The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, December 05, 1902, Image 7

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    Ww
Fi
Br a 1% me
SCANDAL.
EY WILLIAM HAMILTON HAYNE.
Far blacker than a raven’ 's wings,
~ It cranks and feeds on unelean things,
Nor lets the shadow of a doubt
Soften the lie it burrows cut,
With tongue biades keener than a knife,
It probes the lieeding wounds of life
el bare the motive and the deed,
And garrion makes from fower-seed.
: It angles love, and smears with just
So purity and trast
© Baitens nn sins of king or slave
and fouls with slime a new made
> ai ork Ind
ave
—~New Y
5
3 4 H. ¥ Z
went to Tripprille with a two:
Told purpose of making progress
- In painting and profit from his
RB combined eertain qualities bucolic,
~ sristocratic, scenic and atmospheric,
_ That are supposed to make for the up
Jit of sims aesthetic and pocketbook
plethoric. Mr. Brushington, strange
to say, was broke. He could paint,
but, in the city at least. he couldn’
ell enough to buy tubes. He conldn’i
afford to make daily excursions inte
the couniry for subjects, and be had
i pa #0 many board bills with pictures
‘that Tidwell and Farrish, the sculptor
who had descended to basrellef for
“elgar signs. calied him “the hash art
Ist? Besides a young woman's col
lege which gave tone to the town,
Prippville had a hotel In which, as
Brushingham well knew, the custom
Was to register when you came and
py when ¥ou go. The town was sity.
Ated upon the brink of a shimmering
river, with an old stone mill, a water
‘wheel, white hirch In the bottom laud,
. orchards ull over town and enough of
- sheep, pigs and eatile to keep Rosa
‘Bonheur (wrulng over In ber hallowed
ia grave.
So Brushingham, one fine April day,
landed In the Tripp House, with his
© field kit, hin color boxes, hix easel and
his trunk, and registered “J. Clifton
Brushingham, Artist” with a beld
flourish that looked good for at lenst an
week's board. Tripp, the proprietar,
~ Whose spectacles were girded on with
& Shoestring, made a deep chelzance to
“the distlngnished guest, and before
dinner was over ar Jig had completed
bis count of the micrnscople aide dishes
he was thoroughly at home and ready
for the artistic conquest of Trippyille.
By dint of painting Squire Dubwecks or:
chard and permitting Mr Dubeck and
all the little Dubecks to look over his
shoulder while he worked he learned
vodly share of the village gossip
He kpew, for Instance, that old Bi
Tripp was “tight as the bark of fa
- tree” but that his danghter Priscilla,
familiarly known as Pinkie knew
bow to make the old man's money
therefore resolved to “rot in Habe"
(ith the fair daughter of the house of
Tripp, for besides being a girl of gen
ous impulses she was 8 member of
he gradunatiog class at Tripp College.
and one of the “soclal favorites” as
2 #8 one of the most “beautiful and
ccomplished.” ot ceteras of Trinprille
By leaving his door open on Saturday
and Sunday and turning his easel to
It Jim woon succeeded in luring
er Jato his studio, and the result wa
& round of mutnal admiration BOBO,
In which the plump girl with ribbons
In ber hair and the slim artist with
brown cmls became very well ae.
quainted. At the end of his first week
Ji nt a few breathless days, fears
ing that Tripp would present bis bill
But his second Tuesday in the place
dawned brillantly 1a the alwence of
. and the presence of an invita:
ton to a “lags tea” signed by the fair
Pinkie herself and written in the
Ia pat angular ‘hand upon Nile green
At he end of the third week In
ville half the girls at the college
rere “going In” for art, and Miss Pin
kle was trying to get up a clase. She
had already pleked up a lot of his stu.
dio 3 and was forever babbling
it “atmosphere, " “motifs” and
00! Brushingham was invited
dress the “Twentieth Century
Ethleal Circle,” he donated a painting
of the Trippville mill to the First Con.
_gregational bazaar and received a let
ter of praise from Mrs. Henrlettn
Suggs, who won it in the raffle. When
bis month “was up” the artist was the
best-known man In town and very
popular, but when he sat down to
ure up his financial profits and losses
he found that his assets and his Habili
ties fully equal to the task of putting
bis balance on the wrong side of the
ledger. He bada't sold anything he
bad no pupils, his supply dealer was
commencing to “roar.” and, worst of
all, Papa Tripp was beginning to glow.
“er at him,
To accentuate his tribulations Mam-
ma Tripp was beginning to smile omi- |
ously upon him. He suspected that
8he was responsible for her husband's
leniency about the bill, but in her hon.
eyed words and radiant smiles he
heard and saw the bodeful craft of a
“mateh-making woman. Then Pinkie
suddenly came to his relief with the
confidential assurance that she would
take lessons, “no matter what papa
" Hae gave her a list of what she
ald need, and she ordered ‘enough
stuf to stock a studio. That bill for
Artist's materials put papa in an awful
temper. He didn’t say anything, but
ked at Jim as it he'd like tn
ottle lim. Meanwhile the lesson be.
gan and Mrs. Tripp Jury scintiliated
with a shiver,
{certain deceased aunt,
this “dove” fixed the status of Brogh
‘ingham’s diligent pupil.
wd that dove on everything in every
1 vonceivable cnlor, light,
pose.
He chase Tripprille because |
that fateful mory
gerness in Pinkie's behavior.
thought serlously of “jumping the
town,” but put awny {the tempiation
He van eer hig lst of
friends who wight stand a sight loan,
and he shipped what pictures hs had
finished to Tidwell with instroctions va
sell at any price.
Meanwhile Pinkie proved an enthns
siastle pupil. To stimulate her efforts
he get her to work copying objects of
still life. This progress fascinated Mrs
Tripp. and she uvearthed from the bot.
tors of an old closet a siuffed white
pigeon that had once dane service as
“the dove” upon a floral offering for a
The advent of
Pinkie paint
attitude and
Rhea hought conde of wooden
shovels, plaques, plates, screens, doll
Hes, lambrequine, canvas and frames,
tubes, brushes, easels and palettes till
the Tripp House began to lock lke an
art school and Papa Tripp faded into a
sinister looking, cankered skeleton of
himself. If Pinkie had only painted
sorpething besides that dove paps
might have kept up at least a sem-
blance of serenity, but turn where he
would it peered at him out of lis pink
eyes. It was In his soup plate. He
had it with his meat aml with hig des
sort. It flattered by lis desk on a
“hand-palated” calendar, it poised In
hia hedroom on a sky -blge plague. It
was 4811 over town, Instead of a dove
of pence it loomed before him ae a val
ture of discontent, a hind of prey. He
branded over Jt. He would have stolen
the hateful model “teelf {f he dared to
brave his wife sad Pinkie. But the
aceoursed thing had became the one,
priceless dol of all thelr Iares and pe
untes.
Brushingham was now in that state
in which Pinkls, her mother and old
man Tripp were obijects of almort
equal dread. The “dove” sesmed io
have drawn {hem together and to doin.
inate them Hike an evil gonlus in a kind
of tangled web that enmeshed and
threatened him,
When graduation day came he was
expected to be ene of Pinkiv's guests
of honer. He was almost 1] with
worty when he got the invRation. bat
the sight of it gave him new hope. It
meant that the girl add her mother
wonld be nbuent all day, Why not face
old man Tripp alone, demand his LiL
profuse 4 chock, cateh the toon train
for town and legve hin effects ag mp |
eurity ? Tole stire, be wodld loa then
gs well ss his Trippville fame, bgt
what thei? Was 48 pot better that to
be farevir posters with the ssntimen-
tal Viskie, bor oaling tnaans end thet
uldanitons and prépostierans birdy
tt tock cournge io politely decline
the jnvitation, byt he df 11 It took
more to Tacs the Jong sullering and
skuling Trivp, but fo “demand lite
BLT And then to dace to “stand off
the proprietor! Thos was nerve!
“Mister Tripp,” sald Broshingham
ing, when the sweet
girl graduate and ma had left the place
clear. “Mister Tripp, | abem, I'm
thinking of leaving, Two”
“Ahh” gasped the old man,
“Td Hkewali-to know, that is to gee,
shout what my bill
“Ro yer goin’ away, eh?
“Tm afrald se”
“Ye ain't acomin’ back, alr ye?
*I~ah--really can't say.
"Bee here. young feller, if yor sols
AWAY an ain't acomin’ back, I'l wake
the LHL ax triftin as
“I'm afraid 1 may peer got an Spr
portunity to refurn bvighktenod Jim.
“But If y#'ll take away that gosh
nged pigeon?
“Allright, air
“An all this dad gusted stoolo truck,
pack snd pose], and git cut "fore thes
fool Wwatien comes back.
“Coriainiy.”
“They won't be no bi at ail™ cone
¢lnded old man Trins with a yaw}
canesntrated rage and
Raftery, in the Chics
Yin 3 Ee
i
Jets 11 HLL
ra Reeard- Herald,
rediet
A Se SATS i he
Indientions of Strength io Newspapers.
There fire several features that eater
the make-up of a strong pewspaper and
enable an advertiser to gage its value
with reasouable accuracy,
First, comes the news feature. A
newspaper that covers the news field
thoroughly is likely to be a favorite
with the people and to enjoy a substan.
tial circulation.
Next, is its appearance, not so much
from the standpoint of artistic make
tp and typography as from that of
prosperity. The paper with a pros.
perous appearance will, generally
speaking, give the advertiser good ser.
vice.
Third, comes the question of rates
An advertiser is justified in refusing
to do business with a paper havieg |
fluctuating prices for space,
He cannot kaow when
racked,
Therefore, the ¢hief indications of
strength In newspapers are: Eater
prise in news gathering, a prosperous
appearance, and an invariable rate.—
Profitable Advertising.
recuse
botioa is
on A AAA Frat Arn in Mi sien
Pigs’ Likes and Dislikes,
A man who breeds pigs for the pork
trade was (alking the other day abom
the likes and dislikes of (hese ant
mals
“A pig” sald be, “hates a dog, but
admires a cow. 1 have seen my pigs
stand perfectly still and gaze at a cow
for many minutes at a time. They are
also fond of a horse, A horse, ag a
mutter of fact, geems to be pretty fond
of them, and 1 have seen horses and
pigs together In the same stall on a
very friendly footing.
“Plas are fonder of women than of
men, and they dislike children. They
are fond of cold weather. Rain is very
repugnant to them. Snow they like.
My pigs will sometimes frolic in a
suow storm like a lot of school chill
Srea--Philageiphla Recor?
He
throw, 8
§
aft
P Frenvh
| GRASSHOPPERS A BLESSING.
rd a
Kansas Farmers Find They Make Good
Pood For Turkeys,
Farmers in Western Kangaz, Fasten
Colorada and Senthwestern
Nebraska
no longer isok oh the
pela wnecdal to the New York Tribune
Instead the fusect ix regarded as a val
unble asset, ard the arrival of a swarm |
of them is hailed with as mach delight
As is A good harvest of sone miners
crop. The change in the attitude of
the farmers toward the grasshoppers
Is the result of the discovery that Shey
fire excellent food for turkeys,
Mare than a gusrter of a cotinry
agn grasshoppers destroyed thanaarids
of dallare’ worth of crepes in Kaneag
and gave this State
for suffering The farmers Hae
days raised no torkesz and the nxects
had full sway, Today thoorands of
turkeys are owned in the western part
of Kansas. The fowls Hes almost éx
clusively on grasshoppers, and
bird is sald to be able {0 constine be
tween a pint and 8 quart of the ingests
a8 day,
The discovery that grasshoppers
made good fom for turkeys was made
three years ago by Albert Whitlaek, a
Smith County farmer FOAL
he ralsed 800 rorkeys,
in
The next
grasshoppers 48 a
pest and a menace to craps, guys a Too
each
ite frst reputation |
RRA a As SA sy on
and nat only |
kept his own farm clear of graschap |
pers, Lut made 8 god pre
keys by renting they tn hin
who were troubled bn
pers. The next veur a
gan raising the turkeys
turkey eges under the
goon as the young fowik
enough to provide far the
were taught to hunt
ig easy to toarh them ss th
come very fond of the insects,
#1 1
the jr RS TY
¥ hh burg rE
‘hey set
heps, and
Vr
grass hapaers,
3
FEY
WORDS.
wisE
The heart ought to pive
the hand canto esha]
He who waits
good at once, will never do ax
Bon.
You shill ba
row for
Thackeray,
OTE he Wore end
Bi 3
tin Ldn $
POY GRE +
A propensity 10 bape and ix real
riches Cine ta fey
poverty. Hume,
You needn't pick
You ean get then anywho
go meng Mra ADT
The best gfe We 080 Sige +
ja fo jlve 80 hat we
tien fo
Miler.
Pride ja the devils
Ay
AR
Ww Hite x.
Hai Us 4
ENE ig
HO
Hie 81 4
# Rn on
Meith
Pf baefare
Thong htiesspous
for wrongdoing.
discinse ax if %
feaditiga. Walter 1
The wie right use of our
mortality is nei
menace, bul al ply 14
diturd
righteous action, to give
look singly at the quality
not at all at iis results.
toni Thom.
m——————
“ Wigsrd of Hortlesitara,
Wonderful resulis In bhybeidizatie
have been produced by Shier
bank, the “Wigard of Harta
Ut fifteen goves of and at Sania . Bi Ad,
Cal. Bays the San Proooisto Argotagt,
he breeds froits and Bow tho
sends, continoally producing
€tien,
By crossing snd recronsing
geal Hi
fibers to select from,
great
oe
ur
¥ $i dun a
Regaiarnit yd
th in un
ry
i &
WR IT
ey
An0y abot t
of our J fe
©
wom er
Ey 8 Ay
Tas, aw
BRA
Bowral
He ix
A oRloNeives proae, Iss
ceeded in
tie Reras) of the
Rant prune,
prune is
as jarge as the parent,
troduced several kinds
fle
par CHL Varieties,
«© md £4
ini 2
£0 Y oie
J
elt
Flin {
Vy a ui py ow 32
S84 GUEpnIne ol
¥ »
nenriy three
Boog
ad he lu
ef
Bleck le
Wort ed :
Yin
A: frig somewhat leas
D tivated ares: next, gweet patafoes oo.
| eupying eleven per cont.
3 tahoe,
: trifle lean than nine per
Eoand sugar wers
large |
vhid ven they!
1
:
grt bas 4
i literary worker
{ that of ths
to sserifie Wmself for his art quite sid
| ostreng.
‘4 ¢
charity wheal
{ Pollard by an young Ausician who
i look hb
: proved silght, snd he regards thy
: Wrilers wal
Wie
aily gives
doped bse vite
i the rescued?
vgn alle
gisele nioes of |
us strength to
John Hamid
{Was slaying a
| (Bwlizeriand: hotels for the purpose of
ar | Boeing the sun rise-which,
i weather 1s fine,
| worth bebalding.
{up Yery esariy, turted out
and sbdyvered In the twilight
ow vark |
i Instead of 8 magnificent pansrama ny.
C folding
|v 4
| Sintos received hin
i depiriure,
then gazed fixe
Poruents as a merry twinkling
raspberry hybrids, the berries of which |
fre more than twice the
of the parent fruits. By crossing the
E&pricot with a ping Mr. Burbank bas
produced a new fruit enlled the plume
eat, and by hybridizing the black wad
nut and the English wainut, he has
created a new species, with nuts very
much larger and more valoable than
those of either parent, and a
raphl-growing tree. Another remark
ahle achievement of Lis was the pro
duction of a white blackberry.
Mysophobla,
The medical profession hag conferred |
ind
fn PELY suf rare iy
PONLINE 8 Greek, or px
nd RI tii £13 Ti
dee reeR, 1
for their othorwla {
The last
pyardesd this week,
cand the
soaphalin, Tysonbobe
seated by his tabs,
if 3 ix Ongere
smudge uses
it, In short,
geeation of that respec
1
Ww hi § 1 Sony fe Eq =e
#
.
frais of
edbos
Sd
i% nan! VIR EE
BY $0)
seat of hi triad
ness of Englishmen when he surpr ised
the Laird in matutioal tab. The
lady in the play who seized oh every
pope's watehebain and began rabhiag
it with chamois leather Was & myo
phobe, and the irritating man who begs
your pardon and picks some micro
scople plece of fall from your sieeve
ig another. The servant, though most
would benefit by Inoculation with the
disease, who insists on dusting papers
is another, and the disease Is widely
prevalent among all housekeepers Ip
the spring, 1t 1s ulce to Know at last
just what to call it, but the melicai
press 1s more inclined to suggest sehen.
tific names than remedies.-Loadon
Graphic 5
Li
iN
size of élther
ate
wise of
the ©Xap
news|
a Hierary point of view’
13 pot exceptional
ved ROETOW,. regi
WAR'S RAVAGES IN CUBA.
a An
The Loss of Life Fetimated st Nearly |
200,000. Effacts on Agricniture.
From 8 recent bulletin jesued by the |
nied Bates Geological Burvey, snth
tied “A Garetiver of Cuba” compiled
Ly Ilenry Gannett, geographer,
fight is thrown on the depopunlating
effort of the war by the comparison of
the census of 1800 with that of INTL
In the latter year {& was 1.83) 687, on
06.000 tanre than twelve years later, in
IN
crease in the popmiation between 1587
and 1895, the year In which the insur.
rection broke out, the lows of life, as in:
divated hy the two censases, may be
estimated at nearly W006 a Joss tn
he attribmted to the war, and the se
company ing teconcentiration,
With an acreage of $4000 square
miler, and a popuiation in 1990 of 1.
STL TNT, only three per rent. of the aren
in farms was nnder cultivation
most highly cultieated portions of the
island were In Matanzas and Habana |
provinees, which le sdloining in itu
western part, while in Puerto Princips,
the large central provinces enltivation
was comparatively slight and the land |
was uxed mostly for cattle ranches
The crops, in the order of areas ruil
vated, were: firsf, sugar cane, ond:
thar half of the cule
of the area:
grid hanangs a
5 pu
rent, £0
nine ner cont,
AO
11 the prov.
In ING there wore in Cabs OF
sager mille with a daily production of
61.407 haga,
Erie on tu
$is ORE
The Yalae of Patna Rta bved.
The snthian asi of the je
in pe Rg
cieniint and bis dbvpasition
¢
pier apd
BOLE an
A dizpateh trot Pans, while
it records the stabbing of Mr Perobval
fas
him for soother man, adi “yi1.
Poll inrd bled prafasely, but the ois
PH «
perience as of great “alne to hime from
Mr. Poiland
in his dedizht at
being stabbed as & sonros of Ggtovigl |
for realistic write. Thome Who sirye
the public in the Hivrary fold ¢
slantly the shortoamings of thele bag.
nations and are quits willing Yo ple
ir Taney Ly deserindion, not of
bagi ny shigations, but real vines,
There sre no donb reuny and apdent
Bg around for a ehande bn
be owlg tebe, shed, Arowoed (and regusels
tated to be able to write {4 np. Tt 4s
very hard fo have voluntary Ernationn
Fare anise machive ike How ean
& rulaway who hes Dever
ine, or a rescue Troma bursing
sel co.
bomeny 12
boliding who has not seen seh Bo res ff
eis, ar, teller wii thie rescuer Gp
Is simply pining for “saperiensen®
wis great nek Mr Pere
wis io, geiting staliiand ¢
envied of a large clrele of admiring
friends~ 8t Louis Globe Democrat,
i ————— i
Hae Was Boand to fiat Full Value,
he London Graphle tells ‘a gos)
story of an American genticman who
aie of the Right
vai Pollan} |
when the
na Speeiacie well
This enthostant got
in the cold
And he
continned to shiver in the twilight.
sell in golden gly, 8 the
2 of seeing blue lakes sa on a map,
Hike silver threads sad row.
ranges Baw meaning i
murky, te for rolled By,
sing denser every nuinute, and ree
dined without a sien of passing un.
ft was time to have breakfast |
When this astute oftizen of the United |
Lill previons 10 his i
carefully checked 12 and
diy ar it for a few mo-
5 salle overs
sprend his countenance. He then took
neil amd wrote at the foot of the
“Hy sun not coming up to tine,
ing—-20 franes.” apd calmly de
ueted that sum from the total
nt a dr a A A SS AA
*
dis
obsting
ARAN
fren
RP
“Lining™ Shakespeare.
The volabiiity of the penny-a-liner In
well kuown to all connected with the
newspaper profession. Had “Hamiet”
been deseribed In a press telegram by
the wedern liner the message wonll
have been headed something Hike this,
in large letters: “Appalling Tragedy
Born 4
| suggestive facets regarding the island
Bre taken,
Allowing for the probable In }
The |
"
a
i
h
i
i983
ETT
| whores 14
Cal Know
The rial iterary works i
3
fa Paris. be S81
= WEA
¥
i
Eo ¥
i
Tree or “Curfew Shall Not Ring
Denmark: Ing Munderad by Hix
Brother! Young Coun Lady Goes Mad |
ard Draw Ds Herself Four Royal Per!
wh
sonages Blaughtered
Rety
of
Conan niace
heralded
nary Ve
Lender CG
instead
ed
ans
Fogwsy 1"
Tren faan
TE IAN,
pinto
have
ADTOB TING
wohl
by ship 5
netian
ARIA a
A Few
joel wf
the manger “Ronen and Jailer”
¢ Re le nleratie and |
Tragedy in High Life;
avers Commis Sglvide:™
Twa |
or sedans thing i
8 Tndicats
Ihe wohl
wo Hiner,
Ra 4 XS mpi
how Shakespeare's
ba veo shy
it
feese 1
¥
at out if bandied by
—
How to Choose a Husband,
In some paris of Germany the girls
a pretty custom ig which
queen of Bowers plags & pare
If a girl bas several suitors
wishes to Know
have thee
snl
which of them woul}
rie her, she takes rose petals
and drops them nto a bowl of water,
wiving each the name of one of her
aidmirers.
The leaf that reinaing foating longest
represents the man whose faithfulness |
she may rely on. and whom she would §
therefora do well tu choose,
Tain
fo
tr
Eno Lowe rmii
i weet)
train
ein Tor long. yours wandering fresidelns from a
Cornhill? It cannot be the climate, for our own is quite
moa 1 Hstorient assceiations, we are Jouted, COT
§ are as wlendidly tadifferent to Bivtory and art, too, for ve
mntter of that, unless a8 Jt is applied te the decoration of
human formas they are to the Rosetta Stone,
The familiew that one finds residing in Italy, for instance, long since
abandoned such foolishness as sightseeing. That useless fatigue is lft 10
the newcomers. the habitues I have met no more dream of visiting the
Vatican galleries or of reading in the library of Lorenzo the Magnificent
than they do of settling down seriously to study Italian.
One hears, especially In the less expensive little cities, some twaddle
1bowt culture; but you may take my word for It. in nine cases ont of ten
the real attraction of the jlace lies In the fact that a Victoria can be had
for $30 a month and a good cook for one-tenth that sam Tha Ceotery.
mr
Of
J
America. This is natoral, for in po other country is dl
¥idualism so highly differentiated az in America, or mss 80
| fall of inborn energy. so rich in loitiative, resource, optimises
wn goo
i revonize the value of gu brilliant personaiity, however ne
play Sud expression,
To thiz It aust be added that fn America the instanons
in whith men have risen from the most humble begionings to the most
fabulous dewiiniss are
A ldneoin o davelops from a woodcntter isto a President: a Schwab
wha, at twenty voars, earned a dallas a day, and, at thirty five, bas & sab
ary of a quarier of a willlon; a Carnegie who, as a youth, 4d not know
we ¥
how to get rid reasonably and nsefally of his three hundred
willion dollars, must suggest to every woodcntier, every “bulions™ every
factory apprentice with the soantiest elementary schooling, the ides that MB
depends wholly on himsel! whether or not be shall tread in the fool
steps of a Lindoin, & Schwal, or a Carnegie, and reach the goal that these
celebrition have attained
The Horatlun “Aurea mediooriias” has powhere else so few partisans
as In Ametien, "Everybody ahead? 18 the National metio. 1
intentlonaily, the second half of the smart
of the American people seems to ba success. The dream of success foods
the fancy of the chill, hypnoiizes the veuth, gives the man temerity,
tenacity, and perseverance, and only beging to become a matter of ndiffers
gnce under fhe sobering iInfloenice of adrinead age.
“SBaecee hewever, In bay ane of those vague wards whith mess noth
me definite, which, HRe “freedom.” or “progress.” are mere recipients
8lled By everybody with contents distinctively Bis own Success.
an 2
late Education
Essential to Su
By Chauncey M. Depew.
man T bas been my foriune, as buriness associate in many en
ferprines, to. beoone intimately acyuainted with bhusdreds
of men, who, without auy equipment whatever of aduen-
ton, have aveumuiated millions of dollars. 1 never met
p ith one of them whose regret was not profound and,
Seep and poignant that he bad not an education
E I pever met soe of them Who did not feel in the pres
ence of cultured people a certain setise of mortification
which no money paid for, [ never wet one of them who
Tite #
taf
feel the sane mortification,
Our Invpusge comes, in part,
fx In Heel! x sort of Latin and Greek.
Latin and Greek takes dp the pager
fram the Latin and Greek. Our literathre
The man or the woman who knows
atid reads the editorial or the mags
tine and scans the page, of the Look of poetry or proke and looks at the
Hastrations. sid there 2 4 memning 0 the word with the Greek or Latin
derivation which comes to high uncopatiously; there Ia a suggestion of &
vigsale faver io the illustrations whlch gives them a delight; so that you
fined university people reailers to the day of thelr death and business people
readers notil they go Into lnsiness
In the older cousitries of the world the
been a poiviiepe. In these United States of
is a duty
There the
cladges, rest Hate,
and underininey ie
tia pure ar it
sigher education had sways
America & Hieral siscation
2 of
There ths
fnstitation Fovernment rest npon throes, rest upon
higher sdasation eadangers the rsuste
Hery liberty resis upon the intelligence of the
il de tor the character of that intel
whan
THrOne
wotile, and is accanling
ig
insurances CORNY
FE i arly ily e
Auninst
dueated boy aod gil = a misstonary
in religion snd ln meorais
Every eollsge 3 an
Frere Tally pod god
for Lhe rigat 23 the Btate, Ia Roa ly
7 Vg
NoMore*“Asleepatthe Switch”
By George H. Daniels.
; SLEEP at the Switey”
ed i fis
voitid pot have been written if the
great railroad ays stone of the poet's time had been what they
fire sow. If abe anilor of those thrilling verses bad pet
“taken time by the Iavjock, amateur recitationists of to-day
would have to depend eutirely on “Woodman, Spare That
Tix ART For the melodramatic situs.
the switebman sboring ai his post, the (rain
night and saved in the very nick of time by
a makden with ker halr :uaadiog og endowauld oot be true to life in these
days. Like the tinws, raliroads hove changed--for the better-and the fate
pf 8 tradnload of passengers 3 no longer weft to a single man who may of
fay no! snuggle up to his switch and take a nap
WHE the BYSININ now opetation «nn the main loess, a man
“asleep at the switch” would practically step the running of trains for miles
back. The steeper. By otimr words, would vietually tie up the operation of the
road until ain For the obiect of the block system Is
blook tralng, io Keep them a certain distagee apart. A Dick is the dis
berw een towers YHATY all the way fram less than 1508
£3 Chely one train is shiowed In a Block at a tow,
sysiein enn be divseriled lg a few words, The
hy Ba in the tower ahead That
ear” an) o al i» unlocked
Jean leaving Grand Centres
tower the towemyan
ia vicar bee
os
thon used to sack advanisge-
pring madly on threogh the
Ss
Ahi
Took”
Reply woke lim
3 wie
PAL ES 2% digianee
weet Lav Ver
“hi “x
y ¥yyal
Mer BE
fa oso minyples that 13
tower are
Boa
by Bis ola in the
ta engiroiled as
tower two for an unlock by
wie amd two,
5 RE Lo
algnasls ab vaed odiend
sek pay oy a!
Livy aL 8X
AMET
mis arion
rile
H If Block
ower Two anlocks tower ane by
vote then clears signals, and after the
aapaanees the tral approaching tower twa by ringing
i carvied out all the way to the end of the
FIDaR
IWerpsan at
thre
OW ery
a phanger Boa calaget,
3s Dass
bedls, Ard this method
Boe
four
Lime
Still, the Wock system does uot alter the old rule for tralnmen When
& train stop at an unusual place, the tralpman, as Io former days. muss
hurry back over the track for at least three-quarters of a mile, and place
a torpede on tie track. Then he t eontinne further back one mile and
place two torpedoes, 17 his train pulls away before another train comes
along, he picks up the torpedo uesres: the train, leaving the others on the
track.
Torpedoes are called
torpedto he slows up,
the track bas
two torpedoes,
audible signals. When the engineer strikes the first
and if be does pot strike a third he knows them that
been cleared and again goes abead full speed. If he strikes
however, be slows up sod proceeds with extreme caution,
knowing there 18 danger within one mile abead. At night, in addition te the
torpedoes, the trainman must light a fusee, a red light, which burns exactly
ten minutes. Ab eugioeer coming upon one of these fusees knows that a
train is ahead within teg minutes, add does not pruceed until the fuses has
| burned out.
Sl
find a sililing to buy primers, and, as & man In mature life, dows
sentence, The universs] ideal ;
separed 1h sacrifice his whole fortune that his bey should never
anarchy and socialism
AMBITION is nowhere else so general and so boundless us
»
and self-confidence; 35 little tethered by pedantry, so ing
mare pumerous and striking than anywhere else.
»
b
nA,