f f t as 4 K 1 a- Ftopfhe l vii5H HOW TO MAKE A SAIL WAGON Does Not Take Average Boy Long to Arrange One to Suit Himself General Description In Fig 1 the sail wagon is shown complete with an end view at a showing the steering arrangement A board about 3 feet 6 inches in length by 18 inches across and about one half or three quarters inch thick is cut into p shape something like an LI iitt a j I I J Ironing board narrower at one end than at the other A one inch piece of board is secured to the front end to give strength for the mast and steer ing gear One pair of large wheels and one pair of small ones must be procured or made as described further on The large wheels and axle can be secured to the bottom board by means of two blocks of wood as shown in Fig 1 and Eg m 2 Fig 2 the latter being a view of the tinder side of the wagon The two small wheels must be rigged up a little differently A board about the same thickness as the axle is shaped at one end into a round handle which should fit loosely Into a bored hole In the front end of the wagon The broad end of this board rests on the axle and is bolted to two pieoes of board the same width which come down on the front and rear sides of the axle and are bolted to it Fig 2 A A The fifth wheel bearing Is made out of tough wood and placed so that the steering wheel turns easi ly Fig a A round stick is put through the stern of the piece to press the feet against when steering Fig 1 b Some boys make a rail Fig 1 c around the end that they sit on The mast can be made from a round stick about 4 feet G inches long A broom handle will do for the cross arm to which the sail is attached The sail should be so arranged that It can be very quickly lowered should the wind get the best of the wagon Should it be found inconvenient readily to procure a set of discarded baby buggy or express wagon wheels they can easily be made by an in- a JZ ID sfOfci u c genious boy as shown In Fig 3 A hub is made from a round block of wood as shown at c and round sticks cut from light curtain poles or broom handles made into spokes as at b care being taken to get them all the same length The rim Is made from barrel hoops although some boys make them of thin wood well soaked in warm water and bent Into shape A nail or screw is put through the rim at each spoke as shown at a the completed wheel While this is a general description of a sail wagon it does not take the average boy long to make one to suit himself out of almost any old thing he Is sure to find about the place It Is interesting to notice the many and dif ferent designs of wagons and sails when once the craze is started Smooth roads an open space and plenty of wind is all that Is necessary for a successful sail wagon race The Truth Father and son were walking the streets and passed a large park in Which were many statues One of them the largest of all was of a woman Father what is that asked the son pointing to this particular one which was inscribed Woman That is not a statue my son an swered the father It is but a figure of sneech Life A GOLDEN WORLD ll Vnv I feel liko a second Columbus For I have discovered you see A world in the shape of an orange Which grandma has given to me Tls covered with wrinkles and creases Which represent mountains and seas Deep caverns large islands and rivers I trace on its surface with ease And way down belbw this tough covet Gold juices are rolling around Like lava beneath the earths surface Just see what a treasure Ive found Ti3 a valuable world I am certain All golden without as within And people who live on my orange Can never commit any sin I wish that the world of Columbus America home of the free Were as good as the gold of my orange Perhaps it depends uponme For looking for good I can find it And trying to love every one Ill And them more gentle and loving Than ever before I have done AIR CUSHIONS AID SWIMMER Apparatus Designed by German Mas ter Enables Person to Move About in Water Freely The swimming apparatus designed by a German swimming master is both for trained swimmers and those ignorant of the art When out of use this apparatus is readily carried in the pocket says the Popular Mechan ics It consists of two oblong air cushions each subdivided into five J compartments which are connected together by transversal straps Be fore putting on the apparatus which consists of thin caoutchouc lined with a dense fabric it is inflated through a valve within a few seconds by a few strong breaths Being arranged on both sides of the body the apparatus leaves the head and neck perfectly free thus doing away with any pendulating motions characteristic of most salvage New Swimming Apparatus paratus The person equipped Tilth the apparatus moves about in the wa ter with remarkable safety and sta bility A special advantage of the ap paratus is its allowing the swimmer at will to take up a vertical or hori zontal position thus enabling him to remain in the water for hours with out fatigue BEE IS GREATEST ENGINEER Little Honey Gatherer Has Solved Problem of Room of Lightest Ma terial and Strength Probably King Solomon has been most criticised in his judgment for sending the sluggard to the ant there to consider her ways and be wise We cant say but it may have been that in Solomons time they didnt have the present day Italian honey bee turning jout comb honey in the commercial square pound frames But we are assured just now that taking up a pound of honey in an ordinary frame the average engineer ought to feel immensely incompetent and un wise as to ordinary ways and means to engineering results In the construction of the hexagon honey cell of material from her own body the working bee at once has solved the problem of economy of room of the lightest possible mate rial of greatest strength while the dividing wall In each honey case al lows the greatest number of work ers to continue on the job A H Godard writing of the engineering ca pacity of the honey beo says I have seen strips of comb a foot wide and four feet long sustaining a weight of 30 or 40 pounds of honey while the comb itself would probably not weigh more than five or six ounces We need not hesitate to say that such a structure compares favorably with some of the best achievements of the modern engineering skill of man The Home Team Can I get off this afternoon to go to a funeral asked the office boy Whose funeral asked the man with a cynical smile I guess Its goin to be the home teams -Yonkers Statesman STATE CAPITAL GHAT NEW LAWS EFFECTIVE IN NE BRASKA JULY 7 Friday July 7 a large number of laws enacted at the late session of the state legislature will become ef fective and many laws by which the people have been governed in the past will be repealed at that time The new closed primary law the automobile regulation act the reap portionment measures several re forms attempted in the line of the con duct of the states business the trust company act and the law providing for the commission form of government for cities over 5000 in population lead the others in general importance and ire among those which will be opera tive statutes Among those measures which were enacted at the 1911 session and which are of moment to the people of the state at large are the following H R 433 Requiring the registra tion of stallions v- H R 177 Mlelating to the control and suppression of infectious diseases of domestic animals S F 115 The Ollis stock yards bill S F 273 The Placek senatorial re apportionment S F 200 The Alberts judicial re apportionment S F 314 The county attorneys sal ary act S F 342 The Banning bill provid ing for the commission form of gov ernment for cities H R 5 Providing for the incorpo ration of religious societies S F 171 The Tibbets Jansen trust company act S F S4 Relating to the payment of jurors H R 389 Making judges ineligible to election to other offices while still holding the office for which they were elected S F 173 The Bartling bill chang ing the method of teaching at the Omaha school for the deaf H R 309 Providing for the ap pointment of legislators in cases of vacancies II R 17G The act relating to the salaries of clerks of the district court H R CO The county commission ers salary bill H R 572 Relating to the fees paid lusumnce examiners H R 21G A fire escape act II R 243 The game season meas ure H R 219 The Hardin Sanborn pure seed act H R 53 The service letter act H R 360 The Bulla hotel commis sion act S F 240 Relating to the sanita tion of factories H R 481 The printing commis sioner bill H R 197 Provides for the con struction of storm sheds on railroad right-of-way for use of shippers S F 319 Railroads to furnish men to protect freight H R 158 Relating to the releases md assignments of mortgages S F 271 The Smith mortgage tax act H R 274 The state aid to bridges over streams more than 175 feet wile H R352 The McArdle automobile act H R 703 Creating a department for the inspection and supervision of construction of state buildings H R 590 AH state buildings to be constructed within the appropriation made for same H R 98 Creating an advisory board of pardons H R 2 The Eastman agricultural school act - HNR 257 Telephone booths to bo constructed in depots for the use of patrons H R 71 Relating to the hours of trainmens service H R 2SG Relating to the testing of grain in wagons H R 109 Relating to the carrying of concealed weapons S F 55 Relating to the hauling of voters to the polls S F 318 The anti bucket shop act H R 107 The Housh anti free gift act H R 313 Prohibiting minors under eighteen from using tobacco H R 215 Prohibiting hypnotic ex hibitions S F 175 The Hoagland indeterm inate sentence act H R 538 The Crossman medical college hill State Fire Commissioner Randall is In the western part of the state inves tigating the causes of some recent dis astrous fires He is looking into the conflagration in McCookt which gave the fire department so hard a fight to save the town also into a supposedly Incendiary fire in Hastings Potatoes are too high for use in the state instiutions according to the de cision made by the state board of pur chase and supplies Until the pres ent price of 3 per bushel Is reduced the board will not buy tubers The state board of agriculture has Inspected the work in progress and just completed at the state tiir grounds Two sections of the steel framework for the new grandstand are up and the whee superstructure will be in place within two weeks The board looked over the diking which has been lone on the west and north west six feet in height for a distance of 1500 feet and about three feet for another l500 The embankment is in tended to prevent overflows from Salt rreek AGED WOMAN CLOTH WEAVEE Mrs Hodgdon at 75 Says She Could Not Live Without Sound of Looms Saco Me Save one the onlj American in a vast room among thou sands of those who speak no word oJ English and where the stridor df ma chinery dins her ears from daylight to dark Mrs Melissa Hodgdon at seventy fivo the oldest weaver of cloth in America has just completed her fifty fifth year of work in the cot ton mill of the York Manufacturing company here Although Mrs Hodgdon has out lived all but one of the many thou- Mrs Amelissa Hodgdon sands who have worked In the Yorfe mills since 1856 and has even seen the original owners of the great con cern pass into their graves she is still as capable a worker as the aver age young French girl of nineteen and her fingers will comb out a pick out or mend a thread or throw In a new shuttle with all the deftness and precision of the loom itself Mrs Hodgdon has seen the cotton business change from a struggling lit tle industry hampered by poor ma chinery and even by a dearth of cot ton caused by the Civil war to per haps the greatest activity of New England and one of the greatest in the United States When she began her work the cotton loom was little different from the hand loom which had been in use since antiquity At that time there were many hand looms still in use Mrs Hodgdon says she does not remember whether she ever used a hand loom but says she knew weavers in Canada who were then using them ANCIENT CHEST OF DRAWERS School Teacher to Receive Heirloom In Form of Old Fashioned Ar ticle of Furniture South Paris Me Being next In line of family descendants Frank Farrar a native of this place now a school teacher In Dallas Tex is to receive a valuable heirloom in the form of a chest of drawers an old fashioned seldom seen article of fur inlture The old relic hand made 160 years old is seven feet high and has eight large drawers and three small ones Four boards which make the aides are each 36 inches long by 27 Inches wide and of an Inch thick of solid mahogany There are 38 feet of this rare wood used in the finished ypHb -- fTT He Chest Is 150 Years Old form all of which is of an inch thick The chest was built for David Bemls whose son brought the case to Paris with him In 1796 Oklahoma Indians Muskogee Okla There are man Indians in the West prominent in pub lic life Charles D Carter lof the Fourth congressional district of Okla homa is a Chickasaw Indian with some Cherokee blood Carter was born and brought up among the In dians was educated in an Indian school and has been associated with Indians all his life Senator Owen of Oklahoma is a quarter breed W A Durand speaker of the Oklahoma house of representatives is a Chick asaw and Benjamin F Harrison sec retary of state of Oklahoma Is a Choctaw born and educated in the Choctaw nation In the eastern half of Oklahoma in proportion to the pop ulatipn more Indians are holding state district county and municipal offices than white people and they are equally successful which demon strates conclusively that they are com petent for self government Governor Cruce of Oklahoma while not an In dian is married into the race his wife now dead having been an Indian iStbferfeJSi JSfeji ii jLj ng4Lii N TOOK A CHANGE 10 BECAME HERO LOCOMOTIVE ENGINEER RUSHES A BURNING TRESTLE AND SAVES 100 LIVES PASSENGERS IN GREAT PERIL With Quick Decision and a Jerk of the Throttle Engine Driver Snatch es His Train From the Jaws of Cer tain Disaster Los Angeles Cal Philosophers might find a nice problem of ethics in this emergency A man is confront ed Avith a situation in which he can with certainty save his own life and the lives of a hundred others by abandoning another hundred persona to deadly peril or by risking his own life and the lives of those whom he might have left in security take a desperate chance of saving all or none Such a crises recently leaped up on a sudden before George A Smith of Los Angeles who has been for nearly 30 years a locomotive engineer for the Southern Pacific railroad In an instant he decided to stake every thing upon one throw to rescue all or none Mountain mogul engine No 307 with Smith at the throttle straining against the leash of its brakes wa3 grinding and slipping down the steep side of the Coast range in Soledad canyon one of the worst stretches on the Fresno Los Angeles division of the railroad Behind it was the mo mentum of its own weight and of seven coaches well filled with passen gers Suddenly Smith with distended nos trils drew back into the cab I think I smell smoke he shouted A moment later as the flanges of the wheels screeched around a curve thQ fireman yelled a warning In another moment the engine shot out upon tho big trestle over Santa Clara creek The bridge was in flames The airbrakes brought the mogul to a halt its wheels showering sparks a third of the way across the blazing structure Half of the coaches re- Saved From Disaster malned out of danger on terra flrma and Smith and his fireman by run ning back over the roofs of the cars could reach safety in a few minutes To remain on the bridge meant death Because of the steep grade he could not back the train out of peril Tho only chance to save the lives of all was to dash across the 200 foot tres tle trusting to luck that the structure would not crumble down before the last of the seven coaches had crossed it Smith released the brakes and threw the throttle wide open The en gine sprang forward and thrust its nose into the aisle of flames At every turn of the wjieels the trestle swayed groaned and cracked Cut ting a passage through the fire and smoke the train raced across The passengers finding themselves sud denly within an envelope of Are placed there by one mans belief in his luck screamed cowered and fainted In the tender behind the engine were 3000 gallons of oil fuel for the locomotive Smith knew that a loose 4 valve a tiny leak or an open feed pipe into which a jet of fire might be sucked would mean an explosion that would wreck the trestle and send the entire train In fragments to the bot ton However as grim as Jim Bled soe he urged his iron horse forward Now the front trucks of the engine clattered off the bridge and now the engine itself was free With head out of the window the engineer looked back anxiously as coach after coach all on fire drew off the trestle When the last had won free he brought the train to a standstill Out sprang the passengers white faced and trembling They turned to the bridge which they pelted in vain with the extinguishers Ten minutes after the last car left the trestle it thundered down I just took a chance said Smith as the passengers surged admiringly about him I staked my chances on luck and wa went through Ice Cream Killed Him Charlotte Mich P M Thomas aged sixtjjffour a traveling man if dead of ptomaine poisoning from eating ice cream I LOST C1 POUNDS Another Terrible Case of Gravel Cured by Doans Kidney Pills Charles Understein 50 W 44th St Chicago 111 says Kidney trouble ran me down from 196 to 136 pound3 and I was a shadow of my former self Oh howl suffered I became so bad the doctors said my left side was paralyzed I could not walk without assistance I grew worse and went to a hospital but was not helped My friends all thought I would die Three weeks after I be gan taking Doans Kidney Pills I passed a gravel stone as big as a pea At intervals the stones kept passing from me I passed eleven in one day Doans Kidney Pills finally cured me My health returned and I have had no kidney trouble since Remember the name Doans For ale by druggists and general storekeepers everywhere- Price 50c Foster Milburn Co Buffalo N Y HADNT SEEN IT SINCE I j3 l J She You ought to sea that man In evening clothes He Id like to he borrowed my dress suit three months ago BABYS HAIR ALL CAME OUT When my first baby was six months old he broke out on his head I A POOR I APPETITE QUICKLY REGULATED Loss of Appetite always means stomach weak ness and this requires Hostellers StomacS Bitiers immediately It tones strengthens and invig orates the entire diges tive system Try it and see for yourself YOULL FIND IT EXCELLENT GRAIN TANKS For Storing Grain Tanks of all Kinds Write for Catalogue Columbian Steal Task Cf - Giwr3 with little bumps They would dry up and leave a scale Then it would break out again and it spread all over his head All the hair came out and his head was scaly all over Then his face broke out all over in red bumps and It kept spreading until it was on his hands and arms I bought several boxes of ointment gave him blood medicine and had two doctors to treat him but he got worse all the time He had it about six months when a friend told me about Cuticura I sent and got a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment In three days after using them he began to Improve He began to take long naps and to stop scratching his head After taking two bottles of Resolvent two boxes of Ointment and three cakes of Soap ha was sound and well and never had any breaking out of any kind His hair came out in little curls all over his head I dont think anything elsa would have cured him except Cuticura I have bought Cuticura Ointment and Soap several times since to use for cuts and sores and have neves known them to fail to cure what I pw them on I think Cuticura is a great remedy and would advise any one to use it Cuticura Soap is the best that I have ever used for toilet purposes Signed Mrs F E Harmon R F D 2 Atoka Tenn Sept 10 1910 Religion which was once an institu tion of the state is becoming more and more the faith and ideal of the individual soul Smokers find Lewis Single Binder 5a cigar better quality than most 10c cigars If a girl is in love with a young man she cant see any one else in a crowd m i i 5