{ title: 'The Tupper Lake herald. (Tupper Lake, N.Y.) 1895-1924, February 24, 1911, Page 9, Image 9', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070316/1911-02-24/ed-1/seq-9/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070316/1911-02-24/ed-1/seq-9.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070316/1911-02-24/ed-1/seq-9/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn87070316/1911-02-24/ed-1/seq-9/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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lP ^R* T.;f5#l **W3f S—2S0 BU. Par Acr«. ie swosn to yiekl <,t n.„ •wt« Co.. W«Hh.. IU.JV uveiiated Whit* Un,,:,,,,, \ iiinilaume'80 nciv f, lr , f .,: ro 141 lm«., 110 b w , ,„ l)t «i farmers scatter*! H,;',^ ediKice Hurley, ]'] \ t, Potatoes, fJniwKH •„,.1 «UH thcworhl nv., r j , r ,, tremendous yieldi^ ,„..,,* ly the larReat grow.™ of i world. i ' og bristling With *.<,,] nskinjr, or send \Q r j n 10 packages of'farm s , t rarities, including ,-,}„,,, • * o^ST Avith ^ f^w »w Seed Co.. 182 SouW* Hu. u * teady With Proof, leat preacher In Oor, custom of telling the ws In hia prayers, recwj ?titlon for help against >f wickedness in hi 8 to, tatement: great Jehovah, crime !«, ise. It Is becomliiK daily. I can prove It to - T :s.\—Everybody's Magazb ammercial Anxiety. maker must be the mo B t anufacturers.\ )?\ B there Is always the m \ trike in his works.\ r ChlUm AM Sickly. •ay'* Bwest Powders for I-MM. >UU in 14 hoars, relieve ir *i»e, atoauhch trouble., WHO, io»e and resale** the bowcs, as. They are so ptatuui to lea are ettsn t>e ba-:.*«• m del •field Tea t» \QgguUaell n> ioes not depend for in n concentration. . e Natural ^axative t^ bowels jest as et—- sis just as>lature wot ithartics act like pcpp ostrils. Soon the boi calloused that one mu 'the dose. et boa. ie ooat»-ot area-aim-. •I «X the gosmsae is asMtoa C C ft ER COOPER' UTILIZERS st for nearly a century! t today. Special mix] >r special crops. Befor ; your orders write fc and terms. •••Ftrtilwr, llllreedway.NswTs r Coopmr't Farm Bom DmU »«T«*, a*^w* sisis^wt untry School for Ms JS* •A l y Uff> \ «M-«<f-n»r »•»** «> »?wf.5* *££** »••£>»» StedwfiSiTw. »4 Art. IW BAMS Mi BUS WBfNB •algla, Sciatica 2n2T rgfeod**. Made bf a •a*mUt ( kta* 878 FaltonSt., Brooklyn.NfJ \or COUCl ^•»_NEW_YORK t 'NO. 8-191 tj ENTHAN^ASTORi^ ^rtx MOM EmaocTLir A»t> AKE, OF PACKAC* 5 ^ * PERFECT FAMILY LAXATIVf, ttURAL, STRENGTHENING. WAT AFTER-EFFECTS AND WtTHOUT °0^ NOT INTERFERE IN ANY M>ED tY MILLIONS OF WELL. *.PERSONAL LWS. TO GET m n^cruREo ar THB JYRUP m t-^. •'. E MLE HI IE If EW YORK. — \1 needed about 100 pounds or so ex- tra weight, and so, when I aaw her in the crowd aa we were getting ready to go up in the balloon, 1 ask- ed her to take the trip with me—I had known for a long time that she want- ed to have a flight in the air.\ •nd so Dr. Sidney B. Stowell took Miss Blanche lulse \up In a balloon, boys,\ to her when they were 10,000 [the air while the other man in »t waa looking the other way; they are married! >well tried something differ- might have pTtipoeed to her atomobUe, or on th* deck of a moonlight, or even in the on the back porch; in other might have proposed tint as iff \Ktmr u*m haw* propositi the npur of the momeift ae air aa the scene in which his wooing to a climax—and it. his good airship landed In a ire he had the promise; the easy, thanks to this new way ilng her. \The 100 pounds or* it\ is now Mrs. Stowell. beginning It looked as,.if\ Dr. stood little chance. Mlsa Hul- rhter of Schuyler Hulse, of Id* Mui, waa one of the belles Berkahlres. Dr. StdweH Tree- id one day Iss Hulse. Lure of the City Felt ragtb he1 gained the coveted ln- 'toTealir ^Thahandsome young in took the very first oppor- The visits continued until OASL ie young woman remarked la a (off-hand manner, 'Tm going to Tork to study nursing.\ tl\ answered Dr. Stowell, bare- ling a nan. ^ ^ _ __ 1^ rattled on Mlaa Hulae, \lt*e led. I'm going to Bellevue there and I shall take the full Wont It be finer Hulse left Ptttsfleld soon after- and Dr. Stowell never got the he longed for. He stayed at while Miss Hulse went to New Automobling had always been lobby, but folks had the balloon in Plttafledd Just then and Dr. rell got It, too. He Joined the Club of Plttafleld—the premier for the sport in the east, with gas works and lta host of aero- . Soon he had the \bug aa say. going to qualify aa an air-pilot,\ Dr. Stowell to bis friends, and rent about it in a matter-of-fact way, with each-flight, making >rds and studying the science inautics as if ne Intended to It his life work. essayed the air for the first time, up aa a paaaenger with William I Sleet The wind was high and ir were blown to ' Tyngsboro, but they landed In safety after trip through the clouds. That his qualification for air-pilot ' sr the rules of the Aero Club of )ld a candidate must make six with at least .one passenger, ie of the flights must be at All these Dr. Stowell made, wlthout-peril. Peril In Night Flight, night flight waa punctuated by lflc thunderstorm in which the waa In momentary peril of be> ruck by lightning. In another he waa blown across the State », dipped down till be waters of the Hudson river, rise again and bang against :k-bound sldel of the Palisades. ie by one, the flights were made was but one left, and then he become a full-fledged captain of He could fly alone now, if he or take a person, decided that hia first pasienger be John P. Manning of Pitta- It chanced that day that Miss waa In Plttsfleld too, on leave mce from the hospital in New She went to see the balloon and was In the crowd that gath- about the tugging thing of silk that half a hundred men could hold down. By.JhjuJLchatted and laughed to- ir before things were ready, and Hulse stood closet to the basket the cast-off. Dr. Stowell was setting things to rights and get- everytning ship-shape when he that his airship-seemed even >uoyant, It was plain to hts ex- inced eye that she would Bhooti the air like a rocket—something every aeronaut dreads, glanced about. There was no ballast—yea, there was Miss Hul- who stood smfrjng by the side of basket to watch Dr. Stowell make upward shoot into the air. Per- )B something else beside mere l?al- was in hia mind too. ^..s*.. »erhap8 there was something!J% a Ir of merry eyes! , Invitation Accepted.' \ Anyway^ihe budding man of the air ide up his mind right then and there. AGE OF THE EARTH COMPUTED Calculation Baaed on Quantity of 8alta In Sea Water Makes It Hundred Million Years. An estimate based on a comparison of the quantity of salts In sea water with the quantity continuously sup- plied by the inflow, shows that nearly A hundred million years passed before the oceans attained their present con- dition. According to this estimate, dating from the time when the waters of the great deep condensed to form oceans, the. minimum age of the earth is one hundred million years. ' , Sir Archibald Gelkie calculates tlvs age of the earth by the time occupied in the forming of the stratified or sedimentary layers of the terrestrial cruet. Judging the formations of the remote past by relatively recent for- mations, he declares that a period of ( between thirty centuries and two hun- dred centuries must have passed dur- ing the formation of every depth of a meter; the tune* having -varied accord- ing to the composition of the strata. Admitting that estimate, if the total thickness of all the strata Is 80,000 meters, as It la supposed to be, be- tween ninety sjuHSon and six h||a|red million years were consumed in the course of the earth's stratiflcatton. But science gives another way to es- timate the age of the earth. On the earth's surface there is a very, nen- dble compensation between the heat that the sun sends us and the heat that the terrestrial crust loses by radiation from ita surface toward ©old and infinite space. While the crest Is losing by radiation, the at the The hetpera were ready to let go and cast off. \Oh Mlaa Hulse,\ sang out Dr. Sto- well, \Just a minute, please. Remem- ber what you asked me the other day t Here's your chance. We need a, little ballast; Want to come along T' \In a minute!\ laughed Miss Hulae. Her mother wma~tasre, an* several of her friends. They protested. Why, there were two in the basket of the •alleon already, and a trip In the air waa most dangerous, and the sky looked threatening and—oh, i t was al- together too perilous. • For answer to all these objections the pretty girl let herself be helped into the wicker basket that hung un- der the swaying bag of gas, and in a minute more the lines were loosed. Dp, up, shot the airship Into the blue. The crowd cheered for a moment, but held its breath when the haloon hit into a cross current and barely missed ending lta trip then- and there. It missed the tall chimney of a factory, Just escaping disaster by a foot or two. Then began In earnest the flight into the turquoise of the sky. In a Jiffy the balloon was only a dot among the clouds. The last of the crowd saw them, the new-fledged pilot and his two passengers were leaning over the side of the basket waving their hands at the people be- low—three midgets moving under a big blue bowl. Landing Safely Made.' That night a wire to the club brought the news that a landing had been made safely 25 miles away, at Shelburne Falls, but nothing was said of the really important feature of the trip. Nor was Dr. Stbwell's \ascen- sion card,\ any more enlightening.. la view of subsequent events, however, this card, which heJlled with the rec- ords of the club aa* required by the rules, Is of interest. If an airman of the future were to find this card in looking up the records of balloon- ing in the early twentieth century he would find that It was to all appear- ances a most uneventful trip. - As the card runs: \Ascension No. 7. \Balloon. Plttafleld. Heart of Berk- shires. \Prom \To Shelburne Falls. \Time up, 10:45- a. m. Down 1 P na. ^ \In air, S hours 86 minutes. Miles. 25. ) \Altitude 10.000 feet \Weather fair. Temperature, 78. \Wind southwest. \Course northwest \Passengers Miss Blanche Hulse, John Parker Manning. - \Pilot Dr. Sidney S. Stowell.\ As far as ballooning went, that gave Dr. Stowell an ample record. The 'miles made, the hours of flight the carrying of passengers were now all down In black and white, but certain details qtdte important, were-wholly. omltted. T ' • ^E> _ ':'vi was too busy/leaning over the side of the basket taking my photo- tgraphs,\ said Mr. Manning, \to guess what was going on. But I could di- vine without more than a look thajt my attention to things on earth be- low would be appreciated by the other 1 passengers.\ Of this Dr. Stowell says: \Whatever John Manning may say about it, It he admits he looked over the edge of the basket, that eliminates him as the only witness of whatever proposition I submitted to the then Miss Hulse, We were up about two miles, and so with.his observation accounted for I think \we can safely say we were beyond the attention of unsympathetic tnlrd parties. Just \Ballast\ As for Inviting Miss Hulse, that ta simple enough. 1 needed about 100 pounds or so extra weight, an! so when I saw her la the crowd as we were getting ready to go up I asked her to take the trip with me. for J had known for a long time {hat she wished the experience of a night It was an Ideal day for H, and we sailed over some of. the most beautiful spots In the Berkahires, Including the es- tate of Senator Crane, In the town of Windsor. \The most interesting part of the flight? WeU. t dropped from the alti- tude of 10,000 feet by loosening the appendix, cord instead of pulling the rip eord, and let the, balloon* come down In mushroom shape as a para- chute. My passengers didn't mind, and we landed gently on the Nelson farm, only seven miles from the rail- road station at Shelburne Falls. Miss Hulse waa a first rate air sailor, and as Mrs. Stowell she will accompany me on flights this summer.\ The marriage waa performed by Ret. C. Rexford Raymon, pastor of the South Congregational church in Brooklyn. As for the honeymoon, the bride says: , \I shall be glad to go up again with the coming of warm weather. I enjoy flying. Afraid? Why, that never en- tered my head when Dr. Stowell was the pilot.\—New York World. earth Is slowly but uraMKSsadft/ coot itqg .ant m it .nvas\ .giBrtsssTV avsv uuctlng. The contraction onuses the center to recede or slip away from the surface of the cruet and the crust, no longer supported by the center, sinks here and there, forming folds similar to the wrinkles on a withered apple. These folds or wrinkles are the moun- tain chains. The total superficies of the mountain chains constitutes about 1ft per cent, of the total surface of the globe. This fact leads to the In- ference that the radius of the earth has shrunk a little less than one-nun- dredth of lis niimltfve lensrth. The contraction of the earth's can- ter corresponds to a cooling of about three hundred degrees. According to this calculation, at least' one hundred millions of years, and at most two thousand millions of years, must have pasaed, alnoe the water condensed on the surface of the solid crust. motorists seem to think the ordinary pedestrians are be- neath them. Harry—WeU, they.often are. No harmful drugs in Garfield Tea, Na- ture's laxative—it is composed wholly of clean, sweet, health-giving Herbs! When you find exceBB of speech look for shortage on sight. Xn. Wlnalow*s SoothtDg- Bjrup for Cntldrea toothing, eoffcma the [uni, r«du<H»o iaflftmiik- ttoo, aUoye polo. eur«a wlud i-ollc. Sta • botUo. One might fight a follow the truth. lie and sail not* To correct disorder* of the liver, take Qsrneld Tea, the Herb Laxative. A good home is the best exposition I heaven. A Dty Week. Represents**** Uvlnaseai of Oeon gia, who, disgusted at ti>a bath-toll debate in the house reosstly, proposed that a little money nilgai be made by renting the bath tubs out, said recent, ly, apropos of this subject; \We are now a good deal like BIB Bprtggins on a zero morning. \Bill's valet entered bis bedroom one January morning and said with a shiver: \'Will you take your bath hot or cold, sir?' '\Thank you,' said Bill; Til take It for granted.'\ Education va. instinct Jacob Wendell Jr., who plays thex part of the dog in Maeterlinck's dra* ma, was dining in a restaurant recent- ly when a man, recognizing him as the> actor, approached and said: \Pardon me, but you take the park of the dog in \The Blue Bird,' do yon not? Of course, you don't know it, but I can really bark lots more Ukn a dog than you.\ \Well you see,\ answered Wendell, \I had to learn.\—Success Taking Garfield Tea wfll prevent the se> orrence of sick-headache, iadnisraluu sas] cuirence . r . bilious attacks. All druggists. Preaching produces so little practloe) because people look on it aa a tormanoe. TO cvan A COLD or oxn DAY You never catch up with a man ny trying to get even with him. RECORDS MESSAGES BY WIRE — • « —!«••*.. Combination Typewriter Writes ths Missive Instantly at Other End of Line. In the Wrong Pew. When Attorney George Blchelberger attends the annual meeting of the Union club Saturday night hell feel much mere at home in the club build- ing than he did a week ago, when he called .there, being under the misap- prehension that the annual gathering was set for that evening. \Where's the meeting?** he aaked, as he handed hts coat and \hat to a bellboy. The boy named a room and Mr. Blchelberger lightly ran up the stairs to the place appointed. There he found quite a choice little meeting, but not nearly as lairge as he had anticipated. But he was soon to be deceived, for one of hia friends, sauntering over in his direction, said: *i didn't know you were a Yale man.** \Why replied the attorney. \Tm sure I never said I was. Why, what's upr ' \Oh said the friend, as he wan- dered away, \nothing much. Only* thiris a meeting of the Yale club.\ Whereupon Blchelberger went down- stairs and spent the remainder of the evening signing hia name to aupply checks.—Cleveland Leader. r \Click click, clickety clicks . Translated into \dot dash, dot, dash, dash dot\ that may mean.the safety or wreck of a train, the rise or fall of stock, the death of a loved one or the birth of an heir. Only those train- ed in the Morse code can know. But through the inventive genius of Dr. Q. A. Cardwell there has beenrmanufaev^j^ tured a telegraph typewriter, which does all the things which a telegraph MM, a telegraph operator and a type- writer In combination can do and writes the message instantly at the oth- er end of the line, whether anyone Is there or not The American telegraph typewriter exhibited at the electrical show lb the Coliseum appears to be an ordinary typewriter carrying a continuous roll of paper, which la automatically fed and may be torn off when a message Is written. Connected with an ordinary tele- phone or telegraph wire in active use, it does not in any way Interfere with the usual working of the wise nor the transmission of messages, but in addl- toin thereto it gives a positive Record of each message sent over the type- writer, and if desired does away en- tirely with telegraph operator,- a girl who can use the ordinary machine sending all messages, while the ma- chine receives messages automatically, no attention being needed, except to cut off the paper with the message.— ChicagoEfalmtfieYr / Not as Bad as He Had Feared. \You are as false,\ she cried, \as false as—as—\ , \As false as what?\ he tauntingly asked. \As false as hell!\ she hissed. \Oh. I was afraid you were going to call me as false as the complexion -you are wearing.\—Exchange. , Maine's Only Barn With a Clock. Kennebunkport claims the only barn with a clock in Maine. The farm la known for miles around as the \Clock Emmons place,' by that name since the big clocsj was installed in the top of the barn twenty years ago. It Is a landmark for miles around The timepiece answers for the town clock and is so accurate that the farm- ers set their watches by it It can.be for quite\ a long distance .and! causes strangers when they eight it for the first time to stare In abate- ment, for the last place In the world one would expect to see a full grown ciock is on the top of a barn. The farm buildings are owned by Grosse fcmmons and Byron Emmons of Law- rence, Mass. Theyjufi. it for a coun- try residencey-stopplng here a few nonths in the summer. It was for- overly owned by, their father, the late rhomas William Emmons of Lawrence. The buildings are more than a cen- tury old and were formerly owned by Peter Jackson. t The Mistake of the Boy. Chelsea claims to have a woman who Is entitled to a place In the Hall Of Fame. She lives on Gardner street* and Saturday night ordered a bottle of medicine from a drug store. The. proprietor sent an errand boy with the parcel, for which the woman paid him 39 cents. Upon hia return to the store the boy,, discovered that one of the coin* which the woman had given him wfas a |1.50 gold piece. He went back through the pouring rain, rang the bell and tendered the coin, explain- ing that\she had given it to him in pla<» of la penny. \Why I had no gold piece,\ she piled,, \Someone must have given It to mei for a penny. Isn't that lovely! I owe you a cent, then. Here.\ And giving the boy a cent Bhe slammed the door in hia face.—Boston HeruW 0 0 HUMORS It Is Important that you should now rid your blood of those Impure, poisonous, effete matters that Have accumulated in It during; the winter. The aecret of tha uitw^uatod and really wortdetf ul success of Hood's Sarsaparilla >f fl rm^i^Ay fin Ttl.i^l IT^,,^. ;, «>,« f^ fo.> ^ ™™ihingl, I)™* ftFqgY_ earsaparilla, but the utmost remedial values of more than twenty ingre- dients—Roots, Barks and Herbs—'known to have extruordinsxy efficacy in purifying; the blood and building up the whole system. There it no real substitute for Hood's Sarsaparilla, no \just as good** medicine. Get Hood's today, in liquid form or tablets called Sarsataba, PINKEYE OerooflwsSd«a^a>oteateaf|B»o»aifef«r elsjwi. Ltevli greaa S* SseiolvVM. aesetorbrooa•aroiSMoiliSSare. SssSllilaai is^aetf jsl •o^W^osahc^t^-.lBSeao^tnsStaoSooom. aoMhy eftSsjsntS SK>HW MEDICAL CO, Oisli, GOSHEN, OUAJU ortwenijyHimeyesinlhaira been at intervals a great sufferer ~ rvsaatiam. Daring Sstt time, no faffing now nssny gnV Ions of the virions kinds of fin*. and oslal nave need and nfttn bnt ottss renef. I was confined t o ray bed heap* less. I tried Sloan's liniment and used i t with such satisfactory resold ttiat I a^nt for two huw*botdes, and I hare up to thfe time need abMhslf asoonitbxjtrmwithspkasdm success,\--JAMIS Hvsa, Beebe, White Ownty, Aik. Got Ease in Lass Thasi Ten M ;>M, '^t, Ms. JAMBS E. AurxjurDex, of North HsrpaweU.Menwrnes:—•••I sag and has beea~eaHsd-| ft hotseshoer and subject to unsny itisms hxnry back and bins which has ..th.Mr^n. brought on iTtetimstism in the sciatic nerve. I hsd k so bad one night when sitting in sjy chair, that I had to Jump on my ieet to gtt itttef. 1 at once applied your SLOANS LINIMENT to the affected part and in less than ten mfootes k was I think it b the best of all Iimmehts,* does not need any a powerful penetrant Sloan's Liniment rubbing. It's Try it for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Sprains, dhesjt Pains, and Sore Throat It gives almost instant relief. Prise S&v 80*, and S1.00 at All Deal for Bloom's **•* Book em m DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. W. IJ DOUGLAS $m\ ni4rta*34g & *s SHOBS SMS •KWMtor wiitof swhetttstos clsisssd Ie he \jest as geesV* vmhsss of which are Ssshnowa. Yen are n^eboet. Insist upon having the Douglas skeee wiwaribiiaSMstfsdprkoosithe W. L. Dooglae shoes eost more to nake ttam ordinary show, beseese higher grwU loMhsra mrojiaKl and tela otot with greater oare? amy «euil in the ibattlag » watohad nrsr byjke most Allied oifsolsartoo, of expert •aoonakersln tela ooiintry. These are UM rsoeons wwjWJ* IfcmglMshoesar*|u*nurte«l «o hoH their soaps, look and** abd wear longer than any other shoes vo« Sea buy. • Ifyonrtftata for Mall Older : pcspaUL Ji* • Wthe true vi Ihl entitled to \ WTC DoosUs she. ^'3^MVSF&sSV3&£ •••**o^^&*m»*mimm*mm*mmm ,v\mvmi*