Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 22, 1910, Page 2

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ADVERTISEMENT. ADVERTISEMENT. R I ! - T e : e, . . ADVERTISEMENT. McLach- t efforts in{liouse tariff schedule on hats was re- - 3 A behalf. A conferefice Was held in -t:rqa;n the Senate. Mr. Hill is en- -“Mr. McLachlan, whose, the | Senator -“Brand at which | titled to credit for what he did in the -fu the largest manufa ot | Senator Smoot of Utah, Who was a | House, but the work in the Senate was | hats in the state, and one-of the larg- | member of the sup-commMitee of the |done by the two senators from Con- © est in the country, further stated that | Senate, attended.- Senatior Smoot | necticut, Senators Bulkeley and Bran- the Hat Manufacturers' Association, of | showed a disposition to favgr the Sen- | degee from the time they met the del- which he is the president, had passed | ate’s reduction of the tariff von . hats. egation from Danbury showed a dis a resolution thanking Senators Bulke- | - The delegation returned from Wash- [ position to be of service to the hat- ley and Brandegee and Congréssman |ington feeling satisfled that ithe inter- | ters and It Is unjust to sa$ that either Hill for their work in Washington in | ests of the hatters were in safe hands | or both were “unable or unwilling” to granted that Senator Bulkeley was en- to secure thelr. | titled to this credit and some of the | their b te Danbury hat manufacturers are de- | To have an effort made cidedly indignant over that. They |thanks to the senior ~sepator know whom they have to thank, but | however, ’rbiuqd their ire. A Campaign Story Conceived and Pub- lished Jointly by Hartfbr(_i Courant, New Haven Journal-Courier, W ater- bury American. by, Danbury. Hatters Reply - (Hartford Times, July 18) ' large quantities of English hats had been coming into this country, and the tariff was so arranged as to be decid- edly prejudicial to the American hat- ter. Therefore when Mr. Hill, as rep- resenting the congressional district in which the hatting industry flourishes, succeeded in getting the tariff on stiff hats raised for the protection of the industry in this country there was no little satisfaction in Danbury. When the Payne bill reached the What E. J. Hill Did For the Hatters Senator Aldrich Wantéd to Cut Schedule in Two, It Is Said. Credit for Tariff On @un Hats HAT MANUFACTURERS DENY CON- NECTICUT SENATORS WERE Senate, Senator Aldrich gave orders that the hat schedule be cut in two, UNWILLING OR UNABLE (Spectal to The Courant) and ~ this was done. Consternation | . TO HELP THEM. Waterbury, July 14. |reigned among the hatters and their The “Waterbury American” this | Tepresentatives in Washington. A lie- tle thought over the matter made it | Statements from Danbury Which Have clear that the-reason for this cut v that this was a personal matter with Mr. Hill, who was expected to be in the conference committee. and Senator Aldrich and his friends purposed to make this the basis of ‘some trading with the Connecticut congressman, being one of the methods b which the Senate boss attains his ! ends. ing prints a special dispatch from Danbury to the effect that the hat- there have to thank Congress- man E. J. Hill for the present protec- tive duty on their goods, that 4t was to his work, la that it was secured, and that Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee, instead of aiding him, were either unable or unwilling to do anything. The dispatch follows as Appeared in State Newspa- pers Are Not Facts. due SENTIMENT WHICH TIMES COR- RESPONDENT DISCOVERED ON VISIT TO THE HAT MAK- ING CENTER. Danbury, July 14—The Danbury hat manufacturers are somewhat But Mr. Hill didn't go on the confer- worked up over claims made by | ence committee and the hatters were (Special to the Times.) Danbury, July 18. If there is a difference of opinion among the hat manufacturers of Dan- as to the credit which is due | put to it to know what to do, since iAMrmh proved stubborn and took the | attitude that the cut schedule would | have to stay as it was. The hatters’ { representatives hastened to see Sena- Representative Rogers and one or two other Bulkeley men in Danbury that Connecticut's senior senator was re- sponsible for getting the hat schedule in the recent tariff bill restored to the bury figures it contained as framed by Con- | tors Bulkeley and Brandeges on the | Senator Morgan G. Bulkeley and his gressman Hill in the Ways and Means | subject and found them not only un- | colleague, Senator Brandegee, for the Committee in the House after the |able or unwilling to do anything for | Senate’s action in restoring the tariff Senate’s Finance Committee had cut | the hat manufdcturers, but realized at | on hats to the schedule rate decided on it in two. The scHedule was restored | once that their attitude was hostile | by the House, it is not apparent in to its ofis;ln'al shape and the hatters |and that nothing need be expected | what they say in talking on the mat- have been jubilant about this ever | from this source | ter. There is no disposition to de- since, but they know very well whom | Nor did the Connecticut senators | tract from the merit of the work they have to thank ftor and are | do anything. for the Connecticut hat | which Congressman Hill did in behalf annoyed that Senator Bulkeley or his | men, even though a delegation went |of the hat manufacturers when the riends for him should try to steal |from Danbury to Washington. It was |tariff bill was before the House, but nother’s thunder. taken for granted that the reason be- | they that the acknowledgment of Milton A. Dammann New York | hind this was their being bound to |the werth of Mr. Hill's services can be lawyer who represented the hatters | stand by Aldrich in any case. It was | duly made without¥enying to Senators Washington in all their fight over | Congressman Hill who made sugges- | Bulkeley and Brandegee thé credit of hatting schedule, and is perfectly {tions that brought about the sched- |securing action, favorable in their in- famiitar with the whole situation. | ule’s returns to its form when it left | terests, in the Senate. They deprecate Recently in his office in New York | his committee and this was done | any attempts to stir up a feeling of a was asked by a well-known Dan- | through Senators Lodge and Penrose, | political or personal nature over their ury attormey who was responsible for | both of whom have important hatting | interests. They are not in politics, Senate's restoring it after it had |industries in their states. They alone | and do not wish to be involved in po- been trimmed down to 50 per cent. of | in the Senate and ¥ in the House | litical controversies. The statement the original schedule in the Payne bill. | are responsible the hat schedule | which has appeared in a number of “Hill and God,” he Teplied senten- |as it stands today | the yers throughout the state, and tiously. | Recently there have been published | which contained what purported to be In the period i previous | statements regarding this matter | 8an opinion from Milton A, Dam- to the special tariff last year | which would seem to take it for | mann, the New York lawyer who rep- \ e resented the hat manufacturers in ‘Washington, has occasioned consid- erable talk in Danbury. Mr. Dam- mann is reported to have said, when asked who was respomsible for the Senate’s restoring the schedule:— “Hill and God.” The reply savors somewhat of the “Me und Gott” remark attributed to the Kaiser William in the song which the late Admiral Coghlan sang to the amusemeént of his company, but to the consternation of diplomats whose bus- ness it is to see that nations do mot fall. out. The hat manufacturers say that they regret the remark for Mr. Hill's sake, as much as for anything else, as it is calculated to make him ridiculous. Bulkeley on His Job. Henry McLachlan, the president of the Hat Manufacturers’ Association, stated on Saturday, when his attention was called to the remark of Lawyer Dammann:— “I do mot believe Mr. Dammann made such a remark. When T saw Mr, Dammann in Washington he said that the restoration of the House Schedule Ly the Senate was made possible after Mr. N. Burton Rogers had interviewed the two Connecticut senators. Mr. Dammann told me that Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee worked hard and faithfully in the interest of the hat manufacturers and that the res- toration of the House schedule was the result of their efforts in behalf of hatters. The remark attributed to Mr. Dammann is not at all in accord with what he stated to me when he spoke in praise of the work of Senators Bulke- ley and Brandegee and of the friendly offices of N. Burton Rogers. Mr. Hill had done everything he could in the House for us. He could not have done more and the hat manufacturers feel indebted to him for what he did. But the schedule, favorable to our inter- ests, was saved in the Senate through the efforts of Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee.” “Then you do not think the sen- ators were neglectful of the interests of the hatters or ‘unable or unwilling’ to help them?” “I certainly do not.. Senator Bulke- ley was on his job on tariff matters all the time, and he and Mr. Brandegee did everything they could for us and | mess at the time, complied with the ‘thé train with behalf of the manufacturers. Mr. Mc- Lachlan said@ that he, personally, was in no way connected with politics and that in no sense was he a politiclan. He wanted credit given to whom it was due. N. Burton Rogers. N. Burton Rogers, who was one of the representatives of Danbury at the last session of the Genmeral Assembly, was very indignant at the statement published in the papers. In a conver- sation on the matter Mr. Rogers told the story of his going to Washington with a committee of the Danbury Hat- ters’ Association to see Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee. He said that a telegram was received by one of the hat manufacturers of Danbury from their attorney in Washington urgently requesting that a delegation of hat- ters, with some one who was intimate- ly acquainted with Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee, be sent to Washington without delay. The hatters knew that Mr. Rogers was an old personal friend of Senator Bulkeley’s and that, owing to the fact that he had voted for Sen- ator Brandegee for renomimation - for the Senate notwithstanding the vote of the business men of Danbury in fa- vor of the nomination of Mr. Hill, that the junior senator was particularly friendly to him. The Hatters' As- soclation asked Mr. Rogers to accom- pany the delegation to Washington. Mr. Rogers, though suffering from ili- request and a few hours later was on the delegation for ‘Washington. The hatters in the dele- gation were Edward Voén Gal, D. E. Loewe of the D. E. Loewe Company, W. B. Mallory of E. A. Mallory & Sons, Frank P. Farrell of the Dan- bury Company, Philip Simons of Si- mons & Keane, Ernest Downes of S. C. Hawley & Co. and John Beard of the Beard United Company. Mr. Rog- ers saw Senators Bulkeley and Bran- degee early the next morning after the arrival of the delegation in Washing- ton. Both senators without hesitation said they would do what they could to have the House schedule restored and promised to leave mnothing undone in behalf of the interests of the hat man- ufacturers. Both senators put off im- portant engagements which they had for that day to attend to the business of the hatters. They said it was enough for them that it was a Con- neeticut industry which required at- when intrusted to Senators {Bulkeley | help the hatters. and Brandegee. Mr. Rogers mald fur- ther that from time to time: he re- ceived communications from Senator | bad In Washington with Senator Bran Bulkeley informing him of tbhe pro ress of the efforts which he amd Sen- On ithe day that the Senate finally adoptd the House schedule rate Mr. Rogers re- ceived a telegram from Senator {Bulke- ley notifying him of the Senati tion. “This,” said Mr, Rogers, that Senator Bulkeley never for \a mo- ment lost sight of the interest of the hatters and that he constantly wwrked to have the House schedule restored. It is a cruel wrong to attempt to rob Senator Bulkeley of the credit which is due him.” Mr. Rogers added' that Congressman Hill is deserving of cred- It for his work in the House, but'.his power to help the hatters ended thmre. Mr. Rogers said with emphasis that had a tone of indignation: “It is aalie to say that Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee were unable or unwilling to help the hatters, as stated in ‘the statement from Danbury.’ Mr. Rog- ers has secured a copy of the Con- gressional Record for Jume 25, 1909, containing a report of the dlscussion; of the matter in the Senate when thes House schedule was agreed to. The Congressional Record gives the ful-‘ lowing report:— ! Mr. Aldrich—I ask now to take upq paragraph 442. The Secretary- 443—hats, forthy Mr! Aldrich—The committee, after a careful and long investigation of this subject, became satisfie? that the House provision was better than the Senate provision, and the committee desire to withdraw their amendment to the House provision. . The Presiding Officer—The question is on the amendment of the committee. The amendment was rejected. Mr. Bulkeley—Has that paragraph been agreed to? The Presiding Officer—The para- it came from the House of age 176, paragraph* bonnets or hoods, and so graph as Representattves will. be agreed to in the absence of objection. The chair hears no objection. What Other Hatters Say. Frank A. Farrell a member of the Danbury Company and who was a member of the delegation that accom- panied Mr. Rogers to Washington. state? that Senator Bulkeley worked hard in the interest of the hatters and that it was due to his efforts and the efforts of Senator Brandegee that the “Both were willing angd able to help us,” said Mr. Farrell. He recalled a conversation which he degree. Mr. Farrell sald that in that conversation Senator Brandegee stated ator Brandegee were making ! behalf | “I am an administration man but [ of the hat manufacturers. will- do everything that lies in my power in behall of the hat manufac- turers to bave the House tariff sched- ule restored in the Senate. If neces sary T will take the floor to oppose the committée, Senator Bulke is with me in this and we will both work to- gether. It is enough for us to know that it Is a Connecticut industry that requires the tarift.” Mr. Farrell fur- ther stated that every hat manufac- turer in Danbury repudiated t ment about Senat Bulkeley Brandegee. Mr. Farrell communicated over the telephone with other hat manufuc turers who could not be reached other ‘wise: He invited each to make a state- and statement in regard to what had be published concerning the attitude of Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee and repeated the statements to i i correspondent: D. E. Loewe of D, Loewe 1b Co, stated: “As one of the wcommittee from Danbury who went to ‘Washington and saw Senators Bulke ley and Brandegee on the tarlff mat- ter I wish to state that I am perf ly satisfied with what both Senat Bulkeley and Brandegee did in the "interest of the hat manufacturers of ‘Danbury and of the country and I have thanked Senator Bulkeley.” Philip Simons of Simons & Keane telephoned to Mr. Farrell that the statement that Senator Bulkeley was “unable or unwilling” te help the hat- ters is false. Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee did everything in their power to aid the hat manufacturers H. B. Mallory of E. A. Mallory & Sons .authorized Mr, Farrell to make for him the following statement: T was one of the committee of hat man ufacturers who went to Washington 10 see Senators Bulkeley and Brande- 1 to the tariff on hats. In- stead of t! tors being hostile, ut woilling or unable to help the hat man ufacturers they did everythin in their power for us and any statements to the gee in reg contrary are fals John H, Beard of the Beard United ympany, made a statement to Mr Farrell which was a corroboration of Mallory’ Mr. Von Gal informed Mr, Rogers thsit the newspaper statement did giveat _injustice to Senators Bulkele arul Brandegee. . The hat manufac tupers are grateful to the twwo senato for what they did. Mr. Rogers said th#t Shelton A. Davenport and H. R Mo “hesney to whom he had on ¥ihe matter had also said th, atons Bulkeley and Brandeg done everything possible for the hat- ters, Thirsting for Information. Little Gertrude, entering a butch- er's shop for the first time, stood ga- | zing around her in silent absorption. | Presently she took her mother by the hand, and, leading her to where hung a string of bologna sausages, she put a tiny finger on one big sausage and gravely inquired: “Mamma, what was | this when it was alive?”—Exchange. KILLOCH LETTERS FROM ABROAD Bonnie Scotland—Glasgow—Cars and Coachies “ Retair.- ed”—Lochs Lomond and Katrini—Trossachs—‘“Bens” | —Stirling Castle—Knox—Drummond — Edinburg— Castle—Holyrood— i urns —Scott—Roslin — Melrose —Dryburgh—Abbo‘tsford—Ayr. Chance for a Bandmaster. Conway, which is in need of a band- mester, has issued the following adver- tisement: “He must be a cornet player, and between performances he will be c;u:{;;w s give only = day | and famed In Scott’s Heart of Mid- | requireq to act as a range minder, in- o M ek s DR Carlton Hill, with its grand colonade. | pector of hawkers, boats and car- but fifty places of interest We are|Najgon's and Burns' monument, we | riages, storekeeper and such other du- scheduled m! visit in 5?\'en weeks be- | c] m;b x<g look over mlelm.\‘.;x‘nd “f:nhffi ties as the town clerk may from time fore we sail homeward, so time is|yond. Princes stree! _has SP! 101 to time direct.”—Western Mail. preclous and we must push forward, | Monument to Sir Walter Sc and Ro wonder that sueh speed causes | vast architectural attractions, one of finest streets to be found in any the Europeans to call us Americans globe | [ trotters! Word Painting. Jimmy (reading)—"Casey swatted Bverywhar e ed cars or| We take an afternoon for Roslin o e have Tetained cars oF lcasti>, by carriames seven miles | de leather into left garden for a brace Sbecial coaches or brakes - and | tirou#h interesting suburbs. A guide| of sacks, an’ den pilfered thold base . re S ik Db explains it all to us, taking us through . ” ety Top 7 WO touristy DeDESIONY | the tiiree. stories of ruins from ‘the bell | 32° dented de pan on Muligan's lall- Sna et e et A o eontract | tower, from which a view of the beau- | paloosa dat sailed over Outfielder BB Segiitar SricE. . | tiful Eck far below is obtained to the | Shaughnessy’s nut.” 1 tell yer, Willle, Soms of the party importune to stay | CAvernous = subterrancan = passages| dat's word-paintin’, dat is! Shake- a week in Glasgow, but s 4 < h we marc e by oo, This is only the baginning. - |the flickering light .of @& lantern. _A | SPeare never could beat dat! First of all we give a day to the|DParty of twenty stand inside the big e Hae tou theas e Boat the | oven without crowding in the bakery. A e ben theoysh the Scotch DIEh- | We gach take away a sprig of the Unobsaciant Bints’ ENEnatiny mond and Loch Katrine and cosch | Pi€ yew trse which Is over eight cen- Masculine dramatists are old-fash- along by several smaller lochs from the | tWries old and yvet growing! The cas- | foned enough to make their women s . This trip is J ;‘“l"e;'a‘-;'\“":\,({‘;"xmv‘gffimo;; “catty.” It shows a lack of observa- hampered by the prevalent d and iy 8 O . e % iz gt 5 e o e Bt happened here. Now for | tion to make the feminine character Lomond, Ben Venus, Ben Nevis and|Many vears it has belonged to a lin=| in a modern play behave in the man- R BABEE 10 shrouds Ellen's | of Earls of Erskine. Oliver Cromwell | ner of the eighteen-eighties.—London Isle and much eise. | | conguered tnis stronghold and partial- | gietch, A cave is pointed out as Rob Roy’s | ¥ destroved it. prison, also a dainty cottage where hig | . The chapel on the brow of the hill wife was born—Helen MacGregor. though very ancient. Is kept in repair Thing Greatly Worth Having. Stirling castle ia of great historical | ANd constant use. It holds the bodies | 708 SR TOTT F won‘h the eminence as well as high literally, ana | °f the St. Claires who previous to 1650 a x g sup y the clouds politely rolled away to’let | Were buried in Armour. 3 baving is the opportunity, coupled us look out upon a landscape unsur-) A day is taken for an excursion with the capacity, of doing a thing passed in Britain. Lofty mountains ::”r-'r'»“,‘xf‘ ““1"”?" 3‘“;8‘{-6 with its won- | wejl and worthily, the doing of which iy W 5 erful ruins. built in 1136 2 H ¥ : BRe s R TR R b b e R o el is for the welfare of mankind.—Theo- meanders along far down in the valley Below twenty two miles in a distance | MOUS on2 in the Lay of the Lost Min- | dore Roosevelt. of five miles, We look out upon eight | Strel. can give an adequate conception famed battleflelds important in Scotch | Of it. “vet beautiful in ruins” history. We stand at the citadel wall| Dryburgh abbey, four miles away, is Friends Seized Opportunity. on a rock where Queen Victoria stood ;llf :!li‘: "\xmfl‘ hl.\tr{\l c p;‘r[fl(\l‘ nd of sim- “How did it happen that your s Dot —icagp B igg 2 ar interest. After demolition it was| griono™ hen a maiden in e Mpor | 15 e L sA0er demonttion it » friends got the best of you?” queried | Two King Jameses were born here—If | Stroved. in St. Mary's aislz con- | the inquisitive person. “They got | and V—and it was the home of IV, |tains the of many of the| busy while I was watching my ene- | 1 assassinated the Earl of Douglass | ScOtts, including Sir Walter himself. mies,” explained the man who had got | in a2 room here, and we stand in the | , AbbOttsford is three miles in another | g “p AP ACS CTF casement through which the body v direction, and we are shown through | e our that magnificent home of Sir Walter, We reverently bare our heads by the [ When the guide’s back is turned, clan- | grave of Henrs Drummond. awhe gave | 42stinely sitting for an instant in the Output of One Shoe Factory. Fo the world The Greatest im - the {©ld arm chair where he sat when writ-| Ten thousand pairs of shoes are World,” and whom we've heard declar. | & his oo Hovels e les | produced daily from a single eastern the gosp2l vears ago in our own lan Ay, 4 -as e birthplace of | ‘ggeto; Every 24 Ten yvears ago when we were here only | BUIT'S. is visited, on the coast by river e i Dhours ‘it uses:the bides and skins of 7,800 kids, 300 | dge was bullt 1788, but the | horses and colts, 300 calves and 425 ‘auld brig” was made 1250, made fa- | steers. mous as the scene of Tam O'Shanter's 3 7 Ride. The cottage of two roome a small plain slab marked the spot, | AYT. crossed by the “twa brigs.” The Jut his many admirers have replaced #hat by a more appropriate monument. Our party stand one after another in Newest Thief-Catch A recently invented thief-catcher for stores consists of a system of levers, which will close doors from behind a counter on pressing a pedal and at the same time ring an alarm outside the building. = Dearth of Great Actresses. Although acting is essentially a fem- inine art, Englishwomen are making far less mark In it at the present time than 'in probably any other period of our theatrical history. We have no Mrs. Siddons.—London Tatler. Oid Thoughts May Be New. A thought is often original, though you have uitered it a hundred.times. It has come to you over a mew route by an express train of associations.— Holmes. Introduce Method. “More time,” is the usual exclama- tion, even by those who have all the time there is. They should bethink themselves-about more method, or else waste less time.—W. H. Howe. Think It Over. - When you avail yourself of an op- portunity to get even with a man you furnish him with a desire to get back at you. Tulips Like the Light. Tulips are very sensitive to the light. During a cloudy day they will sometimes close their petals, and not open them until the sunlight returns. Lessons from Experience. Publius . Syrus: Léarn to see in another’s calamity the ills which you should avoid. There were 40,551 weddings in Lon- don in 1907. bas been know for “ Goose Considered Sacred Bird. To many peoples the goose was & sacred bird, and even to this day there are found many, especially in Asia, who will net kill a goose., The devout cherish a fond fancy that all geese perform an aerial pilgrimagesto the holiest of lakes in the Himalayas every year, tramsporting the sins of the neighborhood, returning with a mnew stock of imspiration for the en- couragement of the devout. Money and Its Drawbacks. Some people are left money just in the nick of time, and make good use of it; it is ruinous to others to receive money that they have never earned. A good many people would never do any work at all if it wasn't for the fact that they had to, and so a wise Providence decrees that money shall not come their way except by the sweat of their brow.—The Captain. Glory. How many metals make the bronze of Corinth? Insults on boards or on paper, the spot of ink or charcoal or mud, the dregs of heart, of mind and of body, the dirt of calumny, all these, under the sun, dry, harden, turn into bronze solid amd brilliant—a pure bronze, which is called glory!—Catulle Mendes. Woman’s Remarkable Feat. Though the compiling of a diction- ary is a ta .k that even .a corps of trained ‘editors undertake with no slight hesitation, a Washington wom- an, Mrs. George H. Gorham, finished the remarkable feat of writing an idiomatic French-English, Bnglish- French dictionary entirely unaided. Galileo discovered the use of the pen- dulum. Tn 1639 he published a work dealing with the use of the pendulum in clocks. SAARALRATTULIARUAUAAARUS AL URARRRRS Woman’s Relief Dr. Krugers Viburn-O-Gm Compound, the woman's remeds, years as. “Woman's Rellet,” sinocs The Lesser Evil. The colored boy employed by a New York lady was named Lycurgus Jones. “Lycurgus is & rather long name,” she said to him; ppose 1 call you Gus short.” “Ah doesn't like nick- names,” he replied: “If you doesn’t like Lycurgus, you kin call She calls him Lycurgus. The Highest Authoriti A Kentucky physician, after exten- sive experiments, has written a paper to show that whisky aggravates the venom of snake bites. This is testi- mony from a high source and leaves little to be done except to appeal the case to the supreme experts in North Carolina.—St. Louls Globe-Democrat. Humanitarian Who Failed. A Brooklyn man complains that he lost $500 backing up an invention to prevent snoring. He can at least count on the sympathy of several million “light sleepers,” who will join him in heartfelt regrets that the anti-snoring device did not succeed. By the Grace of God Alone, No firon chain, or outward force of any kind, could ever compel the soul of man to believe or to disbelieve; it is his own indefeasible light, that Jjudg- ment of his; he will reign and belleve fhere by the grace of God alone.— Thomas Carlyle. Cultivate Ideals. It is a cheering thing to meet young minds inspired by ideals. It Is a de- lightful ‘pastime to give a quarter of an hour a day to a great poet. Have a little blank book and copy a quotation or two when you meet them. Way to It. Now, if Champion Jack Johnson would only “draw tht color line, lhai demise of the “fighting gam would be entirely complete.—Detroit Journal. For nervousness, Irritablility, me Jonesey.” | SARRRRIRIIRINNZ @own pains, and other symptoms of general female. weaknass, this compound has been found quick &na safe. A ' Chief Justice’s Golf Stroke. Thi lord chief justice, on cirenit at Birreingham, had a curfous experience whille playing golf over the Edgbaston courge with Walter Whiting, the local professional. At the second hole his lordship drove Into a bunker, the ball | lying' badly under the bank. Taking | his nfblick, he hit hard. The ball | jumped into the air and dropped inte | his rigiht-hand jacket pocket.—Londom | Standara. | \An Architect’'s Patrons. John| Merven Carrere, at a meetin, of arclritects in New York, sald: | “Amaziing, the age of an architect's patron:#! The average man, in fact. is 35 before he v;ln to save serfous- | ly; his pile isn't made till he is 50; he begins to build himself a houss in | his old age, and his funeral takes place abput the time the painters are called inX" The Simart Boy's Opportunity. In thess days farming is becoming more andymore a science. It is the | smart boy who stays on the farm in- stead of gaing to the city. And it is well knowr that when proper methods are employed the present yield will be doubled. There is not much pros- pect that im the next century the doo- trine of MaW'hus will be exemplified by | seeing this nation lacking for food. Be Good.” Beware of jmaking your moral staple consist of the negative virtues. It is | good to abstain from all that is hurt- | ful and sinful. But to make a business | of it leads t emaciation of wcharac- | ter, unless one feeds largely also on the more nutiritious diet of active | sympathetic benevolence, — Oliver | Wendell Holme | In New York and Jersey City there | are often as many as 60,000,000 eggs 1 in cold storageeat one time. Beafiache, backache; pressing- the antique pulpit of John Knox, from which he preached his celebrated ser- ntons which brought upon his head the wrath of royalty. This is carefully %ept in Greyfriars kirk, near the cas- tle, which dates back to the fourteenth eentury. “In Edinburg we stop at Knox's pen- sion, kept daintily by three maiden _‘ ters of that name who are grand- Tileces of John, and are cultured Chris- “I think Viburn-O-Gin is the best remedy for weak'wamen. It Sives me more good than any medicine I have ever taken & cannet praise it strong enough. I think it is the bestiwoman's medicine on earth.” t Xowll feel like writing & similar letter if you try It | humble but quaint. The kitchen has a small recess where the poet first saw the light. The Kirk Alloway is in ruins and roofless. An alaborate monument to Burns is near in an ornamental garde: Farewell to Bonnie Scotland! Re- | gretfully we Jeave thee. thy wholesome. cordial people, thy strict integrity an® revarence for the sacred. thy historic Don't Let Problems Worry. Of course life is full of problems. The only way to get any comfort is to throw them all in the wastebasket and to do the things we can see clear- | 1y in daylight #t Rhas positively proven its great value in the treatment of ‘womanly diseases. 2 i It will help you, {f you are s sufferer frem any of the ills peculiar to women, which can be reached by medicine. It has helped thousands of other sick women, as grateful istters from them clearly describe. It ocontalns =o poisonous AAAAMAAAAAAAN el For Married Men. g 0 Tidien, and biographic past of which thou dost Tts utterly Impossible to mention, | ®ell to be proud; thy pure blue blood | Don’t expect to have your own way arugs. o el $1.25 a bottle with directions. much less to describe, the many at- | Which courses in many an American's | fn life. You must yield one-half at 7 ' tractions, historic and modern, of this | Yeins *and never ashamed of! Fare- | joaqt et your wife have her wa: grand old city. A large Scotch brake | Well! Now southward by retained car - Let y ¥ conveys us around to the main places w:: '*:2;“‘ X'“t“’ A";‘l"'r}f‘ :‘ gland, whera | mtme in a while and experience a throb : of interest. The castle, mounted on its | ©UF next letter will find us of generosity.—Exchange. Smbregnabie il Arst of ali is viid Lroct A Franco-German Drug Co., 106 West 129th Street, New York with its rooms of Queen Mary and of royal regalia, its military barracks, A Cow That Beats the World. Tendency to Exaggerate. Queen Margaret's chapel, the oldest The world’s record cow is Josephine. | We exaggerate misfortune and hap- AND ALL DRUGGIS1S' and smallest in Britaln, “Mons Mes,” |a Holsteln. owned by the Universily | piness alike, We are newer cither oo jant old cannon, etc yrood palace and the ruins of the y _adjoining are hastily gone through,- the portrait gallery, rooms of the. of Missouri, whose milk-giving record . beats that of Johanna, her. Wisconsin | Wretched or so happy as we say we predecessor as the record holder. Jo- | &re.—Balzac. hanna's record for six months totailed | Krugers Viburn-O-Gin AAMMIMMMANINVIANNY 4 ! idle that people are willing to beli-w[ l loafer.—Atchison Globs Queen Mary, Lord Darnley ahd Charles | 15,541 pounds of milk. Josephine's | 11, room whers Rizzio was mutdered | total for the same period was 16,744 Evils of Idleness. and where Charles 1 crowned. | pounds. Johanna's best single mont It is such a crime tor a man’to bhe Five royal persons lie buried here. in her year's test was 3 pounds, Arthur's Seat is a high hill behind, | against Josephine’s high mark for one | @ number of other bad things about & e pearly a thousand feet above Holyrood ' month of 2,960 pound

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