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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 6, 1896)
I A FOOTBALL HERO. I I I IT WAS a great cross to Mr. and Mrs. Bartlett that Itoger was ap parently quite devoid of any worthy ambition. Their two older boys were so utterly different. I 'red hud been graduated from Yale with highest honors, and Horace was mak ing remarkable progress at the Sci entific School; In fact, they were both exceptionally line students, which made the contrast all the more strik ing. Kor Itoger was sadly uulike Ms brothers. He seemed to labor under the Impression that he bad been sent I to college simply and solely for the pnrnnco of p'antirrg o r:!aV f!;t IjS". J Apparently nothing else had power to j kindle the slightest enthusiasm in bis ! Hluggish breast, and his father and j mother argued and expostulated with j him in vain. "You are frittering away your v.ilu- able time," they argued agalu and again, "and are letting slip golden op- ' portunitles which, once gone, will neter come back to you; and what have you to show for it all but a broken nose and a fractured collar bone?" "Is there any prospective benefit to be derived from these hours spent In scrambling after a foot ball?" his fa ther questioned, severely; to which linger merely responded in his usual off-hand style: "Why knows but I may be elected captain of the 'varsity team next year?" "Is that the height of your ambi tion ?" his parent returned bitterly. "I am terribly disappointed In you. sir. Are you to go on playing foot-ball for ever and ever, or what do you propose to make of your life? I'erhaps you think that your reputation as a foot ball player will prove an 'open sesame' to all desirable positions? Do you sup pose that anyone wants a fellow who lias willfully wasted his best opportuni ties? I had hoped to make a profession al man of you, not a professional ath lete, and hail even aspired to seeing you some day In our lending law office with my old friend. Wilkinson Smal ley, but it's no use. Small y wants only young men of the highest prom ise," and Mr. Bartlett sighed wear ily. "It does no good to talk to Itoger," lie rounded to his wife afterward, "for hardly ten minutes had elapsed after 1 had been remonstrating with him about the evils of foot ball before he Inquired If 1 wouldn't bring you down to see the game on Saturday, and In formed me that he had saved two tick ets for us." Mrs. Harden regarded her husband helplessly. "What did yon say to him then?" she queried. "I told him 'certainly no:,'" Mr. liartlett exclaimed warmly, "and I ex pressed my surprise at his daring to suggest such a tiling. Show me some lasting bcnellt. or any abiding good, that Is to be derived from this ridicu lous game, I to, I him. ainl then come to me to abet you In such follv, but not till then." And so Mr. and Mrs. Iturilott railed to witness that memorable game In which their youngest son gained for himself such enviable laurels. Once In the Held. Itoger was like or- trans formed. Keen, alert, cool, rising splen didly to every emergency, no one would have known him fur the samo slow, Indifferent, easy-going specimen of hu manity who grieved the ambitious souls of his parents by his small aptitude for tJreek. Not that Itoger was by any means a dunce, for his class standing was fair ly good, but what pained his father and mother was the recognition of what he might have accomplished had It not been for the nrch-enetnv, foot ball. The great game over, the victorious team hastened back to their gytnua Klum with all possible speed; they had Home little distance to go. as the gym nasium was not very near the ball grounds, so that In order to reach It they were obliged to traverse the cen ter of the towu and cross the rail road tracks. Itoger. wlio had been detained a mo ment or so longer than the others, reached the station a short time after they had crossed, and found the plat forms crowded with people who were returning from the game, mingled with those who were alighting from Inclin ing trains. As he stepped upon the platform he became conscious that something unusual was going on, and he Immediately perceived that the tyes of the multitude were riveted upon a tlgure half -way across the tracks, a fig ure pausing there In bewilderment. "There'll a train coming each way." Homebody gasped; "why doesn't ho got off the track?" The station ngeut and one or two other officials were shouting loud'y but the man. who was old and very deaf, appeared thoroughly dazed. A he was preparing to step upea the track nearest him he caught sight of one train coming down upon him. and he now staggered back and was about to plunge in front of the other down coming express, when suddenly some thing very unexpected happened. As the crowd of bystanders shrank back with horror-stricken faces, con vinced that they were about to witaes the horrible fare which nuts: instantly overtake the old man. a figure in a much-begrimed canvas jacket sprang out from among them, and clearing th? tr.tC...? . 1-ouuu a.-iilt-u LfS10e the swaying form of the other. A shudder, and a wave of pitiful re- I gret swept over the motionless crowd. "He can never drag him b.iok in time." they breathed: "they will both 1 kill ed oh. the pity of it:" j But our football man had no thought of dragging the unsteady figure in front of either approaching engine. In an instant he had tackled the man and thrown him ria: upon the ground be tween the tracks, for all the world quite as If he had been an opponent on the football field; then he dropped light ly on top of him and lav there motion less, while the two trains thundered past on each side of them, and the crowd stood waiting spell-bound. In much less time than it takes to de scribe the episode it was over, and what might have been a tragedy had proved to be only a bit of melodrama after all; yet as Roger Jumped up and pulled the old man on to his feet, ap plause and cheers louder than any that had greeted him on the football Held rang in his ears. Abashed and quite overwhelmed by such an ovation Itoger made haste to elbow his way through the crowd, and In so doing nearly overthrew his own brother Fred, who happened to be standing directly In his path. "Kor heaven's sake was that you. Itoger?" he cried, confronting him In astonishment. "Do let me get out of this," his brother responded Impatiently, "they needn't make such a fuss because I knocked the old duffer over," and he bolted In the direction of the gymna sium. Saturday night generally brought the scattered members of the Bartlett fam ily together, as the collegians always made a point of coming home to spend Sunday under the parental roof tree. On this particular Sunday evening all were assembled before Itoger came In. I' red was all agog to describe the scene that he had witnessed, but he un selfishly held his tongue. "I'll not spoil his story for him. but will give him n chance to do Justice to it." he mentally ejaculated, as he watched his brother swallowing his soup with un rutlleil composure. But Itoger said nothing about the vital subject, nnd l'red looking at him with increasing surprise as he judi cially set forth the respective merit of the opposing football teams, and called attention to their most vulner able points. "I'll turn In early to-night, I tli'nk," he yawned, as he withdrew from the dining room. "I put pretty solid work Into the last half of that game," and he leisurely wended his way upstairs. "I wish that Itoger would put a little solid work Into something else." his father volunteered, as he disappeared from the room. At this l'red, who had In times past repeatedly scoffed at his brother's ath letic proclivities. Instantly tired up. "Father." he burst forth, "von're making a big mistake about itoger. He's got more genuine stuff In blin than all the rest of us put together, and ir it s rootball that s done It. the soon er we all go In for the game the bet ter;" and then he proceeded to give a graphic account of the afternoon's experience, which caused his father to blow his nose loudly and repeatedly, while his eyes glistened with happy pride, and sent his mother weeping In search of the sleepy athlete, u-lm couldn't understand what he had done that was worth making such a fuss about. A few days later Mr. Bartlett re ceived a note from his old friend Wil kinson Snialley, which ran somewhat as follows: "Hear Bartlett-I hear that your Itoger is going In for the law, and If so. I want him. When he gets through with the law school you can hnn.l M, over to nie, for he's Just the material that I'm on the lookout for, and you may well be proud of him. "Me scared me out of a year's growth the other afternoon n't t te station, the young rascal, but In nli.. ' of that. 1 wish you would tell him to .me rouud and take dluuer with me some night, for I wan: to talk to him. "With kind regards to Mrs. Bart lett. believe me. ever your friend. 'WILKINSON SM ALLEY." When I'.oger c.'.n.e home the follow ing Saturday, his father handed him note, remarking: I'm afraid I haven': appreciated your football, old man. but I'm going to do In'tter in fu ture: and. by the way. linger. 1 hear that you're to piny in the game at Spr.ngr'.eld next week: is that so?" lloger nodded. "Very wed. then." Mr. Bartlett con tinued, "your mother and 1 would like to have you get ns the best seats that can be bough;, for we've set our hearts upon going up to see you make the firs: touchdown." Toledo Blade. Treats of Photography. 1 have read, with the comments there on, the account of the spirit photograph ing of n child's foot upon a window glass. I have something equally strange to offer My father-in-law. Emanuel Ttyder. I ves a trifle over two miles north and east of here. He and his family are stanch spiritualists. In the fail of ISTIi they had a valuable horse called Nellie, which wns quite a favor ite. It took sick with colic. 1 think, and .lust before it died snt upon it haunch es with the forelegs hanging down, then dropped over dead. Although the day was clear the sun did not shine on that the westi sid.ejj.t,:l'- 1'nise. a few rods from which. :n front of a window, the horse died About five months afterward the low er right-hand pane of glass in the lower sash of that window began to look smoky, and when the sun shone direct on the glass the correct picture of the horse was depicted in the sitting pos ture mentioned. This remained so for ten years. In the fall of lSs;t the glass became clear and The picture faded away, and in place were five diagonal lines, which remained about six months and disappeared. The glass began to look cloudy or smoky again, and the profile of the horse appeared as before, and is there to this day. It does not look like a flaw in the glass, but as If pictured in the glass. When the sun does shine in a direct line on the glass the image cannot be seen, but In the night. If a Tght Is held against the win dow, it can be seen by a person on the outside, and vice versa. This picture has been seen by hundreds and is ap parently a mystery to everybody. The fact of this phenomenon remains just the same, but the query is open for an swer: How. why and by what was the picture of that dying horse photograph ed on that window pane? Nye, Ore., letter to the I'rogresslve Thinker. Bursting Fly-Wheels. The bursting of a fly wheel Is almost unheard of In England. nntu-Ithsmmi. lug the high speed engines we now have running, yet in tne united States fly wheel casualties have become a nmtter of weekly report. In England we have many thousands of high speed cast Iron fly wheels and very large wheels up to sixty tons weight running with very high periphery speed, and they nil run safely, and yet In the States they say: "The sudden advent of the electrical ap paratus and it-s high speeds found peo ple making fly wheels of cast Iron with a narrow factor of safety, or, indeed, no laetor of satoty at all. if we consider the Impossibility of detecting Inherent strains and Imperfections in this rial. No one can know the value of material molded luto form nt a tem perature of 2,000 degrees and then cool. ed dow n to a 40th of this temperature, nor can they Judge Internal struetura by surface Indications. The fact Is that cast Iron Is not suitable material for tly wheels that are to be driven at hlirh speed, nor Is It necessary to make them of this material. There Is not even the claim of cheapness In their favor, If the metnoiis or making such wheels of wrought Iron and steel were once work ed out." Twenty years ago a Scotch firm, who had to make a large fly wheel for n spinning mill, riveted up a box rim. inane rrom rolled plates, nnd filled It with cemented masonry or "grout." and did a very sensible thing. London En gineer. Loneliness of Arctic loo Fields. On these Island hunting trips nu om inous silence reigned. We were then having alternate day and night, and tne spirit of the approaching months of darkness seemed to hold the day lu thrall. The weird desolation and ione lluess of the great peaks; the Intermina ble ice-caps, lustrous nnd cold under the gray waste of cloud; the wide, mossy stretches, thick-set with Irregu lar boulders of many hues, and thickly starred with white, pink, purple nnil yellow flowers; the absence of life; the windless hush all these wove a web of awe alunit one's mental perceptions, and made the world in which we walk ed seem a part of strange dreams. Century. Fire Burns Thirty-High! Yearn, There Is a burning coal mine ac Sum mit Hill, near the Towu of Mnu-.M Chunk. The fire, which was started by a tiny accident, has raged lu this mine since ISoS. nnd nil the trials at xtliigulshlug It have failed. "Why does a woman always call her purse a pocket-book?" "I don't kno. unless It Is because she carries In It a memorandum telling her where to find her pocket." Chicago Record. r l.r;E 53 l,r ft-' Kccapc from a Meteor. A meteor, weighing nearly four nnd a half pounds, fell in an orchard near Namur. in Belgium, on April 13, nar rowly missing a young workman. The meteor penetrated twenty Inches into the ground. Electro-Magnetic Velocity. Recent experiments by Monsieur Blondot on the rate of propagation of an electro-magnetic disturbance along a wire showed, according to one series of tests, a velocity of 184.1S3 miles per second, and according to another scries, in which the distance traversed was nearly twice as great, 18o,177 miles per secoud. The velocity of light Is about lyi,3uo miles per second. The SwlnBlna Earth, It is known that the poles of the earth, Instead of remaining fixed in po sition, revolve In small circles, or curves which are nearly circles, in a period of 427 days, and that another motion of revolution, considerable shorter, also affects the position of the polos. The cause of this "wobbling" Is not known, but Prof. Simon Xewcomb lias recent ly suggested that It may be due to cur rents In the oceans and In the atmos phere affecting the equilibrium of the globe. The Traveler's Tree. Monsieur Bureau, a French traveler, disposes of the old stories about the "traveler's tree," In Madagascar, which has been represented as a great boon to thirsty wanderers on account of the water stored in its cup-shaped leaf stalks. He says the tree grows only where there is a plentiful supply of water, and where ralu falls frequently nil the year round, and that since the leaves are situated at the top of the trees, which are very tall, the thirsty traveler would have difficulty in reach Ing them, even If it were necessary to do so in order to find water. Nature Worked Backward. An Interesting story of a reversal of the ordinary course of nature, which cost a market gardener dear, Is told by Miss Ormerod, the English naturalist. Watercress is eagerly devoured by cad' dls worms, but caddis worms nre a fa vorite food of trout. The trout In turn have a voracious enemy in herons, which ordinarily catch the fish after they have grown fat on caddis worms. Recently It happened that a large grow er of watercress had three-quarters of his crop mined by the ravages of cad dls worms. On investigation It was found that the trout, which ordinarily protected the plants from the worms, had been devoured, ahead of time, so to spenk, by a flock of hungry herons, which In thus reversing the course of events, had brought disaster to the own er of the watercress. A Steam Bli-il. Irof. S. P. Langley, the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, has con structed a flying-machine, driven by a steam engine carried bv the ninchlnn which made two sucessful flights nt uceoquan, a., ou May 0. The machine ir not large enough to carry a man, and is only intended as a model for expert ment. It is called nerodn HHP tnun n lug "air-runner." Its framework Is of steel, and the length of its wings, or j aeroplanes, from tip to tip Is fourteen feet. No gas is used to lift the machine, i the ascensional force bel HOT flprt vttjl from propellers driven by the portable i steam engine; nnd this force Is made effective through the shape and pitch of the wings. In the air the aerodrome resembles an enormous bird saillnir broad, regular curves nnd irniiinniiv rising. When the etentu gives out the machine, instead of tumbling headlong I to tne earth, settles down gently and ; rignt side up. i tie engine used at pres i ent is capable of driving the aerodrome about half a mile. On account of Vmt Langley's high standing In the of science great Interest has been ; aroused In his experiments. The Color of Water. The fact is generally known that pure water appears blue when light Is trans mitted through a sufficient thickness of It, and that when opaque particles are .suspended in it the hue of the wnter Is greenish. But while pure wnter looks 1 blue when light passes freely through : it, yet when it is contained in a deep ! opaque receptacle, like the basin of a lake or the ocean, it ought to absorb all light and look black. Experience shows, however, that the deepest parts or tne Mediterranean, for instance, an- j pear uot black but Intensely blue. This ; has been supposed to be caused by ml cute particles held In suspension, but the recent experiments of I'rof. Spring at Liege suggest a different explana tion, tie nas round that wanner cur rents passing through pure water In j terrupt Its transparency, even when the aiacrence of temperature is very slight i i in ri i Such currents may cause deerMritirr appear blue by reflecting pg,, , ' Hum iu-i u.-,.,.-, iiuuuKii u,e transparent layers above. This, It is suggesteil . plains the fact that fresh water lake are more transparent in winter than In summer, because In winter currents &f ueuieu water are nor. iraversile. tl.,.. Even the shadow of a mountain f.,jn on a bike may Increase the transim. nnpv nf the iv;it.i. l- ...w.!;.... .. .... .lus lm SUI i ace. Stereotype Casting Apnarati,. Chas. M. Conley, for years au ewpri stereotyper and at present foreman of the stereotype foundry of the Chica'i) Newspaper Union, has perfected anj patented an Invention to nutomatioiillt operate means for locking together thi cover and matrix-bed of a stereotype, easting box preparatory to the casting operation, and In like manner automat ically to unlock the parts when thi cast plate Is about to be removed. Pro. vision is made at different portions of the box against springing and warnlni of the parts In use, thus not only avoid- THE CASTING BOX. Ing the danger of leakage of the molten metal, but also Insuring a perfect cast- plate product. The Invention la om of great value, as it not only saves time. but protects workmen from Injury and makes possible a better grade of wort The accompanying cut will clearly Il lustrate tne improvement to the skilled mechanic. Childish Diplomacy. We all know the child's aptness In "easing" the pressure of command! and prohibitions. If, for example, he if told to keep perfectly quiet because mother or father wants to sleep, he will prettily plead for the reservation ol whispering ever so softly. If he is bid den not to ask for things at the table, he will resort to sly, Indirect renilnden of what he wants, as when a boy of fin years and a half whispered audibly, "1 hope somebody will offer me some mote soup," or when a girl of three years and a half with still greater childish Hot observed on seeing the elder folk eating cake, "I not asking." This last may t compared with a story told by Rom seau of a little girl of six years who, having eaten of all the dishes but one, artfully Indicated the fact by, pointing In turn to all the dishes, saying, "I have eaten that," but carefully passing by the untested one. When more difficult duties come to be enforced nnd the neophyte in the higher morality Is bidden to be considerate for others, nnd even to sacrifice his own comfort for theirs, he Is npt to manifest a good deal of skill in adjusting the counsel of perfection to young weak ness. Here is an amusing example: A little boy, Edgar by name, aged Hw years and three quarters, was going oat to tnke ten with some little girls. The mother, ns is usual on such ocasloos, primed him with special directions M to behavior, saying, "Remember to give way to them, like father does to me" To which Edgar, nfter thinking a brief Instant, replied: "Oh, but not all at once. You hnve to persuade him." Prof. Ja Sulley. Fireproof Paper. L. Frobeeu, of Berlin, Germany, shows the production of a valuable ar ticle for industrial and other purpose. Ninety-five parts of asbestos fibre of the best quality are washed In a solu tion of permanganate of calcium, a'nJ then treated with sulphuric acid, which bleaches the fibre. After treating the fibre tints, five parts of ground wood pulp are added and the entire niasspu' In the ngitntlng box, with the addition of lime water nnd borax. After being thoroughly mixed the material is pump ed Into a regulating box and allowed to flow out of a gate ou to au endle wire cloth, where It enters the usual paper-making machinery. It Is report! thnt pnper treated thus will resist even the direct Influence of a flame, and may be placed in a white heat with Impu nity. Ordinary paper may be made tire priKif by trentlng with a fluid composed of 33 parts manganate of chloride. 20 ol orthophosphorle nclil, 12 parts carbon ate of magnesium, 10 of boric acid, ami 2o of chloride of ammonia to a quart01 water. Taper saturated thorouebl.' with this solution will resist great heat Watts Heen reading anything anon these Cuban atrocities?" I'otts-No I've got a box of them at home ye that my wife bought three months W from an alleged smuggler. Cinclunat Enquirer. Xo wonder bees are profitable: the rteal all they eat from the neighbor.