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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 11

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
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Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

i mm i i The Oorftou.iy Staged Falryeeque, AMUSEMENTS. KLIMT QAZZOLO'S New Play ol the Far West THE. MAN' Scat row ready. Price Nlgst. fLia, 6.

Tic, k-o Xec; mAllnM. W. Tto. 1 Tlrsraday, On Mghs Only. EZRA KEXDAJX la Hla New Camadr.

siteix rxxGAXT joxza. rrle-I W. tU Ho, Wo, Co. 8at aw ri.y. IV.

bttnUr, -y. S-lt Mat, Satwday LEW DOCKSTADER and 111 Oraat Prica-Vltht, T5. IU lc Scata low raadr- Mas, Tw, Kr. lt-11. Tw XThU Oalr.

JOHN E. UENSUAW i o-mortow. A IT ATX CAKKXESS, WfM iLku. tLUO. 7bc UC M.

SWata raady JEEHS AT BEARD OF CHIEF. Pcllceman Promptly Fined $10 by the Trial Board. PITTS BURO. Kovembr Tv Police mn T. Ward wu fined J10 br th pollc trial board on apeclfic charge of conduct unbecoming" an officer.

Frank FJdjeway, director of publlo aafsty. who wears a carefully trimmed Vandyke beard. Inspected the police nd that TVard waa unahayen. He akJ the jatrolman about It, and Ward rfrn(l thut he Intended to raiae a Van-beard, at the same time caressing ht chin. Dtrwtor F.l.lpway reported Ward for conduct cr.bpoominir an oncer, and he eri'earT'd before the trial board.

He was ciean s.aven ar.l tried to explain bla to r'e a beard, but the director wou: 1 hot hstea and the- fine was tin THEY COULDN'T wethearta" Argue About States and Is Broken. NoTember T. Because tyry.coulJ not determine the -relative cf Iowa and Illinois the romance Johns, of IUlnola, and ilr. Ilonry Johns, of Iowa, was ahattered. 'Joni baa Ured In Illinois ail hi life.

Mrs. Henry Johna, hla widowed alster-ln-law, ns Hvd ever since ber marriage In Iowa. waa lonely, and Johns was heartsick, so he cflTi here to claim her and take her to Ms home. AU had been made, the tMJe'e 5re had been fitted to her, the lnriiatlor. were-out for the weddlns-, and lire, Johns happened to decide ehe nt think of tiTina anywhere but In 'Iowa, The prospective bridegroom 1m- Iowa was not worthy cf railed in the aame breath with s.

Tie srfrument which fol- lrwel in the severance of ail iriantal tttg t'Uations. -j praise. TO-NIOHT rose mix FOLLY 2 P.M. P.M. rii FcruLiRTiHn toe people ALL.

if UK I HUHH-SQUt SHOW. lhat HAVEL "How's for hish- 4U7 ladles attended the Gayety last week. Thiixsclay. Nov. 8.

Matinee Dally 'Hop are," WEBER RUSH'S PilsIaiWMows 80 PEOPLE 80 I 2 Big Musical Buriettas 2. "High-priced TaudeTille. Handaoma gowns. EXTRA ABDEL EADER and his three wives. Prices Watlnee 10c 15c.

25c Nlfjnt-lSc. ISe, 60c Monday, Nov. la, NIGHT OWLS I TO-NIGHT Cie9 ti facinrl TLzniiy. Friday aad Saturday, Kov. 8-MO.

Dally llaLnee A TRUE MELOORAMATJC SUCCESS A Creation Genuine From Life In Montana 20 Years Ago. Rich In Humor of Western Character. i BIG-HEARTED JJM IS A BIQ. HEARTY PLAY. Everybody Goes to the Park.

Prices 10c, 20c, 20c, 50c Monday, Fiske 0Hara la "Mr. Blarney From Ireland." COc. AN'p si.oo. 3lrj jm, -aw w'sSF JawSl li 77) HfafoGlass Vaudavtllo cz J.J LuZ-1 LJ.LLU Llatlnoo Every Day tP Cnoi siting. dllhtfiil MMdf.

splewdld MTtbtti. charming' nml-ti fact every- 1 mc tiii now MeTiiif dui. at the ORAKD this )rr: 1 l.iia ein4l ty iui i lulu vvi. io THE FTFTH nil ah tit kHKLI- tb himni HITI'T A 1 T-M COM- bU KTI.I.V wfT. eharartee MmUU CAJtTEB HLl lXtkD, sweet uw uim as tae UBAAU.

ENGLISH'S TLIs Alters cca zzi To-Matl Rice asd Weaver EMPIRE THEATER Tfabaab and Del. Rt. TeL Stt7 Prwtpert liCKJSIiil HUME Of BrRIXteUtK" Tafia Dreamland Eorlespjrs OAVr AR'ON "Yen II Hsto to Hurry." Prleee tS-Ii-Sd-7J cents NEXT WEBK-KSRHT If AIDEKS CO." ROLLER SKATING Eiarj Af.srcosn and Nigbt Skafes for Everybody AH ibe Tlroe ENGINEER SAVES HIS TRAIN Sticka to Post with Scalding Steam i -n Enveloping Him. -BEVERLT. N.

November 7. AJ- thourh hla cab was enveloped by clouds of acaldlna; steam and ha waa la danger or losing- hla Ufa, Harry Crispin bravely stuck to hla post and brought hla Im periled train to a atop at the Pennsyl vania station here. The train, due at 7: p. nx came Downnc; along- at a lively clip about a half-mile below, when the eccentric rod bixTke and with a loud crash punched a hole In the boiler, al lowing me steam to escape. The soald.nir steam rushed in rreat volumes Into the cab.

but Crispin gripped the throttle, reversed his lever and crowded on the airbrakes so hard as to almost throw passenger from their seata. The train wa stopped without further damage than that dona to the boiler, and I Cr spin's bravery they were loud In hi GIRL MAY CARRY MAIL Western. Pennsylvania Sceka to Emulate an Eastern Novelty. ALLEGHENT: November T.At the civil service examination for mail carriers In the rural districts, held In the city hall here, there appeared Effle I Moea, -daughter of a farmer living near Elizabeth. voung woman waa one of five persona who took the examination, and the manner In- which she answered the questions tends to tb belief that a he will She long to drive the mail--wagon through the wooda of forward ana Eu abeth township.

TAKES LONG TRAMP. Smalt GlrL Lost Walks 17 Miles, i 1 Friends. 1 BOONVILLE. November T. A lit tle girl giving the nam of Ellen Small- wood arrived in Blackwater, a amall town near here, saying that she had walked all the distance of 171 milea.

-The child la Oelve years: old. She de clared her mother and father were dead, and that she had started for Willow Spring. In. Howell county, but got loat and kept on warning. tne ia Doing taaen care of la Blackwater.

A Girlhood and Scoffs Emulson zrz Urlitd together. The girl who takes Scoffs Emulsion has plenty of rich, red Llood the is plump, attire and energetic. Ths is that at a period when a dirc'Jca is weak Scoffs IZmuIJion provides her with powerful nsuriihnicst ia easily digested form. lib a fcod thzt huilds and keeps a- 4. a A ALL MIDDLE THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 7 1906.

A RECENT FAS mo FEW MEN IN COUNTRY'S EARLY HISTORY HAD THEM. A SORT OF HERO WORSHIP In a little company of young men a fiew nights ago the question of middle names came up. and Inquiry showed that five out of six of those present had middle namea. One said he once dropped hla. but took it up again at the request of hla father.

An other said he never told anybody what his middle name was, and three admitted that they regarded theirs aa a nuisance. Then they wondered when middle namea originated and what good they were any bow. Every person must have remarked the current fad of writing out the middle name in full. This fashion sprang up only a lew -years ago. and ha been much affected by some people.

Until it be came the vogue, a person with a middle name would have been laughed at for writing it out in full, but fashioaLjustifies everything. Some people, desirous ts be differentiated from common herd even divide their names in the middle-as G.Waahintcton Sykes. W. Shakespeare Bogg or T. Jefferson This show that the owner knowa how to wear a middle name without being tripped up.

by it, as a militia officer sometimes is by his sword. Middle Names More Common Now. But the question, recurs when d)d middle namea become so popular and what good are they? There ia reason to believe they are far more common now than they were a few generations ago. In a list published in The News a few days ago of pensioners of the Revolutionary war who died in Indiana, out of HO. there were only twelve with a middle name or initial.

Any one company that served in the war of -the rebellion" would show more double than this; and any page In the city directory would show two or three times as many. Benjamin Harrison had no middle name, but the company which he raised and commanded as captain before he became colonel contained fifty-five officer and privates with middle namea nearly five times aa many aa there were among the 810 revolutionary pensioners who once lived In Indiana. History seem to show that middle names were not common during the revolutionary period nor for some time after. Few of the prominent soldiers' or statesmen of that period had double namea. Of generals there were Oeorge Washington, Anthony Wayne, Henry Knox, Arthur St.

Clair, Francis Marlon. John Sullivan. Nathaniel Greene. Artemu Ward, Israel Putnam. Rufus Putnaa each having but one name.

The same wa true of nearly al the commissioned officer in the revolutionary army. Presidents Without Middle Names. Of the thirteen presidents of tha Continental Congress, between 1776 and 17S8, not one had a middle name. Of the fifty-five signer of the Declaration of Independence only three had middle namea The bold algnature of John Hancock would not be aa effective if. he had had a middle initial, and that of Benjamin Franklin appear more dignified without one.

i Among the 850 delegate "to the Continental Congress, from 1774 to 17S8. only twenty-five had middle namea. In the first Congress under the constitution, held in 1783. out of fifty-nine Representative only five had middle namea. One of these, a member from South Carolina, bore the singular name of John Baptist Ashe.

Another, elected first Sneaker of the House, was Frederick Au Conrad Muhlenberg, ot Pennsyl- vanitAA'-third wasJobn.P also from thes these 'eter, Gabriel Pennsylvania. Both of men. by -4 he way. were rreachers. eth quit ths nulpfUto enter the revolution arv arm v.

and both as soldier- and'l tateamen. Their father, alao a clergyman, waa of German birth, and they a-ot their middle names from the prevailing custom In Germany. Few Among Early Statesmen. Of our eight Presidents' from 1789 to 1840. only one had a middle name, and of the fifty-three, persona who served aa Cabinet officers under the five administrations of Adams and Jef ferson.

only two had middle namea John Qulncv Adams, elected in 1824. wa the first President with a middle name, and William Henry Harrison, elected in 1840, waa the second. The names of early statesmen like Alexander Thomas Jefferson. Edmund Randolph. Al- i bert Gallatin and other of that period.

sound better without a middle name. An-drew Jackson. Abraham Lincoln. William McKlnley and Theodore Roosevelt belong to a later period, but they. too.

were fortunate in not having been loaded down with a middle name, that might have proved an 1 do it seem quit ciear mat mraai namea were far leas common in this coun try, during the revolutionary period and for many year afterward than they now. So they were in England. Ut comparatively recent' time few of the great namea in Engitah literature or his tory, were double, and it la fair to aesum that they were no more among common people than they were among the celebrated. Such a name aa William 8hakeneare. Oliver Cromwell.

John Mil ton. Isaac Newton. Franda Bacon. Wil liam Wordsworth, Charles rxkena, Rob ert Browning. John Bunyan.

Thomas Car-lyle, Daniel Defoe, William Pitt and many otnera or renown, wouia oe nanaicapped in history by a mioaie name or initial. What Does the Change Signify? If the custom or fashion of middle namea la of. comparatively modern origin, or at least much In vogue now than' formerly, what does It signify? Obrioualy the parents who 'confer name are sponsible for them, and a middle nam ia generally the result of a sort of hero worship or of a deetr to perpetuate family names and traditions. The double names of modeia time ahow a atrong disposition to pay homage to great men by naming children -after them. The namea or states men of the revolutionary period lend themselves readily to thla practice, because, as almost without exception, they had onlr one Christian nam the adoption of the whole name makes a middle name for tha -child that bears it.

Thus a great many boy babies have been named after jGeorge Washington, Alexander Hamilton. Thomas Jefferson, Anthony Wayne. Benjamin Franklin, or, cominr down later, after Andrew Jack son. Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln. rover Cleveland and Theodore.

Roose Thirty-five" or- forty years hence there will be many men on the of action writing-their namea Theodore and everybody will know what the R. stands or. Just as they did forty or fifty years aeo when a man wrote nis name oeorge Thomas J- Alexander H-. Benjamin etc -Congreasmsn Named After Great Men. Abraham Lincoln has- been dead a lit tle over forty years, and of bis namesakes are in evidence, aa witness Abraham Lincoln Brick, cf this State We.

have also George Washington Cromer, and the present Congresa contains George Washington Taylor, of Alabama; Oeorge Washington Prince and George Washington Smith, of Illinois: James Monroe Miller, of Kansas; Benjamin Franklin HowelL of New Jersey, and Andrew Jackson of Thfre baa not been -a -Congress in the last. fifty year that contain one or -more members, sometimes veraL named after soldiers or statesmen -or the revolutionary Both armies during the civil war contained hundred of aoldier bearing name of the revolutionary period. There ia nothing discreditable tn fh kind of hero worship that leada parent to name a child after a great man whom they greatly admire, thoujth it sometimes happens that the men. when be grows up, would prefer a different name. Napoleon Bonaparte Taylor, formerly an honored lawyer ana juage or mi city, ad very modeat man.

used to tvsret hw-nam his parent had riven him. aid Andrew Jackson Barch field, a member of the present Conrrew from Pennsylvania, la" a red-bot Republican. But a large majority of middle namea are given a a. sort of annex or td the first' to' preserve family name and traditiona. Thla also la a commendable motive, out way nave Ti I DEFEATED FRED LAN DIS GEORGE RAUCH.

Elected to Congress In the Eleventh Indiana District. middle names 'at all? From a practical point of view they are superfluous, and that makes it all the stranger why they should have come Into such general use In this practical, utilitarian and commercial age when the tendency la to shorten words and eliminate superfluities. Many a man who has had to writ hla name several hundred times a day has regretted the necessity of lifting his pen to write and dot the initial letter of a middle name. Probably one reason why middle namea have become so much more common in modern times than they once were, ia that for centuries the common law aaaumed that the full legal name of a person consisted of one Christian name and aurname. No legal importance attached to a middle name, and If a person had one it was not a misnomer.

In legal parlance, to omit it in an Indictment or pleading-. This Is no longer the rule of the law, but it wu for a long time, and during that period middle namea were almost unknown. Their-reneral use in this couri-try la of comparatively modern growth. BIRD CENSUS IN ON UNDER UNIVERSITY DIRECTION Assistants of Chief of Experimental Station Traveling Afoot to 8ecure Notes on Habits, Feeding, Homes. URBAN November 7.

The most important investigation of bird life ever attempted In any country have been begun In Illinois under the direction of Dr. A. A- Forbes, director of the experiment station of the University of Illinois. A. O.

Gross and H. A. Ray. his assistants, are engaged In the Work, which will last for several years. Gross and Ray are traveling on foot through the State, keeping always fifty yards spirt," and tiam-ing and noting all birds they They' also keeping a record of the.

different kind of crop or' other vegetation crossed by them, and the distance traveled. In thla -manner data are votained Concerning all the species observed, the number of birds of each species, and the surroundings in which each bird Is seen. From the reports of these observera, the number of each bird an acre for each crop, and; for each part-of the State will be determined. They carry-fa light gun for shooting rare specimen, and keep full note On all ornithological matter coming under their notice. Their travel will extend to all parts of the State at all seanona of the year.

The results of thee studies combined with the knowledge of their food as drawn from experiments already made will make it possible to judre with approximate accu racy the significance of their economio INSISTS PRAYER CURED HER. Battle Creek Woman, Given Up by Physicians, Well as Ever. BATTLE CREEK. Mich-, November T. Medical authorities are much Interested In the peculiar Incident attending the alleged cure by prayer of Miss Frances L.

Case, formerly of Augusta, but now a teacher in the Advent let school in this city. For two years the woman, who ia about thirty-five years of age. has suffered from tuberculosis, which she in-atsta has been cured by faith and prayer. Two years ago Miss Case waa obliged to quit teaching and a council of physicians decided that her case was hopeless. Being a devout Adventlst, Mia Case hastily asked that elders of the church- be aent to her.

and four responded. She. waa anointed and for hour the elders prayed in her room. When their prayer began tha woman waa unable to move in her when they 'finished aha waa able to alt up and comb ber hair, something abe bad been unable to do for weeka Accordingly her faith received a new spurt, and In a few daya she arose from bed. ate heartily, and gradually recovered.

Miss Case, now living at 36 UnlvWalty avenue, tells an Interesting story df her experiences ana is rignteousiy proiase her thankfulness. She has recovered fully, without medicine or care other than faith and prayer, so aha avera. DEATH REVEALS RICHER Recluse Dies a Millionaire and Chi I-; dren Ignorant of Riches. OMAHA, November 7. By the filing of his will her it came to light that Joseph A.

Beht.the eccentric recluse of Omaha, who died In Los Angeles, Cal last February, one of the richest men In Nebraska. His estate I valued at 000, So eccenuio waa Bent in hla habits. So quietly did he amaaa his fortune, and so little did he talk about hla affaira. that hla own children did not even auapect that he was wealthy. One-half of hla fortune la given to va rious eharltiea and religious institutions, and the rest to his children, grandchildren and other heir.

His eldest daughter. Mra Mary Lane, of Denver, ia made sole executrix of the eatate. Bent lived the life of a recluse for years, and his personal expenses were less than those of an ordinary day laborer. He carried SI. 600 insurance on hla life, and he had on deposit in banka in Nebraska $60,000.

He had outstanding on loans more than sioo.ow, ana ne ownea x.wo acre or valuable larm urn as in nine States, besides much other property. SHORTAGE OF MEN IN THE PACIFIC STATES Loud Call Comes from Railroad Companies Agents Are "Up a Stump," SPOKANE. November 7. "More men." The call cornea from railroad companies, railway construction concerns, mill owners, the mining and lumber camps In the Spokane district. Ten thousand competent workmen and skilled craftsmen can find Immediate employment in eastern, central and western Washington at better wages and shorter hour than ever prevailed in the history of the State.

More than 900 milea of electric railway lines are under construction or projected in Washington, and in addi tion to-tni tn Hill. Marrlman. Earllng and Northwesters Interests are planning to build hundreds of mile of steam lines tn Washington, but the work la being re- laruea Because oi the lack or men. Agents in the employ of the Great Northern, the Northern Pacific, the Ore- son nauroaa ana navigation companies ana in various luoroering and minln companies declare thev are unable to fln tha number of men reouired. thv have been forced to Import men from the East and middle West B.

Campbell, vice-president of the Great nonneni nan way company, said on a recent Inspection trip in Spokane that his company alone can give employment to 6,000 men. "'and." he added. "If the work are doing in the northern part of the country is taken into consideration. snouia say 10,000 men will sot be too many. Wagea Are High.

Mr. D. c. Corbln, preeldent of the Spokane-International railway and of the Washington Stat Sugar Company, saya: "Construction -work on Epokaae-Inter national railway haa 4 been delayed al least Six months because of the' lack of laberq At no time- this year' have th contractors paid less than $2.25 a day for cumniua.iaDor, ana aunng-tce last four months they have been paying a day, and at no tlroe have we been able to do work satisfactorily. At no time have we Dean anie to emninv rrurm than "wi mn while at all times we could have employed i rum to men.

"I had anticipated that the Spokane-In lora.uonu roaa wouia nave Deen built Into Spokane by June As it is. we hali not te able to complete the road before January l. we have also- experienced groat aimcuity in operating- our sugar iwiurjr ai aveny oecausa ot lack oi common labor." Contractors on the Northern Pacific and Harriman lines in Washington, northern Idaho and eastern Oregon, who draw on 8pokane for their skilled mechanics and laborer, declare tbey- can place from 1.000 to 6,000 men. while it la a matter of record In Spokane that building operations have been considerably hampered by the lack of structural ateel workers, carpenters, bricklayers electrical workers and plasterers. Albert E.

Mead. Governor of Washington, accompanied Congress man Wealey L. Jones, of North Yakima, on a trip from the Cascade mountalna to the Idaho line, and he made a personal investigation; of conditions. "Never before in th history of the State of Washington waa there so much activity and so much nrosnerltv. tha Governor said.

"Every man who wants -to work can obtain It at good wagea, and mere are places lor thousands of other. "Washington needs men. We are now past the million mark; we have opportunities for 2.000.000. What Is true of Spokane holda good from on end of tha State to the other." TIGHTLY TIES UP 40 MILES. Old Oaken Bucket on Strike Among Nutmeg SOUTHAMPTON, November 7.

Because the wells ran dry from which water haa been pumped to supply the boilers at the steam plant at MlUdale, which has been uaed to operate electric lines since the breaking of the dam at Bull's bridge, forty miles of electric road waa tied up for two daya The line in I WEATHER SERVICE THAT WILL BE WORLD-WIDE CHIEF MOORE HOPES TO BRING NATIONS TOGETHER. WIRELESS IS AT AN. END riden, MlUdale to Cheshire. Cheshire to in search of om friend who the top of Walnut mountain and Cheahtr woul PT the nominal fine I then Un to Mount carmeL near here, and farmer report that they i rioualy 4L WASHINGTON, November 7. Willi L.

Moore, chief of the American weather bureau, hopes to see the day when every ahlp ot any size that sails the seven seas will be a weather" observatory, equipped with instruments furnished by the weather. bureau of the Department of Agriculture, and making dally reports of Its observations either directly to Washington or to some wireless telegraph atation that will transmit them to thla city. Aa a corollary, weather reports. Issued at least would be furnished to every ahlp having a wireleaa telegraph equipment Then toe dangers of navigation would be greatly lessened, for if a navigator can have twenty-four hours warning of a storm that is moving in hla direction he can take measure to sail out oi ine probable track of the disturbance, or. if that ia impracticable, take steps to hare his ship in such a state of preparation that th danger of.

wreck 1 reduced to a minimum. By the use of wireleaa telegraphy, says Chief Moore. It will be possible to discover where storm originate, if that point of origin ia within the reglona tn which ahlp sail in number great enough to afford opportunities for reports. On land and sea tnere are instruments wnicn meuurw within a few feet of a break in an elec tric current -It will be possible to figure almost aa closely with respect to destruc tive etorma. Wlnda ObeyCavssof Nature.

Although It can not be asserted with full knowledge that th assertion la true; It nevertheless appeared that, the winds obey aa definite a law aa every- other shenomenon of nature, Observation la the only method whereby- aa approxi matlon of these lawa can be obtained. Mr. Moore made an emoaltion of his thought on th subject at a meeting ot oia tune teiegrapn operator, aeemme them most worthy to be first to hear what he had in mind, because witnout telegraphy th weather Berries of to-day would not be in existence. The American weather service gave virniin of th aDDroach ot tb last hurricane in time for all ship along th coast above the southern end of Florida to get into shelter. The fact mat toe storm continued eastward after passing through, the etralta of Florida, instead of curving northward, and came boiling up the coast, does not detract from the value of the warning.

The storm simply failed to go where it would have caused the greatest destruction had there been bo Warning Peril. If the wireless telegraph service had been In existence all the ahipplng In the lane leading from Europe to the West Indies would have fbeen warned of Its approach. together jwlth aa accurate statement of the direction it had It departed from the ken of the observers on land. 'I Navigators in thatilane, knowing that the. storm would not atrik anything to change again its course, would have been Justified in believing! that it was coming straight, for them fyng before their barometer began showing them the existence of a disturbance somewhere near them.

1 It la a plain, simple proposition that the wireless impulse can be made to travel farther and faster than tha warnings of Its coming that a storm sends to barometers. Unless wireless can send its impulse farther and faater, the hoped for service will be-of no benefit except that It miT be able to indicate a little more accurately the direction from which the disturbance la proceeding. There is a good foundation upon which to rear th proposed superstructure. Great Britain. France, Germany and Spain.

In Europe, and Japan, in the Orient maintain weather services patterned after our, th pioneer In that line of research, with which an exchange of news la maintained. The daily weather -maps of those countries are aent to thia Government and all the etorma reported to them are carefully recorded by the forces employed by thia Government The other day. ia the Bureau of Ocean Meteorology, a cartographer was trans ferring the lines made by the Japanese cartographers to a blank map of hla own. The Japaneae record will be of use in th future to show what wa happening ta th Eastern seaa on a given day. and a comparison of such maps will enable forecasters to obtain a good Idea ot what ill happen elsewhere.

For International Agreement. International agreement, either ta the form of. a treaty or a mere, agreement between the heads of the various services. will be needed to make the proposed aervlce of value. It.

will "be necessary to have It understood what part of the seas each nation will undertake to cover with its own reporters of phenomena, else there would, be endless GIVES HUSBAND A PADDLING. "Paddle or Jail He Aska-Paddle" 8a a Prisoner; Burgees Gets Busy. FRE ELAND, Pa-, 7. Sym-1 pathy for a poverty-atxlcken and neglected wife, combined with a desire to enforce the law. prompted Burgess George Hartman, of.

this place, publicly to flog Reuben Kreaky here, Xresky and a companion. Jams Bell, who 'were arrested forj raising a disturbance la the Central Hotel, were arraigned before hla Both pleaded Bell waa sentenced to pay a fine of S12.M or serve a month In Jail. Turning to Kreaky. the burgess said: "Kreaky, you were before me on a former occasion, and sympamy zor your wire and family ln- lalnvilie to M. oucea me to let you go aowntown.

wttb It la supposed that the natural flow of water into tne weiia will be enough to allow of their use to-morrow. Otherwise, water will have to be carried In barrels from the Qulnnipiac river, a distance of three miles, and poured into the wella. MONGOLIAN PHEASANTS. Birds Are Set at 'Liberty In Minnesota and Protected by Law. ST.

PETER, November 7. Another ahlpment of Mongolian pheasants from the State game and nab commission received by the Nicollet and Sueur Counties Game League. There were a dozen of the birds, and they have been liberated In Oshawa and Belgrade townships. A. year ago a number of the Chinese Dheaaant were given their llbertv posed.

You abused that liberty by mak ing your escape, and that one still remains unpaid. I know the condition of your wife and sympathise with her. I i do not Ilk to. send you to la.ll, for she Is. the one who will suffer, while I sympathize with neglected-) wives, the law must be enforced.

You have the alternative of a month in the county jail or submit to a severe paddling at he hands of the burgess. Which shall it ber i "I don't want to go to Jan." replied Kresky. doggedly, "so you'd better get your paddle." "I'm ready with th gooda. Clear that ball!" yelled the burgess to the officers. Then he grabbed Kreaky by the left ana and flayed him with a three-foot paddle 1 out of the courtroom and down the street a distance of 100 yarda until be handed him over' to his wife.

Over 300 people witnessed the flogging. which took place 09 moat prominent thoroughfare. Kresky. although not se- injureo. cnea bitterly.

Hla have multiplied rapidly during the last friends believe that this unique method summer. They are protected hy law un-ior punienment win nave a aaiutary etiect til 1910, land the officers of the game league on his future conduct. The action of the have never learned of a single instance burgess meets with the approval of the of their having been moleeted. I cltisena. .1 Breath Hyomoi and Got Relief and Cure Sold Under lt you have catarrh, -with offensive breath, burning pains in the throat, coughing, raising of mucous, difficulty in; breathing, aneexing.

huskrness. discharge front the' tickling -and dropping at the back of th throat, especially at night, coughing spasms, etc begin the use of Hyomel at once. Its beaiing -meaicationwiu give relief -In a' few. days- snd It continued us will completely drive all catarrhal a-erm from system. Hyomel contains Nature's healing oils and th germ-killing proper ties 01 th pine-forests, ana goea wua Guarantee.

the air you breathe to the moat remote eella of the respiratory organa. searching out and killing all catarrhal germs and soothing and healing any irritation there may be in the- mucous membrane. It la eaay and pleasant to us Hyomel. pleasanter than most of the stomach dosing, as its healing air Is breathed through a neat pocket Inhaler, which can be carried, in the purse or vest carries medication' to just the spot where relief Is needed. Th complete Hyomel outfit costs but fl.Oe.

extra bottles. If needed, 50 cents. do-not want any one's money -un- lass Hyomel gives relief and cure, and absolutely agree that money will be refunded unless the remedy gives satisfaction. All druggist should be able to supply you with Hyomel or we will send It by mall on receipt of price, and every package is sold with the distinct understanding; that It costs nothing. unless It cures.

Write to-day for a vtnptom blsnk. whicb we will send you free, together with treatise on Catarrh and how to cure it. Wlien yon-fill In and return to us-the symptom blank, our consulting phys'clan will give- your case the best car and attention, and write you a letter of advice without charge. The li. T.

Booth Company, Buffalo, N. T. 1 1 I Tiffany Co Fifth Avenue 37th Sixtd, New York Holiday Announcement Messrs. Tiffany holiday prspmticns have been completed.1 The various "depart-mentsyare rich in' new designs" in. 'jewelry of every description, silvervvare and selections df this season's choicest objects frcrn the art centres abroad 1 Patrons are urged to place their Christaas orders at once, while tfie stock is fresh and 'contains many individual 'pieces will not be duplicated 1 Ont-of-Town Service Upon advice as to requirements and limit of price, Tiffany and Go.

will send photographs, cuts vor careful descriptions cf what their stock affords ":7 1 i Goods Sent cn Approval Yrto any rt oMhelJnited States, to persons riorm? to house or who will make I themselves known by reference from any National Bank or responsible business house Sc Co. art strictly Retailers. They do not1 employ agents" 'or their 'warts other. dealers Christmas Catalcgus Jiist issued-rTOany Blue Book for 1907 no illustrations 621 pages, giving concise descriptions and prices of jewelry, silverware, watches, and other objects suitable for Christinas presents SZorr Book sent upon request I' Tiffany Co, always welcome a comparison of prices I AH the pride cf style, and sat. Isfactlon of serrice you expect from the finest iiothini four-i Int It will hold its shape long as worn.

It serves every purpose In any vret cr sjry, and will provs the most useful garment. you ever owned. Tb Keeye raetsrle. tk greatest la the veri. dtspeoe vtih sweat abo work sad metaods.

a til Uat was ea Mat perfxt garaMst war uBBeeslSle, hare tsi aupertertr. Latest style Seek troa the dealer wba Ua Xeariga Co is froa C.Ustvon Co, Kzwrorj: $35.00 Velvet Suite for $19.75 Suits for ladles, of splendid quality Telret, ia black, blue, brown, wins, garnet or rreea, nobby fitted or pony, sllk-hned coats; some are brail trimmed, others plain tailor-made; skirts are 13-gore circular, pleated, sizes for misses or ladies; these regular $35.00 sulta, one pa a rw day's special, to-morrow. Special Sale of Plaid Sii IVcIsj Three hundred now ones just received for to-morrow'i tale. Waists, of beautiful new plaid, in twenty different 'color combinations, checks, plaids or stripes, bias or straight back, full sleeve and deep, trimmed cuffs, tab collar, button back or front, choice of fin f)f all 5.00 and $100 waists, very 000 ladies' $18 TaHor-nrcde-suils $10 Sulta for ladlee of fine broadcloth or Cheviot, in all colors; coats ara fitted and silk-lined; also handaoma fancy, suits. In plaids or ciecLi, coats made fitted, box or pony style; not a suit ia the entire assortment worth less than $18.00.

and some your prv choice O-LUeU Coats for ladies or misses, 50-inch length, of panne cheviot, no in black, blue, brown or green, qualities up to $10.00, special. tse Coats for ladies, of fine Imported novelties, 50 and 62-Inch length, ia plaids, checks and mingled effects, swell coats not duplicated where at less than over thirty styles for to-morrow fr 4 tjuu Ladles' 50-inch of fine kersey or broadcloth, la black or the broadcloth coats are full satin-lined, the kersey coats are line! to the waist; grand coat not found elsewhere at less than A our special olteU Ladies fine 5Mnch broadcloth coats, in black, garnet or brown, lln- i throughout with. Skinner's satin, silk braid trimmed, quali- a ties equal to uptown $30.00 coats; Sell2'sf Uu Coats for Children 2 to 18 Coats for little ones, 2 to 6 yearsof crushel plush, la rel, p. blue, green, gray, brown or green, up to $3.51 Coats, 2 to 6 years; of rich bearskins, -la all colors, cap anl cs! ti and Interlined, qualities up to $1.00, our I- Coats for Utile ones, of moleskin plush, 2 to years. Ii a colors, qualities up to while these bargains List.

at. Coats for girls, 5 to 15 years, of Cne beaver, ia braid trimmed, values up to very Coats for g1rl3, 6 to 15 years, of Astrakhan, I Bome novelties, choice of ccats worth to ii.Z 1.

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Years Available:
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