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Logansport Pharos-Tribune from Logansport, Indiana • Page 6

Location:
Logansport, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WHY? WHiT, the Springtime, do so many Imve that drowsy, lifeless feel ing? WHY is there so much backache, (neuralgia and WHY do Hcrofulous taints, erup- iSlonS'and erysipelas show themselves? WHY not admit the truth, which via, that "kidney poison is in the Us loo -then, not put the blood in condition by curing the kid- WHIT not today resort to t.hut remedy, Warner's Safe Cure, which IB the only kaown specific for these- troubl-s? OWNER OF SPETJCEIH. ARTHUR BRAND WHO WANTS TO RACE HERE. JFlo Ji a Son of the Controller of the City of London and In an Kuthusl" uitlo Unit It tor. not, obl ni.i'l ImppinossV in a. word, use the best iti'Lhle for bn.ni.shin^ health and Atlilnt.il! Kviinls.

Mnr'ih '''xfoi'i'l and Cambridge unl- dual lie-Id mec'llng. Oval, London, KriglfLml. April oC fi'i'lrif: wmcs, Philadelphia, I-'a. April I'U Animal U-n mllu race-, fima- oC J-Jrigluml, I.on- May of Pennsylvania "Chlrcl spring Philadelphia, Pa. May Johns ITnpklns university vs.

iiiKiHuli-, Increase match, lialtl- '-Shon-, Jkl. May TVlilKh university vs. Johns 'HopUlnH university, lacrosse match, tSouth I'tfilhli'hom, May Yale college vs. Harvard unl- "Verslty, annual dual field Carri- 'brlilfro. Mass.

May NTW Knffland Intercollegiate association annual champion- 'Ship fiold mooting, Worcester Mass. May Lchlffh unlvorslty vs. Stevens Institute, lacrosse match, Hoboken. N. Juno Now York Athletic Club summer rave r.i Island, June University of Pennsylvania vs.

University oC California, dual Held meeting. Plilladclphia, Pa. July Athletic union individual nil round athletic championship Ilerfcc-n Point, N. July amateur championship field minting, Stanford Bridge. Sept.

--Amateur Athletic union 3iia! champk.n.'ihlp meeting. York Athletic club vs. London Athletic club, international dual London, Knglnnd. Sept. New York Athletic club annual fall games, ravers Island.

Tlio Gcrmazitown Club, of RTHUR BRAND, the English yachtsman, -who is anxious to bring his little half, rater, Spruce to this country to show us what small boat racing is like, Is a son of John Alexander Brand, controller, and one of the lieutenants of the city of London. Mr. Brand, according to the Yachting World, comes of a naval family, one of his great uncles, Lieut. G. Rowley Brand, having wen killed while in command Of H.

M. Unique, in an engagement with a French frigate of double her size, while 1 mother great-uncle was a midshipman the battle of Trafalgar. Mr. Brand as long been devoted to small boat aclng, commencing his yachting career when he won a model yacht ace. Proceeding to Oxford in 1SS3, he be- cuine a member of the, Oxford University Hailing club, and, buying the 17 foot Inch cutter Pixie, took her to Dartmouth, whore he joined the Dart Calling club, and raced In many local regalias and matchu.s, until, In August, iSS7, Pixie was capsizud, and sunk outside Dartmouth harbor during the Jubilee race.

One of the hands could not swim, but Mr. Brand managed to catch him by the back of the jer.sey and support him till they were picked up by Mr. Channel, the owner of Xanthe. J-lls old club, the O. U.

S. Into rather low water at the end of ISSli, somt; of the members combined to give It a fresh start, and the club once more nourished, with the Rev. V. W. Lucas (a Christ church don and llrst-rate sportsman) as Commodore.

Mr. Brand was Vice-Commodore, and held his Hag until he left Oxford In 1SSS. During his last year there he curried off several prizes In Venture, one o.f Smith Brothers' early productions. In the summer of 1SSS Mr. Brand built the 1'J-foot racing dingy UriiQue, and with this boat and the IS-foot sloop Co- duette until the end of 1SUO.

Unique was a succedsful little boat, and the champion of her class In the Solent in 1SS9. In ISSi) Mr, Brand formed and elected honorary Secretary of the Minima Yacht club, which marked a new era in small boat racing. In 1SOO the Smith Brothers of Oxford brought out their light canoe yawls, at about the same tine as Tiny and Humming types of the deep one-half rating Solent class. Having some experience of both classes of one-half raters, Mi'. Brand, in 1S91, brought out Spruce 1.

(built by Theo. Smith, Med- Jey), anticipating that In line weather she would give the deep-keeled boats the go-by. This did not turn out to bo the case; in fact the harder It blew the better she went, and her success in her Jlrst season was phenomenal; ISO- also saw her credited with a good number of wins. Spruce I. was an experiment.

She was sharp at both ends, with the rud- nutiuflg Ul uii AOO square feet, and her rating Y. K. A. 0.41. Fined, with centra-plate which drops 1 foot inches and a drop-plate rudder, she carries no ballast and relies wholly on her crt-w.

She Is built with a well feet long by inches wide, into which la Utted a water-tight bucket of oiled canvas, in shape like a footbath. This i.i the only place in which water can collect on board, and, being watertight, none of the water can get into the boat. Spruce is, therefore, able to stand a vast amount of bad weather. In JS93 Mr. Brand built Spruce she had a bulb keel and centreplate, but did not distinguish "herself until, as an experiment, her bulb keel was taken, off.

However, early In 1S94, he wan again to the front with Spruce built by Harry Smith of Medley, Oxford. It was decided to build Spruce III. with a centreplate and no bulb, the plate to be a weighted one. She began her racing In April of 1894 In theThames and Thames Valley Sailing she was most successful. In the middle of May she went to the Solent, and oa May 19 In the Royal Southampton Yacht club, when she took first honors.

Mr. Brand was unfortunately laid up after that for a month with pleurisy, but she carried off two prizes with Mr. Keller at the helm. In the middle of June It was found that she wanted her rig altered, which was not done, You s-y a collar and cufif that And perspiration will not affect Yes. And when dirty you need vrir-c i'acin off -with a wet cloth or sp'onyc Yes.

Wonderful How nrc they nntV A linen collar covered on both waterproof "CELLULOID." like a lincu collar. Ir, it the only waterproof collar No, but it is the only one ir.ai.la willi the linen interlining a'ud conserjnciiliv the only one that can jpvc entire satisfaction because it is the How can I know that I get the rh-lit kind? Because every piece is stamped follows Inquire for that nnd refuse or you will be disappointed. Suppose my dealer docs uot. He probably hns, but if rot, jircct to u-i, enclosing riior.n;. CniTs collar wanted is stand-up or turncrl-down.

THE CELLULOID TELLS OF HEE DANCES CISSY FITZGERALD WHO HA6 CHARMED AMERICANS. of i3 endeavoring- to secure a good dor on. her sternpost. Spruce II. and 1 III.

have counters with pivoted rudders. She was rigged with lug and mlzzen, main lug 12S square feet, mlzzen 30 l--h professional to take the placa Atteu-i-Il. who will not return to cautiflil You sec them ererywherc. J. ARTHUR BRAND.

through the sallrnakers being busy. At the end ot July she came out sloop rigged, after which alterations she hfu'dly lost a race. She -went to Dart- inouth on Aug. 7, and carried off a on the 8th in the Dartmouth branch of the Minima Yacht club at Salcombe for the B. C.

A. meet, and carried off first prize in every race. She also won the B. C. Ladies' Race, Miss Bennett Ktecrlng her, as well as four ladies' ruces.

JTr. Brant! also had the seven-ton yawl Cornavia from 1SSS to 1S92, and In the latter year bought the twenty- ton cutter Tina. Both Cornavia and Tina have been used more n.3 the racing boats, but in them he has generally managed to do a fair amount oif cruising round the south coast in the oil' season, and they have both won races under Mr. Brand's flag. Enthusiastic in promoting races for the fair sex, it is partly owing to his energy in this direction that ladies' races have now become a feature in Dartmouth club fixtures.

He is 1'reqnently to be found racing with the upper Thames clubs In the spring and autumn, and is on the com-, mlttee of the Cruising associate of thelnstituteof Naval Architects, and a member of the following clubs: Royal Southampton Yacht club. Royal Corinthian Yacht club, Start Bay Yacht club, Minima Yacht club, Oxford. University Sailing club, Thames Sailing club, Thames Valley Sailing club, Dart Boat Sailing club, Teign Corinthian Sailing club, and the British Canoe association. Thnt the VulBarltlea of High Kick- luff Are Paxilng the People Want In Poetry ot Motion. ANCING HAS been defined as the poetry motion, and I have no fault to find with the definition.

The rhythmic ments of the dancer, the swing and swell, the placid beauty of the andante undulations, and the pulsing splendor of the allegros and zim-zim- bingoes are muscle melodies that appeal to the eye as strongly as a Tennyson lyric appeals to the heart or a brass band to the ears of a mob. It IB only right and just, therefore, that dancing should receive poetical classification. Anything that Stirs human libra or reaches a pectorally masked chord and twangs It belongs in the domain of true poetry. And dancing gets to the fibre and the chord every time, if it is real dancing. But there is dancing and dancing.

It is not all shuffles and pigeon-wings and high kicking. I might tickle the' shimmering prisms on -a chandelier with my toe and set the crowd wild with delight, but the man or woman MODEL 40 COLUMBIA Bicycle beauty comes from graceful lines and fine finish, in which points Columbia bicycles excel. But there is more than mere looks to recommend a Columbia. Back of handsome design and eleganl finish is a sterling quality that over the roughest road and the longest journey will carry the rider with safety and satisfaction. Buy a 80 i 1 HARTFORD or a HARTFORD.

BRASCH STORES: Boston, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Providence, Buffalo. SeitJ too 3-ceni Slumps for Columbia Cxialogus; frcf if you all ai Columbia THE KENNEL. The Sprlnpsldo kennels have purchased the noted pointers Duke Hessen ancj Hempstead Pearl. A. W.

Rutherford's annual sale of fox terriers was held In New York recently before a large crowd ot dog In all twenty-seven head were sold, ranging from J5 to $27.50 each. The lot averaged fll.25 apiece, which Is somewhat lower than in previous years. America has drained England of some of her best collies 'and nothing In. the male line seems to be coming up to take their places. Stockkeeper remarks in the Liverpool report that there Is nn opening for a really tip-top dog Just now.

Perhaps we can send' them something very soon. The election of officers of the Bedlnff- ton Terrier Club of America for the ensuing year resulted as follows: PrealV dent, William H. Russell; secretary- treasurer, Thomas Pearsall; committee, H. Russell: ThomM Pearsall, C. TV.

Loug-est, Martin fi. Thelbers. and John Hopklnson. SPORTING NOTES. Shortstop Fuller has at last re-signed with New York.

The Toronto club has signed third baseman Jud Smith. Pitcher Jack Barclay, of Burlington, N. has signed with Atlanta. The Springfield club has signed a youny pitcher named Chesbro, hailing from Northampton. FRIEND.) is the BEST REMEDY for WIFE, MOTHER.

bj Seeding tod John Gooiaon, CISSY FITZGERALD. Jn the frathering who Is capable of differentiating between a dancer's use o( her legs and a mule's use of his hoofs would simply sneer at the performance and turn away with the remark that there was no beauty or art or poetry In the achievement. The criticism would be correct, and my high kick would be forgotten as soon as somebody else with longer and limberer legs came along and put her biggest metatarsal against a. higher chandelier. No, no, you can not gauge llmb-wav- Ing by the same mechanical laws that enable us to determine the liftlnjf power of the steam hoist or of one of those giant cranes in Cramp's shipyards.

Look at the graceful Na.utch grfrl, at the passionate eyed Egyptienne, at the turbulent-torsoed Spanish slg- dancing is not all done with the feet or the muscles; the mind, the heart, the eye are in their swaying and whirlings, and in so much as either of them asserts herself in the dance and dominates the movements with her individuality, whatever it may be, in that much will her performance be more singular, characteristic, unique and successful than the performance of other dancers of her kind. If she succeeds in putting all of herself into the dance and in belonging to it body and soul, instead of having the dance belong to her, then she will triumph and people will talk about her and hurry to see her, and wonder why it all Is. and how it is all done. Some opera singers simply sing- their songs while others both act and sing them. Mile.

Calve's Carmen threw euch a spell upon Americans that'they are discussing the artist yet. And do you know -why? Because Mile. Calve h.erself headlonr into the nils. heart. Heels, voice, and heY self up entirely to the part, as Mary Anderson said aha did to the role of Juliet when she first essayed it she was Carmen from the core out, and let the wild impulses and delightful dare-deviltry of the character romp through her blood as they did in the original.

Genuine art can not be Delsartlzed. It is based on genius, and there is no rule for three Of genius. If Henry Miller or Viola Allen in "The Masqueraders" were to tell just how fast or slow their pulses beat in that card- table scene, they would laugh at the Inquisitor, and perhaps frankly say they didn't know. If they tried to measure out their changing flurries of passion In heart-beats or pulse-throbs and assort them so that settled melancholy registered 65 and love suspense sent the blood jumping up to 106, and they could Acute pains require prompt relief. The best remedy is one that can be used immediately and by anybody.

Allcock's Porous Plaster meets the case exactly, for all sorts of pains and aches, as sprains, strains, lameness of the back or limbs. When you Bur Allcwk'i you obtain the bcMpluter. Don'l Allcock's Corn Shields. Allcock's Bunion Shields, lave DO equal as a relief and cure for and HER FAVOTUTE POSK. dole their feeling out In this arithmetical way.

they would not be the true artists they are. Now I don't claim to be a pcenhis. but I do claim to be Cissy FitzKerald. and all that there Is of Cissy Fitzgerald, Inside and outside, from toe-tips to topknot, I put into my dance; I dance it and'I act it. I rush into it fis a shingle Into Niagara's torrent, and let it sweep me along.

I whirl and kick and dosy- do and spangle It with myself. I pepper and salt and spice it with myself; I give it the sparkle and bead of myself, and when. I get through It is the Cissy Fitzgerald dance and nobody's else. And nobody dreams of calling It anybody's else. I believe that my success with my that Is the way the average person will look at due to the fact that I have in my time played many comedy roles and so schooled myself in expression and action and felt my audiences for-effect that all these experiences now embody themselves In my work and never fail of results.

One writer has flippantly declared that I am not a dancer at all, but a perfect mistress of the art of "giving the eye." I suppose he thought that would make me mad. But it does not, I would simply like to slap the dear-fellow on I the shoulder and ask him how he found it out. Thousands have felt the thrill of my "giving the eye," but this clever scribe ia the first to rip the veil from my secret. Of course, he doesn't mean "giving the eye" literally or in its restricted slangy sense; he means that it is the expression which goes with my dancing that makes'it so fetching; that I look the role as well as act it; that In fact I Cissy Fitzgerald the high-tiddy- idy. I am now studying- a new dance.

It will be entirely different in movement and lace furbelows from the dance I did in "The Gaiety Girl." And do you know how I am studying it? Before a looking-glass. There is no toe-twirling, no tangling of skirt ruffles in the gas- fixtures; no limb or muscle agitation of any kind. I do the whole dance with I my face. This is the acting, or part of It, that will go with the dance. It takes I long and hard practice, and the hole proprietor says he willing to stand th loss If I break the But, oh, how I wish my observant critic could see giving myself "the eye" in that mirror CISSY FITZGERALD.

Brandreth's Pills purify the system, and thus the cause of many diseases. RE VIVO RESTORES VITALITY. Made a el! Man of.Me. produces refill's In It actc pouvrlully ami OitYK fait mcu will recover tlu-ir youthful vjuor using Lorit Memory, all cllocts ot' beli-abuxu or oxoi-ss ami which It Dot only htartingat. ot IN a great ucrvo tonic and blooil britifi- back tho pinlc plow trt ffiooks atwj ro- BtoriiiK tin- ilpo of youf.lu It ivanK olf and Cousiiraiiif.iou.

on other. It oui camod in vest pockot. By Sl.OO per pncliiiso. or lor S5.OO, with a pott- tlvo written puurumcc to euro or refund the monoy. jrfe.

ROYAL MEDICINE 53 Rivar CHICAGO, ILL FOll SAI.K )tY B. F. Keesllnn, DruggtaVtogaosport. ncw, OR.RODRiaUtZ SPANISH TREATME.N I LOST MANHOOD botii of and iuddfi)o- nfrcxl mm njid womnn. Tho ifwfoicffocuof of trnntjnont, K11HOJIS, producmff Iwwmtv, Exfoautalni; dniijmnnd Irtjw of nower or tint omti veyrpftnHUiiilu biff one for study, burilnomnnd of nower or tint Goxi- Orului.

They iiot only euro by stAnt nff At the sent of dlv but are XKICYK nnd ItLOW brijiirmc: bade tho jtink rinw to ohcvLB nnd FIUK OF to UlO iwitcus. Ijy mnJl, or A for 4.N with wrlU ten 1 (n (Mire Ihr BOOC CrbC. Ben Finher. 311 Four tli FEMALE PILLS. NEW DISCKVHir NEVER A new, roliubio ujid htmtian.

uiod by over monthly. Ini-lp-orntoa tiicra 2. rtTbox.ortnoiboxSi. pltoln vrupper Sond tc In orpartlCUliira, Sold Sold by B. F.

Keesling and Ben Fisber. Consumers of dewmj tokccowb arewihjtopajdlittleTnoretlii lie price dialed for tlie ordinary trade tolaccos. will find this Irand superior to all ortara BfWARE IMITATIONS. SPECULATORS rim INVESTORS IfC Alii "WRITE U3 and retcrn matt -rill you FREE, foil information to how to In St.re«t, SPLENDID GAINS 'C MODEST INVESTMENTS, Botxis, Grain, Provisions and Cotton boa juid Mlrt tor or on a margin of 5 10 6 per ount-j 1 ConuniwdoM 1.10 per OnrBaHj Market Letter contains full Cor-' -viih iiv Hlchert rcfftimcw. Consolidated Stock and Produce Co.

AT BROADWAY. NEW YORK. Lost Manhood tjr Hindoo Jtemi.siy. With Ben Fibber, Druggist. LOGANSPORT, INO.

niKhily omiitKiona, The Pennsylvania Station. ennsylvaniaLinB Trains Kun by Central Tlaw' vxoopt Bradford and Colnmbus 2.45 a ro 2.45 a Rlcamond Cincinnati 1 00 a 2 a. Indianapolis a 2 JS a Effoer Pworla fnew a 55 a '12 25 a Crown Holnt ChlwufO 3 15 a Richmond Clnclnnar.i 5 45 a Til.nO CronTi Point Cblcjigo U.OO a 7 25 Momlceilo ttffner '5 a 40 Columbus 7.50 a a.2f) HIner loca! freight a Indlauapolle it ID L20 Rlcnino: Cincinnati 1.55 1.85 Bradford CoIonibnB 1.50 125 Pnlladelphia i New 1.50 J.25 MonticeUoA t-'-'pmt 7.46am Chicago 1.30 1,45 Chicago Intermediate 1.55 pro Richmond 3.IK) pm til.DO a in Wlnamsc 5.45pm Mai ion AoomcxlaHon 5 5u 19 40 a J. A. MCCULLOCGH, ieeat, Logansport.

EAST BOEK1I. New York Exprew, dallj 2.41 a ra Ft Wajn- except Sonday 8.20 a Kaa. City Toledo except a Atlantic Erpreiw. dally 4-57 Accommodation for East L15 WKfiTlBODMt. Pacific Express, 10.27 a AccomodaUon lor West Cltr except Sundaj except Saudw 8t LOalj Ki, Eel Rlvep Logansport.

West Side. Between Logansport and Chill. EAST BOOSD- AccomiEodatlon. leave except Sunday 9.55 a 4.35pm WEST iccomroodaUon, amre except C. G.

XEWKLt. Agent. VAN LINLj Trains Loganspbrt, 01 THE No. 25 Tor St. Joseph a Jowpb FOKTUE SOCTH.

51 For TerreBants TMa For Terre For time all ai aoa In ton InfonuttoD toi mn,.

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About Logansport Pharos-Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
342,985
Years Available:
1890-2006