k f W te - Rfr S tmmsmiKVBvifmimwwm mriwQmm OUR NEW PACIFIC FLEET Ships Recently Ordered to the Pacific Coast under Admiral Evans BEAR ADMIBAI KOBIiET D EVANS U S BATTLESHIP ILLINOIS CapL Gotfrled Btocklinger tonnage 11525 guns 18 speed 17 knots U S BATTLESHIP LOUISIANA CapL Richard Walnwrlght tonnage 16000 guns 24 speed 18 knots U S PROTECTED CRUISER CHICAGO Commander Robert M Doyle tonnage 4500 guns 18 si eed 18 knots Flagship of Admiral Evans BSBHSHMnHCSS K SJiSC iSB Si i HBHsBSISSSSlBi U S GUNBOAT YORKTOWN Commander Richard T Mulligan tonnage 1710 guns 6 speed 18 knots iahjjjj3ifim n nwpiitMuu f - Wit daid Humor JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS T HE Democratic leader of the house is one of the best story tellers at the national capi tal He also has a rich vein of humor but is rather sparing of its use lu his speeches One of the most famous exam ples of his irony was a satirical trib ute to Admiral Crowinshield during the Sampson Schley inquiry This de licious take off was done in verse Wil liams occasionally drops into poetry and wound up by declaring that Great Crownlnshlelds the bravest tar That always stayed ashore At the time Mr Williams was men tioned as a presidential candidate ho had considerable dry fun with the re porters over the matter To one news paper man he said My boom is mak ing tremendous strides My private secretary Is unreservedly for me and I have hopes of securing the support of Charley Edwards the clerk of the minority room To a somewhat young and callow re porter John Sharp with exceeding gravity said he had quite some hopes of getting the nomination Reports from Mississippi were especially en couraging Toomsuba Ofanoma Noxopater Nanachehaw Toccopola Tabbville and Grubbs Springs I am told he said are already for me while I have ev ery reason to believe that I shall have the undivided support of such places as Nittayuma Wahalak Bolatusha Hushpukena Ittabena Pelahatchle Mittayuma Skutch CInqupin Paw tickfaw Octoc Leggo Yellow Rabbit Chunkey Station Hambone Deovo lente and Whynot Upon being asked to spell the names he did so with great gravity On a later occasion when the news paper men asked him concerning his candidacy he said that Mrs Williams had objected that with her sick head aches she never could stand the White House so he would have to give up the presidency John Sharp once ran afoul of Tom Reed This is the way Re tells the story himself I met Mr Reed coming out of the cloakroom and he said to me in that peculiar drawl of his Williams what ever makes you such a bitter parti san Well Mr Speaker thats pretty good coming from you isnt it I re plied Never mind me he replied But why are you such a bitter partisan Well Ill tell you I said You know I never saw a Republican until I was thirty eight years old and I cant get used to them somehow He looked at me reproachfully and walked away without another word At a Washington banquet Mr Wil liams once proposed this toast Heres to President Roosevelt whom the world has grossly overestimated as an author and whom the Democrat ic party grossly underestimated as a politician It was Williams who fastened the designation of kid congressmen to new members Mr Wharton a boy ish looking recruit from Chicago in terrupted and wanted to know what he meant by kid congressmen Mr Speaker said Mr Williams with a wave of his hand toward the member from Chicago with that de gree of reverence which the personal appearance of my interrogator excites In my mind I should say that he is perhaps the last person in the house who ought to ask the question where at Mr Wharton subsided General Grosvenor was designated by Mr Williams as the most exuber ant and unscrupulous prophet that this part of the world ever saw The minority leader once had a Democratic caucus called and the re porters were wild to find out the rea son Williams was very short with them at first but finally thawed out and said Boys I have decided to confide in you I called that caucus for the pur pose of advocating a return to govern ment by consuls under which system the Roman republic prospered for a thousand years Nobody bothered him after that John Sharp was once denouncing the committee on rules popularly known as the house machine The gentleman himself is a mem ber of the committee on rules put In a member Yes drawled Williams nominal ly The house recognized the thrust with a roar but the other man persisted You attend the meetings of that committee he said I am Invited to the seances re turned Williams but I am never con sulted about the spiritualistic appear ances When Williams first ran for congress his opponent was a famous coon hunt er and trained much sunnort hv the J fact Williams had never hunted coons but saw that something had to be done Buying a bunch of roman candles he went out with the boys fired the candles among the branches till he scared the coons out of the trees made a record hpnt and won the elec tion POINTED PARAGRAPHS Your dog never bothers any one When the joke Is on you it is never very fun 113- There Is a good deal of inhumanity in human nature How loud the door bangs when some one else slams it It Is easier to keep a secret than it Is to keep a promise Every one Is superstitious enough to believe In the dollar sign You cant judge the speed of a loco motive by the way it whistles There are lots of happy people but they are unnoticed In the noise the wretched make As we grow older we are all com pelled to give up much of the spunk we displayed In youth If you think you are right go ahead if you want to but dont expect every one to go with you Atchison Globe The Muskellunge The Indian name of this great fighter of the fresh water lakes and tributa ries is esoxmasquinougy Our nat uralists have the word translated Into about eight or nine different styles but the correct way of spelling it in our language Is undoubtedly muskel lunge Most fishermen however pronounce and spell it to suit them selves and no man seems to be an ac cepted authority It is one thing in Canada another in the St Lawrence and another in the great lakes The favorite among New Yorkers is mus callouge The fish reaches a length of seven and a half feet and the big gest ever taken is said to have weighed ninety two pounds In game ness it Is said to surpass the tarpon of the Caribbean and the tuna of the Pacific New York Press The Causo of Snoring This is not for you because yon never snore No one ever does snore himself It is always the other fellow But you can read this and then tell that guilty other fellow how to break himself of his bad habit for snoring is merely a bad habit and as such can be overcome It is caused pri marily by Improper breathing that is breathing through the mouth instead of through the nostrils so first of all care should be taken during waking hours to breathe correctly The habit once formed of keeping the mouth as firmly closed as possible he will be less likely to sleep with it open Then see that your troublesome snorer has a proper pillow He should sleep with his head as flat as possible for if hia head is pushed forward and the nech bent the tongue drops back againsl the soft palate and forms an obstruc tion which makes all the unmusical sounds we hear when the air is forced past it St James Gazette The Last Match Saved Them The ship had lain becalmed In a trop ical sea for three days Not a breath of air stirred the mirrorlike surface ol the sea or the limp sails that hung from the yards like drapery carved In stone The captain resolved to wall no longer He piped up all hands on deck and requested the passengers to also come forward I must ask all of you he said to give me every match that you have Wonderingly the passengers and crew obeyed The captain carefully arranged the matches in his hands as each man handed him his store until all had been collected Then he threw them all overboard but one drew a clgai from his pocket and striking the soli tary match on the mainmast endeav ored to light it In an instant a furi ous gale swept over the deck extin guished the match and filled the sails and the good ship Mary Ann sped through the waves on her course Pearsons Weekly The Cods Bill of Fare An Interesting exhibit in the South Kensington museum London illus trates the omnivorous nature of the cods diet Among the fish falling a prey to its voracious maws we note the young of the herring dab whiting and sand eel Shrimps and young lob sters also form an important Item in the cods menu The strangest part ol the cods diet perhaps is the sea mouse whose thick covering of bristles might he thought to render it unwelcome to any stomach Large whelks and shells of whelks with their indwelling hermit crabs are also largely devoured From Its partiality to mollusks in fact tho cod may become an assistant to the shell collector Woodward in his Man ual of the Mollusca remarks that some good northern seashells have been rescued unbroken from the stom ach of the cod London Globe Growing Fiowre In Winter A long run of dark days in winter Is bad for the florists It matters little how cold the weather is provided there is sunshine for the heat can al ways be maintained to the proper point and with sunshine flowers will bloom just as freely when the ther mometer shows an outdoor tempera ture of zero as at the freezing point though of course more money must be 6pent for coal But when day after day for weeks at a time clouds over hang the sky nothing will grow as it should The carnation buds develop slowly until they are half open and wait for sunshine and if it does not come in four or five days the blooms decay So also it is with callas and roses They will open halfway then without sunlight will quickly spoil St Louis Globe Democrat Wanted a Better Cne Patient When youre 111 doctor do you treat yourself No I call in one of my colleagues Then cant I call In one of them th nna that cured rou Kumar Curve Balls The Spit Ball the Rise Ball the Fade Away Ball and Other Marvels of the National Game Why a New Curve Is a Bonanza By FREDERICK R TOOMBS mim 2 WtXZH h VaAMwM HOW THE SPIT BALL IS HELD B ASEBALL pitch ers find the study of tho phenomena of curve balls a most Inter esting as well as val uable pursuit It was the discovery of the curve that gave base ball much of its im petus as a scientific sport and men spend years In seeking to develop new varia tions of It and new possibilities Those who successf lly demonstrate a new species of curve find no difficulty In earning 5000 to 8000 or 10000 a year Considering that almost any major league pitcher can by careful living and judicious treat ment of his so called salary wing Bucceed In staying in tho game for ten years it is seen that it is almost as profitable to study ball curves as It Is to elect yourself president of the Unit ed States And so far as a corporation presidency is concerned the clever pitch er for a big league team makes prac tically as much money and runs far less risk of going to jail Among the new curves are what have become known as the spit ball the rise bull and the fade awny bail The spit ball is probably more disconcerting to batsmen than any oth er curve because It Is said to break or curve in at least two different direc tions and In such a manner that not even the man who delivers it can ac curately gauge just how It Is going to act The spit ball is grasped in the middle of the pitchers palm with the X- ixvNsCMr - - - wy t r ymg8r v- l - - vi mji Ovv JH ijf - ry a w w v S5yvyP w7FSZZl HOW PITCHERS HOLD THE BALL- IN THROW ING CUBVES At the top ready for an Incurve or shoot In the middle an out curve or shoot at the bottom a drop thumb and all the fingers extended as far around It as they will go The pitcher moistens with his tongue hence the name of the curve one or two of his fingers so that these fingers exert practically no pressure on the ball and then throws it with all tho force that he can muster and yet be reasonably accurate The fingers that were not moistened exert pressure on the sides of the ball so peculiarly as to make the revolutions of the ball vary in direction during its flight and co the two different curves during one flight of the ball are produced The Initial cut in this column shows how the ball Is held by the pitcher who de livers the spit ball This photograph and the others used In illustrating this article were specially posed for by Joseph McGinnlty of the New York National league team The rise ball Is the result of ex periments of men who have for years been trying to perfect an up curve or up shoot While pitchers could produce without much difficulty in curves outs drops and out drops they could not for many years make a ball rise as It went over the home plate The lnshoot is delivered by sending the ball away over the ends of the In dex and middle fingers It Is the revolving of the ball on its axis that makes it curve or to be more accurate that leads to Its curv ing The ball that revolves swiftly from left to right offers more resistance to the air on Its left side than It doe3 on Its right so the ball swerves to the right or in toward the batsman The outshoot is delivered by sending the ball away over the side of the fore finger and when the ball Is released the back of the hand is turned down ward Now the ball revolves from right to left and so It swerves to the left or out from the batsman The drop can be delivered In two or three different ways and In most cases the ball is held just as for an out curve but It is frequently let go with more of a snap and always with the back of the pitching hand turned to the right or partly to the front so as to make tho ball revolve away from the The best of every thing in his line at the most reasonable prices is flarshs motto He wants your trade and hopes by merit to keep it MA The Butcher Phone 12 BILII I iJAfO A toff y rryy ccs ri y j IBIMpWSft S V A few doses of this remedy will In variably euro an ordinary attack of diarrhoea It can always be depended upon even in the more 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