ft i t m mtmvm VW fliMij OUR PRESIDENTS Long Distance Jane An old farmer was skeptical as to whether people who were miles apart oould really talk to each other over a telephone wire One day his wife went to make a visit to a distant friend who had a telephone in her house During the afternoon the farmer visited a near neighbor who also boasted a house tele phone and who persuaded the farmer to call up his wife as a little surprise Following instructions he put the re ceiver to his ear and after the usual nrelirninaries he shouted Hello Jane Just then a flash of lightning caused By the heat of the summer day struck the wire and he fell sprawling to the floor The neighbor was chagrined that the old man should meet with such an accident on his first trial of a phone and assured him that such a thing would not happen except in case of storms But the farmer was con- winced of the possibilities of communi eation however and would not try again He rose to his feet and shak ing his head knowingly said Its wonderful that was Jane all right Ladies Home Journal Fixed All Right An automobllist who was touring through the country saw walking ahead of him a man followed by a dog As the machine drew near them the dog started suddenly to cross the road and was killed by the car The motorist stopped his machine and ap proached the man Im very sorry my man that this has happened he said Will 5 fix it Oh yes said the man 5 will fix it Ijsyess Pocketing nfimTiii i r IIB1I11 iflfii wETr n im 1 j JAMES KNOX POLK The eleventh president of the United States was a native of Mecklenburg aounty N C but spent most of his life as a citizen of Tennessee He served fourteen years In congress was speaker for two terms and was elected gov ernor of Tennessee in 1839 He was elected president In 1844 defeating Henry Clay Polk was a Democrat During his presidency the Oregon Boundary dispute was settled and the Mexican war was fought In private life President Polk was unostentatious frank and courteous He died at Nashville Tenn in 1849 a few months after his retirement from the presi dency at the age of flfty flve - The - Scrap Book Agreed With Him A professor of botany was recently lecturing in an Iowa city In his dis course he attempted to show the great value of flowers and their near rela tionship to human beings He con cluded his remarks by saying The Lord that made me made a daisy Whereupon some one in the audience called out You bet he did It was several minutes before the professor discovered why every one laughed LOVE SCORNS DEGREES Tove scorns degrees The low he lifteth high The high he draweth down to that fair plane Whereon In his divine equality Two loving hearts may meet nor meet in vain Gainst such sweet leveling custom cries amain But oer its harshest utterance one bland sigh Breathed passionwise doth mount victo rious still 3Tor Love earths lord must have his lordly will Paul H Hayne He Saw Double A Scotch minister and his servant going home from a wedding began to consider the state into which their potations at the wedding feast had left them Sandy said the minister just stop a minute here till I go ahead Maybe I dont walk very steady and the good wife might re mark something not just right He walked ahead of the sen ant for a short distance and then asked How is it Am I ivalking straight Oh aye answered Sandy thickly yere a recht but whos that whos with you Argonaut the money as the car dis appeared in the distance he looked down at the dead animal I wonder whose dog it was he said Juvenile Ambition Mrs M G Black of Gardiner Ore who received one of the last rewards of the Carnegie hero fund for her brav ery in saving three young girls from drowning was talking about bravery the other day Do I think that bravery heroism can be cultivated Yes she said in a sense I do Heroism is unselfishness carried to its highest point and chil dren can be trained to be unselfish There is only one Avay to teach them that though and that is the way of kindness Beat and bully children and they wont grow up unselfish but the opposite She smiled Once at an Easter party I had a long conversation with a little boy As I helped him decorate a pink egg I asked What are you going to do when you grow up Looking up from the egg with n frown he answered Whip papa Shocked Into Generosity A small church was in need of re pairs and a meeting was being held to raise funds for that purpose The minister having said o00 would be required a wealthy and equally stingy member of the congregation rose and said he would give a dollar Just as he sat down a lump of plaster fell from the ceiling and hit him upon the head whereupon he rose hastily and called out that he had made a mis take he would give o0 An enthusi ast present forgetful of everything called out fervently O Lord hit him again Lincolns Soft Answer One hot summer day when I was in New York I was invited to a cold tea at the Americus clubhouse in Greenwich Conn At the clubhouse was a gracious company and among the guests was Governor John T Hoff man of New York One of the guests said to the govern or that he had noticed President Lin coln sent an open letter to Governor Buckingham of Connecticut thanking that state for having raised its quota of troops and he asked Hoffman if he had ever received such a letter for New York The governor replied that he had not but had read the letter to the gov ernor of Connecticut and it had dis turbed him not a little But soon after its publication he had had an inter view with Mr Lincoln at the executive mansion and had said Mr President I notice that you took pains to send Governor Buckingham a letter thank ing Connecticut for having raised its quota of troops But you forgot to thank the great Empire State for hav ing raised its quota Aha said Mr Lincoln When Mrs Lincoln passes me a cup of tea I never think of thanking her for it I expect it Boston Herald Had Sufficient Company A little boy was heard swearing by his mother She reproved him very gently telling him that God was with him and by him at all times and knew his very thoughts Soon after he start ed downtown on an errand and a dog followed him Turning quickly around the boy told the dog to go back it was bad enough to have God follow ing him everywhere let alone a dog In Confederate Money OnedaydurJngatemporary n1 mit3iimimnmmiiwm i i tlon of liostillllos between the opposing I forces a tnll strapping Yankee rode I Into the Confederate camp on a sorry looking horse to effect a trade for some tobacco Hello Yank hailed one of a number of Confederate soldiers loll ing about on the grass in front of a tent Thats a right smart horse you all got there Think so Yes whntll you take for him Oh I dont know Well Ill give you 70u0 for him bantered the Confed erate You go to blazes indignantly returned the other Ive just paid 10- ORorke Horfcarrier Oliorke had been a hodcarrier In Rochester when he was appointed to West Toint There ii something that sets the heart beating warmly in the fact that when his friend of toil learned that he stood at the head of his class they chipped in some of their hard earnings and j bought him u costly richly engraved gold watch as a token that they were proud of him He drilled nie under the blooming horse chestnuts on the east side of the academic hall and 1 well remember his looking at that same watch while giving me a little rest The fall before the Gettysburg cam paign he became colonel of the One Hundred and Fortieth New York and some time In the winter of I re ceived his wedding cards and the brides name was Bridget Many a time since I have thought that fiis was his boyhood love to whom had re mained steadfast while lurs were falling about him However that may be he was killed while standing on a large bowlder his regiment immediate ly before him and lighting almost at the very muzzles of its guns on Hound Top Meanwhile fames trumpet has been pealing but not over his grave Ah how tickle she is Everybody knows of his classmate dishing not one in I a thousand of dear old Pat Yet I j am sure that the spirits of Bayard and Sidney reached out their hands from heaven to grasp the gallant boy and welcome him to the company of gen tlemen of all ages Atlantic He Didnt Inject It An elderly resident of Lynn Mass was talking about Mrs Eddy the head of the Christian Science church When she lived here in Lynn said the old man she conducted a temper ance campaign for a time She did a lot of good though now and then she Ill help you my friend said Mrs Eddy but first you must answer me one question Do you or do you not drink beer Why lady he said ye certny dont think I squirt it into me arm wid a syringe Bismarck and the Ambassador Lord Russell the English ambassador at the German court called one day on Prince Bismarck at the palace of the latter in Berlin During the con versation Lord Russell remarked that a man in the chancellors position must be bothered with a great many trouble some callers God knows how true that is sighed the prince But you certainly have some remedy or other to get rid of such people quickly Oh certainly laughed Bismarck One of my best is that my good wife comes in to call me away on some pretext or other Of course the caller cant remain after that These words were hardly uttered when the princess entered and said in the most harmless Avay Otto it is time to take your medicine Do not forget it Lord Russell broke into a ringing laugh and took his leave at once Would Not Compromise A German traveler who tried to pass a meal ticket on the train was told by the conductor that he would have to pay the regular fare of 33 cents The German argued and refused to pay more than 25 cents whereupon the conductor stopped the train and put him off In a twinkling the traveler ran ahead of the engine and started to walk on the track The engineer blew his whistle violently but the irate German turned shook his fist and called out You can vissle all vant to I vont come pack THE ZOO BY NIGHT you Gleaming Eyes In the Blackness Give a Flavor of the Vilds The average grownup who visits the zoo thinks it rather a dull sort of show for the fact that the animals are captive robs them of all the romance that would attach to them in their na tive forests But let the blase sightseer obtain permission to visit the zoo at mid night and his impressions will be very different Darkness hides the bars aid i the boards and the eyes of some wakeful creature gleam maliciously u you For the moment you imagine that you are in the wilds on equa terms with the creatures around I Poised on the swings and platforms at the top of their cages sleep the j monkeys instinct surviving their loss of freedom for in the forests they had to sleep thus to avoid the beasts of prey TTnro rncfc n linnocu nrnim nrinn linr fcp PENN AND PEACE Th Real Originator of the Idea of an Arbitration Tribunal It Is an Interesting fact that about 215 years ago William Penn wrote an essay suggesting an international par liament for the spread of peace like that now In session at The Hague It was entitled Essay Toward the Pres ent and Future Peace of Europe and has really been the basis of the move ment culminating in The Hague 000 to have him curried Lippincotts i nnl Two hundred years ago at this r teawT IWrT ti i if -A MPA W STL IfsA j rf FT tir t2f rF - -- c r 5 IWFj r5Sta mmj r f ra - Wu 1 Sd it- i f -3 f SlSi kBKCrtE Hl wiikSKCJH inr i SftK3rfeJSiK 17i4sJi3BaiAW T arst irrti 1 a n i i i h -- 3- i r - JT a -- VCESfi 1 t 35UiU ii- i -- ii- -- oi i1 bracing all the small states now exist U1U1 UU H oO llollX lli lilt till llllU Xitl paws hanging limply down There re clines her lord asleep upon his side his paws turned in and his general pose not unlike that of a dog The more cunning and more coward ly of the animals do not seem to sleep at all for as soon as they hear our ap proaching footsteps they give us their frpiHn Tvitli RnnHc nnrl mnlovnlnnt y I - i PENNS GKAVE AND HIS POllTICAIf BY BtB QODFKET KNELTiiat time Penn was in confinement in a debtors prison despite his great serv ices in the founding of Pennsylvania His appointees in that province had tricked him in various ways until his Interest In the province was mort gaged and rather than pay fraudulent demands he allowed himself to spend met with a rebuff The story goes that i nine months behind bars Many a tramp once asked her for help I sylvanians make pilgrimages to Penns last resting place m the burial ground attached to the Quaker meeting house at Jordans Bucks where his two wives also lie his second Hannah in the same grave with himself The tombstone at the head of his grave is remarkable for its simplicity It is not more than two feet high and contains only Penns name and that of his sec ond wife with the dates of their de mise Sometimes there has been talk of removing Penns remains to this country and placing them under an imposing monument but wiser coun sels prevailed Americans in London are Interested in seeing this year a hither to unpublished portrait of Penn by Sir Godfrey Kneller which for eighty years hung in a rectory in Westmor land but was recently exhibited at the Graves galleries in Pall Mall PRESIDENT OF NICARAGUA General Zelaya and His Central Ameri can Federation Ideas Almost midway between Mexico and Panama lies the Latin American re public of Nicaragua To the south is Costa Rica to the north is Honduras to The northwest Salvador and north of Salvador Guatemala All these lit tle republics have their presidents so called though in general they are dic tators whose rule lasts only- until the next successful revolution There has been a good deal of lighting between the different states of Central America The president of Nicaragua General Jose S Zelaya who for about a dozen years had controlled the destinies of this country is ambitious to establish F5 jjj vx PRESIDENT JOSE E ZELAYA a Central American confederation ing as wholly independent govern i ments Naturally he wishes Nicaragua to be the leading state In the confed eracy and aspires to be himself the chief executive of the proposed union That is perhaps why his plan falls to arouse as much enthusiasm as might be expected in some of the other states The executives of the latter are apparently In no haste to give up glowerings and watch us suspiciously theIr offices In taterest of unIoQ till we depart Pearsons i MELONS IN STORAGE How a Rural J P Decided a Suit Be tween Neighbors Problems worthy of Solomons acu men are often submitted to these rural arbitrators justices of the peace In the Macon county Mo archives Is a case of this sort Timothy Kain a farmer or Easley town hip set out some watermelon vines which grew so luxuriously that they trespassed upon the field of his neighbor Felix Hopper When garner ing time came Kains attempt to har vest his runaway product was rebuked by Hopper and his shotgun The con troversy got into court and Squire William Easley for whom the town ship was named was asked to decide the ownership of ten watermelons worth Kt cents apiece The lawyers for Kain read books to show that his rights of property followed the vines clear into the next county should they travel so far Hoppers lawyers pro duced equally sound reading to prove that Hopper was entitled by law to anything that camped on his premises It wasnt Hoppers fault they said if the vines wanted to spread out and go visiting lie had the same right to them that he would have to a colony of honeybees that iniIit get tired of being with Kain and concluded to move over and make honey for Hopper Squire Easley let the lawyers spout until they had read through all their books then he arose to his six feet and said Mitchell has read books that make it absolutely certain thein melons be long to Kain I hadnt any doubt in the world about that till Guthrie here got up and turned Mitchells law bot tom side up Theres no question but what theres enough law in the books for both Kain and Hopper and that ought to make em happy The court decides under the circumstances that with the law deciding both ways theres nothing to do but to hand out justice as lie sees it The judgment of the court is that those arc Kains melons Thank you your honor said Mitch ell arising and bowing but that hes Indebted to Hopper 20 cents apiece for storage finished the justice But your honor said Mitchell in dignantly you cant do that They lunont tiled any claim for storage Besides youre allowing them more for their melons than theyre worth on the market The court will take judicial notice of the defendants rights offset or no said Squire Easley with some asper ity And your own evidence shows Hopper was diligently guarding Kains property for him Thats worth some thing Guarding it Yes Kain himself testified Hopper was there with a shotgun when he climbed over the fence Kansas City Star Professor Matched the Boss Boston and Cambridge people of an earlier day remember well Professor Child of Harvard a scholar who vas likewise a live man They tell wiih great gusto a story about his faithful attention to city politics Professor Child always attended to his duties as a citizen of Cambridge One night lie went to a ward meeting at which a boss began to put forth some of his warped ideas The college professor was speedily on his feet and scathing ly denounced the boss and his methods After the meeting was over the good natured boss just to show that he bore no ill will met the scholar on the stairs and genially handing over a ci gar said Have a smoke profess His antagonist straightened up took the cigar and said with great dignity Yes Ill match you in any of your lesser vices Boston Herald Didnt Get a Patent Among the strange applications Avhich reach the patent otlice one lilel some years ago was most extraordinary it being a petition for a patent for an ant guard which consisted in merely draw ing a chalk mark around a table or other place by which it was claimed the approach of ants was stopped It seems that chalk makes an ants legs slip as soaping a track prevents a rail way engine from starting The peti tion was novel and caused considera ble amusement The application how ever was refused on the ground that there was nothing new in the inven 1 j tion that chalk had been used for such IJUllJUSUS UKIU1U illlU UiULISUtU lUCiU I J were not patentable Climbing 199 Steps to Church The only way of reaching the old parish church at Whitby in York shire from the town is by means of 199 stone steps probably as curious an approach to a place of worship as any in the kingdom The church stands on the east cliff some 200 feet above the sea level and to watch the crowd of worshipers before and after service threading its way up and down the winding stairway is a sight to be remembered London Strand Forgetful Tommy said his mother reproving ly what did I say Id do to you if I ever caught you stealing jam again Tommy thoughtfully scratched his head with his sticky lingers ny mats lunny ma mat you1 should forget it too Hanged if I can remember Everybodys Mechanically 1 Judge And what did the prisoner say when you told him that you would have him arrested Complainant He answered mechanically yer honor Judge Explain Complainant He hit me on the head with a hammer Ex change The fault is always as great as ha that commits it French Proverb Fred Wiggins Auctioneer 1000 i G tf LADIES I Will cry your Blln any time anywhoro Uills posted in tin Snppy country Tin cupafurnlslid for your free lunch without extra chnrgo Terms 310 for first 1000 or less 1 per ct on nil snlod running over All dates madu l The Danhury News r Herbert J Pr ItEOlSTKKED lUADLATK Dentist Ollico ovor McCowipIPk Driiff Storo McCOOK NEB Tuliiplioiifitt Otlicu 1M rosiiloiico IM Former locution Atlanta OoorKia OkV k GAPT BARRETT IMtACTICAL Architect and Builder Repairing and Remodeling Buildings n Specialty McCOOK - NEBRASKA Shop Ihouo 32i g E P OSUOKN J W WENTZ OSBORN WENTZ Draymen Prompt Service Courteous Treatment 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