The intelligencer. (Anderson, S.C.) 1915-1917, October 20, 1915, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4
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I4. M. GLENN.... Editor and Mannger
Motored uo eecond-clnaa matter
April 28. 1014, at tho post offlco at
Andoraon, South Carolin?, under ?he
Act of March 8, 187?.
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- /.^.rt.^gwr-'^
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER..20, 1915
"His sword within Its scabbard .aloepB.
Sutj'morey, how lt Dnorosl,?.
. ' o . .
\Vhrsuw'many crUel^lc^but'W? are
^tttlsncd that they wqrp^i?agnlAod ut
vLouu, . ;
-0 j i?+'
Wo hopo Mr. Drabham of Olar will
let up on -.Hising- blue colton uulil
thia btiulncns depression' flosses.
1 ' ... o.' 'V
! The KnlHor said that tho war would
,ehd in October, but ho ls now Jump
ing about ovor Europe Uko a March
tiaro.
--o-- . ? " '
Colonel TiooB?vvK continues '. to
???=i?v?? ?i ?iOit??, ?? sonic ono aptly de
scribed him on his flrst entrance into
: national politics,
^^M' ? '-~?:-"
Bulgurla, la a fllrtutiouu old girl.
:8ite- ran a morry 'bluff on tho Hon.
. Allied Powors and then ran away with
. tho other follow.
i-0
- ThC prosldeut has dovolopcd Into a
,magician of'.tUe^urstvrank. .Ho took
:;tho ficronmlng American englo and
wade him Into aV'cooing'novo of peace.
: "-O-- '
ho only ruler who hutt added to his
ngilom by thia war ia Neptune Tho
botfbm ot tho seiji -baa been . strown
riches for tho old man with the
trident.
Tho prenldont'a Thanksgiving proc
lamation will bo rel loved of tho old
10 sameness If ho should happen
and out one of his love totters by
taite. >r'
.0 countrlus at ..war aro fond of
_^,t?n?r:,.??l.f truths.,.-. They're like tho
^rtsi?tton who sank in the quicksand
?lp to lila dakiel!-but ho went dawn
head il rat. . .
.v Poland b?peda and ia porm?tted' to
took ct llWrty from ufar. Freedom
bin shrieked many a.: Mme in that
downtrodden; country .since poor old
liosc??ifko 'fell. . ,
'. ; ?? -O" .?? ? '
; Judging'Greece by tho kind ot cfU?
;.?jns ?he. hus senti,lo our country; wo
arV not 'surprlj?wd. tp?t sh?i ia handing
|^;a,;ejiiolco^ t?n?;pt titty' to the op
^al?g'; ip? wer?.'
;<j The Germana are, working Hussion
jir^onera in thoir field?, and lt le prc
OT^??^* .?.^v,n.i\^'^? ".?^^ty,--Pr
PP^^eat'?they':'^11' bale' :^?seo*lto
^liifrkers foie prime' tlino?v hay.
A FAILURE OF THE ALLIES
Tho failure- of the allied forces In
their campaign ugainst the Dardanel
les has caused u mighty undercur
rent of dissatisfaction among the
people back ut home, and tiio propo- j
Billon hnB boon seriously made In thc
houae of lords ul London to abandon
the siege'. The struggle there haB
been gol":.' on for many months, und
no substantial results buvc been ac
complished although thc loss In kill
ed anti wounded to thc nilled armies
bus been more than un?: hundred thou
sand, tn say nothing of thc immense
money cost ami thc loss of valuable
battleships.
Tlifrc ls a belief nt home, especial
ly muong the people from whom thc
HO url fleed soldiers were recruited,
ihat tiie lives of the men in the army
were In many cases uselessly wasted,
and not u little Indignation has been
expressed against thc British general
in command of the campaign, who
has nov/ been recul led.
Admiral Malian, ono of thu greatest
..unitary experts of the world, years
*KO laid down this principle uf naval
.iirntcgy:
"Oblps are unequally matched
against forts. Just as cavalry and ln
'antry arc not equal, either to the
?tiler, in the other's proper sphere.
V ship cnn nu moro stand up against
i fort costin;; tho samo money than
'.lie fort could run u ruco with the
?hip. Tho quality of the ono ls pon
.'erou'MicBB, enabling great passive
strength; that of tho other is mobil
ity."
Tho correctness of tho opinion of
Admiral Malian, whose services havo
'jecn of great value to tho United
rftatcs, has been amply proven In
nvontY of the present war. Much was
expected of tho mighty armada, sent
igainut the Dardanelles and headed by
?hu Bupcrdrcndunught, Queen .Eliza
beth, but tho big guns of tho naval
licet have done comparatively little in
reducing the Turkish forts. Tho vos
sels have been hampered, too, by Hoot
ing mines. In fnct, tho importance
of Ibcso floating minc fields tc the
routonlc cause cannot bo well over
estimated, for, without, their menace,
tho forts might not havo proven im
pregnable to tho assaults of tho big
naval guns. Whuiioycr thc ships havo
tried lo dash In and Inflict hoavy dain
SjjSriJicy have met resistance, and
frequently* destruction, by floating
mines. *"""*
In tho ul?go of Port Arthur during
the tljt bet ween Russia and Japan,
nnd .also In thc capture of Santiago
in cur war with spain, lt was shown
(lint coast fortresses^'ar? in"greater
?langer, of. capture by land forces than
foy tho-* ' ?rom tho sea. It lr, easy to
seo that no vessel, however large, con
?;nrry nu heavy ordnance and a3 for
ailluldc armor OB the land defense.
Th's inequality has been mado great
ar tinco that time by tho addition of
thc submarino monaco to. battleships,
.md so lt ls hardly probable that tho
mips now arrayed ugalnst the forts
encircling tho Dardanelles ran do any
grout good in breaking the stubborn
resistance.
With tho failure of tho licet, tile
strength of thc army will bo lessened,
md so tho tldo of resistance all along
tho allied line will begin to ebb, it is
roared. The failure of tho Dardanel
les campaign will bo heightened now
by tho necessity of deflecting many
troops to tho Servian front whoro the
?cod IB greatest. The Teutonic pow
ita aro not tho only ones who havo
reached a critical point In the war.
?'he other side Is fucing tho same
.risls, and it looks as if events are
rapidly shaping themselves for some
thing vory decisive in this unparal
leled world struggle.
TUE GRAVEYARD OF AMBITION
It has been a tradition of 'American
million that tho United States cell
ito is tho graveyard of presidential
is>d rations, and tho experience ? of
statesmen in tho past who have
.ought to reach ihe presidency ty
ivny of the upper house of congress
jives strength to this argument. Tho
inly senator who evor achieved his
unbition in tho last half century was
um j ami n Harrison, and ho received
lis nomination in 1888 as a dark
misc in a field crowded with favorite
ions.
This old tradition has evidently lost
mme of its power to discourage hopc
'?t..; aspirants, for nearly all the . Re
publican .candidates mentioned for tho
presidency aro either in the sonata or
hoy ore trying with might and main
b get.there. Weeks of Massachusetts,
smith of. Michigan, iSherman ot 1111
lois, Borah of Idaho, Cummins of
'p^^'!;ara'oH members of tho senate
md aH these noted gentlemen have
hfcir rods 'np for the presidential
ightnlng. Ol tho other names promi
lently mentioned, Root of New. York
ind Burton of Ohio dropped ont of the
icnato last.March, driven out by the
fear that they could not bo reelected.
Fairbanks of I juliana, another likely
candidate, baa Been service in the sen
ate, and HO baa Knox of Pennsylvania,
who was lifted om of the ucnato to
becomt TV.rt'H secretary of ?tate.
Out aide uf this long Hat of scramb
ling sons. Hadley of Miaaourl IOOIIIB
up prominently, and even bo Ina an
nounced for the aennto from his atate
and is doing bia best to lind a place
In the presidential graveyard. Gover
nor Whitman of New York la the only
man who baB not been associated
with the acuate by actual service or
by A desire to get there, but it is now
conceded that his failure aa governor
of the empire Btate baa knocked his
boom Into a cocked hat.
There remain Taft and Roosevelt,
of course. Taft ls not considered se
riously any more sines bia last aprlnt
was such a miserable farce that lie
picked up only Utah and Vermont In
Ibo running. Aa for the Colonel, ho
1B a perennial candidate, a prodigy
who hus broken ull traditions, and no
kind of rulo would work willi him be
cause he would smash lt Into splin
ters "Just to he different, doncher
know."
After looking over thc Held and
passing the Republican senatorial
race horsou In review, we come back
to the beginning more convinced than
ever that thc upper house of congress
ls tho graveyard of presidential hopes.
There ia a neat little Bix-foot plot re
served for them all, and wo have a
most admiraba and competent Bexten
In tho person of President Wilson.
WORRY
Worry is peculiarly au American
discaso. Conditions of life hero aro
diff?rent from what they aro In other
countries of tho world, and one of our
chief characteristics IB always to he
In a hurry. Wo bolt our food at meal
timo, wo rush to our work OB If we
wore members of tho flro department
going to a conflagration In a rube
town, and wo trot and fumo through
tho whole duy as if wo had a grudge
against Father Time for not putting
ono hundred and twonty seconds In
overy minute. Tho inevitable result
of a life ordered on this plan ls a
continuous atatc of worry.
No pcrcon cnn be utterly free from
worry, for In every life there come:?
now and then n time when troublo or
Borrow or distress of como kind falls
with crushing forco, and lt is Impos
sible to throw off tho fooling. In the
dark hours of night, whon peaceful
sloop should have UH way undisturbed,
worry stalks Into tho mind and drives
ont with a lash overy wholesome
thought. Tho hours seem an eternity,
and tho feeling ls only relieved when
tho rooatero begin to crow and thc
sun comcB pooping in at morn.
Wo havo heard of peoplo who could
lay aside their cares and worries
whon they retired nt night, much ns
ono would take off his clothes aud
hang them up neatly and primly
against tho coming day, but wo never
really believed any Buch fairy toles.
The man who cnn do that sort of
thing either hus no feeling or bis
mind lian been dGVolopcd into a hope
less machine which can be started or
stopped only by touching a button.
While tho grip of unavoidable worry
is hard to throw off, it is a fact that
most of tho worries of mankind aro
such as could be avoided. Many ot
thom spring out of Joalousy and envy.
Wo have seen two families living sato
by side, both having about thc same
amount of wordly goods and enjoy
ing practically tho same social ad
vantages, and we have boon impressed
by tho largo measure of peace and
happiness they enjoyed. In trutb,
they seamed aa happy and care-frco
ns a healthy pup snoozing in tho sun
shine.
A little thing may chango In a day
the relative standing of these two
families. The hoad of one house buys
an automobile and goes spinning
around the world as if ho owned an
enlarged ediUon of tho Rockefeller
fortune. Thon tho chances aro that
tho hoad of tho rival house begins to
mope at ? once Uko a man with . a
chronic casa of dyspepsia because, ho
can't buy ono also, the .light of his
happiness is snuffed out, and ho sis-,
xl cs and aputtors through tho pro
gressive stages of worry until he sof
ties at last into a sullen 'state pt Wno
tunk. The wife and the kiddies, too,
may feel thc same way about it, and
they'begin to hurl ll ttl o shafts tippe J
with fire at their neighbore, and it all
ends with a big spite wall erected
along the lino bf their adjoining lpts
and towering far. up into tho blue,
blue ?ky.
-. Worry deatroys happiness. Worry
undermines health. Worry gets a
strangle hold on character aome
timea and laya ita palo and lifeless
form ont Under the weeping willows.
lt.you have good health, a good nam?
and a crust of bread, yot^d ' better
thank tho Btars for your fortune^and
quit worrying about what the other
fellow possesses. Il you know the
truth, you might flud that ho has a
white clophunl on bia hands and real
ly cnvlca you after all.
A LINE
o' DOPE
I
Wearier Forecast--hain Wednes
day; Thur.sduy partly cloudy.
"I wish you would state tomorrow
that all of tho teachers certificates for
the last examination will bc malled
out In a few dnys," stated .Snpt. Kel
ton yesterday. "There remains only
about three papers to be corrected.
This work would have been finished
but I was called from thc olflce be
cause of ujy mother's illness."
-o
Sup'.. Felton w is asked about the I
'.oinpulHory school attendance law in
Anderson county yesterday and how
lt was progressing In ibo districts
which hud apodtcd it. "You sec this
law requires attendance at school
only four months, and therefore. I car.
hardly say anything about it as yet.
These four months aro In the dieres- I
sion of tho trustees and tho parents.
I hone to bo able to moke nome inter
esting reports later in thc session," |
stated Mr. Felton.
"J. nm having thc biggest demands I
for Fords now that I have ever had,"
stated Mr. Archie Todd yesterday. "I
am looking for a shipment every day j
but when they como tlioro will not be 1
enough to go uround. Wo arc requir
ed by thc Ford company to keep a
greater supply of Ford parts than
ever before now. and I have enough of
these right herc in stock to build a
complete, machine."
-o
Managor Pinkston stated last night I
that the reason tho Diamond from the ]
Sky was not shown at tho Dijou yes
terday afternoon and night was bo
cauBe the film was burned in thc re
cent Atlanta fire. rinwoYcr, bo stat
ed that ho would run tho samo install
ment next week, and that thereafter
lt would go on as before. Mr. Pink
ston also stated that hereafter tho!
Broken Coln would bc shown on Wed
nesdays instead of Thursdays as be
fore.
JuBt how tho circus Wagons are to
reach tho grounds down on River
a trent seems to bc one of tho chief
prpbloms of thc city engineer right at
present. It was his Intention to haul
sand, gravel and cinders on the street
by the raattross factory and have them
go over it but if this weather kcops
jap there will be no chance to have
this dono. If it should rain today, or
even if lt does not rain any moro, the
streets art going to bo lu a bad .condi
tion and tho drivers will certainly
have troublo lu reaching I tho show
grounds. '
Chief Sommons stated yesterday
that ho was preparing fqr ono of the!
biggest circus crowdB that had ever
Somo to Andorson. Ho stated yester
day that he believed that1,Barnum and,
Bailey's circus Friday would bring
thousands of people to Anderson and
that hu was gottlng ready for a big
day.
.This morning Tho Intelligencer car
ries a supplement containing pictures
of young ladies from tho different
counties in tho state who have been
chosen in the stato-wldo contest to
select the most beautiful young lady
in South Carolina to be queen of the
Harvest Jubileo at the slate fair in
Columbia next week, and'there ap
pears in the supplement ? coupon that
is worth 100 votes. Mucty .intorest is
being shown in this contest and num
erous Andorson pcoplo have received
cards from friends of tho contestants
tn other counties asking th ch- cid and
support of their choice: - It is hoped
that all readors or Tho Intelligencer
Will clip tho coupons nnd send them
in as ' directed. . Of coarso' everyone
is supposed to1 judgo and-Vote' accord-.
lng to tho photographs baV l|ry would
bo mighty nice to have ' ^tfeiijon's
contestant win. out in the state con
test and Judging from tho ' stares j
sho' has a mighty Uno chance.
Tho will 'of tho lato; Chas, C.
Langston has boen flied for probato.
The will, dated August ^^jfc':-re?&i
as follows: . ..
"I give, deviso and bequeath to my
mother, Ducy Jane Langston; nil bf
my estate, property and effects, real
and personal, end of evoiry^kln'd and
description and wherever situate, to
have abd to hold absolute,'-.'iib':-,her
and her heirs and aligna forever.
"I appoint my said mother executrix j
..*.,' . ?'.'.-'. ;-';'.'''.-vv -'-.
; . -.-...'.
TF you want to see a great showing
A of good styles for boys come in this
week. Our display is complete-noth
ing neglected in quality, durability or
style-no good points sacrificed for
cheapness.
The prices as low as the values permit.
School suits forboys from 4 to 20
years at $3.50 to $12.50.
Overcoats, ages 3 to 17, prices $3.50
to $7.50.
Raincoats, $2 to $3.50.
Shirts, Underwear, Hose, Shoes and
everything to outfit the boy.
A handsome guaranteed watch given free ' wi th
each hoys' suits at $5 or more.
Parcel Post Prepaid.
"The Store with a Conscience
of thia will."
Mr. Langston's estate ls estimated
to be worth approximately $25,000.
-o
A four reel .Charlie Chaplin will bo
shown ot thc Bijou Thursday. Mr.
PInkaton lUatc-s that thia is positively
a new picture and has never boen
shown herc before. Tho name of it la
"Ambition."
GOOD ATTENDANCE1
AT PIEDMONT FAIR1
Crowds On Opening Indicate Fair
Will Be Decided
Success.
Greenwood, Oct. 10.-The firat day
of tojo Piedmont Fair ls a success
from the standpoint of interest shown
and the variety and number of ex
hibits. Tho grounds w< re opened
promptly on the hour thia n orning and
a fairalzed crowd, the usual opening
day crowd, v. aa proaont to give the big
events of three dava a proper seud
otr. Tho judging of horses end
mules occupied tho attenttoa of ibo
judgc3 after the formal exorcises,
pud neala this afternoon this class
reived the attention of tho men
appointed to select the prize win
ners. .
Our Wealth in ..'orest Products.
(Tho University News Letter.)
. At the North Carolina dab season
the other night Mr. J. PI. Lassltcr of
Northampton county briefly' detailed
tho forest wealth of the state as
follows:
Nearly O?.??O.?O? acres of wood
land, containing 430,000,000,000 board
feet of standing timber, in which
particular North Carolina ranks
among the first four states of the
union.
An annual timber cut of 4,000,000,
000 board feet. Lumber and timber
products worth $34,000,00 a yea*.
ranking next to cotton and . tobacco
manufacture as a sourco of annual
wealth. .
Our farm wood-lot products, main
ly firewood wero worth $11,000,000
in t\o census year; In which panic-,
ular North Carolina outranked tvery
other state in the union. .
The annual firewood cut is Borne
5,720,000 cords por year, equal to
3,000,000,000 board feet of lumber;
which eaolly accounts for thc fact that
nobody was ever known to frcezo to
death In North Carolina.
We have 33.000 sawmills, 117 furni
ture and refrigerator factorios, 138
L ar ri ase and wagon works. 12 car and
general construction shuns. If wo
count the lumber and tl m J ed Indus
tries the;' employed 44,000 " peonlo
and turned ont products worth 550.
000,000 in tho census year.
Our own' wood-working establish
ments consume noarly a third of our
lumber and Umber products or around
$11,000.000 worth of them annually.
Hoped and Tied.
The men . engaged in cuting off the
end* of protrudhig tica on thc elevated
railway were oipllcity instructed,'" for
the sake of Innocent Tussorby on ,tho
Btret below, never to allow a piece of
tie to fall to tho street wlthnut a
attached to lt, says. The New York
BreninE Post.
Ono day, as the end, of a tie Was
sawed off, the min on the Job carew
the rope, tie and all Into tho street.1'
"Hy, there, what er yon 1 doth'!"
relied an Indignant foreman.
"Yo toi dme not <to ' let anythlug
frap to the street without a robe, at ;
tached." rejoined the mah In a sudly
tone. "Well, aln^ I obeyin' orders f
Csrter Glas* 111. !.
Lynchburg, Va., Oct. liA-Carter
?lass, father of the present curnm
iy'r.ct, ls suffering from a nervous
breakdown.' Ho leaves for John
Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, to
night and expects to be io- good con
Huon fay tho opening ut congress.- '
BRITISH WAR OFFIGE
HAS SMALL FAITH
IH CITIZEN SOLDIERY
London, Oct. 1?.-(Associated Press
Correspondence.)-Tho business men
who wear tito gruy-grccn uniforms of
tlic Voluntary Training car.is have
increased until there are now ovor
400,00 0 of them. Still bio difficulties
ns to their status aud what they re
gard as tho aloofness of the war of
fice as to. their usefulnoaa continue.
Tho red brassard with the "C. A."
(whirl) means "(Jcorgius Rex") has
not, as It seems to tho volunteers, bean
accorded the full recognition that thc
sat rlficea ana tho earnestness of tho
members warrant. Rut they grow hi
numbers and their president, Lord
Dcsborough, and ;.roa:iy others WVJO
aro Infl/ucntlal In tho orgaulbation,
Including Lord Rosobcrry, who ls tho
president of tho Scotch branch, are
hopeful that most o' the duties of
?.orno defensa may soon bo entrusted
to tho volunteers.
ia England and Wales alone thcro
arc already established 40 county bri
gades or regiments.. In, Scotland
thero are 70 separate corp3 and now
ones aro being , formed so suddenly
and generally that those in chango of
tho movement aro having dh.iculty in
preventing organisation on other than
ti e accented lines. Io lao county of
Lancashire, for example, there are
over i?.ooo members, < whom 4,000
aro In tho city cf Manchester.
- Men v? ;,o aro not eligible to Join
tho army, either on.account of arco or
other disqualification, are in this or
gur-irat.lon, cinipping themselves with
rifle and uniform, drilling as many
hours weekly ns they can Hpare. from
their regular wo.-k, learning to shoot,
to dig trenches and to perform guard
duty and are performing functions of
a police character ranging from coast
patrol to watching over local water
supplies. As on example of their
work, tho coast of Hampshire is now
patrolled from poolo to Bournemouth
by volunteers.
. On Saturdays and Sundays, In par-,
ticulnr, the uniforms of tho volun
teers are ?eon nt railway stations, on
busses and throughout all parts of
Eoglaad on tho roads leading to tho
camps whero they put In tho week-end
drilling. .Even the disturbing lack or
interest at-tf-'o war office in tho volun
teers and tho recent ruling that.' a
man with the uniform on moy bo ar
rested if in a theatre do net seem
ingly check the growth of the organi
zation.
Smallest Baby. .
Chicago, Oct. 19.-Muster "Peanut"
Hirsch, said to ho tho smallest baby
In existence, astounded wise sclontlfic
men, physicians and 'nurses Saturday
night .when he kicked His little p'.nk
tootsies . and- gurgle a : ho was tal; en
from -an incubator which has baon hit
home since his birth, three ; mont?a
ago. -
.'"Peanut" wo? tho only ono of trip
lots who lived;. lie weighed ohb
pound and sis sances at birth. Physi
cians told, fels -mother so small a baby
couldn't'live. V 'v;V:
When n physician lifted him from
tho incubator ho weighed throo
pounds ahd four buncos . .. '
"He'll live," said : the phy sician v
Wireless Telephone Man Pardoned.
Wilmington; Del.., Oct. 13.--Pres
ident .Wilson has . pardoned Cameron
Spear ', of Now .York, former . head -of ,
the. Wireless-, Telophono . company;,
wlto: ls serving ;a five-years',sentence j
in the Atlanta'' ' .penitentiary fer. j
criminal, conspiracy in using the |
malls to defraud.
'WasnliiM " '**
embargo of nearly a year against
movies tho White' House was filmed
f,u* a fiction romance today . >' fieere
ary- Tumulty issued; tho special por
to!t; tor *tbe invasion of the camera
while the president ls away. ;
'
:-iv.>;'""'
WILL SUBSIDIZE DYK INDUSTRY
Japan to Guarantee Protection for
.Manufacture-:! for Ten Years.
(Washington e;i3patcli)
An outline of tho plan ot tho Jap
anese government to subsidize tho
dyestuff and chemical industry, ia
order to mako Japan Independent of
(Jerniau concerns, was made . public
today by thc bureau of foreign and
domestic commerce. Subsidies will
be granted for 10 years, under a bill
passed by both houses of thc Japa
nese diet, to concerns one-half of
the capital of willoh1 4s owned by
Japanese cubiceos.
"Tho amount of subsidy to be grant
er," said tho announcement; "will
be sufficient to enable thc '-.nup?nica
to pay a dividend of 8 per cent on
the paid up capital. Thc manna fac
ture of the. materials for gun powder
will be regarded as tho manufacture
of dyes and chemicals. As has been
tho case with (ACT countries, Japan
has suffered severely from the short
age of dyestuffs and chemicals siuto
the outbreak of the war-.- ' In nor
mal times tho Imports of dyes vero
valued at about ?a.GOO.OOOV a year,
nearly all of which came from Ger
many." if.ni i,
ODD am OF y KW a :';
?< -ri-: ! ?? .
Malloy, id.-Unable to speak, and
toll how tho accident happened. Migs
Lucille tinda, 17-year-old. is. recover
ing frew an operation -required 'for
the removal of a fork^whl?h she swal
lowed'. It ls believed,;sho . was ex
amining ker-ttrout with tho fork when
lt slipped from her hand.
Oilton, ?Okla.-Mr3. F. Tanner of
this place believes sho ls tho only
woman in tito country who conducts a
pool hall; She soys under tho. con
duct of women, such places should
become clean, high-standard places of
amusement.
Anahuac, Tex.-Mrs. Frita Otter
aroHs lu the "sight ?to rsljjs ?r^gindow.
Something, like a snake, toueueu h?r'
neck. When sho aroused other Bom
bers of tito family, they founu the
saako colled comfortably around her
neck. .
Lon,Angeles, Cal.- Girls have you
caught on to. tho new fads? One is.
a peace of ring, made ot/silver with
a dove and an olive brunch enamell
ed on it. The other is a? ".?,wcet-;
hoart" ring, in~ which tho->'i>co; of tito",
girl's best bean is worn.; .
Jersey Shore, Pa.-Jane T.eaclfnrd,:
19-year-old. was "taken . wita?a flt of
laughing while lis.tSir.ing to ' a funny
.story told by a frlond;... S':c laugh
ed for throo hours, and it was.noe-'
esis?ry to put ncr under thc caro of a
physician.
Plainfield, 111-An-ingenious fann
ed .attached a rubber toso ,to tho ex
haust,of bia automobile, drove, through
his fields and Inserted tho hose Into
ovory gopher hole he found. Evory
gopher was killed. T.lio farmer then
inserted the hose Into ratholcs, turn-,
ed on hiB engine, ami the rodents hayo
disappeared. .' -
-v ' . ?-1 ?? ? . -
An Interrupted Prayer.
Bill Nye used to tqir thisctory of ti.e
J*te Myrbn W/ Fried, of Denver: .
. Reed was a bright and original
preacher and . many curious . people
carno -to hoar him. Onco a.-mau from
tho Gunn IBOn county arrived at his
church rather late Sunday,.. morning
whllo Reed was . making a low but
earnest prayer.
>\ "LoudfvV' yelled tho lato comer.
Mr. Reedceoned this prover fof, n
moment, looked at thc gentleman
from ' over thoVrango? and aafd: ? "My
Wend, I wasn't speaking io you."!
' Explosion Klllii Fourteen
.?Butte, MoMann, Ort. ?9V-^?^ufu>ehv
men were killed and eight snrlcumly
injured whoo; a wagbnload. of dyna
mite whlchiwas bol??, hau?od ?n^tf?e
yard of the Granite .Mountain mine;
exploded.
Trtisto?e^^?'re thinking otfi- put
ting np; a nice motto over' your
to. encou rage the . children. ; '"&bVJ
Won??; ^Knowledge ls^woalto,f^0o^
M||lf^?r^?Mbt'< ?ll^KTh? ' .''qn?Siwfr
know what. my. salary is.^CMpaW