11 The (gee, azire 0 50e, Dees Junior DmniDAy Dcjdk. Dottie Dialogues Our Voices Drown Out Our Coun try's Call. FT WALTER A. SINCLAIR. " IT This is ihe i I -J asked Dottle. I hope," I re- the de- and "Come (4t ay goodby? hopefully. "Not for" several hour, piled Wh-rr' "I thongjit tint ' myb! you had heard yoiir country calling," eh mused, touching a bugle U on lh? piano keys. "I'm a little hard of hearing." I ex plained. iippn-.you will say that In case of-a draft." 'he, pbserved, critically. "Keep those windows closed." 1 warned. "Ifsfta ar- dangerous In the springtime, O. Annie." t "B(iw abrrut sight drafts?" she queried. "I'll get.ein oculist's certificate," I re sponded. r" " ' ' ". don't fctlleve you're patriotic at all," ah- armn-d. 'I never ould smoke those brown paper cigarettes," -I apologized, meekly. "Count App"ny':" h derided. . "Tea. count upon Yne." I agreed. 'Wouldn't you Beek glory where rhJU , concarne fllea thickest?" she rmuulea. - -- - . "Nor where the fever mosquitoes Wiazrdn Ty . thickest," I added. "In tlrrars of peace, prepare for maneu vers." ahe paraphrased. J "Now, lt'they' were only womaneuvera. I healtated.. - , "The Home Ouard for yours," ahe de cided." ''On parjloular home at a time." I cor rected. "' ' i "To think you.have no martial spirit," ahe. mourned. . - . "Not even a aarwty marshal's spook," 1 anroitto '...," ' ' "White brave , heroes ana regulars are dally departing for the front or frontier, vaa the rase ma be. to maneuver, sunburn and- eat - hot wraales for their country," she mimed. ' . . ' . . "Aha! b'aa" some 'brave he-roe been floss Ins around her?", I Inquired. ' "Certainly." she announced. "LJeutenant Pufllcker of the; gallant 'Bteeth, bade me a regula sentimental song farewell last nil lit. Ha wore his uniform, too.' ,' "And had uniform success, I'll bet." I gritted, enviously. "I'll admit he' looked Just like the de parting .fover " In a -colored picture, nong sl.de," 'sh averred, roguishly. "W'aa It hia fatigue uniform?" I Inter rogated. -;' . ' 'Ak me! He "ddln't loo fatigued," she responded. 'Ton d know his dress uniform by the gold las and frogs on It," I auggested. "UNIFORM St'CCK5fS" "This didn't even have a toad on It. hut he did seem to have a frog in the throat she reminisced. "L)id he aay that 'Hark, the bugle was sounding?' " I began. "Kven though I had a terrible cold, he was too much of a gentleman to mention It." she retorted, coldly. "I mean did he say that sold-Jprs were mar-ching a-way, this being the right month for a March?" I continued. "And that like other heroes he was frittering away his time singing ballads Instead of catching the transport?" "He seemed to be in a transport of bliss." she giggled, blushing a bit. "He looked It." I rellled. "How do you know?" ahe countered. "I saw him at the club about midnight and he was quite chesty," I said. "Well, he bad a right," she affirmed. "Sure. Helng the first man to ahow signs of war." I added. "What do you mean?" she questioned. "Well, when he came into the light,". I enlightened, "and threw off his army over, coat, I asked him If he was serving In a flour mill or a magaxine. because one shoulder of his uniform coat was white with powder!" "I I don't!" she declared, after the red had mounted to her temples. Then with a mischievous light In her eyes she asked: "Don't don't you ever do any er magaxine work?" (Curtain.) (Copyright, 1911. by the N. T. Herald Co.) '7 V -i- SHA HA HA'Vn . y - j es? j . i Day We Celebrate' l-..vJ I riJOTt) PATNTEU. March 22, 1911. Bt'tiool. Year, ..Train 1904 . .Train .1 1902 . Pacific 1905 Moves for City Beautiful II ' V: i How to Meet Disaster Tersely Set Forth j . Keliom . Ixthrop .Mason . . Lake . . . 1-lnooln . ... ..1898 ... ...1897 1900 ......1898 1903 1903 Alexander Haslett. builder, at work on his fall. This happened twice In the few .home-' of the possibilities of the city of (he future, as It will be remodeled from rx ajlug titles or , built from the start In accordance with modern needs, were out 4in.4 by the..tiwr planning experts who met at tit (o .planning; conference recently" Ti.d rd London. The most emfnent taott .in 'thla line,' both In tfurope ana -UMti a., dlsuaned the subjttct thor wughly. 'tlietn. deliberations being aided by maps, drawings and photographs of the mutt, "ntabl work already done In this country and abroad, and It Is expected thai a fresh -Impetus will be given to the rcniotfejrng; of towns sa a rrsult of the broadenin of viewpoint and exchange of by t H. BUrnhain. president of the -V American National Commission of Kine T-Arts andr -Ur., aiurnhain's own feeling Is tnat me vonierence win iui.c an iiu mediare and deep impression on the lay ing "out of cities and towns all over the world. The most striking prophecy regarding (uture elites was made by M. Kugene Heuard, ' munWpul architect of Paris. M. Hcnard predicts that In the nesr future light Wd energy will be conveyed universally by electricity, while petrol and oxygt-n will be drpended on to supply heat a comforting thought In view o our 4;mlnlshlnjc wood and coal supply. . Alao. every well-equipped houae will be aupplled with a private 'cold storage plant, refri gerated by Tries n a of liquid air, a device that will prouably ' have a good effect on the price . of , perishable provisions by utttng within the reach of the people one of the Jobber's chief sources of profit. Another auagstloa that might well be appMed daring the dog day In New York la the recommendation that cold radiators. aa well as heat radiators, be uaed to keep dwellings at a comfortable temperature In summer as well as winter. M. Menard holds that by this means each house might be provided with one or more health chambers, closed by double 'windows and doors, . In'whVJi the family would . be enabled to reap all the benefits of cool air, full of oxygen, during the moat sultry summer weather. . . Another prediction reminds one of Ed ward Bellamy's "Looking Backward." It is that glaa verandas of various shapes. Joined together so aa to afford protection to the sidewalks, will ultimately be a feature of all cities and towni. By such i a device the elusive, umbrella, would at last receive Its Just deserts, for the streets would be Just aa dry. and comfortable In rainy weather aa they now are on sunny days. Also, the city of the future, accord ing to M. Hernard, will have buildings ex actly as high as the street In wlr , In which case New York may achieve within the century the statua of an Interesting relic of the past. The roofs of these houses would be platforms ornamented with shrubbery and flower beds, to be used as roof gardens. The town of the future, aa regards its topography, will offer a marked contrast to the favorite checkerboard arrangement of the average American city In that It will be traversed by large radiating thor oughfares, partly occupied by moving plat forms, raised above the level of the side walk proper, which will afford a means of quick communication between the dif ferent sones. The Idea la to terminate these platforms by large revolving- cross maa. placed at the Intersection of the main streets, so that the crouds In the most congested district will be unable to block the streets The Craftsman. the steel frames of a modern building In Philadelphia, aa he was adjusting a rope on an elevator, slipped and fell eight stories through a shaft. Death waa as certain as It can be for any man. There was nothing between him and the brick pavement ' below, some seventy feet distant. Did he give up? Not ha, He waa one of the men who dally tempt life on the slender - framee of a great structure, who face death every hour of their work, who look down and see It stories below and look up and see It In winging iron beams above, whose minds are keen," w hose will Is quick and w hose acts are swift as thought. He did not "surrender himself to his fate." He did not give up and "trust to a happy ending." He waa wholly unwilling to accept the "dispensation of death" while breath gave aome chance of the dispensation or me. He had ut two or three seconds from the time he fell until two storlea down there was a board projecting. He grabbed for the board and caught it. He could not hold it, but he broke the strength of his fall for two atorles. The swing and im petus threw him into a somersault, and he went down turning, but aa he turned fate brought him near another board, at the fourth story, and, on the Instant, he grabbed that as he passed and again broke seconds In which he shot like a bullet, past story after story, on his headlong way. He struck the ground, but he had only a alight Injury to his skull, which a fortnight In the hospital will cure. Neither arms nor legs were broketi. His back was not Injured. He had saved bis life by sheer will, quick wit and 'invincible resolu tion. " - This Is the way in which every man and woman should meet the falls and fates of life. It comes to all to slip- It happens to many to fall. Slip and fall often come at the very moment when they seem certain disaster. Hope Is gone. There appears to j : . : r Daily Health Hint J Water is one of the moat effective means of maintaining health. It helps to move the poisonous waste materials and producta In the system. The 1'rmlDUr of It. Teacher Tommy, what is the feminine of the masculine "stag?" Tommy (whose mother Is a society leader) Afternoon tea, ma'am Phlnx. be no chance. Many a man baa gone to his death with more chance than had Alexander Haalett. Many more men slipping In other ways have lost all that makes life worth hav ing, because they saw and Belied no help ing thing, though many were near as they fell. But the real man and the real woman In. the Instant of fall and In the moment of disaster acts, thinks as the lightning strikes, and seises the one Blender, stay ing chance that passee, and, selling It, wins. It is in this spirit that all of life should be faced. Though the slip Is irremediable and the fall seems fatal, though one has climbed long and stands high, only to fall at the end, atill In the very headlong de scent, aa one shoots past all that one has climbed to win, life is still possible, suc cess may yet be won and hopeleas disaster may still be retrieved. If. like this man. nothing daunts, and with relentless will and lightning thought, and Instant deter mination, one seises on anything and everything that can aave. And in the beneficent life, arranged by forces higher than our own, no man or woman ever Blips and falls without some chance being given to retrieve all that la lost and to save all the future Philadel phia Presa. Name and Adflrew. Grant Ast.Ieford, 434 Martha St Eddie Anderson. 1921 South Fourth St Elsie U Anderson, 1305 South Eighth St Ruth E. Anderson, 2418 Indiana Ave Leonard Adler, 3817 North Seventeenth St Cornelia E. Buckblll. 1054 South Twenty-second St. Edith E. Bradford, 1810 Ohio St Florence Cope, 1418 Park Wild Ave Wilbur Erlckson. 3712 North Twentieth St Lotnxop- Gertrude Maria Folk, 55J25 North Forty-swond Ave. .Centrarrark 1901 Frances Grasso, 2733 South Twelfth St nancrort John M. Hunt, 3112 Woolworth Ave FarK .iuo William W. Hlslop. 8182 Fowler Ave Monmouth Pafk ...1898 Zella Hlghsmlth, 3177 Grand Ave Monmouth Tark ...1897 Helen Horton, 2044 Vtnton St Vinton 1905 Martin Johnson, 2603 North Twenty-sixth St Lothrop 1895 Stanley Jackson, 3025 Pinkney 8t Howard Kennedy ..1899 Howard Jones, 2817 Leavenworth St Cass .: 1903 Ethel Johnson, 1916 Burdette St Lake 1897 Ravmond Krnmwled. Fifteenth and HimebauKh Ave. Sherman ........1899 Emma Konvalln, 417 Lincoln Ave Train ........ . George A. Kurtx. 2013 Pinkney St Sacred Heart . Peter Kandylor, 2821 Walnut St Im. Conception Prareda Karbowska. 1546 South Twenty-fourth 8t..Im. Conception John H. Keck, 815 Park Ave Carl S. Llndeman, 2858 Ohio St Hey ward L. Leavltt, 1916 8outh Thirty-second Ave. Rachel Laxarus. 2013 Ixard St Kellom Edward M. Lynch, 1060 8outh Twenty-second St.... St. Joseph ........1899 Ruth M. McKean, 1718 Charles St Holy Family 1896 Iola L. Marmory, 135 Nortn Forty-third Ave Saunders 1901 Robert E. Meehan, 1910 Lake St Sacred Heaft 1896 Edward Morey, 812 South Tbirty-thlrd St High 1893 Mayne Maloy, 2220 Burdette St High ...1895 Robert Miller, 953 North Twenty-seventh 8t Webster 1904 Eleanor McGilton, 102 North Thirty-eighth Ave High .......... ..1897 Melva MacAulay, 2705 Dewey Ave ..'..'.. Farnam "v........ .1895 Amanda Nelson, Thirty-fourth Stand Fowler Ave. . Monmouth Park ...1900 Nuncls Nunflto, 608 Pierce St Pacific 1902 Harry A. Nielson, 4708 North Thirty-ninth St Central Turk : ., ..1905 Haxel Obllnger, 2420 Hamilton St Kellom ..-....'-. ..1905 LeBter Pope. 1021 South Twenty-first St Mason ...1899 Mildred O. Petterson, 1470 South Sixteenth St ...... Central Park. ... ,1900 Lawrence Parker. 2517 Caldwell St , Longer . I . ..1897 . Fa mam . Howard Kennedy . Windsor , .1902 ..1903 ...1902 ...1898 ...1906 ..1904 ..1901 ..1904 Husband Sold Three Children for Dollar -J Floyd Lee Paynter. Ill South Eighteenth St ; . . .Central.. . . : . ..189 8 Clara Pease, 2012 Oak St Vinton 1904 Paul E. Petersen, 3340 South Seventeenth St Vinton .v. . 1900 Harvey. Petersen, 1620 North Thirty-second Ave. . . . Franklin ..1903 Manta Putcamp, The Dunsany High . .', ..1894 Ruth M. RIbbel, 1114 South Thirty-second St Park 1 1906 VlolaB. Stroud, 2430 Patrick Ave Lake . 1896 Isabel C.Shukert. 2228 Larimore Ave..-. High 1894 Beulah Sorensen, 6603 Florence Boulevard ........ Miller Park .......1904 William R. Scott, 2811 Dodge St Farnam ,.1899 Virgil Saunders, 2029 Miami St. Lake ..V 1899 Joe Stanley, 2115 North Twenty-sixth St Long ;..1901 Fleming R. Schneider, 3819 Charles St Franklin 1901 Bertha Smith, 2 422 South Twentieth St Castellar .... 1903 . .... . .1902 ; .... .1905 M898 . .1901 i 1901 Mary F. Ure, 2003 Binney St Lothrop Louis Volchek, 1409 South Fourth St Train... Bessie H. Whitehead, 2630 Grant St Long .. Katie C. Witherspoon, 34 42 South Fifteenth St Forest ,i Willie Wiggins, 2620 North Thirteenth 'St Lake .. I'HlL.ADfcXl'HIA, March SI. According now that her husband has disappeared and Secret of the Everglades J one of the strange (acts about thia Ever- . glade region Florida la that It is really a decayed mountain tup. The crest is furmad of nuuvtve llme.-tone. usually cov eted by aianUe of sand. In this forma tion are nuraWiirM pot hnles. which vary In sue from 'a' few feet to thousands of acres; also countless lakes of fresh water, hp! inns and tttuent auburranran stream and pools. A tev miles nrth uf Cap Sable t an uutcrnp. ut I'mentune which projects to Lake Okeechobe. In this outcrop is an extensive shallow buin extending 110 m.les north and south and about se.enty miles east and es. while the altitude of Its ! the lake rkin ia twelve tent above mean low t'.de In j line. Ibove the tivcayne bay and a little less Gulf of Mexico. As a result of the weather and flowing water the rlrn has been worn Into fan tastic shaves. The depth of the bas:n V varies fnim one foot at Ihe rlm to twelve feet in place, tut Keneralh' the rock flour ia tn.rii a depth of one to six feet. And here Is the secret of the fertility of the i Kvei glades. Above the entire rock floor J rifes a layer of muck, formed of an al- i lucial deposit and of decaed vegetable 1 matter. This deposit varies from a fe.v! inches to several feet In thickness The J water covering th:a deposit come: fr.,m j springs that In Urn have their (OJrce In i i. A. Wllley In Cassler's laa- to the Btory told by Mrs. Mary Quglsa of No. 1517 South Lee street, this city, to Magistrate Hughes she and her three children were sold by her husband for 11 to a man who, she declares, haa threat ened to take her by force. In broken English she asked that her husband be found and made to support her and the three children whom he had left at home to starve. Though the alleged transaction took place some time ago and though the woman re pulsed the man who claimed her aa his property, she declared today that ahe was still in fear that he might come forward force himself Into her home. "It was three years age." she said, "that my husband sold me. He wanted money for more liquor. He gave me and the children for II, and I didn't know any thing about it. When the man came to me and said, 'I will live here, I own you, and you belong to me, I paid for you,' I thought he was crasy. I aald, 'You won't live here,' and I tried to drive him out of the houae; then he showed me my mar riage certificate and said, he had bought It and me for $1. I snatched It from him, and I have It now where he can't get It; but I am afraid." Magistrate Hughes sent two of his of fice to the woman's home to verify her atory. The youngsters were huddled together on the kitchen floor before the stove, which apparently had not had fire in It for days. The baby of nine months wss crying, and the other two, Joe, 6, and Oeorge, one year or so younger, were gnawing at chips of wood which they had picked up In the street to kindle a fire. There was not a vestige of food In the house, and the chil dren were blue with cold and half starved. In one of the upper rooma the officers found an emaciated boy,' Mrs. Quglsa's brother, who recently came from Poland, and who Is suffering with tuberculosis. Magistrate Hughes provided enough money to buy food for the family for a few days. How Army Customs Started - w ' i V. I Tart to Walker j ! Good Thing for Whooper3 in J J T President Taft t;kes a Joke and l., t be liked , JVhen he drnps work or p'ay I Is as buMsh abOU It as when l:i cuKene Neither die he preiiient appear to l everiensitrv e about tits wen; hi. which -rather more- tl.air that of most men He had gone to the rhevy Chase cmo outside Washington, for an afternoon game i gt well very uuickly I iiffert r .from whipping touyh will feel, indebttd to Dr. ilanucl Kodrigurx I'ortllin ' of Madrid for finding a delightful remedy. Me Mnnoum es In I'tlni'-a 1-aboratorlo that j ai the whooping touxh patient requires la j to be taken for a rhle eery fine day mi ! the front vat of a -wiotor car and be will I vt golf reent!y aixl came swinging out o! the club house in golf logs, which. If anv thing, add to hit stature. Passing the (en Bia courts. . be saw a Washington friend The favorable effects of a hang ot air in the later atavea of whooping tough are well known, but lr. furtlllo eays that even belter resi.lis than a mere change of air who la heavy enough to have been taken i ran he obtained by nmiur t ar riuV lie ; for the president,' at a distance, work'.n hard. The president stopped and tmiled broadly at the eftorta of the steut one to r4uce. .Hello'.' XT aiker'.'' he said, aa the game slackened. e;ar t It from sne to u?;il that yeu need that esereise. old man." Imposes certain indltlnns however, namely, that a clear, mild day be rhnsen (or the excursion, a good level road se lected, a apeed of six and a half miles an hour never exceeded and that the child be placed on the front sent of the car nTit to Ihe chauffeur. Tou can generally tail' from a mans aecktlea whether he la married er not. ." . - in . -N' -A ' . ."'v. . .' -v x' .- V ; ' ' ' i t ' ' - ! V J Captain James A. Moss. Twenty-fourth United States Infantry, read an intereatlng paper before the annual convention of the National Ouard association of New York at Albany recently on "Customs of the Service." Captain Moss is a graduate of West Point of the class of 1K9I, and al though a native of Louisiana, haa spent all of hla service with negro regiments with the exception of two months, when he re ceived his captaincy In the Twenty-seventh Infantry, being transferred shortly after to the Twenty-fourth Infantry. Captain Mosa la known aa the pioneer American military bicyclist and made an WW-mile trip on his wheel from Fort Missoula, Mont, to Tellowstone park in the summer and fall of 1896, and then a trip of 1 WW miles from Tort Missoula to Bt. Iouls in the summer of l1. Captain Mosa said he had given consid erable attention to the practices of '.he army In the last few years, and that since the Spanish-American ar many of the tfa ditlons and customs of "the old army" have entirely or partlallv tasked r.way. owing to the general reorganization it the army and the passing out of so many of the older offlcera and the Influx of a large number of young officers from civil Jjfe and from the volunteers-men wjisr-Vnew nothing ann'it the customs of the service and who eeemed to care less. Captain Moss oited a number of the various cus toms In the army, several of which are given below. s The expression "How." used by army men In giving a toast, is equivalent to the expression. "Here's to your health." Some think It la merely the Indian corruption of "Mow d'ye do?" abbreviated by the Indian to "How." and taken up and used by officers and soldiers who In the early days of frontier service were thrown In constant contact with Indians. However, on the other hsnd. there are others who believe the expression Is derived from the Indian language direct. m MRS. MARV' OUQ15A AlsIJD HEJ? CHILDREN would march past and countermarch only in front of the soldiers designed fr cru sade service, thus signalling out and dedi cating to the cause these' particular men. It is very probable that the assembled populace did considerable cheej-lng during this part of the ceremony, and it la quite likely that "the three cheers" are sym bolical ot that cheering. The following versions are given of the derivation of the expression "dough boy" as meaning, "infantryman." in olden times, when Infantrymen used to clean ttelr white trimmings with pipe clay. If caught in the rain the whiting would run, forming a kind of dough. Hence the sobriquet "dough boy." The tramp of 'In fantry marching In mud Bounds as If their shoes were being worked and pressed In "dough." From adobe, then "doble" the Idea being that Infantrymen ar the soldiers who have to march In the mud; henee the expressions used In the sixties and early seventies in referring to infantrymen as "di.ht. crushers, " "doble makers" and "mud crushers." However, some Infantry men think they are called "dough boys" becauae the., are always "kneaded" (needed); whileother Infantrymen think they are the "flower" (flour) of the army. The custom of saluting with the hand Is supposed by some to have come from a Roman practice dating back to the Borglaa, or even earlier. In those days assassina tion waa so common by the dagger that inferiors coming Into tae presence-of su periors were required to rets the hand, palm to the front, thus showing there waa no dagger concealed In It. Time euid cus tom have modified the requirement to the preeent method of saluting, There are othera who are Inclined to this view: From the beginning of time In feriors have been required to uncover be fore their superiors, and equals ta acknowl edge each other's presence by some courtesy. In the British army durm- the revolution a aentlnel saluted not only with gun. but taking off hla hat also. Complicated headgear like the bearskin At parade and at guard mount, when and the helmet could not be readily ra the adjutant glvea the command. "Sound j moved, and the -act of removing the hat off," It Is customary for the band to play j degenerated Into the movement of the three chords or flourishes, tailed "The hsnd to the visor as If the hat were goro three cheere." before Imginning to play the to be removed, and finally became oonveo- march and marching up and down In front . "onaiisea as at preeeoL ' of the command. After the rhd has re lumed to Ms plsee and finished flaying the march the "three cheers" are again sounded. This practice comes from the fol lowing custom that obtained during the crusades: doldjers that bad been eaelec-.ed to go en Ihe crusades were often formed la line with troops not so selected. The baad The practice also oomes from the cus tom during the crusades of kolahta when receiving orders, always te call upon Ood to witness their assumption of the duty Imposed, by raising the Bword to the Up and kissing the cross formed by the guard and body of the vwpoi. The eUpolas t the caber point In saJutrag atgntflea sub mission. New York Poet. - n