The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, July 16, 1914, Image 6

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    EPITOME OF EVENTS
Paragraphs that pertain to
many subjects.
IRE SHORT BUT INTERESTING
Beta* Me«(>041 at WkM la Tranapi'ieg
la VanaM Stctjo— af Oar Oea
m* Foce-ge Cc-untnc*.
WASHINGTON.
The Hi* at taa bnttleah.pv Vlaala
* M» and Idaho for aae ia the Creek
navy a a* <'«>».otffiMed hr the deilt
•ry ia Secretary Uaaleia of a check
lor SIZ^SJTTS M
e o a
Secretary Uaatrla haa aaaoaacec
that ho aanid advavtlae (or Mda for
the aoaatraruoa of too m hat tie
Ain aa Anc**t L One at the three
a—P§ » th«* ? ear'a cor.»troct.oc pro
paa a .13 he kUt at the Brooklyn
navy yard
e o o
t party taried.ag member* of the
auapPHMuoaai naval commit’ee* and
thaar artvea and Mr* Jaaephna Dna
Ma Ml SaAtipM aboard the dis
patch boat Dolphin for Qniacf. Macs .
to attend i be teeach-as of the new
hattlealup Kerala.
• • •
Hr load eat Bikes recelred me-sad*-!
from the rale** of the principal M
tlooi at the oorid and fro* American
aorieUea 18 f-sret*B r.tlea coo gran,
hail him and the American people
aa the IZMh anniversary of the inde
pendence of the Catted Staten.
• • •
TW tncopristioa for the
kM of tho Salem fire sufiers-r*. ashed
by I’wiiii sf Wilson ta a oman to
nawgrias. ox refused by the bouse
appmpr arum* cusnittw. Tbe au
Jartfy of tbe committee contended
that Massachusetts ox able to take
• • •
Cfter a »*«fy debate between the
Mississippi de eg*
> tbe bonne rejected a senate
to tbe Indian appropria
te* MU which would permit us Mi*
ataeippf Choctaw* to present their
dux fur pwtiriyatm t* the tribal
funds of the Choctaw Indians of Ok
• a •
Secretary Daniels has sent letters
of rommrslsttrra to Morris Wallace,
master of arms, and William Carley,
hoatssow's mate for dance and cooi
ssm displayed X Vera Cruz recently
la rescuing a sailor who had climbed
X a yard arm of the battleship Vir
ginia aad ox about to dive to tlie
deck lto feet below
• • •
Tbe Japanese ambassador. Viscount
Chmda. introduced to President Wil
son Major General Gijachl Tanaka, a
Member of Che Japanese army general
g*f. who kx been ia Europe lares
tigai ut military establishments. The
get.c*al ia arrompot.ied by Dr. 8. X':n
agaaa. a distinguished authority on
totemstum*: law.
• • •
President WiVs -c raeeived a tele
gram tram the Pa* Hellenic I'nion in
America thanking him for the sale of
tbe battleaisips Idaho and Mississippi
to Cronos “We consider the trans
action a great art of humanity in pre
venting tbe outbreak of a nen war in
tb* near met A telegraphed tbe presi
doai of tbe aaloa.
(. OOMMTIA.
Apparently a**d by what he con
sidered the superior class' of his op
ponent Matty McCue. a Hghtaeigbt
of Karine. Win. substituted for Ad
Woigxt wx X easy victim tor Joe
Kiser* ta tbe second round of a
ta eat)-frame contest at Vernon arena
to LdS Angeles
• • •
Tb* statement of tbe Copper pro
die»rs' ansociatiuu tor June shows
x tas rex* to stock on hand of
J2.'C«.«2S pounds, com pared with toe
previous mould.
• • •
At! tbe volcanoes along tbe Aixskan
plfll newt of Seward to tje
Aleutian islands are to action, accord
lag to a report brought by Captain
Me* wiles at tbe ateamabip Dingo.
wb-.c«i arrived from Dutch harbor
• • •
Tbe qImm is tbe Colorado ftrike
dMtrvt will aot be permitted to open
aa tons *» tbe federal troop* are In
tbe held. Tbe order leaned by the
1«4eral com leader upon entering the
district last April 1s final Tbi* is
tbe sard that came from tbe secre
tary of wnr. to whom tbe dty and
mutjr sdtetals recently appealed
• • •
American canoeists are preparing
to defend tbe international canoe
trophy and some excellent races ar»
prom is rd at tbe el. mi nation trials to
be beid in Oraieseod bay. July IT
and It
* * *
Orieaa'a health authorities lure an
ipnt red tint none of the several
ffrw.sQ rat* examined for bubonic
plague Infection had sbosn traces of
tbe disease. Tbe work of rat exter
auubut win he prmsed rigorously,
tbe object being to destroy tbe esti
mated «M.(« rat* in the city.
• • •
Five conches of tbe Dixie Flyer left
the tracks of the fiasbrille. Chaita
•oura A 8t Lntda railroad at Wau
bairhte. Team., and. according to rail
may olnnls. four parsons were
rtUbtly # #
The administration anti trust pro
tu definitely rtarted on its
*. (e tbo otatuto books when the
mttb tbo legislative machinery
forced draft, romplet
of the Covlngtaa
bill and laid that
for Anal passage.
0 0 0
lent M A NeC ^
before the Motion Future
at Dayton O,
1« cents be charged for
a" shows, and ah
I
l uited States mints last year pro
duced 18o.C71.871 coins.
* • •
In Aprd thirty-seven Cnited States
mining companies paid out $7,118,033
la dividends.
• • •
Fred A. Buyse. former mayor of Chi
cago. and for years a well known re
publican polite ian. died at his home
there. He bad been sick for many
weeks.
• • •
Dr. Charles Francis Baxter, former
ly a physician at the penitentiary on
Blackwell's Inland, was sentenced to
serve the limit sentence of one year
in prison and fined $300 for selling
mt*ri 1::n« to prisoners. He pleaded
guilty.
• • •
tluy Pbillir*. associate secretary, of
the Missouri Pacific Railway Co., shot
and kii.ed himself in the offices of the
! company on the eighth floor of a New
York office building. His paysician
sa.d he had been a sufferer recently
from despondency.
• • •
Trave^c;; at the rate of seventy
e ght miles at hour. Eddie Ricken
bacher drove his car to victory in the
three hundred mile automobile race
at fioux City and captured $10,000 of
the $75,000 prize. $15.«t0 being divid
ed among the other contestants.
• • •
Captain Robert Bartlett of the Ca
nadian Arctic exploration expedition
positive y denied that he had sent any
report to t.ie minister of marine at
Ottawa w hich could be construed as
.no. «".:ig -ha: eight men of the Har
lots crew •* er emissing and probably
iost
• • •
Powerful champions went to the
defense of the industrial relations
commission in :he senate and de
feated. if, to If*, an appropriations
■ ommitte- amendment to cut down to
•SdjMM the S2M.M0 provided for the
commission by the house in the sun
! dry civil bill.
%
A. Iketz. cf New York, a diamond
mere bant, and his son. Charles, have
been indicted by a federal grand jury
at New York on eleven counts as par
ticipants in an alleged conspiracy to
smuggle diamonds into the United
States I*.amends valued at from
t to 6406,060 v.ere smuggled
from Canada in 1911 and 1912, it is
alleged.
• • •
Fede-al legislation to be substi
tuted for the "blue sky" laws of the
■ anous states, the e'emination of pri
vate banks and the discouragement
of tbe practice of issuing overdrafts
were expressed in resolutions adopt
ed by the National Association of
supervisors of Slate Banks at the
clo-sr-g session of their convention at
Atlantic City.
• • •
The Norwegian collier Storstad,
which collided with the steamship
Empress of Ireland in May. with a
oss of more than 1,000 lives when the
Empress sank jn the St. Lawrence
rirer. will be sold at auction. The
Stor-tad was seized after its arrival
at Montreal, n connection with the
- i!t for S2.tMt6.000 damages brought
as-'air.'t its owners by the Canadian
Pacific railway company.
• • *
A Chicago jury awarded James B.
WVson. former conductor on the Bal
• more & Ohio railroad, 175.000 for in
, .ur.es received after he had been
forced to work sixty-eight hours out
<f seventy-two. While switching a
freight car to a side track at Penin
-ula. Pa., on the third day he became
exhausted and fell between the car
and an engine. His right arm was
^ crushed and bis spine badly injured.
FOREIGN.
A world s altitude record for an
•eror an*- carrying only the aviator
was made at Johacnisthal by the Ger
i an airman. Otto Unnekogel. who
attorned a height of approximately
.l,d54 f«et in bis monoplane.
• • •
Th*- Berlin p-lice arrested the pres
ident and members of the Servian
Students' club and searched their
rooms for evidence of a pan-Servian
I conspiracy which was alleged to in
volve Servians living in various
'towns of Germany.
The latest census of the population
of India is different than ordinary.
The story of how it was taken and
:!.e facts which it brought to light
are as entertaining and picturesque
as anything the readers of newspapers
: have had to amuse them in many
moons, and as unusual and striking
too. as one »ould expect from that
strange and mystic land.
Confirmation of the capture of the
important town of Korisa. in southern
Albania, by Albanian Musselman in'
«urgents. has been received. The fight
ine lasted three days, after which the
Albanian government troops took to
flight and the Dutch officers in com
mand proceeded to AvIona. It was at
first reported that the entire garrison,
including foreign officers, had been
captured by the insurgents.
* * *
Two hundred coal miners were en
tombed ;n the V.eMe-Marihaye col
lier' near Liege. Belgium, when fire
broke out Two hundred of their
comrades escaped when the alarm
waa given
• • •
The troubles of the Ameriean-Pan
ama joint 'and commission, which is
endeavoring to settle land claims,
have grown serious, according to the
legal officers of the canal, wao made
no secret of their expectation that the
work of the commission would result
in failure.
• • •
The new French cabinet, of which
Senator Ribot is premier, was de
feated in the first division taken in
the new chamber of deputies by a
vote of 30 to 262. The premier im
mediately resigned.
• < •
Some of the unionists who have
been the strongest supporters or the
Ulster volunteers, including Andrew
Bouar Law, Robert Cecil and Leopold
Charles Amerv, attacked the govern
ment in the British Honse of Com
moas for its failure t* suppress the
.nationalist volunteers.
ALLEGES JIG PLOT
MEXICAN CLAIMS U. S. FOSTERS
REVOLUTION.
WILL SHOW UP CONSPM
Moheno Coming to This Country to
Reveal What He Says Is the
Crime of the Age.
Vera Cruz.—Querido Moheno, for
mer Mexican minister to commerce
and labor, before departing on board
the Espagne for Cuba and the United
States, virulently criticised the policy
of the United States toward Mexico.
As he sat in the forward saloon of
the French liner. Senor Maheno look
ed through a port hole toward the
American flag flying at Vera Cruz
and shook his fist in rage.
He insisted that he was in a posi
tion to produce proofs that there ex
isted a "secret platform" of Lie pro
gressive party in the United States of
which Colonel Roosevelt was cogni
zant and in which he concurred, look
ing to the disruption of Mexico and
the acquisition ultimately by the
United States of all the territory be
tween the Rio Grande and Panama.
He said that Francisco Escudero,
who was minister of foreign relations
in Venustiano Carranza's cabinet, has
letters which to him are conclusive
evidence of his allegations and de
clared he hoped' to be able to produce
these letters at the proper time.
“And not only were the leaders of
the progressive party' pledged to this
policy." he added, “but politicians of
both the republican and democratic
parties had promised their secret sup
port. That President Wilson himself
had subscribed to this iniquitous con
spiracy is evidenced by his attitude
toward Mexico. Not a single Amer
ican in all the hundred million popu
lation of the United States can give a
satisfactory answer as to why those
troops are there on shore in Vera
Cruz."
"To show up President Wilson s
crime against Mexico—the greatest in
the history of modern nations" is the
announced object of Senor Moheno's
trip to the United States.
Dr. Cole Loses Suit.
New York.—Commercialized use of
Christian Science teaching has been
held by the appellate division of tbe
supreme court to be illegal.
The conviction in a lower court of
Willis Vernon Cole, for practicing
medicine without a license when he
accepted fees for Christian Science
treatment, was sustained. The higher
court, in its opinion, answered in the
negative its premise.
Is the commercialized use of pray
er for the avowed purpose of treating
all persons seeking cure for all kinds
of bodily ills the practice of the re
ligious tenets of a church?
Coie, formerly a sculptor and a
poet, testified at his trial that his
practice brought him an annual in
come of $6,000; that he had never
studied medicine; that he never so
licited fees, but accepted those offer
ed him.
Bureau Issues Statement.
Washington.—In connection with
“The recent phenomenon of an ex
cess of imports over exports in April
and May,” the Department of Com
merce, in a statement on the com
merce of the world and international
balances of trade, announced that
the net export balance of the United
States probably would exceed $400,
000,000 for the current fiscal year.
This would be about $250,000,000 less
than last year’s balance.
The department pointed out that a
large proportion of the older and
more advanced nations show an ex
cess of imports over exports of mer
chandise. Canada shows a balance on
the import side but nearly all other
American countries show larger ex
ports.
Salem Receives Federal Aid.
Washington—Congress appropriated
$200,00 for the relief of sufferers from
the Salem, Mass., fire. The house, in
spite of vigorous opposition, led by
j Chairman Fitzgerald of the appropria
tion committee, accepted, by a vote
of 161 to 66, a senate amendment to
the sundry civil bil to provide the
money.
The president had urged the appro
i priation in a special message and the
I Massachusetts delegates had been
j pressing for action for a week.
Quarantine New Orleans.
Washington.—Notice that quarantine
| against New Orleans will be declared
! by the Guatatr.alian ports on account
j of bubonic plague scare has come to
! the state department.
Newsboys Won Valuable Land.
Chicago.—Six acres of vsluable land
| on the outskirts of this city has been
] deeded to newsboys and bootblacks
by Francis A. Hardy as a site for a
home for the boys. Hardy is chair
man of a board raising an endowment
fund for the home.
Another Strike in Italy.
Rome.—A fresh general strike of
the employes of the Italian state rail
roads is threatened, and the govern
ment has taken extensive precaution
ary measures.
Cadets Have Left Gibraltar.
Gibraltar.—The American battle
ships Missouri and Illinois, with the
cadets from the naval academy on
board, sailed for Gravesend. England.
The Idaho is to remain here a few
days until taken over by a crew of
Greek sailors.
Electric Strike Is Over.
Pittsburgh, Pa.—The strike of the
Westinghouse employes in the 'Turtle
Creek valley Is over and the workers
have returned to the three plants to
resume work.
NEBRASKA IN BRIEF.
The Nebraska Bankers’ association
Is to meet in Omaha in convention
September 16 to 17.
The Harvard Community club Is
planning for a fall festival. Commit
tees have been appointed to arrange
a program.
G. M. Prentice, retiring postmaster
at Fairfield, has held the office for
nineteen years. He will be succeeded
by A. G. Carey.
Mrs. John Marmott died as the re
sult of injuries sustained a month ago
at Humboldt when she was thrown
from a buggy in a runaway.
The Beatrice city commissioners
have adopted an ordinance regulating
street traffic and imposing restric
tions upon drivers of motor vehicles.
A story hour has been added to the
work of the supervised public play
grounds at North Platte. Miss Mabel
Duke is in charge of the new depart
ment.
Wheat and oats yields in the vicin
ity of Fairfield are large and the corn
crop is in good condition. Potatoes
are running to tops and the yield will
not be large.
The question of providing a five mill
levy for four years, for the purpose
of building a new court house will be
submitted to the voters of Lincoln
county on August 18.
Harvesting in the vicinity of Har
vard is almost completed an<l the
yield has run from thirty to fortv
bushels per acre. The corn and al
falfa crops are in good condition.
Citizens of North Platte have be
come aroused over the many fires of
incendiary origin that have occurred.
All loiterers or night prowlers are to
be given quicK Justice from now on.
The Fremont city council have ap
proved the contracts for the new
sewer extensions recently awarded by
the board of public works. The im
provements will cost about $12,000.
Contentions of the Calumet Baking
Powder company with regard to the
legitimacy of the use of albumen in its
product and the water glass test in
its demonstration, were upheld by the
state food. commission.
At a special election held at Bridge
port the three propositions submitted
-to the voters were carried b*- » lar<re ,
majority. Bonds were voted for aa
extension of the water mains, and tor
a sewer system. Sunday baseball was
also legalizzed.
A real reunion of former Nebras
kans and Omahans will be held in
Omaha during Ak-Sar-Ben week. Octo
ber 5 to 10. The committee in
charge expects to have many former
residents of the state come home
during the week.
Frank Aldrich of Lincoln. IS years
old. wh!!“ rid;ne his j—vc’-’ Pt
forty miles an hour, collided with a
Burlington passenger train just west
of that city, and broke his neck and
legs. He was thrown thirty feet by
the impact.
A ten days’ schedule is laid out for
the farm demonstrators and university
?xperts to cover the country contigu
ous to Crawford. A party of about
fifteen arrived from Chad-on.
met about five miles north by citizens
of Crawford in autos.
Taylor filed a complaint in Justice
Archer's court charging Tony Hilton,
colored, with having shot Fred Lowe
in Plattsmouth on July 4. The pris
oner was given a preliminary hearing
and bound over to the district court
under bond of $1,000.
Charles H. Chase, president of the
Crawford Fruit and Produce company,
was stricken with paralysis as he waa
preparing to retire. His whole right
side is affected. There is strong hope,
however, of his complete recovery, as
Mr. Chase ha» scarcely reached mid
dle life.
The second of the series of Market
weeks, inaugurated by Omaha busi
ness men. will be held in Omaha dur
ing August. Invitations will be sent
to dealers in Nebraska, Iowa and
South Dakota, requesting them to
visit Omaha and be the guests of the
jobbers and manufacturers during the
week.
The name of the boy whose body |
was taken from the Missouri river a
mile below the Northwestern railroad
bridge near Blair was James Bushus.
jr., aged 8 years. He was drowned
by his tricycle sliding into the river
at Sioux City on Sunday, Jnne 21.
His father. James Bushus. identified
the body.
While excavating for the new Up
land school building, Elmer Bunger
found a lower jaw of mastoden amer
icanus with ten teeth ranging in size
i front 2x2*4 inches to *4x\4 inch. The
bone crumbled up on removal from
the yellow clay in which it was found,
but the teeth are in perfect condition.
This Is the first specimen of the kind
I found in this locality.
Grant C. Brown, car foreman for
the Rock Island at Fairbury has a
force of forty-five men. including car
repairers and carpenters, engaged In
coopering cars for grain service. The
force is the largest in the history of
the company there. Owing to a short
age of box cars, the company is coop
ering stock cars to haul grain. New
grain is already being moved to the
Kansas City markets.
Arthur Warner, a youth of about IS
years, was drowned in Medicine river
near Stockville. He was in swimming
with some boys. The water is high
on account of recent rains and the
current took him down.
Hall county agricultural enthusiasts
are industriously boosting the county
fair. The county agricultural society
has just been organized. President
L. C. Lawson was In Lincoln la-'1
week, inspecting the latest improve
ments on the State Fair grounds. A
number of these innovations will be
used in the new buildings at Grand
Island.
Ben Roeson. who claims Chariton,
la., as his home, has been sentenced
to serve ninety days in the Lincoln
county jail for robbing the home of
Ed Hostetter, near Maxwell.
Mrs. John Petker, who lives near
Charleston, dropped her 8-year-old
daughter from the second story of her
residence and then jumped after hex.
Two ribs were broken and Mrs. Pet
ker was badly burned. The fire was
caused by the explosion of lamp
which Mrs. Petker was carrying down
stairs. Mr. Petker extinguished the
flames before they reached outside
the house.
PREPARE JR ROSE
RAILWAY COMMISSION PLANNING
TO MOVE CROP.
NO CAR SH0RTA6E THUS FAR
Movement of Grain Will be Controlled
Largely by Prevailing Prices,
It Is Thought.
Lincoln.—Preparations for oversee
'ing the handling of the immense crops
that Nebraska farmers have harvested
and are yet to harvest, are being
made by the state railway commis
sion. Car reports are being carefully
scrutinized as they come into the com
mission offices and experts are at
work making comparisons with other i
years and gathering information as to
the probable distribution that will
have to be made the present year.
No calls have come to the commis
sion thus far for car relief. But it
will not be long before complaints and
orders will be surfeiting commission
affairs. The body's activity in this
regard is to see that fair play prevails
In railroad attitudes toward shippers,
that cars are kept on the move and
that empty car distribution is kept up
with demand.
Prices of two or three weeks hence j
are looked to govern the movement !
almost entirely. If they hold up well j
there will likely be a decided rush for \
the elevators and grain will begin to
move in tremendous quantities. If
the price falls off there will be much j
grain held. That will almost certainly 1
mean a heavy movement in the fall :
and during the winter, and will come :
at a time when part of the heavy corn
crop will be in tie process of • move- i
ment, It will burden the railroads
down in that event more than for sev- i
eral years.
Warts Maneuvers at Ashland.
Lincoln. — Because Commander-In
Chief Morehead of the Nebraska Na
tional guard believes expenditure of
federal and state funds should go
toward improvement of the Ashland
rifle range in Nebraska rather than
Camp Dodge in Iowa, he has ordered
General Hall to use all energy at his
command to hold this year's maneuv
er camp in this state instead of in
Hawkeye territory. By so doing it is
believed that some $42,000 that would
pass needlessly out of Nebraska
would be conserved here.
The matter is still the subject of
discussion between General Hal! and
the federal war department. Nebras
kans in Washington, including Secre
tary of State Bryan and Senator
Hitchcock, will be asked to further
the effort- If the plan goes through
a company of regular army infantry- 1
men. along with a number of detach
ed regular army officers, will be sent
to Ashland to participate with the
guardsmen in the maneuvers.
Reports of federal inspection of all
companies of the Nebraska guard
were forwarded (General Hall from j
Washington. The work of the guard j
is complemented therein, the Omaha
companies coming in for particularly
favorable mention.
Work to Begin at Early Date.
Lincoln.—As a result of a confer
ence between Thomas J. Majors and
A. L. Caviness of the state normal
board and J. H. Craddock of Omaha,
architect, who will make plans for
the new building at the Peru state
normal school, work will be begun as
soon as possible. The building will
cost $83,000. A levy of S5 per cent of
a mill has been made for the state
normal schools by the legislature and
the board has apportioned the amount
and each institution will take Its turn
in having a building erected.
Loss Shown In Forty-nine Counties.
Lincoln.—The increase of over
$1,000,000 which was made by the j
first thirty-eight counties reporting to
the secretary of the State Board ol I
Assessment has been cut down by the
last eleven so that there is a loss for
the forty-nine counties of $849,761,
Douglas and Lancaster counties have
not yet reported and it is thought that
the increase in these counties will
help to bring the valuation of the
state up to somewhere near what it
was last year.
Complains of Charge.
J. W. Shorthill. secretary of the
Nebraska Farmers' Co-operative
Grain and Live Stock association of
Hampton, has filed a complaint with,
the state railway commission against
the South Omaha Stock Yards asso
ciation, claiming that the stock
yards company makes yarding charge
of 8 cents on hogs when but 6 cents
is charged by Kansas City and St.
Joseph.
Two Cents Per Mile Allowed.
Lincoln.—Because railroads of the
state in several instances of competi
tive rates between common points
have been allowed to increase to 2
cents flat per mile, dissatisfied citi
zens are said to be planning a legal
attack on the action of the railway
commission.
The present state of the 2-cent pas
senger fare law, however, indicates
that the step would be a hard one to i
accomplish. The law allows railroads !
to charge not pore than 2 cents per j
mile, hence they are entitled to that, j
Portray Indian Life at State Fair.
Lincoln.—Scenes from Indian life in
the pioneer days of Nebraska will be
reproduced at the Nebraska state fair
this fall.
The band of “first inhabitants" of
the state will come from the vicinity
of Chadron. Indian village life will
be portrayed. There will be four ex
citing Indian dances. These will be
the Omaha, tj»e ghost, the wolf and
the scalp dances. This will not be a
Wild West performance in an ysense
of the word, but a genuine Indian en
tertainment
VALLEY OF ESK BEAUTIFUL
England. Perhaps. Possesses No More
Gorgeously Picturesque Spot Than
This Stretch of Land.
London.—There is, perhaps, no more
beautiful spot In all England than the
valley of the Esk. which stretches
from the sea to beneath the heights
of grim Sc&fell. The Gatehouse estate
midway up this valley possesses beau
tiful gardens and a glorious view. Oa
an outlying spur of fell above the
grounds a Japanese garden has lately
been called into being as by a magi
cian's wand. The site is ideal: a cup
on the hill top. which was formerly a
peaty swamp dotted with great bould
ers and slopes and gray granite, has
been transformed into a quaint and
beautiful garden The bog. skilfully
drained and utilized, has formed a
chain of tiny lakes, spanned here and
Three Hundred-Year-Old Japanese
Tombstone.
there by humpbacked bridges. In the
8tiU waters of one pool a tea-house is
reflected: there is a pergola which will
presently be a dream of delight with
wistaria and climbing roses: beds of
irises and yater plants fringe the
pools, masses of azalea give a wealth
of very rich color, and a big magnolia
in full bloom testifies to the climate,
of the Dale. In pockets among the
great boulders grow many rare plants,
and cherry and flowering trees are
planted with a lavish hand. Bamboo
flourishes, and curious evergreen trees
and shrubs are everywhere.
Here and there are quaint old Japa
nese temple stones, brought from Ja
pan. They are ancient, and the weath
ered gray granite of which they are
made harmcnizes well with their new
home. The hollow of the fell top is
sheltered from the winds that sweep
over the mountains. It is a beautiful
spot. Behind rises the gloomy bulk of
the Screes, that line of inhospitable
mountain rising sheer from the black
depths of Lake Wast Water, the deep
est of the English lakes. To the north
lies Scafell. though it is Ju6t hidden
from the Japanese garden by other
lesser heights. To the west is the sea,
beyond a majestic mountain known as
Muncaster fell. On clear days the
Isle of Man is plainly visible, a fairy
iBle with a blue line of distant moun
tains on the far horizon. To the south
are more mountains. It is a wonder
ful achievement, this little oasis of the
mountains, for the soil for planting
had to be brought from below. Great
ingenuity has been shown in the work
ing out of its original conceptionf and
it is a valuable addition to already
beautiful gardens. It is also an <Jb
ject-lesson in an art which the Chelsea
flower show has shown us is flour
ishing very healthily.
—
WHERE WIVES ARE SCARCE
Medical Missionary to Labrador De
clares They Are Very Scarce
in That Country.
London.—Dr. Grenfell, the famous
medical missionary in Newfoundland
and Labrador, entertained a great au
dience at the Queen's hail with stories
of life in wild Labrador.
"Wives are so scarce in Labrador."
he said, "that the Moravian Mission
ary society has made it a rule that if
a woman's husband dies she must be
a widow for at least a fortnight.
"Just before Christmas I had lunch
with the late Lord Strathcona—or,
rather. I had lunch while he watched,
as he had not lunched for 50 years.
Lord Strathcona asked me how the
hospital he gave us was getting on,
and 1 had to tell him it was not doing
so well, as the boilers had blown out.
" ‘Get the best set of boilers you
can put in immediately, and send the
bill to me.’ he said."
‘MINDS DIRTY: BODIES CLEAN’
Dr. J. J. Walsh Says in Address That
Condition Is Reversed Since
Shakespeare's Time.
Baltimore. Md.—“In the 350 years
since Shakespeare we have prog
ressed from dirty bodies and clean
minds to clean bodies and dirty minds,
a doubtful betterment." said Dr.
James J. Walsh of New York, former
dean of the medical department of
Pordham university, in an address to
the students of Loyola college. He
said modern educators have lost the
secret of education, which is discip
line—the training of the will and
mind.
CHILDREN’S PET KILLS MAN
Babe, Giant Elephant, Noted for Gen
tleness. Mangles Its Keeper at
Park In Toledo, O.
Toledo. O.—In the presence of sev
eral thousand persons. Michael Rad
datz, animal trainer at Walbridge
park, Toledo, w-as killed by “Babe,” a
giant elephant- Raddatz had brought
the elephant out harnessed up to give
his children their usual Sunday ride.
Suddenly the elephant hurled the
keeper to the ground and mangled
him with Its tusks. The elephant was
subdued by the head keeper.
THE SHORT
CUT
TO HEALTH
is by way of the Stomach,
Liver and Bowels. Keep
these organs strong and
active by use of
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
and you possess the se
crets of continued good
health. It is for Poor
Appetite, Indigestion,
Cramps, Constipation
and Biliousness. Try it.
PUT MUCH FAITH IN GARLIC
Belief Among Physicians That It Is
Highly Efficient in Tubercu
losis.
Physicians on this side of the At
lantic are experimenting with garlic
as a possible cure for the dreaded tu
berculosis.
A Dublin doctor has been working
on the theory’ for some years past
with considerable success and has
published a book upon it, and although
it is too soon yet to tell of results in
this country, it is being tried at the
Metropolitan hospital in New York.
It is said that there is little tuber
culosis in Italy, where garlic chewing
is a national habit, and that in this
country it is the Italian children who
have given up chewing garlic who suc
cumb to the "great white plague."
Garlic contains a chemical substance
called allyl sulphide in the percent
age of two drops to a teaspoonful of
juice, which is much stronger than
the amount of the same chemical
found in onions or shallots. It is this
drug which, it is claimed, destroys the
tubercular bacilli.
Garlic juice is said to act quick
ly UDon tuberculosis of the throat,
which heretofore has been almost im
possible to treat, and application of
the juice to lupus (tuberculosis of the
skin) has excellent results unless the
disease is of long standing.
Probably Not.
■‘The cave man used to bang his
bride over tbe bead with a club and
walk off with her.”
• What of it?”
"I don’t suppose the girls cared to
rehearse the ceremony as they do
nowadays.”
Red Cross Ball Blue, much better, goes
farther than liquid blue. Get from any
grocer. Adv.
Woman's first law is the canceal
ment of her imperfections. Thus she
resembles man.
A Stitch in Time
Colds, fevers, congestion and germ dis
eases are pretty sure to overwork the kid
neys and leave them weak. In convales
cence. in fact at any time when suspicion
is aroused by a lame, aching back, rheu
matic pains, headache, dizziness or
disordered urine, the use of Doan's
Kidney Pills is a stitch in time that
may avoid serious kidney disease.
Doan's Kidney Piilscommandconfidenee,
for no other remedy Is so widely used,
so freely recommended or so generally
successful.
A Nebraska Case
I '*Et*rr Rdmrw
I TtUs a S*ry"
Samuel Blxler.
l retired farmer,
f GoVdon. Neb., says
' "My four year*
f war service re
L suited in a chronic
[ case of kidney
complaint. I had
to get up seven or
eight times at
night to pass the
kidney secretions
and my whole
body ached. Often
my Joints swelled
and I had fainting
spells. Doan's Kid
ney Pills corrected
a 11 th»M Al1m»nta
and I can't be too gratefuL"
Gaft Doan's aft Any Store. 50c a Box
DOAN’S WAV
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ror ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham
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Women who have been cured say
It is “worth its weight in gold.” At
druggists. 60c. large box, or, by mail.
Hie Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass.
FREE TO ILL SUFFERERS
If you feel ‘out of sorts’ ‘run down’ ‘got the blues*
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m iru losses surely prevented
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p B ^ W ^ Write for booklet tnd testimonials.
Pig 10-dose pkfe. Blackleg Pill* $1.00
50-dose pkgo. Blackleg Pill* 4.00
U»e any injector, but Cutter's best.
The superiority of Cutter products is due to over I I
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laaist on Cuttsr’s. If unobtainable, order direct.
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am cieaiers
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OAMQIS) ftOMUl. 1M Da£at» Av« , Brooklr®, M. V.