The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 27, 1920, Page 6, Image 6
WOMAN EARNED HER LIBERTY
Unlooked-For Suffering Endured by
Stowaway Who Was Making H?er
Way to Freeaom.
i
Gone was the Bosporus and in its
place we saw the leaden waters of the
Black sea. From the porthole of i
Josef's cabin - we could distinguish i
many miles west of us the coast line j
of the country in which White had '
spent three years, according to Capt. j ;
Alan Bott's "Stowaways, Inc.," in Asia, j
Feodor soon left us, for he had to i
bring other stowaways to the light of j
day. From every concealed cranny of
the vessel men and women, almost as ;
light-hearted as ourselves at deliver- j
ance from the Turks, were coming into 1
the open.
One of the stowaways, a passport- ?
less woman whom the aged captain j
was taking with him to Odessa, did j
not rejoice for some time. As hiding :
place for her the old man had chosen j
a deep locker in his chartroom on the j
bridge. There she had remained for ;
the last two days. Now, Kosa, the
kitchen wench, knew nothing of the j
captain's lady. That morning, not !
wishing to send her own particular
stowaway?a Turkish deserter with !
coal-blackened face, untrimmed beard j
and decidedly odorous clothes?back j
to the bunkers, where he had spent !
the previous day, she thought of the
locker as a temporary home. Dump- j ,
ing him inside the locker, she fas- j
tened the lid and ran back to the j
kitchen. The Turkish deserter landed
with some violence on the captain's j
lady and both received a bad fright as
they clutched at each other in the
darkness. Yet the lid could not be removed
from the inside and the woman's,
screams were unheard outside the j
little room. The air in the unventi- ;
lated locker grew more and more j
stuffy. Finally the woman fainted. <
The Turk, tired after a long spell of
cramped wakefulness in the bunkers :
and the kitchen, composed himself .
philosophically and went to sleep.
AGED MAN CLAIMS RECORD >
New Hampshire Nonogenarian Still
Able to Swing Ax Both Lustily ; [
and Expertly. j
Friends of Frank Mozrall, ninety, ;
of Franklin, N. H., claim that he is the
champion woodchopper of his age in
the New England states. Despite his {
near approach to the century mark he
is able to swine an ax with the best of
the choppers of the New Hampshire :
woods, those who know him best say. ;
Mr. Mozrall was formerly a hotel
man. Since his retirement a favorite
pastime of his has been to walk a distance
of five nriles from the home of
his niece to a wood lot and there chop ^
wood. It is claimed that he cut almost
five cords of wood in a week, which is
considered a record for a man any- j
where near Mr* Mozrall's age.
Mr. Mozrall helped to build the first
bridle path from the Profile to the
summit of Mount Lafayette, and was
one of the best-known guides in the
mountains years ago. He has guided
some of the best-knowrn people of the
country in their explorations of the
White mountains. It is only recently
that he has come into fame as a wroodchopper.
^ i
Mr. Mozrall's memory is most excellent
and his general health.is excep- ;
tionally good for a man of his advanced
years.?Boston Post.
j
Syntnetic Vine- and Acetic Acid.
Acetic acid is now used in great
quantities in making acetate of eel- 1
lulose for airships. Before the war :
this was obtained by distilling wood, 1
but it no longer suffices. A synthetic S
way of making acetic acid was dis- i
covered and now the price is much j
lower than it used to be.
The process is simple; it calls for the
production of acetic aldehyde by a reaction
of water with acetylene, and the j
oxidation of the aldehyde gives acetic j
acid.
Three French companies are now !
using this process and La'Nature says j ,
they bid fair to drive the distillers of j
wood out of the field, even planning to
produce a synthetic vinegar that shall ;
be much cheaper than the natural ar- j
tide. j
Strong Ptca.
The local scout executive had vis- I
ited the school for the purpose of or- :
ganizing a troop. He talked to the I
boys for a time and then taught them :
several yells, some for their school i
and some for the principal, all of
which ma le a decided hit with them. 1
A few days later they asked their j
teacher to invi e him hack, hut she '
refused, pi can t that their time was
\ i
needed for th? .r regular school work, j
Another few days and their request ;
was repeated, only to meet with J:he <
same refusal and the same excuse.
It was almost a week before the
r !
subject was again mentioned, and j
thei^ the genius of the class did it.
"Say, Miss YV ho began, j
"don't you feel like you would like to i
be yelled for again?"
Remarkable!
An amorous young man met a math-!
ematical maid .it the Christmas dance.1
He was as keen on flirtations as she :
on nroh'ems. and he asked her, in j
r ?
the conservatory, to tell him her age. i
"Eow old am I?" replied the girl.;
"Well, when I am as old as my sister !
was when she was as old as I will be
when she is twice as old as I then was
I will be twice as old as I now am." j
The young man, eager to please,<
looked it her in polite astonishment
and^exola lined:
"Nsrerl" I
AS LITERATURE IS "MADE"
Kipling Manuscript Shows Author Possessed
of at Least One Great
Quality of Genius.
There turned up, the other day, in
a sale of manuscripts a particularly
interesting specimen of literature in
the making. Mr. Rudyard Kipling sent
it in typewritten copy to the editor
of the National Observer, Mr. Henley,
and it appeared under the title "Tomlinson"
in January, 1892; but between
the coming of the typewritten sheets
and the appearance of the printed
poem a good many things happened
to the manuscript, some due to the
author and some to the editor. One
imagines Mr. Henley editing Mr. Kipling,
a situation which the author anticipated,
for against certain lines he
had written admonitions and dire
threats, although there is no evidence
to show whether Mr. Henley let the
lines stand because he liked them or
because he was terrified. In another
item in the same sale one sees that
Mr. Kipling first wrote the poem
"Cleared" in the character of an Irishman,
but when he saw it in proof he
altered the phonetic spelling. Which
indicates, incidentally, the capacity for
taking pains which is an important
factor in successful authorship, even
if it fails to stand, despite a wellknown
quotation, for the whole of
genius.?Christian Science Monitor.
"BABY" AIRPLANES FLY FAST
Planes 'That Can Make Ninety-Six
Miles an Hour Are Now in Use in
Europe. p
Just as the era of adult automobiles
was followed by the creation of baby
motorcars, so now in the aerial world
there is an influx of baby airplanes.
In the park, in the fields and in various
other open spaces miniature aircraft
are having tryOuts all over England.
One of these midgets, called the
"British Crowweighs 220 pounds,
and flies with almost the speed of a
full-grown airplane. Another baby,
called "the pocket airplane," is so
small that a man can span its wings.
It is 16 feet long, and the inventor,
Austin Whipple, says it will achieve
a speed of 96 miles an hour. A feature
of this baby is that it can be j
folded for transport and carried in-!
side a trunk.
The French are also dabbling in liliputian
aircraft. An infant monoplane
Is turned out by a French firm at Garsay
with a span of a trifle more than
13 feet, thus being two feet smaller
than the "British Crow." Fitted with
a ten horsepower ABC engine, it has
a speed of 62 miles an hour, and can
land at the low speed of 20 miles an
hour. The average retail price of
these little brothers of the Capronis,
Handley Pages and Vimys is from $1,D00
to $1,200.
Monumental "Toppers."
Though there is a revival of the silk j
hat, which many people thought the j
war had made extinct as a species of j
headdress, few would argue that it
makes a fit subject fpr the sculptor. J
Yet there are several top-hatted
statues about. One at least is in the
United States, ft is a statue of President
Lincoln. He is bareheaded, but
his "topper," a very unfashionable
specimen, is carefully laid on the seat
at his side. But perhaps the funniest;
specimen is in the Central square at j
Glasgow, Scotland. It represents a re-'
spected citizen, James Oswald, mem-1
ber of parliament, and he carries his
"topper" in his right hand, held firm- j
ly by the brim and upside down. The
street urchins find this "topper" irre-;
sistible. If the policeman is round the j
corner they play pitching pebbles into
Mr. Oswald's hat. Some of them* are ]
expert at the game and the hat has!
to be emptied of stones quite fre- j
quently.
Eight Thousand Swiss.
Only 8,000 Swiss soldiers fought in
the war. That number entered the .
French service. j
But that is not the whole story. Out,
of the 8,000, 300 survived, including j
many wounded. The rest, 7,700, were ;
killed. A thousand of them held up
a German advance one day at Verdun;'
held it up until the last man of them i
was killed. |
* 4. r.A roorc oorn fho cfnrv nf Wil? i
AUUU L OV _> ecu. o u(,u u>v uiv.j ~ ^ ..
liara Tell and the poem about Arnold
von Winkelried were in most of the
school readers that young Americans
cut their eye teeth on.
The 8,000 Swiss who fought in the
war well established the right of that!
story and that poem to remain in
American school readers.?Life.
Lost His Place.
Old man Bitzer conducted a furni- ;
ture store in a neighboring town., j
Bitzer. like many others of his race, j
liked his beer, so one day between j
customers he stepped into the barber i
chop, and while waiting his turn de- '
cided he would have time to enter a
saloon next floor and have a glass of I
beer. On returning to the barber I
shop he was much vexed to find his |
turn taken by another, and after a few I
gruff remarks said to the barber: j
f I
"When a man goes out and comes right
eway back in. is he out?"'
Some Ordeat
"What's the matter? You look .pale
and feeble."
"Been through quite an ordeal. Was
up to Flubdub's heuse last night*'
"Well?"
"And drank some home-made wine
manni'aetured by his wife'and smoked
two of his Christmas cigars."?Louisville
Courier-Journal.
(
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J. F. Carter, J. W. Barr, J. C. Kearse,
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Tells How Ziron Iron To,
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0. E. SHUMAKI
Wholesale Distributers
-President
nic Helped His Daughter j
%r Appendicitis. '
Read this letter from Mr. J. B. Kelly,
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Ziron is a scientific, reconstructive
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