Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 24, 1901, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE OMAHA DAILY BEE e ————————————————a—— THURSDAY, JANUARY | ] ] NULHATTON, PRINCE OF LLARS | 3, feoviet soverst, otomes ot tsveret| [N THE FIELD OF ELECTRICITY | Sae, tvom b ot nst o crrent i \ : { | & humbug | that there was no suc | path which fs non-fonizable or not chem X | thing and n any such th - | fcally decomposable, will produce no elec- | Recollections of the Modern Heit of Ananias | ¢ # #tar of betl have heen drscos. | Bteam Roads Having & Bun for Their Lifs | {fol7tic effect on that surface. To this end and Munchansen, | ered at Kleir rvatory hich 1 in New England. o 1 has | “r\ sed between it and the | tr here was ne - irrounding soll an electrolytically con- | o | Klein's ob ry, the estimable hard fucting medium, such @s a mixture of TALENTED INVENTOR OF NEWSPAPER FAKES a never looked through | EXTENSION OF TROLLEY PRIVILEGES | craphite with some binding material by | [ hing a puir of opera glasse | mear which it may be applied and ficed n h I lenial of the star of 12 | to the surface of t! me le ructure Onee n Trathful Com relal Teaveler, [ o000 stirred up a hornet's | Court Ruling on Question of Damages | which it s designed (0 protect. A condue in an Evil Moment He Told nest ab The plous and ortho- from Electrolysis=Telephone | tive mixiure of graphite and parafin ‘s Storles und Fell nd- lox fell upon him with truly religious ar Meter and Talk Reg- | well adapted for this purpose, though it fs long fr Grac lor, defending Prof. Klein and nouncing inter. | not essential that the substance of the pro i Proctor with a vigor which soon made the | | tective medium should be itself conduc English astronomer very sorry that he . | tive, provided it permite the passage (Copyright, 101, by A. T. Vanee.) poke A writer in Harper's Weekly calls at- | through it of current, and will prevent a. News comes from a remote corner of | During the summer of 1588 Mulhattan, | tention to the expansion of electric roads | cess to the metal surface of the products Texas that Joseph Mulhattan he most | with the ald of mythical Prof. J. N.|in the New England states and its eftect | of decomposition. Among such substances stupendous and ingenlous liar of his time, | B Birdwhistle, of the equally mythical |on steam rallroads. “The question,” rays |are prec d chalk, pulverized anthra- L has recently turned up in that part of Lawrenceburg Academy of Sclence, dis- | the writer, “of adopting electricity vt the | cite coal and gelatinized compounds of sil country. It 18 now in order for th | covered an invisible moon, the bulk of which | rallroads which run through populous cen- | fca, all of which, when used in layers of papers to be on their guard, for in his about two and a balf times greater than | ters is more generally agitated in New | sufMcient thickness and when moist, per 3 prime Mulhattan perpetrated and got into | that of the visible moon, while its distance | England than elsewhere, and the prowice | mit the passage of a current and prevent circulation through variou impor it rom the earth was only abot 30,000 miles. | of the New Haven road to aave many uew | the recombination of the products of elee. newspapers, hoaxes that would have made | “Its influence on our tides,” wrote Mul- |miles of its branch lines equipped with | tro decomposition. The protective medium Baron Munchausen feel like | hattan 1 our atmosphere, our crops, and | electricity within the coming year adds | may be applied in a thin layer with brushe and there 1s no guaranty that he won't g0 | the gr orms must be very nd | new fuel to the controversy that has long | or may be deposited in larger amounts in a Into the business again. The last previous | will fn a measure account for the ', | raged there. Already the New Haven road | trench and the metal structure embedded definite news of Joe was some five years ako, | tornadoes and hot and cold waves that | operates more miles of electric liues than | in it. An incidental advanta having when it was announced that he had retired | sweep over the earth. It makes its orbit [any other raliroad corporation, and the | metallic structures exposed to the sofl, sur- | to the wilds of Call v to recuperate | in a path diagonally between the earth and | fact that it intends to extend this service | rounded by a conducting substance, is that “AVE EVER KNOWN FnR F'V from his arduous mental labors, Soon after | sun, in such a position, caused by the sun's [ Indicates that it considers electricity a [the strength of any elcctric currents from it was rumored that he was dead and his| powertul attraction, as to be invisible ex- | power that will increase in importance on [ these structures will be enormously in years of persistent silence gave ice 1o t the upper edge, as it occasionally skirts | the steam roads. Th are over forty- | creased through the provision of fnnumer BY sMnKI“fi A the rumor horizon during the months of July and | five miles on this road operated by elec- | albe points of exit, thereby relieving thes ° ° Mulhattan had been a truthful comm tures of currents, which are harmful clal traveler for years before the passio Then the romancer went on to say that | has only its seven miles from Bordentown | particularly at the joints | August tricity, while the Pennsylvania railroad [ str for big story telling took possession of him. | prof. Birdwhistle aphed the dis- | to Mount Holly, and the Baltimore & Ohlo lephone Recorder, One day it occurred to him that the new ery to Prof. Swift of the Rochester Ob- | Its four miles in a belt line through Balti i HUrENg Ayt e 4 S papers of his locality weren't Interesting atory and Prof. John M. Kleln, the | more ported with the telephonograph, which Is enough, so he proceeded to liven them Up | pnoted astronomer of Kentucky, and had re *'The conditions in New England probably | 4 combination of the phonograph with th with the produets of his own imagination. | coived a reply from the lattor, stating that | help to make the steam railroads of that | telephone, and 1s Intended to take and The Pittsburg L was the medium se- | ho had his Instruments to bear | Section progressive in the adoption of elec- | record telephone messages by automatic lected, and he kept the cditors busy publish- f upon the western horizon at the indicated | tricity. The trolley has sprung up and | means and, to a lmited extent, give an ing denials of the little ho: he got uy t 1 that he, too, had gazed upon the | multiplied the ike the proverblal mueh- | answer in the sa way. The message about well known people ently the 1, thus corroborating Prof. | room ¢ total electric mileage in Massa- | js spoken by the person sending it into personalities palled upon him, and he sough 1 every particular. The invisi- | chusetts in 1854 was about 600 miles, but | the telephone in the usual way, and the to excreise his genfus in a larger field. Ab u: | red bly through the news- [ It 18 reported that the returns for the cur- | vibrations set up by the volce are caused this time the first crematory in the U ny day rent year will show nearly 2,000 miles of | to act upon a recording stylus by the im electric raflw d waves. In wax cylinder in th spoken to Is indented and a phonogram is produced. This, of course, can be read this way the office of the person Mr. Mulbattan now turned his atten-[is comple | Btates was erected at Little Washin A —— ays in the state, New lin i] of the sc nouncing that a cremation would take | | Pa. Mulhattan wrote an article an-| are almost daily profected, and the stat | ly crossed and recrossed by fon to things terrestrial, and brought to place at a dato two weeks ahead of the |t public notice an anclent pyramid 1 completion of the furnace, and Little Wash Ington soon had an army of reporters (o on tertain, besides special artists from the il lustrated papers. When they found the | 4nd was full of & crematory unfinished and discovered that | derful relics of an extinet r there was no cornse they sought for Mr, | ot another mound sensation, | them. The same conditions prevail in Rhode "t | Island and Connecticut, and the recent trip | off at lelsure in the usual way. The vi- awrenceburg, Ky. He said it was found 1o | of a trolley party from Boston to New | brations are transmitted either directly or no of the huge mounds there abounding, | York shows how extensive the eleotric den urns and other won- | roads have become th e. Later on | gection | indirectly; in the latter caso the object is ughout this whole | effected by an electrical current. In the test mentioned a messag transmitted trolleys have not only entrenched | from one room to another, although the wi were petrified and that some well known | haif crazy with excit citizens who wero very desirous of seeing | were sent out to the new oll fields, with | the Washiugton monument completed were | fnstructions to lease land and put up der- | about to remove the petrified body to the | ricks without an instant's delay [ exposition at Philadelphla, to place it on| The famous story of the monkeys, told exhibition durlng the Centennial year. An|on J. B. Pa admission f the money to be used in finishing the monu It w Mulhattan to supply that important omis- | Which be told how a golden calf had been | upon the preserves of the steam roads in | length of wire over which it traveled rey slon, but be was far away vered, and tables of hm; s \Iuh .“u' the matter of carrylng passengers short | resented a considerable distance A8 re 2 criptions on them. It was thought that|distances, but they are making a bid for | produced t th g i S P | producec means of the phonogram on ~ ¥ g " ) € Distri g rice these were coples of the original ten | freight, baggage and even the malls. The | which the message was recorded tho words | Harburger, Homan & Co., Manufacturers, McCord-Brady Company, Distributors. It was in 1875 that Mulhattan got up his | commandments. He also wrote of great oll | jagt leglslature of Massachusetts granted | were distinctly audible, the result muk' . first really imposing fake He discovered | wells discovered in out-of-the-way places | (o some half-dozen different trolley lines | equal to that of an ordinary phonogrDl | o _‘ that the remalns of George Washington|and the oll men of Pennsylvania became | tho right to carry merchandise, passengers’ | The apparatus has n tested over a line ent Prospectors | baggage and the mails The same privi- | five miles in length, ge was glven to other electric roads al- | good and the impre ady incorporated by changing their char- | b tors the articulation being slons on the cylinder ng as deep as the impressions made I s when speaking into an ordinary phono- . ““This {s one of the most dangerous steps [ graph. Of course, large battery powe s of Kingston, Ky, was an } in encroaching upon the rights of the rail- | was needed, and a reinfore Ing cuFrant ’\‘:u: on the cotton-tending ReeSe. | ronds yet attempted, and it fs with some | required at the recelving and registering s sald that Mr. Parkes had secured | gjarm that the big steam rallroad cory at the d corpora- | line. A wpeclal use appears v to be ment. This was printed and reprinted the { seven imme nkeys from his brothe : it Ly King Solomon Had A Great Reputation for Wisdom of 60 cents would be charged, | improvement 1 1t r 1 uth At W0 had traineq | oD% View this departure. The question | found for the telephonograph in small of- One of his wise remarks was “Of making many books there is no end.” e had never AL L s R e ne e | AR 2 - BOULE At e s “| | paturally suggests ftselt whether the rail- |fices where a limited sta pmploy { icti . is like the maki P N P Y teemed with letters, favorable s de- | them to break hemp. The mc ’”‘”'"“"”""“Er-%lu WiI RDS Coletitaity W eartain | Tham If on oot |.n’:\',':..v.": "":“1'"“ ']': seen the making of a great dictionary., It is like the making of many books and secws to ausclatory. Alexander K. McClure, editor | little eare in their keeping, received DO|pranch lines, which run through populous |ant and a call is made, the phonograph have no end. In making the of the Philadelphia Times, was particularly | pay, and did their work so well that the | canters, 1n self-protection, or stand aside | can be so st an o raply art o0 vigorous in the denunciation of Mulhat-|farmer discharged all his laborers, made | oy oo their profits matertally do out o instrument is.fitted wit " tan's idea, while the Pittsburg Gazette sup- | arrangements to import a thousand mor Naterially cut down i instrument is fitted with a tele- This condition of affairs largely accounts | phonograph which will automatically for the activity of the New Haven and |down any message you may send other New England steam railroads in will read it on ported it warmly monkeys, and looked forward with joy and For a time thereafter Mr. Mulbattan's | confidence to the time when, owing to the his retur storfes, according to his own account, were | jow cost of his labor, he should obtain & return.” It is | Standard Dictionary | | | | building electric side lines or changing the | possible to throw the phonogra aetiol what might be called “plain lies.” But he | practical monopoly of the business of Kyt | motive power on old established n:..::n-« of play and use llnv]ulr‘vln'nwhh\ ‘v‘h:-y ; vl'(l BN an) L st Tos Ty s aihe et iantioe sioctwintion | iy make @ bl for street traction privi- | mechanism Is such that any number of mes- S U0 ORRI S SRR DRI 18 [ to se " . 2 | leges, and thus carry the wa o sages up to a gregats of 15,000 words ¢ o vas ved & a milli work and produccd some sparkiing goms of | tucky had becomo greatly excited over the | (U0 SI0 I PRI ol pidins ;:: Saken b to.an Aasregatmiof 10,0001'word an army of the brainiest and smartest men of the world was employed and a million dollars e | A ey e roms atsloays | DiE. Faileaad. cofvorations :Have, attampied Tetophone Meter spent. Take the BEST PRODUCT OF THE BEST BRAINS and the result must be satis- ted the Mammoth cave and promptly | portation of monkey labor from Africa, as g g ¢ e Meter. ; ; 5 d evolved ont of his Inner conschousness an- | hojug infinitely worse than the importa- !:,‘k',‘,“'m:,';:( st Jeparture from | When a man subscrjjes for 900 te factory. But with all this expenditure of man and mind and money 0ds may be made any day In » ’ A other great cavern fourteen miles long, | tion of pauper labor trom Europe, and n\]m | RAVHAL, Whirs oot et e ey :,h‘,n.v calls under the hapression that he containing & large navigablo river. to ply | o strike of all the farm hauds of Kentucky | TR REREC TOE WER hetween the stewm | iy covered for a year if he gets.a bill for upon the waters of which a steamboat was | would -certainly occur, and \:u-n ml..'hu(l k,::w'.“m_m”mm‘ Bneratiots Tebt e uu; ;-m calls in ; single month he is kely to | being bullt. Leslie's wrote for u[\\] m':; riots and b d and {ocendiariam, unless | o "y ot ined 1n this setion atace. (oo JIL EALEE A, ;l»yl“lnuwruw! indignant, | S8 RHE B0 WO he cAve RS e | th teminiacure DUt 8 MOR 0 s atoty | LLEBE eldcteln 7a)l whvA) Kave \broked bwn | trs oo TRaYL soone vt TNE e Wums ake | T ol e s | Lot by protbItag momkers Y | (b barrlor by hacuring Towtslition Bariales | vice: woss Cary i AN ovatariia dé- rl ariist felend Mulbattan : | was sent « ‘ - | ting them (o enter what has been hereto- . f suaouec o] ® and the articles and pictures were printed | atiracted the attention of ono of the In- |y (G 1o Suier what has been her a telephone and register the number of calls. | . eslie’s strate eWBpape pllige eader ers of the London e considered the special rights an Broadly, ay be called “‘telephol in Frank Lesl lustrated Newspaper lligent leader writer torial o col- | TItory of the former. Whether the fnter- | mar: BB M i ol o The cave was so brilllant a success that he | Telegraph, who wrote an editorlal a col meter.” The meter looks Itke a black There are so many points of superiority fn The Standard Dictionary, aside from its mar- | ests of the two syste ortati ves, until he [ ymn long about the influence of simian | €3ts of the two systems of transportation wil ultimately be found to harmonize, or followed it up with other ¢ box about five by three and a half fuches 4 mearly the whole state of Kentucky | labor on the labor problem in slze. Through the top protrudes a rod, velously low price, that one can scarcely enumerate them. Some one has said there are in n plantation ke All who bathe In the waters of that | complaint In the o of the Manufacturers: | '® Push button, which registers the call The | become blondes and if the bathing is per account of a Texas cott its suc in order by a flock of t . Here ave some opinions from the press of Europe: on the dial before his eyes. But aned geese Natural Gas company against the Indian suppose ringing hollow to the footstep. Nest cams (he SemAtRaule Miary b ‘:" \;1‘,",‘,"\.",,4,”\\ & :lfl‘m:'"l',;':‘ riir Beopiod] Dhich morves as a pross button. In the || THE STANDARD 41 dictionaries in one. Each topic is the work of a specialist. defy v Jake of hair dye that was published in the | end, s a questl at eresting | front of the box is a slot, through which | o ; HalAbE Bad: L A AtRLG] . g PO _“'”‘:.,' '\:”_ \'::"WNIF then, | summer of 1888 in the Virginia City Enter ;un'l very important to all concerned,” appear the numbers of the dial, which are | Satisfactory to students and scholars because so complete, containing 300,000 words, Mulhattan concentrated his pow .rful in- | prise. Mulbattan discovered that “"“‘\‘\ amages from Stray Currents, 1-'“"':4" on the peripheries of wheels, as nearly three times as many as the old stand-by, Webster's Dictionary. The book stands in . it et = HALnS pntained one of the greatest natura " n most counting machines, s8ithe dube v A g y i s B tolloct upon the domestlc goose and the | lako contained one of tiie greatest natESl | The supreme court of Indiana has b ibey Sinaytt mAGhineN, tenithe et high among the wise men on both sides of the Atlantie, and that fact alone establishes result was a highly detailed and interesting | 4¢posits of hair dye in the k | ruled the defendant's demurrer to the hes a connection he presses on 8 | | sisted in for any length of time they Bet|apoig Street Rallway company for $a0,- | \1¢ Subscriber tries to cheat and fails to Ss8e GAPHISA: under thelr ‘necks mourds | The Freeman's Journal , Dublin, The Irish Times, Dublin, Ireland The Liverpool Dally Post, Liverpool flled with water uo that each goose could | red-headed. A man last spring rented the | 600 qamages for Injurles to the gas com. | PUSE the button? Whenever the button ia Ireland: “For scholarly mccuracy and . It will be recognized, we bave “It 1s an implement that will be of drink out of its nelghbor sourd. 1 | Levining ranch, on the north side of the | panvig bines through electrolysis pressed properly the machine sets up a exceptional fulness . It stands every 1eason to say, mnot alo vast service to those who cultivate ‘f,; .nln ‘;“, ok ",LN'“ “"‘: e N,,," [ lake. He bad three strapping daughters. | ““Tho ruling 1s one of the first, if not the | PU4% Somewhat like the dime-in-the slot | rivalled Of other existing throughout the erican continent the literary arts on either side of the #‘n‘.- story concluded with the prediction | AS 80on as the water became warm enough | Gyt in the country on the question of | t€ lephcnes. The meter I8 in electrical con tionarfes with which we are acquaint it in all English-speaking parts of Atlantic, It {3 a monument to Amer- that “If the farmer's experiment is as suc- | the ®irls daily went bathing In the lake, | whother or not cesstul as he thinks it will be it is only a ! : question of a fow years until the whole | When the ‘men folks' were all out on the | Carter's opinion in part follows S ranch at work When they began Iu\-l“'l‘ ‘The method in use by the defendant : s goose" This wha regarded | their dips in the lake the girls were brown | iy gperating its cars results in serfous in- by the ordinety B¢ This was cegarded | )i red, but they soon found themselves be- | jury and in some cases to the destruction | AROtheT side—that of the company. U HY. a0y DevepaDess, partioularly ib the | londes. oxt the hair of the girls 5 y ™ 38 Cestruction | ger “the system of an unlimited number south, as an important agricultural de. | COMIng blondes. Next i 1o e | T Db tine Bl nes, TG ABEIRRG 680, 7| G oslly manv! Desaoha la ey labts parture. became flery red. The .|.|. WD And hie |the use of an approved appliange, at rea- [ of CSII% mADY peraons uro the telephones ” wife tried the baths and now the whole | gonable expense, so operate its cars s b hE pscribers without paying any- Mulhattan's Texas meteor story attained |V . h 50 a8 v tho servio 3 8 meteo family ave Titian blonde to avold injuring the plaintift's pipes | (MUK for the service. If the company could damages will le from In. | PCtion with “central” and the girl at the king for their mermaid gambols a tme | juries attributed to electrolysis. Judge | £¥(chboard walts to hear the buzz be- Y fore making the connection. If the sub- scriber tries to cheat she gently reminds him to “press the button.” But there Is ed, we know of none that can be com- the 011 World, also ns an authority fean industry, no less than the great pared with the Standard.” from its fulness, discrimination, va- White City by Lake Michigan (the iate The Belfast Age, Belfast, Treland: ricty and ample erudition. It s a Chicago World's Fair.)" it were difficult to praise this monument of American learning and splendid dictlonary too highly. It is industry. . . From *° publication ot a work for which all who speak the the Standard Dictic .y America may English language may be justly grate- date a new period of the country's his- ul.” tory.” cotton crop of Texas will be weeded out o p on o ernational eve S0t o THE STANDARD DICTIONARY has a great many attractive features. It is not feas- ,'I.': “':‘:‘:rl:"l::“::““|“|,:mh'\”r“‘l,, ",‘.I. Ry e The Bird-Enting Tree. The plaintiff cannot by any known method | S0}1Ct Proper compensation for this un- " THE STANDARD 1 S A ‘ n g ) € i, Whtti Cashlia AL wax' the making ot that Mr. Mulhattan is credited also with pre- | Protect its pipes from fnjury authorized use its revenues would be ible to enumerate all at this time. Ior instance, so many words are in constant dispute, Jasotto and e making o r. Mulhattan is credited alsa # s considerably increasec 5 A % A T ‘ 3 pap An Assoclated Press agent swal- | paring the dispatch from Chihuahua, Mex- he plalntift owns ita pipe line laid in | (PEEREY Tacreased. Failing i that, 1€}l g0 words bave been referred to 50 leading philologists and their opinions atken as final. the LAt R PRliALR N Hnesiald dp x: could stop the practice it would make rallrond company seizes on these pipes | !¢ WOTK of the central office much lighter, elther reducing the expense or leaving the lowed the story whole and telegraphed it | ico, dated April 22, 1889, that was pub- all over the country. On the day after the | lished in the St. Louls Globe-Democrat The matter of spelling is also difticult to adjust. In the Standard that has been settled ‘ i coured | @04 makes use of them as a conductor conservatively, vet ‘curately. story was published the Gazette received | This was & ‘story of a tree that devoured | g7l FBRKES W6 OF LA 6K B CORAUCLOr | gypiy’proer (g render better mervice to sub conservatively, vet accurately. 114 telegrams in rege to the matter. [ birds. To begin with, there was a detailed B | goriber: D alarhana e 4 | greatly injures and in some instances . epl ympanies have The quotations are gems, illustrating to a nicety the use of the words. The illustrations are numerous, in fact it is a work that will be attractive to children on this account and consequently all the more valuable as an edue Jurope—one from | 1 this s done|CUENt & remedy by the Introduction of a ping o | SYPLeM known as “‘measured service.” The Is | Subscriber contracts for 900, 1 calls per y dally avers wholly destroys them & under @ claim that it s perfo public service under authority of | not this a taking of private property for public use and for which just compensas | tlon must be made? ill answer bis purpose. There I8 one serlous Three of them came from iption of how the narrator studied | the London Times, one from the Edinburgh | botany and used to make long trips fnto the | Scotsman and one from the Paris Gaulois. [ mountains, hunting for specimens. Finally Tho editors of these enterprising papers | the tree in question was discovered. It was aphed for correspondents to get full [ something like the wecping willow, “but particulars and to draw on them for the | the lonk, drooping, whip-like limbs are of or 1,500 tor according he thinks a | of three, four or five calls No home library where Prof. R. A. Todd, Columbia: “I am exceedingly pleased with its fulness, conden- The Standard Dictionary is Offered for l | | i hool childpen St 8ceuricy and compleieness. It mechanical execution is @ delight to the wrtin- necessary funds. The meteor was said to [a dark and epparently slimy appearance | 00 M o | | objection for the company to this syste 1ere are school children e genge. have fallen at Willlams' ranch. “It cov-|and seem possessed of a horrible lfe-like | “The fiiy oonld ‘pat jand @ia net, srent i e S should be without the Stan- President Bashford of Ohlo Weslyan: “After a comparison of many words I am mmn' ered an acre of ground; it plunged 200 feet | power of colling and uncolling.” One day |4 Menopoly of the x:f,:»v‘“:nm 0 (e tonora by haid Chiadouak b0 g " convinced that the Standard surpasses the Century Dictionary in careful and accurate in the ground and stood cighty feet above | the observer saw n bird settlo on the top | fefendant or Ata predecestor, and when || 7€ & TIOFC DY (I HBICR means 4 dard Dictionary definition of words and in its illustrations, as weil as the number of words defined.” 1t it came down red hot and steaming, | of the tree. “The branches immediately (A 1Fa« POIA AN witsn ware: plaosd | o e S e 1 e o ek Later: I say more emphatically than ever before that it is the best dictionary in the flliing the air with sulphurous smoke apd | began to awaken and curl upward. They [0 tbe = street tho railway - company | (UL ) DIEWSTIOR Gl 00 say nothing | College men gemerally agree p iy janinze and T want it for constant reference noxfous gases and killing all the cattle. A | twined and twisted like snakes about s 58 A AN SRS WMED DIDER BNt Dol gt ) auet andl 1 Alted with | 88 40 thy exaslianos of the mark Prof. Duffield of Princeton: *It will be consplcuous among the enduring monu- famlly of Mexicans were struck and burfed | bird, which began to scream, and drew 1t | 18id In the streot at any tme, and it ac-| G 8 (R0 MAREC B E FUEd AR | Here are some expressions con- p,o,0 of (noilectual life at the close of the 1uth cent For comprehensivenens 00 feet in the earth” The newspapers of | down in their fearful embrace until I lost | QUired its rights to run an electric road |p oo, o7 80 SO PATER ART offiet cerning the work by colleg® or y,canutary, aveuracy in defnition, judiclous arrangement of material, nstructive fl- the country contained columns of {nterviews | sight of it The mext day the explorer ®1biect to that fuct, and all the consequences | Lo niVREL Bow Bos, TR0 i professors: lustration and admirable typography, it is suprrior to any other work of it class, and with distinguished scientists regarding the | ot halt a doze chickens and threw them | that might follow. The plaintift 45 not [N CECERANE 0 nter o] ere will supersede them and be recognized as The Standard Dictionary.” *meteor and thousands of letters were sent | (010 the tree moment T tossed In the | & trespasse |unluuwm! the strest law- | 7.4%0 Poskwerk but H hARiIE e bRare g T L e B I A A remdiog” of the dul to “eentra” “gvery | | For $7.00. Examine the Book. Mulbattan ever came to Fort Worth he |the fowls, these branches, fully gorged,| ''The number and size of the ears p irns the wheels of the dfal, but it “store would shoot him on the spot. Afterward, | dropped to their former position, and the (Pelled throuh our streets by eleetricity | po"Lnoora by winding a spring. Each ° Bowever, he relented and Invited the famous | tree. gIviug no sign of animation, 1 dured | 1¢ ever rapidly on the increase. Cars |y, \SOn! bY WINEOK UP 6 wpring Each | prevaricator to dine with him. The Ga pproach it and take the limbs in my haud, [ larger than ever before are used on the | =05 mnlamatar At tha (oveaton th e Py reply to the letters received, besides | the tentacles of an oc us. The bloed of | "OW are, or soon will be discharged into call: The nventio: rovides for a second ~ « § {hag. ot Uhounands of sxplaiators aitee. | the fowla had been ubiarbed by.the mucks | e Fth of the stréots are very ke, an | (olyy, T IIYentlon provides for a secand | | 1309 Farnam Street. lars. leaving crin n slains on the dark |!f It be tru hat th currents not only | . al office This | a nh\\.}wy\'l\\r“\‘ Mulhattan next wrote an ex 1 rface pitack gas and water pipes, but the steel | gimnle counting machine, With & —— count of the discovery of th art of| The dispatch concluded with an account [ frames of tall bulldings us well, and that | \oucq of figures arranged on the = making malleablo glass. The story was | of how the explorer wicte of the discovery | Such steel frames may be deteriorated and | pr geyeral whee By mear i el i . told with such sweet simpliclty and care. | o Pror. Wordeahaupt of the University of [ Weakenod so s to imperil such bulldings, |\t wan o ree " inersntie o RELIGIOUS, r clergymen ae Sams iy publish hteen volumes of ful and minute detail that the average | Heldeiburs, who replied that the tree was |18 there uo remedy in the law to prevent it, | copncetion with the moeton - The . v ' Jewlinh vorsi the taimud, 2" e reader felt that he could go right out and | the Arbor Diaboll, only two specimens of [OF to compel the sirect raflway comp lisaen Is to be taken the switoh in | ML and Mrs, James Sargent of Rochester, | The historie old Paul's chireh, Di T AR A Hale of Calr manufacture malleable glass himself with | Which cen known to scionce, one grow- | L0 control fts return currout when it 1s | qurned on and the subseriber s wore) o, e ALY W [ | fire and’ 1L, w n the most iearned men i a few simple implement xt, At the sug- | In§ on & peak of the Himalayas and the conceded (hat it is reasorably n its power to | press the button of his telephone Ihe thi fi me 1o time it f jere’, e Sipineopa) aiiyroh. AWHHL he WAk gestion of a newspaper wan at Lexington, [ 9ther on the island of Sumatra o s0 spring in the meter is released and begin [ oo Haw anGveh t ten ye | IVaiia e unite with Henvy Mortan: now Ky., Mulhattan located the star of Bethle- | Mulhattan always prided himseif upon his | ““Where a corporation is exesclsing a pub- 1o unwind. By an ingenions mechaeiee reat thiy r the | 10 184, wher c resi - Inwtitate of hem. Among Mulhattan's friends at the| “tall ftories” and was never so happy as | Me franchise, and does 5o in such & manncr | o vice It closes and breaks the electyical Qe n - BRNOSN fg 1T reh q ted Teol K : others in transiat tima was John M. Kleln, a hardware dealer | JUst After perpetrating a particularly atro- |8 to cause wetual material injury to legal | cireuit for tacn call thar han Leen eeebly ‘ e e A DA LR LB 8T i £ of Richfield, Ky | clous hoax upon some newspaper. As he | rights .-luid destruction of property when at |and each time the clrewit is ¢ losed th REIAM. 6 ¢ A ture lent of 1k " ! L was covstantly €olng about the country as | reasonable expense, by the adoption of | register N A n LAl aan s n AAAG . A8 t th Methodi Cat world was th e | Walter i Mulhattan dubbed him “‘professor” and|ipo unwary editors to keen track of him. | Injury could be avolded, and the porson fn. | the previens meanioen o (ol Meter Ltod | 548 M. Cunninghim was born In st | Santurelll, an uged woman from Perugla, | Cardin " | described him as & successful observer of | Ay gno time the commercial travelers of | Jured is powerless to prevent or guard |to the comoans s “ SEMBATRILIA | A1 Pole ant. On account of her grent dgo the made in | attainments and high sclentific reputation. | re This was Just before his retire. | bo held (o be negllkence in (he wae of m | Lewys TynimUm of (rouble. The subscriber | Amorican el izer ; fuch 10 his surprise, "Doing. Carblina e: | at I ) According to Mulhattan's stor it was | ment to the ains, and the supposition | franchise on the part of such cor e b FARGInG | fakon plade and | of ipelr numbe: e | [aaea qun foat they firs: et In Ny Iate | cAFdinal's Dgur | A L orporation |1t present to take a record for himself if | the Rom X \o husha ) I if s g P f S rof."" Klein who had discovered the star. | g (hat the unexj ! honor was too much | not to adopt such approved applian he choose hat t independent moveme iy nd added she, “we were nefther o I \ ; Ry The late Richard A. Proctor, the eminent | ror hiy modest nature To BadiaeTm & ahan0s fon o o st thare. In absalutsly no | of helr farmer prisat e th The | who | 5 SURHRROAS C AT SORLR Euglish astronomer, was i the United | A, T. VANCE. evont Electrolywin, | ehanse for dishones On New Year's eve Re il 1, ( v tly amused the ugitat o States at this time. Uorcunately for him, | £ e Y In & patent tssued November 6 to Prot. | Constipation Teads (o Twer Trouble, and | Dibef e Baptat temyle, Philadelphia, leii Rabbl Jicob Duvid Wilowski, one of i raned i uiin he didn't know about Mulhattan and he| When you want sparkling wine get Cook's | Luclen I. Blake, says the Electrical World | torpid lver to Bright's dasase percn | Waier mnd thee the ite n m York y 1018 persons. "’ i | burned with zeal to save the American [ Imperial Extra Dry Champagne. Its purity | and Englueer, a plan of protecting under- | Ast Bitts @ certaln cure at any stage | Mmenhers of the L Rl SAAr DS N to Chicags e utract of 16,00 public from the paths of scientific error. |und delicious Bavor commends it ground metallic structures 1s descrived, | of the disorder, g iy i XL R 0 eete 11 wh alde er & lur « d can be ued Tor \

Other pages from this issue: