{ title: 'Hartwick review and visitor. volume (Hartwick, Otsego Co., N.Y.) 1902-19??, May 22, 1902, Page 1, Image 1', 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/sn91066276/1902-05-22/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066276/1902-05-22/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066276/1902-05-22/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066276/1902-05-22/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Fenimore Art Museum
we ait ases W dune 1 . . 0.6... sin.. Bi . No. 7 Chicago: Ex ~ 855 p,. mfexcept Sunc Time Card. Gonna NoRrTH. 01160133...nah-neuuun..«s.-.,.,. South Hamlet\... Hartwigok ...... Cook Summit....... .... ..... URBSC; ceci ea ree evens cassrsimace ne nris ine HOPG ccscsssscse © Gong SOUTH CooperStOWD..--.. see cus aes ceseva L‘V ‘ U HopQ FAOQLOTY: soc.. cccsecssscocssenss CBRSO 000006 es ecs eveerscrenesscsiess - D2 Cook 40.4 sees HarliWickh...u-.. ne csetsscenc h AL Co AL South Hartwick........ F0 ® Mt. VISIONM...... .e oa sa se seca sesess m ~ e T5a m West 0neonta....: ........... 8:00 a m. ONCORt& ... ...e .... .... ec. .s... 880 a m | __ Ang. every hour thereafter. Last car leaves Oneonta at 10:30 p. m., and only | runs to\ Hartwick. Last car leaves | Cooperstown at 11 :20 p. m., and only runs to Hartwick . | \ _ Delavareand Railreed. | a 4 mm mme A M p K1\ '0’. p P Ma arrive | and 'lonve Omar-uh”: - [8. Y. railroad meet in Cooperstown to | ] take action upon & proposal of- the D. &: FOX THEEAST. _ ARRIVE LEivk No. 10 OneontaLocal......... sescsesss . 745 AB No. '6 Passenger oa a 7.30 pm. \145 p m | No, B Boston Express... .... 4:00am.» titan FOR THE WEST. No.15 Binghamton «ocal..... & No. 1 Passenger hogan). { FC Bae o o ue p ® No, 17 Milk... .,....°\......~. 1.30-p m ; igo ise» 6.58mi: 7.086 pm « tolam. 2.06 am |: 8.40 pm. No 19 Pan'gr. Snnd I l ll 00am. 11.05 am Trains 18; 6, 8, 17 and -$ run on. Sunday. 'Time: tables ng. local and through train. service between stations on all divisions ot D. & Knaystem may be obtained at all D. & H. ticket offices. © eooamnsxowx- a: int. R. BR. In Effect April 14, 1903. TRANS SOUTH. - No.1 Xo.5-:N0.7N0.9No.11 A.M. AM. AM. PM. PK 4\ 8 6+ Portlandville..... Ar Junction.... To Lr Junction...... ** W. Dar. (U &D). \* West Daven; rt.. Ar Davenport Ctr.... : 'TRAIKS NORTH. NOJKOJNOJN 10 N Ar CGoopéeratown .... - Phoenix Hills as Milford .. ‘0 Portlandville wae * Janctl OM. sees Ly Junction .... .... 7 82 \ W. Dar. (U & D). 7 2 «* West Daven ’t.. . ** Davenport C't'r I * Stop: onaixnal. coll. Trains leave Looperstown £ r Phoeanit: atOALaml. an 5:16 p. m. ing, Phoenix M at 7.‘flt.m.ahdd 10 Train sl.7. and 8 connect at portwithti’ -Arain Ermcrrvs JAN. 26, 1902. & OM. momma \WEST 1 30 a. m. ily~--Buffalo and Chicago sleepers. | 3:00. a.5 us'., Dalily— fired, arrives rt Bull’slo 8-00 8. B1.,. Dali ~~Fasgst mall, arrives at Budslo 1 no p. Chicago- sleeper, {also Ithaca . con- i 11 15 a an. except 'Bunday-Local listless Bu m., Dal ly—Observallon parlor liar. diner. St. Louis leopar- i 'ecach. aud sleepe‘ri\ for Buffaloillevelau andChicsgo. 1% RAST: oe 1:25%m. mil. Dally-Sleepers for Few York, also conc 125%. m., Daily—Sleepers for New York. also coach ~ 0“qu COUNTY. District. Attorney . Meritt Bridges and: \® [Miss Anna Shanessy of Morris were mar- p |ried-on. Wednesday of this week. 'The townof. Pittsfield; ¥oted, May 8th,.| Fang f lo Change from the- labor system to. the m» money system of highway taxation. ' \Mrs. Nathan Bristol: died at her home _, , [near Scbuyleéers Lake, May 2d, aged 22] mi | years, leaving a baby boy a week old. |. a it | - By a majority: of 48 in a vote of 110, | A the people of Morris have adopted ibe; 7 ' money tax system of working the high- . A: w‘y's Cooperstown anticipates. a large: num- 'ber of city people in its beautiful village [ modate. ~The 107th annual-meeting of the Otsego Gonnty Baptist Association will} be held: '| at Morris, June 4 and 5. - Preacher of the} opening sermon, Rev. C. H. Colegrove } of Brookdeld. €. June 8th the stockholders ot the C. & if. company to take the stock 'of the: first named.company. Milford people are now agitated over: the light, and heat-question, and also on: la proposition for a sewer. Special elec- tions bave been called. for May 2BIth, and: these purposes. A quiet wedding occurred at the home: 'of Mr. and Mrs. Jolin Jacobs, in New| fLisbon, Wednesday evening.. May - 14, . when: Mra. Jacobs' kdaughter, Miss: Lulu Tunnuhife, was united in. marriage to ileton Peet of Mt. vision. > he. annual. meeting of the Otsego : County Medical society will be-held in | | the: court house, Cooperstown, Tuesday, [ May 27, 1902; at 11 o'ciock a. m... :Dinnér [; 'will be Served at.Hotel Fenimore at 12:1 § 4 I'p; m.;and will be: paid tor by individua E M fimembers ~ Pensions have. recently been granted as: [follows. in . this vicinity : . Rawin [. Wileox, Richfleld 'Springs; #87, Edgar B. Church, Ha twiclr 312, Edwin Bruce. :;Jefl'o-rson, #73 .. © --teraon,.$lg, Augusta C Shoemaker, ] [Schay lers Lake;:88. - 'Do. sheep: .pay? Edson Balcom - of Fel 'Lena -has one that is thirteen 'years old; 29 | bas © had twenty-seven lambs; raised: _ [Awenty-four; - average .. price-.sold $3 75, izmskingQSQ, sheared 104 - 'pounds.wool,}: average price sold 22 cents pound, making : pto a) point near where the: birn:-row |- 'stands, and repair the - -old building. (or a house. The vote was unanimons.' {'The outlay will approximate 01800to $2,000. In the matter of the application of the Qneonta, Cooperstown . and Richdeld Springs Rallway company. for ap o‘lnt- ] ment. of commissioners. .to. llete mine | whether a street sucface, railroad. ought ack | to be constructed and- operated:upon Lake | -and- Church-streets: Jn.the-village.0t -Rich. |; Application granted by: prions.“ T Hon. E. D. Wagner, | Ol Boonville,N Y., and Engene Clinton, | es. 7:55 2a. ms,. Daily—“canton, New. York1 Philadel- | esq, of Greene, N. Y., appointed com- phis and south diner, yest uled drawing- room service aud regular coaches.) - 11:00 £. m., except Sund eatib and parlorcarsfor New York, Philadelphia and: the south. mb. . : . ‘fl; gl- son; Mew York: 5:95 pam Itx5:p. m.,, Daily-Coat NewYork. Kor. Syracuse, Owego - n f .> tions, 5:00%. m.,. lfldnd 3-251) m. daily—845 a.m., and 6:10 p.m. except Sunday: . For information regarding rates, routes, reser- vations, etc;, a ply to J with, Lackawanna Tic et agent. / on KCB Buss. D. .A. GET ESTIMATES FOR YOUR Daniet D. Frisbieot the Sohouarie| “Bench can wilt be CSE an ' date‘!or the | JOB ROOMS,. The latest style of New Type, exper-] fenced workmen, good stock, the lowest prices consistent with - - good work, and the job completed on time. As : we. pay cash for stock a \ <a 28) ViClNlTY NOTES ger... 'l # k‘Elouse. -s ® G-gGilboa Monitor. George Fuller is the' «;> Carman, of Blnghamton, for $26;800 {The building 1s to be: completed by Nov. 1, 1903. . { of G. W Simln” plang! Philadelphia the s¢ 4 totha' orwoh missioners. ‘ €. Alex Wharton} Otel at? Rich as: ledsed his father's. viflen the. Wharton m James C. Wyckoff has purchased the itor, a ‘Hon. Eiliot Danforth has sold his resi- .denceo' at Balnbridge to Ralph W. Kirby, |: 68 -higr.0f the-Bainbridge National bank.. A stray -cat tipped over a lantern in a _ | barn near McDouough, Chenango county, \| the other day, and- the conseqnence was ; two 'barns were destroyed. | ' Geo. L. Fox retires as one of the edi- tors of the: Midst ws, his parta‘ R the work A liddlebnrgh gentleman says that ages at Parls and will sail from: ind week in June. Heory: :Vaubresérof Cobleskill the not» ed stock. and poultry -- man, reported the' other day that he 'had 2,480 chicks bhateti< edout and 1; 500 pore on. the way in. the: $0040 MajorE. P. Peéliett, a mtive oi Nor? I wich but for the past: thirty-six years'a resident of South America, has presented | bis private library 'of 1,000 volumes of tich and rare. editions of many authors igh school. F.., W...Drimmond recently died in ' Binghamtonl ving a fortune of $72,700, | . Enearly: all 'made~in: the cigar business. [He was. but 45 years old and started his! | business- career on a tin peddler’s ceart at . the age of 14 years without a dollar. What Thin Folks Need ing. and he digestive organs,\ gen sh,. Only 25¢, at - } andalldrogglsts. * 'this summer-all its hotels can: accom- . . Mrs. Faonile Roberts, widow of - the} F 29th to vote on propositiogs , to 'bond for|* if fls 'at least another $1,000. \ decided. | orchard and. tin 'Q Jinsity. 88. Lucretia Simmons, \Elder daughter ~ Bichmondville', bas] - ncubator “Bonnie that for: chicken bust d , guess? DELAWAKE COUNTY, Lester Webster is driving 'the stage be- tween Stamford and Davenport Center. John Puller, a respected resident of the:] town of Stamlord, died at his home, May |. 14th, aged 63 years. - :_ Robt. Frazier, who formerly conducted | A restaurant in Delhi, died May 9b, of 'puenmonia, aged 67 years. - Hiram K. Burroughs was found dead ; 'An his bed at Hobart, May 12. He was 76 years-old, and was born in Roxbury.; Wilitam Archer of, Kast Meredith,] f highway commissioner, was thrown from | his wagon, May 13th and sustained a - dis» | located shoulder. *> Rey N.M. Walters, D. D., of Bingbam- top, Will be the. diemorial day 'mspeaker in Franklin in the afternoon, and at Tread- tay. Colorado, Hay 2d, aged about.” | years. ¢ A run on the Walton bank was start- -ed by rumors that the institution was unsound, recently. A reward of ($500 is: [offered by the bank officials for the ap- | {prehension of the. one who started the} rumors. John Gilchrist died: at East Meredith, 'May 13th; . of .pleuro-pnenmonia, after a: brief aged about .58: years. The} -deoceased. was a veteran of, the clvil war | and a member of the G. A. R:. He is survived by one son. ~~ -- At, the recent extra session of -the | Delaware county board of supervisors, . Middletown was authorized to issue-cer- | ttifioates. of indebtedness. for : $30,000,: Andes; for $10,000: ahd Colchester- for 86,000 to repair damages. to: highways, | caused by the December-floods. The: survevorqiare {still at work;on the: new road from' Walton to Downaville| around Mt, Holley. . The grade snryeyed :is bat .a over. gix. foot raise. to ['the hundred. feet. They. have completed 'the survey on this side and hope to get- Jan equally good, grade of the other side- | of the: hill. . ~An,. Andes correppondent says z—Tax- , | The-stum- Gf: $7,150 for new bridges and fabutments, besides ''a goodly sum - for ighwarrepairs, is enough“ to make our ghigh enough to sult 3: alréady. ° The loss on theDelhi opera house was adjusted .sit. (82.152. 59. <The adjusters. 'were & representatii'e of the company | and. W.. T. Hine of that. village. The anagers: of the opera 'house bave ac- epted that amount.' The uninsured loss: What wili‘be done -with: the property has. not yet been J: ~ - Galilee. ' Galilee, so intimately associated with theorigin of Christianity, ts still A place : :of. much interest. . William. E. Curtis, writing. from; Tiberius to 'The Chicago Record Herald, says: \Galilee is thegar- den of Palestine and has the .most-pross. tented ard comfortable people Ewen she mame has a musical apd. merry: sound : When the: hills of: Judes are rocky. and: 'bare, when the meadows : of Samaria aré | on.-Henry Bentley, of' 'bornt brown snd. the valleys 'of Sharon [ This design he ( been placed in the are parched. with drouth, the Jowlands of |. -with the perfume of the range flower and 'the syr ngla. Galil ibctwsen thirty and. thirty-five. miles east 2and went. : It: consists: of :threc-aeries. of Eplateaug-or' zones, rising «one above 'an-. 'other toward\ Lebanon: and culminatin“; An- the anowy ; beak of! Hermon. David sang in the Psalms 'of: ‘the dew of.. Her. mon 'that. descended upon. the mourns. itains of Zion. In summer: hot hary ers lift their perspiring:. faces toward. the {snow 00; Hermon *- summit and feel the: |cool breezes that 'they calBits' igift, The» country’h’as alw\‘y : Been. ‘famed Tor fertility. I % its rich abtdres , and Tukur o yards. That par of it. s & . of Galilee 18%. the, most T encamped. \. Galllee..owes ther perior fruitfuilness> over. Judea: and San greaterrai’nlali here than in tho“ ) months. M in Years» ss¢~Scrvlcc. -has, been in continuous service since 1844,. two years; - equal to several millions later on. Holdarflp a—Gongreesman. _ of the campaign Champ: Clark, «Missouri's bhlhant con sternum? a f‘irpmfx oveaworlr. . {nervous ’ ‘ltsnso Dd; j 18 ar: fimgnisoounlsrd'mvsr worked. tly frrunfldowomsu andmsak\ sfiskl poisons from: the system, enrich | f rdprovea tite, make healthy | F P. Luce's, Hart- : t more than, tour‘days. Cor payers are- hoping thatthis town wili not | be visited- by. foods Aor years to.come. | close—listed residents groom, as Laxes are > V'ln the navy yard at San Francisco 'Galilée are. bright with: Rowers andgrow- | {ing crops. . Every, hill in: Gaiflee, every | bit of bottom: land, is:a wheat field; the: |mudwalle sre; covered with -myrtle-and: I' maria to Mount Hermon.:- -There is no © ispensed with regularity and! gener- a Fen this . reason the: .fRalds of |. | Gilileo- are: always.-greeo, while the| apneigbboring oountryfis a desert, except | . ' Tinmthe rainy season, which lasts: only five: a \ , claims ;to_have-the oldest 2C lemploye of, the., Erie: railrosd company. A | Thopoas: Nicholson, who, -It is -afiemed, {il | some fifteen years before. the- toad reach: 7. ed Owego. : His age is given as seventy. 0 - The Agricultural Department recom-] [ mends that the first files which appeat | [ during the, sprfomer be summarily deals| || ith, as fly generations follow. each-other | - l51st ten: days intervals, . with 120-fold in-] \crease. Therefore: one original progen«~' A j‘itor killed at the: beginning of fi y timede | . mserits ;\ writes] | me three bottles oil . ma e me all Fig I inedicine \ever! sold“ \-. \Bold by all Drusslista: GREAT LOAD oF MongEy.\ | The Swatara Oneé Carries! Qllloooo' 0600 In Coin. - °+ ~ \I notice that the newspapers have recently-spoken of the carrying of 4 ~000,000 of bullion to a foreign: coun : by one of the ocean liners as the grea est amount ever transported » sald & 'man who has been with the navyfof . years to a Star reporter. \It is ent! “ly wrong.: In 1885 there was brought 4 the mint in New Orleans to the tre u- ty in Washington $11,000,000, and, was brought in a steamer - =_ \The government decided to. tran was first thought best to bring it by rail, but this was assuming a greX risk. 'The cabinet discussed the m port $15,000,000 from New Ofileans. It ter carefully, and it was finally [| ad that the safest way would water. 'The memberg. of the saw that there -was: up if the money, was bro “mile United Stat amount, so.the wood“ ' Iantic was pressed into service | out. We: removed. from the : W her magazines. The shells from shellroom were removed, as were also available space was utilized for pack- ing the coin. \The only weapon of de- fense was a Gatling gun. B 'The money was conveyed from the .mirit to the vessel? in Wagons. A squad work. 'The two vessels 'were in tow, and. the. trip from New Orleans to! the Washington. navy - yard upfed a little siderablewind was encountered off Hatteras, but oth erwise the trip was without incident. yard to the treasury by an express company. \The money was in boxes of $2,000: 'that the. money. was in silyer dollars, | or the greater part of it, for while un- bags,. rotten from. being in storage so- long, gave way, and a large number of: the silyer, dollars were scattered about 'the wharf \The Swatara was & historic craft, | | John: Surratt. was brought back from | Maita in the Swatara. 'The Prince of Wales, pow King Edward, paid her &. cE When she was with the adron at Villefranche, in . the Mediterranean. She was then thefi Ragship, The prince when he saw her said~ - te. \Is this a yacht or.a man-of-war? - ' \'\The Swatara is now in Rotten row - waiting to be surveyed. 'The $11,( . ;000 éarried by the Swatara from New I Orleans to Washington was the: great- | -eat amount of money ever circled by I 'R single craft.' Washington Star ‘LENT BOOKS TO CARNEGIE- ttrolunaster Will Erect Ca statue to p Colonel Anderson,. a gt ijronmaster, will have a statue ‘patch from Pittsburg to the New. York: World. It was in 1853 that Colonel Anderson built his mansion in. All igheny and placed 400 books in-his 'try. He invited the working boys to' R ‘ipps, his partner. Mr. the sculptor, a ment to cost $5 . son. statue. It was this act of Co lonel Au ;derson, ~ Mr. Carnegie said, that mad resolvedf he should ever have sur C CYNICISMS. How &. gir} loves to confess to her lover that she bas sewed on Sunday! It gives I to get her teeth fixed. If you. want to Bee a woman become - animated, get her to tell about the sick 'women 'she has known. | t ithlngs if they didw not say, \0h 'don't |. & loose back and fitted front. Some -|. tt’ed elect at both back and _ Recommends pigervtne. * The ab ve portrait 'is that of (| | Countess Mogelstitd, of Chica- | : go, Ill., whose gratitude for the [ benefit receivedfrom theuse of Dr. Miles'\ bkmnc prompted \| her to make this statement: A4 4‘It adordsma at pleasure: to add || lNervme. though A am past loc 5‘s“ of age t, i m UL e “fl' . iated , ”3.2 {gait sleep. afi feel contentedwithautabot e I the house.\\ Grateful yyours, Cmmaa MARIA, CountsaQMog stud. -: 1. {i% ancrve tonic and strength- . of segret service officers watched tha} 'The money was carried from the navy | | each: and in-bags. My recollection is | f opalescent glass. \Two shelves gre be- ' low thls, one carries chine and. jadea‘ loading at 'the. navy, yard one. of the | e 'other book j je Colonel Janies Anderson, Aflegheny's | cted in his honor, says & special dis- | C 1plus wealth to devote it to the: extension f lof free libraries. . {measures fifty niltes north: and south and \ A French girl marries for the liberty | ed £ .’ an American girl merrier: a ~[ Atty A erican schoolhouses in' Porto [ | How would \kome men' get out of | p the very > ef@cellent ° | B ; find. it ffflp : builder that starts right in 're- | : storing health immediately. . f . Dr. Hileo Madical:Co., Eikhart, Ind. | of the Recent Crase In erior Decoration. Rlers at large have gone | ad. On all furniture you i nces of the so called te- Woods are tinted moss . foliage are to be found in the: nd chairs. Inlaying of all kinds , n. shows an art now { is done 'In plain wood : | the enemy's. bullets and, won for. him- MEMORIAL DAY’S ORIGIN. New Story: Regarding- Incident Which ' lnapirerl“A‘§nnua1 Observance. The approach cf Memorial day has garding the incident that led to its first . observance, says the Philddelphia Press: \On a beautiful May day thirty-five | 'years ago there -gathered- beneath the overhanging boughs of a fruit bearing R churchyard among the mountains of New York the friends and Kinsmen of | 'one who, though a meré boy, hadfaced . 'the brunt of battle, his body pierced by | self the golden érown of martyrdom in f Ithe military service of his country. P < There were also gathered there a few | of His companions in arms, bronzed vet- | §2] {erans, survivors of the red flame of | 'the sails from the sailroom,. #0: that all ° commune .There\ is a Beat upholstered in green 'leathor: ornamented with red: and gold conventional figures. Above this is a long, narrow picture forming a friese. : The shelf below this picture is handy for books.\: To carry out the green and 'red scheme there are a palm in a red | pot ahd a green and a red rug on the | floor.. # R Dill LA BAUME. ALPINE ACCIDENTS. Alplnlsts in. spite 'of themselves, says | the London Chronicle, It is estimated that 60. per 'cent of last year's dents was, among persons who bad: come to. Switzerland for the first time | t practically no experience in| ~Kew ; cabins” are to be built in the dangerouspl ng the tourist against“ regen, etc., are to be erected. A new reode of 'mignals 'by 'which the} ‘may communicate with the. val-. perous looking farms \and. the most cor=|:come and borrow books, which he loan- | of.: 'ed out in two weeks' stretches; Andrew * ban Carnegie was among the readers, and so | unatt Everything grows here, from the wheat. j. C e 'of the Caspian Sea to the Egyptian palm; | undertaking a risky climb ; but. in such cases \hotel| ers. will warn the tourist of his | E: beforehand Guides have also climb, if they mind that. the tourist is | unable to withstand 'the fatigue or in | casethe change ofsweather would ren- b a\ Thirst \of the Natives no: Knowledso.. . n, 'who has. just return- m a visit Ito*Porto vRico,tells the w-theé® Washington, the Hn coin,» the Penn, the McKinley, the Jet-r ferso the Irving, the Hamilton, and tending\ them.. One of .the principals ve AHL *F pointedouttomeayoungglr ,9ers\'—Atcbison Globe. e . :] ents 4 Lightweight rain coats ”are cut with | , j‘ 'pretty, ~_who walked, he | enty miles to and-from | daily, slept:on a- barometer and |: begged nearly all her food; she was no ' poor. whiswashueofhlsbeststu- . boy Lhad on. g shirt so much too hin that. his whole person pe through the pening e candles snd: sit on the schoolroom foor | &C 7 in groups .of three,-one candle to each The intelligence of the Porto:| ‘ penhaxen, has invented a propeller for' that attempts to imitate the ac-] h's tail and combines driv-. ; ring, power. Experiments . A . \The prodigal son made one gréat| “mistake,\ remarked Mr. Chattertom- | with. the air of a man who is about to : ler, while its steering ability exceeds : - that attainable with twin screws and together. 'The great difficulty is ‘ with tb engine, for, with the present gt the stern of the ship in the the ordinary rudder, with at axis vertical : 'Just an Opinion. \[ csnlt see,\ said. t; . \Ma be” ,replled the sour. looking: 4a because he thinks. of ie prefers to take the slen- hifiago [Regard-Herald. inthonee) | was hidden from her. view by the me I standing before it. _ electrolites. or steamships The' oscll-l of the pendulum propeller : | a é well preserved | ! but rather plump wl ow, \why an old | j man should ever want to marry a carnage that swept Pickett's division from the field of Gettysburg, who had | come. to. drop a tear at a comrade’ grave and voice a tribute. to his mem- ory. © \Just as the solemn rites of burial; \were over and. the last shovelful of | earth had been heapéd upon his resting gplace God's breath shook the overbang- : \Ing -~boughe> and sweet and \beautiful | 'apple blossoms came gently down and decorated that young hero's grave. \This incident coming to the ear. of . fiCommander in Chief 'John A. Logan, 7. was the inspiration that caused him to fesue -an order -creating~-Grand: Anny Memorial day, and ever-since on the | '80th of May ,the loyal, people of this na- - lion gladly follow the example—heaven évetera‘n’s grave is neglected -and with | the flowers -of spring place -the 4 flag. :which the valor of: himself and | comrades kept flymg under the blue of < heaven ?* MoopYy TO THE RESCUE. © New Secretary of Navy Comen to a: - Car Conductor“- As nce. _ - They are telling & story. , Washing. ton about 'the new secretary of 'the| > navy. Mr. Moody was riding on one | standing .on the platform on the side | next the gate that protected passengers from cars coming on the other track.. A lady, a Boston lady, came to. the | door of the car and as it- stopped start-. ed to move toward the gate, whi \Other side, please, lady,\ said the \You must get off the other side”; ggaid the-conductor. ~ \I wish to get off on this side,\ came: ° the answer in tones that congealed the. offcial into momentary silence. Be- fore he could either: explain or expostu- | - late Mr. Moody came to his assistance. | \Stand to one side, gentlemen,\ he' Times. LIPTON’S GREEN SAILS. Put They Wes-o to Ploy In a Joke-1 ~. Last Fall ' It. has leaked out - that Sir Thomas? . Lipton came to America last fall pre- | | pared to spring a. huge joke on the] Americans if “he won the America’s- Companlon. The other day a fire oc- | curred in: the loft of the carpenter shop | Where some of the riggipg of the | Shamrock II. had been stored. In the : mass of partly burned sails were some \pieces of vivid green When opened ip,: Beveral sails were hauled out from the | wreckage, all of emerald green. : Later Jt became \known that in the | event of f Shanirock IF. winning two of | { the races this: green suit was to: have | ; been. worn in the third and deciding | I race. It is also said that this green | : ; suit of sails never-saw the light of day, ' ~ but was bent and 'stretched at night | | while the boat lay in the Horseshoe at } Sandy Hook. The discovery of the - green sails was the cause 'of much DEATH N EARLY MASTERED Lifeless lleart’ajeat Almost Restor- ed, Says Loeb-Calcium the,Agcnt. Professor Jacques Loeb .of Chicago will restore the action of n, heart that has ceased to beat has been nearly dik! covered 'says the -New York: Evening“ Journal. In discussing the general sub . Ject. of prolongation. .of life. in: an- ad- ' dress delivered at: Columbia university Professor Loeb:said: \Those who.intend to try to prolong 'life first must, control rhythmical phe-: nomena, such as heart beats and respi-. ; ration., Periodic actions of the heart are. characteristic of the functions or -_ \Calctum. makes the muscles twitch. . “hythmicaliy like the heart, but cannot : [ It is very nearito it, however.\ - South African War Incident. A detachment of, British soldiers re- cent]; visited a deserted Boér farm. In the sitting room: they found a piano, to |. which a pathetic note was attached efi \| treating 'them not: 'to smash it, as it -was a present from somebody's dear mother and consequently a souvenir | ~ _| which was much valued, says the New '] York Tribune. The hard hearted yeo- { men, of course, promptly proceeded. to; . search it and found it crammed with Letructed. 'It bauls sixty-one frelg .caraonastrstchln0slitornia.where- l one-third that: number- considered gunpowder and caps.. Getting Bach at Hens-r. spring something good. her Hege lord relievé himself of his | essary question. ° 'have been a full growncow. » 'a girl?\—88.lh Lake Herald. \Blue Bell In Fairyland\ and, \Blue | season. Mr. Outclllfe Hyne and Mr. Murray brought out the following new story te- | 'tree. beside an open grave in A httle ‘ ' | tically designed and' 'so graciously set and ste toit that no | of the Boston surface cars and was | remarked quietly,- \the -lady wants to |- climb over the gate\-Néw York | mirth. \ feure a bad beginning in marriage. re, or 'you also 'may. become | obtain the regularity of heart «motion. | Feeling that it was her- duty to let | © glowing thought, Mrs. C. asked the nec- | \Because if he bad stayed away a.Z couple of years longer, that calf would f \Yery good, Henry, but will you kind- i ty tell me, just to appease a little wo- | manish curiosity, on what information | | you base your theory that the calf was | | Riverside station, Liverpool. This run is: | just over 200 miles without a stop and . trow Beard\ will be two. English extrave- | .ganzas to be seen in. New York nextf Carson are collaborating on a dramatic | <THE CORO h ATIQN BAG. Latest Ides In Fi lone-isle Wrist: Bags (For: ens _ Among the fashioxiable' of : the feminine costume which have been tion wrist bag,\ which in its newest} lphla, Times. The bag is: atthe 'bottom, where-it has a pointed : effect. An artistic coronation bag in | beige. covered Walrus has a clasp. of; | gilded (sliver which also forms the | ' chain and the graceful scroll orna-] - mentation applied along the bottom of | the front ofthe: 'bag.: The bag-closes. with two-gcorns form- arranged with a Aap which opens with: 'a turquoise cabochon button, revealing t a- pocket to receive the handkerchief. | ' trees: at least as far as the branches ex- The lining is of. moire silk, the delicate beige tint of which harmonizes with 'the ivory hue of the leather. > of black walrus similarly adorned with T ellver edged mountings and scroll orna-. mentation and gcorn cups holding amethyst nuts, the eep luminousamr- I ple of which is repeated in the color of . the moire lining A. bag of tan walrus 'As still ano variati‘ n of tHese artis- and in this the nuts reposing in the | gilded cups, are of polished coral. SPAIN’S YOUNG KING Alfonso XIII. was- very. delicate, but with the strict obliged: to observe he. has grown well, is tall and has a very good figure, Don. Alfonso inherits all the vivacity sense: of humor. 'The professor of his- tory, Senor Briéva Salvatierra, wa ' once calling Don Alfonso's:attention t \{ the titles that: former kings. of Spai who bore the same name had bee '| conductor. He was ignored as only ai awarded by history.. He cited that on | born and bred Bostonian can ignore A& - | man, The lady took another step to- _ le: tall ; | ward the gate. : pinists last year has roused the | . Swiss Alpine club to introduce new : measures in order to protect amateur |. Alfonso was cglled \The Wise,\ an: 'other \The Watlike,\ and so on, whe | suddenly the young king interrupte 'his professor, saying, \Well I thin they will nickname me 'Alfonso the Rabbit.\ \ 'This is because Don Alfon- 80° went nearly-every day to the Caga del Campo (country house), which ho cordially ~detests and which is full of ] thiigs, don’tgo out there « marty.\ © She thinks that raho‘ul’d be men and their wives, 3 \Fhe New York Press. Aside.from the pupils and textbooks on nature that tell nothing about bamboo, mango: chestnuts and other trees that the: young Filipino knows nothing of, - The | educational problem is yet to be work- ed out, and 'the: working out of the: 'the; youthful teacher hardly can avoid stumbling New German (Join. The mint of the German government. Henry to the United States. All the love in the world will not ake ta nothing more, in. Hfe than & warning | Most people .can..write a; better pand [ 'Tessness. 'Kver notice that some people are such, [worms their friends feel: free to jump \ on them?© ~ Life is full of troubles, and. we have tore breakfast. When ditcrent—Atchison Globe. . - RAILM Y, Ties: pany, must have photographs - of the boiders-affized. w motors of improved design to op- - cats cars on the New Iork elevated. rnnslxcartrainslnstsadoftheilva thatlsususlnnder 'be the' largest locomotive ever- con-s enough for au ordingr? engine, RA! WAY TIES- .. Express and limited trains, accord-; ing to experts of the American Society mile nearly 100 per cent. 'The longest railway run in England western rallway special trains to the' catches the American liners, . The Chicago and Alton will place a everything a physician needs to per- form a simple operation or dress an | ' Kettle. Coulee [-version of the adventures of Captain- injury before the removal of a patient to a hospital. jer n. somins a 9 somewhat narrower at the clasp than | be shallow. 'ed of turquoise nuts-set in cups Of the | glided silver, 'The front of the bag. is [ Equally artistic is a coronftion bag i _ Great interest ig- at present being [concentrated on the youn ing A ] so of Spain, says «the Madrid corre- ' _. spondent of the New York Herald.: He| was 'born. under: exceptional; circum- | stances, and 'his farther, Alfonso XIf} | regimen that Don Alfonso has been angel\ moral abd social difficulties besetting | ~- :the path of the unmarriedteacher she | 'will run: up against great obatacles in. reannot stand sitting. ithe way of geographies that tell at | most nothing .of the Philippines, bis- | tories; that are beyond the capacity of | has struck: of a 83 mark: silver piece |. | commemorative of 'the visit of Prince noticed that: the.. worst ones come be- [j weep. her friends say whe has “splendid J :control,\ and her enemies say she is in- | | _ Commutation tickets between Phila- f 'delphla and Wilmington, Del., accord- | Ing to a late order of the railway com- | ~Orders bave just been placed tor | |ous health.. 'They eat. - Japan has acquired the American | {° dining car system at &- jump. without | Brome Co pausing at therailway randwich stage. |© the fi of Mechanical Engineers, have increas- . 1-2 ® | ed the cost of running locomotives. per1 hin 4s made by the London and North. | Medic ~Burgeon's chest on every passenger car | {on the rogd. The chest will} contain.| FRUITS AND FLOWERS. _ A. very good fertihzer for house | plants is coffee grounds. It is usually 'best to set stakes by the | stde: of the gladiolus plants' and tie them up. named in honor of the coming - royalty } ceremonies in England is the \corona. It is an advantage in gathering the fruit to have the trees with low spread- ; h s. and! smartestxform A8 of walrus hand- | 1118 eads somely in «gllded sliver, S2Y8 | fruity - especially adapted to small Dwar? pears and grapes are two places where little can be. spared In growing fruit for market it is of great advantage to have varieties that will keep long and bear transportation we“ a 'The greater portion of the roots of a _ grapevine grow near the surfa ce, and \ for this reason the cultivation should Fertilizers also should be applied near the surface. The longer an orchard is kept in cul- tivation and crops taken off the greater | becomes the necessity for liberal ma- nuring, Apply iit broadcast under tend Impressed Her. \ She-His peroration was go . eloquent ' that I was moved to tears. He-What did he say? She—0h it was something Hke this: ;If in-er-the somethifig-of the some- . thing or other I should still exist, then -OB; I can't quote literally-but it was ‘jalmply grand'——Ch1cago News ited requisites | . of the fashionable {woman's 'costume, |- A Poor Indeed. “Is.hcrrichl1\r | 4‘Mercy', no' I don't suppose the poor } man could scrape up: more than two or ~ | three millions to save his life.\-Chica- . jgo Record-Herald. as Interesting Anecdotefnelated of Don | The Art of Hat Selling. Elderly Customer—Don’t you think Ate too young looking for me? Hatter -Why, . my dear gir, you're just young enough looking for it.-In- dlanapolls News. Stamina. “Why, I heard she had died of old \*\TThat is an error. She had a very telly-ere attack, but is quite recovered.\ of spirit and repartee for which his L’Lt'k‘ father was famous. The bon mots of |. 'the young king denote a very keen | English as She Is Spoke. She-OB, let us dance the next. Hrs—Lather can 1. Necessary to Walt, \There is one great difference be- \tween. real love and story book love,\ and palm 'trees and much about oaks, she said regretfully. \What is it?\ he asked. \In the case of real love yau can't turn over to the last chapter and find cout how the story is going to end before .you permit yourself to become inter- ' problem entails difficulties over which | ested in it.\ | \I believe,\ 'he returned thoughtfully, f“that woman's curiosity and impa- | tence. would lead her to begin at the wrong end of a real romance if she could.\ \Why of course,\ she angswerefd calmly. \Can't you see how much | more 'delightful it would be to begin .| with marriage and end with court- ; + * - a - . ship z\ Bome menaresoslow that when they | |run they lose time. He considered the matter deeply and {shook his head. It is so hard for the heavy masculine mind to follow the Flight feminine fancies—-Chlcago Post. Possible qulnthin. Elesie-Indeed! And where did she . come from? Nurse-The stork left her here in a 'clothesbasket. Elsie—The ideal Perhaps she H grow fiest: of & famiiyl of chal- on seems to suggest it- As d follows child the mother land 'less vitality; often not t 'for herself and none, therefore, hex-child. sacri utics: find- that. it ;, them in vigor- >, welh'lsepwellandi | __ are 'not nervous. | When- baby comes its : advent is practically painless, and the A mother is made hap- B Either birth of & be & healthy‘ of: healthy nse “Favor- d p t his rit scription\ and a bott incl“ glider: edical' Discovery) I yots bottle ofeach, and: d taken them a few days. I felt much I had taken hardly three parts felt well and could.-cat as well as work without guy n hing 'be ore) I at thankful to Plerce for. his imedicine, anl ell all who tall me they are sick, to get these medicines, or write to Dr..Plerce.:\ - Those who suffer from chronic dis- eases are invited to consult Dr. Pierce, by. letter, ./¥ree. All correspondence : strictly private, Address Dr. R, V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bil- learners and sick headache. - < Nurse-Yesg, dear, this is your little ® than they do. This is an age of care- baby sister.. nt mothers who use. Doctor © gPlerce's Favorite Pre- -