The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, January 12, 1899, Image 8

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    oR AS
“JEST OUR JM”
At the school examination when we sot back fn the erowd,
: Watchin’ of the huil proceedin’s, we was goshamigt ty proud,
* I notiead that his mother had a teardrop in her eye,
An" my own ol’ gray-fringed blinkers wa’n’t oncomfortably dry,
* Pur the one that graduated at the head of aff the school
~ Wasn't any goldfish swimmin® in the ‘ristoeratic pool
No, there wasn't any sky-bine-blooded podigres in him,
For the boy that tak the honor cake was
Jest
Jim,
up yonder In the court when he pleadod his frst onus,
: 4s ih got a verdick without risin’ from their place,
An’ the ars a ‘round him an’ the jade came off his seat
Fur to compliment his talent, [ could scarce santrol my feat.
Conldn't hardly kes oep | from dansin’, an’ I wanted fur to whoop
At the way he put the lawyers far the plaintiff in the snp,
Bat altho he swam fa honor an’ they made a heap of him,
In the of his ol’ daddy he was
Jost
Our
Then when me an’ his 0° mother went to hear a famons case
An’ wo saw him there a-sittin’ on the bench with a solemn face,
An’ the lawyers was a- Salling him “Your Honor’ an’ “the Court’
How we 8 Jot our bosoms swellin’ an’ our sascy hearts cavort!
There he sot jest like a statute, fail o' digoity an’ iaw,
Jest the v a picter of a man We over saw,
An’ eer our hearts was swellin’ foil o’ pride clear to the brim
1 kop’ whisperin' to mother it waa
Jost
Car
Jim.
Bat the golden fires 0° glory seemed a-blaziag In our souls
other Bignt when I come singin’ “Yankee Doodle” from the polls,
hollered out to mother they'd elected of our son
Far to go an’ set in Congress in the halls at Washington,
Ort to snan us hag each other sn’ a-kissin’ jast jifka kids,
An’ the tears a.verfowin' of the dam beneath oar Hds,
An’ ar ing an’ a-waitzin' till cur heads began to swim,
An’ tela * of each other it was 7
ost
Our
Jim,
—Drenver Post,
H ILE THE “TWO
SISTERS” BURNED.
BY BAY STANKARD BAKER,
PE AE ES a a od
~ bod of AEN wn Fn nat ad
PE Oe OTe Be Ho ’
q PN a A Xr A BIN oP
“Axow™ shonted the hoarse voice
of twenty’s lisntenant.
Instantly Christianson, Scanlon,
Greenman and the others lined np be-
side him.
“Cnt down that wall!”
Scanlon struck a terrible blow on
the springy pine boards that formed
the north side of the room. Gies fol.
lowed. Their axes rebounded as if
they were striking a stone wall,
they never pansed for an instant. In
ten seconds the wall was down. Oat
side of it the plates of sheet iron stiil
held firm.
“Btand firm!" shouted Wendt,
The trackmen leaped back. Wendt's
big body drew itself np to its full
neighty his ax swong high, and then
crashed against the iron. The handle
snapped short, but the head was
driven through. Wendt's big boot
finished the work. Ten half-suffocat-
ed men crawled out on the main roof
of the elevator.
Far below, blurring together into
ove vision of white, a thousand anx-
ious, upturned faces gazed at them.
A faint shout of relis! came np. In
one swift glance the firemen saw the
fire-tngs, the pride of the department, |
frond coughing and granting in the river
below; they saw twanty's leads cooling
freight cars on the siding; they saw
the tops of the streams of water that
came almost ap to them, then opened
like white blossoms and fell back in
spray. They could hear the shrill
Leia PA
sent in that the
were on fire
Perry, the
of timbers, a rash
air, snd from out of »
rn the fire there
rush and roar of the fire, and then the |
shouts of the marshal, borue up to!
them faintly above the din:
“Come down! come down!”
But going down was pot such an
easy matter. At their foet the edge |
of the slate roof, built something like
a mansard, pitched on a steep angle a
dozen fest downward to a narrow,
ledge supporting the rain. gutter. Six
{yards from the bottom the top of &
four inch stand pipe crooked over the
edge of the roof,
Down below the marshal was eail-
ing their attention in pantomime to
this pipe. It was their only salvation,
They knew that well enongh.
‘an you do it?" asked Wendt,
| without a quaver in Lis voice.
““Ithink 1 can,” was Quirk’s an-
swer, “IU's better than burning.
Quirk's lips set tight. A fireman ia
trained to take chances, bnt
chances as these, He sat u on
the edge of the roof, with his feet
hanging over. He anst slide down
the steop slate mansard, now slippery
with water covered with cinders, and
he must stop, if he could, at the gut-
ter ledge, which was only & fow inches
wide. If he did not stop—the lit-
tered planks of the court were a han-
dred feet below,
A fireman may not think of his
wife or of his babies at such a time.
He must sct without a tremor and
take his chances.
Quirk slid. His rubber boots
struck the ledge, his body bounded
up, for a moment he stood balanced
like a tight-rope walker on the gutter
ledge, sud then he fell back on the
slate mansard, sale. Below, a thou-
sand men with clenched hands and
bitten lips groaned their relief.
Gies came next. Quirk, who had
steadied himself, caught him. Then
Gries canght Christianson, and Chris-
tianson caught Fuller, It was Green-
man's turn. Greenman was blue
about the lips. He told Scanlon that
it was a terrible risk to take.
“Steady, now,” shouted Wendt,
hoarsely. *‘Don’t look down.”
Greenman slid, He looked at the
same moment. His rubber buot
struck the ledge, oaught—then slipped,
“I'm lost!" he shouted, as his body
shot dizzily over the brink.
~ “No, yon ain't,” growled Faller,
] grimly. He bad caught Greenman
by the collar.
A moment both men tottered on the
ledge, one below and one above. A
mercifal burst of smoke shot up and
man to the top of the
”
said the marshal
ititwe can, The south
Suamty's lieutenant,
window. I
ladder erept
with twentiy's
at the windlass.
d axes, and behind
strugg company
ha lead of hose,
thay senrried up »
y to i belt room at
} bed like a pigm
¢ broad plain or th a
foet away blazed the
ue there was amoke |
— dense, J w,
smoke of ~ burning grain.
- choked with it.
ot the friend! Delt
| crowd. When it passed Greeman was |
- { lying limp on the ledge, with Fuller's |
n | Lang A708 iwisted ia his collar,
‘and slid swiftly downward,
‘eame (Hes and Faller in order,
1% going to fall
I's only the belt
inmoke and flame
{were singed.
But
hes other men followed withont ae > |
{ cident, Wendt Inst. Then began the |
perilons journey along the eighteen |
feet of ledge to the stand-pipe. Quirk
led, sliding along the slippery slate
mansard, never trusting one foot in |
‘ the narrow gutter nufil the other was |
| firm, :
i From below, it seemed as if the ten
So close to
AYR
men were walking on air.
the edge of the roof did they tread
‘that the crowd saw the bottom of each
foot as it was lifted,
At last Qnirk clasped the stand. pipe
Then
Hurry, there!” shrisked a voice
above the roar of the fire. “The roof
At that moment there was a crash
and a bright barst of flame behind
them. Greéeman, stilt terrified, redcled
wildly,
“Steady, romred Wendt,
honse-—not the |
thers '
roof."
Greenman, Seanion, Christianson
want one after the other, spinning
down the iron stand-pipe like boys on
a peeled pole. until only Wendt was
jeft.
“Hurry! hnrry!” came again the
marshal's voles, A great stream of |
water drenched a flame that had sprang
out mat helow the gntter wheres Weniit
stead, The erowd was silent, with
every musole tense.
Wendt grasped the stand pipe, now
almost burning ho! and alid. An in-
stant later he was swallowed np in
There was the
growl of yielding tumbers, then a snllen
roar, and a voleano of fire ponred np-
ward out of the elevator's pit. The
roof had falien,
Two firemion ran forward with their
12 | helmets tothe heatand dragged Wendt
away. His hair and his eyebrows
His hands vere raw
with barns,
“I guess I fell most of the way,” he
said, laughing weakly.
There the incident ended. It had
lasted just twenty minntes from
twenty minutes after twelve o'clock an
Ootober 26, 1896, when the Bangor
ladder tipped the elevator window, to
forty minates after twelve, when
Wendt came down. The Two Sisters
were destroyed, and more than a mil
Hon bushels of wheat were left soak.
ing in the river or smoldering in the
ruins-but po hives were lost,
The searred marshal was asked after
squealing of the engines for coal, the |
are badly rusted and in most of them
ot such |
the fire if such cooiness and daring
shonld not be rewarded.
“Rewarded!” he said, graffly
“Indn’t they escape? It is a part of
the business "Youth's Companion,
ANCIENT FORT UNEARTHED.
It Was Ocenpied by French or Spaniards :
Two Centuries Ags.
Buried a dozen feet nnder a Neo
braskas sand hill, twenty miles west of
Sionx City, Towa, the remains of a
stone fort have been discovered. Ia
side the walls the searchers fonnd a
quantity of haman bones and frag.
ments of arms and armor at least two
centuries old.
The patterns of the weapons gud ar:
mor indjpate that the owners were
Frenchmen or Spaniards, though there
is no record of any settlement in this
region of either nationality at so early
a date,
The find was made by John Ham-
mond, & farmer, who stumbled on one
coraer of the fort while excavating for
a drainage diteh. Stone is » rarity in
North ate Nebraska, and Hammond
was 80 much surprised that he carried
bis investigation further, and has now
uncovered au area about 150 feet by
F300 feet in extent.
The fort itself is built of bard red
sandstone, much like that so exten.
sively quarried now at Sioux Falls,
Sonth Dakota. The walls are about
three and one-half fest thick and twelve
or fifteen feet high, with small towers,
evidently for sentries, at intervals of
twenty or twenty-five feet.
The armor includes a half dosen
breast-plates, two or three steel caps
and 8 morion, or helmet, of the pat-
tern much worn by French and Span.
ish soldiers of the fifteenth and early
part of the sizteenth centuries. All
many holes are eaten completely
through the metal
Amoug the weapons are several two-
handed swords, the head of what was
evidently a battis-axe and the wheel:
locks and barrels of ancient maskets,
The bones sre much scattered, and
from them it would be impossible to
say how strong the fort was garri-
soned,
Wp en Spr,
Canadians Buy American Fruit.
Consul Graham, of Winnipeg,
Manitoba, says that the fruit growers
of the United States (chiefly those of
the Pacific slope] supply at least four.
fifths of all the green fruit consumed
in Manitoba and the Northwest Terri:
tory of Canada. Canadians now,
however, are making a vigorous effort
10 captare their own home trade,
Cold storage plants and packing
houses are being constructed and
transportation lines are being worked,
The United States system of packing |
fruits has been adopted, and a much
stronger bid will be made for these |
markets than heretofore. Still great-
er care in selecting, packing and ship- |
ping will be necessary on the part of |
American fruit growers if they would | i
continue to bold their supremacy in|
the market.
Instead of a Striag on His Pinger.
“Williams,” said Flint, who had!
been in a brown study for several |
minutes, “what is the name of that
British General they have been mak.
ing so much fuss over?’ “‘Kitchener,
isn't it?” responded Williams, “That's
it!" exelaimed Flint, delightedly. !
“Kitchener! That brings it up alli
ve | wiped out the horrid sight from the
right. I know pow what it was my
wife asked me to attend to this morn
| ing. She wanted me to advertise for |
in cook, "Chicago Tribune,
rail
highly
purposes for 1893-19000 and the n
gress has already heen made,
ten years ago it was emphatically as-
eause the roads were so poor.
| America is the greatest eyeling coun:
Waste Froon Deficient Care.
The best roads are sometimes se. |
verely injured by very heavy storms, |
but, as a rale, they do not suffer |
nearly az mueh as either roads which
neglected or those which
worked” in the sdf
tions will reduces the
Cominimam.
Thera are, however,
oanag |
whieh will hold water; [2
left fat, or very nearly so, ani
meaMeiont orown to shed water:
grass aud wends
along their edges nntil
fa}
water
not kept clean and open, and (4
than the rowd-bed and
C Bpon at, f
Thess defects are maialy due to the |
impression that a stone road onee laid |
peads no attention for a year or two,
ara |
fashioned way, |
It is practically impossible to prevent |
injury in case of storms of extraoe- ||
; dinary severity, but proper preeau- |)
dancer to a! a Ri. si
many miles of |
stone roads in this country which are {
not fitted to resist heavy rainfalls be. i
(1! the sarfasces ars allowed to |
get ratty and 15 retain depressions |
they are ||
have |
are allowed to grow |
cannot |
ran off freely, and the side ditches are | a
in
places the earth at the aides 19 higher | or
i oWgy
I turns th: water i
Table
Nov, 20, 15908
Main Line
Yenvie rest Faerun,
wn Sho Express, saws
» wri Ax ovmaneeiation, wee da va
win Fane Fox press
con
MiB a om
Selig i
Ww Ga om
badeiph a ® ii
Te nve
dinedenn ys
Sapitie ¥ £3 pow dal
p Pasoor od
Hee Fx Jes
+ entae So
hh rerey Wel
4 SA
ne, dnily “to
we ¥ i ays FRAY
¢ ambris and ciearfield
Juve ik} i he
1 iat
far $1 Aut?
ys
and after that only an annual looking: |’
Over and perhaps a scraping and a few |
repairs, The result is thst the roads
deteriorate very rapidly and are an
as they econid and shonld be
only for a few months when new.
This method is neither practical por
economical; it does not Reap roads in
good shape and it costs mach more
in the end Proper road tusinte
nance 18 as amporiant as correc! oon
struction; we casnot do better than
pe fit hy the experience of Faropean
ountriey and follow in principle if not
detail, the thoronghk system of eon.
stant care and repair that has heen so
developad 1» France —L. A
W. Ballstin,
A T
govonid
To Convert the Farmers,
A shrewd League member has a
scheme which he thinks is great for
the purpose of winning over the farm.
ers who oppose road 1mprovemvent,
first, booanse they do not hike to be
tated, and, secondly, because they
dislike “them siokle fellers” Thera
i* novelty in his ides, and, provided
the expense could ba borne and the
proper labor devoted to working it
ont, it wonld probably he a success
The plan 1s to dnd a few farmers in
every township who live on the rogds
which need rebuilding and present to
each of them a bieyoie on condition of
their jearning to ride and then attend.
ing to theirinstraotion.
ing the enthasiasm that the wheel be.
Understand.
gota, the scheomer argnes that the few
furmors will first learn how poor their
roads are, then become good rosds
souverts, and flaally convert their
seighbors who are oppositionists, The
argument seems to iw a sosnd one
far ax the likehiliood of the few bacon.
tng converts is soncernsd and also with
rear fo the probability of their max
in: converts but the cost, aven if 1
was atiempted on a bDmited sosle,
makes it prohibitive, nnless, indesl,
some of the manafacturers, wioss
b Raion it would grestly
sonid be indaesl to ec-operate. The
seheme has not been formally pre
sented to the Leagae oBoers and there.
fore is not taken seriously «Xow York
Sun,
Sores se,
Proposed Californias Laws,
The next California lagistatnre will
bave to consider several mils looking
toward road 1 sersasnt in that State
One of them proposes to elassif iy the
roads o as State highways, couaty-
thoroughfares aad distriet-roads,
Twenty sight principal roads are ann.
merated to comprise the
the most important roads in each
eonnty will be set apart to form the
second-class and the remaining roads
to constitute the third clans,
Another ball provides that when Sve
miles or more of highway of the fen.
glass shall have been properly con.
structed In any connty, the Sate shall
secept and maintain it and that $104,
000 shall be appropriated for such
SPR
sary sums thersafiser, Existing jaws
are to be atendad to arrangs fur tha
Blate to take possession of roads da.
elared to be State-highways, and for
the expenditare of haif of the annnal
ey $0
Bag
: rond tax in constricting and maiatain-
ing permanent roads,
Ansevicanw Hosds Are Improving.
America 1s & conntry of poor roads,
- and those workiag for highway reform
are laboring in a wise and just canse,
but it is worth noting what great pro
Ab ns
serted in England that the bicrels
eonld never become popular here be
To-day
try in the world, and there has been
| more advance in road improvement
during the last decade than in any
previous twenty years Baltimore
| News,
Items For Crusaders,
The bad road's name ia “mud *
Several of the main streets in San.
tiago de; Cuba have been macad.
amized,
Macadamized streets should be
scraped immediately after a rain if they
| are to be kept clean.
The New Hampshire Division, L.
A WW, Las prepared a road improve.
{ ment bill to be introdoced at the next
session of the State Legislature
After May 1, 1899, all wagons in the
i provines of New Brunswiek intended
to carry ss munch as 8 ton and a half
will be required to use tires at least
fonr inches wide,
The wheel, like many another good
thing, Is an excellent servant an in
| comparable ald to health but it 13 &
terrible master, a death-daaler.
: Ph
i;
Brat class: |
For mtew maps, oi
or fhrvsn Thom PF
Finh syvsoe Piiisteim Pa
cB Hote hineen
Ln. Mgr
Aitoona & Philipsharg Cemnesting
CONDENSED TIME YAGLY.
Pose, Mgt
Egpets
ia eer November 30, 1897.
Tren Weel Taps
RM Soy
200 100
rig Li
2¥ 10 Aa
247 LAT AN
AX, PM. OPN
you
#0
ia
ra
Hamey
Hout wedmie
ii Wok 1
bo
Lipp y 0 1.40
Foi Mili aX is 31. i
Hontedals, B38 17.3
Hamev... S47 LAT
rE , Fa
A a 8 & io
& 90
HOA
5 43
®t
EF frail In
Ramey
Hoatedaie
Chemin Mis
Philipsburg
ax
552
rik
3
iam |
sliam
0 en :
ay
+. + have their :
same grape, the only vineyard of
pa
AM.
fa Hea! U7 v
Bamay |
Houtedalwn
Shun a Mills
Phtlipabarg
x87
44
«50
I Union (Satie
YR
Losec trong At Phillpalagep
Fon | with ail fhwel Creel
for nnd from Bedisfonte, Look Haven, Wit
menort Readieg, iisdeigbin sed New |
York: Lawrepsevtiv, Uarpine Watkins
tiensvy and Lyons, Cleariiebd MaliaToe and |
atten, Carwepsvitie, Dalle Pascsotsw:
wey, Bidgway FHradlfont Baffals and!
Boohewter
Al Epvaialn Tor Bont dais
PER traing Leaving Tyr
For fail informa
and Ramey with |
» atid FX
ET
Go KH Goan
Laws Fa ny *~ %
te Se , nt bo es
MRS,
Mrs. James Brown Potter is
& charming acires hb
worninn, whe has ¢ Pepa tion
Landon of being a most dotinh
Last summer she
in Barleish by
2 rather
Sid
fone.
Hive
wall
be © ow Fe
#51 (Rhy
JAMES BROWN POTTER.
ff fram the untahle word,
ideally comfortable
MRS
Epgiring hero
Within all was
anid on the well
shade of a spreading Shestun!
Mra, Potter took her al fresco
gad then wandered through fia quiet
oid garden,
arranged in curving flower beds but
they are a source a
light to Mrs Potter,
iudes to them as “my pets”
no live stack.” she explains.
flowers are sufficient
who tenderly ab
“1 hava
!
| Faller Ban
; Pakerneaen §
i
PAR Lek ;
¢ my TR el T
La
JAMES BROWN POTTER.
sot only |
We a feme-loving |
in
ful hos
Heed quietly |
in Bt John's wood, | 0
fringed with trees
i ro Sha
I Exp ay
Pn
-Rept lawn, beneath the |
tree. Ang BOR iv
Inne |
redolent with the perfume
of spire and roses. The flowers iu this whe
¥ A
peaceful garden are old-fashioned and
f pever-ceawing de
PARTE IID LOG
Or
| the country, here and in Europe,
"| them
i the
po | Paroside
PA BE Sia |
Ratiromd trains :
+ Heston Roan 1
i oad Time]
ailiey | T he Speer Wine Company.
Passaic N. J.,
ineya ards stocked of the
3m 3
tne K
try. the vines
{ pli lanted here
The Speer
Br ay andy are now
Ina In
? § reg ros the the world,
| the Mr Tic ]
character
RR
{ strong and vigon
Fa medic
body and high
cxnrelied. in-
valids, weakly Ee renng, especially
nales, and the aged are made
nis by its use, as
nal wine it has no equal;
as a family wine it has no super.
First class physicians all over
.
Ef
who have tried them recommend
as 150 ki
A close study by
effect of Gifferent
on the system
physicians on
brands of
wines convinces
| them of the superiority of the Speer
: | Passa wines for their patients.
Sold by Druggists and (3rOcCers.
pi ittsburg & Eastern Time
Table 53
iC IAKE EFFECT NOV In 1898.
Westward
frave i
Se
Poser hy row June
| Ma hailey
Pabmtinare t
Tu
Sgssueneil
Sunderland
iw tak ft
Passov aed
Erion Lpsmapleil
B50 BRAG AG Bal BL BA de ee ed ©
BEWEEE
Fulivr Bau : 3
Eastward
i N .
#
>
v
ar
Leave
-
“
fer
i Beige Bean 1
RR Tl a
Huarnalds
1 “xfs
\ 4 Tat ¥
GS ER RE RD ARR ey
CREST uanand
Ald ol RN
potent hinEblE
fd ania selirud, sad FLo& ON. Wom
“at Whiskey Yan wd dik Modem & Nowe
le mona sl Medteees with P x x Ww,
ruins will ran
Matiaftey aod
Ean fy VEEN Xe Sat
mH Hicks rapes Manager
——— a
3k . ns
Sey.
AAR
Beech (Creek Railroad.
NY CEH BRB ER {uo Lewsoo
Condensed Tine Table,
Bead down
Fup Mail
NouE Nos
am pm
Naw xX jan
Noy 2 a
_ 14
as To
~
143
i 1 a
CHEE a3
Kerry
Now Miia
Canta
Migetelin
am wrEhed i
SE eg wR vf ul wd FE
Woon Ld
Hig of
Wal eeion
Morr Stat + Bikes
3 Wi
Je LL, mbt Fagus the Lx
ATR NB
> Frigg
Pasnitd ne QB R
a
“nr
Had!
»F we
4 wg 3
iw AY sinh A TRIBGE SE ai
NY van Yh ar BiB
|
BE gsifuysgluIugrrasbouy
PE pom
sUmily Werkdays iB 3 pin Sunduyy
THA Ge pa Masti
ht New YorR passengers Jriveiipg Sia Phil
fide pha on 1090p wm wie Kom Wi
hang cabs at Msi tngdion Se, Praga
Cds tiorme AT WI lanuipart with Phila.
chi pha sist Reading setisonl at Jones Share
with the Fair Mrook Hi: al MIG Haid
with Venti Hatisewd of Pertroey ymin; wt
} Phatipebairy with Pert av vin maiiroed and
Ld emptied
“Ta ma 3
They are quiet |
and restful and cool in snmmer, and |
fn the winter they seem to promise |
beautiful things in the way of warmth
and happiness for the season to come”
But it is the stmplicity and the unaf-
fected hospitality of her London houses
that makes it a favorite resort for her
friends. Burleigh house {zs only
small, unpretentious. gabled rustic res.
idence, hic
passer-by.
the walled
sght—an
ideal home.
rs SS A Se
The Cear's Proposal
"Wall Jim vot 2've think abart
Czar ¢
disarmament
Jim—"Well t's
amm
RAS
at iis me an |
my old woman, male, when there's a
bit of a shindy brewing The one wot
| proposes. peace {8 the one wot ain't got
‘old of the poker.”--Fun.
a
iden by the trees, to a chance |
To those who have entersd |
garden §t is a place of da ©,
the |
* Ronski ia and this ‘ere universal |
|
i
Viton & Phibioebary Conapeting mitnossd a3
with Phe Butta, Howhostor and
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