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The Portsmouth Herald from Portsmouth, New Hampshire • Page 5

Location:
Portsmouth, New Hampshire
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OSTONMMNEB SASTERN DIVISION nmer Aangement, In Effect June 24 Leave Portsmouth Bostofl. 360,730,735,815, 1065, 11 05 in, 1 2 21, 3 05, 5 00, 6 35, 7 23 -n. Su'nday, 3 50, 8 00 a 2 21, 00 in. Portland, 955, 1045 a 245, 8 50, 20, m. Sunday, 8 30, 10 45 my 8 60, 2 0 Wells Bewsn, 955am, 245, 522 m.

Sunday, a 30 a m. Old and Portland, 955 a a 45, 5 22 m. Sunday, 8 30, 10 45 a m. North 'Conway, 9 55, 11 16 a 3 00 pm. Somerswortb, 4 50, 9 45, 9 65, 11 16 a 2 40, 3 00, 5 22, 5 30 m.

Sunday, 8 30 a m. 1 30, 5 00 m. Rochester, 9 45, 9 55, 11 16 a ra, 2 40, 3 00, 6 22, 5 30 m. Sunday, 5 00 m. Dover, 4 50, 9 45 a 12 25, 2 40, 6 22, 8 52 m.

Sunday, 8 30, 10 48 a 130,500, 852 pm. North Hampton and Hampton, 7 30, 7 35, 8 15. 11 05 a 1 38, 21, 5 00 m. bunday, 8 00 a 2 21, 6 00, 6 35 m. ilns for Portsmouth ave Boston, 6 00, 7 30, 9 00, 9 40, 10 10, a 12 30, 1 30, 3 15.3 30, 4 45, 7 00, 9 45 m.

Sunday, 4 30, 8 20, 9 00 a 6 40, 7 00, 9 45 m. ave Portland, 2 00, 9 00 a 12 45, 1 40, 0 00 m. Sunday, 2 00 a 12 45 u. aVe North Conway, 7 25, 10 40 a 3 15 m. ave Rochester, 7 19, 9 47 a 12 49, 5 30 p'm.

Sunday, 7 00 a m. ave Somersworth, 6 35, 7 32, 10 00 a 1 02. 5 44 m. Sunday, 12 30, 4 12, 6 68 p. m.

ave Dover, 6 55, 10 24 a 1 40, 4 25, 6 30, 9 20 m. Sunday, 7 30 a 12 45, 4 25, 9 20 m. ave Hampton, 7 56, 9 22, 11 58 a -2 13, 4 20, 4 59, 6 1G m. Sunday, 6 20, 10 06 a 8 09 m. aye North Hampton, 8 02, 9 28, 12 04 a in, 2 19, 4 31, 5 05, 6 21 m.

30, 10 12 a 8 15 m. ave Greenland, 8 OS, 9 35 a 12 10, 2 25, 5 11, 6 27 m. Sunday, 6 35 10 IS a 8 20 m. SOUTHERN DIVISION. PORTSMOUTH BBANOB aiiis Kave the following stations for Manchester, Concord and intermediate potions rtsmouth, 8 30 a 12 45, 5 25 m.

eenland Village, 839 a 1204, i 33 m. ckingham Junction, 90V a 107, i 58 m. ping, 9 22, a 1-21, 0 14 m. ymoncl, 9 32 a 1 32, 6 25 m. turning leave ncord, 7 45, 10 25 a 3 30 m.

830, 1110am; 4 2 0 31. ymond, 9 10, 11 48 a 5 02 m. ping, 9 22 a 12 00 5 15 m. ckingharn Junction, 9 47 a 12 17, i 55 in. eenland Village, 1001 a 6 OS m.

Drains connect at Rocking ham Junc- Ut Haverhill, Lawrence Boston. Trains connect at Manester and Concord for Plymouth, Lancaster St. Johnshur Montreal and the west. JorttrHiauipton only. given, through tick- i sold and baggage checked to all ints, at station.

LANDERS, G. P. T. A. 12 29 ork Harbor Beach ave Portsmouth, 7 50, 11 20 a 12 45, 3 07, 4 55, 6 45 in.

ave York Beach, 6 45, 9 50 am, 12 10, 125, 4 JO, 5 SOp m. D. J. FLANDERS, G. T.

P. A. MAN'S DAILY TALK. Knmlxer of I'ned by Varlontt Fernonii In Twenty-four "I have been trying to figure out how many words the average man utters in every twenty-four hours," said a gentleman who had a penchant for peculiar things, "but I have been unable to reach any satisfactory conclusion on account of the different rates of speed at which different persons talk. Of course I have no reference to the different kinds of words which may be found in tlie daily vocabulary of the average man, but I'm talking about the total number of words uttered, counting repetitions and all, every twenty-four hours.

"There is the quiet, melancholy gentleman who will not speak on an average of 500 words a day, and there are many who for one reason or another would not utter anything like this number. On the other hand, there is the conversational gatling gun, not always a woman, either, who will roll off words at a fearful rate of speed and aggregate for one day would run up to dizzy heights. Then there is 1 the normal talker, who will strike a good decent average--the man who will neither bore you with his indifferent silence nor tire you with his meaningless verbosity. suppose that we figure that the average person will utter an average of s-ixty words every minute. This would amount to 2,400 words for every hour, or about 57,000 words for every twenty-four hours.

Of course no person will talk this much, as the windiest of men anil women would probably break down before they hud talked as much, as fifty-seven columns in the average daily newspaper. The only question is as to how much time each person puts in talking during each day. Some men and women are situated so that they cannot talk during the day, except at mealtime, on account of the character of the work they hnve to do. There are others, such as traveling men, for instance, who depend upon talking for a living. I have figured that the liigh man, probably the traveling man, will talk five hours out of every twenty-four, which would give him a total of 12,000 words every day.

1 hnvo figured that most nny sort of man will talk as much ns ten minutes out of every twenty-four hours, and this would give him a total of 600 words for the defy. "These are the two extremes. I am satisfied that the normal man--the mun who strikes a decent average between indifferent silence and disgusting verbosity--will talk probably one hour, all told, each day, which would allow him 2,400 words. And this, by the way, is consid orable talk, for it will fill two columns in a newspaper, and a whole lot of wisdom ran be crowded into two Oilcans Times-Democrat. GOVERNMENT BOAT, FOR GOVERNMENT BUSINESS.

Leaves Navy yard--8 20, 8 9 15, 00, 10 30,11 45 a. 1 35, 2 00, 3 00, 30, 5 00, 5 45, 45 p. m. Sundays, 00, 1015 a. 1215, 1235 p.

m. olidays, 9 30,10 30,11 30 a. m. Leaves Po tsmouth--8 30, 50, 9 30 15, 11 00 a. 12 15, 1 45, 2 15, 3 30, 30, 5 30, 6 00, 00 p.

m- Sundays, 07, a. 1205, 1225, 1245 p. olidays, 10 00,11 00 a. 12 00 m. JVedntadavi antf Saturdayt Are Now Receiving Two BCargos of IB.

AMD THK lip only (ftivof ffj'sb cement in the city Wo the largest stock constant ensure the newoaf cements. i 137 MARKET ST. AN AUTOMOBILE IN THE PULP11 ANIMALS. and Seven species of wasps secrete store up honey just as the bees. Tlie jawbone of the average whale twenty-five feet in length.

Tho tongue of such a monster will yield a ton of oil. Oats and several other animals have a eyelid, which can be drawn over thu eyt'ball either to cleanse it or to protect it from too strong a light. I) urine the summer thrushes get up before 3 o'clock in the morning and don't go to bed until after 9 o'clock at nitwit. So they nearly nineteen hours. The Telea polyphomns, the best known species of American silkworm, feeds readily on the leaves of the oak, maple, mulberry, willow, elm and several other trees.

The value of haddock lauded OH Kng- lisdi coasts is usually $4,000,000 great et 111 an that of herrings nnd constitutes one- third of the value of all the fish annually taken. The big gray kangaroo of Australia measures about seven feet from tho tip of its nose to the end of its tail. He car. run fiihter than a horse and clear thirty feet at jump. In tho stomach of a ten pound pike taken from Loch Gnwe, Scotland, recently was found a full grown rat, quite intact.

except that the head and neck WLTC slightly cut, presumably by the pike's teeth. For Cold In tbe Head. Camphor is much used as a remedy in tho beginning of a cold in the head. Those of our renders who hnve faith in its virtues will probably be interested in what is' said to be the Swiss method of applying it. The method certainly ap- penrs simple and efficacious: Half fill a jug with boiling water, and into that put a teaspoonful of well powdered camphor.

Fashion out of writing paper a funnel, with cap the top of the jug. The camphorated steam should lie inhpi- ed through the nose for ten or fifteen minutes, the inhalation being repeated, if required, every four or five hours. If, in spite of its unpleasantness, the inhalation is persisted in, it is said that throe repetitions will always effect a cure, however severe the "cold in the head" may be. A BRAVE LITTLE CHRISTIAN. Hard Her Firmness Softened Ilcnt't of ft Bud Mun.

A splendid story is told of a good little girl. One day her mother sent her with a message to a man who was the biggest drunkard in the village, and when the little girl arrived he was far from sober. Seeing the child, the man with sneer Baid: "Oh, you are Christian, are you? I expect you have been praying this morning!" "Yes," answered the little girl. "Well, you arc a lot praying hypocrites!" And, seizing a gun, the man The Latent Move In the Campaign AualiiHt tbe Horse. I' The automobile has been, adapted for- i.se in agriculture.

A Chicago firm has turned out a mower equipped with ball ODD BLUNDERS THAT HAVE BEEh MADE IN SERMONS. minister Who Not Well Pouted tti Maritime Nomenclature. Another Who Wanted c.nd roller bearings and propelled by a gasoline motor. The motor, according to The Scientific American, i to Announce Themselves pair of four cycle gasoline engines of AmouR Thieves, The thief born and bred in the slums is always superstitious and cowardly. He believes in the power of witches, omens nnd the protecting properties of amulets, talismans and charms, and when searched at the police office there nre usually found in his pocket or concenled about his person bits of coal, rusty horseshoe nails, lucky stones and rings.

He parts with these articles, on which he relies for safety in tho hour of peril, with the greatest reluctance and stipulates with the turnkey to have them returned either to himself or friends. London Tit-Bits. I WILL NOT SWEAR." added fiercely, "I will shoot you if you do not swear before you leave." The- little girl, however, stood firm and refused, which only made the drunken man more angry. ''Swear or 1 will shoot!" he cried, putting himself in the attitude of firing. "No, 1 vvill not swear, and you may do what you like!" replied the girl.

The gun dropped to the man's side; the fierceness fled from his face, and he said kindly: "You nre a brave little girl! Go home and pray for For the Boy Who IH Scolded. A Texas boy writes: "What is your best advice to a boy who is told every time he nays anything that he is telling a lie and whose mother is always mad at him and ia always finding a with what he does? I just want to know what ynu would do if you were in this position." 1 would be first sure that told the truth and that I didn't deserve the a Ending. Then I would try to show my mother and those about me by my patient, manly conduct when under fire that I had good stufT in me. A boy who is conscious that he is in the right need have nothing to fear. If ho is so unfortunate as to have scolding mother, ho can simply a it as one of the bur- dons of life which he must learn to boar.

There is no one who has not his difficulties--no boy who has smooth sailing all the time. Jus-t make a rule every day to do tbe best you can and learn to take the hard things of life with equanimity Above all, don't lobe your temper because others do. A good thing for a liny to learn is not to answer back. A scold- fng person will soon quit scolding if he jnmcs to find a ho is doing it Boy. Proof of the Story.

Several years ago we owned a fine, largo gray cat. lie fond of hunting would often bring his game to us, and we were vc-iy proud of him. One evening were telling a visitoi about his hunting excursions and mentioned the fact that he had caught a rabbit the day before. The cat, who was in the room and who had listened very earnestly to this got up and walked to the door and asked us, cat fashion, to le: him out. We opened the door nuc thought no more of him.

Later in the evening, when our visitor was going nway, and the door was again opened, there wns the cat in front of tin doorway with a rabbit in his mouth, dead but still warm, nnd nlinost as large lie dropped it and looked up ir the visitor's face, as much as to say, want to show yon that they were telling the truth about K. in PLuladcl phia Ledger. "Ilanncd" the Fastest. A small boy who lives in Germnntown and is a member a Quaker family went to visit Washington friends not ago. In Washington there was a bo; just about the age of the j-ounc Quake and in time they became fast friends.

Then one day the Germautown boy challenged the Washington boy to a foo race, and in much excitement the even took place. The Washington lad was no long in outrunning his companion an crossed the line some seconds in the lead. When the little Quaker lad could catc! his breath, he gasped, "Well, the may have beaten me in the race, but my legs, ranned the fastest." A Long Pelt Want. An once went to Windsor cnstle and insisted upon seeing Queen Victoria. lie wns told thnt it was quite impossible, as an audience with the queen could be had only by appointment.

Still he persisted, nnd then they told him flatfooted that before seeing thst queen he must state the object of his visit. He said he wanted to show her a new piece of furniture, a throne bed a perfect throne by day and a perfect bed by night. --San Francisco Fntnl Prosperity, A street peddler who sells shoe lacings on a Washington street corner had his Mring of laces wound around his neck like a scarf. One night recently business was and he sold ns many as four pairs of laces. (The change wast too rapid, and the peddler entight cnlil in neck and died of Uecord.

Dr. Fralick of Now has concocted a fluid which lie believes will prove successful curing consumption. At a demonstration two patients in ad- It js not for the laity to throw stones vanecd stages of tbe disease were Inix horse power, mounted tandem on i at the parson about his slip, due either tc jectod with the tluid. According to large pipe six inches in diameter and I platform fright or to absence ot mind, i )os( ho witnessed the experiment, ve feet long. the brethren and sisters who arc not ot the effect of the fluid ou each patient The rear of this plpe'ls adapted to be make plenty of mistakes of tlii.

wag Uui TlK faw llusbc di as kind. Nearly every otic-- man or woman ecured to the mower frame the same 1 a i tberc had been a rush of blood to the an ordinary draft tongue, and the, soa)p pntllP1 ing ail(1 hns sat down head; the pulse became stronger, the ront end is supported by a steering the frightful consciousness of having said' eyes brightened, and the fingers and PRESIDENT'S POLICY. something which was far from that intended. One man, a lawyer, is still piiued nt himself the recollection ot toes became warm. This indicated, the doctor said, that the lluid had extended to the extreme parts of the body.

TOE AUTOMOBILE MOWEB. wheel. The large pipe serves not only a bed for the motor, but also as a eservoir, in the middle part, for gaso- tli church who had so kindly "assisted" lue, and as exhaust chambers at its at the death of her husband. The village doctor, who had given hU services on this snd occasion was the most chagrined. In another Illinois church a social was hiiving said three times in the course of rho jufusicu made the pntieat per- i spire.

Dr. Fralick has been working ou his cure for tuberculosis for eight years. He says in a recent interview: "I have been experimenting with a fluid containing properties similar to those existing in the normal blood. This fluid contains compounds that destroy all known disease germs almost Instantly, and. while its action is antagonistic to objectionable organisms, at the same time it will Intensify aud Increase the desired properties of the blood.

an address that "there was no food for either animal or beast," and a certain i clubwoman recalls with horror how, in I the midst of a poetic description of sunrise in Alaska, she finished with "nud it wns very pretty indeed." Yet there are more recorded slips mado by ministers, perhaps, because a ridiculous tiling from the pulpit becomes thrice ridiculous, as, for instance, the noiiaceuient by a country clergy I niiin just before the benediction that Mrs Dlnnk. a poor widow of the parish, desired i thank all those members ot ront and rear ends, one chamber for ach cylinder, respectively. Although the driving devices are deigned primarily for a mowing rna- hine, the motor is adapted to a va- iety of purposes. By simply disengaging the cutting apparatus it may be ns a portable agricultural engine for drawing loads about the farm, grinding feed, pumping water, sawing vood, or any other purpose for which aii engine is valuable. The Thistle.

The Scotch thistle is snid to have been chosen as a national flower because of the part it played in saving the country from an attack by the Danes in 1010. In the beauty of its flower and its harsh and thorny surroundings it may well typify the life of that unfortunate woman famous in history as Mary, queen of Scots. Tic Wns Holding; On. A little four-year-old was running down hill holding his dress tightly. "Look out! You'll hurt yourself!" called his mother.

"Oh, no! I'ze not afraid. See! I'ze holding on to myself." You will find that the mere resolve not to be useless nnd the honest desire to help otiipr people wilK in tho quickem and delicntest Tv.iys, improve Huskiu. 1 1 I Fniry'n Rohp. Thorr w.is a fiiry, nnd Rood, on i i i i i i Wlw took Inn fit That folk hat! c.vay Ant) them in a woiiiiruijt K.oni Till hail made a robe of Whose sUmriK folds Wire I I i And whicli no time toulJ i dctroy. TJiczi i pt-oplc rriod: 1 I.fnd us, lUis woTuiroui Tliat a Fny a i i i i At I a a horrowcil Tho a i milled, "(in lonk." salI, "AkiTiK patli, an'l i i That, few utr.iy I i Yet f.Un-y still remain behind:" Lcoaaid 10 Cliurcliroao.

Palestine Jong lias been considered Mo Our Autbortxt-d to Deflne xitlon on Iniporliint Washington, Sept. can be Btat- on the highest authority ttuvt President Roosovelt has authorized no one to define his position upon any public question since his succession to t5ie presidency. Beyond a reiteration declaration made at tue time the oath of office was administered to him tbat be would carry out unbroken the Me- Kiuley policy the president has spoken to no one with regard to his In detail. Therefore tbe reports son ad broadcast over tbe country a it is his purpose to pive the subji of roc proeity the leading place in hi- rx age to congress in I and tl.i:t is to push that U'' 'ront with all tbe vigor it his command can be coiis.derul wholly gratuitous and entirely based upon assumption. With none of bis official advisers or close- friends tins the president discussed this theme at all since eiitprins; upon the discharge of his.

duties. So far as anybody is authorized to for "This Is the first time in the history of medicine that a material has been infused into the blood which contains to be held Knowing that the small fry ls a a a tho as much nU-uee at such times and that it often became boisterous, troadiug indeed upon the ecclesiastical and other toes and sitting upon the ecclesiastical silk hat, the Ladies' Aid society, i managing the affair, determined to vord the notice that parents itld nor, feel nt liberty to bring their off spring. Sunday the minister, glancing hastily at the paper in his hand, only tho words "children" and "imitcd" and, folding it up, proceeded to sa a the ladies specially urged the children to be present. adding that no occasion ithotit them. as complete "Tlie Saviour said, 'Suffer i children to come and it is the gloiy of the Christian church a it tin-so tender little plants and a never d-n-s it them to feel tliat they ar merestlug solely as "the Holy Land.

)t wolcoim i lor j( the children, therefore, be present as far as possible." They were, it 'u needless to H-corrl. a a i the cake plate i astonishing results aud testing the capacity ol ice cream I'leezcr. Another minister made an anno.iniv- which grated harshly upon the nerves of tlie more sensitive part of the congrogatloftj although he was probably unable to avoid doing it, as the i i hud been sent in pioperly signed. I a just a a I cant if ill and touching solo. siKig by the tenor of the choir -one of those songs which seem to lift the singer ami the listener Hi) above a things While the audience was still breathless and tin- tenor was about to a his scat the pastor arose and announced chcor- ind the only trade which has sought to exploit it has been a of tbe "personally conducted" tour.

IVut this may be changed soot), for valuable mineral do- havo beeu discovered beneath the historic soil. A German mining eu- gilieer In Palestine has written home as follows: "Valuable mineral treasures have recently been discovered in Palestine, so it is safe to say thai, Industrial of the Holy Land is no longer a dream. It is true a tbe greater part of the once 1 nourishing country Is a barren desert. The lines of communication are miserable, and trullic is jerms of disease. In fact, every capillary is flushed and every cell fed with a most potent and in every way desirable enemy to unnatural conditions." Ir.

Fralick says be is not prepared at present to divulge tbe components of the fluid. In tbe demonstration he first bared the arm of the patieut nnd laid open a vein. The lluid was then infused through a canula. Sixteen ounces of tliC fluid at a temperature of Kit! de grees were infused in each cnse. Dr.

Fralick says that when the fluid flows through the veins a compound forms aud nascent oxygen is liberated. Two cancer patients, l)r. Fralick says, have been treated successfully the lluid. unsafe, aside from the one railroad (here would be a ohirKeii pie social in the parlors of the chine!) Thursday from Yafa to Jerusalem. "The newly discovered mineral deposits lie on both sides of the- Jordan ami the Dead sea.

The salt deposits of tbe Dead could be developed Into tin industry. The waters hold chilli-magnesium, brom-niaguesltim aud calisnit. Aside from this, there are tho bituminous chalk springs of Xebi JNlu- sa, which a i from 30 to 40 per cent of a a "The most important of all the de- positis is phosphate. As is well known, natural ealkphosplmto, phosphorite and eoprolite are necessary for the production of superphosphates. This latter composition and sulphur form the most important ingredients in the.

preparation of a i i i a manure. At present the phosphate mines of Florida almost supply the world's demand. "The immense Holds of phosplintc to the east and west of the Jordan need only better means of trallic and communication in order to insure their development. This, it would seem, is not far distant, as the Turkish government is planning a continuation of the Yafu- Jenisalem railroad, and steamboats are already plying the Dead sea." i at which a large attendance, expected. There is a story, not a now certainly, and probably not a true one, but one which is applicable, of a discourse wns upon the wonders of cri'iitioii and God's c.u'c of the least as we'll ns of the greatest of his works.

"When God created the a i he made the i i i of sand. When he I made a Ninirara, lie also made the i dewdrop. hen he trade the ele- a i a formed guat, a when ho made mo lie made a dnisv." lu these opinions his hearers may have coin-in led and may not have. A lYesb.Meriaii minister, writing in an English religious monthly, i few- Dictionary For Eiisrinoorn. The Society of German Engineers In Berlin lias undertaken the preparation of an international technical dictionary to be published In English, French and Gorman.

Its aim is to secure exhaustive completeness in technical words and expressions, exactness in translation and i i in usage. genuine- slip a a i a i e. One of these stoiics is of a Doling who" labored among '-he fisher iolk of the east coast a i who was much given to metaphors. This Sunday morning he spoke of tin: soul sailing out upon the sea of eternity, and he almost dramatic. "Look," ho cried, "nt yondor ship! The Blue Peti-p is at the masthead; the sails are hoisted.

She lises on the swelling Oil Knurlnes In To what extent the i i a i a spirit is raised and slung from from Here he paused, while the congregation, every member of which knew a hip from fore to a waited with expectant i est. "From the place where it ought to be!" he finished desperately. 'K means well," said nn old seantan after tin- service, "but w'nt can you think oC a man us doesn't know the cat's hoadV" Then there was the brother who gave series of sermons on tho prophet Jonah nnd. coming to the part about ihc storm told with fervent gestures how the snllort "rowed and rowed to bring the sea ti land." This is much liko the cffoit o.f that other pastor who described to hirt people the situation of a man who was correct to say to oppose reciprocity him, It would he that he intends at every ns to a it is purpose to i utntMUil emphasis upon reciprocity in Ins forthcoming message, lu point of fact it is not yet known ttiat President KnoM-volt will refer at nil to th ia lii- message. He has told i a W.iod.

the military Culm, a favors the proposition of Plait of Connecticut for limited and ry reciprocity i Cuba but uinhor than this hns not gone in the reciprocity quest ion GAS MADE FROM AIR. I i i That OX-KMI Procons i lii-volutlool-ni. i TrndrN. According to Kauul Plctet, the fa mous Swiss inventor, Ins latest cry In regard to the manufacture of ygen gas will revolutionize the mota Lrades of this country ami indeed wil a an I a influence on most our Industries. Hrlcily the Imcidion consists ol tal; Ing oxygon out of tbe atmospheric aii by physical means ami not by eliem ical process, as at present.

The in ventor claims a by i process 1 cost of oxygen i be very much 1 than a a i per cubic- foot, which, compared wit It present prices', is in proportion of faitlumrs to i i i The process will be applied to metal lurgy, chemistry, i i ami public health. For lighting purposes the BOII will lo mfrcd with water gas and It is said, will give a much better i lit a much lower price. It has greui heating prxporlies and can be used I'oi fiiiicltintr all ore a i i gold other refractory ores. Tlie process, it is said, i lie much lionper a any present one for a i a purposes. The oxygen enji be put into large- rooms, schools, tlwators, and so forth, and In thin nioanrs the air will be rendered much puuur.

"It is certainly ti very great idea," says Dr. Dreyfus, tbe celebrated scion tist, "ami we; have every eoiilidence in it being all that Professor I'lctet says it is. lit- is a inun who inspires confidence, and that he is very able has been proved by bis work In the con structioibot low I A REVOLT. lUnrln He Kft- cnjM's Washington, Sept. Mail received at the Colombian legation flrm the reports of the defeat of C-ner- ul Murin.

the revolutionary leader has bet'ii operating in the a i of Toliina. General a i rapture. His original for. frogated about men in the border state of a a i are r' 1 forted a i though the y.i,.y..... laus across line are mil' 'i tilted lest the government of Cnleml .1 shall i a i I a i oUlelals here that Colombia has no Intention of taking; such action Mr.

llerran. the secretary of Co lombian legation here. Hie lion in Colomldii, i i i now has a almost a lias cost the i mem of and tin. sncritlee of i BASEBALL, of A 111 tin- 1.1. I is growing In what one is disposed to banging over a frightful abyss nnd ended consider as the dreamlands of the far cast is shown by the recently made statement that oil engines are now used in numbers in Palestine for pumping water from wells.

with the words, "And to him the moments seemed minutfs." Once a minister in picturing Nemesis overtaking the guilty spoko of the "sound of footprints approaching" nnd was dis- at the smile which went round. Yet not ail mistakes are mere slips of the tonjjue. An old Methodist iniii'su-r of memory who preached central Illinois twenty-five years ago used repeatedly to speak of the "tlufcisand a feeding upon ten thousand lulls," which is a remarkable feature performed ull ut oneo. "But let not the maker of slips worry Major Heuard. the celebrated mill- t( u-y aeronautical expert, lias devised a i for cvpryTuch tnry now airship which, it is claimed, will be superior to a of M.

Rnntos-Dumont. A now type of motor has been constructed by this engineer at tbe govern-, Post. merit works at Mi-udoii. but so jealons- tslip there ii; likely to hove boon enough of forceful spf-nking to make an impression and perhaps to live ly has con i tructioii guardf! Most housekpcpci-s h.ive woriderwl what a no regardirm it design thp whju A rovri nc tht i i is known A spicp (s i i i a aa It. Is claimed, however, a I motor oon ns the nutmeg is it is rolled generates sillHcient speed tri the in lime rnndc- from oyster shells aerostat to be nuvigaiile in order to its destruction by tho ers save a weevil, and it The i i i oper'mcn'iS i i ri it- will be earned mit in i is ono tlie and is dust that remuiiu i They nre to be of a v.

r.v an.i f-xactiiig In th( possfbditiCM of tbe gine. 'One i a Is to consist of a i tho rrtd by many (s "The portions of steal; nre rnthor smnli from to Uoiion nnd a thin morning." wild Mm. Stnrvem npolo- totn 1 (ll.iirince of 170 miles. Mr.Jc:- nurd hi confident of accomplishing tin goiicfilly. "I'm i it's very considerate of you," ourncy without a single stoppage and replied Mr.

Stnrbonnl. it a fair rate of speed. I toti I at speed. it's very Instrument I-'op Soil Study. Tho djvision of soils of the T'nlted States department of agriculture has just described a new instrument now in use for investigating the properties of soils.

The new apparatus electric affair. It registers a half dozen 01 more various soil properties. Thh method depends upon tho principle that the resistance offered to the pass ago of an electric current from one carbon plate to another buried In tin- soil depends tipori the a of inol.s ture present between the carbon plates or electrodes. L'nlqnc Educational Method. K.

novel method of teaching the French language by the phonograph is being attempted in England. Several prominent French professors are dc voting their energies to preparing pbo nograph cylinders currying French les sons upon tlieni. The phonographic records arc accompanied by a book, "The Pictorial French Course." Each book contains thirty lessons, each of corresponds to a phonographic cylinder, and each lesson is Ingeniously illustrated. At rut-ii. New VTU 0 1 0 2 1 1 0 Siuitn mil 1' I 1 1 .1 I I II 'I 1 1 1 1 1' a i i i i uml y.tnmn-i.

At i i i (I i) 0 Cuu-lniiati '1 11 0 0 a i a i i i i I i atirl Herxrii At I'liii Philidi'lphu 0 (1 0 0 0 1 2 1 ft 'i 0 'I 'i 'I i i Tin i .1 1 i Klintf At St. l.oi 1 i i) il 1 .) 0 St. 0 'l 'I ll it i i i i don i OH '1 I 1 I US W. 1. i' i i "'I I i rk "7 i 1'j 'i' I -J Si.

r.imis IT" I I I I I At i i i 1. 1'lululi 5. A i i 1 i i i i i i 1 1 At I I i i a i i i i i ttd-lmijtun. 4. a i i i a i nH, Washington.

Sept. Th" ti.le of Immigration to A i slightly in the month. The total number of I i a a i at York in A was i 2 TO2'. men and women There wo'-e in tho number ti.T'C I a ians. H.fmK Poles Asiatics.

The total mi'iilM from nil Dumpe a 23.SHO. In August, woo. immigrants were Imv'rd at Now York. Of these r.S'_"2 were were I a i a nnd Asia 307. Ernptive Cone of.

Professor Semmola, In the Hendl- conta of the Naples academy, states that, tho new eruptive cone- of Vesuvius began to form in September. 1'JOO. and has reached a height of forty meters, hut is difficult of ascent owing to its steepness and the thick coating of sand on its walls. Tho cavity, he says, is Irregularly elliptic and divided along Its major axis Into two parts, Automobile i Next. Mme.

Schmnhl ia the Nouville proposes motor car kitcbens, her idea being a kind of a a restnuraut from vhencc food can be served ready for the table. She points out a some plan of this kind Is actually in work ing order In Berlin, but there tbe ambulant restaurant only concerns with the preparation of food for the sick and ailing. New York. Sept. --t'hanncoy W.

Walker, a i a i of the Policy Holders" National union, having limped bis bail of tfl.uiM). is now dodg- ng detocthes armed i a beueh warrant issued by Magistrate Olin- sted. Although tlu- sum Hnolved in lie charge is but Sl.uno. the cast- is beloved to include wholesale swindling jperittions extending ovei half tlie states and i the isolators moro than i i the past year. Mnjor Conovcr ew York.

Sept. W. rnn.jor of (lie Seventh rpgi- ment and a member of the art firm of William Rcljans. i avenue, died nt 3 o'clor-k yesterday afternoon at his summer residence, in Saxon avenue, Bayshore, on Long Island. Kiumn Goldman Fret'.

Chicago, Sept. Goldman, Infoanarchist, who wns arrested here on a charge of complicity with in the of President McKinley, xvas discharged from e.us- tody. BRIEF NEWS NOTES. The Duke and Duchess of Cornwall have left Ottawa for Winnipeg. A storm tiff tbe Alaskan coast caused fears for the safety of Oregon.

W. H. Artams. wheelsman on the Brooklyn nt Santiago, was reported at Dulnth to have caused thr loop by error In steering..

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About The Portsmouth Herald Archive

Pages Available:
255,295
Years Available:
1898-1977