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About Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905 | View Entire Issue (April 19, 1900)
r-t- ..4,M f OUB FAVORITE FAMILY F000S. Ktcli Coffee. Mvrdeck'i Pan Spices, "Opt" Flawing Extracts. And Burdock r.iF&cfl YOUR GROCER HAS THEM ALL. OLD SOLDIERS. We want to ptircban additional claims of Union .S'liilicr'n, Sailor', vbelr widow nr minor lieir. whoh"TTi!ntfuu d lew. lUttn iffoucrc prior o June XI. lsr-1. cTi-n If ttfy iib-indon-d Ibctr fmm VV'l I buy rrc.tlon claims If evor to Ym'l, iho Government l.tind Wurrni, and fttiiain itjm for id'cr whurmve nol hinl tbrm MueU. tirritt Inclui-t.i cms offered bfrenu. ... .. ... ,K tLLEY, Land tt'y M Sheldler UlOg.. Kaimun CIi. Mo : REMAINS OF A PREHISTORIC RACE, j : EFFECTS OF ARTILLERY PUNCH. m'lT 5!''OVery what are n- (foiwd Is a composition like cement "I notice," .aid an officer of the Six- punch as we would a chance to retreat "1 , . , f.a f"PhlRtorlc a"d "an1- The ,urface " Tall"'T t"nlnth 'mnt yesterday, "that Ad-, before the enemy, liut so strong were unu impervious to water, wnne the sub- miral Dewey was knocked out at Sa stance Itself la porous. Minute shells Vannah by Imbibing a glass of 'Artil are found in the composition, and In lery Punch,' combined with a plate of some pieces the material is perceptibly chicken salad. It Is my private belief finer than In others. It appears as tho' that the chicken salad mixture is a the artisan of ancient ages completed myth. Invented by the resourceful his Image ar-i then cut or pawed them newspaper correspondents. From my into sections, perhaps for th; purpose : experience with that particular punch of facilitating transportation. j I am free to fay that I believe its dead - Among the most perfect pieces Is a ly effects need no side issues to put section from the lower part of the bust . it on the plane of knock-out drops, to the middle of the thigh, showing the j ."Our southern friends, who uuder hip and a part of the body. Doth endH stand the mystery of the compound, are smoothly cut, and the abdomen !ean drink quarts of it. They are im- race along the Neosho valley. In south east Kansas, is adding great Interest to the development of forsil beds which have lately been found In that section. A collection of pieces of human Im ages that instantly excite speculation as to their origin and age Is now In a modest museum at Neosho Falls, a small torsn in Neosho county. Ethnol ogy throws no light on their history. In fact, from all the writers on prehis toric America can no theory of the or igin of these images be obtained. They seem to be unlike any heretofore found on the continent. It Is certain, at least that nothing res-mbling them has ever been found in this part of the United States, and they will add new and In teresting pag-s to the works of au thorities of antiquities. . So recently have they been found that there has been no opportunity for more than a vague conjecture us to their age and probable creators; the first scientist Is yet to Inspect them. They can have no significance with the fossil finds in this part of the state, though they may serve to confirm the seems to have consisted of a separate section. Other pieces are in the form of breasts, feet, arms and shoulders, parts of the head, etc. Few of them are Intact, but nearly all of them can be designated at sight as parts of hu man forms. The proportions of all pieces seem to be perfect, and there Is nothing to Indicate that they are the distorted Aztec Images, such as have been found in Mexico and Central America. Authorities Insist thet such Images found In other parts of the wor.d are modern theory of the co-existence u producH of an age antedating the Az man with extinct animals. The two tec period. It seems that they could distinct representatives of ancient lifenave been deposited at no other time than whn the gravel was. One sug gestion, based on the condition in which they were found, Is that they were ob- There Is more Catarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases t'Ut together, and until the last few years uas supposed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctors pro tiounced It a local .ll-ease. and prescrib ed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cur- with local treatment, inoiiouneed It .nrurabte. Science ha proven catarrh to be a Constitutional disease, and therefore requires consti tutional treatment. Hulls Catarrh Cure, manufactured !y K. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O.. is the only constitu tional cure on (he market. It Is taken Internally In doges from 10 drops to a teaspoonf ill. It acts directly in the blood and mucous surfaces of the sys tem. They offer one hundred dollar Tor any case It falls to cure. Send foi Circulars end testimonial. Address, K. .1. CIIKNKY & CO., Toledo. O. Sold by Druggists. 75c Hall's Family 1'i.ls aie the best. have appeared here simultaneously in the past year. One seems to represent a period of at least seml-clvllization, and, while it Is the common belief that the fossils are of a more modern age, It is possible that they are as old as the fragments of images. The collection of pieces of human Images belongs to J. AV. Dice, a farmer living near Neosho Falls, who also has some valuable fossil ppeclmens. Thre are seventy pieces In It, and that they are the genuine cr-ation of a people quite advanced In art there Is no ques tion. They were found either In the gravel bars along the Neosho river, within a radius of a few miles of Dr. DUe's farm, about twenty-two feet un der the surface of the valley. In a stratum of gravel, or were recently un covered In the banks of the Neosho by the attenuation of floods. rr.une. They have gone through Dew ey's experience, and the strange ele ment in the tale of an artillery punch Is that after a man gets over the first issay at it he may regard it with corn; It's something like a boy smok ing his first cigar. The second was never known to make him wish he hud not tackled the first. "My Initial experience with the punch in question vias acquired at Huntsville. Ala., where we were encamped in the winter of 18M-99, after our ineffectual attempts to inject ourselves Into the struggle In Cuba. The officers of our regiment were Invited to a ball given at the best club I ever enjoyed the hos pitality of. A feature of the enter tainment was a monstrous bowl of ar tillery punch. The officers of the Sixty Jects of worship by a nomadic people, j ninth, toasted by the charming ladies and were made In portions as a means ( of Huntsville, drank of this punch asked them what they thought of 'ar- the assurances that it would not affect us that we took a chance. Fay! It was glorious. Dancing with those beau tiful southern girls seemed like float ing on clouds wit hangels. Conversa tion of a scintillating nature was the ruie. We went to camp clear and trefeh and got up in the morning feel ing like potentates. NEWSPAPER MEN TRIED IT. "I don't know what they put in the punch; it is a southern secret, but I im agine that there is a blend of superior moonshine whiskey and champagne in it somewhere. A couple of New York newspaper men came to Huntsville to report our movements for their pa pers. We took them to a stag rfecep tlon at the club, and with real repor torial enthusiasm they went at the punch like a Rrooklynite goes at Per ry's soda water after a session at a Broadway theater. After three glasses apiece they moved the piano down stairs and wheeled it to a hotel a block away, turned In a fire alarm, broke up a crap game, released all the prison ers In the guard house," woke up the manager of the telegraph office and wired news of a bloody riot to their papers which news the wise manager spiked and finally went to sleep on the roof of a cotton warehouse, with their feet hanging ever the eaves. When they got on earth two days later 1 of expediting their removal from place to place. The strata of gravel where they were deposited Is washed clean, Indicating that It was once the bed of a running stream. The fact that but one man, with hardly any knowl- brew. WHAT TWO GLASSES DID. tlllery punch.' They replied In chorus; 'Carbolic acid, chloride of lime, cy- "I drank two glasses small glasses Bt anlde of potassium, nectar of the god that and the next I knew I was riding j and dynamite.' two horses around the public square, standing up, holding the reins with one edge of prehistoric development, has i hand and my revolver in the other, but been interested In the search for relief in this field, and yet has collected such an interesting lot of specimens, lends bright prosper ts to the field for those whose life work is along eth nological lines. The country In which Mr. Dice's spec imens were found Is remote anil sparse ly settled. Hnce the India ngave It uf. falling to hold my voice. Another of the boys was engaged In target practice at negro cavalrymen on their way to a Cakewalk. One young soldier jumped out of a window In the cub house be cause a girl he had never before met refused to marry him. We were all A GRAND CONCOCTION. "On subsequent nights, when we had receptions at the club they remained at the hotel and played pool for high balls of gin and Nashville beer. "The 'Artillery Punch' is the grand est concoction on earth after the first time but we couldn't get those cynical New York scribes to believe it. I trust Admiral Dewey will be more rea- SMOKER AND DRlHKER. Has Had the Habit for a Hundr and Twenty Year. New Brunswick (S. J.) special In Www York World: It is a favorite temper ance argument that smoking and drink ing tend to shorten lire, but such an argument cannot apply in the case of Noah Raby, Middlesex county's famou old man. Raby will celebrate his one hundred and twenty-eighth birthday tomorrow. He says he has smoked since he can remember, certainly 120 years, and haa drank whisky whenever he could get It during almost as long a space of time. "Maybe it will shorten my life," he says, "but I really don't think It will." For over thirty years he has been an Inmate of the Plscataway township poorhouse at Stelton, about three miles from this city. He is bent and twisted with age and rheumatism. He is tooth less and sightless, but his other facul ties are perfect, and his mind and memory are faultless. His head is larg and finely shaped. It is crowned by a mass of white hair. A full beard cow ers nearly all of his face. He is very proud of his long hair and beard. Raby is an inveterate smoker. H says that his mother used to tell of the first time he ever smoked. She had been blowing smoke rings to amuse hint and laid down her pipe for a moment. He at once seized It and was pvfllnc away energetically when she returned. He was Boundly spanked, but this did not break him, for he has smoked and! chewed for the last hundred yearn. Upt to the age of ninety years he was a heavy drinker. He never married, although he had one romance. When about twenty-eight years of age he was overseer on a to bacco plantation in Nansemnod county. Virginia, owned by Mrs. Sarah Parker, widow of Cotton Parker. Mrs., Parker was a remarkably beautiful woman of great wealth. Raby did not have th courage to confess his love, but made a confidant of a negro slave named Uncle Mingo, who offered to "hoodoo'" Mrs. Parker so that she could not resist the amorous pleadings of Raby, but to I to the while amn thlrtv venra ai-n ll The substance of which they are has been farmed and pastured. .GO lit A Vi KVUT TALKING MACHINE nf Hiiiiplecoiisirticilon mid very iliinilile. : TELEGRAPHING BY ELECTRICITY. : foolishly intoxicated, and the next I sonable and find as I did that after ; thiB Raby wouId not consent. Raby en- morning Colonel Duffy, who heard of the initial Internal vaccination the se- 1 eJ the nayy- He served four our exploits, threw the soldiers' invec- duclive dreams induced by the green years on the Constitution and the Bran. Live into us in a manner mat maue pin ure as the roar of Broadway traffic "ywlne- "e was nonoramyq aiscnargea us long for a sight of Broadway. We to the tinkle of mandolins compare ln nm- and revisited the Parker plan- with the mental exhilaration that fol- tation' Mrs' Parker asked why he had lows Indulgence in this premier of Ieft her emP'y so suddenly. southern drinks. To the taste it Is aa Telegraphing by means of eleclrlc light rays la a new method of wireless telegraphy. It has been found poHHbic to transmit signals electrically by rays emitted from an arc lamp, the rays known ns those of short-wave lengih, the ultra-violet rays, ladng the oie-s made u"c of. Curl ZlekKr of Ilrtinn, Austria, Is the Inventor of the new system, on which he hps j.ist t;iken out patents. Tn details of the operation of the appa ratus are describe.! In a rerent num ber of the Telegraph Age. Tht' rays ir font out from the sending nation at Intervals enrrer-ponding to thos- of telcgr.-iphlc signals, and f:i the direction of the receiving station. Where they piudu.ee weak elect? thu? be sent out In a manner to corre spond with the dots and dashes of the Morfe alphabet. The receiver consists of a tubular Klaus vessel closed air tight In front by a qua! iss plate. Within the vessel are two electrodes, one of which has a spheriiiil terminal a few miHimi tres In diamc ter, anil the other a small circular disk ho Inclined that the pencil of light entering the glass vessel falls upon It and Is, reflected to the knob of the other i lerirode. Both electrodes are covered with pla tinum foil, and are separated about ten millimetres. The air in the glass vcsk-I Is rarefied to a suitable degree, or the vefsel is filled with a rarefied gas. learned that day that some of us h;.d been found asleep In vacant lots and doorways and that the only Sixty-ninth regiment officer who had escaped the seductive influence of the punch on this occasion was a dear friend of Mayor Murphy of Huntsville, who had put him through a rehearsal a few nights previous. "Well; along came another recaption at the club. We went and scorned tho : - WONDERS OF A CAVE. I In front of the nuartz nbite Is u tnho waves, by which (he signals are made ,iUe.i with a quartz lens, by means of wsioie as sparks, or ure maile audible i blf lelei.lw.r,.. if .,1 ... .t .-I ... iff r1rlur( ..iil!S. Hum! aeO I ll, I,...., .. 1 i.. ' ' ' ' " " I i.imv Morlm, etc., a o.nl t wii cleiir h- unv i 'rr''1, n,ay uf' H inted by Morse appa llemi uuiiii ne.ileii il u h I lie Mur.c rceurif, 'ratus i.Ht lutilier pile, d ones o'o. ,eot nl,Ji-ei ((- j xnoiiniiiloiion recel. i of ie. Penij fur ihtt l the sending station Is an appa- hmiieyniir:';";;; ?&vhZ" i'ky,:'1!rHtu,, gi,,,"ar l" u -w vu,,-, .rii(Mli -riMuir tlilH and lili,er priced mn- having either tt reflecting mirror or ; ....,. . ,,. ,.,,,-. nrtKhKM is: Ao t..n .... I...1U - which the rays coming from the send ing station are concentrated upon th circular disk in a small, slightly Il luminated spot. The two electrodes are connected with the secondary windings RAYS PRODUCE SPARKS. Hot Sprigs, S. D., April 10. Since the secretary of the Interior has ren dered the recent decision setting Wind Cave, S. IX, apart as a national reser vation, there Is more than ordinary in terest taken in the great cavern. The very fuct that the government has de clared it a national wonder, and for that reason retains It for the enlight enment and delight of the public, at once gives the place national notoriety. The cave Is said to have first lieon discovered by a cowboy in 1X84, wh-n he was riding the range. While ln th "I told her it was because I loved pleasant as milk lemonade; to the ner' 8am KaDy- ana wnat a you senses-well, I've told you a few things thlnk she sald? 'You snould have had I know about it." more courage, Raby. Paint heart ne'er . mm won fair lady.' But it was too lata It is Illegal in Great Britain for a then- for Ehe had married another man pawnbroker to accept the Victoria two yRars before. Maybe she was only Cross as a pledge under any circum- l"kinK- It was Just as well, for I don't think I would be alive now if I had married her, for she had an awful temper." Raby was born at Eatontown, Gates county, North Carolina, on April 1.177!. His father was Andrew Bass, a North; American Indian, and his mother Mom. Ing Raby, an Englishwoman. stances. Fair Grounds" and den of Eden," "Pearly Gates." The whole cave, with its numerous byways, yawning chasms and craggy walls, has the appearance of what might be an extinct geyser. There are fissures or crevices paralleling one an- ABOUT NICARAGUA. bunliieaA lioiinc In K,ui-:i Cily E. P. MORIARTY & COMPANY, (iruerul Spurting (ioodn. 1 IOt IValuut M. KA,VftA C1TV. Dr. Searles Searles rz.ii: ct iz?u:z:r.t ...In ... Private Diseases of Men. PRICES LOW. 9 year In Omaha n XI'Kt lAI.IM'S In Van- combination. If lenses are used, however, they must not be made of gloss, but of rock crystal. In MO or(,l'r tf 0ll"' 'I"1 ultra-violet rays to pass mrougn mem. The pencil of ultra-violet rays from Ii " ) roccle K Mini Hiei .Mricture.SypiiiiU y, IjoMt uf vliror nan y. lloin" 'l i-iminient. I'rl'w Low. (Juration l.'ollRllllii tloti, K t h i.i I o n l ton mill Advice 1'liKK.. Many Cuied by ttdvlrp only . V rit them lo dny. DR. SEARLES & SEARLES, 111) No. Mill St., OniuliiiNc!)., ravine In which the cave Is lo.-ated hU When the ultra-viol, t rays from the horse suddenly became f lightened from sending apparatus fall upon the disk- a roaring noise from a cliff of rocks shajied electrode of the receiver their' near by. and the cowboy alighted, luminous electrical effect caus-s spark-j Upon examination he found that there Ing at the induction coll. The opening was a hole In the side of the em ar.d shutting of at the transmitting bankment. though only a little over a the lens may be Interrupted bv means 1 Miul" ln accordance with Morse slg-, foot in diameter, from which wind was of a glass shutter, which Is operated I n,,U thuH I,ro(lure at the receiving sta- j rushing with great force. From thlf by means of a bellows and a pneumatic ball, suih as Is employed with (.holo graphic apparatus, signals s-nt In this way the signals may be made visible or audible, or recorded. The most serious objection, however, Is the lack of speed, for so far It hat been Impracticable to arrange tians SHUTTER TO MAKE SIGNALS. The ultra-violet rays are absorbed by the glass plate, being only emitted when the shutter Is removed. Hy leav ing the shutter open for a longer or a ' " "i"iiii-'-iou in BiiuiKs oi snorter wina the cave derived Its name. The or longer duration, according to the cowboy then pmcured some of his i - . rrltmdfl, and toother they blasted the miners erd rrtlvprn tn nffumriiih shorter time the ultra-violet rays may ' more than 8 to U words a minute. OMAHA & KT. I.OUIS R. R. WABASH R. It. 41 Miles shortest to St. Louis. i'S Miles shortest to Qulnry. THH .ST. BOUI.S CANNON BALL." lAr.r TU I.I-AVK; l-'IRST TO ARI1IVK. I'ave Omaha DAI p. m. Anlve Kt. I-otils 7:x, h. m. Trellis leave Union Station daily for 81. Louis, vulm y, Kansas City and ail points Kast or South. 1 lomeseekiM-s' Kxcurslois on sale 1st ml Id Tuesday of each month. ht unishlp tickets to all parts of the fcorld. Tor full Information, call at . & St. L. Thket Office, HI Farmim Hi. U'Hxtoit Hotel Block!, or write, Harry K. Moores. C. P. He T. A., Omaha. Neb. LATE INVENTIONS. ! mire to read Irs. Thornton A Mi nor's odvei llseun nt ill this paper next (I'ifli. If our renders or any of (licit rrleuds aie troubled with any rectal dlre.iMS they will be Inteies'.ed In read ing wli.it others say of the treatment tml ;!ho'vs A pack or paying cards has been I 'P,,r u. , patented In the ,,. i which the faces , " T Wman on the fi,ce cards ure portraits of ' , ' ' , u "f a chair and table, Uewey, Miles and other army and navy ' f 'he rh"'r Mn I'1""' " ,mcer, The queens are Co.umb,as y ::rrhaHH,,;V, l"" fr"nt ,hf To pro,,,, the ,, p.vers on a type- ? U "l "TV writer from damage wh. n sacral lock'zontal position. themselves tog, llier, a sleeve of soft I For llftlnir hot enl, ..... ..... fabric I. slip,,-,! over the end of the kitchen utensils a ;.w ,,,,.,, , lever w ,h a ruhhlon device which In- formed of a .Ingle ce of wire be, close, the sides of the type, leaving double n, .h , .,.. . . ' i., .i,.. t.. ..... lonii a minute, mtj lll .'lieu. rillCKMVI'ATll V, Dr the Khuum Meihoi of Ahsnt I refltriient, en rim Iihcu-ch at onv tlls- I I c without fiiedlcliie. COMB NO I'lM Mi to try It. Absolutely no (i uiilcsH you sro ctirPil r Ix'nefltted. hi For cutting cheese a new device has circular tnbl? on which I he cheese re volves, with a hoilzoiital bar supported on to posts secuied lo the counter to tarry the cuulng bar, which Is mount ed on a lever to descend and cut tho Chet He. A f'allfornlnn has patented a small bat to be used In playing handball, which has a curved wiekerwork b-is- 'tet against which the ball strikes, with a glove st the hack' which Is drawn )ver the hand and fastened to hold the junket In iHisltlon. For n fi Igcrators a new trap nllnch mcnt has a swlnglr-r cup set on the under side of the refrigerator to close Ihe lower end of the water outlet, tho ;up being controlled by a lever In con- I iliv excellent teitirnoiiUls, some ora (o, w ill be sent Inquirer for 'if, nertlon with the front door to lower the iminp. A'Mrtftft: l'aor. Kiiabab, 1617 .cup every time the door U opened. tL(go HcOuialr , Neb, with the ends curved Into semi-circular shnpo for use In engaging the opposite sides (f the tin. ljtnij.H can be opened for filling with out the necisRily of unscrewing the burner by using a new attachment, which has the burner collar mounted on a hinged support, with a looking de. vice nppcslte the hinge, ,v)lch hold the burner vertical when the lamp Is llgllteil. In .New Hani! shire a man has pat ented a new warming pad for uppiica. tlon to different pnrls of the body, com. prising a plurality of Independent,, elongated pockets filled with soapstoiie In a dry, jowdered form, which ho!l the heat arid allows the pad to sht.p Itodf to tho altllcted pnrt. Chicago News: Our troubles are nev er io black aa our fancy palntg them. rocks near the surface until a man might enter, the cavern being larger further ln. One of the venturesome cowboys tied a rope about his b idy, and while those outside held the rope he climbed In and down, against a ter rlllc wind and Into utter darkness. It wa3 necessary for him to crowd and squeeze himself through some small 4 crevices, un riougn mere were oecasion- ally large apartments. After lowering himself fifty feet the wind had c:ised I blowing, and upon lighting a match, louno mac me wans Were covereii with what resembled a heavy frost, which glittered and sparkled brilliant ly. The cattlemen and pioneers of that locality thought of the cave only as a temporary attraction and had no de sire to c rilm It under any government right. Frill ISM) It thus remained un clitlrne dund practically unexplored., only as the during and venturesome visitors delved Into Its mysterious In by. rlnths. In that year It was located as mineral ground and the work of open ing tho cave a s on nttracllun was corn menced. Since then It la claimed that l'H) miles of pusmges have been ex plored without reaching the end, nnd 3.IKH) different clinmbets have been dis covered, varying In size from 12x12 feet to about three acres. These chain bers have been niinied by guides and visitors appropriate to the formations of crystals upon tint walls, or upon suggestions of tourbUs exploring them, among the most prominent b Ing the "nrid ' Chamber," "Keel Room," the "White Room," V,. Church," "0. A, R, Hull." "I'nlr Oiound," "John stone's Camping (iround," and "Imnte'p Inferno." They have already discov ered fourteen different routes In the rave, only three of which have been thoroughly opened lo the public and made easily acceuuiblt), vise.. "The Car- No Field for Young Americans of Any Trade. In answer to inquiries by a New York correspondent as to the field for other all the way from 50 to 300 feet American skill and labor afforded in apart, which are connected by cross Nicaragua. Consul Donaldson, of Man passages. There are also eight dif- aKua. on February 10, 1900, sends th ferent tiers cf chambers overlying one following information: another. In the first tier you find the ' As teachers and professors In gov water formation beautiful, clear stal-' ernmpnt ani other schools In Nocar actltes like IciOg bagging from the ! "Sv-i tllere ii! really no openirjg for our ceiling, some of which connect with young graduates. Salaries here ara the stalagmites below. The second Her has the frost work like a bank of snow composed of tiny, fine, needle-like crystals of the purest white, being from one-fourth to two inches In depth. The third tier is the very delicate box work, the prevailing formation of the cave. In the fourth tier the box work is a little heavier Insignificant and customs so different that Americans have never proven suc cessful. The salary of a principal her is 50 pesos, or about $17, per month. American physicians and surgeon are successful here, but no part of tha world Is more crowded with them than the large towns of Nicaragua. Hun dreds of the native young men study and of a transparent color. The fifth ' medicine in the United States and Is the popcorn formation. In the sixth and seventh tiers the box work is still turn here to practice. They understand better their own diseases, customs and heavier, with geodes and all colors of People than a foreigner could, and th crystals, while in the eighth tier which 1 majority of the people prefer them. is 500 feet below the entrance, the for- ' Intlfts, however, are scarce, and motion is heavier than anything seen j whenever an American dentist comes before, and is indigo blue In color and he do("s a s:00(1 otislness and can chargs dazzling to the eye. The cave Is perfectly dry and the air pure, sweet and Invigorating, especially remunerative prices. Engineers of all kinds are the most successful any professional men In to asthmatic people. The temperature I th,,se troP,cal countries. Very few na- ia about 45. degrees all the time. The1 tive9 fr'How that vocation, and most of ptjriv fresh air Is caused by the w ind ' lne engineers employed by the govern, at the entrance, which blows outwardly I ment are foreigners. An engineer's sal-, at times, t.nd again blows In, changing' ary at the atart ls from 250 t0 300 Peso according to the1 rising and falling ot (?8 to 100 ln x-'nlteJ States g-old) per the barometer. It was in this cnv month. that Johnstonev the famous mind read-! "uslness here Is the favorite oecupa er. searched while blindfolded for a tlnn fnr 8,1 natives. The wives of th hidden pin, finally rinding It arter ! 0""'ci!lIs. of planters, of lawyers, of doc searching three days and nights. The ' t(,rs nml evPn ot politicians, have their cave Is located ten miles from Hot Springs, and Is reached by dully stage clinches. It has been under contest for the last three years, one parly claiming It as mineral land and another as agri cultural land, each attempting to carry out the governmental provisions for acquiring title, and between them they little shops and thus crowd every town with stores. Salaries for clerks are not worth the consideration of any foreigner. Pearl Buttons From Milk. It ls reported that making pearl but tons out of milk is a curious Industry lave built a hotel, a log cabin over the! r.the creamery of Cuba, New York. entrance lo the cave, and have made ' aml for u roni,on ln" cream: y peoplu many and expensive Interior Improve-! WPre B,)le ,0 p:iy U,e farmcr8 a higher mi nts. A warden will no doubt be at I vrn "r ml'k 1,"t HFaf"m th ver once appointed by the government to ' M"r'- An of tl,p I'roouct of the Cub take charge, and It Is expected- that j ''"'"mery Is used for buttons. In pre more of the Burrourdlntr hindsc-me win i Prlng the button material the milk U be Im hided In the government reservation. placed In a huge vat and mixed with, rennet extract, as In cheese making. H Is kept at a temperature of 100 de- A. I. Klornis npp;.-d for a mnrrlage ' green until It Is of the proper eonslst- lloen In Hartford o few days ago. ' eney. Then a fine white powder Ik The Connecticut law requires that the ! hdded and the whole thoroughly rooked Christian name In such cas -s be given j for an hour. After that the whey Is In full. He said that he had no ("hrl-4- 1 if n name and that the tellers "A. I." did not represent anything but Jusl themselves. Holso City can talk over the telephone wllh San Francisco, 1,000 miles away. depurated from the curds, after ths munnor of making cheese,' but In this case the turds or solids are pneked I barrels and shipped -to a button man iifaetury In New York to be molds into altruttiive forms. m .8 i '.l'.Mf' ' ... e t, '.