The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, May 19, 1909, Image 3
1-? rp-jzb-. & h r jSJ--gr -" ?" X-6 KT --" ;VH- IVi-l vl . tl - i TUFT IS GUEST OF GMMTE PRESIDENT ATTENDS MECKLEN BURG CELEBRATION. HE MAKES TWO SPEECHES Anniversary of "First Declaration of Independence" Is Occasion of Three Days of Entertainment in North Carolina. Charlotte, N. C President Taft.by his presence and participation, gave his indorsement to the celebration of to the one hundred and thirty-fourth anniversary of the Mecklenburg declaration of independence, and con sequently the entire state is rejoicing. The chief executive came on the last of the three days of celebration, and his address was a-main feature of the carnival program. .Military maneuvers and drills, band concerts, athletic and baseball con tents and numerous addresses enter tained the swarms of visitors from all parts of this and adjoining states. The Charlotte fire companies opened the affair Tuesday noon with an ex hibition, and then a troop of regular cavalry drilled and a band concert was given. Baseball followed, and in the evening the Charlotte drum corps and three bands amused the crowds. Governors' Day Program. Wednesday was designated as gov ernors' day and the main event was the delivery of addresses by Gov. Kiuliin of North Carolina and the chief executive of several other states, at the lair grounds. These were pre ceded by a big athletic meet and fol lowed by a cavalry drill, military maneuvers and band concerts, with another ball game thrown in for good measure. Two events made the evening not able. The first was a May musical festival at the Auditorium which en listed the services of a number of excellent soloists and a large and well trained chorus. The second was an illuminated parade given by the Order of Red Men. President Taft Arrives. .lust at ten o'clock Wednesday morning the booming of a 21 -gun sa lute by the Charlotte artillery noti ced the people that President Taft had :irried on his special train. Nearly all the inhabitants and the thousands of visitors were at the station, and as Mr. and Mrs. Taft alighted from their car they were greeted with a mighty roar of applause. A special reception committee took the distin guished guests in charge and conduct ed them to the Selwyn hotel, where they were welcomed by Gov. Kitchin. Senators Simmons and Overman and the mayor of Charlotte. After meeting all the committeemen and their wives, Mr. and Mrs. Taft. together with Mrs. Stonemall Jack Mia. the governor and mayor and oth er distinguished visitors, were escort ed by a guard of old soldiers to a re viewing stand and witnessed a grand parade or all the military and civic organizations that could take part in the celebration. Mr. Taft Speaks Twice. A second installment of the music festh.il in the Auditorium was graced by the presence of the city's guests, and then all returned to the reviewing stand, where President Taft delivered an address. His words were listened to with close attention and frequeutly elicited loud applause. Later in the afternoon the president made a speech to the colored people and the students of Riddle university. From S to 9:30 in the evening Mr. and Mrs. Taft held a public reception in the parlors of the Selwyn hotel and shook hands with thousands of people. Military drills. b.nd concerts and other entertainments were provided lor the crowds all Wednesday after noon and evening, and the great cele bration closed in a blaze of glory. Old Controversy Renewed. The people of North Carolina, whose proudest boast has been that their ancestors were the first Amer icans to throw off the yoke of British .rule, now rejoice in the feeling that President Taft has recognized the .justice of their claim, but the century did controversy has broken out afresh. .Many historians refuse to accord to the pioneers of Mecklenburg county the honor that Is thus accorded them. These historians allude to the story as "the Mecklenburg myth." and there by arouse the anger of North Caro linans. According to those unbiased inves tigators who have looked most deep ly into the matter, the Mecklenburg ers did bold a public meeting on May :'.l. 1775. and did adopt resolutions quite -abreast of the public sentiment of that time, but not venturing on the lield of independence further than to say that these resolutions were to remain in full force till Great Britain resigned its pretensions. In 1793, or earlier, some of the actors in tbe pro WWIWMWWWWMWWWXWWIWWWWO!11! ON THE LOOKOUT FOR WHALE Crew of Steamer Thrasher Has Set tlement to Make with Giant of the Deep. Vp among the torn bergs of the Arctic a monster whale is cruising about with a harpoon embedded in his thick back and something less than half a mile of stout hempen cord trailing after him. The crew of the steam whaler Thrasher, which has returned from an eight months cruise in the icy north, declare that "Mr. Whale got all that was coming to him." "He got away from us." muttered the mate, spitting viciously into the scuppers, "but we will get him next sermon. It was good rope we used. anil he'll get tangled up on something .o e will be one whale to the gi.od when we get back there. , "He was a bad one, though. You see Silva. the boat steerer. slung the hook into him when we were on open water between two big bergs. Off he goes with the stick in his back, and the rcpe went out like a man tumbling j ceedings endeavored to supply the rec ord from memory, unconsciously in termingling some of the phraseology of the Declaration, of July 4, which gave the resolutions the tone of a pronounced independency. Probably through another dimness of memory, they affixed the date of May' 20, 1775, to them. Cass for 'Mecklenburgers. The case for the Mecklenburgers is set forth as follows: In 1818 there arose a great rivalry between Massa chusetts and Virginia as to which com monwealth should--receive credit for the Philadelphia document, and the controversy was brought up in con gress. It was at this time that David son, a representative in congress from North- Carolina, announced that Meck lenburg county had declared her in dependence' 3 mosths before the pro mulgation of the document in Phila delphia. While the statement created some surprise it resulted in an investiga tion into the facts as to the Mecklen burg declaration. This inquiry was made by Nathaniel Macon, who repre sented North Carolina in the senate, and through Gen. Joseph Graham and' Representative- Davidson-Senator Macon received from Dr. Joseph Mc Knitt Alexander a full account of "the event," which Dr. Alexander said he had "copied from papers left by his father." This statement, which in cluded the May 26th declaration. Senator Macon sent to Raleigh, N. C, and it was published in the Register on Friday, April 30, 1819. Dr. Alexander's Story. Dr. Alexander related at length how the farmers of Mecklenburg county in the spring of 1775 had called a con vention to be composed of two dele gates from each settlement in the county to meet May 19 to devise means for the assistance of the "suf fering people of Boston and to extri cate themselves from the impending storm." "Official news, by express, ar rived of the battle of Lexington," ac cording to Dr. Alexander's report to Senator Macon, and the influence of the news from Lexington, he added, resulted in the unanimous adoption of the Mecklenburg declaration of inde pendence. The declaration as written by Dr. Brevard, and approved by the conven tion on May 20, 1775, reads: "I. Resolved. That whosoever di rectly or indirectly abetted or in any way, form or manner countenanced the unchartered and dangerous inva sion of our rights, as claimed by Great Britain, is an eneniy to this country America and to the inherent and inalienable rights of man. "2. Resolved. That we, the citizens of Mecklenburg counts', do hereby dis solve the political bands which have connected us to the mother coun try, and hereby absolve ourselves from all allegiance to the British crown and abjure all political connection, con tract or association with that nation, who have wantonly trampled on our rights and liberties and inhumanly shed the innocent blood of American patriots at Lexington. Declared Themselves Free. "3. Resolved. That we do hereby'de clare ourselves a free and independent people, are, and of right ought to be, a sovereign and self-governing asso ciation under the control of no pow er other than that of our God and the general government of the congress, to the maintenance of which inde pendence we solemnly pledge to each other our mutual co-operation, our lives, our fortunes and our most sacred honor. "4. Resolved. That as we now ac knowledge the existence and control of no law or legal officer, civil or mil itary, within this country, we do here by ordain and adopt, as a rule of life, each and every one of our former laws, wherein, nevertheless, the crown of Great Britain never can be consid ered as holding privileges, immunities or authority therein. "5. Resolved, That it is also further decreed that all, each, and every mili tary officer in this county is hereby reinstated to his former command and authority, he acting conformably to these regulations. And that every member present of this delegation shall henceforth be a civil officer, viz., a justice of the peace, in the character of a 'committeeman.' to issue process hear and determine all matters of con troversy, according to said adopted laws, and to preserve peace and union and harmony in said county, and to use every exertion to spread the love of the country and fire of freedom throughout America, until a more gen eral and organized government be es tablished in this province." Tulips in the Cornfield. There are more than 20 varieties of tulips to be found growing wild in the country about Florence, the earliest of these, a tall scarlet one with very handsome fiowers. being generally found among the corn; later on there is a dainty, small, striped red and white oue and various lovely yellows, in shades varying from pale lemon to a deep orange tint, with reflex petals. "la a Tuscan Garden." Woman Rules. "This is the woman's century," says a suffragette. As every century has been since the appearance of Eve. ' from the loft. He ducked and dived until one tub of rope was gone, and he did the same with another. He was .making for the, nearest floe and when he reached it he spit a lot of water into the air and took a deep dive. The edge of the Ice cut the rope like a knife and he was off for good, with 2.000 feet of the Thrasher's line and a good, harpoon with him." San Francisco Chronicle. To Relieve a Cold. For cold in the head try inhaling medicated steam, procured by adding half a teaspoonful of friars balsam to a jugful of boiling water. Fold a towel round the mouth of the Jug, leaving a small aperture in the cen ter to allow the steam to escape, and take long, deep breaths of it into the lungs. A True Sport. Small Boy (to his pale-faced aunt in field) What, auntie, afraid of that cow? All you have to do is to act the way they do in a bul' nght Just wave your red parasol at him, and when he dashes up jump lightly aside. It's until euj . iiie. - JbbB-msQbB -ssWr4rsflsV.BflBf sHsBysSPflsVvJFBflBr VTBWT'bTSbS -'BBmSr'SBV-iBVSBBBBYsBBMBmBBl ILLUOT&ATEDJSt SYNOPSIS. "Vanishing Fleet." a story of "what miciit have happened." opens in Wash ington witli the United States and Japan near war. Guy JllUier. secretary of the British embassy, and Miss Norma. Rob erts, chief aide of Inventor Roberts, are introduced as lovers. Japan declares war and takes the Philippines. Guy Hllller starts for England. Norma Roberts leaves Washington for the Florida coast. Huwaii is captured by the Japs. All ports are closed. Tokyo learns of missing Jap anese fleet and whole world becomes con vinced that United States has powerful war agency. England decides to send a fleet to American waters as a Canadian protection against what the British sup pose is a, terrible submarine flotilla, tin ner is sent wiw a message, neet- teriously disappears. The kaiser is miss ing. King Edward of England is con fronted by Admiral Bevins of the United 8tates. The Drcadnaught. biggest of Eng land's warships, is discovered at an im passable point in the Thames. The story now goes back to a time many months before the war breaks out. and Inventor Itnbert8 viitlts the president and cabinet, telling of and exhibiting a metal produc tion. Tills overcomes friction when elec trified and is to be applied to vessels. A city for the manufacture of the mys terious discovery is built. The mys tery of true levitatlon is soH'ed. Roberts evolves a Kreat flying ma chine. The cabinet plans a radioplane war against Japanese. The start for the scene of conflict with a large fleet of mon ster airships is made with Norma in com mand. The Japanese fleet, believing Nip pon supreme, suddenly discerns the radi oplane fleet. After maneuvering the air ships descfiid. and by use of strons mag nets lift the airships, one by one, from the sea. CHAPTER XIX. The Eagle's Flight. No stranger spectacle was ever out lined against the sky than that of the fate-laden morning, when at a height of more than three miles above the sea the emperor's ships were borne away. A child full of life, energy and vivacity, clutched in the inflexible talons of a merciless eagle,' and hur ried into the empyrean, would have been no more helpless. The sun's rays were now painting the surface of a far reaching, untenanted ocean, on whose waves no sail caught the breeze, and across whose depths sallied no squad rons. The .day of its abandonment was at hand, and the time not distant when seafaring was to become merely legendary. In the profound solitude of the up per air the radioplanes swung majes tically in a wide circle, and then like a flock of geese in homeward flight formed a long line which in stately procession directed its course to the east. The Japanese knew by the faces staring at them from the bellies of the monsters which had gathered them in that they were in the grasp of the enemy. and impotent, although throughout that trying day no word was addressed to them. Once, from their lofty planes of transit, .they saw through their glasses a dim outline on the far southern horizon whose faint blue haze held Honolulu, designated as a stopping place, but which they were never to reach destined to be a port for naught but phantom ships a port of dreams. To ihem their progress through the air was at a terrifying speed, and the wind of flight sweeping in a gale across across their decks drove them to shelter; but they did not know that the machines above them were work ing at slow strength, in order that their coming to the shores of the American continent might be unwit nessed and unheralded. The hours slipped away, until below them the shadows lengthened and deepened and the waves were no longer seen. Up in their aerial path the dusk was fall ing, when simultaneously they came to a halt and hung motionless in midair. Officers and men hurried to" the decks to learn what this change might pro tend, and as they did so they discov ered that the silent monsters were clustered in what seemed perilous proximity to the craft holding their redoubtable flagship, the Ito. On the bridge of the latter appeared the ad miral of the fleet, Kamigawa, his im passive face showing nothing to his followers of the strain under which he had labored during those long hours of captivity. Like his fellow officers, he looked at the assemblage, anxious to know the cause of the abrupt stop, and then aloft to the engines of vic tory, from each of which there whipped and cracked in the evening breeze the stars and stripes. The grinding noise of metal sliding over metal attracted his attention, and almost before it had ceased a man clad in the blue uniform of the United States navy leaned out of a huge port, holding himself by his hand, and frowning down at the men upon the Ito's bridge. "Good evening, Kamigawa!" a voice hailed with gruff resonance, and he recognized Bevins, .who had been an instructor in the naval academy of the nation which had presented him with post-graduate instruction, and which he had come to assault. "Good evening, admiral," he re sponded in excellent English, mentally thankful that he had offered no great er resistance to this famous bulldog of the sea; but with no taint of shame clouding his mind in thus being re called to the fact that he 'had at tempted war upon a country which had helped to educate him. of which he had been a guest of honor, and to which he owed much in knowledge of seamanship. "It gives me much pleasure," re sumed the voice above in a tone of cold courtesy, "to request that you at once go through the formality of sur rendering your entire fleet, and sig nal the other vessels from your flag-j snip that in behalf of yourself and men you accept parole under the usual provision that neither you nor any of your men will bear arms against the United States during the " re mainder of this war." "But I can't do that!" Kamigawa protested in a tone of -bitterness. "Very well," came the curt answer. "I shall at once drop you, and I can assure you that nothing will give me greater-joy." - f. 1 nr The blue figure with its flannine U OS ROY NORTON COrmttZKtsrrmtrfrt0mtrmtiimM T coat 'tails swung hack toward the open port with an air of decision, and the Japanese admiral knew that this was no time for the practice of decep tion and evasion. The man above was not one to be trifled with, and could be depended upon to. keep his word unfalteringly, even though it might cost the lives of every prisoner taken. He hastened to relinquish his last hold upon his vessels and men. "Wait a minute, admiral!" he hastened to call. "You can at least give me time to ask thea their iwiabes?" ' "Yon are not to ask them!" was the sharp reply -from above. "Yon are to tell them that they can save their lives by giving their parole. There is no alternative. I'm not -asking favors, but simply giving you a chance." "But" "That's all! My country doesn't have to beg favors from all nations combined. 'You have seen damned good evidence of that! It's no favor to me if you give your parole. You can have 20 minutes!" The port above clanged shut, and Kamigawa, his cup of bitterness filled to the brim, reluctantly signaled the other members of the fleet, who seemed less bent than he upon delay. As the darkness settled more closely round them and joined the blanket of shadows below, there floated "from The Great Wingless Terror every captive ship the plain white flag betokening complete surrender. The sun banner the emblem of Japan had disappeared from the seas. She was no longer a naval power, and her brief encroachment, advancement, and season of truculence was at an end. As the last cloth of white fluttered out, the port above the Ito again opened, and a voice called down: "Thanfc you," and then continued: "I'm srry for you. Kamigawa, but it can't be helped. It's the fortune of war. Nov we are going to bring your cruiser Yakumo alongside you and the Kashima, and we want you to have all those aboard transfer at once. We can't carry her any more." He did not explain to the enemy that radioplane Seventeen, which had been struck by a shell, feared that the heavy burden of transporting the Ya kumo would prove too much for a higher rate of speed. Steadily and without apparent effort the three radioplanes came together, until the cruiser rubbed sides with the two battleships. 'Here were no rolling swells and turbulent waves to prevent such a maneuver. In the quietude of that aerial tryst, ruffled only by the breeze of the night, the ponderous masses of steel were brought into con tact as gently as if held by giant hands. Grouped around them were other dread machines, which suddenly, to facilitate the transfer, threw the brilliant beams of a score of search lights upon the decks of the doomed Yakumo, their rays illuminating and overflowing the upper works of the Ito and the Kashima, between which she was held motionlessly. The great guns of the three war ves sels stared open mouthed at each oth er. Their turrets loomed darkly, and cut off tbe farther rays of light, and in the white glare the faces of the men standing upon the decks took on a ghastly hue. With muttered conver sation and alert obedience Xo orders themen of the Yakumo stepped from theit4own deck to-those beside them, dividing themselves into equal parts. It was hard to realize in that spot of light, surrounded by the1 black shad ows of the night, where all was still and stationary.' that they were three miles above' the surface of a tossing sea,' and that to step out into the gloom would be to step out of life. It rt , . , - m i , was a ghostly interchange in a world of unreality. Reluctantly and" sor rowfully they took, their places oa the battle 'ships and turned to bid farewell to ( the beautiful cruiser which had been their home for so many nights. They were all clear now, and not a living thing was left upon her.. Once more the dynamos of the radio planes increased their speed. Slowly they drew apart, .the one clasping the cruiser alone remaining motionless. The searchlights, like steady eyes of the night, still' stared at the cruiser whose every gun and every bolt was brought out clear and distinct in the radiance. During the day her crew had cast off her broken top hamper. .which in any event would have been useless, and now, swept clean by the wind, she seemed illumined for her death. With the parting cub of her armored sides against the Ito and the Kashima she had bade a last good-by, to her sister ships, and now seemed the center of a tragedy of the night, waiting for her execution. From the deck of every surrendered ship silent and sorrowing men looked upon her as If fascinated, and something of pity crept into the eyes which watched her from the ports of that conquering fleet of the air. They, too, were sail ors. She was held thus for a moment, and the softened hearts of the con querors gave to her a last honor. The port of Seventeen opened, a rope lad der fell from its metal doorstep, and down it passed a gray-haired man, who had once commanded and loved such a cruiser as was she. It was Brockton. The captives on the decks of the captive ships strained forward, wondering what it could mean. The blue-clad figure walked the length of the Yakumo, reached out a hand to a short halyard, and pulled down the flag of surrender. He rolled it into a bundle and tossed it out into the wall of darkness, and from beneath his coat withdrew a bun dle which he unfolded and affixed to the loops. Suddenly, as if bestowing a Picked Her Up Into the Air. last honor upon the dying, he gave a tug, and the flag of Japan was flung to the breeze. The Yakumo should not pass to death unhonored, and was destined to be the only warrior to go down with colors flying. A wild cheer of short duration burst from the van quished as the officer remounted his ladder and closed his port. Then, released and liberated, she fell, the brilliant rays following her to the end. Down, down, down, falling at first on an even keel, she plunged, her flag fluttering wildly in the de scent. Gradually she turned bow on as If preparing for the dive to death. With terrific force she returned to the waves .of the Pacific, and entered them, throwing up in that mighty im pact a tremendous cascade of foaming waters, which lashed themselves ir.to the air in mad wraiths of ghostly white, surged back in angry billows, and resumed their quietude. The Ya kumo had gone to the graveyard of the Valiant, and the searchlights showed 4F "Z- ; Hl-r MV-W-M"-XJ-X-rTj-XJJJ-0-r-Kj-o-xrXJ-LO-r-TJXjXJ'J'tJXt JJXn.'.fJ jj jltuaj-i- i jir-tj-fifh-irir - JACK THE OLDEST DOG ALIVE He Was Born Nineteen Years Ago, But Refuses to Think of Dying. Jack, a mongrel terrier, but a breed worth while, has been so used to fight ing all his life that he will not die. Not he; he refuses to think of it, says the Boston Globe. His father was a cross between an Irish" terrier and a skye terrier and his mother a smooth-haired fox terrier. Glorious combination, a terrier of the terriers. He was born in Newton Low er Falls in March, 1889. Bought for $5, his owner, to keep the peace in the family of Noah A. Plympton of Wellesley Hills, said that he had brought him home for the baby. On those terms and on those alone was he admitted to the household, which he has ruled since to such an extent that the members are grateful that he does not- know about the dis- nothing more than the crests of the "depths wlilcir'had-furntshed her shroud. - The men of Japan who had wit nessed her parting had been wrapped in breathless silence. Now it broken by one great sob as tbe who had commanded her turned away from the .bridge or the Ito, blinded with tears. Above them the port re opened, and the fighting admiral again addressed them; but In a voice which told that he, too, was not with out sympathy. . "Admiral," he said, "order all your men to go below decks. We have been, loafing all day. and will have to speed up now. It will be death to stay exposed." Aroused from their last look at the Yakumo, they were amazed at this in formation, but complied: and before the last Lian had crowded down the companionways the wind began shrill ing about their ears. Away through the night with sudden velocity shot the radioplanes at a speed which would bring them to the coast long be fore darkness had ceased. In all the American fleet there was not a man who did not know that -Lake Wash ington at Seattle was .their destina tion. Its landlocked sides, guarded by towering hills and giant forests, and overlooked by a splendid city, was to be the prison of tbe enemy's craft. Its length, its breadth, and its depth were sufficient to float the combined navies of the world. Their flight was well timed; for it was still dark when they swam down through the air over the waters which were to reclasp the ships of Japan in their usual environment. The Norma swooped lower and lower, decreased the speed of her descent, passed over West Seattle on Its little peninsula, the quiet Puget sound with its long wharves, and then gently settled above the placid lake. Slowly, like a water fowl wearied of flight and seek ing Its ease, it approached the sur face, and with infinite care rested its burden, until the Ito was again afloat. Norma, at her chosen post of duty. put out a tired hand to a controller, gently movQd it a notch, turned off the current which made the radio plane a lodestone of te'rrific power, threw another switch as the admiral beckoned, and then, with a great sigh of relief, felt the machine lift itself into the air. It came to a stop, and through a port, by the admiral's side, she watched that procession of dull red lights emulate her example. Ship after ship was released, and invariably the signal came flashing to the eyes: "Deposited without accident.'" There was another quick interchange of or ders: the Norma turned her beak to ward the stars of the southeast, gath ered headway, and led her followers back through the night In homing' flight to the key which had seen their creation. The admiral gave a great sigh of sat isfaction for work well done, and stretched himself out on a settee to rest, looking curiously as he did so at the supple figure in the hood which for nearly 24 hours had steadily led him on to victory. He called to her, and tried to Induce her to accept re lief; but she declined with a weary smile, saying: "No, not until we get home. It will be but a little while now." Something in the words she had thoughtlessly used recalled her own heart longing. What were the achievements of war, the inspirations of conflict, or the glories of triumph, in comparison with peace, love and home? With an indefinable sense of great yearning she thought that Guy was on the sea, going away from her and her people, and even in the heart of the radioplane which was canceling space at tbe rate of 500 miles an hour the distance between them seemed In terminable. Life was made up of good-byes! And so in a reverie of bitterness she clung to the hood and fought against fatigue, until, as the morning was upon them, she sent the craft to rest in front of the shops where their return had been anxiously awaited. Overcome with weariness, and feeling throughout every fiber of her body the snapped tension of sud den relaxation, she staggered through the port into the fresh air of the dawn. From every direction men were run ning madly to surround them, and even the Columbia was landing men upon the shores, who joined in tbe rush. TheMlmping old admiral stood in the door, when Roberts, supported by two surgeons, appeared. Norma clasped him in her arms and burst into noiseless, nervous sobs, which he mis interpreted. "Failed! You failed, my daughter?" he asked forlornly, while the men waiting for news crowded forward to hear the answer. It was given by Bevins. "Failed nothing! We cleaned them out and landed them where we started to without the loss of a life!" Those still aboard the Columbia needed no messenger to bring the news. The workers of the plant burst into a frenzy of exultation The ad miral stilled them with an upraised hand. ' (TO BE COXTIXl'ED.) cussion which so nearly kept him from the place where he belonged. Faithful, affectionate, good to look ar. with his expressive eyes and shag gy hair, intelligent to a degree, good tempered, though quick to resent an insult like the accident of having moved one's foot anywhere near him. Jack has been a cheering companion and a devoted friend. And Jack has had the unique honor of being present at a Wellesley col lege, function, to which no man ever has been admitted. He came homo decked out with ribbons. Curious Lantern Fly. Among the curious insects of th9 Maiay peninsula Is one called the lan tern fly, which is "remarkable for Its sudden leaps, made.witbuut the aid of its. wings. All Wh Would Etyoy. good health, with its blessings, most ee derstand, quite clearly, that it involves the question of right living with att the tens implies. With proper knowledge of what is best, each hour of recreation, of enjoy ment, of contemplation and of eJFortnay be made to contribute to-living aiight Then the use of mcdkmU'tmy be dis pensed with Wairivantager but wader or diaary conditions in many' simple, whlesorne;remedy any be iavale- able if taken at the proper tine and the California Fig Syrup Co. holds that it ie alike important to present .the subject truthfully and to supply' theoe perfect laxative tei those desiring itj X ' Consequently, the Company's Syrup ef Figs ami FJixir of Senna grara general satisfaction. To get its beaeSeial electa buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sale by all leading druggists- FEW CARESSES IN HER LIFE Infinite Pathos in Remark Made by Little Philadelphia Chile ef the Slums. Dr. Herman L. During, superintend ent of tbe Philadelphia City mission, has for many years devoted his life to the poor. Dr. During is the in ventor of the pretzel test for street beggars. When a street beggar pleads starvation, you buy him a big German pretzel at the nearest stand. If he eats the pretzel, he is honest; if he refuses It, he is a fraud. Dr. During in his work among the poor has learned many odd, quaint things hat he relates superbly, for he ?3 a born story-teller. In an address at Bala, apropos, of the hard, rough lives of the children of the poor, he related a dialogue between two little girls in Rum alley. "Maggie, wuz ye ever kissed?' said the first tot. '"On'y wunst in mc life wot I kin remember.' said the second. 'When I wuz In de Honnyman hospital wid a broken arm one d de lady nusses kissed me, an' 1 blushed like a child.' M Laundry work at home -would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually neces sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear ing quality of the goods. This trou- j ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great er strength than other makes. What Kind of an "Office." Once upon a time a child who was asked ou an examination paper to de fine a mountain range, replied: "A large-sized cook stove." The same method of reasoning seems to go with older growth. A recent examination paper at the Sheffield Scientific school at Yale contained the question. "What is the office of the gastric juice?" And the answer on one paper read: "The stomach." Everybody's Magazine. The Secret Out. "What made my lovely complexion? I d not like to tell, for it "was medicine, but the nicest a woman ever took. It wan Lane's Family Medicine that did it." This i a plenr-nnt herb tea which acts favor ably on the xtomach and bowels, purifying the blood and cleansing the skin like magic. It cures headache and backache. Druggists and dealers sell it, 23c. Thoughtless. Husband "You must marry again. dearest, when I am gone, and that will be very soon." Wife "No. Edward. No one will marry an old woman like me. You ought to have died ten years ago for that." Penny Pictorial. Ask Your Druggist for Allen's Foot-Ess. "1 tried ALLEX'S FOOT-EASB recent ly, and have just bought another supply. It has cured my corns, and the hot. burn Ins and itching sensation in my fret which was almost unbearable, and I would net be without it now. Mrs. V. J. Walker. Camden, X. J." Sold by all Druggists. 3c. It Is a point of wisdom to be at peace with men and at war with vices. II. C. Chapman. Lewis Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Made of extra quality tobacco. Your dealer cr Lewis' Factory, ,1'eoria, 111. When the calf kicks, 'tis time to thrash the cow. Do You Love Tour Chad? Then protect it from the dan gers of croup to which every child is subject. Keep DR.D.JAYNE'S EXPECTORANT in yoar home all the tiiae, then you're ready for tbe saddea attacks of croup and colds. Neglect may cost you the life of your child. It's safest to be on yoar guard. Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant is the best remedy known for crosp; it gives quickest relief. ' Sold coa$tfnTs tn three size bottle? $1.00. 50c. 25c DEFIUCECdiWatw Stares makes laundry work a pleasure. lSoz.pkg.MB .?- sln . .W -?fe K, i. j rn- r.-w '"V. .- - -xr- -, $- t