the proper height
or at the proper point to obtain the full view of the cross. Doubtless this
magnificent mountain will retain its shape and remain one of the wonders
of America for many generations to come.—Toledo Blade.
MEMORIES OF THE FARM.
“AQ
ae eee
—
ge =
My Bote i:
BGS SERS
ng A a
5 rade
as A
li Kasei.
FETE Cone aR
Zo \ ee
OMIA
oe rs
When I was a boy we had one unfail-
ing job—husking corn.. We husked al!
winter. We busked from crop to crop.
It was like a curse on my life. It
was the unfailing remedy for the least
appearance of laziness. “Go down to
the north field and husk a few bushels
ef corn.” That was the order and it
had to be obeyed. And with a corn
crop running into the billions of bush-
els they still husk it by hand. Why
doesn’t somebody who is sorry for
farmer boys, Invent something ?—Bush-
nell, in Cincinnati Post.
SILENCE CLUB OF PARIS.
Members Do Not Tatk Uniess *mer
Have Something to Say.
“It is not surprising that the first
year of the Silence Club of Paris has
closed with such gratifying results that
the club may be said to have achieved
success in its decidedly unique sphere
of usefulness,” remarked a psycholo-
gist to a Washington Star man,
“I look for similar clubs to be es-
tablished in this country among the
eult, as thelr foundation and purpose
is anything but a joke cr of a freakish
nature. The idea fs new in this coun-
try, however, though the success of the
Paris institution will give it an im-
petus among the advanced thinkers
among us and those who have made
the interesting problem of mental phil-
osophy-a critical or a pastime study.
“The rules of the society do not call
for absolute silence, but the members
are supposed not to talk upless they
have something to say. Chatter is ab-
solutely tabooed. Each member pledges
himself to avoid noisy places and par-
ticipation in public demonstrations. At
a recent meeting the members declared
that since they had joined the club
their neryous systems were in much
vetter condition than before they be-
came members.
“Of course such a club could not be
composed of the fair sex, even though
they were all devout believers in and
followers of psychological teachings. A
congregation composed of silent women
would be impossible of conception, and
while our fair sisters may experience
chagrin that they are to be shut out of
participating in any form of club life
among themselves that is also indulged
in by their brothers, this is one form
of assembly that bars then out. Neith-
er would politicians be eligible for
membership, unless as a disciplinary
measure.
“The club is based upon the sound
psychological principle of not doing
unnecessary things or calling the brain
cells into play by unnecessary thought.
In practical everyday Ife this prinei-
ple is exemplified in the establishment
of retreats among certain of the relig-
jous creeds to which members may re-
pair for meditation and rest. and in
medical circles it is shown in another
form in the so-called rest cure. If one
wishes to enter into a study of a mild
form of this particular principle let
him consider the amount of wasted en-
ergy, physical and mental, that the av-
erage person each day expends in need.
less talk and needless action; {t will
be found to be prodigious.
All rules of mechanies converge to
the concentration cf force and the
elimination of waste energy. In hu-
man affairs generally every individua!
endeavors to expend as much energy
as he can in the simplest as in the
greatest of his endeavors, seeming tc
think that the more force he puts int«
an act, a thought or a speech the bet
ter it is”
The Ears of Insects.
Simply because a bee has no ears on
the sides of its head it is no sign what-
ever that it is wholly without some
sort of an auditory nerve. This fs
proved by the fact that grasshoppers.
crickets, locusts and fiies all have their
ears situated in queer places—under
the wings, on the middle of the body
and even on the sides of their legs.
The common house fly does its hearing
by means of some little rows of corpus:
cles which are situated on the knobbed
threads which occupy the place which
are taken up by the hind wings of otb-
er species of insects. The garden slug
or shelless snail has its organs of hear-
ing situated on each side of its neck,
and the common grasshopper has them
on each of its broad, flat thighs. In
some of the smaller insects they are
at the bases of the wings and in others
on the bottom of the feet.—Scranton
Truth.
Queer Things in Kansas.
A Kansas City man has just suc-
ceeded in getting a patent on an elec-
tric motor fastened on a cow’s back,
the electricity being generated by a
dynamo attached to her tail. It strains
the milk and hangs up the pai] and
‘the strainer. A small phonograph ac-
companies the outfit and yells “So!”
| when the cow moves. If she kicks ©
hinged arm catches the milk stool and
Jams her over the back.—Osawatomie
Globe.
His Normal One.
First Nurse—The doctor says you
must observe old Mr. Skinflint’s mean
temperature.
Second Nurse—He hasn't any other
kind.—Baltimore American.
‘Don’t criticise folk foh not bein’ sat-
isfied,” said Uncle Eben. “When a man
is real satisfied, he’s li’ble to git de big
head an’ be disagreeable.”—Washing-
ton Star,
HURT, BRUISE OR SPRAIN
THE OLD-MONK-CURE RELIEVES FROM PAIN
Price 25¢ and SOc
- SHAVES TWENTY SQUARE MILES.
That Is Amount of Space Covered by
Hend at One Sitting.
“Having determined how many freight
ears would be required to transport the
Iowa corn crop, how many miles it is to
Mars, how much it costs the average
family to live, and all the thousand and
one problems that have arisen since the
days when theologians argued over the
number of angels who could stand on the
point of a cambrie needle, some enter-
prising statistician has gone to work tr
figure out how many square miles of
space the hand of the average man
travels over in shaving He announces
that the man of average length of life
shaves over twenty square miles.”
—$_$_——_._
TO CONSTRUCT SEINE TUNNEL.
Charles M. Jacobs of Pennsylvania to
Undertake Work.
Charles M. Jacobs, consulting engineer
of the Pennsylvania, New York & Long
Island Railroad company, has been re-
tained for the construction of a tunnel
under tke River Seine from Rouen to
Havre. Mr. Jacobs, whe has already
prepared plans and submitted them to
the French officials, has had charge of
the entire work of the big Pennsylvania
railroad tunnel under the North and
East rivers and Manhattan.
a
AN EXPENSIVE FOOTBALL TEAM.
England Pays $9815 for Sending Aggre-
gation Across the Water.
In the latest list of supplementary es
timates presented to the Parliament of
New Zealand there is an item of a kind
that has probably never before been sub-
mitted <4 a legislative bedy. It runs
thus: “Expenses of the New Zealand
football team in England, £1963*
($9813). Thus the sending of the highly
successful team across the waters was &
sort of socialistic enterprise.
eels
JOIN GREENLAND EXPEDITION.
Duke of Orleans to Penetrate Along
North Coast.
The Duke of Orleans has announced
to his friends at Copenhagen that he
intends te start a new expedition next
spring in the ship Belgia to penetrate as
far as possible along the northeast coast
of Greenland. The purpose is to join
the Danish expedition, under Mylius
Erichsen, which left last June toe ex-
plore the same coasi.
—————__—_.
GO TO JAPAN TO TRAIN.
Four Officers of German Army Leave for
a Two Years’ Course.
Four officers of the general staff of
the German army have started for Japan
for twe years’ service in the ———
army in order to study methods of train-
ing, strategy and other matters. These
officers have been making especial prep-
arations for this service, and among oth-
er things they have taken a course in
Japanese.
cia hacia
NO RELIEF FROM ECZEMA
For Over Two Years—Patent Medi-
cines, Quack Cares, and Even Doc-
tors Fail—Cuticura Succeeds.
“I was very badly afflicted with ec
zema for more than two years, The
parts affected were my limbs below
the knees. 1 tried al] the physicians in
the town and some in the surround.
ing towns, and I also tried all the
patent remedies that I heard of, be
sides all the cures advised by o-d
women and quacks, and found no relief
whatever until I commenced using the
Cuticura Soap. Cuticura Ointment, and
Cuticura Resolvent. In the Cuticura
Remedies I found fmmediate relict,
and was soon sound and well. C. V.
Beltz, Tippecanoe, Ind., Nov. 15, 1905.”
aes ate een
Churchee Build Roads.
No part of the Perkiomen valley bav-
ine thus far received a share of the
state’s good roads appropriation, an
energetic campaign for improved high-
ways has been opened in this vicinity
aud the two strongest and oldest
churches of the region are lending hearty
co-operation.
The members of the New Goshenhop-
pen Reformed church, who want the
road from this borough to the church im-
proved, have decided not to wait for
state aid. They have effected an agree-
ment with the supervisors of Upeer Han-
ever township and will contribute $300
toward a fund for rebuilding the road,
the township providing the remainder of
the money.
‘The members of St. Paul's Lutheran
church, which is also situated about a
inile outside of town, on the opposite side
of the berongh, are engaged in a some-
what similar enterprise. — Pennsburg
cor. Philadelphia Record.
ee
A Big Bargain for 12 Cents Postpaid.
‘Tbe year of 1906 was one of prodigal
plenty on our seed farms. Never before
did vegetable and farm seeds return such
enormous yields.
Now we wish to gain 200,COO0 new cus-
tomers this year and hence offer for 12c
eae
1 pkg. Garden City Beet....---+- 10
1“ Earliest Ripe Cabbage..... 10
1 “ Earliest Emerald Cucumber 15¢
1 “ La Crosse Market Lettuce. 15¢
1 “ 13 Day Radish.........-- 10¢
1 “ Blue Blood Tomato.....- 15¢
1 “ Juicy Turnip ....-----+* 10c
1000 kernels gloriously beautiful
flower seeds ....sseeeeeeeeeses 15C
WORD cncnd pvnsesacnavsecon-c0ee OF
All for 12c postpaid in order to intro-
duce our warranted seeds, and if you
will send 16¢ we will add one package of
Berliner Earliest Cauliflower, together
with our mammoth plant, nursery stock,
vegetable and farm seed and tool catalog.
This catalog is mailed free to all in-
tending purchasers. Write to-day.
John A. Salzer Seed Co. Box ©, La
Crosse, Wis
ad
Rov Is Famous Singer.
The Illustrirte Zeitung speaks of
Moses Mirsky, the Russian lad, 12 years
old. whose voice has attracted much at-
tention, as the Wundersaenger. He is
the son of Russian Jewish parents and
was reared in London, where he was
heard in public for the first time three
years ago. He began as a singer of syna-
vogue music.
CAUGHT BY THE GRIP--
RELEASED BY PE-RU-NA.
BPBPAPD LPP PLD PPPOE NEN
LR FED :
or” \ 7 Bp Ze
fe ™ oN J Daye 5 a %e Pas
Gf ri\i A ee
NY So Aa
(es : 2 > Lee ag Bs
Sa & h Lie a ay pt
Cet toe Ar at GN Ea
LOY H ms ‘\ z Ef The Medi
EN of <4 Pwd ZA F Profession.
= ay Sy PB \ eco; izes
4a EA) The _.
ag TES = ; Al ioe
34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT
Keene Suse fers jure ole eentery,_. We suis for examination
AS ay Powis
a — We Are The Largest ‘Manatacturers In The World
oh Ba betine PUI SPeeyiee cr narsase: Sead torlarge, treecetaiogua, aks Se ose
Sager with Min. Gus’ «Elkhart Carriage & Harness Mig. Co, See, See
Hiss t naire oboe. Elkhart, Indiana. —
Effective Medicine for La Grippe.
Robt. L. Madison, A. M., Principal of
Cullowhee High School, Painter, N. C.,
writes: “Peruna is the most effective
medicine that I have ever tried for la
gtippe. It also cured my wife of nasal
catarrb. Her condition at one time was
such that she could not at night breathe
through her nostrils.”
La Grippe and Systemile Catarrh.
Mrs. Jennie W. Gilmore, Box 44,
White Oak, Ind. Ter., writes:
“Six years ago I bad la wigne fol-
lowed by systemic catarrh. e only
thing I used was Peruna and Manalin,
and I have been in better health the last
three years than for years before.”
Mrs. Jane Gift, Athens, Ohio, writes:
“Six years ago I had la grippe very
bad. My husband bought me a bottle of
Peruna. I was soon able to do my work.”
Every woman naturally should be
healthy and strong, but a great many
women, unfortunately, are not, owing to
the unnatural condition of the lives we
lead. Headache, backache and a general
tired condition are prevalent amongst the
women of to-day, and to relieve these con-
ditions women rush to the druggists for a
bottle of some preparation supposed to be
particularly for them, and containing—
nobody knows what. If they would just
get a box of Brandreth’s Pills, and take
them regularly every night for a time, all
their trouble would disappear, as these
Pills regulate the organs of the feminine
system. The same dose has the same
effect, no matter how long they are used.
Brandreth’s Pills have been in use for
over a century and are sold in every drug
and medicine store, plain or sugar-coated.
——_+—____
Betting on British Football Games.
With his notification of the race meet-
ings at which he is transacting business
in the following week a “turf account-
ant” named William Roberts of Brock-
ey now sends out his “football card,
which is,” he says, “the latest form of
speculation.” It is common knowledge
that there is nowadays, unfortunately, a
great amount of betting on footbal!
matches, but it will be news te most peo-
ple to Lear that the evil has gone so far
as this. The card gives a list of sixteen
matches and —— the odds which the
bookmaker will lay against the backer
naming three “home team winners,”
three “away winners,” and so on to the
number of about thirty different predic-
tions.—London Truth.
oe
Important to Dealers in Millinery.
The time is at hand when dealers
must come to the market to buy their
stocks for spring and summer business.
Blumenfeld, Locher & Brown Co., 368 to
374 Broadway, known to the trade as
“The Progressive Millinery House of
Milwaukee,” are ready to show their
immense stocks and invite inspection.
Their assortments of ready trimmed
hats, and medium priced tailored and
pattern hats are even larger than in pre-
vious seasons, and the decided favorable
distinction that this firm has attained
owing to the superiority of their produc-
tions, should make it of interest to deal-
ers to become acquainted with them.
Take advantaze of the Buyer's excur.
sions and come to Milwaukee.
—_—_——_—_—__—__—
“New York a Manufacturing City.
New York is seldom thought of as a
manufacturing city, but it has 60,842
manufacturing establishments.
——
Ink from Bananas.
The juice from thoroughly decayed ba-
nanas is a bright, clear carmine, and is
said to make a first-class indelible ink.
Suffered Twelve Years From Afte
Effects of La Grippe.
Mr. Victor Patneaude, 328 Madison
St, Topeka, Kan., writes:
“Twelve years ago I had a severe at-
tack of la grippe and I never really re
covered my health until two years azo.
I began a and it built up my
strength so t in a couple of months [
was able to go to work again.”
Preumonia Followed La Grippe.
| Mr. T. Barnecott, West Aylmer, On-
tario, Can., writes:
“Last winter I was ill with pneu-
monia after having la grippe. I took
Peruna for two months, when I became
quite well.”
Pe-ru-na—A Tonic After La Grippe.
Mrs. Chas. E. Wells, Sr., Delaware.
Ohio, writes: “After a severe attack of
la grippe. I took Peruna and found it a
very good tonic.”
The Nerv> of Him.
“Mr. Slopay, I understood you have
said that nothing could be more unsatis
factory.than a meal at my table?” said
the landlady.
Pix said that, but I have changed m;
mind. o
“Oh. then you think there are more
unsatisfactory things than a meal at wy
table?”
“Yes, ma’am; two meals.”—Houstoo
Post.
oo
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS.
PAZO OINTMENT fs guaranteed to cure soy
case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrud-
ing Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded
50c.
site cosseaiibitepniltieibes,
To Manufacture Folding Skates.
The latest idea in skates has the qual-
ity of sane inte compact shape, so that
it is possible to put them in a wailet.
and thus a pair of them may be earried
in the pocket of a coat or tucked away
im the interior of a lady’s muff.
—
$521,000 Annually for Libraries.
New York City spends $521,000 a year
‘for library purposes.
fae, That
No. 1 Hard Wheat
(63 Pounds to the Bushel)
Are situated in the Canadian West where
Homesteads of r60 acres can be obtained
free by ane willing oe = to
comply with the jomestend egulations
During the present year a large portion of
New Wheat Growing Territory
has been made accessible to markets by
the railway construction that has been
pushed forward so vigorously by the three
great railway companies.
For literature and particulars address the
Superintendent of lemigration. Ottawa, Canaca,
wo. ‘Soe me Canadian Government Ages!
- D. Scott, Superintendent of Immigration.
Ottawa, Canads, or T. O. R , Be
Callahan Block, Slnwaubee Wee. Ruthorized
Government Agents.
Please say where you saw this advertisement.
CATARRH
Preys
HAY | EVER
A Positive
cue” GATARRH
Ely’s Cream Balm froze BAL \
quickly absorbed. Mp SIRES OL
Gines Raber at Once. = oh» Atay
a eee soothes ’ Mi,
the ‘Sead ee 5
ee
away a Cold te the «al Se
Sore ihe Sauserct HAY FEVER
‘Taste and Smell. Full size 50cts., at Drug.
Gists or by mail ; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail
Ely Brothers, 56 Warren Street. New York
MOTHER GRAY'S
SWEET POWDERS
FOR CHILDREN.
‘A Certain ad
meh Ree gh
Mother orm. "7 i up Colds
See Roa ea «
THAT's Pun
relating urte tor
S5.W Gaceonr & sow, Mansuiucas, tase, a
Persia a Cotton Exporter.
Persia now grows 13,000 tons of cotto2
yearly and sends it all to Russia,
EES EE
ag Gi Upamd ;
; mm _|[q) For Infants and Children,
PAS tian The Kind You Have
r ANegetable Preparation for As- Aiways Bought
simiiating te Food andlieguia— Lar
| ting the Stomacks andBoweisof | Bears the
Bie a ee ree aie! fe Si tu
| Promotes Digestion Cheerful- ee ae “
| ness andRest.Contains neither |/4
| Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. || @ of ‘
| Nor NARCOTIC. i ]
| Teepe al Od Dir SAMUEL PUTCHER a
——————
Recholie Selte~
eee —
gS te
— o
U0! iONs ,revel
wodisesorsomr For Over
Fac Simile Signature of bak s
NEW YORK. i irty bars
ior )
palabra SJUCINI
| EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ;
CANADA’S GOOD TIMES.
eRe Oo eke ta ee a? el, ee ee Pe
216,000.
While it is Well to heed every word
of caution from the leaders in com-
merce and finance, and to avoid all
speculative ventures that lack a solid
business foundation, it is clearly. evi-
dent that there is no conspicuous weak
spot in Canada’s present era of pros-
perity. The ‘Toronto Globe says: “The
Dominion has in a commercial sense
plenty of money, and our leading finan-
cial institutions are in a position to
jend freely in the United States. The
chief productive enterprises of Canada
are not buoyed up by an era of danger-
ous speculation, but are following sub-
stantial business methods and finding
safe and continuous markets for their
goods. We are not bolstering up any
industries by extensive export bonuses
that must impoverish the people as a
whole and ultimately lead to collapse
through the failure of the artificial aid.
There is no extreme protection in Can-
ada such as would create great for-
tunes for a few at the expense of the
general public and lead to disruption
and catastrophe.
“The prosperity of Canada has no
such artificial foundation, being based
on a healthy and substantial expansion
of trade and industry, with a propor-
tionate extension of productive settle-
ment to new areas.
“It is true that we are borrowing
extensively for railway construction,
but every line will bring new territory
within the limits of profitable occupa-
tion, and will create prosperous settle
ments to bear the burdens and repay
the outlays. We are not exhausting
mineral resources, for it is quite rea-
sonable to assume that, although min-
eral wealth is never permanent, ours
will during the measurable future de-
velop a far greater productive capac-
ity than at present. Our timber wealth
can be made continuous by a judicious
policy. And agriculture, the real foun-
dation of our prosperity, is expanding
with every new expenditure on railway
construction. We are not in the flush
of a railway mania that could bring
its punishment through the useless du-
plication of lines. The gigantic rail-
way enterprises that now‘stimulate ev-
ery line of business in Canada will
create a new Dominion, and thus ren-
der easy the heavy burdens of debt
now freely assumed. Canada’s era of
prosperity has been unprecedented, but
there is no sign of weakness and no
cause for lack of confidence. While
our growth is normal and healthy, we
need have no alarm at its rapidity.”
This article might have told of the
growth that is taking place in Central
Canada, where thousands of Ameri-
cans have made their homes during the
past few years. The past calendar year
has given to Canada by immigration
an addition to its population of 216,000.
Of this the United States contributed
63,781. The agents of the Canadian
government, whose advertisement ap-
pears elsewhere, say that this number
will be largely increased during 1907.
Poor Color for Grass.
An Englishman who has been visiting
in the suburbs recently is hypercritical,
to say the least. Ever since he has been
visiting this gentleman he has been find-
ing fault with everything. The other
evening they were on the host’s beautiful
lawn. “This would be charming, Mr.
Blank, if it were not for the color of
the grass.” “Why, what is the matter
with the grass?” inquired the surprised
host. “Too green, too green,” sighed the
Englishman; “it spoils the color effect.”
—Boston Record.
eae
Germany’s Coal Production.
Germany's production of coal in July
amounted to 11,518,000 tons, which
compares with 10,727,00u tons for July,
1905. Coke production amounted to
1,707,000 tons, as compared with 1,421,-
000 tons. For seven months the produc-
tion of coal was 11,417,000 tons; brown
coal (lignite), 2,800,000 tons, and coke,
3,510,000 tons ahead of the parallel
months of 1905.
STILL MORE PROOF
That Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills Have
Cured Even the Most Stubborn
Cases of Rheumatism.
“When I was 2 boy of sixteen,” says
Mr. Otto H. Rose, a retired grocer, of
1226 Lexington Avenue, Indianapolis,
Ind., “I met with a serious accident
which injured the bone of my head
over the right eye. I recovered from
the accident to all appearances, but
not many years after I began to have
intense pains in the injured bone,
which came on every year and would
last from a few days to several weeks.
“I consulted the doctors who told
me that I was suffering from neural-
gia. The sight of my right eye was
affected, so that at times I could
scarcely see out of it, while both eyes
watered constantly. During these at-
‘tacks I was often dizzy from the ter-
rible pains. The pains came on every
morning and passed away in the after-
noon. I never suffered from the pain
at night.
(‘I tried without success to get re-
lief until a friend told me to try Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills. When I had
taken a few boxes I felt the pain
growing less intense and in a much
shorter time than I had hoped for I
was entirely cured. I have recom-
mended the pills to several persons,
who have used them with good results.
“My wife uses Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for nervous headaches and finds
them the best medicine she has ever
used as they give relief where all oth-
ers fail.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sola
by all druggists or. sent, postpaid on
receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six
boxes $2.50, by the Dr. Williams Medi-
cine Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
‘An instructive booklet, entitled
“Nervous Disorders,” will be sent free
on request to anyone interested.
An Old Woman’s Diary.
Mrs. Roffey, a widow of Newdigate,
near Dorking, who, on her 92nd _birth-
day, was entertained to dinner and cang
“ Hunting We Will Go” and “My Jid
Gray Mare,” has kept a diary which is
full of interesting figures.
She gives the cost of her maintenance
in the world to the date or her last birth-
day as £191 12s.—an average expendi-
ture of 8s per week. She has walked
221,480 miles. She walked to London
and back—fifty-four miles—when — she
was 17, to get married. The songs men-
tioned she has sung 1106 times. She
has in her long life consumed, among
other things, 134,320 cups of tea, 67,160
glasses of milk, 11,960 loaves, 50,730
potatoes, and has worn 165 bonnets and
hats, 80 shoes and boots, 41 dresses, 53
aprons and 34 shawls and wraps.—Lon-
don Evening Standard.
ee ee a
Irvine and the Lawver.
Sir Henry Irving was at one time a
witness ip a case of street robbery. He
had seen a sneak thief make off with a
girl’s pocketbook and he consented to
appear as a witness for the girl.
The thief’s lawyer was of the type
that roars and rants at witnesses and
attempts to break them down. He tried
this method on the distinguished actor,
“And at what hour, sir, did this hap-
pen?” asked the lawyez.
“LT think——” began Sir Henry, when
the lawyer interrupted with:
“It isn’t what you think, sir; it's what
you know that we want!”
“Bon’t you want to know what I
think?” mildly asked the actor.
“I do not,” the lawyer snapped out.
“Well, then,” said Sir Henry. “I
might as well leave the witness box. I
can’t talk without thinking. I’m not a
lawyer.”"—From the Caledonian.
—_-__—_
Taq Good to Let Un.
One day a party of merry boys start-
ed from Perth on a trip down the Tay
When they reached the firth the waves
made the Jittle craft toss and roll. QGne
of the company kept holding his hand
on_ his mouth.
One of the cronies exclaimed, “Let it
up Georgie and you'll feel better.”
“Na, na,” was the reply. “A canna dae
that, it’s Dewar’s whisky.”"—Auiomobile
Magazine.
Bookkeeping.
Modern business methods favor double-
entry bookkeeping. In the business col-
leges when the instructor asks what this
sort of bookkeeping is the pupil will
reply, winking and smiling: “‘Double-en-
try bookkeeping is the keeping of two
sets of books, one of which may be pro-
duced in court if required.”—Argonaut.
| MEN’S HATS IN CHURCH.
Their Care a Troublesome Question
Awaiting Solution.
It is a matter of historical record that
our forefathers in the Seventeenth cet-
tury wore their headgear at divine serv-
ice and also at dinner, but it has re-
mained for an English newspaper to tes-
tify that in its opinion gentlemen some-
times refrain from going to church be-
cause of their hats.
A daily paper has recently suggested
that the very irregular attendance of
upper class males at church may be duc
to the respect with which they regard
their headgear and the inadequate ac-
commodation provided in sacred edifices
for the safe bestowal of the cherished
“topper.”
They quote a Piccadilly hatter as say-
ing. “I receive more hats to block ou
Monday morning than on any other day
of the week, and judging from the ob-
servations I hear, | should say that the
owners benefit very litle by going to
church. If they place their hats under
the seats they are kicked by the occu-
pants of the pews behind, ladies being
almost as careless as mischievous boys
in this respect. Then if they deposit the
hats on the seats, some one—probably
the owner himself—is sure to sit upon
them. Wky con't every West Bnd
church have a cloakroom where gentle-
men can leave their hats? This sugges-
tion has often been made. A small sum
could be charged and_ devoted, let us
say, to the clothing of the heathen in
West Africa.” .
A West End viear who was asked if
this difficulty explained why men did not
go to church gave an unsympathetic an-
swer. “I cannot conceive,” he — said,
“even in these artificial and finnicking
days, of a man who would avoui going
to church out ef consideration for his
hat. At regular intervals male mem-
bers of my congregation complain to me
about this matter, and I invariably tell
them to wear caps.”
A verger at a neighboring church who
offered as a remedy the suggestion that
‘men should wear opera hats told the
amusing story of an experiment. “One
gentleman always used to put his hat
outside the door of his pew,” he said;
“others followed, until the whole aisle
| showed a row of silk hats. This was all
right till one night an old gentleman
who shortsighted and infirm came late.
He helped himself forward by resting
his hand on each pew. In this way he
kicked every hat into the aisle and
‘dribbled’ his way, so to speak, up to his
seat.’—Jondon Hatters’ Gazette.
THE WAGE WORKERS’ SHARE.
Some People Jump at Figures Which
Will Not Stand Analysis.
“Reckless statements regarding the
share received by the wage worker of
the wealth he helps to produce are fa-
miliar enough,” says the Masten Print-
er. “For instance, we are told that the
| census of 1900 shows that the average
annual wage paid is $437.50 and the
wealth produced is $2451 per capita per
annum.
“Now, the census does not show that
the average wage per annum Is as stated
and the per capita value of the wealth
produced is grossly exaggerated, at
Jeast as regards manufactured products.
“The total selling value of the manu-
factures produced in the United States
in the census year was $13,014,287,498.
The cost of raw material, of which many
million dollars worth was imported and
therefore not produced by __ American
workingmen, was $7,348,144,755.
“The miscellaneous expenses, rent,
fuel, ete., amounted to $1,028,035,611;
the wages paid to workers were $2,-
328,691,254, but adding the salaries of
@erks, foremen, etc., of whom the So-
cialistic statisticians take no account, the
wage account summed up $2,732.921.-
528. The gross outlay of the manufactur-
ers thus came to $11,109,101,894 and
their apparent gross profits were $1,-
905,185,604. :
“But from this various deductions
must be made. Exclusive of stockholders
in incorporated manufacturing compa-
nies there were 708,623 proprietors, the
yast majority of them, as the census ex-
pressly states, depending upon the
profits of their business for the reward
of their labor. Probably 95 per cent. of
them worked in their shops, contributing
to the production of the wealth of which
their wage earning fellow laborers are
wrongly described as the sole producers.
“If only 650,000 of these proprietors
were actual workers and if an average
of $1500 a year be allowed as a_ fair
wage for their labor the result would be
that $975,000,000 should be deducted
from the apparent gross profit, leaving
about $830,000,000 to the credit over
actual cost. But the manufacturing
plants represented an inyestment of
$9,874,664,087, and if 5 per cent. be al-
lowed for interest on the investment
the net profit would be a little over 4
per cent., out of which the deterioration
of the plant would have to be made
gvood.””
A Tone Hunt.
After more logs had been thrown on
the fire and pipes lighted the talk drifted
around to the Middle Fork of the Amer-
ican river and country roundabout. “The
strongese remembrance I have of that
country is of the big grizzly that chased
me out,” said Bill Bailey.
“I was a-pickin’ wild strawberries up
on the side of the mountain when some
pebbles, dirt an’ one thing and another
come a-clatterin’ down; you all know
how it is on a side hill when somethin
heavy is moyin’ above you. I looked
up and-s’elp me if there wasn’t a whoop-
in’ big grizzly a-stalkin’ me, yes, sir,
doin’ the sneak act right up on me.
You ought to seen me go down that
mountain; I'll bet my tracks was a rod
apart and in some places I didn’t leave
no tracks I jest nacherally went through
the air. But the bear was hittin’ only
the high places, too, and the faster I
went the faster he come. I could hear
his ‘whoof’ right behind me an’ some-
times I believed I felt his hot breath
on the back of my neck. But I fooled
him good and plenty.”
“How?”
“I'd crossed the river on my way up.
an’ while the ice would bear me I
knowed it wouldn't hold up no 1500
pound grizzly, so I headed for the river
and out on the ice. So did the bear but
not far out. He went through an’ I kep’
on; I didn’t even stop to see if he got
out. I was afeared he would.”
“Oh—: you said you was pickin’ straw-
berries.”
“So I was, so I was; but I didn’t tel:
all the story. for it would be too lons.
That bear chased me from August to
January.”—San Francisco Chronicle.
Too Precipitate.
An old Scotch woman once said to her
pastor:
“Dear me! Ministers mak’ muckle
ado aboot their hard work, but what's
two bits of sermons in the week tae
mak up? I could do’t myself.”
“Weel, Janet,” replied the minister.
good humoredly, “let's hear you try it.”
“Come awa’ wi’ a text, then,” quoth
she.
He repeated with emphasis: “It is
better to dwell in the corner of tive
housetop than with a brawling woman
and in a wide house.” Janet fired np
instantly. “What's that ye say, sir?
Dae ye intend anything personal?”
“Stop! Stop!” broke in her pastor:
“yon would never do for a_ minister.
Janet; you come ower soon to the appli-
cation.”
és WO gE
eS Fic EGE
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; chi gs and Elixir lesome rem ant _ of Functs the Ca QD f
if a product whi 2 (ea mar y is desired it sl and in eee ced ie a sai >
N universal sa ra has oan sg db: it should be ns of life Cnowl- C44 Z
: ac action, b ith the ay y the Calif remembered itd «6|6 Gas
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Peay \ of —Syry ways b iptive of gs and a = ey)
sa B ip ays be call th 2 2)
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Ree tame’ tthe Como ond to ote Bee Vf YW
Slee SES — prated mpagr-Calloran se I thn.
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aN? “aS or or thet package, \ js
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ZANZIBAR ON A DECLINE.
British Island Not So Important as It
Was.
The Island of Zanzibar has been un-
der British protection since November 4.
1890, It is the first storehouse and dis-
tributing center for trade of the whole
east African coast, although with the
development of the resources of the
mainland and increased shipping facili-
ties of the several mainland ports its
relative commercial importance is not
So great as in former years.
(aretha
ROBBED OF JEWELS.
Scciety Women at Newport and Other
Places Are Victims.
_It is calculated that society women at
Newport and other fashionable summer
resorts in the east were robbed of over
$300,000 worth of jewels in the season
just coming to an end. Very few of
them have been, like Mrs. Stuyvesant
Fish, fortunate enough to recover their
property.
—_—__——_—_—_—_—— *
NEW PHOTOGRAPHING APPARATUS.
Auto Machinery ‘Can Be Seen Without
Removing Cover.
An ingenious if not novel use has been
found for the kind of radiance discovered
by Roentgen. With its aid a photograph
has been taken showing the machinery
of an automobile without removing the
hood which covered it.
acest asipmeanecoaiaee
Merchants’ Excursions to Milwaukee.
The Milwaukee Association of Jobbers
and Manufacturers has been more than
gratified over the success of its buyers’
excursions this speiig: It goes to show
that the Merchants of the Northwest are
becoming more interested in Milwaukee
and appreciative of the fact that the lo-
cal jobbers and manufacturers are up to
the times and that orders placed with
them receive as close attention as in any
market of the country.
Any merchant in the Northwest is en-
titled to the low fare, not for himself
alone, but also for his wife or any one
actively interested in his business. Tick-
ets will be on sale as follows:
First Meeting—You can_ buy tickets to
Milwaukee February 16-24, and return
home February 18 to March 6.
Second Meeting—You can buy tickets
to Milwaukee March 2d to 10th, and re-
turn home March 4th to 20th.
Third Meeting—You can buy tickets to
Milwaukee March 16 to 24, and return
home March 18 to April 3.
Ask for a ticket to Milwaukee at full
fare and for a certificate (not a receipt)
for fare paid. This certificate wili en-
title you to one-fifth fare to return home
if validated at the Secretary's office, 4
University Building, at any time within
the dates fix. J.
Get the low rate and visit Milwaukee.
Japs Form Express Company.
A new Japanese shipping company has
been formed, with a capital of $1,000,-
000. It already passesses a fleet of
150,000 tens, and intends to establish
services to eastern Asia points and
America.
esata ial tae eee
How to Trap Wild Animals.
40-page trap book illustrated, picture 46
wild animals in vatural colors, also bar-
ometeré& calendar, aiso gun & trap catalog.
aie Binet on raw furs. All ont pos paid
for 10¢ stamps or silver. F KEE to those who
ship to or buy of us. Address Fur Dept.,
N. W. Hide & Fur Co.. Minneapolis, Minn:
ae eee
Many Subway Passengers.
New York City elevated and subway
car lines are now carrying the most pas-
sengers in their history, the number re-
cently reaching the high water mark of
1,486,777 in one day.
oo
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.
Take LAXATIVE BROMO. Quinine Tablets.
Druggists refund money if it falls to cure.
E. W.GROVE'S signature is on each box. 25c.
London’s Gas Consumption.
London’s gas consumption is over 600U
feet per year per head.
ae acer sips
MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING SYRUP for
Children teething; softens the gums, reduces ‘In-
flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25
cents a bottle.
—
—-India has 25,000,000 acres of irri-
gated lands.
THREE EPOCHS IN
A WOMAN’S LIFE
go} SF Fk om PY
ge s %, § aS ey
f waa Ww 8 g @ sy
Ne S = = oy BS =< 2s a4
ag 2 > et y y y rit :
Paint Your Floors
Nothing will lend more elegance and refinement to your home than nicely
painted floors. For your parlor, dining-room and bed-rooms a painted border
surrounding a rug gives you floor perfection, ee conditions and ali around
satisfaction. The painted border sets off the rug and gives the room that finished
appearance. The rug can be easily taken up for airing and cleaning.
is specially made for painting floors; is made of the kind of materials that stand
scrubbing with soap and water; is made to walk on, and holds its finish long after
other so-called floor paints have been worn off. Buffalo Floor Paints are made
in different shades, and are easily and quickly applied.
Ladies: To every lady who has a floor to finish and who sends us the
@ name of her dealer, we will send our booklet of valuable inform-
ation on floor finishing, which will surely interest you, and our beautiful silvered
Souvenir Buffalo-Head Hat Pin Free.
Butfialo, New York
Buffalo Oil Paint & Varnish Co. Gicago, minots
MRS. ELVA BARBER EDWARDS
There are three critical stages in a
woman's life which leave their mark
in her career. The first of these stages
is womanhood, or the change from a
care free girl to budding womanhood,
The second is motherhood, and the
third is Change of Life.
Perils surround each of these stages,
and most of the misery that comes
to women through ill health dates
from one or another of these im-
portant crises.
Women should remember that Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
made from native roots and herbs has
carried thousands of young girls over
the critical period of pane: has
prepared mothers for childbirth, and
in later years carried them safely
through the change of life more suc-
comeely than any other remedy in
the world. Thousands of testimonials
from grateful persons, two of which
are here published, substantiate this
fact beyond contradiction.
Mrs. George Walters of Woodlawn,
Tll. writes ‘
ee Tericmy duty to tell you of the good
‘I feel it my duty to. rou of
Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound
has done me in preparing for childbirth .
After suffering and losing my children a
friend advised me to try your valuabie me-
dicine, and the result was that Ihad very
little inconvenience, a quick recovery and
During its long record of mo!
Ez INDIAN RELIOS WANTED, of copper
‘and stone. Write and tell me what you have.
H. P. HAMILTON, Twe Rivers, Wis
Soedtess Apple Tesee exch 8, Fro cosion, asras
‘wanted. Write Western Nurseries, Greenwood, Mo
———————
= ss Sa os
TMi Sag
Kee SS
aac
MRS. GEORGE WALTERS
ashealthy a child as can be found anywhere.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
is a blessing to all expectant mothers.
Mrs, Elva Barber Edwards of
Cathlamet, Wash., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
“I want to tell bow Lydia E. Pink-
ham's BL vectors Compound” carried _
Eas Sliteoat any Goatie whatever; ates
cod ~ of a very severe resp a
cannot sa} enough In praise Ww ‘our
medicine =A done for a .
What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound did for Mrs. Walters and
Mrs. Edwards it will do for other wo-
men in their condition. Every suf-
fering woman in the United States
is asked to accept the following in-
vitation. It is free, will bring you
health and may save your life,
Mrs. Pinkham’s Invitation to Womca.
Women suffering from any form of
female weakness are invited to
promptly communicate with Mrs.
Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the
symptoms given, the tronble may be
located and the quickest and surest
way of recovery advised. Out of her
vast volume of experience in treating
female ills Mrs. Pinkham praneny.
has the very knowledge that wi
help your case. Her advice is free
and helpful.
9 than thirty years its long list of
es Se Compound to
y fair minded person.
moound Makes Sick Women Well.
th 5 5 rere Cars
eS 2 ee
| a this paper.
aa pen’
—— EF Ui
I
SS OR
Su \" L7
A \ GARR
THE INTERNATIONAL UNION CIGAR STORE
J. B. CLANTON, Prop.
BUSINESS LUNCH AT ALL HOURS
325 Wells Street, Milwa
Wells Street, Milwa
325 Wells Street, Milwaukee
Telephone 3814 Grand.
P. CANAR.
CANAR LAUNDRY
522 State St. Telepho
W.T.G.
LAW
NOTARY
Rooms 216-217-211
TEL. GR
14 Grand Avenue,
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING
A Delightfully Perfumed Hair Po
PREPARED ESPECIALLY FOR COLORED PE
This old, reliable preparation has constant use for over ten years, and is thousands of homes. It is guaranteed for hair soft, pliant and glossy, enabling up in any style consistent with its length.
By supplying the needed oils direct HAIR DRESSING tones up, invigorating hair from falling out, increases its splitting and breaking off at the ends.
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING rests and Scaling of the Scalp, etc.
There is nothing experimental about thoroughly tested and is endorsed by the be convinced that it does all and more t
CANAR BROOK LAUNDRY
State St. Telephone Main 357 Milwaukee
V.T.GREEN
LAWYER
NOTARY PUBLIC
Emps 216-217-218 Empire Build
TEL. GRAND 2235.
Grand Avenue, Milwaukee, W
ELSON'S
HAIR
DRESSING
Only Perfumed Hair Pomade
SPECIALLY FOR COLORED PEOPLE.
Available preparation has been in
over ten years, and is considered a necessary
drug. It is guaranteed free from all injurious drugs.
HAIR DRESSING makes harsh, stubborn,
dent and glossy, enables you to comb it with e-
consistent with its length. It is perfectly safe
for the needed oils directly to the roots of the hair.
DRESSING tones up, invigorates and nourishes the s-
ing out, increases its growth, and prevents
breaking off at the ends, and gives the hair new
HAIR DRESSING removes Dandruff, cures T
the Scalp, etc.
Nothing experimental about Nelson's Hair Dressin-
d and is endorsed by thousands of satisfied users.
That it does all and more than what we claim for it.
THOSE WHO KNOW HAVE TO
W.T.GREEN LAWYER NOTARY PUBLIC Rooms 216-217-218 Empire Building TEL. GRAND 2235. 14 Grand Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis.
NELSON'S
HAIR
DRESSING
A Delightfully Perfumed Hair Pomade
PREPARED ESPECIALLY FOR COLORED PEOPLE.
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING makes harsh, stubborn, kinky, curly hair soft, pliant and glossy, enables you to comb it with ease and to do it up in any style consistent with its length. It is perfectly safe and harmless. By supplying the needed oils directly to the roots of the hair, NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING tones up, invigorates and nourishes the scalp, stops the hair from falling out, increases its growth, and prevents the hair from splitting and breaking off at the ends, and gives the hair new life and vigor. NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING removes Dandruff, cures Tetter, Itching and Scaling of the Scalp, etc. There is nothing experimental about Nelson's Hair Dressing; it has been thoroughly tested and is endorsed by thousands of satisfied users. Try a box and be convinced that it does all and more than what we claim for it.
Miss Isabelle Byrd, Battle Creek, Michigan, writes: "I recommend it wherever I go. It has done wonders for me."
Miss Willie L. Griffey, McMinnville, Tenn., writes: "I have used your Nelson's Hair Dressing for nearly four years and would not be without it. It is the most wonderful beautifier on the market for colored people. There are others, but none like Nelson's."
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is put at a cannot get it at your drug store, send us.
We want good agents (male or female)
Address NELSON MANUFACTURE
Girl Ticket Sellers.
AIR DRESSING is put up in 4-ounce square tie at all drug stores for 25c. your drug store, send us 30c. in stamps and we will food agents (male or female). Write for prices, LSON MANUFACTURING CO., Richmond
NELSON'S HAIR DRESSING is put up in 4-ounce square tin boxes and sold at all drug stores for 25c. a box. If you cannot get it at your drug store, send us 30c. in stamps and we will mail you a box. We want good agents (male or female). Write for prices, terms, etc. Address NELSON MANUFACTURING CO., Richmond, Virginia.
Girls will sell tickets to patrons of the Market street elevated road. The girls will be in absolute charge of the ticket offices along the elevated road and subway line, the tickets being lifted by an automatic turnstile. All plans for having the young women assume their duties have been made, and the corps of ticket sellers has been chosen. The decision of the Rapid Transit management was not made public until
---
---
Milwaukee
G. CANAR.
R BROS.
DRY
ne Main 357 Milwaukee.
GREEN
WYER
PUBLIC
B Empire Building
AND 2235.
Milwaukee, Wis.
made
OPLE.
seen in
considered a necessary toilet article in
free from all injurious drugs or chemicals.
makes harsh, stubborn, kinky, curly
you to comb it with ease and to do it
with. It is perfectly safe and harmless.
try to the roots of the hair, NELSON'S
ates and nourishes the scalp, stops the
growth, and prevents the hair from
and gives the hair new life and vigor.
moves Dandruff, cures Tetter, Itching
at Nelson's Hair Dressing; it has been
thousands of satisfied users. Try a box and
what we claim for it.
NOW HAVE TO SAY:
Mrs. C. Covenia, Fernandina, Florida, writes: "I have been an agent for your Nelson's Hair Dressing for nearly four months. It is the best selling article I ever sold."
Cora Resnoves, Indianapolis, Ind., writes: "It is the only Hair Dressing that the colored people ought to use. It is the only one that does my hair any good."
It up in 4-ounce square tin boxes and sold drug stores for 25c. a box. If you 20c. in stamps and we will mail you a box. male). Write for prices, terms, etc.
RING CO., Richmond, Virginia.
the necessary number had been obtained. There is only one other large city in which girls are employed as ticket sellers, and that is Brooklyn. Before deciding to employ this class of help representatives of the company went to Brooklyn and held conferences with officials of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit company. The strongest argument in support of their employment is the dexterity with which they can handle large numbers of tickets.—Philadelphia public Ledger.
---
SOLDIERS' STORIES.
ENTERTAINING REMINISCENCES OF THE WAR.
Graphic Account of Stirring Scenes Witnessed on the Battlefield and in Camp-Veterans of the Rebellion Recite Experiences of Thrilling Nature.
In the year 1864, by sentence of court martial for desertion, some three or four soldiers were to be shot at Fort McHenry, Baltimore, and the day of execution was fixed and almost at hand.
Among the soldiers sentenced to death was one with a wife and three small children, in whose behalf strong pressure had bene brought to bear for mitigation of sentence, but without avail. The night before the morning on which the execution was to take place at sunrise, the wife of the soldier, and her children, came to Washington to intercede in person with the President if she could in any way gain his presence, for the life of her husband and the father of her little ones.
Not familiar with even the ordinary methods of reaching the President, a stranger to every one, and guided only by a hope born of despair, and the faithfulness of a true wife and mother this woman had come to make a last effort and appeal.
By good fortune she was guided in some manner to the very person, and perhaps the only unofficial person who could have secured her at that hour of the night an audience with the President. This person was Mr. C., who was on terms of intimacy with Mr. Lincoln, frequently accompanying him on visits to the army at the front, and had access to him at any hour of the day or night.
The case of itself was an ordinary one, and it was only the great anguish of the wife that induced Mr. C. to take any interest in it; but his strong and sympathetic nature once aroused, he undertook to conduct her to Lincoln's presence, even at so late an hour, and let her make such an appeal as the nature of her woes would prompt, and trust to its effect on the President.
So taking a carriage, and in it the wife and children, he was driven rapidly to the residence of Mr. Lincoln, at the Soldiers' Home, where he was temporarily residing, and being permitted to pass the guard, was soon within the cottage.
Mr. Lincoln's sleeping room was on the first floor, the entrance to which communicated with the hall. Mr. C. rapped on the door, in response to which he was asked what was wanted. He announced himself and requested Lincoln to step to the door, as he had a matter of life or death to present.
Lincoln dressed only in a long night wrapper and slippers, went to the door as requested, and Mr. C. made known the object of his visit.
The President remonstrated with him him for such an unseemly hour and place, and refused to interfere in the matter at all. Mr. C. pressed the case, and appealed to the President's sympathy, but to no purpose, as the President became more and more determined in his manner, and at last flatly refused to take any action whatever.
At this moment the wife, whom Lincoln had not before known, was so close at hand, came forward with her babe in her arms, and with her other children at her side, and there in the midnight hour, kneeling at the feet of that tall and wrapped form, they together poured out their piteous appeal for the life of the husband and the father.
And not in vain, for this was more than his great nature could stand. Brushing away a tear and raising the woman to her feet, he hurriedly turned aside, passed to a table and wrote this telegram:
"The commanding officer at Fort McHenry will suspend the execution of all prisoners sentenced to be shot. A. LINCOLN." And so the lives of all four were saved.
With Bayonets Fixed.
On the same day the Second Michigan left their State, June 6, 1861, the Nineteenth New York (of which I was a member and which was raised in Auburn, the home of W. S. Seward, Lincoln's Secretary of War, left Elmira for Washington by way of Baltimore. We reached the city on the 7th, early in the afternoon. From a passing train which we met on the way we had made up our minds that the regiment's baptismal fire was probably at hand, and the idea was received by the boys with a spirit of great eagerness for the fray. In efficiency and drill we were above the average of new regiments. Two companies were made up mostly from the State Militia, whose officers, commissioned and non-commissioned, were drilled soldiers; three more companies were commanded by ex-captains of independent companies, and all had been drilling hard for weeks.
Our colonel, John S. Clark, had arready done service for the government which entitled him to the ranks of the heroic. When the Southern sympathizers of Maryland cut the telegraph wires, stopped the trains, burned or guarded the bridges so that all communication with the North was cut off, the government sent out eleven private messengers, all of whom were captured or sent back. Colonel Clark was in Washington at this time. He had served in Cassius M. Clay's famous battalion in the defense of the Capital City, and hearing of the predicament of the
government, offered his services as messenger. He got through to Annapolis, and delivered to General Butler, who was there with the Eighth Massachusetts, President Lincoln's orders to come through by any route as quickly as possible. Soon after this Colonel Clark returned to his home in Auburn, N. Y., and was unanimously elected colonel of the first regiment raised there. It is but the truth to say right here that in our regiment every man, from Colonel Clark down to the private in the ranks, felt perfectly able to take care of himself.
A few miles outside Baltimore the train was stopped and three rounds of ammunition given each man. We were ordered to load, which we did, and then resumed our places in the cars. At the head of Eutaw street the train stopped and we debarked, forming columns by platoons. While this was being done a crowd gathered, and some rather disagreeable remarks were made, mixed with cheers for Jeff Davis. We had been drilled according to Scott's Manual, the butt of the gun resting in the left hand when at shoulder. We were standing in this position when the command was given to "Order arms!" With a noise like the falling of some heavy solid body the butts of 730 muskets struck the ground as one gun, and with a loud clash 730 bayonets sprang to their places, while firmness and resolution were expressed on every countenance. This seemed to affect the Baltimorean nerve, and silence reigned for a time. With colors flung to the breeze we took up the line of march to the Washington Depot. Soon the roughs in the crowd grew bold and renewed their insolence, but the coolness and determination of the men with their capped muskets was sufficient to prevent serious trouble. At the sight of the National Flag floating over the Eutaw House the regiment halted and gave three rousing cheers, and after this the crowd was perfectly quiet. The police of the city said afterward that undoubtedly the appearance and steadiness of the men saved them from an attack by the rough element, who were all ready to pitch into anything from Yankeeland. We reached the depot before noon, and were soon aboard the cars and off to Washington, no harm having been done to any one. David Thompson, Pittsford, N. Y., in National Tribune.
The Ludicrous and the Heroic. An incident that combines the ludicrous with the heroic is related as having taken place at Charlotte the next day after the treaty of surrender between General Johnston and General Sherman. General Breckinridge, then Secretary of War, assisted in the negotiations. In fact, the celebrated armistice between Sherman and Johnston was largely the work of Secretary Breckinridge.
After Breckinridge returned to Charlotte he held a council with some of the officers, and then rode out to camp and made a speech, in which the terms of surrender was explained by him. He was given a cordial welcome and closed his remarks in his characteristic manner, felicitously alluding to the close of the struggle for Southern independence, though it was plain his feelings were of a contrary nature. After his speech a soldier who had not heard the General's remarks, but had been informed that a surrender had been agreed upon, rode up, saluted General Breckinridge and begged the privilege of asking him a few questions. "General Breckinridge," said he, "is it true that arrangements have been agreed upon for a surrender which includes all Confederate troops on this side of the Mississippi?"
"It is true," said General Breckinridge, "and the terms are such as should be accepted."
"Well, General, I shall not accept or be bound by them," said the plucky Southerner. Drawing himself up to his full height, the fire flashing from his dark eyes, he repeated: "I shall not accept them; the rest of the army can do as they please, but for me, the sun shines as brightly on the other side of the Rio Grande as here." And, waving his hand to the boys, he put spurs to his mule, who also bade defiance to the surrender in a loud sawfile note. The last seen of the unrepentant Confederate he was belaboring his mule with his slouch hat, which, with tail aloft, was making reasonably good time for a mule toward the Rio Grande, where, no doubt, the soldier thought he would land some time that evening.
Antietam.
But for the most terrific battle in the annals of American wars a pretty little stream that flows through the heart of Maryland would be unknown beyond its immediate locality. Winding sluggishly down from the Pennsylvania hills, it bends romantically in its course, now past the ancient mill, under its quaint bridges, stone-arched, singing on its way through sun and shadow and, like Tennyson's brook, going on forever.
There is no more picturesque part of our country than that through which the Antietam flows. It skirts the most beautiful farms of Maryland, laves the rounded limbs of the kine while they drink, in the shadows of the trees that line its banks, and finally loses itself in the broad Potomac.
Time was, and not very long ago, when the farmers of the Antietam, fording its shallows, dreamed not of the great drama to be enacted there. No tourists from afar sought this entrancing region and the bare-footed fisher-boy, also oblivious of its beauties, angled for eel with the patience of the renowned Izaak Walton.
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