The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, November 12, 1897, Page 7, Image 7

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THE RED CLOUD CHIEF.
,7
Vl
7
I
rAlNTER GILBERT.
1
. M VL.V
,
QUEER SURCEnY.
A JAP STATESMAN.
-
BTORY OF A CELEBRATED
ARTIST'S CAREER.
flrlif llloKnililnl Skrlvli of tlir
rinoii l.iitiilon llluitratnr Who Itt
r?ntl I'.mcil Axtuy lli t.rit a it
lluok I'liturr .Milker.
lit JOHN GIL-
bcrt, It. A., presl
i . dent of the lloynl
w Society of Painters
11 In Water Colors.
IHCll 111 1.U11I1UI1 IIIU
other tiny nt the
ago of SO yciii'H.
Gilbert's Hr6t pie
turo was exhibited
In 1S.1C. It was a
water color draw-
ng, and Its Htilijet't was "The Arrest
ot Lord Hastings by the Protector,
Richard Duke of Olouccstcr." In the
amo year ho exhibited an oil painting
In the Royal Academy and lu 1830 he
exhibited at the Uritlsh Institution.
From that time forward his pictures
wore seen constantly lu the last named
gallery and occasionally at the ncad--my.
Most of his palntiiiBs have been
historical, and many of them were sug
gested by the classics In English and
"ontlnental humor. Ills brush wns
busy up to 1SO0, In which year he
painted "Onward."
He was better Known to the Engllsh
r.peaklng public as an illustrator of
books and periodicals than as a palnt
tr. Among his most Important lllus-
h'm1& fiM
I mw
JMa
SIR JOHN GILBERT, R. A.
tratlons arc thoso of an edition of
Shakespeare, upon which ho spent sev
eral years. In 1871 he was elected
president of the Royal Society of Paint
its In Water Colors. In whoso galleries
he has been a constant exhibitor. He
waa knighted more than twenty-flve
years ago. In 1870 ho was elected n
Royal Academician and was also made
a chovuHer of the Legion of Honor.
Sir John for many years refused to
sell any of his paintings, with a view to
nno day presenting them to the nation.
In 1S03 ho divided the collection among
the art galleries of London, Manches
ter, Birmingham and Liverpool. At
that time ho was presented with the
freedom of the City of London, an hon
or that was never before and has nev
er since been given to any artist.
Ills Ant Arr Mmle to Tkr till- rie
of .Nrrdlp mill Thrrnit,
Science has mnde vast strides during
the last half of the century, and In no
branch of knowledge Is this progress
more marked than in that of surgery.
Many an operntloi Is now performed
with facility and safety that was not
dreamed of fifty years ago, and many
nn operation that wo now consider
trivial and beneath the remark was
then considered as next to Impossible.
The Introduction of nnaohthetlcs and
tlm rnp!iriliii nf l.oril Lister 111 Illltl- I
septic, surgery account largely for this
state of things. Indeed, before the In
troduction of antiseptic methods In the
operating theatre as many lives we-re
lost from thoso bugbears of all sur
geons, pyemia nnd septicemia, as re
sulted from the. operations themselves,
The method, therefore, of securing a
wound which Is still prevalent nmon
the Brazilian Indians may be looked
upon as at least strictly antiseptic.
The materials required for performing
the operation nro found handy nlmost
anywhere In a Hra.lllan forest. These
arc a species of a very large ant, which
has mandibles that can bite through
almost any substance. The mouth Is
furnished with transversely movable
Jaws and does not possess a sting. A
bite f i om one of these ants Is perfectly
harmless, and Is followed by no swell
ing or other evil results. The lower Up
of the ant. Instead of being a simple
cover to the mouth, Is developed Into a
strange Jointed organ, which can be
shot out much farther than the upper
lip or, when at rest, can bo folded Hat
over the face and can be rapidly pro
truded or withdrawn. It Is furnished
at Its extremity with a pair of forceps,
and Is able to gr.Tjp objects with the
strength and firmness of a Bmall pair of
pincers. Nothing, unless eased In met
al, can resist those jaws. What the
Brazilian Indian dors when he or one
or his patients receives a gash Is this:
He catches some of these ants, and,
holding them to the wound, which he
has previously closed togothcr, lets
them bite. They flx their mandibles
on each side of the wound, nnd then lie
pinches off the rest of tho body, leav
ing the mandibles nnd Jaws to close
up the wound. A row of these ants'
heads keeps a wound together quite ns
effectively as tho nccdlo nnd thread of
a surgeon, hut the pain given to tho
victim of this rude style of surgery
must bo considerable. Rude as this
method may seem, however, It hu Its
advantages In being strictly antiseptic
and causing no evil effects. Tho Jaws
of the ant nro extracted with a pair of
forceps after tho wound has satisfac
torily healed. New York Herald.
MR. TORi; HOSHI, THE MINIS
TER AT WASHINGTON.
' liir rom Km!" itf 111 Xntltn I'ountry
ml ii Authority on Inlrriiiitlonul
I.hit -Thr Legation Nutril fr Alurnrr
of Orlrntiil lYiituri-4.
(Washington Letter.)
.' B ?l
ni rJ i
Tv
$'
8
of l'r.tlR Mhlrh It Will TukmVcur
to Krmi-ily Mimic Mm .NmmIhiI In
mi Kmrrjrt IH'J.
N a pleasant part
of the northwestern
section of Washing
ton, nt No. 1310 N.
stieet, stands the
Japanese legation.
Though It Is own
ed by the Jnpaneso
government n n d
has been occupied
for diplomatic pur
poses for ten years
or more, theie Is little that H Oriental
In Its appearance. Nothing In the ex
terior denotes the purpose of the build
ing except a golden chrysanthemum,
the national emblem of Japan, over the
main doorway. Scarcely anything In
tho interior Indicates Japanese owner
ship except the richness of the raw silk
hangings and some priceless lacquer-
work and porcelain. It Is a pleasant
thrce-story-und-bascment brick edifice,
well shaded, with grass lawns and gar
dens at the side and In the icar. Con
nected with the residence Is an nnnex,
stretching back to the next street, and
nffortllng accommodation for the at
taches and a separate cut! mice for bus
iness purposes.
The residence of the minister and his
family can bo mado separate from tho
legation ofllccs whenever that Is de
sired. On ceremonial occasions the
portieres of diplomatic etiquette and
precedence, may bo let down, but those
occasions are few. At all other times
thoso visiting tho legation on olllclal
or prlvnto business arc received with
Informal cordiality, and find the at
taches as accessible and Jolly ns a lot
of college undergraduates. The chanres
nro that If It Is a pleasant day they
will run across them fencing or engaged
In other athletic sports under the shade
trees of the lawn. They are all youth
ful In appearance, though somo of them
have hnd experiences which might
have brought gray hairs to persons of
less happily constituted temperaments.
Tho present Japaneso minister, Mr.
Tom Hoshl, Is one of the most hospit
able of tho diplomats In Washington.
Ho is not a wealthy man.ns was Mr.Ta
teno, but ho dispenses a graceful hos
pitality outside of the purely diplomatic
functions In a manner which adds to
its charms. In this he Is assisted by
Ills wife, who speaks English, and who
Is an exemplification of the culture
a
jHl Lonilo
V "J4 Some
CRAVES OF GREAT HORSES.
The recent death of the young stal
lion Domino, and tho mark of respect
shown him by his owners, the Messrs.
Kccuo, In putting an appropriate slab
over bis grave, recalls the fact that but
fow of tho great horses which have
died in this country have any tablet
to show where their bones He burled.
One of the first horses to have this
mark of respect shown him wns Lex
lugton. This flno horse died In his stable
noar the house occupied by his groom,
Henry Overton, nnd nt his request Lex
ington waa burled not far away. Mr.
A. J. Alexander, Lexington's owner,
had an appropriate marble shaft plac
ed at tho head of tho grave, on which
Is.recorded brief mention of the horse's
victories.
"Uncle Frank" Harper, who was a
neighbor of Mr. Alexander, followed
tho example sot by tho Scotchman and
when his Incomparable turf perform
ers and stallions. Ten Uroeck and
'.Sffcj-jiiU ...,iiH" "
ELOQUENCE OF A GIRL.
Tho latest child phenomenon comet
from Jersey City and sho Is drawing
crowds of enthusiastic people to hear
her in Pittsburg this week. Her nam
Torn Hoshl Is the "Tom Reed" of ENGLAND'S HAD RULE.
Japan. He pieslded as speaker orer
the house of representatives of tho Im- ' ., ,.
"rial Diet during the tlrst sessions of THE SPIRIT OF UNREST AND
Japan's natlonnl legislature. Tho WHAT ITS PURPORT IS.
stormy, turbulent scenes thnt marked
the assembling of that body threatened j Miimirr of xmhc i'rr of iniilu i.o
to make parliamentary government in
Japan n failure. Hut tho flim hnuil
with vvnicii .mi. iiosni wieioeii tno
gavel, his knowledge of parliamentary
Inw and the justice of bis rulings
brought older out of chaos. He wni
chairman of tho Budget C'ommltteo
which provided the ways and m.-ai3 for
carrying on the war with China, and
ho presided over and largely con hided
the deliberations of the committee on
codllltatlon of the laws of Japan, which
resulted In making an oponlng fcr
Japan to propose the Important treaties
with western powers which linvo since
been put Into effect.
Hut while Mr. Hoshl may resemble
Speaker Reed In his ability as a par
liamentary leader, he has none of his
sense of humor or sarcastic wit. Ho
takes life altogether seriously. He be
gan his political career by so snvagcly
attacking abuses of government lu a
series of addresses he delivered nil over
Japan In advocacy of popular rights
and tho establishment of representa
tive Institutions that he was 'vvte Im
prisoned and once temporarily ban
ished from the capital. After the adop
tion of the constitution of 1SSD, which
accorded most of the popular rights for
which he had contended, he waa par
doned, as "an act of grace," and went
abroad to study representative Institu
tions In England and other European
rountiles. lie bud previously become
n barrister of tho Mlddlo Tcmplo In
London. His "eating his terms" in
thnt institution of learning was not
merely u formality. He became an In
tense student of International law, and
hns never relaxed his studies In that di
rection. His library contains nearly
every known work on the subject In
tho English language, for he spenka
but little French, nnd he Is constantly
adding to It. Just as the famous
Japaneso surgeons, Kltasato, Aoyama
and Okata, who discovered tho germB
of tho bubonic plague, nro widely
known In tho medical world, Mr. Hoshl
bids fair to become celebrated as a
Jurist.
English Is the langunge best spoken
by all the members of the legation out
sldu of their own tonguo. Most of them
were educated In Europe, but Mr. Kcl
shcro Matsul, the secretary of legation,
Is tho Hist product of tho Imperial Uni
versity of Toklo, Japan, and owes Ills
varied accomplishments entirely to
thnt recently established Institution.
He possesses somewhnt of tho gravity
of demeanor of the minister, but light
ened by a keen rapacity for onjoymont
nnd considerable humor. Ho served
ISABELLA H. HORTON.
Is Isabella Harvey Horton and she Is
a little colored girl just 13 years old.
Her vocation Is that of an evangelist
and her preaching Is said to be forci
ble, logical and convincing. Tho John
Wesley Methodist chapel Is whore she
holds her Pittsburg services and though
the church accommodates over 1,500
people its congregations this week have
filled halls, stairways and vestibules
and overflowed into tho street. Isa
bella Harvey Horton is fatherless and
poor and she is trying to earn money
enough to cducato herself. It has
beon proposed that Wesley chapel fur
nish a scholarship for tho talented lit
tle girl and to this end over $100 hn
already been raised.
Niniip mill Fmno of John J. ingallt.
Somo of tho society people of Atchl
hon arc telling an Ingalls story, which,
though undoubtedly true, loses nono of
MINISTER HOSHI.
tvhlch hap been n noticeable feature of
tho women of the hlghor classes in
Japan, nlmost from time immemorial.
But Mmc. Toru Hoshl la nn ardent pa
triot. Her native country has charms
for her which no nmount of gayety In
'JMjA-O1. ,.!
IN HONOR OF TEN BROECK AND
LONGFELLOW.
Longfellow, died, he gave them decent
burial on his pretty Nantura farm, near
Midway, and over tho gravo of each
he has erected suitable monuments,
Theso enduring stones tell tho observer
the breeding and the performances of
the horses which Ho beneath them.
Its cleverness on thntaceount. One of , foreign mountain or sensicio resorts
tho Ingalls girls, who Is alleged to bo j t,n overcome. Her holidays, there
very choice of her company and very fore- arc naK!,,cl, )" Jnpnn' wh,' tho
ley Springs. Mmc. Hoshl went home
early In May, taking with her her
brJgbt young son, who had beon the
light of tho domestic life of tho lega
tion dining his brief stay here. Tho
' namo of this youngster Is Hlharu
.Hoshl. Ho Is an only child, between
' five and six years of age, but Is not
especially spoiled becaiiso of that dis
tinction. Ho is rapidly becoming an
proud of her father, recently attended
a scmi-publlo dnnce. In the course ol
the evening bIio was approached by an
Atchison young man, tho son of a gro
cery keeper, who had known her from
infancy, tholigh not Intimately, He
asked her for a dance, when sho re
plied aa sho drew back a little superciliously:
"I think you are tho son of our gro
in a diplomatic capacity In Corea dur
ing tho eventful days of tho Chlno
Japaneso war. but left before the final
tragedy which resulted In tho-assassination
and cremation of tho queen. In
tho recent negotiations of tho Japanese
treaty with the United States, Mr. Mat
sul played nn important part, for
which ho hns been suitably rewarded.
WOULD wish to
say a few words, In
e o n c luslon, con
cerning the spirit
of unrest which Is
so visible almost
everywheie In the
India of to-day,
nays a Poona cor
tcMinudi'iit of the
uiloii Standard.
of the Eng
lish papers appear to be Inclined to ex
aggerate things, to mix up the Pooua
murders and the Calcutta riots, as If
they were both ciiuhimI by the same peo
ple. No tine who has any knowledge
of India todav thinks that there was
any ical connection between these
events. Both weie hi ought about by
puiely local causes, Still less has the
shooting of an old sentry or two In the
Tochl valley anything to do with the
disturbances lu India proper, although
I have seen that some London papers
have lumped them all together as If
they were part and parcel of the same
conspiracy. Hut, though the causes of
the Calcutta riots and the Poona mur
ders were puiely local, there was cue
point of lesembbince between them and
between all the serious bleaches of the
peace that have taken place dining re
cent years. I mean that tbeio Is a
whlcspicad Idea that the government,
no matter whether It Is that of Bengal
or Bombay or any other part of India,
Is afraid to take severe measures lu
quelling disturbances. There Is an
idea that the authorities will allow
their district olllcers no sort of dUcro
crctlou lu dealing with lints and the
like, nnd that It is perfectly safe to
embark In the pronounced outrages
and breaches of tho peace, because the
government Is either unwilling or un
abln to suppress them. The nativo
press hns so eneruached on the tolera
tion of tho government, so freely
passed tho line which divides liberty
from license, has Indulged with Impun
ity with such outrageous slanders and
libels on the olllcers of the government,
even tho very highest, that there Is no
wonder that a belief has spread abroad
that the government Is afraid to exer
cise Its full powers and that it will not
extend to Its olllcers any sort of pro
tection when they are assailed with
tho nbusn and reviling of the native
press. In fact, In Bengal It has been a
custom of recent years to positively en
courage the attacks of tlu nativo press
on the Indian civilians who ndnilulster
that province. Slnilliuly, we have seen
how nothing was done to protect Mr.
Hand from tho slanders nf the Mali
ratta press. All this, and many other
things dating from recent years have
resulted In n loss of prestige which It
will tnkc years to remedy. On, every
side there are rumors of disaffection;
It Is said that Brahuuin emissaries nro
attempting to tamper with the men of
the native corps containing Hindoos,
and so long as the government shows
a weak front to tho seditious attacks nf
disaffected persons In tho press mid
elsewhere, so long may we expect to
seo this spirit of unrest, which Is so
marked a characteristic of tho India
of today, increasing and multiplying on
every side, it Is hardly necessary to
add that the news of tho frontier disas
ters and murders of Isolntcd British
officers which have been coming In so
frequently of lato only tend to encour
age and Ht lengthen this spirit of un
rest. Already the Ignorant peasantry
In various parts of tho country fully
believe that tho British raj must sine
ly be coming to an end. Evil disposed
persons go freely among them telling
how tho famine, the earthquake, the
want of rain, nnd 'every other evil Is
directly attributable to the alien rulers
against whom Mr. Dndabhal Naorojl
and his followers nro so fond of In
veighing. Whnt we want In India now
are strong men. This Is no time for
tho dissemination of radical doctrines
or congress remedies. If we are to
maintain our position in the country
wo must assume a more determined nt
titude than we have done of lato.
TALLY STICKS.
ItoniHit Niiinrriil. .n Drrlio' from
M-orc lllil C'rllle AlnlwlHT.
That tnlly stlckH wore at ono time
pretty general may be concluded from
the derivation of the word score. In
Its original signification, a "scoro" Is
a "scar," a cut made In a counting
stick. So also a "tally" Is derived from
(ho French tallle, says Chambers'
Journal,
Tho Roman numerals are derived
from scoies, They were mere notches
cut lu wood oilglnally The V for llvu
was n rude representation of the out
spread hand, and the X In like man
ner symbolized nil ten lingers; the IV
was a comparatively late Innovation;
originally the IV was represented by
four strokes, or notches, as In clock
dials.
The old Celtic alphabet tho Ogham
wilting -was of very similar nature.
It consisted of notches cut at the co--tier
of a square stone, or else from a
stem Hue. The lcttern II, L, F, S. N are
formed by cutting strokes tit light an
gles to the stem line of the right hand,
utiil tho letters II, I), T, C, Q by strokes
at light angles to the left. Thus, a
simple stroke of the right Is B nnd to
the left Is II. two to the light Is L
ntul the same number to the left Is
I). Three to one side Is F, threo to the
other Is V. Long strokes, ntMiiherlng
fiom one to live, cutting the stem diag
onally, expressed M, G, Ng, St. R, and
slim I strokes, numbering from one to
live, cutting across the stem at right
ungles, give the vowels. It It! easy to
see that the tally stick was used for
numbers before the alphabet was
thought of by our CelMe, forefathers.
Having proved the tolly stick valuable
for accounts, they applied It for writ
ing messages on mils and memorials
on tombs. The old Runic stnves for
calendars were Boinewhnt similar.
Strange symbols were Introduced to
mark (he several festivals, but the dayi
were Indicated by notches.
TIip
ANOTHER KIND OF FIRE.
OMi'i'r .VI runt thr lliinilne
of
eery keeper, but I Infer that you do not ' adept In American games, ns well as In
1 know me. I um tho daughter of tho the tongue of the country of his tem-
Hon. John J. Ingalls." "Ingalls? pornry residence, ami manifests an in-
insnlls7" niuslnglj inquired the young tolllgcneo, which promises to mako hlra
groceryman. "wnero navo I Heard that a wormy son oi ms i inner.
namo before? Oh, yes, I remember
now. Your father was tho man who
reported tho Corbett-Fltzslmmons crln
light." Kansas City Journal.
Nonlrtjr Lirrn
Socloty people of Mollnt,. 111., havu
jUBt been giving n circus. 'Fhey had a
tent and all tho paraphernalia of the
regular thing and took In $2,000 for
diarlty-
Tho manner In which the Japapeso
NuKKCBtcd ijiioii for lluthor.
It Is suggested, as tho life line and
life saver are not always ablo to pre
vent the drowning of bathors nt tho
summor resorts, that two or three
lows of iloxlblo stakes, ench row de
scribing nn nrc of n circle, bo set, be
ginning nt tho shallowest point at high
tide and curving out to deeper water.
Strong nets nttached to tho stakes and
reaching the bottom would prevont
people being cnrrled beyond n
point whero they could be easily res
cued. Beyond this lino nnother could
Tho rimmfortr.
In a Covent Garden playbill of 17C7
It Is announced that a lady will sing a
mhHss namel-Torn U'Z i !tr"" 'l?"0" ,mrnerB' l
uiiimuu mm u llliu ui uum )0 SUltlOn-
ed. The expense necessary to tho cur
rying out of this plan should not be
pears on the official register of the state
depaitmcnt indicates it rather remark
able concession to western usages, Tho
eustom In Japan for centuries has been . considered when tho safety of human
to place the ,u..:lly name first, the I llveH 1H ' "."canon
ctven "name afterward. In bis nfitilnl
communliirttlons to his government, the A ,1,,w I"0"11'' in Now York state haB
It Is only from the belief of th?
soodness and wisdom of a Supremo Be
ng thnt our calamities can bo borin
n tho manner which becomes a man,
r-Mackcnzle.
song from "Judith," accompanied by ' jnpanese minister Is Mr."Hoshi Torn." UK' wl,ptl uy a woman, who Is said
Hlbillu "on a new Instrument called n rt was In that way his appointment was i le nno of the mobt expert theatrical
pianoforte." . rtrst announced. Mr. Hoshl has prefer- electricians In the country. Sho makes
red to follow the customary method of 'a specialty of designing switchboards, I rests tho eyes ami mnues the
writing tho namo which prevails In and says the work is .fascinating. ' supply much better.
pnstern countries, nnd puts his given
Japan, which forty years ago had no
other than crusting vessels, none oi
them steamers, now hns several steam
Hhlp companies, tho largest of wliirh
owdb sixty-three vessels.
Kin t'ninir Strike.
Becnuso ho kissed or attempted to
kiss ono of tho fair English lassies
employed lu tho dusting department of
tho Newcastle, Pa., tin plate works,
Richard Kissinger wns discharged. He
is a member of the Patent mnchlne tin
ners' union, which Is aflillated with tho
Federation of Inhor. Stealing a Idas
wns not sufficient excuse for discharg
ing a workman, the olllclals of tho un
ion said, and they demaiMcd Kissin
ger's reinstatement. This whb refuscil
and a strlko wns ordered. About U00
men nnd boys went out. Tho company
docs not claim the girl objected to the
kissing. Kissinger said tho superin
tendent of the mill wanted to got rid
of him nnd took this means of doing
it. Tho girl says ho did not kiss her,
but even if ho did tho offense was not
Borious enough to cause n suspension.
tlm Hut.
"Sir Colin himself told me what o
do, nnd to get a piece of port fire from
Capt. Peel. This I did, and off we
set," says "An Old Soldle.r'H Memories."
"The distance we had to travcrso was
Inslgnlllcunt. As soon us ever I got
Into tho first hut I put the port tiro
to the root nnd tired tho grass, then
on to the next, but, .tins! no sooner
was a blaze well established than my
men seized lighted brands right nnd
left and set flic to every hut around.
Wo were Instantly In n olrelo of fire.
The dry materials blazed like tinder;
one of my men's pouches blew up, and,
what with lire nnd smoke, It was im
possible to go further, so 1 ordered n
letreat. Just a.i mioii iih I got on the
main road, who should I meet but Sir
Colin himself, with some of his staff.
He called me and said; 'You have nut
half burned the huts, sir.' 1 answered
that 1 could not burn more on account
of the lire.
"Sir Colin turned on me like a wild
tiger, shouting: 'D your eyes, sir,
I will nut allow you or any other man
to tell me the fire Is too hot!' 1 was
simply speechless; 1 felt its It I could
cry. I looked nt Gen, Munsflold, who
happily caught my meaning, for he
said: 'I think thcoinccr means the lire
of the limning liu'ls,' 'Yes.' I cried. '1
waa not afraid of the other tiro, but
one of my men's pouches blew up and
wo were so surrounded by Homes that
1 thought It better to retire.' Sir Colin
snld: 'All right, sir; It was my mis
take,' and so I returned, terribly crcBt
fallen. I lost three men out of the
nine who nccompanled me In tbli
work."'
(
I (
Kltliin With llUturlni,
M. J. McGeary, the hatter, and W. P.
Bennett, the messenger, own maltose
klttons which hnvo histories. Nothing
Is known about their ancestry, but they
are supposed tr, ho brctheis and to
have come from East iMlef.Unc, O,
Six. weeks ago John S. McKean & Son
received a carload of sower pipe from
the Buckeye town. The car went
nstray and wns almost two weeks on
the road. It was dually run In on a sid
ing here, nnd when the door waa
pushed open two lively little maltese
kittens scampered awny from tho door
and ran back through the sewer pipe.
An effort wns mndo to capture them,
but they wore wild nnd bit and
scratched In a manner which made cap
turing them dllllcult. Finally ono ot
tho men put on a pair of buckskin
gloves nnd got one of them. It was
given to Mr. McGeary. The other got
away nnd "went on a bum." After
wandering about for a week It regis
tered at Mr. Bennett's residence and
moved in. it has made Its home there
ever since, "nill MeKlnley." Mr, Me
Geary's pet coon, and the maltese kit
tens are great friends. They drink from
the same water bucket, and Art Me
Icnn furnishes them with u dally diet
of English spnnows. Tho oddly as
sorted pair eat their dainty meals In
perfect hnrmony and no couplo In
town getB nlong better than "Billy"
and "Miss Kitts." The klttons are
none tho worse for having been shut
up In the car. Kensington (Pa.) Key.
stone.
ItenlInK tlm Kye.
A medical journal says that In tho
continued use ot tho eyes In such work
aa sewing, typesetting, bookkeeping,
reading and studying, tho snvlng point
Is looking up from tho work at short
intervals and looking around the room.
This practiced every ten or fifteen
minutes relieves tho musculnr tension,
blood
name "Toru" beforo tho family nnmo
"HoBhl." Several of tho Corean lega
tion have lately followed a like couree.
The girl who paints her lips hnR poor
taste or nt lcft the man who kl6j
her thinks bo,
Thirty towns in Utah have no newspapers.
:lurlniiutr Kny Dlvori'P.
Cincinnati has. 107 dlYote cases on
the docket for tho next term of tho
court. Business In that line Is un
usually heavy, and tho prosperity of
tho divorce lawyer blossoms like a wild
rose. Tho dlatnnco between the altar
nnd tho divorce mill Ib getting shorter
nil tho time, nnd mnrital bonds lu that
city are llko wisps of straw.
llnriorat
The other day death rudoly tore an
Ohio man away from nu office he had
held for sixty-live years, Ex.
,jStX
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