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About Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 6, 1904)
b fXi '4 IFmtt, OPINIONS OF OREAT PAPERS ON IMPORTANT SUBJECTS Country an City. ' RAJTER put4ilhed near the of Missouri speaks of tlie f i farmers ofthe teiepauue where tt has been In troduced.' Te Improvement, tt Is remarked, "laeea fit and country in Immediate com munication, rendering nnn-or. in. srh. I uie inns ui..i nave, neeu made on country road." HJgh ways saay b uiudey and weather stormy, but the world can be rung up according to the ne-nsltles of the mo ment, fai-llllatJug bulnes and soeial life, and saving an Immense amouut'of time and effort. A marked tendeury f te M.Jft brieja; the country Into closer (ouch with ttie centers of population. Electric road are Multiplying a-ixl make their way Into neighborhoods that could not hope tor steam. Unea. Hural free selivery of the nulla le tuortBg onward with great stride,. Over 'JO.onO routes are tn operation. Missouri alone hnn 1,'jno. Farmers ret their letters end the dally newspapers delivered almost at tbelr doors. Each days events rea-h the country promptly, and tfee old rural Isolation la disappearing. Mean of ready travel grow better ami keep- on extending, and Ihe rood roads organisations gain oonsuntly In active support. Within dozen years ele.-trlc transit In the eties has more' Lb n doubled the area suitable for town residences. Ortios themselves are spreading farther Into the country, of wblch "suburban sections are a pleading modification. Labor on the farm Uaa been rendered easier by Ingenious machinery: All whose memories stretch back to pioneer dyt can, boar w h to the enormous advance toward bringing country and city cieser together.'- Progreaa In ' that respect proreeds at an accelerated paee. Oolng to , the dty or taking a nin Into the country is a common place Incident. How far the space between wtlj eventually be annihilated Is beyond the range of conjecture, but the id Unea of separation are disappearing In so many ways f that. the future relations of country and city are full of hopeful Interest. ThT ' " FT" ni! to the drift of the population D the cities. IVe of co'iiiitry ll?e U'a natural and genersl leellng. The nWctianr wBo comes to the city aa youth to make his forttihe -often' rettirtis to the country when he Vlreajand'Htreflliis 'of doing it ail through his business sareer. IJe would hardly "be willing to admit the deep tenderness of 'the 'memories of the old farm. All the re tootenejis of thar iputet nook has passed a way , You can rg up" the farmer, of .to day and find that )icls abreast with theusrentncw and that lie has It In prlntel details', hank to the rufiil delivery carrier. St. Louis Globe Deal crat ' - ' Leap Year Over Half Cone. TJT"T"? E do not wish to urge anyoue to rash and pre 'l'!ta5t'y action, but It Is our duty to call the Y Y attention of young ladleg, and. Indeed, of all Mia tinmarrlcM ladles, to the exceptional privileges iSiWZ which Immemorial custom allows thera tn the ijuartemary period through' which we are so upichy j.aln(. nie number of weddings shows no lu . treae.Ove r orjinnry jears, and It Is to be feared that the leuilnlui! world has not rnnlized how little potential enargy there la In wafer which ha. passd the mill. The decay of Ifce peculiar cu-iton?. of I-ap Vear is atrongly evidenced by ti'aiwost conilpte lack of Jokes on the subject In ttif scwHpapers, since It Is well known tiiat topical humor lingers iotif after th vanlnhlng of Its cause. xv " , 80 fax from Leap Year sinking Into noxious desuetude, A v tulght be-ex.pectel' tuat Its' peculiar privileges would e more wUley used than ever before, now our young women are becoming mora adventurous and also much larder to suit The reiulrenti'nta for admission .to mat rimony Imposed on Hit young men by the opposite sex have . ttaan aa rapidly as the standard of scholarship In the unl feraltles. and a young man mhose attainments a few year . igo. would have been considered sulHclent to qualify him lor the position of master ot a household would nowadaya aava to be content with his degree of bachelor. Really, It Is not at all certain that women do not do Host of the proposing every year. Very little Is known Ibout this mysterious . though Important topic, anyway. Each person's experiences are limited to a comparatively tew Iiwuneeji, and these are always regarded by both aartles aa exceptional In all respects. Novels are slto- l MDYC VISITED ME."".' "Your letter brought team to my .eye,;' wrote- the Invalid to her friend ' af former years, s aha lay. lu bed and painfully usod'hei-'lead pencil. "I bovo teen out of sight so long. ' You can . never know howgood It si-ems to be .. looked uu and visited." Julia Graham that was what every "one called her w ho remembered her had married and gone West. "Mrs. George William Osgood" was the name n. her vlalUng card. Ittit she returned "for, "Old Jioino VVf-rk" after an ab a'euce of nine yeur.-tand the return was far from belli;; an unmixed pleasure. A pleasure it wan, In many ways great er than she expected; but the changes . . . ... . were many, aim some 01 mem wu. . !..!. ..r .i.tti- fcood or youth, or any locality where he haa spent much of his life,' without this mixed 'experience the Joy of re newing acquaintances which " were pleasant, and yre' sadness of ilndlng those whom ho loved lees prosperous r leas strong or happy. 80 itr was 'with Miss Graham. The "week", was only a-Keek, for her, and It was a full one.. irbwe veriB, relatives to visit, old friendships to be renewed, and din ners to be eaten. ' But the thing watch Julia Graham xlfd 'that endeared her to some old friends was the looking up, of those wliom she had known In other days who were unable,, or tlmld ljr dlslndincd, to! look her up,. The letter was from one of these. .JuluU - bed learned that thls"olI friend' lived tt suother town, and -was .bedridden. -" lUcoaj-beava whole day to go to her, ''but (the came back saying over to her- seW 4ha , jvefds vrhlch-her friend had . said, "I ..know. now'-. wh'.. our ,'Jrd blessed Uioee to whom lie said, I was sick, end ye visited mo!"' There was another old friend, a schoolmate, who had married a drunk-, - ard, and who did no appear, at . an ec ine leauviusw 01 mi w. Shouldn't call on hat; be -tnlgnt be ittTS," said JuUa's cousiav Bsc gether unreliable, and tlous concerning the great advantages to t. ' soatbern boundary to the census queries although many wore personal ane leaa lmportaat .Vital etatlatlcs are procured.' It may evet be doubted whether sarily or even commonly preceded by formal declaration any more than are However that maidena, no matter bow desirous they are, and should he ta obtain the best men for husbands, to adopt the oonven tlonal form of proposal. Breaking the ice la a tlaagreeafiU process. It l-letter from such maidenly use for fear leat the her unwillingly. It doing anything he really doea not want to do; Bttoh mor rare thin women think. A man's affactUn for the oppo site eei la In the beginning geueral and diaToaa. A mat Is naturally so aitrulstlc that he normally loves all women, and .on which one of them he ultimately focuses the ful force of his sffection depends on circumstances and on th woman. New York Independent " I HEN a w begins that the Department at Washington has ordered the reten tion of all letters' addressed to that nian or company. The dishonesty which Is held to Justify the Issuing of a fraud order may not be a mere barefaced attempt to steal an ,'effort to get something for uotblug. The charging of an excessive profit, or misleading advertising, has called forth such an order. A recent case In point la that of a company which advertised to furnish seed for an agricul tural product and to buy the product at market prices. The order against the company was Issued because It was learned that It aold In small quantities, for a total of $iKK), seed .which It bought In bulk for $3; and because It repre sented the product as easy to raise, when, In fact, it Is difficult. This fearless attitude and 'action of the Government Is of the greatest possible benefit to the country at large lu two ways. It checks, lndeetr- It stops almolurt-ly, one kind of fraud, and It protects lnuoc.eat persons from Io!is through that fraud. The thing on which stress should be laid Is the availability of this strong arm of protection. There Is alwuys a large nuiiflinr of fraudulent schemes afloat, dependent upon the publicity which they get through advertising. When one's attention Is attracted by such un advertisement, he has only to call the attention of his postmaster to It, and to ask him to notify the Department at Washington. To do this In every suspicious case Is a duty which every honest man owes to his neighbor as well as to himself. Youth's Companion. m mm A RUSSIAN HDD. in ,Tir Mrs. E. W. VoronoU. wife o'f th'e.comhdaht.'of tb. MBawWlMi dragooiis, has orgsnlxed at her own-eipenee a. transport ,1aJeni tojthe wounded. She has also Joined the Slaters of Mercy during the war. 'She has" even signified her willingness to go td thi front amdVsstrfe in, tHe", Hell' Cross ranks. Her purse la always dpen't,anjr tdeiqajd,hayLT)jf or m.. object the,, promotion of deedi of mercy In connection .wlji .carina; . . for . wounded. Rus sian soldiers. t 4 4 ;f. . ,A' v.fc . Julia went to her In her poverty apd sorrow, and her visit was like a ray of , afraid I did It just because It was my sunshine to her old friend. : , duty. But I received a treater bless- Most pathetic of all was her looking, ling than I gsve.',, , .., - . up an. old man, feeble now and obllv-' The eriierlencoof cine woman tuny ha lous of most that had happened recent- a suggestion to oer people, returlriitg ly; buf w,tfl ni,ntl Ulat c,m t,".cl1 toT Home West. Theirs, too, may when recalled by suggestions of former t the blessing of Him who said, "In years, and whose life was brightened; "v, uich as ye have done It unto one for many a day afterward by his mem- , Jie. least of these,, ye .have done -It orles of the Ttstt of "Uttle Julia Qra hani." 1 " ' '." " The pleaeantest things about Old nome Week," said Julia to her hus band, "were those which I was most reluctant to undertake. It coat me ajsbs expected; M Is full of creases, and real stronle to do It, and ttseaj ware l dorn't hang right ' ' u '.t 53 the government ha not added ques method of matrimonial negotiation matrimonial enaragenieaU axe neces military engagements. may be. we do not recommend ouj to thaw tt. And let do ne abstjl) maneuvers. aa abe can adraatageouxlt man should, through gallantry, accep Is rare that a man la perauaded lnt Fraud Orders. buliits concern In the United fitatei suddenly to receive a large uuuisw ol letters dally, It may be sure that, although no ripple has disturbed the surface, a quiet In veatlgatlon Is going on, and If there la any thing disboneHt alout the business a notice will' soon 'appear from the jiostniaster, to the effect Japanese Inventiveness. - T has long been supposed that the capacity for Initiation Is the characteristic of Western nations alone. According to some leading an thropologists, as one goes from West to East be finds this capacity disappearing and tlie ca pacity for imitation taking its place. The Chi nese and Japauese. are Imitators, not Inventors. 4 1 But the present war between the Russians and the Jap anese Is rapidly proving tlie Idea to be mere assumption. It is the Eastern rather than the Western people which, In this contest, are exhibiting the capacity for Initiation and Invention. Their strategy la almost faultless, and It Is their own. Their artllllery Is astonishingly destructive, and, in some of Its most deadly features, Is the product of Japanese Invention. Their naval tactles have been so un expected and successful aa to promise a revolution In the future methods of-naval warfare. When peace comes and the Japanese carry their genius lntorthe Industrial wld,1 they will demonstrate perhaps In a more telling way that the capacity for initiation does not dlmlnlah as one travels toward the rising Sun. Church Standard. HEROINE. :rkiirijrku . , me;" Youth's Cbinplknlon. - , When a woman puts ah a black silk dress . enev hasn't worn In . months, somehow It doearit crasrht the sensation fefeven.ion A new liwlse wat-h containa a tiny nard rubber phonograph plate which alls out the hours loud enough to be leard twenty feet away. Sentiment an be had by having the words re corded on the plate lu the tones of a iear friend as those of a man's wife w children. The amount of albumen necessary In man's food has been proven by French 9hysioogisU to be much leaa than has een supposed. . From three to five (unces dally was. thought to be re julred, but later Investigators found that two and oirejbalf and even one jnd one half ounofs would suffice. In ;be new experiments, continued for :hlrty-elght days, the real need was iihown to be less than one ounce per lay. Eucalne, the new local anaesthetic, Is adapted for many operations where .hlopoform cannot be used on account if heart weakness. It Is Injected un ler the skin at the point of Incision. Outtlng may begin In a few moments without pain, and wore of the drug s dropped In at Intervals of a few min ites as new portions of tissue are ex posed. A recent successful operation !n tondon was continued an hour and 1 half. . A recent French Invention Is a ship's ompass so mounted that as It swinj; rotmd with the variations in tl"i point ing of tlie vessel It produces automat ically, througli"electrlc connections, a :liart on a sheet of paper, by consult ing which the ship's officers can gee B'hat the course was at any moment )f the voyage. The same apparatus lo registers the Hpicd of the vessel 3y recording the number of revolutions if the gi-rews, each stroke of the pis ton closing a.n elietrle current. The aeeelerometer, di8lK"il for neasurlng the power exerted lu Htart aig a train and to Indicate the proper Ied for curves. Is the Invention of V. M. (llliey, a teaclter of physics. It roufUsts essentially of two glass ves els otuiivted by a tule and contain iig liquid, such as mercury and red tleohol. As the train starts, the liquid passing from the forward glass to the tear one shown by sultabk gradua johs lndlivates the firce exertel, and Si .the same way the Instrument, when )laced on its side, makes evident the ,erk or centrifugal force in rounding 1 curve. Joseph Wharton, of I'hllndelphta, mggesU, In a paper read before the Vmerlean Philosophical Society, that n the prevailing scarcity of platinum he metal palladium might be a practl ;able substitute. It belongs to the ilaUuum group, although -In some re ipacU It resemble silver. Among Its alualile characteristics are hardness, luctlllty and malleability. It Is" also (ocldndly nou-corrodlble. It occurs, ilOng with nickel, copper, silver, gold, ilatlnum, Iridium and rhodium. In the ires of the Canadian nickel mines lu )ntario. Out of 300.(100 tons of these ires about 3.000 ounces of palladium ire annually produced. Dr. J. 0. Ewart, In discussing the problem of the origin of horses, de icribos as one of the most distinct ;lnds now living the Celtic ponies, vhlch are found in the most northern larts of Iceland. They reach a height it ou!y four feet, and are so abun lantly furnished with hair that In wln er storms they are practically snow jroof. Dr. Ewart observed the con luct of one of these ponies during a inowstorm. As soon as the storm be fan she turned her hind quarters to It, md In a short time the snow had 'ormed a kind of shield or disk upon lie long hair growing about the root if the tall. Thus- protected, the pony Ud not shift her position while tiie storm lasted, except to turn with a hange of the wind. I The Submerged Seventh. ' Just after t)iercoriVefilng of the new flouae of Representatives there was 1 member from the West who was boasting' of the enormous majority riven him by the voters of his dis trict. "Why," tlie new member would ex jlaiiii', "do' you 'know 'I was elected iy the snffrages of seven different aatlomilltles?-' ' Oned.iy some one asked him to name lie'. ' ha tljinAl! tie's: lle'Save.. them: 'Wit jSeVnian,; I'.oilsh,' Tton.onitaa, Swedish and Greek." "Cut you have named only six .na tionalities," said the seeker after inbwieflg'e." '"WtiaCwa's" the seventh The new member again ran. over, his mtle ?lt,ut coiild not remember -the "JZ tome, facetious bystander chipped In stth' the remark: "Maybe" there i(fcre me Americans In the. bauch" f w , 'Good for you!" shouted the flew Representative, lustily; ' slaRplnn thU high. "But It was funny that I should orget them, dohTyeu thlnftT' ; .. Words fop ths Wordy-i,' ,( . Two goo phrases for the people who rpeali long end weaiisoniely have come is- jUsefu weapons. ' ' One is the comment of a politician in a "Washington orator: "He has a 4Qod, train of tbojight, but It lacks ter- nlnal facilities." The other conies from the village' hn tiorlst, who said of the Tillage orator: 'lie's the only feller. I ever knew ."who mild set bis face talkln', an' then go iff'in' leave It" ' It is one ot ftho Inexplicable attrl mtes, of women that they really like d got a long letter. TRAINS BUTTERFLIES. California Wwata Cm a Io Many Tiling wit iter f eta. Miss Mabel Adams' Ayer, of 1'522 Clay street, a prominent Sunshine Ciuh worker and a memtier of the Forum Club, has succeeded in'trainiug butiei--. flies. " I At first the Idea seems almost ab surd, but if oue'ean see the way Mi Ayer bandies her pets it bee ins the most natural thing In the world. .Td speaking of them-to-day Miss Aysr said: "Why, it doesn't seem at all strsnjre to me. They are just like any other trained pet. They have their likes and difcliken, and they are really lovable little things when you come to know them. The'firet thing that started uie to studying them was when I was asked to deliver a lecture before the Koruin Club. I chose for my subject 'Butter flies and Rainbows,', and, wishing to give something more than could be learned from books, I went Into tlie garden and captured one or two of the butterflies! The more I studied them, tli more I loved them, and. now they are almost like people to me. "When I first get one 1 uncoil his tongue and feed-blm with sugar and water, and the rest why, I don't know; they Just come to know me, that's all. You know, the buterfly has six legs, and the two front ones be' uses-to wash his face and preen him self, much as a cat would. . "They live on sugar and water, and I always keep plenty of flowers In the room for thein. One big fellow, called a 'Morning Cloak,' I was unable to do anything y,-Hh. He seemed to have no nffei-tion. They are sensitive, and nervous temperaments affect them si- ways. Some of them are;quite playful and two or three would run after and try to catch the end of a'stlckpln when I drew It in front of'tliem. "One evening I wore several of them on my shoulder as an ornament.' Of course. It was In my own home, but tliey stayed on my gown all evening "I have had In all over forfy butter flies, but. you know, they live only three or four weeks, and most of them are dead now. "No, I do not use a net for catching them. I simply go out and pick them up. I always breathe on thehi, and that seerus.to, warm them, and they get so they will I1y all around me and bathe or eat from my hand." San Francisco Post. ' The Cooky Jar. My mother's got a cooky jar, a great big crock'ry one, An awful large and heavy thing, seems If it weighed a ton. It's got a lid that's crock'ry, too, and has a knob on top; . 1 . . You take both bauds to lift it off, for fear you'll let it drop. It's In tlie kitchen closet, there, down underneath the shplf,' , And if you're good she says that you can go and help yourself. r keeps it solid, brimmin' full of She cookies all the time, And when a feller's hungry sayl well, ain't those cookies prime! And when the long vacation's here, or on a holiday,' And you've been playin' all forenoon as hard as you can play At "hide-and-seek," or "three old cat," 'or marbles, like as not, Till you're all tired and tuckered but and sort at starved and hot, Aud dinner time seems If it was a whole year off or more, Why, then's the time you want to go to that old closet door And step in where It's dark and cool and smells so good and sweet, " And reach down in that'eooky 3r and ' eat and eat and eat. " And sometimes when I sit In school and everything's so still ' 1 ' That yon can hear the outdoor sounds, the splashin' by tlie mill. The rattle of a cart, or else a red wood pecker's drum, While close around Is quiet 'cept the sleepy, schooly hum, 1 I' think of that old closet shelf and of the Jar beneath, . " ' And how the cookies crack and crunch betweeu a feller's teeth, And how tremendous good tfiey taste,' til! seems If, I declnre!' ' . I couldn't wait till 'school, was but but, wheu it is, I'm there. A feller's mother' always knows Just what is "good for boys,'. .' . She ain't like aunts and other folks who ...hate to hear a noise; SIib understands 'a chap, ' she does, ' and knows Just how he feels , And that he has to eat a lot besides his reg'lur meals. . . She knows Hint school and playin' makes you have an appetite, And that to. wak and starve to death till diftner itne.iin't right; And-ao. she -puts, the cooky jar beneath the. closet, shelf , And.fillH.it full of bully stuff and leta ,x . you help yourself. , ISatiirdjiy Evening Post. ' -' U ! '-a 'Giant in Strength. "IlbW's the baby getting on?" asked a family friend.' "Growing bigger and stronger every day, I suppose." ' . . "He's growing bigger every day," said the proud father, "and he's plen ty strong enough now to suit me. You remember what a tremendous voice ho hod when you saw him, three mouths ago? Well, It's still more tre mendous now, yet be lifts It a dozen times a day." Almost Eavesdropping. Among the public men In England Is u well-known speaker whose remarks are Inaudible twenty feet. away, nnd of him a wit said: "No one admires Mr. X: more than I do, but I always feel that I am tak ing a liberty In overhearing what ho says." "You are eight years old," . a' man said to ,hls boy, "but you have already bad more school books,' more slates and more oendls than I had all nur life," . -jluui6ifli ni ASB fjtrj ajqji jisii oj Ifutof sasdipe jibu oj 4UIOJ oqj uis. judJd Jul si j) 31114. 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