.TfCWUT it .WKTHMmmmn km'Ui i . Mmmtkmr4 m , h' JVatl4JUJt.-Mfcoijiaifciiii ikMfatir.r. ,,, b ,- , N m mm ii i. in in ii.iiiih i mi " wirwnm a- ii HI IT 1 h r r v V DAKOTA CITY HERALD JOHN H. REAM, Publisher. PAKOTA CITY, - - NEBRASKA. MAN WITHOUT A Hurrah for the man v.itliout a paint Ii ho is not the Ball of tho earth, then tho earth must curdy remain unsnlt d. Ho feels no inward burning ne cessity of breaking into newspapers (with constant declarations ns to tho JmdncsB of men and things. He Is not full of suppressed resolutions aa to tho wickedness of everybody else, nays tho Chicago Inter-Ocean. Ho has no spe cial yearning to ascend Chautauqua platforms and feed full tho listening throngs with all the horrors of exist ence. In privato lifo ho is tho cltl y.cn who looks after his family, who Is regarded ns a good neighbor and ho gains and deserves tho respect of mil those who know him. In tho busi ness world he is the man who does his work without a lot of nolsoand wasted motion and thereby earns tho grati tude of his associates or employers. In public lifo ho is tho man who sees that tho business of government gets attended to and leaves to louder states men tho honors of big headlines and Chautuuqun lectureships. After bear ing or reading tho studied and labori ous complainings of tho other variety, the thought of him is like tho murmur of pleasant waters. It cools, refreshes and strengthens tho Jaded spirit. It reminds ono that everything is far from being lost, that the world's work is still being efficiently done, that tho republic is Bafe, and that the sun Is still shining. A Boston restaurant keeper kept a green turtle on Its back In his win dow and was tried on a chargo of cru elty to animals. A Harvard university professor testified that tho turtlo was more nearly related to the birds than the fishes, but the defense took tho ground that it was not an animal, but a fish, and tho Judgo Instructed the Jury to bring in a verdict of not guilty. Whatever intellectual I?o3ton may hold as to tho status of the rep tiles, there is no good reason why tho laws forbidding cruelty to nulmnla should not bo broad enough to cover more than warm-blooded animals. An Oak Park professor is advocat ing the establishment of a school in which the art and science of courtship may bo taught. Good heaven! Has tho man no knowlcdgo of human nn turo? As soon as courtship Is niudo n thing that pcoplo will havo to study and work nt nobody will wlBh to in diilgo in it. Tho way to make court ship popular which Bocms to tbo Oak Park professor's object is to enact a lav; prohibiting It. Tha sick friend ltf'sorvthg useful purposes. He has long served as an excuse for tho belated homefarer who has been sitting by his bdaldo. Now ho is coming in handy for tho speed ing motorist who is hastening to his dying bed. It would be a great Blioclc to his loving friends t by Rome mis cbnnco thla convenient Bcapcgoat should suddenly recover. That Pennsylvania farmer who took a club and proceeded to batter up an automobllo whoso driver refused to stop when tho farmer's cattlo becamo frightened, possibly acted contrary to law, but his deed shows tho dangorous Btato of mind engendered In tho public by nutoists who dccltno to act reason ably on the road or who Ignore tho rights of pedestrians. A savings bauk official reports that a strange number of bogus coIiib find their way into baby's bank. Playing a trkk like that on a baby Is more rep rohcnslblo than putting buttons in tho contribution box. A Harvard professor says a ray's "Elegy in n Country Churchyard" would bo rojected if submitted to the editor of n modern magazine. Of courso, Ha length would bo agnlnst It at first sight. Tho young Cullfornlan who Bang, "I'd rathor have fingers thnn toes" will be surprised to leurn that a Jury In Chicago has assessed the latter at exactly four times tho valuo of the former. An Ohio man boat his wife with a baseball bat becauso alio had moved his bed during houBcclcnning time. She wouldn't havo mlndod, perhaps, If he had got mad enough to beat n rug or two. The Harvard professor who advises us to study Greek to tako our minds off money making overlooks tho fnct that money making is all Greek to tho youth who tucks his diploma under his arm and goes out to look for a (Job. ' Phlladelphlans are searching In Lon don for details of tho early history of William Penn. In futuro agos Phlln jdelphians will ho writing blographlei f Connlo Mack. i What a splendid thing It would be 11 somebody could dovlso a schemo for tho segregation of tho Joy-riders and the boat-rockers. A Kentucky man went violently In its while riding In a Chicago taxi- ib. It Is calculated to havo that ef fect to watch tho register shovo up 30 cost Furthermore, the result seems to save been a measuro of economy since It evidently cut short ae taxation of the taxi. T&bES'q sSNDOTHDR City and State Face NKW YOIUC How can tho Empire state and Now York city solvo its tramp problem? Tho vagrants now In tho state would form tho entire popu lation of a city tho size of Albany. The Empiro stato, and especially its metropolis, is tho mccca for this vast army of derelicts. The Jails, penltontlarlos and alms houses nre put to an expciiHo of ', 000,000 annually in endeavoring to copo with tho problem which has arisen through tho existence of this undeRlrablo clement. Hut far more serious than this Is tho loss caused by tho destruction of property, robberies, fires nnd kindred misdomeanors, which coBts Uio state, tho railroads and other private Interests over $10. 000,000 annually. Tho Immenso numberoftrnmpB tres passing on railroads nnd tho fatalities which overtako many of them may be Judged from tho fnct that in a porlod Alaska City Center FAIRBANKS, Alaska. If you should happen to drop Into a town wherp a newBboy scorns your nickel and asks you 25 cents for a newspaper, where ordinary meals at lunch count er restaurants aro a dollar a throw, whoro tho only communication with tho bnlanco of tho world is by wire less, where ice Is plentiful but you've got to pay to skate, and steam pipes are laid alongside tho water ptpoa to keep them from freezing, you'd think you had struck a queer place, wouldn't you? Yet such a plnco is Fairbanks. You might well oxpect a town that's 2,500 miles north of Senttlo, Wash., to bo In perpetual zoro weather, but you wouldn't expect a ctty located this far up In the Ice belt to bo so rich that it could afford a water systoni, not to mention tho luxury of steam heat, which, whllo not only providing wnrmth for privato homes of tho city, Is mado to swaddlo tho fire plugs and keep thorn thawed out and ready for uso during tho long wlntor. Seven months of tho year aro "dark" In Fairbanks, and during ono of those months electric lights aro burned on tho streets 21 hours a day. If you want to read your morning newspaper nt breakfast ltymust bo by tbo nld of tho electric bulb, and In what would bo your noonday glaro you havo got to carry a lantern In order to distinguish VNNNNN Bank Uses Thumb fWHAlli TH' luSE or LEARwn' iu rTnii c WHEN THIS 13 SO MUCH FASIER. CHICAGO. Chicago has a bank which Identifies Its depositors by means of the thumb pilnt mnrk. When n customer who cannot write his name opens an nccount or doposlts money or withdraws It hu makes u thumb murk on thu slip, and is audi clontly Identified, According to tho cashier of this pe culiar bonk, thoro has novor boon nn error In tho Hortlllon system of Iden tification. When wo began business six yenrB ago, ho says, not moro than one In threo of our customers could sign his name In English. Wo would not nccopt signatures In Jewish wilt ing. Wo wero confronted by a serious problom, Tho uso of tho thumb print was HUggcHted, and It has worked out to perfect satisfaction. Whon a man comes in to open an account nnd wo find hu cuunut sign his namo wo fill In tho identification CJXIE52 Ssi.FTsWul mm yxrzj fifJi xt r t llrBl t Police Chief to Stop Boys Smoking K boys of this city now huvo an of ficial fathor to watch them nnd pre vent lhtlr smoking cigarettes. Henry T. Zlmmer, chief of police, tins un dertaken to vigorously enforce tho Kansas law which forbids minors to smoko. The polico aro confiscating all tobacco, cigars, clgarottoB, cigarette papors and pipes found In possession of youths. It's back to tho corn Blll nnd tho grnpevlno for tho boys. They cntinot legally smoko until they reach tho proper ago. This law Is of tha 1009 vintage, but little attention was paid to It and tho Kansas City boys who wanted to "roll ono" wont abend and rolled It and smoked without ofllclal Interference. Thoro wero soma complaints to the city officials, howovor, and Hnally Chief Zlmmor ordored tho patrolmen to stop Juvunllo smoking, Thu chief has seven sons nnd ho know something nbout how to stop smoking. Patrolmen visited tho confectionery and drug stores whero boys congre. To Restore Chairs. To clean nnd restore tho elasticity of cane bottom chairs, turn tho chair and with hot water and a spongo sat urate tbo cane work thoroughly. If the chair is dirty use soap. After ward set tho chair to dry out of doors and tbo Boat will bo as taut as when aew. For Celebration of the Fourth. In tho Interest of a "sano" Fourth of July a Chlcagoan has Invontod an InBtrumeut to produco nolso by burst ing paper between tho mouth of a rubber bulb and a perforated haudlu. . . i ) i w ji if f 'i HtafwHtMi- Tramp Question of ilvo years actually 23,904 trespass ers wore killed and 25,230 injured In the United Statos whllo stealing rides. .Most of th'm wore tramps, and at least one-llfth of tho ncdldents took place in this state. A large proportion of these vagrants are youths and young men whoso ages rnngo from sixteen to twenty-one. Reared in the cities their yearning for adventure, uncontrolled by proper homo conditions, causes them to tako the road. Though one-half of those finally quit tho nomadic lifo and return home or settle down, tho remaining hnlf be come Inveterate tranipB and gradual ly turn from vngrancy into a enreer of crime or semi-crime. A very Inrgo percentage, however, aro adults and comprise every species, from men who will not or cannot work through chronic unlltness to those who nre Innocent victims of downright adver sity. Ono solution proposed is to form a labor colony. A labor colony is, brief ly, n state-owned colony for tho de tention, reformation and Instruction in agriculture and other industrial occu pations of persons committed by mag istrates ns tramps nnd vagrants. of Queer Things Fairbanks. ALASKA r:?ls2pZ TT lOto 10 DtOUtl BELOW a-gRQ TUIT'I .I i rmi in i I w t r e TrtR I ME -! 4 tho neighbor you meet in tho street, A common laborer gets ?& a day mw .Cl.iz. J and board In Fairbanks, and board Is Justed Just above Uie nottio to pro a factor worth considering. It is cstl-1 vent its being raised, the milkman mated thnt It costs about $2.25 to aup- can closo tho front dor of tho safe ply three meals a day here, so the wll& the assurance that no thief can laborer Is making tho handsome sum enter. At the sldo of tho box Is a of $7.25 per day. or $ 43 50 por week. . book to hold any extra bottles. rjven unuor incso conuiuuuu luuurvia arc scarce Fairbanks is as cosmopolitan as any mining camp In tho west. A steam railroad connects Fairbanks with all of tho mines within a radius of 50 miles, and trains aro run several times dally and from vnrious points. Fair banks proper has a population or 5, 000, which includes two bnnks, two hospitals, numerous hotels, four auto mobiles, an electric lighting plnnt and other accessories of civilization. Tho population of tho district outside of tho city consists of nVout 5,000 people. From October to April or each year Fairbanks Is wrapped In a heavy sheet of lco and snow nnd tho ther mometer varies from 20 to 50 degrees below zero. Print Signatures card for him, Just as wo would for any other depositor. Then wo wrlto his nnmo and witness his mark. Thon wo glvo him an ordlnnry rubber stamp pad with red ink on It, nnd ho prossos llrst one thumb and then the other on tho pad and makes n care ful, clear Impression of each on tho corners of his card. Whon tho depositor comes hack to ' add to his account or to withdraw I money tho bank attendant mnkes out tho Blip for him nnd writes in his j name. Then tho depositor makes his thumb print on tho slip and presents it at tho toller's window. Tho teller turns to tho card lndox and finds tho caru. Just an ho would Tor any other depositor. In place of looking at tho Flgnaturo ho looks at tho thumb prints nnd compnres them with tho marks on tho deposit or withdrawal slip. Wo havu novor had a complaint or crror from thu uso of this system. Thoro aro absolutely no two thumbs alike, and thu thumb print mark is an absolute Identification. We havo had complaints over slgnntures, but never ovor thumb prints. Mon have claimed that they did not sign with drawal slips, but no one has ovor de nied his thumb mnrk. MLAMCF ISI Th' PRice or UUERTY I ,J -.LJ . gated beforo and after Bchool hours, Hoys who wero smoking wore taken to tho polico station. Tholr tobacco and cigarette papers were taken away from them. Tho chief loetured the boys nnd permitted them to go home A Inrgo number went through this ox perionce. Thu smokers' supplies tho police contlHcatu are burned nt tho police heudquartors. Every few days the Binoko from tho city hall chimney bears the tobacco-laden odor of a levee barroom. It la simply a few more sacks of tobneco and a fow more bunches of papers passing beyond the roach of tho boys. Good Reason. Littlo Ethel "Pupa, hero's a pic ture of tho old woman who lived in a shoe and had so many children she didn't know what lo do. Why did she live In a shoot" Papa "She lived in a Bboo because sho couldn't gut s flat with all thoso children." Tobscco Trust In Chins. The tobacco consumption of China is very largo and Is mostly homo grown. Tbo finer grade of loaf conios from tho Philippines, but the whole situation Is controlled by tho tobacco trust JttLV btSK vie I VA) i.rc. j i TV X'"JKkV - DAIEr NEW SAFE FOR MILK BOTTLE Ingenious Apparatus That Is Destined to Balk Petty Thieves Opened Only With Key. It took two Michigan men to de vise the milk bottle safo shown here, but between them they contrived a most Ingenious apparatus that is de stined to balk tho potty thieves that steal milk bottles from doorsteps. New frilk Bottle Safe. The safo is a box Just big enough to hold two bottles, side by side, and Is divided Into two vertical compart ments. Tho door has a spring lock nnd tho key Is hold by the house holder,' tho milkman not requiring any. In tho fact that tho milkman needs no key lies the featuro of tho device. In tho bottom of one com partment is a trapdoor that strikes the lock on tho front door as it Is pushed up and opons the latter. "-non a Dotuo is pinceu on mo irap- or, nowovor, ana a aiming Dar au- VENTILATION IN DAIRY BARN Some of Essential Points In Securing Proper Amount of Fresh Air In Cow 8tablcs. Tho essential points In securing sufficient and satisfactory ventilation In stables arc, according to tho King system of ventilation, ns follows: Stnblo walls nnd ceilings should be practically air tight and non-conductors of heat and cold. Doors nnd windows should fit well. j Fresh air intakes should bo not more thnn ten or twelvo feet apart. King Ventilating System. They should havo tho outsldo opening nt least threo feet below tho inside opening, with tho Inside opening at the celling, provided with a valvo or shutter. Foul air flues should bo air tight and non-conductors of heat and cold. They should havo their lower opening nhout ono foot above tho floor level, and with nB few bonds as possible pass upward to a height of nt least twenty-flvo feet, and should always bo two or three feet abovo tho ridgo of the roof or of any near-by roof. In building these flues around a clrt or pinto they must bo enlarged In propor- , tlon to tho slzo of tho obstruction passed. i REGULAR TIME FOR MILKING lob Should Not Be Performed by Tired, Dirty Farm Hands, Just In From Field. There Is much loss In milking b causo of having this work done b tired nnd dirty milkers, but tho raer. doing tho work are not to blame for being in this condition, nays a wrltor in tho Kimball's Dairy Farmer. They come from tho fields with their clothes covered with dust and perspiration. and bb soon aa they havo their supper commonco tho milking. Is It any won ' der that It Is often only half dono? H 1 farmers would mnko it n rule not to j compel tho help to do milking out or . seasonable working hours they would I experience much less trouble In se curing holp. Tho milking should bo mado a part of tho day's work and not nn nddltlon to it. Many farmers, espo- nlnllv wlmrn nnlv (An ni- nttonn ......... ! are kept, look upon this Job ns a sldo I Issue; that 1b, tbo milking can bo dono when they can't do anything else. Tho milking Is as important as any part of tho work, and whether you aro plowing or harvesting, mako your plans so that when the time comes to milk It can be dono without any delay. Again, tho best results cannot bo had from cows unless they ire milked at regular hours. White Speck In Butter. Whlto specks In butter aro some times simply flno particles of milk curd, resulting from lack of care in skimming. Sometimes they are small specks of dried cream having been scruped from tho sides cf the pan and being too dry to thoroughly soften and mix with tbo rest. Keeping Cows Clean. Keep tho flank and udder of the cows cllppod., It Is much easlor thnn to clean tho parts boforo milking. It holps to keep dirt out of tho milk. To clip tho cows nil ovor onco or twice a yoar will do them Good i- " "T 'f -fin hLftj Sin! GREEN RYE FOR MILK COW.. May Be Fed When It Heads Out and There Is More Nourishment in It at That Time. Green rye may bo fed as soon as It heads out; there Is then the most nourishment In tho stalks. Cut when freo of dew, and lot It wilt a few hours beforo feeding. Feed small quantities at first. A half forkful may bo given to each cow after tho hay has been eaten. When fed thus there Is no danger of bloat or hovon. Tho feeding of green feed to cattlo should be in the hands of a careful man, 'and not given to boys or a careless hand. Attention to this rulo will frequently savo the life of a valuable cow. Horses at work should not bo given green feed, as it is liablo to produce colic. Cows should not be turned oit to pasture too early. Walt until tho grass has made somo growth, and there Is somo nourishment in tho grass. Before turning out to grass give tho cows a feed of hay or straw llrst. After tho hay is eaten they are turned on tho pasture. For the first day or two let them graze, ono or two hours. When tho cows are accus tomed to the change they may remain out all day. Experienced dairymen feed a small grain ration throughout the grazing season. If you are getting 1C cents per gallon for milk, It will pay to do this. EXCELLENT QUALITY OF MILK Jersey Cow Is Unsurpassed for Beauty, Utility, Profit and Superiority of Product. Tho milk of the Jersey cow will al ways be in great demand with the critical consumer, because It contains far greater proportion of nourishing solids and rich, highly flavored, but ter fat than the milk of other breeds. Tho man who investigates the ad vantage of tho Jersey cow ovor the dairy breeds will generally invest hla money in a Jersey cow, nnd the profits will demonstrate his wisdom. Tho Jersey cow yields ns much profit as two or moro ordinary cows. She is healthy, vigorous, and costs no more to keep than an inferior cow. Prize Winning Jersey Heifer. Tho milk from tho Jersey cow Is 30 per cent, richer than tho average cow. Tho Jcrsoy cow Is unsurpassed for beauty, utility, profit and excellent quality of product. Gilded Milk. L. Ilorton, one of the biggest retail ers of milk in New York Htnto, Is charging twenty cents a quart for some of tho milk ho sells. Tho milk is produced by tho owner of a farm at Nowburgh, N. Y., and cleanliness Is insisted on to nn extent almost un believable. The cows are washed and wiped with spotless liuen, and when tho milk is obtained it is handled as though it wero champagne. Tho milk is sold to tho "gilded rich" in New York city. Works Up Big Business. An Oregon grocer In a dairy com munity ha3 worked up a big business by delivering goodB to his customors within a radius of five miles at the samo time he gathers up tho cream from the farm. Orders for goods pour in to him by telephone every morning beforo ho starts out. Carlotta's Good Record. Carlotta, the Missouri cow that pro duced ?270 worth of butter in ono year is nino years old, has had seven calves and wns never sick In her life. Her grain ration is corn chopped, bran, oats, gluten meal and linseed meal. She gets at least three of these Ingredients every time she is fed. Treatment for Cramps of Muscles. It often happons that tho dairy cow suffers from cramps of the muscles, especially of tho neck and sometimes of tho hind legs. This can bo over come by giving nn ounce of bromide of potassium in the bran mash twice each day for teu days. Avoiding Dust at Milking Time. The cows should not bo fed their roughago, nor tho bedding bo stirred up before milking, and aa far as pos sible tho barn should bo opened and aired beforo milking time, so that tho foul air which tHlntH milk fo readily may escape. lnd cream will not make good butter. Dairying is tbo most prominent branch of farming. A little laxativo feed should be given nt the tlmo of freshening. Milk cows must bavo an abundance of water or they will fall off in milk. A cow thnt mtlka for only five or six months Is seldom a profitable cow. Irregularity and too much fionon onlty In feeding tho calf aro olten dangerous. Whon your cows do not pay lor their feed, it's time to cbango the feed or tho cows. Selling tho products of the flold to tho cows and hogs is delivering them to tho best market unown. It thero la a noticeable falling oft In tho milk, seo If n cbango In tho ra tion cannot bring back tho flow. Tho silo enables tho dairyman to keep moro livestock on tho same num ber of acres and at less cost In feed and labor. Novor take a very young calf away from Its mother nnd put It on Bklm- milk. Taper It oft from wholo milk to IsUlmmllk gradually JrSyjJR'' '9HVt' -s OR many weeks g plans for celebrat ing me anniver sary of the Declar ation of independ ence ns a great civic festival havo been In prepara tion. Varied and ex tensive onto rtaln ment should be supplied so as to mako the day us sumo the character of a community fes tival. Ilut tho reck less use of danger ous explosives by children, too young to realize their own peril, Is not necessary to the nation's expression of gratitude that It is freo and independent. This sentiment has at last crystallzed Into a movement for a sane Fourth, and throughout the country various cities have made ar rangements by which it is hoped child life will be better protected than it has in preceding years. It was on the third of July, 177G, that John Adams wrote to his wife, Abigail, tho letter, since often quoted as a prophecy, concerning the future celebration of this period as a national festival. Dcsplto the fact that he wns one of tho most Important figures In the stirring events of that historic time, he wrote two letters to her on that day. In one he said: "Yesterday tho greatest question was decided which was ever debated in America; and a greater perhaps never was nor mm Independence f& View From Chestnut Street will be decided among men. A reso ution was passed, without one dissent ing voice, that these united colonies are and of right ought to bo free and independent stutes." In tho other let ter ho wrote: "Tho second day of July, 1776, will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America. I am apt to believe that It will be celebrated by succeeding generations ns the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated ns the day of deliverance by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, bells, bon fires and illumination from ono end of this continent to the other, from this tlmo forward forevermoro." The resolution for independence was, as these letters bIiow, really adopted July 12. Hut tho formal De claration of Independence was adopted July 1, und copies of this declaration, prepared by a committee of five head ed by Thomas Jefferson, wero then sent to tho states. The resolution adopted July 2 was presented to con gress by Richard Henry Leo of the Virginia delegation, Juno 7, 1776. It road: "Resolved. That these United Colonics are and of a right ought to be free and Independent states; that thoy aro absolved from all allegiance to the Hrltish crown; that nil politi cal connection between them and the State of Great Britain Is, and ought to be, totally dissolved." Prompt action in so serious a matter was'not to be expected and congress put It off until July 2, when the reso lution, much to the Joy of Adams, who seconded Lee's motion, wns adopted. In the meanwhile Lee, tho mover of the resolution, wns called homo by the Illness of his wife. Otherwise ho would probably havo been made chair man of tho committee of five appoint ed to propare a formal statement. This committee was composed of Thonins Jefforson, Henjamln Frank lin, John Adams, Roger Shorman and Robert R. Livingston. It is usually i-r-S3"j The Slow Luncheon. Mistress Why havo you been so long, Mario? I told you wo wanted tho lobster for lunch, and it is now past ono o'clock. Maid It's on account of your hob bio Bklrt you gave me, madam. Pole Mole i r-ir MVif conceded that Jefferson wrote the Dec laration, which was reported and dis cussed until July 4, when It was adopted. Copies were prepared nnd sent to the states. Pennsylvania watt the first to receive its copy, and on noon of July 8 it was read to a crowd of citizens in the stntehouse yard. It was read from n wooden platform erected in 17G0 to enable David Hit tenhouse to observe a transit of Ve nus. Some In the concourse who list ened to the reading may havo realized that a new constellation had ap peared iu the flrmnment of the na tions. Only the president of tha congress, John Hancock, and his secretary signed the Declaration on the day of its adoption. The final signatures of the fifty-six who signed the original document were not affixed until No vember. Three of the flfty-slx signers lived to see the fiftieth anniversary of American independence. They wero John Adams, Thomas Jefferson nnd Charles Carroll. Adams and Jeffer son died on the fiftieth anniversary July 4, 1S2G, leaving Charles Carroll tho sole surviving signer. Jefferson and Adams had both served as pres idents of the republic which they had helped to form. A third President, Monroe, also tiled on July 4, but five, years later than these two. Posterity, though it has fulfilled Adams' prediction, selected tho fourth instead of the second of July ns tho day for celebration. The corner stone of the Washington monument at the national capital was; Side of the Historic Building. laid July 4, 1S50. It was a very hot day. President Taylor, who was pres ent, was exposed to the heat of the sun for three hours. On his return to the White Houso he drank freely of ice water and Iced milk and also par took of some cherries. Shortly after ward he was taken 111 and died July 9. Benjamin Franklin, the cUest sign er, was seventy. Edward Rutledge of South Carollnn, tho youngest, was. twentj'-seven; Jefferson was thirty three. The average ago was forty threo years three months. Many oc cupations were represented, but law yers, of whom there wero thirty, were in tho majority. The first public celebration of tho event was that of Pennsylvania, July" 8. On July 9 Washington, comman der In chief, annnounced In general orders, "Tho honorable Continental congress, Impelled by the dictates of duty, policy, and necessity, having been pleabed to dissolve tho connec tion between this country and Great Britain and to declare the United Colonies of America free and inde pendent states, the several brigades are to be drawn up this evening on their respective parades at C o'clock, when the declaration or congress, showing the grounds and reusons of this measure, is to be read In nn au diblo voice. Tho general hopes this Important event will servo as frsh Incentive to every ofllcer and soldier to net with fidelity and couraf.e, as, knowing now that the peace and safe ty of his country depends, under God, solely on the success of oilr arms. And state possessed of sufficient power to that he is now in the service of it stato possessed of sufficient power to reward his merit and advance him to the highest honors of a freo country.' Mean. "He took a mean advantage." "In what way?" "When sh'e sued him for divorce hfa got the Judge to glvo him the eus. tody of her lapdog." Judge. ?3i3) Worried. "I'm afraid my wife is going Into a deolln.fi." ' "'Don't worry about that, old man Sho'll como out all right." "Yes, but what If sho shouldn't? I'vo got all nrrnngements mado to send h ieast for tho summer." JL .& v m rrrs' H 1 & - -J 'hS1' 4 9HE1 1 . , t, - ' w 3 v w Mr J t Jin rf