f - -— - - TE AD $3 kK i ; : gi1§ HIA0 4 no i ves @ i —- 8 _—- . TE | ‘The Birthplace of the | | ssorrres ean cnmrnxnrrnn | AR Apostrophe fo | A WIRELESS DAILY PAPER. | Georgia Marple, 7 |] 8 Ege ee : ean Ne T TT 7 . . ¥ 2 . Marconigram From 1500 Miles Aways As a PSE Mucnope Georgia Tl , = Lov ar : ; s ’ RT The Cunard Bulletin. may rival Vermont. The marble belt Hk ; 77. i DECLINED TO BE. KING Washington 5 Honument Mr. Marconi’s successful publication | Is about sixty miles in length, ex- k \ —— 't : ing ast voyage ani { : 1 Washingt.on Spurned a Crown. oy a a thyongh p Ickers Cf duty. fhe Supply ; a people. is practically inexhaustible, Jang a a. : e FodoAAk ARK AAR ARR A AAA Ak kk “Phe apparatus in ‘the Lucania was | 9°0ih ©f the deposit in many places Is Subje Re Tin . > ; : ; : over one hundred feet. But white and g t=] purely experimental,” sald Mr. Mar-|'c0100§ varieties are found The Lh Wa shin ton Perched upon the brow of a hill] coni to an Express representative on | characteristics of the Georgia marble 5 g about two miles southeast of Newburg, | Saturday. “I merely utilized the | are purity of chemical composition, : ] N. Y.,, stands a plain, unpretentious voyage to thoroughly test some im- | yniform texture and peculiar crystalir pi rubble monument, erected by the His- provements made recently in high-pow- | structure, rendering it rk ’ By Arthur Branscombe. torical Society of Newburg Bay, whieh er receiving instruments, and the Lu- | durable because of its fo nay Chie N the quiet shades of Sul-|ing-hall, with its huge fireplace mas- | marks the site of a building within cania’s passengers profited thereby. of water, iif 2 grave, a nestling North- [sively “framed” in oak, vividly be-| Whose walls occurred one of the most “The Lucania’s news telegrams came “The amptonshire village, you |speak the splendor of its early history, | dramatic events of American. history. | through without the slightest interrup- FITS permanently cured. Ko fits or nervous In will find the original sug-|and it requires but little stretch of the | In 1782-83 a large part of the Revolu- | tion, and I received many private mes. | Dessalter first day s use of Dr. Kline's Great gra 4} gestion of the American flac. There | imagination to conjure up one of those | tionary army was encamped in “the | sages as well. One such message Ssh Sirericiieanl uses Lt are the Stars and Stripes, that now merry scenes of bygone days when fields around this hill, under the com- | came from Glace Bay, Cape Breton, on Ty Spr unaen ila le by me float over a hundred millions of peo-| King Carnival held sway within its | mand of General Washington, who had | Wednesday, when we were 1010 Eng- 108 cheapest telephone gervicg in the ‘A lay 4 ple, and there they were at the mem-{ walls. his headquarters for a time in the EI- | lish miles from that station.” Wor 1 in reid Ragidy Wis, : : provi orable time when the Genoese dis-| Washington House, the modest little | lison House, at New Windsor, and lat- | The Lucania presented a curious Millions in Oats. ily coverer was sailing with his adven-|Brington cottage in which the %family | er in the Hasbrouck House, at New- sight when fitted for the reception of Salzer’s New National Oats yielded im swept turous crew across the wide seas to|found a home after leaving Sulgrave, | burg. The building whose site is now | long-distance news telegrams. For- | 1903 in Mich. 240 bu; in Mo.. 255 bu.; im Cen the west in search of a new world. |is now occupied by a couple of farm- | marked by the monument was a sort | merly there were four wires strung 5: po = ang in 9) other States fom Ig A distinguished family, the Washing-]laborers and their respective families | of meeting hall, or public building. | between the two masts of the vessel. generally STE 1 do i x ai tons, bore the Stars and Stripes on |in the employ of Earl Spencer. for the use of the officers and soldiers, For this voyage, however, the masts | of bushels to the yield and millions of dol- warri their shield, and a distinguished son of | Near to the Washington House is the | called the Temple. were lengthened fifteen feet, and be- jars fo ths {irmer's purse, Thy Jt for 1901 entire that family gave the design to the na-| quaint old church, St. Mary's of Great| In 1782, owing to lack of pay, ete. | tween them one big cable was sus- Lot id SN Tee ne Lait Clover valley # tion he fathered. Brington, where the father of the two | discontent with their lot, distrust of a pended, from which thirty-one wires Salzer’s Speitz, Beardless Barley Home ih * In a dozen places around the ancient | Virginia emigrants worshiped. It is |republican form of government haa | were connected to a single cable, car- | Builder Corn, Macaroni Wheat, Pea Oat, an ing homes of the Washingtons the armor- | the oldest among the many ancient | gained a formidable foothold among | ried on four heavy booms which pro- | Diution Dollar Grass and Earliest Canes over i ial bearings are still to b> found in a | churches for which the county of |the rank and file of the army. Matters | jected forty feet beyond the side of had icf makers for you, Me. Paimer: fiver greater or less state of preservation;| Northampton is celebrated. The in-| had reached such a pass, indeed, that the vessel, and then carried back again | ; me TT gs 3, 3 iy on the family tomb; on the walls of | terior of the church has witnessed [a8 secret meeting was called, urging through a porthele into the cabin a slant Jobs A Shem Seed Co Ja ing s1 Sulgrave Manor, which had been |many changes, but to the eye of the | the army to appeal from the justice which Mr. Marconi used as an operat- | big catalog and lots of farm seed samples, bad o granted by the Crown, in 1539, to|visitor from the mew, young country | to the fears of the government, make | Oh pure, white shaft upspringing to the | ing room, A marked i i i j 8 o Laurence Washington for his many | across the seas it is full of recollections | demonstrations of power and deter-| _ - light The most remarkable feature of the | ber rnp 2 he In of os services to the country and the State; |and suggestions. To the antiquary one | mination, arouse the fears of the peo- Wi Spe mand, ony of heavenward- | long-distance operations was on | late years. he os evi aching might. g v : : Calmly against the blue for evermore hy Sonesta: At 130 a, m, the srs Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children : ni Lift thou the changeless type of souls atch of bulletins was received from | teething, Sotiris Sums, Jeduces nfm. these Th ae Canada, including a report of the tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. 25¢. abottle was t Above the common dust of sordid | memorial service in memory of the late The flounder is an industrious fish and the x strife Sir Michael Herbert in Washington, a | 1ays 7,000,000 eggs in a year. yd nto the radiant ether of life steel trust dividend item, and London ay TTT oe Bheplarand by the vastness of eter- opinions on the new Cabinet.—Lon- Pose th a i : Twill Hem A hero's quickening spirit lifteth thee on fospross, tory. : ad Unto the skies that claim thee for i sh 5 There | iarity abo: i ohn: that claim thee for their Difficulty in Korean Language. They Lhd A ao Somdles a \ In those vast fields of light, sublime, Toe capital story has been told by an | Swim. of bos alone, : merican missionary who has just Norwa was ostabliched. WOT! oy Boieh comme holdest thou with the om Boe, ’ Ph men’s Fo the object of hice gs hid With sunset’s glowing heart ere twi- | that country i tnerensed a loz money at 2 low rats of interest 5 2 light gray owite to or nae ¢ wi > onsty | to workingmen with which to purchase J mand Hath stilled its throbbing fires, and which with a oid number of Woras homes. = The plot of ground to be ‘to-day with dim night ! : th a slight inflection 6f the | bought is not to exceed five acres, and garme That folds thee softly in the silver | Y0iCe, are used over and over again | the erection of the home thereon is day, light with an entirely different meaning. not to exceed a total cost of $804. The would Of many a dreaming moon, In The missionary in question was | interest charged is 33; per cent. Pe pl i majesty preaching to some natives and assur- | LOT¥:two years are allowed in which Tere) Serene, Ie the great name enshrined | ing them that unless they repented to refung the lnoney, To st in thee, they w o, a ie : te —_— futur Thou dost defy the all-destroying Le panes FRADE IN A Bau BALE OF: HAY. Rh years. : . 7 . =r and smite with thy sti reluke our craven item pen ns Orien- 5 Frauds in Watch Cases. 4 from NA co fears! H = De arty, it tuey re- ceording to an article i Jinecin- 2 ! x SULGRAVE MANOR, THE HOME OF THE WASHINGTONS IN ENGLAND. Point us forever to the highest height, | J6¢ted his advice and refused to repent, | nati Commercial, a i shron ; : : > ; 7 : = a ; And in our Nation's peril-hours suine | Should they be dispatched—to the local | Was Seay found, In Jia wily. seeroted cess i be on the face of the quaint old sun-dial, | of the most interesting features of the |ple, and so obtain’ justice. for them- |... ‘vhite ee postofiice! Pinte > Si a Say ponadw / not . which formerly occupied a position on {interior of St. Mary's is the peculiar | selves. ‘ J 5 Fa | With the inute witness to the undying On another occasion a lecture was de- | lead areal ga Tog in es the south gable of Washington House, | construction of the old worm-eaten| The outcoms was a letter addressed | Potyer | ! 3 livered, in the course of which a beau- | 80lid gold watch case secreted in the cen- ge Great Brington, and which® now |pews and the diversity of the armor: |to General Washington by Colonel Ni- or thei hipe soul that lives above the | tiful moral was being drawn from the Sai ig vy wei 3 i army stands, after being lost for over a [ial carvings with which they are em-| cola, an officer of the army; which rr aa Sciibners Ne _ | say career of the tiny butterfly which | no ey tes iy wasn i guida century, in ihe grounds attached to bellished, the total absence of thé old, | ter a recital of fulsome praise. of the Biro) nr Up aren : aga was suddenly cut short in the clutches | until the springs of the case are taken I She } The Cedars,” on the road leading to | high-backed order ‘of pews being par-|commander-in-chief, said, in part: ¥Ovw- of the spider. The simile fell some- | 3nd the lead will be found secreted behind + Great Brington, whither Robert Wash- | ticularly ‘striking. During one of the |ing to the prejudice of theipeopte: it| : : what short of its intended meaning, | *fhees cases % be Revel | ington and his sons removed from Sul-| many periods. of restoration, which it| nright not at first be prudedts pst «. WASHINGTON'S MODESTY. . and it was not until the laughter had ped, ne wre made by Lg Who 2 divin, grave In 1666; it is also on a dozen |is evident the building has undergone, | sume the title of royalty, “bgt 5 Sal Ga TS er : subsided” that the lecturer became | to the dishonest to oe I nite and: Fy pieces of Weshington furniture still|no doubt these pews have been ecut|things were once adjusted wi Led The Father of His Country Disliked Vain | aware that the victim which had been Rob Dlessin for anyone to find that he ak extant throughout the county of North- {down so as to afford increased seating | strong arguments might be 3 od fed hry ¢ Sioty, floundering amid the dainty silken bas logged. Fmp of ied iu his watch Me.” ampton ‘and in the neighborhood@ of |accommodation. = .| for admitting the title Of Kinga | fy: 1018 4 common trait of self-made men | threads ‘of the web was, a donkey oper trick of the mak f° i make Sulgrave and Brighton. Somewhere about the middle of the| Of what avail would have hen Bi to enjoy the collection and preparation | which, in the Korean language, it ap- solid gold watch cases is to stamp ¢ eo case a The sun-dial bears unmistakably the | centre aisle, and slightly to the left : ; £3 “P-1 of material for writing autobiography pears, is Synonymous with DRbierAr. “U. 8S. Assay.” The United States does ry . Washington apms—two bars (argent) [as you proceed -toward the chancel, : and to let all the world read the story | Boston Transcript. PERSIE a ice Psp oi gold ti fool i and, in chief, three mullets (gules)— |is to be seen, securely embedded in a+... of ‘their lives. It is seldom that a re- SHE Ty Ee eoby cule, Sng ivhs fi by hie One | carved upon it, with the date 1617 and | long stone slab, an old “Lrass,” bearing quest: to furnish help iu: writing 9 Women Searce in Fiji Islands lieve that the Government had Something ig the initials R. W. It is a round slab | an inscription to the memory of Eliza- memoir of a distinguished man is re- The sex question in Fiji i . 3 Ko rith the stamping or gusraniseing wate of sandstone, sixteen and one-fourth |beth and Robert Washington. This fused by himself or his family. Wash- | wip the Indian i" oot nm A Te i ats faking ark © inches ‘in! diameter and three inches | Robert Washington was a younger ington held other views on the subject. | tho colony has — ant Sl ad erie a Sn penn down thick, chamfered on the lower side. | brother of the grandfather of the two | 16 seems that afer the Nevolution alg. tr J Ww. Db; ison. one of the | filled watch with a twenty of twenty-five- + The lines, figures and shield are in- Virginia emigrants. He died vont Mr. Bowie made application to Dr. cloths in tie Inn Tm, ong of the year guarantee. These watches are gener- fhe cised about one-sixteenth of an inch |issue just nine days before his wife, James Craik, ' the family physician of | 4¢ heen com a parm, i Dad if the purchaser ae by. = deep, and -the holes where the gnomon | Elizabeth, his nephew, the Rev. Lau- George ‘Washington, for permission to abogt it peiiod to Malte nulnie RS Which, guaranteed at, he hin might was fixed are plainly to be seen. The | rence Washington, officiating as curate examine such papers as would be nec- He oints out that at th ‘of 2 33 10t iI existones. a centre and sinister - mullets of the|at the. burial of both his uncle and essary to assist him in preparing a {ine percentas a a e ond of 1902 The Dueber-Hampden Watch Company, over shield are almost obliterated, but were | aunt. memoir ‘of His Excellency. all z es in th Be oy an ale Wi Ee oe “i quite distinct’ when the relic was re-| In the centre of the stone slab, and On Tuesday, March 25, 1784, Wash- be es 7) > 2 wr hg fo of the manufacturers who are in aR oy! covered. Both initials and date make | about a foot below the inscription, is Ingion wrote as follows to Dr. Craik adults by op he ile a i 100 | tionable business. ; he's it probable that it was made for Rob- | another “brass” in a fair state of pres- from Mount Vernon: : “Such . a i Te n : : fron ert Washington, the original occupant | ervation. It is the armorial shield .of “I will frankly declare to you, my he sa 's 2 3 ue pling reo i et S385. 92 Eiergyign a foo _of the cottage, who died in 1619, Itlthe Washingtons with the Stars and dear doctor, that any memoirs of my of Hh is eh e to ine prevalence egsthe ggg of seventy, « displ: lay face downward for the greater | Stripes plainly visible. life, distinct and unconnected with the | wy i.p : oy fps 284 grievimans The Dutchess of Marlborough be- fe part of a century in the spot whence| On the left-hand side of the chancel, general history of the war, would rath. |p. o0o Ey i Ine Chajenity of | Jieves strongly in physical training a it was recently unearthed. facing the altar, stands the magnifi- er hurt my feelings than tickle my cides hi ER esa inal children, 220 heriowy two gods, » boats HE Satin of Herne Wier stil cet I la he pride whilst I live. I had rather glide | putty. not to oo to be recorded an- | the Marquis of Blandford and his little swim preserve much of their oldstime pic- | Spencers, to whom the Washingtons HA gently down the stream of life, leaving I no 0 mention many violent | prother Ivor Charles are undergoing wate} turesqueness. Below one of these an- | were related through Catherine (Kit- Lr | ; it to posterity to think and say what Arr D id a Se a course of instructions daily at Blen- bo cient gables is the Washington shield. | son), Lady Spencer, wife of Sir John a : they please 67 ple than by any act of showing a Joe 0 Hop fer gi... WO : she ¢ bearing the date A.D. 1540. Time and | Spencer, Kt., who died in 1586. She| : xd | mine to have vanity or ostentation Im- | porn into the world thore are xe: 2 Fo the elements have played havoc with | was a first cousin of Laurence Wash- NEWBURG MONUMENT. puted to me? on ae ne ey el . Lg Ib5 elements I : : 3 : =H aur Wash | tl ros did Washiieton pot gst e boys, and -quotes Buckle, the his- | , For years the editor has been urging blew . y enough can still be |ington, the original grantee of Sul-| ap Hill, Conc onl ; . = put aside the torian. as saying: “If , 3 farmers to sow Alfalfa Clover, and aah Israel FATE Ont tn Show os Whee the Ste grave MAF id ill, Concord, Yorktown, Valley | request, knowing that no accurate his- 1 toh ay ing: the Proportion ; jo" y,¢ thousands of wide-awake Ee i when and Stripes of the Union may have In the chancel, and adjoining the ¥ arge aq 0s long, weary years of tory of his career could be. written bi . 3 ae "pane Pps Mi ssiiared ol over Sasa ue doing this : Saas righted, Tis PRrlicuis shi oo PRpiert Chant 16 Et pats i strife had there been a less determined | without ‘consulting his papers, and | force Were to be greatly disturbed, pov their great benefit and satisfaction. in th : ¢ : LT o” . i 4 3 2 a o ” - y Ilford, Westl F 2 3 : not Dears thes a0 ibe, ! ren "| man than “Washington in command? [deeming it indecorous to permi . | even for a single generation, society | A: Walford, Westlore Farms, Pa., writes: Dose be. opted motto of the to the Washington vault, indicated by | ry forexwarn Zaghi . : p t public | 13 he thrown into th S i I have-60 acres in Salzer’s Alfalfg Clover Dle tl familyan ADDIOPTiate. sentences trom ils mscimiton chrontcing. the = us forew orpad, W ashington is- | use of his MSS. dealing with the War Cont ast a hn m = de Hos; Serious ‘It is immense. I cut three crops this sea go ba the Latin poet Ovid, “Exitus acta pro- | tombment of Laurence Washington sed an prder for 2 meeting of the of- | for Independence until such time as) _. NSon, no a great ing me in fie son and have lots of pasture besides.” fhe > bat”—but it i : lo i S07. | ficers at the Temple. Gengral Gates | Congress should authoritatively Vices or the peonle would ‘infallibly Horan, T. Bunter, & TV, save, “SH Sete bat” is to be seen in numerous | the great-great-grandfather of George | jrecided 1 ia aE Si : atively open | ove” Tondo Daily Mail ger’s Northern Grown Alfalfa clover can- argun miniature Carvings of the Wims witich| Washington, und hore again mos ot Hires; od, anc ami great solemnity the | its archives to historians or to the gen- ? i Vvolly Maoib not be beat. I have solved the question of i “adorn” the massive masonry of which |seen the prototype of the Stars and commander-in-chief arose and read his |eral ‘public. = Possibly ‘Washington “Fleming In Dltgaien. stock raising here. Salzer’s Alfalfa is good nothi * the ‘old ‘porch is built. In close prox- | Stripes that floated over Washington Address > high ¥ as 2 masterly pd oi { thonght 51 Was foo Soon 10 zetia glear By an unlucky blow lL 5 Hammer for Bi crops of Ee ee relia ii ‘imity. to the #hield, and a little to the [at Yorktown.—Woman's Home Com- oquent hen for faith in the justice of | history of his life. At any rate, he was | Ar. Benson had disabled one of his | Zer’s Macaroni Wheat for 63 ba 2% i 2 right, is the old sun-dial, while higher | panion. this country; ferming those Who would | prompt in suppressing the hope of giv- | thumbs. “That's too bad.” said a | fattening wheat, and Salzer's Hanna Bar: is di UD inthe centre of the gable tis oy erm ts Porernmoy traitors, and [ing Dr. Bowie any diaries or papers friend 10 whom he STiovod. the i ley, for arid, 39 land, is good for 70 bu. find a GREE arms of the ancient priory are| Switzerland is gaining in popularity Ya or 1atically declining to be which would enable him to construct a aged member several days afterward. Pd ro PL Ra She, ther es yng, With successive res-|as a resort for Americans. During ge as hemar “No, it isn’t,” replied Mr. Benson Barer sorts Rape ie, and Sal- e th ; dnd cepaics 3 ? 9 hi —i ; End a * | zer’s Teosinte, good for to nvuea SS man or ae a io sonson of 1 ane Inher of Amer. . Government inspectors passed upon almost Jesenvtully, It is one of the | food for cattle, Se Salzer’s ton Dollar N Li : for ) gistered in the hotel books was 59,0158,449 live animals last vear 7] best things that ever happened to me. | Grass and Bromus Inermis for lots and fife’s staircase and the grand. old, banquet-' 7348; last summer there were 11,859. |a cost of a little more than a cent each It has taught me to appreciate that | lots of good hay. These things make it + fact, > : ea thumb. I never knew its value before. possible for me to grow live stock by the sustai I found out by actual count the first | ~ Have you heard of Earliest cane? Gives i day that there were 257 things I had | six mowings a year, and Teosinte, the 80 1} no been using that thumb for every day | ton per acre fodder wonder? i Wh of my life without ever giving it a | JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND 10c. IX One thought—aud it was practically indis- [%e the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Cro ‘B ef pensable for every one of them. Please | Wis., and receive their big catalog and pas Hh i] open my knife for me, will you? |! farm seed samples free. [A.CL.] less? Thanks. That makes 258.” 3 Forty millions of calendars are gratui- fete 1 | —h ML tously distributed in the United States A : A Crusade Against Hunting, during the first month of every year. He hy Pierre Loti, the French naval officer Widny Schook Children Are Si : oun ! BI-HER-8-30RKS 53-DAVEH TEAS. who has written so many pleasant sto- gol Children Are. Bichly, to-day ay ries of this travels, is heading in | uses by Mother ora omar [OF Children, * Se - France a crusade against hunting. And Home, New York, break up colds in 24 hours : Tari co Tue or nce the movement is attracting widespread | gure - everishness, Constipation, Stomach God’s FE. 70 DEATH. RESIG attention and arousing deep interest. Troubles, Sug Disorders and Destroy ; im y EAT By or an / all druggists, 25c. Sample mailed hs ’s : M. Loti would have laws passed that | Free. Address Allens. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.Y 3 Rods would put a stop to the present wanton a ——— -— akin vi Rs hong destruction of birds and animals, Kill- 1 In Gelaany Te Tan i 213 goed fo gol ; grin 0 ing to supply game and food he would Sg in corand one i520.