The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, July 24, 1902, Image 2

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    A i A £0 ESI LE SRY shan
SF HS A A
etore Judge Chetiain
3
men like you owl ‘thlef' und hound : -
the poor devils to prison, Read my One Bundred and RETORTT EWE species |
books on Kleptomanis. or if you won't of blind crestures are knows ¢ » selepes,
that the foorwaliers to gould.
oy gre always Joking out for.” ET |
It was only three days later that De. | It Ix sald that tn prehistoric times |
fective Jobn Broderick, of the central the Incas of Pern built reads that Te
detall, arrested Mary Brown for the fended from the tropleally heated val
| Inreeny of three distiond rings from a loys np the mountains to the regions |
tray on the showease of Poor & Allen of perpetus] frost using the natural as i
. |The salesman and the detective hoth phalt rock. and these roads are ib good
_| declared it to be a “cold case of steal” condition to-day.
The justice of the peace held Mary | abi
the trial was held gull, while inv Sight over jong distances,
Coke was there as the jewelers’ rep. B00 to 1400 fear. If they pass below
Brow Grand J indisted | The wild duck. the hawk and the sea |
So —~ Ee id Ptouched of evil stricken info hideous |
| msuslly remain at an shtitude of from :
presence was a pollstion x spared to |
do that, COMPS Over the Noritesst
I Side Medical School next Monday and discovered In great ERVER,
#1 hear me lecture to the physicians of i
{ the future on the honest this. Why. I In the Gulf of Mexico there is 3a Isl |
1 tell you again that some of the cleanest 8nd where the beaches change color :
COBSCIences on earth are in the breasts twice dally with the tides. When nn-
«if that's where the conscience is Aity- coversd the sands ars purple. bot the
| ated—of some of these State street Inflowing tide speedily transforms them | maa ¥, this sink of depravity, this WOuld {Or 2 moment he so foolish ax to | course, the matchmaker will pretend
! supplios nothing so en as To i
experienves Thirty thousand peopbs,
{ many living blareeless lives with the
cosumsunity lefl to enjoy the fe of |
‘his senves. Priest, philanthropist sie |
| resentative to ald in the prosecution,
the level of the highest Sying Kite nf a
| continue an ignchle existence!
Brown when s child stole blackiwery actly measured hy the sitiiude of the
jam from the buttery. that in later Kites
years she had taken other things, hut t ni
in each case had she been impelled not | The plow is an Instrument of almost
amounted to 8 disease to possess thivzs abd protably will reniain for all tine,
that were not ber own. nnknown. lis origin goss back to the
strength of argument a good desl of Ged iis invention fn Osiria the Chinese
Mary's beauty and much of the fore to Gin Hoang the Phoenicians to Da
Jurymen seemed to have level beads, brews to Tubal Caln. ete. But it i to
and the fact that Mary had selected be assumed that the plow, however
the costliest rings In the tray to slip Iu Simple during antiquity. is not dos fo
amount of mental responsibility.
Coke wan well satisfied with the sita. | | assumed its present + complicated form.
ation of affairs. ‘When to his utter
£ nent the wr $ About thirty tolies orth of Pekin
the capital of China. there are twenty.
in fact, the preparation of the case, its tandem line the fae Is epsily ds
{ presenting and fhe sppeal to the jury verned by allowing for perspective The :
for conviction were mainly his. The ite measurements are relatively aevnr
| defense pot ia a plea of kleptomania. ate. beranse during the prolonged fight
| Mary Brown was good looking. The of thousands of wild ducks the kite !
jlury was told to look at ber. The jury ring can be hauled In and paid out
{did. The jury was then told that Mary Sutil the altitude of the dnc %a Ia ex.
. He was insobordinate amd vicious, and |
| dungeon under the street. We can
| bmaugine thet Bis food was thrown into
{him as If be were 53 animal with a
[ phous wish that be would best his
: brains our agalost the walls of bis
c¢ell., He Baz told the story of that
by wickedness but by 8 desire that divine origin. whose tre lps enter iw
| ably it was drawn from bis in broken |
| syHables while be siared vacantly at!
Coke managed to offset by sheer bonrlest sges. The Egyptians ated. |
| rumble of Pelee: the hick walls of |
of the kieptomanical argnment. The O90. the Persians fo Huschenk. the He. |
¥
E
2
3
$
i
i
| ¥olcano invading bis refuge. lo the
awial silence that followed be knew |
that death bad come upon people in |
her glove gave evidence of & pretty fair one SAR, and that it was S ehanged asd Bt. Pierre, and like one forgoiten he
: iran grating yielded to his blows and |
: Be stumibled into a larger cell. Hot
BU. | cinders were sifting down from the
came hosting for
Ard fram % sete 18 The For rear of a |
courtroom. Attorney Coke sighed
when he saw hin friend. the allenist,
“Is all up now.” he said to himself.
The eminent physician took the stand,
He declared Ta a voice almost
§
i
a
i
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four animals, each of which is cut out | :
of ane plece of sandstone a little farger
than their natural size and pinced |
| some twenty feet from each other
&
¢
&
i
3 :
There are four of each snimal-twao
pairs of camels. two of ponies two of |
Bons, two of unicorns. two of ele- |
p| said the doctor,
r| sympathetic that in his opinion Mary | Dhants, tws of goats— one pair standing |
| Brown was a kleptomaniac; that she | | Soa the other reclining. This remarks. |
{ bad taken things because of an inelina. e avenue of animals In stone leads to ‘ ra i 1 . =H
1{ tion to take that was so powerful that | the King's Tombs wherein rest the Jos od hus, he > a tl
8 | neither the hutoan mind nor the human | #thes of the last Chinese dynasty. The Jo 20 . . Yalta
hand could Tenist. “These people peed tombe are bullt in a vast valley, inte a a Th a
: thy. not ent, gentlemen.” | Which all good influences are ot | Womid ind the case of Raoul Sartont
| to centre. The timber of which hess
There wis 50 use trying to stem the
Mary Brown.
was in deep thought. He said so little |
it. { and Jooked so Immersed In his musings
b| that his wife regarded him x bit ¢u-
| riously. Finally a gleam came into the
{lawyer's eye. “Jane” he sald. “Dr.
ks | Broadhead and I bave been collectors
18 | of nature books for years. haven't wel
1d | That's true, you say, and, yes. we both
| bave very fine collections. My collec.
tion, however, isn't as five as It unwed
to be, and I haven't sold any books
§ wither. 1 think Til eall on the doctor,
for an hour or so to-night”
Two hours later James Coke retursed
home. He bad a parce! under his arm.
{ "What have you in the package,
ames?" asked his wife.
The lawyer's answer was not direct,
found that Dr. Broadhead was ont.
ait in his library for awhile until he |
back. 1 had the best chanee in
3
E
| from my personal observation I am
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3
and I toll the maid that I would gverdane.
:
| tombe sre built was Brought from Siam
royal family of China show a great re- |
; Bpect for thewe tombe and an oficial |
said to be a descendant of the Kings in
| Placed in charge of them. Berend the |
* That night at dinner James Coke |
avenue of animals are stone statues of
six civil and milnsry officials,
Pueger in Sen Bathing.
In an sddress to the State Medical
Association at New Haven, Conn the
brook, said that the results of his prac. :
tice and long observation have oan. |
vinced him that there is danger in fre.
quent sea bathing. He sald: “That
salt water bathing is & pansces for all
iin seems somehow to be a prevailing
fopression. People from the Interior |
at shore and walering places. Bat
convin tha }
cet that sen bathing Is overestl. ‘also white. This paper Is the pillow
mated as a benefit—or. rather. it ie:
1 am accustomed to sting that far :
the average child or adult the maxi
1 p time to look over his books. Did. mum of henefit is atdained by not more
ak what I have In the package, than one-half hour a week five min.
ane? Well” and the lawyer cut the |
tring and took off the paper. “Hers iv | ternate days, and further. if, after thor.
my copy of “Walton Complete Ang |
T.' & first edition that disappeared
steriously from my shelves two |
ears ago. Here 1s White's Natans)|
History of Sellvirne’ that went the w=
the Walton Ht year age. Here is oy
“Aristotle on Birds® sad here are
he rest that I have been mourning,
Mdane. t's curious, n't {t, bat In
book cases are locked "—Chicago Rec
ord-Herald.
Heavy ordnance is not quoted in the
steel market, and it has no established
Watervilet arsenal, however, reports |
| the cost of the goods it manufactures,
| and some of the more striking figures
are as follows: Twelveinch breech.
loading rifle, $310.245815; another style
| Is $1444 cheaper: 10-inch breech load
ing rifle, $28.424.48; 8-inch breech-load-
{ing rifle, $1220.22: 6inch rapid fire
_ gun, $I527.08; B-inch breech leading
_"irifle, field piece, $2677.20, though there
| Is another style that cost a good deal |
| more. The 12-inch breech-loading mer-
: 10.852.57, and the 10°
| inch mortars cout $6856.57. This report
tars cost only |
does not give the cost of ammunition
morning and evening gun fire for
a thirty hires cents each.
dome ‘Manson. editor of the Eagle
at Christine, says the Hankinson iN.
WS, Is il with smallpox and the
Broadhead is ont to-night Jecturing on |
| kKleptomania. ‘The next time tha be
- calls here, my dear. soe to it that the
{tor the large guns, but the Frackford
{arsenal makes blank cartridges for
mes.
are to be J
but in the regular form, and the trial
utes every day. or ten minotes on ale
ough rubbing, there remains a feeling
. of lassitade, an Inclination to He down ;
or the desire for a stimulant, the time |
must be shorteped to that point at
which, after the hath the bather ex.
hibits a full reaction and a desire to
resume his play or occupation imme
diately.”
Kkye Court-Martialed. :
Colonel Riles, of the ordnance divi
sion of the Department of the East
Luited States Army a few days ago is. |
sted an order condemning to death one |
Skye by birth a terrier, by profession |
4 mascot, being attached to the Forty-
ninth Coast Artillery, stationed at Guv-
. be hard ol te 1 jganery Island. The order raised a
| price 1 ardware trg
storm, and a drum-head court-martial
Was convened. Arguments were made
for and against the little dog. aud the
court finally decreed that he should be
| banished from the sland. He is pow
A prisoner of war at the ferry slip cn
the New York shore. i
The offenses of Skye were many, the
culminating one being the destriction |
of the colonels lawn in the most meth
odical, complete and hopeless manner.
All the papers In the vase were made
attracted great attention. ‘rhe affair
will be officially reported to the War
Department. Skye is a briliaat dog, |
and the court-martial could not harden
itself to eliminate him. — Washington
A Dangerons Irritant.
The most dangerous vegetable irr
tant poison is that of the ltchwood tree
of the Fiji Islands. One drep of the
sap falling on the hand is as painful as
A touch of a bot iron.
hea
A woman's ides of really belog loved
‘have you tell ber 0 a different
thick, were piled on the Soor, the top
lone covered With coarse-wovens but
| beautifully clean white linen, The cov-
ering is the same, only the enabion in
are particularly comvineed of it. snd ! lighter in weight The pillow? A Fite
ctice it very f ; ‘tle white wooden rocking stool, four
ba ery Jreely In their outings inches wide and eight inches long.
i liolding fn its boliow top a small silk
: tase, and is removed each morsing.
with Irs tinted sik and white, every.
Cast askle thar pretty, dainty. litte
; npidagiing willl dreams of howe, and [|
| leepily murmur a “God bless all the |
dear ones” and “Oyasumi asebase”
: New York Mail and Express.
ln the seventeenth century Jobn Joss
habitants resembled those of ancient |
| Britons, and Sir Thomas Herbert, an.
among these loadings. A century later
. reports from several traders and others
. were received of an Indian tribe that |
possessed manuscript, spoke Welsh and |
Abraham Chaplain, of Kentucky, that
his garrison near the Missouri bad
i been visited by Indians who conversed
(in Welsh with some Welshmen in his
The sole survivor of the eataciyem at
| Bt Pierre was 4 brotish negro. s felon
3
!
|
“isolated in 8 ocll beneath the sidewsik
which might fittingly be called 5 don
eon, for only pefraciory prisoners /
| were confined there. ied Kartout]
ove of nn and the fenr of God in
thelr hearts wore redaeed to releinesd |
rpses hy one blast foom the furnace |
of Mont Pelee. and this dreg of hy
i
utterly worthless outcast was pers
mitted 10 Hive, The Dest is often taken ||
and the worst jefi, but hers wus 8
-
Japan ‘Bas seme aiinge customs : i
tion that are at variawcs with our West
arn dese om the question. Is the fires
i place. love dosn't ester ed the oop
tract Bt nil
The primary prrpose in a Jupanews |
girl's marriage in tn grt Ber piped
where she will be well connected and | :
cared for No mother in all Japan
Wien 4 sirl rinchos a nusrisqiile
ame this "go-tetwoen” casts about for
: & Busband for ber When be nds a
| young Pan wha mets all of Be
| ynireconents of the family end Drione
be arranpes for a mesiing wilh the
| gir] and Yer mother
Another way is to armarms for a
| meeting st the houss of a irlend. of
think of giviag bre daughter in mar | that it fn quite by sccidest. sithouga
riage fo a young man who bad 10 | all of the party understand perfectly
‘home ready for her recention Fe
that It is by design
wile city foll extinguished with mor. | BUSt Rave the necessary means to. The girl is very shy snd Mides ber
81 terror in their eyes—a swift jody |
ment as of the destroction of the in- |
iguitons and the very refuse of that |
tor of charity, mother snd obild us!
shapes of death and a wretch whose |
Bartout could pot bave escaped if
be had teen 3 well-behaved prisoner, |
& short thine before the eruption had |
Iecome pecessary fo put hm lo the
terrible day in bis rude patois. Probe
his qoestioner. Sartout beard the |
bis Boke in the earth shook violently,
and he felt the scorching breath of the
street. The Beat was so Intense he
wis gind to run back and cower in the
| farthest corner of the cell he had
deft, sod (here Be remained stupitied
| With fear, Four days later the shrieks
of the crazed negro were heard by a
rescue party from the Fremeh cruiser
Suchet, and, almost dead from hunger,
thirst and burns, be was released. Fis
i Imjuries are not mortal and being
the ordeal he survived. A Voltaire
an aspiring subject for bis philosopay, |
Is fiction only 4 Victor Hugo sonid
{tide of the effect or 11 great slienist’s | Some five centuries azo. The present do it Justice. New York Evening Sun. }
Pa-| testimony. Not all Coke's eloquence
eri avalled a Jot The jury fled out
| 1orned around sind filed in andacquitted |
EA 6 SANE Ea ld
apesnue Beds.
I Bad anticipated serious Inconve
Denes in regard to sleeplog. bot 1 dis
oivered that Japanese beds fre not so |
| bad, after all. Of course, this is a very |
| nice hotel and, on account of my |
( friend. Mme. Sugimoto, whose family eo
name is highly booored In Japan, we!
L receive the best of attention, but my
President, Dr. Jobn H. Granie, of Say. |
ideas of Japanese living are sudergoing |
rapid changes.
Three matsize (that ia four by six |
feet: cushious, each about six inches
roll, covered with soft, tough paper.
As you stand and look at the bed,
thing looks foviting and comfortable,
bat, however enthusiastic ame may be
to Adopt Japanese customs, after the
frst balf hour of experience he will
rocking chair pillow,
The wooden screens bave been rolled i
oul, converting the porches into long
halls: the watchman whirls his rod of
Iron rings as be passes each bour: the |
Snel erien ate growing Txinter and
good nights. Florence M. Wilson, ia |
Welsh Indians in SAmerien.
Though public attention has lately
been directed to Welsh settlers ig
America, the question facks the great
interest caused ifn the eighteenth cen
tary by the statement that a tribe
of Welsh Indiana had been discovered,
lyn, in his “Voyages to New England.”
wenlioned thay the customs of the in-
other traveler of the same date, in bis
“Travels gave Welsh words In use
retained ceremonies of Christian wore
ship. Among other Information then
published was the report of Captain
company. Those Indians were thought
to be descendants of a colony said
to have been formed by Madoc, son of
Owen Gwynedd, on bis discovery of
America fn 1170 London Chrotivie.
An fajary to the tongue Is repaired
by nvature with more rapidity than is
the case with auv other part of the
system,
| care for Bis wife and be psust he sbile | | face beliind ber fan as she bows low
to show a creditable family tres i many times. Then she sotizes HMlush.
Without there eaventials he might love | - ing and mervous, behind ber mother
the girl to desperation and she might | | The young man at this meeting Josks
regard Bim with equal ardor, but lhe { ber over snd decides whether be will
would never get her | wed ber. It be agrees, the negotia
The Japanese maiden in any event | | tions are carried to 8 Snish. He pays
‘doer nol choose her own hushand It for the troussesn and the bride's
‘would no more ootar to ber to do saeh father provides the entire furnishings
(an xudacions thing than fo Bave cho- | for the house which the newly married
! se the name given her at Birth. An
interested iriend of the family, known |
| pair will occupy.
§ -
AS a “go-between,” attends to (ils mat- | t's 4 clear waste of time fo go oot
iy,
Cacartscd among radbish in te)
joft of an old bara In Harn county,
Ohio, where it had been hidden from
view for WARY Years an apcient BH.
hie bids fair to establish the claims |
of many heirs to an estate of many
millions.
Bas just returned from a two months’
in an effort to Jooate the descendants
of Absoiam Case. the vast estate of
the inte Leonard Case of (Gevelsnd. |
Ohio, will eventonily enrich hundreds
of his descendants, owing to the dis
covery of the old Bidla
Leonsrd Case Sr. died in Cleve
jand in 1864, leaving ome hetr to his
millions, 8 son, Leonard Case, Jr. The |
latter, a bachelor, died in 1580, lear
dng po will, bul property in the hexrt
of Cleveland vained at $8600 30 to
be divided among the 19) descendants
of his Tather's brothers and sisters,
cotering Sve generations
Two years ago Mr. Dunham, who is
a descendant of Absolam Case and a
i Woking tor insults
halt brother of Leonard Case, St.
guistly bigan the work of tracing and
kwating he heirs. The estate cone
wists chiefly of real efate in the bus
ness cetiter of Cleveland, taking In
the First National bask, (he gas Hght
| plant, the offices and yurds of the
Arcording to the statement of M.
J. Dunham of Middletown, N. Y.. who
Cleveinnd, & Pittsburg Railroad Co.
ihe Case School of Applied Scietce
and narrowly skips the residence of
John I. Rockefeller. It includes some
Afaen or twenty of the largest man
ufactaring establishments in the oity.
Ever since the death of Leosard
Case, Jr, the estate han been the
satisfactory results conid be obtained
‘beesass of the fact that the old fam
Hy Bible, containing certain resards,
sould not be found. As it contained
the pames of all the Cason ity dis
covery wis decidedly ssscatial to the
cation of the heirs
In the old barn loft Sarah Sears
kading, 3 Huron county, Olle It was
¢ lwikily discovered, and according to
Mr Donligwm, it is 15e key to the a
| Iaiianme nt of the heirs claims,
interest pow in view of the disssters
of St. Martidigue and St Vincent. He
writen as follows to the Neus Free |
Presse (Vienna): “Ope thing has al
ways been s puzzle to me. Here was
a fourishing city of about 30.006 ny |
habitants, most of whom evidently | so
i were welltodo. A few hundreds, at
most, lost their fives in the destron- ©
ion of the city: the rest sscapsi
The eruption of Vesuvius coatinued
oniy & few days after which the din |
trict returned to {is ssasl placid con- |
dition. In many places the deposit
‘of asbes and lava was only a yard
thick. and it was not more than three
{yards thick at any polal yot excn
i vated.
“How 4&4 it heppen that theses
thirty thousand hamelesg persons |
showed no desire 0 return fo their |
beautitsl houses, so well bait that
pry Pa, BC
FigH FORM ACQUAINTANCES.
See dA
¥
Peculiarities of Social Life in the
Tanks of an Aguariue.
It is a more of lesa familiar fact |
that fish of a kind flock together
Fishes kpow thelr ows kind and seek |
their company. ssys the Now York
Bun.
Put a number of each of Iwo or
three kinds of fshes in an aguarium
ank and the fishes of seach kind will ; Har
es ize one agother perfectly: ami | ¥eDior. but was on what proved to be
| the fishes of the several kinds bunch |
together and travel around together
Apparently fishes may aise know one [with such fortitude as he did. Through
another tadividually.
It not infrequently happens Um
among Gshes of the same kind in a
tank one will harry and drive about
the rest. or perhaps select one Ash an
nully and persistently harry the other,
nature it had sgainst the other fish
a personal animosity.
ind, it is sometimes necessary to taka
the harried fGsh out of the tank wo
save its life. If smother fish of the
same kind is then put in the tank in
the piace of the ome taken out, the
#erapper and pagger lets i aicne Ha
may not ignore it altogether. but he
loean’t harry it as he did the other.
But take the second fsh out after
‘wwhile and pat back the first one
and the scrappy fish goes to hustling
it right away; to all appearances the
fighter recognizes the other, individu
ally. It may seem strange. but such
Is the fact, as observed at the New
York Mquarium,
avestion con | they ate standing 1 © Gis y day. and
erating Pompeii which is of double
which could have heen restored, at
| the Time with very little labor? Why
i fid they mot make the siighiast at
tempt to regain their valuable prop
Lerty in land and bulidtegs furniture,
bronze. marble, guid. silver and jew
(eis? Did the men of that time Bave
little byve of dome that they could
leave it without 5 backward glance
at the first uaplessaniness? Were
: the Pompelisns so rich that the loss
‘of the'r perfectly appointed homes
appeared trivial to them. so that they
praferred setting slsewhere to restor
ing thelr city? Or did superstition
| prevent the attempt? This indiferent
: renunciation of their patrimony dy a
| whole ¢ityful is to me an insoluble
enigma which forces self the more
strongly fnpon my attention sow as 1
| walk alozg the finely paved streets
between fouses which nesd only new
roofs to make them again habitable ™
cnutii liad Bind wa ——
rs
| BEAUTY or COLLEGE SPIRIT.
Makes Educational Institutions a
Power in the Community.
Among the stortes told by Dean
; Briggs at the dinner of the Exeter
. Avsdemy alumni the other evening
i was one Intended to show how De
| wpirit of the academy survives in its
- pupils long after they Rave vassed
(from thelr alma mater “He was
then,” said the desn, "a Harvasd
his death bed
“The pespie at the hoapital had new
- #T seen any one bear as much
Cit all, as was sald by a medical visitor
from the university. he was such »
gentleman. Just before his death one
of the attendants ssked him if Be felt
| same jocal pain,
the object of its attacks, or it might |
be that tn the case of two fahes af | 4 (ngs medicine. Then instantly he
the same kind in one tank one would |p uene of the other man and said,
i'l beg your pardun. Tae medicine
4s though besides DAving A RAKING | may hyve had nothing to do with i’
“1 did not” he sald, ‘until you gave
“Now, nobody in that hospital who
saw that hoy die witnessed the scene
In such a cave sa that last descrid
without a stronger faith than they
had before in the school whose name
| he bore, When men from a college of
(school show such a spirit as that it
| means that they are capable of In
tense loymity to their friends. And
it is that lovalty, attainabie neither
by money nor by age, which makes a
school or tollege a power in the come Cia
manity, and Is as the breath of life
to it." — Boston Herald
Throughout the world blind men
putnumber blind women two to one
The pouch of a pelican is large
snough to contain seven quarts of
| Water,