80,
1017
*
All necessary operations in
writing, billing or Statistical work
are accomplished from the key
board of the light running, easy
ad io n M odel 10 (Visible)
Reck
R stwo M i
In no othsr dlatriet In tha world
are active raining operation, ^ r r io d
on a t such depth a . In the Lake Su
perior eopi'er region. M U the Chi
c a g o Chrouicle. The No 3 shaft of
the Tam arack mine la the deepeet
In the world, having attained a verti-
cle depth of 4,840 feet, nearly a mile.
Not fa r behind it I , the Red Jacket
■haft o f the Calumet A Hecla, which
la 8k>wn 4 920 feet. Another deep
abaft of the Calumet A lle$la la the
No 4 of the Calumet branch o f the
property. Thia ta down 7,800 feet
an an incline o f a mile and a half.
In view of the roarveloua -eiBcleney
o f the modern holating engine no
considerations of a mechanical na
ture need lim it the prospective depth
P o e t-W e li I ’ ve got out d re llu, s of o f shafts.
n r poem alrcadv. H a rth a
T he greateat obstacle to deep min
B is W ife— And I ’ve got out seven ing la the proportionate inereaae In
Unee of my washing — Borioo Herald. ‘ tempera turn. In the I-ik e Superior
I copper dlatriet State Geologist Lake
; baa ascertained that the tem perature
Denial.
in the mine varies one degree fo r
“ Are you the
every 110 feet. The tem perature in
la f e n d a a t In
the deepeat ahafta a t the Tam arack
Hite cuaef“ \
and Calumet A Heeia variea between
“ No. air: l ot
■ 88 and 90 degree«, and In view o f
aalv »he man
these conditions It la evident th a t
who committed
considerable d epth, can y e t be at-
(b e t h e f t . ” —
1 talned In thia section.
New
fo rk
Staple Staadl Cuttins De»
föLW iiP “
T h a racaat agitation of tha bonll-
laura da era, or private distillers, of
France, against ike prupoanla o f M.
Bonviar, tha m iniater of «nance, to
ta x th e ir franchise haa diacloaed the
immense power of thia veeteo Interest
among the peasantry I t is estimated
th a t no fewer than i.Oon.COo to 1,800.000
fam ilies avail themselve^ of the privi
lege to d istill from the pears, applaa,
damaona and cherries of th eir o rchard,
apirituuua liquors fo r household eon-
aumptloa, bays a London paper. B at
as every hectoliter of nonexempt liquoi ' ja-
_w orth, perhaps, some 810— i t taxed /
to the tune of 844, there it every Induce
ment to the enterprising peasant to
distill more than bis household can
consume, in order to do sa illic it buai-
World.
SURE
S h re w d .
“W h a‘ made
yon tell tbejao
Itor the temper
ature waa Just
r l g b t f ” s a id
Bich» om e R ib lx *
I M o m Touch
Ball Bearing T y p . Eta
Catana Finder and Peres-
D mom I Tekulow
V w tJ . Writing
A Kay t a Every Charte»
T lm Idd - I f
y«u
pi-ee". Mrs. Reardb'U,
I'm getting rather tir
ed of hash w ith my
coffee and tonal for
break fa s t
M rs Boardblll — All
rig h t H I toll the gtri
to give yon nothing
but eoff-c and toaa»
a fte r thia. - Cblcaga
‘hoosnnds H a ro Kidney i i u l « »
(Jpenn - W h at’s the m atter7 C a u l
and Don’t Know tt.
» you awlmJ
— -—
; D o w M M - if f lb , bat don t roa «new
How » • x i
Fill a bottle or comm
uter sod let it stand l
«
IP YOU
fcerri
/ F
$
TOUCH
AVOID ALUM
Say plain ly-
Royal is made from pure, refined Grape Cream of Tartar—Costs more
than Alum but you have the profit of quality, the profit of good health.
S
Nothing has ever equalled i t
Nothing can ever surpass i t
' Dr. King’s
New Discovery
A P erfect
Cwre
F .. All T h roat and
T roob
Mo.-w Uar>. If it faff». Ì
Shrew d T k le r e r y .
.Am ericans who go abroad must « »
peet to be robbed right and left,” said
« y o u n g man who recently returned
» « * < * E ^ p c o n tour. “O n . ex- |
p e rt, to be held up for all sort, of t t £
but when the b-gears follow yon home
yea can’t help feeling a sort o f admire
0 on
u»elr Ingenuity.
M|
over on one o f the Red S tar
" n<1 ,he flrBt thlns 1 dM “■
>t An(werp W M to go to tbe
„ , bu. „ a c e nnd send a n casage to tuy
mother announcing ray safe a r r i v a l J
paid the toll and thought oo more
.b o u t It until 1 got home, when among
my m ail I found a letter from the Ant-
operator, addressed In care o f my
„ y ln g that through an error
he had not charged me enough for my
„ w h and such a
cablegram sent, on roch and such »
date, that be had been obliged to pay
the difference out o f his own pocket,
. Bn<,
bis salary waa very small _gnd
‘ he bad a larr<- fam ily and all that sort
f th ,
fclt , ure 1 <Uuld reimburse
;
“« *
• “ » « « ■ « « *•
Y « . « Z !-« « • — ?l. britta of trie I did - " d him a fomlguu»” * £ £ £ 5
zondoriu’
dUcoverv
fC d T -
J 1 have since learned from experienced
s baax ;b»t
travelers that I bad bent made tbe
r.tora about it. both s e n tfe t^ “
victim c f c systematic form of robbery
1 wofataly free by mall,
e
an ] t^at scarcely a cablegram la aeut
ikkes, Dr. Kilmer & a » « -r s— o a— a from tbe other aide unless It la o f a
Co., Binghamton, N . Y . W h tr writing m t -
nature that Is not followed
Uoa »«ding this ganwousrilor in tkt. peps». by
tm ,u
EurOpean
“
| o p e ra to r -------------------------- -
and ruin your stomach-
. i l l i . I Q
J U
vmanrism-.vndov comas th.! unpktsanl
>OC- it y <f -..ng co npeitad to go often
hu ig <f.i d*y. at d to gt: up rr.eny timet
,.g lb 'r ig h t . T o t irrilJ and tha evtra-
14J r.i>
a Swamp-Root I , aooa
!.< I
I t . u t r ii -he »■ chest to.- ha weo-
..-tri ¿mm ot i-t fflosi iiitrssslng cases.
to think of tasting it
By the use o f so called cheap Baking
powders you lake this puckering, injurious Alum
right into your system— you injure digestion,
A
'* ''.2
if the urtnery pseenge. It correcti Inebtlltv
o hold * » ar . — ecaling P*ln la seaal.»«
uv.1 effw“ v .-.liov-ing u~a of ..vuor.
And look in the glass— you will see the effect—
You can’t help puckering—it makes you pucker
s i i i i l M
' that alga t-C b lc a « u Newa.
your linen « Is
evidence of kid-
f t l nJ ' L f t ’'«X trouble; toe
* n
iraquent dadra to
<
P*-- * or pain I* 1
' '
2Le b* cL i 5h i ?
onrinc.ngpre». that the knisey. and bled-
„ . m o . t<.
;
-n v-r. is comtoit in the knowledge ae
flan «xwewed, I -at Dr. KUmer’a Sv amp-
\
praet -i-inky tomedy fuMUIs every
rtah in curing rheumatism, .win In the
uu_... kidneys, liver, t ladder and every part
ALUM
curwL N atu re alno« won’t
de it« it aeeda help.______
ith > »
* hours; t
t or s’ •
}f J r
your tongue to
DOCTORS'
l
tc
»
—
OulaoV tired through the moot ere«» |
n . i a the F o rt,
fnl periods of modern France. I l a was ; In October. 1«M. Allatoonn puna, a
bom In 1787 amid the muttering! of tbe
(n tbe mountains of Georgia, wae
revolution. Oulxot’s parents were mar-
j , , General Corse, with I.tWlt
ed by a proscribed Protestant pastor. menu | t w(1, , strong, strategic point,
id hla birth was never legally regie , n A „„„vorer. IflO O ,«» rations were
red. Hla father, who waa an advw rtorrd tbere
Freslch, the southern
lie, nattl Ids talent for public apeak
w|t h «.000 men. attacked the
ig In the Intern»« of tbe persecuted kalTW«»n and drove the defenders Into
roteetants and became a merked man # BInaI, fo ft on t he crest of tbe hlU.
fter living for several weeks In dan- Th, lm tt|e W M fierce. The northern
tr of his life he was at last arrested, j o i j i , , , fell In each numbers that fur
nwllllngl.r enough, hy a gendarme wba lher f|Kbtlug seemed Tolly.
new and re»pectw l hist.
( But ons of Corse’s oiBcera caught
“8hall I lei you « . « p e r s a t a tk»
o f , w U t(. «im »! gag fluttering
lan.
....... .....
...
la the breexe on tbe top of tbe Kens
•■Are you lonrriedT” replied M. Ggt
mountain, across tbe valley. 18
»uL
’ miles aw ay. The »¡¿rial was answered.
“ Yea. I hare «wo cbUdna."
BlXj tb o - came the Insp’ lng tneaeagi
“ And se hare I. ” replied the prisoner, ff,lln mountain to mountain; “ Hold
“lin t "you wctokl hare to pay for me. y ,,, fo rt_ | aDI eomiag.—W . T . Kber
l « t us go on?1
| man.”
They went on. and XI. Gulxot died on I c h „ r a ftr r fb eer went up. and.
the scaffold a few days Inter. A t tMe
hopelessly reduced In numbers,
time Francois, tbe future statesman. lL, y dld
the fort for hoars until
who was tbe elder of the two children. llie advance guard of Bberman’a army
was six and a halt years old an.1 ah cnn„
the!r relief. BU years 1st«
ways preserved the reodlcri.cu of go- p j» Bliss, the evangelist, heard tha
lag to see hla father la prison, or what rto rj.
aI) Ra T|t l ,i detail from a a r*
was euphemistically callsd the uutiee of d)rr fri. od and (ben wrote tha words
Justice.—Gentlemao’s Magaaino.
aud musk: o f hla fane-tia hy»;in. - l i t
Influence fo r Good «8 A U Othey Mem
bers of Their Ssss-Othae
Methods of A id .
Tbe women colleges of thia coun
try have gradoated «11 their clasa
ea, and the girle who have reaped
the tangible rew ard of a four
years’ tw iner in 'flie shape of a di
ploma have p.t*»cd into that atate
o f life to which it pleated th e t» w -
era to call th e n , aaya the New
York Hun. Aa In the case of every
• h i s s th a t la graduated from a
.v o m n ia eohege, many of these
atudenta have prepared them
selves to be teachers or for work
n other fields of Intellectna. ?n-
> ?vor. f »me w ill follow profes-
dona, such as la w and medicine, or
will take np the practical study of
conomles, which 4ms Interest«!
taring recent years so many
ecincn who have labored to give
themselves the advantage of a col
lege education.
Theh influence o f these eollege
bred women haa been for the good
if their sex, and of a ll those with
whom they rami ln(o contact ever
dnee women begnoto go into p ro
fesalohal life, and It is tdo late now
?o question the v itltie of th eir serv
ices to the world. W omen doe-
‘ ors may not’beeomr the moat eni-
nent In their p;o.e*ai©n, but they
•an accomplish greut good in the
treatm ent of women, more espe-
’ tally. Women lawyera may not
nake the greatest jurists, bnt
hey are able to be of service to
the defranded or wronged mem
bers of their own six. The achieve
ments of those who have taken np
the calling of practical soclologv
re among the tnosl notable which
re to be put to the credit of worn-
n college graduates la this coun-
Mrs. Wiley.
"B ecau se I
know the Jani
to r's d la p o a t
U n ,," answer
ed her ksnhand.
- I f we make
him believe we
are thoroughly
comfortable. be
w ill
h n s tle
a ro s a d a a d
m a k e t h ln g e
d if f e r e n t .
W a a k ln g ta n
WORK OF COLLEGE WOMEN
DEER FOR HUNTERS
Claraace M ackay Provides T arget B o n
b y E lectricity Through Woods —
Onsets Occasionally Oat a flkat.
New T ork.—Bven In this age of ex
travagant mechaulcal contrivances It
la doubtful whether any toy baa been
constructed so utujue and costly as that
which Clarence H. Mackay recently has
had Installed on his estate a t Harbor
HIM. near Roaslyn, L. I. Shooting gal
leries, in which rabbits, pigs and lions
bob up add disappear in front of a
screen a doaen feet away to tempt and
teal tbs aim of sportsmen have long
been fam iliar to visitors of Coney Is
land and other sim ilar reaorta. Clar-
ence Mackay has constructed In tha
wildest part of bis big estate aa elec
tric railw ay to furnish him the same
sport on a scale and la a manner that la
true to nature.
Tha railway, which runs In an Irregu
la r ecllpau. and la operated by electricity,
la a mils long and goes winding In and
ont among tha woods and broken
ground w ith all the seeming irresponsi
b ility of a wild animal. The animal la
provided In tha shape of a Ufe-slxed
inetal deer, mounted on a small bogle
truck. A t a spaed which can be regu
lated at aay pace np to ten or 11 miles
an hoar, tha deer la carried through the
woods, and ns It appears at the different
openings that have been cat among the
trees along tha routs, M r. Mackay and
his sporting friends gat a chance for
Just such a quick shot as the hunter la
the Maine woods haa to rely on to HR
pgg —........... —
--------- --—
At the end of the run the truck paaaea
over a n a u t onia tic switch, which shuts
off the current and the deer cornea to
a standstill In a sheltered pit. where
a m arker Is posted. He notes tbs places
where the dear haa been hit. telephone!
by meat.« of a special wire laid down
«7»
Perhaps the larger number of
liese women who come from the
alleges are merely preparing
t'.icuiselves fo r the places they arc
'o lake hi the home. They study
-r four years tlte sume ro rrit u
a » tliot their brothers and po«ri
ly their husbands pass thronph
nerely to make themselves more
Ifti'd fo shine in the society to
..ltieh lliey w ill belong sft« t_ fh e
-ollcge course Is over. And it is
>o them that we may possibly look
for the greatest t-ffcct on Am eri-
•an Ptniincrs in the broader sense
of the word. It Is too st on now to
tell wh:it th c e irc ft m aybe. V e ry
few families in what is called fash
ionable society, especially in New
York, rend ilif-lr daughters to col
lege. Haughlera In these fam ilies
of the older eastern cities, espe
cially again of New Y ork, pass
practically from tbe hands o f the
govcrncKses Into th eir social
world. They know iu childhood
only the few children related to
them or In tim ate w ith their fam
ilies. It Is not until they leave the
schoolroom to face society th a t
thdlr acquaintances are suddenly
enlarged and th at tbe burden of
conducting S themselves
w ith
credit under the trying circum
stances which most frequently
face a shy g irl falls to them, fk v -
eral years of this life may make
them women of aulBi ient tact and
experience to conduct themaelvea
w ith anything like difttwetion.
They enter the world of aoclety
when the average g irl student la
just beginning the studies o f her
sophomore year. The girl who es-
tera aoclety at the customarily
early age la supposedly learning
life while the atadenta are «till at
their booka.