The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, July 24, 1913, Image 2

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    FOR THEJSY IN
MEWS EPITOME THAT CAN SOON
BE COMPASSED.
MANY EVENTS ARE MENTIONED
Home and Foreign Intelligence Con.
densed Into Two and Four
Line Paragraphs.
Domestic.
Consul David J. D Myers reports
that banana exports to the United
States from Puerto Cortes Honduras,
during the first five months of 1913,
aggregated 1,460,000 bunches.
Dr. JauTO Muller, minister of for
eign affairs of Brazil, has ended his
long visit to the United States. He
boarded the Brazilian battleship Min
as Geraes at New York to sail for
Rio Janeiro.
Sweethearts in their youth, but
parted for more than thirty years,
Peter J. Barnes, 73 years old, of Kan
sas, and Mrs. Augusta Doty, 71 years
old, of Pleasant Valley, N. Y., were
married in Poughkeepsie.
The Rev. Arthur J. Francis, pastor
of the First Presbyterian church of
Englewood, a suberb of Chicago, de
fied church tradition recently by ap
pearing iu the pulpit dressed entirely
In white.
Charges preferred against State
Supreme Court Justice Daniel F.
Cubalan by the bar association of
New York, upon which his removal
from the bench was asked, have been
dismissed by the legislature.
Former Congressman Watson of*In
diana entertains precious little respect
for lobby investigators. He is losing
$2,000 a week by a summons to Wash
ington which takes him off the Chau
tauqua circuit.
Miss Gertrude Mordecai, daughter
of Judge T. M. Mordecai of Charles
ton, S. C., was killed and Miss Hannah
Folk, also of Charleston, was badly
Injured iu an automobile accident at
Troy, N. Y. The bursting of a tire
caused the automobile to crash into
a tree.
1 wo American waiauipa, me guu
boats Helena and Samara, are ip the
International fleet off Kui Kiang,
China, where heavy fighting is in
progress between the northern gov
ernment forces and the provincial
troops of Kiangsi province.
Claude Ball of Montgomery. Mo.,
has telegraphed Speaker Clark his
acceptance of the appointment of at
torney general to the territory of
Hawaii. Ball was Champ Clark's op
ponent for congress last year and
withdrew after the speaker failed to
be nominated for the presidency.
Cleveland's youngest champion
gardener is Rhea Ryon, 14, who began
gardening at Willard school when
she was 8. During the eight years
she has received more than 100 prizes
in school garden festivals and re
cived. approximatly ?,100 from the
sale of her products.
Miss Xarcissa Pillow Saunders, a
belle in Washington during the ad
ministration of President Buchanan,
died at her home in Nashville, re
cently. She was a stepdaughter of
Aaron V. Brown, postmaster general
in Buchanan’s cabinet, and a niece
of General Gideon J. Pillow.
Miss Helen Frick, daughter of the
Pittsburgh iron manufacturer, has at
, last succeeded in her effort to have
an ideal summer home for working
girls, situated in the country. The
iron Rail club is the name that has
been given to the commodious man
sion for that purpose in the midst of
350 acres of ground at Wenham,
Mass.
Another constitutional amendment
to provide that the president and vice
president, after March, 1921, shall
serve single six-year terms, and any
person who has theretofore held the
office by election or has discharged the
powers and duties, or has acted as
president shall be Ineligible “to again
hold the office by election" has been
introduced by Representative Madden
of Illinois.
The Imperial Tobacco company,
the so-called tobacco trust in Ken
tucky, has pauperized hitherto pros
perous towns in the tobacco belt, ac
cording to testimony of A. B. Garvis
before the congressional tobacco com
mission at Washington.
George W. Guthrie, the American
ambassador to Japan, has sailed from
San Francisco on the liner Mongolia
for his new post.
Almond production in California
this year, according to the California
Almond Grower’s exchange, will be
about 1,750 tons, or something over
half a normal crop.
Clara S. Loewu3 of Towanda, Pa.,
is made of unconquerable stuff. She
wo.-ked her way through Cornell and
for twenty weeks lived on food that
cost only 50 cents a week. Miss
Loewus would simply laugh at pov
erty.
Lumber dealers in Ohio quit deal
ers who sold directly to contractors
because they considered them com
petitors, according to O. H. Bachtell.
The final hearing of the govern
ment suit for the dissolution of the
International Harvester company of
America, will be held in St. Paul on
November 13. •
Senator Hitchcock has referred to
Major General Leonard Wood, chief
of staff, a request from Bridgeport,
that a company of ccavalry be detailed
from Fort Robinson to attend the old
soldier's re-union to be held at Bridge
port, August 13.
' Jefferson City, Mo„ has Just opened
to traffic a concrete viaduct fifty
eight feet high and 598 feet long, cost
ing $30,000.
The first case in St. Paul under a
pew Minnesota law prohibiting drink
ing of liquor on street cars resulted
In the workhouse for E. L. Hardy,
pegro.
C. J. Smyth of Omaha has returned
to Washington from San Francisco,
where as special counsel for the de
partment of justice, he had been in
vestigating the Pacifl coast telephone
trust. He expects to return to San
Francisco In about one week.
Dr. B. K. Leach, a socialist editor,
was driven out of Bandon, Oregon
following a notice served on him at
a mass meeting of 600 citizens that
his presence would no longer be toler
ated.
A proposal to maintain the status
quo as to military and naval prepara
[ tions among disputants of internation
al differencees constitutes the third
and final proposal in Secretary
Bryan’s peace plan.
Edward E. Phillips, convicted at
Indianapolis of conspiracy in the al
leged dynamite plot, is the first of
the thirty-three men to leave the
United States penlntentiary at Leav
enworth, Kan., a free man.
Mrs. Andrew Gunderson of Valley
City, N. D., who recently named her
triplet daughters in honor of Presi
dent Wilson's three daughters, re
ceived a letter from Miss Margaret
Wilson thanking her for the honor
conferred ‘‘upon the young women of
the White house.”
Seventy-five bankers, representing
institutions of Minnesota, North Da
kota and Montana, were guests
of the officers of the Minnesota Bank
ers' association at Minneapolis. The
purpose of the meeting was the dis
cussion of the national currncy law
now pending in congress.
The Anglo-Saxon club at London at
its banquet had as its guest of honor
the American ambassador, Walter H.
Page. Earl Grey, former governor
general of Canada, presided, while
among the guests were the lord mya
or and the sheriffs of London and
Lieutenant General Sir Robert Ba
den-Powell.
An automobile driven by Walter
Bassinger and carrying Thomas G.
McGeehan, crashed through the rail
of a bridge and plunged into Root
river at Racine. Wis. Both men were
carried beneath the water. Bassin
ger was rescued, but McGeehan was
entangled in the wreckage at qhe
river bottom.
The old Perry flagship, the Niagara,
rebuilt after being raised from the
bottom of the harbor at Erie, Pa., had
a hard time weathering a sterm in
Lake Erie while it was being towed
to Fairport. O., from Erie by the naval
boats, the Wolverine and Essex. At
one time the seas swept the decks cf
the old vessel and it was necessary
to lash its guns.
An agent of a transatlantic steam
ship line has written Mayor Gaynor
of New York, stating that 30,688 per-,
sons who were curious to see a new
liner during its first stay in New York
contributed, at 50 cefits each, the
sum of $15,344. A check for $5,000
of this was enclosed with the request
that the mayor distribute it among
worthy charities, while the rest was
distributed in Hoboken and among
seamen's societies. ,
Foreign.
Japan is capturing the Australian
orange market from California com
petitors.
A Chinese invasion of Tibet by a
large army is in progress, according
to private advices reaching London,
the main purpose of which is to sell
to the simple-minded Tibetans a
i counterfeit Indian rupee for a thirty
two cents that costs only sixteen
cents to manufacture.
A national seed testing station for
England is urged by the London
chamber of commerce. Traders must
now send seeds for testing as to pur
ity and germination to continental
Europe.
A Vienna dispatch to the Exchange
Telegraph company of London, says:
“It is rumored here, but not confirmed,
that a revolution has broken out in
Sofia and the King Ferdinand has
been assasinated.”
The growth of Johannesburg, the
commercial and financial capital of
South Africa and by far the most pop
ulous city of the country is steadily
i forging ahead and it now has a popu
lation considerably in excess of 250,
000, with a property valuation exceed
ing $162,216,000.
During 1912 the boundaries of the
city of Glasgow were extended mater
ially and the population greatly in
creased. In 1911 Glasgow contained
12,975 acres, with a population of
784,455. Greater Glasgow covers 19,
183 acres, with a population estimat
ed November, 1912, at 1,010,805.
Siam has established a government
savings bank.
\v hile agriculture is carried cn in
gr^at part in a primitive manner in
Sicily, yet the island is gradually
feeling the awakening that is so
marked in northern Italy at presem.
Germany has more than 65,000,000
people living in an area less than that
of Texas.
King Constantine's protest to the
civilized world against Bulgarian
atrocities destroys the last hope of
those who believed that Russia would
succeed in inducing the belligerents
to accept arbitration.
Silk industry in Italy employes
190,000 operatives and 19,000 looms.
It is announced in the semi-official
Seoul Press that the Japanese munic
ipality at Wonsan tGensan) has de
cided to construct waterworks there
at an estimated cost of $150,000.
Floods in the Maros-Torda district
of Transsylvania, Hungary, have caus
ed the loss cf eighty lives. Fifteen
villages have been destroyed.
The society of American women in
London gave a luncheon at the Sa
voy hotel to welcome Walter Hines
Page, the new United States ambas
sador and Mrs. Page.
Persia’s one railway is a six-mile
line from Teheran to the shrine at
Shah Abdul Azim.
Of France’s 277,000 recruits in 1912,
3.46 per cent were illiterates and 22.5
per cent had no education beyond the
mere ability to read and write
An American who visited the camp
of General Toribio Ortega, constitu
tionalists at Guadalup* thirty miles
down the Rio Grande from Juarez,
says Ortega's forces are guarding a
dismantled aeroplane which they ex
pect to set up and use in recommit
ering the federal fortifications around
Juarez.
The world’s supply of emery comes
from Greek islands and from Asia
Minor near Smyrna. Importations
into the United States, which average
$260,000 annually, have been hamper
ed within the last year because of
distnred conditions in theb Balkans.
HAVE WARM DEBATE
SENATE GETS STIRRED UP OVER
BRYAN’S ‘ VACATION.”
BRISTOW RESOLUTION TABLED
Ashurst Tells Kansan He Was Once
Desirous of Fat Job With
Little Work.
Washington. — Secretary Bryan’s
policy of lecturing in his vacation
time involved the senate in a bitter
controversy. It began when Senator
Bristow, ignoring the defeat of his
resolution directed at Mr. Bryan's ac
tion, insisted upon being heard in se
vere criticism of the cabinet officer.
Before the debate ended charges
and counter charges between sena
tors on the two sides of the chamber
had brought the senate to a high
pitch of excitement Senator Ashurst
produced an old letter of Senator
Bristow's which he declared indicated
that Mr. Bristow in 190C had beeu
perfectly willing to take a federal po
sition and devote only part of his
time to It.
Bristow Retorts With Charge.
Senator Bristow retorted with the
charge that Senator Ashurst had
spent over $100 of public funds send
ing private telegrams that should
have been paid fo-r from his own
pocket, a charge denied by Senatoi
Ashurst, but which Senator Bristow
agreed to prove by producing original
telegrams that had been paid for out
of senate funds.
From these personal accusations
the debate went into the general
field of public lecturing and writing
aud democratic senators called atten
tion to the Chautauqua platform work
of Senator Bristow and many others
and to the newspaper writing that
Senator Bristow had done at the last
Baltimore convention. The Kansas
senator emphatically declared that he
never neglected the duties of his of
Not on Tria!.
“I am not on trial here," he said.
“I simply want to show that peo
ple who live in glass houses should
not throw stones," said Senator
James.
Senators Rristow, Townsend, Fall
and others attacked in strong lan
guage the action of Secretary Bryan
in delivering paid lectures at a time
when they claimed public questions
required his close attention to affairs
of the State department.
Fire Risk War at End.
St. -Louis.—Following an intermit
tent conference of two days' duration
with local insurance heads, Charles E.
Revelle, state superintendent of insur
ance, announced that the fire risk war
in Missouri had ended. Neither he
nor the men with whom he had con
ferred, however, would divulge any
of the details of the compromise. Re
'v-elle left for Jefferson'City immedi
ately after the conference. Just how
the tangle caused by the passage of
the Orr law was undone will remain
a mystery until his conference with
Governor Major. Both the state and
the insurance men have made con
cessions, the superintendent Baid.
Bryan Talks of Lecture .Plan.
Washington. — Secretary Bryan
talked freely with the newspaper
men about his much discussed and
criticised plan to spend his vacation
on the lecture platform. He said he
probably would make a little over
S250 on each lecture and added:
“When I return. I’ll tell you Just how
much i have made.”
“Peace Day” Closes Celebration.
Lorain, O.—The closing day of the
Perry centennial celebration here was
“peace day" and appropriate exercis
es were held in commemoration of
100 years of peace between the Unit
ed States and Great Britain.
Frozen to Death in July.
New York.—Hugo Meisner, a young
helper in a Brooklyn ice plant was
found frozen to death in a compart
ment which h had entered to adjust
the machinery.
Get Jewelry Worth $30,000.
New York.—-Cracksmen secured
jewelry valued at between $20,000
and $30,000 by blowing a safe in the
establishment of Rosenberg & Dan
iel. A large safe, containing a more
valual'le collection of jewels, with
stood attempts to open it.
Minnesota 2-Cent Law Effective.
St. Paul, Minn.—The 2-cent fare
rate on all railroads in Minnesota af
fected by the recent decision of the
United States supreme court will go
into effect next Monday, July 21.
Confesses to Murder.
Winchester, Ky.—Dan Deaton, one
of the eighteen defendants who are
on trial charged wvh the murder of
Edward Callahan, former sheriff of
Breathitt county, made a complete
confession on the witness stand and
implicated all his co-defendants.
Not Worth So Much Now.
New York.—A seal on the New
York stock exchange sold fo.- $37,000*
$1,000 less than the laBt sale made a
few days ago, which tyas the lowest
in recent years.
Steamers Collide in a Fog.
v Chicago, 111.—The steamers Sbeboy
gan and Iowa of the Goodrich line
of lake steamers collided in a fog at
the mouth of the harbor here. The
Sheboygan was but little damaged,
but the Iowa, with a thirty-foot hole
In her bow, finally sank.
Powder Did It.
Auburn, Cal.—Four workmen were
killed in an explosion at the giant
pow’der works near Klopper Gap. No
one else was injured. The cause of
explosion has not been determined.
NEBRASKA IN BRIER.
Colonel Thompson, an old settler of
Valentine, died after a lingering ill
ness. He was 86 years of age.
Paul Springer of Fremont and
George Hays of Winslow have been
chosen to represent Dodge county at
the encampment, of school boys at
Lincoln next fall.
Wymore will bid for the national
dog races this year. A thousand dol
lars has been pledged to go toward
making a guarantee. Another thous
and dollars will be raised.
The Edwards farm comprising 115
acres adjoining the Stock Yards and
Land com.nauy's property southeast
of Fremont was sold to the latter con
cern at public auction for $17,500.
At a meeting held by the York
churches they completed the organiza
tion of the York church federation.
County Judge Arthur G. Wray has
been elected president of the federa
tion.
Three more counties. Butler, Cedar
and Jefferson have reported to the
secretary of the State Board of As
sessment. Two or these, Butler and
Jefferson, show a decrease, the latter
of over $000,000.
The Beatrice-Lincoln road has
been graded north from Beatrice to
Cortland, a distance of nineteen
miles, and arrangements made for
dragging, thus insuring a good road.
The work was done by the county,
using (heir own tractor and grader.
State Superintendent Delzell has re
turned from the national educational
association meeting held at Salt laike
City. Ninety teachers from Nebraska
attended the meeting. Mr. Delzell
was again made a director of the na
tional association.
Governor Morehead has appointed
Henry Allen of Central City to be
judge advocate general of the Nebras
ka National guard. He will take the
place vacated by the resignation of
Fred Mack of Albion, who is soon to
move to Florida.
John Melroy, aged 70 years, one of i
the oldest settlers of Furnas county, ^
was fatally wounded when he re- I
ceived two loads from a shotgun in J
bis body. His son, Grover Melroy, 25 i
years old. is in the county jail j
charged with the shooting.
Bill Kantiel and Patrick McCoy,
held on the charge of attempting to |
hold up Sam Kohn, broke out of the \
Fremont city jaii by boring a hole
through a solid brick wall. The men
worked with the prongs of an old bi
cycle.
A pennon, wmcu is saiu 10 coutam
32,277 names, asking that the work
men’s compensation act be referred
to a vote of the people for approval or
rejection under the referendum iaw,
has been filed with Secretary of State
Walt.
Division Superintendent A. W. Kel
so and Trainmaster \Y. W. Cameron
of Fairbury have returned from a trip
over the west end of the Nebraska di
vision. They accompanied a special
train over the division on a tour of in
spection.
E. R. Gilmore, who was working on
top of a threshing machine near
Shelby, had one leg drawn into the
cylinder and shredded nearly to the
.knee. He was rushed to a David City
hospital and the leg amputated above
the knee.
With the new law which gives half
pay to convicts serving time in Ne
braska’s penitentiary, becoming ef
fective this week, prison officials are
wondering. The law is all right and
the officials are in favor of it. How
ever, no funds were appropriated by
the legislature which passed the law
to put it in operation.
Helen, 14-year-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Peter Pollick, was shot and
almost instantly killed at her home
ten miles northeast of Crofton by
John Wetter, a 10-year-old boy. The
boy was examining a 22-caliber rifle,
which was accidentally discharged,
the bullet entered under the right eye
and penetrated the base of the brain.
State Engineer D. D. Price has re
ceived so many calls for copies of
the new laws passed by the last leg
islature covering irrigation that he
has prepared a list of all old laws
and the new ones passed and is hav
ing them printed in pamphlet form.
He expects them to be finished and
ready for distribution in about two
weeks.
i.acK ui water at tne state peniten
tiary has become an acute problem
with the authorities. Board of con
trol members who have been investi
gating find there is no suitable wa
ter to be had on the state's land and
that unless it is located near there
within a short time steps will have
to be taken to make connections
with the city water mains.
The Royal Highlanders, Woodmen
of the World and Woodmen Circle,
three Nebraska fraternal insurance
societies, have joined in an attack in
lira district court of Lancaster county
on the new insurance code enacted
by the late legislature, applying to
the court for an injunction forbidding
Governor Morehead, Attorney General
Martin and State Auditor Howard,
who constitute the insurance board
under the new statute, from putting
the same into effect.
Nebraska stockmen are responsible
for shipments of diseased cattle to
them, according to a conclusicn
reached by the state veterinarian, fol
lowing experiences w'ith several
falroly certified shipments made from
other states to Nebraska during the
past two months.
Demand for cars to carry Nebras
ka's gigantic 1913 crop and remnants
of last year’s crop has become excess
ive during the past fewr days. Accent
ing to railway commissioners there
has never been a time when farmers
and elevator men were more anxious
to secure service than right now.
N. Unthank, who was arrested,
charged with the murder of George
Carson at Arlington, has been re
leased by County Judge Eller under
bail of *7,500.
Nebraska City attorneys appeared
before the state supreme court and
told in chamber proceedings some of
the history surrounding the effort of
citizens of that place to recall Mayor
J. D. Houston. The application of
Mayor Huston’s attorneys was grant
ed and the supercedeas bond will be
ordered. The high court will review
the case at its first fall sitting in Sep
tember
LINE INCORPORATED
OMAHA & LINCOLN RAILWAY AND
LIGHT COMPANY IS NAME.
M’KINLEY IS BEHIND PROJECT
Papers Filed by Receiver English of
Nebraska Traction and Power
Co.—Route by Way Ralston.
Lincoln.—It looks as if William Mc
Kinley of Ohio is going to got into
the intorurban game in Nebraska. Ar
ticles of incorporation of the Omaha
ami Lincoln Railway and Light com
pany have been filed with the secre
tary of state.
The papers were filed by Receiver
Arthur English and Attorney Harry
Brome of the Nebraska Traction and
Power company, which recently was
purchased by Congressman McKinley.
An issue of stock is called for,
amounting to $750,000, and the arti
cles call for an issue of $:!.000,U00
bonds to construct the road. The
articles are signed by VY. M. Loomis,
E. W. Bradford, R. E. Bo:T:enhagen,
S. .1. Howell and Justin Itefrigier.
The route is laid from Omaha through
Ralston to Lincoln, and is probably
a continuation of the present road
from Omaha to Ralston.
Will Enforce Weight Law.
John Grant Pegg. sealer of weights I
and measures cf Omaha, with Dr. |
Spellman of the Lincoln department,
will assist Pood Commissioner Har
man in prenarations to put into ef
fect the new weights and measures
law which goes into operation this
week.
The new law, which was known as
senate file No. 187, was introduced by
Senator Reynolds of Dawes county
and fixes the legal standard for
weights and measures in Nebraska.
It makes the governor of the state
sealer of weights and measures, and
the deputy food commissioner the
deputy scaler.
The lawrequires that after 1013
all fruit boxes shall contain full pints
or quarts, or else be labelled with the
amount contained. Bottled milk or
cream must be sold by the pint,
quart, gallon or fraction thereof, and
butter prints must contain a full
pound. The penalty for a fracture
of the law imposes a fine of $5 to
$100 or a jail sentence not exceeding
ninety days or both and liability to
the injured party for twice thr> value
of the property wrongfully sold.
Tiie law makes the county clerk
the official scaler for his county and
also provides for local dealers. Seal
ers are given full authority to inspect
weights and measures and condemn
all Improper ones.
The deputy sealers shall receive as
follows: SI.50 for inspecting or seal
ing each platform scale, if weighing
5.000 pounds or more, and .>0 cents
for movable platform scales if weigh
ing 300 pounds or more; less than
that amount 25 c ats; $1 for dor
mant scales, $3.50 railroad track
scales, and shall be entitled to col
lect from the owner or custodian of
such scales mentioned, amount suf
ficient to cover the cost of transport
ing all necessary test weights to and
from the location of said scales. For
sealing or marking every beam 10
cents; for sealing or marking meas
ures of extension 10 cents per yard
or fraction thereof, not exceeding 50
cents for any one measure. For seal
ing or marking liquid or dry meas
ures 10 cents for each measure. For
sealing and marking every weight 5
cents. For sealing and markiug all
> automatic slot machines $3.
The net weight per barrel or
bushel or any pari thereof shall be
as follows: Wheat Hour, per barrel,
190 pounds; half barrel, 98; quarter
barrel, 48; per eighth barrel, 24; per
oue-sixteenth barrel, 12; cornmeal,
per bushel 6ack, 48 pounds; half
bushel sack, 24; per quarter bushel
sack, 12.
Wheat Crop is Harvested.
Lincoln.—Weekly crop reports to
the railroads, so far as wheat is con
cerned, indicate that in Nebraska the
cereal is practically all harvested and
much of it on the way to* market, the
yield being close to the bumper mark.
The Burlington’s report that goes
into detail and cov,?rs the corn belt
c* Nebraska, puts the condition as
follows as compared with one week
ago:
Division. This Week. Last Week.
Omaha . 102 102
Lincoln . 100 97
Wymcre . 93 99
McCook . 89 98
As to pastures, they are In fairly
good condition, but in some spots
they are burned and i'eed is becom
ing short.
Screens for Crystal Lake.
Lincoln, Neb.—Game Warden Gust
Rutenbeck afcd Fish Commissioner
O’Brian have returned from Dakota
City, where they went to look up the
proposition of putting in screens at
Crystal lake near that city, to pre
vent carp and buffalo fish from get
ting into the lake during high water
periods and destroying the bass,
which are quite plentiful in the lake.
It has been stacked with bass, and
if the carp and buffalo Ncan be kept
out of it the fishing for the former
will be good.
Shortage of Water.
Lincoln—There is a shortage of wa
ter in the Rcottsbluff country irirga
tlon ditches, which is liable to cause
much trouble and loss to crops if
some way in not provided to furnish
water. According to the information
“an emergency exists,” and as such
it is up to the state to take the mat
ter in hand and relieve the situation.
Assistant Deputy Engineer C. P. Ma
son has gone to Investigate the situ
ation and until he returns Mr. Price
Is unable to say what steps will be
taken to meet the situation- v
, » . ' *
BERLIN A COMFORTABLE CITY
Offer* Opportunity for Passing a Win
ter Unequaled by Any Other
Place in Europe.
Berlin.—This city is the most com
fortable city in Europe. This plain
statement of a plain fact doesn't mean
that Berlin is beautiful as is either
Paris or Vienna, but simply that as
a place in which to pass a winter
or to reside the entire year it of
fers opportunities which do qot ex
ist in Europe.
Berlin proper is not imposing, its
historic interest is scanty, but the new
Berlin, Greater Berlin, is a brilliant
city of villas set in a large park,
where the streets are curved, where
every vista invites the eye, where
flowers rule and great spaces delight.
Ten years ago Berlin West, say Char
lottenburg, in the vicinity of the
Unter den Linden.
zoological garden, was considered a
suburb; today it is the real Berlin,
and not the stuffy old town, with its
dingy houses and not too fragrant
streets.
Of course, Unter den Linden will al
ways he the heart of Berlin for the
tourist, not alone because of the big
hotels of Friedriehstrasse, Leipziger
strasse, and the shopping district, but
because the royal palace, the muse
ums, the new cathedral, and the Lust
garten are at its other end. But leave
it at the Brandenburg gate for the
Tiergarteu, and a crow cannot fly any
straigbter than the wide allee called
the (.'harlottenburg Cbaussee; then
walk leisurely through this delectable
region till you reach the Cbarotten
burg bridge, thence up the Berliner
strasse to the bend or junction,
(Knie), and with the exception of cer
tain parts of Paris and Vienna you
will not find a finer street in the
world. There is the long Bismarck
strasse to pursue; or you may follow
the Berlinerstrasse to the old palace
with the monument of Emperor Fred
erick II., on the Luisenplatz. Or cut
through the Tiergarten at the station
and come out at the zoo, with its fan
tastic animal houses and fine walks,
and you are on Hardenbergstrasse in
front of the Romanesque (late) me
morial church of Emperor William—
with a hideous chime of bells (Berlin
churches are ugly).
The view straight up this avenue is
inspiring. Some noble buildings adorn
it. and at the Steinplatz there is an
other vast square flanked by apart
ment houses that set you to wonder
ing over the ingenuity of Berlin archi
tects and their capacity for the clever
varying of styles, so as to mingle mod
ern and German Baroque without of
fending the taste.
THINKS JAR OF JAM A BOMB
New York Judge Finds Mysterious
Bundle, Which Police Soak
in Water.
New York—Strawberry jam caused
the scare. Jam like that which moth
er used to make—the kind that we
stole when we were kiddies, and then
got licked for the '•swipin’. ”
When Judge Thompson of Brooklyn
returned home he found on the fourth
floor an oblong pasteboard box about
eight inches long and three inches
wide in which were what appeared to
be two metal cylinders. His curiosity
Btopped then and with more speed
than grace he darted downstairs and
called up police headquarters, explain
ing that he had found a bomb.
Detective Ward was sent to the
house. At arms' length he carried the
bomb to the police station and soaked
it in water, while the nerves of some
of his fellow-policemen began to be
come a bit ragged.
Visions of an honor medal appeared
to Ward as he began to open the sus
pected bomb. Everybody was breath
ing hard. He severed the strings and
—there was a sorry-looking detective,
for the "bomb" was two innocent jars
of strawberry jam.
BOLT PICKS OUT A VICTIM
Stuns One Man in Room Without
in Any Way Affecting His Com
panions.
Seaford, Del.—Accompanied by de
structive electrical disturbances, a vio
lent rain and windstorm swept over
lower Deleaware leaving much dam
age in its wake. The steeple on the
Seaford high school was shattered and
the bolt raced down the building,
shocking residents of adjoining houses.
A bolt of lightning entered a home
on Pine street and knocked uncon
scious J. Milton Barnes, solicitor for
the Diamond 3tate Telephone Com
pany, but left uninjured several other
persons in the room. Barnes was re
vived with great difficulty, but is suf
fering no bad results from the ex
perience. Many outbuildings were de
stroyed and much live stock was killed
in the rural districts.
Dies a la Cleopatra.
Cincinnati.—Two weeks ago C. H.
Bishop, president of the C. H. Bishop
Flour company, watched the death
struggles of a cat he had chloroform
ed. That incident, it is believed, sug
gested to him a way out of his own
difficulties. Bishop was found dead
In his home. 100G Windsor street, and
he had used chloroform to bring about
the end. In a note to his wife he said
business reverses and bodily infirmi
ties had mounted hi£ier than he could
withstand and tfcat "this is the only
way out.”
IN SUCH PAIN
WOMAN TORE
HER CLOTHES
Testifies She Was Restored
to Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Malone, N. Y., — “ Lydia E. Pink
ham'a Veorptable Compound has cer
tainly done me a lot
of good. I first heard
of it when I was a
girl and I always said
that if I ever had fe
male trouble I would
take it.
“I suffered from
organic inflamma
tion and would have
spells when I would
be in such pain that
I would tear my
clothes. One day my nusoanu gut ui»
neighbors in to see what the matter was
but they could not help me. My first
thought was for Lydia E. Pinkham s
Vegetable Compound and I sent my hus
band out for it and took it until I was en
tirely cured. I am a woman of perfect
health and my health and happiness
came from Lydia E. Pinkham s medi
cine. You may rest assured^fhat i do
all I can to recommend your wonderful
medicine to- my friends.”— Mrs. Feld
Stone, Routs No. 3, Malone, N. Y.
The success of Lydia E. Pinkham a
Vegetable Compound, made from roots
and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be
used with perfect confidence by women
who suffer from displacements, inflam
mation, ulceration,tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, bearing-down
feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness,
or nervous prostration. Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound is the stan
dard remedy for femaie ills.
DAISY FLY KILLER ££ T. *.S
mei. ciean. or
namental. convenient,
cheap. Last* all
season. Made of
metal, can't apt 11 or tip
over; will not ao1l or
Injure anything.
Guaranteed effective.
A.I dealers ortaent
evnremi nairi for fll Ml.
HAROLD SOMERS. 150 DeA»ifc Arm., Brooklyn, H. T.
IRENE KNEW A BETTER WAY
Small Girl's Naive Confession Some
what Weakened Force of Papa's
Little Rebuke.
The arousing quality of children's
sayings frequently depends upon the
viewpoint of the adult listener. Only
those who can thoroughly enter into
and sympathize with the child nature
get the full llavor and savor of many
a piquant childish remark. The men
tal attitude of the critic, for example,
has much to do with due and proper
appreciation of one of the favorite
child stories told by the actress.
Urace George.
A family dinner table serves as
background for this story, and father,
when it begins, has just reproved his
ten-year-old daughter for handling
greasy food with her Ungers, then
wiping ihrm on the front of her dress.
"Look at your little sister! Irene
doesn't get her dress soiled, as you
do, whc-n she eats.”
"No.” is Irene’s prompt and serene
aeknow lodgement of the compliment,
"I keep my dress nice an' clean in
front. 1 wipe my finger 'way down at
the bottom."
In the Same Boat.
William is small, but shrewd and
quick-witted. A little lazy, however,
he has been alow to learn to read. The
other day his grandfather, whom he
loves dearly, thought to prick the lit
tle lad's pride Pretending to have
mislaid his glasses, he handed Wil
liam the menu of the restaurant,
where, as a favorite treat, he had
taken his grandson to luncheon. “I
can't read without my glasses, son.”
lie explained. "You read the ice
cream list to me.” Said William
swiftly and solemnly: :'T can’t read
r. ithout glasses, either.”
Old One.
"Why do girls find the social swim
j so particularly attractive at the sea
shore?"
"I guess it is on account of the
»uoys."
Corrected.
"Her gown was- quite outre.”
"No. it was summer silk.”
One Way.
"How are new enterprises floated?"
"Well, it is sometimes done with the
water in the stock.”
r -^
A Triumph
Of Cookery—
Post
Toasties
Many delicious dishes
hive been made from
Indian Com by the skill
at.d ingenuity of the ex
pert cook.
But none of these crea
tions peels Post Toast
ies in tempting the palate.
“ToasUes” are a lux
ury that make a delight
ful hot-weather economy.
The first package tells
its own story.
“The Memcry Lingers”
Sold by Grocers.
_ #