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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 \