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About Wallowa chieftain. (Joseph, Union County, Or.) 1884-1909 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 11, 1902)
WALLOWA CHIEFTAIN. I'ublUhetl Fvery Mttk. ENTERPRISE OREGON. Every man hns a right to work, but the other fehow t.o often forgets It. Secretary Shaw r. ii.ixu a little over FJOAxun' tiii- other day. llow much o: It did yu get ' The world l:.:s little use for a man Who does l;.s ii-.-s: oul.V whtU etlgagid In doing others. A lady of -i j;.:s a::ed ?7"."Vi for iamal attentions. What would she tare de;ii.i:.o. V: ;.t J": When t':e g.ri says tiioy are engaged and the ?o';:ig r...:: s -.ys they are not It takes a j:.r t" ..le. Fools may rush in wh-ro ans"!s fear ! to triad, but the tin atri'-ai angel some- times haeiis tiie. iuois ho ate inclined j to rush i:.. I President It evlt iias ordered de partment chi-. is to make the govern ment reports shorter. He must want to have some of them read. The latest is a storage battery mist Let us hope it may succeed before the end of another century in rinding a torage buttery that will store. A Chicago woman Is seeking a di Torce from her husnund who Is de scribed as an enthusiastic amateur pugilist, she says lie was too fciu a.astic. How quickly celebrities are forgotten In these strenuous days. Who was the young lady who had the Crown I'rince of Germany g-.itig arou:;d iu a circle h tew weeks ago'; It Is still pretty hard to pet grouchy old men who don't like the Uys their daughters have selected as future hus bands to agree that arbitration is a good thins in all cases. When a person has "left off" smok ing, nothing helps his resolution like a caller whu lovingly foudies a cigar with the bouquet of a Chinese restaurant end a draft like a soft coal tire In a hard coal furnace. Most statements nowadays are taken cum grauo salis with an allowance for the discount. In apology for the sweep Ingness of the title of his book. 'Troper ty Is Robbery." I'roudhou said that he put his price high because he knew that be should be beaten down. The billionaire msy conie. but will not his heirs tire of the troubles and worry of handling the money and eatter it? Flesh and blood cannot Bland the strata this class of financiers Invite. These mammoth fortunes even tually will return to the people in ways never dreamed of by their creators. The greatest evil connected with the problem of power In the present life is the maleducatlon of men as to the sources from which it rs to be drawn and the metln.ds by which It Is to be used. The many and the prosperous are prone to Indieve that power is a deposit of divine election. Finding one's self possessed of it, the owner at once con cludes that he has been chosen of God to order a part of the universe, dom inate his feliows. dictate events and deal punishments to those who offend against his self-assumed prerogatives. One of the noblest charities In any city is the system of Pasteurized milk depots established and maintained in New York by Nathan Strati. From these stations nearly one million bot tles of milk and milk foods for infants were distributed durtng the past sum mer. Those who were not willing to accept the milk free were allowed to pay one cent a bottle certainly a low price for self-resjiect. Through the eo Ieration of the physicians of tlit Health Department, knowledge of the milk depots has been spread among the tenement house mothers, and free coupons for the bottles of milk have been distributed. There could not pos elbly be a more terse, more eloquent or more Impressive summing up of the work than is contained in the brief sta tistics of the annual report: Since 1S!)1, when the milk depots were es tablished, the death rate among chil dren under 5 years of age lias been reduced almost exactly one-half. Professor Welch, of Johns Hopkins University, announced at the recent medical congress In London bis dis covery of a universal virus, which Is to prevent and cure all diseases the tiuman flesh is heir to. Professor Welch confidently declares that the person who is 'inoculated with this new lrus "will never catch anything.'.' It Is to be regretted that the professor l not a little more explicit ou this point. Ills broad assertion that one who has been Inoculated with the new virus wUl never catch unything is highly ncouraglng. yet It would be more re assuring If he had epecifled that It would keep people from catching old ege aa well as to make them Immune from mumps, small pox and appen dicitis. It may be possible that the long looked for elixir of 11! e has at las been discovered, and the world wdl anxiousiy await further statements Irom Prafessor Welch. Also a little proof in support of the claims mad" for bis vfvus will b. very v.el ome Xet us hope that nil this wlil be spe-sl- Uy f jftlicoailjg and that t.ic splendid vinis which the p.-o:essor expects to iut un tl.e mari.c: vvi.l i.i tuld.Uuu to thwarting age and disease be capable of dehecung uinuuum.ies ami i.o.n-.. cars. If It covers these niatters satis factorily and Irofesor Welch can se cure capital enough to start a factory ( may prepare tor everlasting life, provided the coal liolils out. It Is a good thing for the American who is inclined to listen to the doleful lamentations of the iess!iuist to turn away from the army in the Thilippin s tor a moment ar.d loot; at the greater atu.y and mightier army described in tile annual r port of the I'nited Mates Con;ti.iouer of F.dilcatiou. Just s i: i nutted to the Secretary of the Interior. Tiie report of Coiuuii.-siou r llarr.s .n.i.iws mat the total ul pupils in tn ch..o!s. eleun-htarv. secondary and iii-h-'f. both public and private, in the I'uittd States for the y ar ending .June :. was lT.U'.'i'.U."'.". au increase of -.7'-i pupils over the previous year, v if tiiis number l.".7b'.:;m were eiirollt d in schools sup; ort.-d by local and gener al taxation. If we a. Id to this enrollment tie who attend: d certain spicial insti tutions like evening srhoois. couiiu-t-eial sch. o!s and schools of cookery and of special trades and vocations, we have a grand total of over seventeen and three-quarter millions of the population that received education for a longer or shorter period during the year. An in- . terestiug feature of the report is the increased per capita expenditure for education. In 1S7" the expenditure f' r schools per capita of the population was 1X4: the last year It wus i'2.'M per cap ita, the highest in the history of the country. This army of seventeen million . youngsters is the hope of the republic. It is the invincible defense of our iusti-, unions and of our democracy. No other army on the globe is comparable to it ar f,,ree f,,r ,.i v u r in., .n,i ,w ),.,!.: wark for free and popular government, i 1,1"-V,M' 11,0 wrtH'k Dn,lors cnuslst "r ftwu thirty -two-foot power boats, gaso- A Trm of the Commissioners ofe ensines beln used, aud etiob boat J Prious in Knghiud which was issued recently pays particular attention to tiie case of young offenders between the ages of 10 and '21. It Is said that under the existing law there is ade-i quate provision for those of a more tender age. excellent results having been attained through the present in dustrial aud reformatory school sys tem. But every person above 1U is an adult for the purix? of the criminal law, and the classitication leads to seri- i The boats then run in opposite di ous mistakes. Discussing the question rections until they nre half a mile the report says: "Figures have shown. apart. Then they take their course and the committee of 1S14 have test!- and run parallel to each other, the tied, that the age between 10 and 21 Is' windlasses or reels in each boat iu the essentially the criminal age, and that j meantime having been released and from criminals of this age the profes-' paying out the rope from the stem of sional criminal of later years ia gen- j each boat through a ring In the end of erated. It Is known also to students an iron pole that exteuds out over the of human nature that this age is a ' stern. When a sufficient length of pipe particularly phtstlc age, and that th "as been paid out two large weights habit which may lead to crime or vir- j of 3w pounds or more each are run tue cannot be said to be fully formed ! down the rope from the stern of each before the age of 21." Starting with i boat These weights sink to the bot these premises the report argues that ! torn and hold the half mile of rope separate treatment Is required for the I about four feet from the ground, so particular class of criminals referred j that the rope forms a sweep half a to. Their discipline should be different j mile long, catching anything that from that of old offenders, and earnest comes In Its way. Sometimes one of efforts should be made to reform them, the 8Tveep boats will remain at anchor Aside from the special care which ' and the other boat run around a radius should be given them In prison It is necessary that supervision should be had over them after their discharge. and that a sufficiently long period of time should be prescribed during which ; of the sterns of the sweep boats. The thy would be made amenable to i boats are stopped and the reels are re hetilthy influences. The Brst of these versed to wind up therope. Slowly needs, it Is said, has been supplied "by j the sterns of the lioata come closer and the benevolent and philanthropic action j closer together until they are almost of a body of gentlemen who have lately j directly over the point where the sweep formed themselves into an association ; rope Is fastened many feet below. Then for the distinct purpose of dealing with i the nature of the wreck Is determined, these cases on discharge." For the j The next step. In case the wreck other, action by Parliament Is request-1 proves to be a coal barge. Is taken by ed, "should It become satisfied by the result of the exiieriment that is being ' made that the existing system of a sue-1 cession of short sentences for young ! criminals Is Ineffective and mlschiev- ous. and that better results can be of the find; also observes the best man obtained if power were given to the ! ner of taking It out, whether by buck- courts to commit for long periods to the care of the state young criminals who are shown by their antecedents to be graduating for a course of 'profes sional' crime" Judged by the Huaiple. Stories concerning the rivalry be tween Chicago and St Louis evidently will never grow old. The latest con cerns a visit which Alderman Michael Kenua, "Hinky iJink," recently paid to St Louis. He wished to talk to a friend wbo lives In the suburbs of the Missouri city, and as he had a dime in his pocket for change called up over the telephone. lie talked but a few minutes, and then asked the central operator how much he must depuwit lor the call. "Fifty cents, please," was the an swer. In a most cotdldont voice. "Fifty cents." gasped the Alderman. 'What do you take me for? A man with coin to burn? Why. In Chicago I can call up hades for 50 cents." "Perhapt so." was the answer, framed In the most uimiflled tone, that's within the city limits, know." Minneapolis Journal. still 'but you A CiHHtroiioniic lat. In a 1 ttle schoolliouse in the north of Scotland the soho Cluster keeps in uoys griuumg sieauuy at m. - ir desks, but gives them permission says Tid-Klls. to nibble from their lunch baskets Hometimes ns they work. One day while the master was in structing a class In the rule of three, he ujticed that one of his pupils was paying more nttentlun to a small tart than to his lesson. Tom Rain." said the master, "listen to the 1"shoii. will ye?" "I'm listening, sir," said the boy. "ListiMiin?. nre ye?" exclaimed the mns.er. "Then yt're listening wl' one ear an eating pie wl' the other." Never Judge pictures and horsi by their iraui.v, MINING COAL IN WATER. How a Wrecking Company Kx tracts Fuel from Sunken llurgra. Coal mining In the waters of Ixmg Island Sound has been takeu up on n extensive scale by a l.ridgeport iConn.i wrecking company. The sound con tains immense quantities of coal, Old ouud captans say that there is enough coal in the waters to supply New Yerk for " .vp-,r- Tllri' is scar.-e'.y a heavy storm on the sound that a nunilicr of coal harges are not sunk ami the work of tiie wrecking company In mining for the coal Is watched with deep Interest. The method of water mining Is sim ple. In the lirst place, the wro !; must be found, and for practical work "recks ought to bo in water i'"t over forty or forty-live feet deep, and thirty feet is much easier working . . r. a.. 1 HI ..'4 Pv; , I - 4 t - ": St. lift' " - '' r mis work wm'K nutters are mi- is manned bv two men. The boats run out to the territory where the wrecks are believed to be. In each one is a large reel containing a mile of inch rn',e- Tlu' 1h);US ar, run iw"s,' (,r each otner. ami the ends of the ropes from each boat's reel are spliced. This makes a continuous roe two miles long. and. in reality, lashes the two wreck finders, or sweep lioats. as they arH sometimes called, together. of half a mile, and clearing up a mile of ground. When the sweep rope catch es fast it Is indicated by the pulling down, sometimes almost under water. the diver, one of the crew always being a diver. He dons his rubber suit and Is let down to the fastening and pro ceeds to explore the find. He estimates the quantity and looks into the quality ets or the suction pump. If the find Is worth while the diver fastens a floating buoy to the wreck, and then the sweep boats proceed on their way to find more wrecks. After the wreck finders have marked their find by a floating buoy the lighters run out They are equip ped with derricks and suction pumps. Sometimes the pump Is run down Into the sunken eoul barges and shoved around by a diver, who goes below to tend the pump and place tiie end where it will do the best work. This is the easiest method of recovering the coal, as the coal Is sucked up through the five-inch pipe in a steady stream and falls Into a screen, the water running overboard, and the coal passing down the chute Into the hold of the lighter. At other times It Is necetwnry to take the coal otit In buckets or shovels, the shovels acting the same as the folding shovels on a great dredger, which sends the shovel down to the bottom and then closes up, bringing up what ever It shuts up on at the bottom. It Is not an uncommon thing to find a coiil wreck where the lighter can be pumped full of coal In half a day, and a wreck that will not fill the hold of the lighter In a day Is not considered much of a find. A hundred tons of coal wavdwiI III thin wnv Is ronnl(li(l L,r work. It will be seen that a - ., nf 100 toDA of coa, lf ,,, at a ton, would yield a handsome profit to the "water miners." In round figures, It would amount to $1,0W for a day's work, and, as It costs nothing but the labor expended In mining It, the profit Is many times over 100 per cent SKATING THE YEAR ROUND. TbeOreson Lakes Afford That Pastime to Thoae Who WUh It. Among the many natural phenomena this country affords Oregon boasts of two lakes whose surface Is covered with ice from beginning to end of every year. They have but recently been dis- covered lu Baker County. C. M. Sage ... ... i j liiNt.NU to.VL I.N TUlt W ATEIl. of Tontland on Sunday. July 27. crossed two good-sized lakes In the Granite mountains, some miles northeast of Cornucopia, on half-fro.eu ice. Mr. Sage, with a party of friends, went on a limiting and pleasure trip to the almost Inaccessible mountain peaks back of the town of Cornucopia, in tiie panhandle district. The mountains are high and rugged an 1 before passing the timber line the explorer must hud bis way through a primeval forest. A pack horse Is tiie only means of getting into his district except to trudge along on foot, which, to say the least, is uphill business, due part of the road is so incumbered with fallen trees that It is almost impossible to get through. In order to get supplies to their claims two prospectors were obliged to cut a trail through this tangle of fallen trees, and it was by means of this trail that .Mr. Savage aud his friends were enabled to ascend the mountains until tliey tinally discovered the two froen lakes referred to. The lakes are near the summit on the north side of the moun tain mid In order to reach them the party traveled over ice ami suou lor a distance of live miles. The bodies of water are small. Otic is about loii feet across anil the other is between lino and 7iHl feet in diameter. They are well-dellned lakes or pools, however, covered with a thick coating of lee. clear as crystal and as smooth as glass, which Is so thick and strong that the exploring party did not hesi tate to ride across on horseback. Mr. Sage says so far as he is able to judge the Ice on the lakes never melts, been use they are so situated behind two tall peaks that the sun's rays nev er strike them with sullleleut power to make any impression on the snow and ice. This land of perpetual snow and Ice Is within a day's ride of Raker City by the present means of transportation, part way on a buckboard and the rest on horseback. It would scarcely b more than a ride of an hour and a half on an electric railroad. Mr. Sago Is of I l the opinion that from the lay of the country other larger and more pictur esque lakes with perpetual Ice will be discovered. GRAND NIECE OF WASHINGTON. New York Society Woman Who Enjoy Greut I'opulurlty. Mrs. Attllo Morosini of New York enjoys a two-fold distinction she Is beautiful and Immensely rich and she is the lineal grand-niece of George Washington, the father of his country. Her maiden name was Mary Caroline Washington Uond and before her mar riage to the son of New York's million aire banker-she was the belle of the East. Her pictures made covers for the magazines nud subjects for the art V 2 9 fls. m xt t 7 MRS. ATTII.O UOIiOHlMI. stores. She was courted In society as few other American women have been and distinguished visitors to our shores deemed it an honor to meet her. Mrs. Morosini lives at Hlverdale-on-tlie-IIudsoii aud there holds a court of her own. As a hostess she is charming and an invitation to any of tier func tions is looked upon as a high honor. Hesides being pretty Mrs. Morosini Is an accomplished musician, performing on the piano and linr). She has re mained unspoiled by society and takes a more serious view of life and Its du ties than commonly prevails within the gilded portals of the idle rich. One of her souvenirs b. a buckle which Wash ington once wcte tin bis garter. Dog with D'an not Tooth. A dog with a diamond set in one of Its front teeth was hi Philadelphia re cently. It was here for medical treat ment and during Its stay In the dog ward of a veterinary hospital uptown It astonished everybody with its clever ness. A French poodle. It had chlc that the nurses said was truly Parisian. It had also Innumerable tricks. You would, for instance, say to It, "show your dia mond tooth," and It would curl back Its Hp In such a manner that the dia mond would glitter. The dog belongs to a wealthy woman of Trenton, X. J. She had the brilliant set In its tooth two years ago. What gave her the Idea of this, snys the Philadelphia Record, was undoubtedly the sensational story, printed long ago, of the blaze of diamonds that Illumines the mouth of Fltzslmmona, the pugi list . Presumably. Stenographer Did the baby sleep well last night? Cashier I guess so. I did. Somer ville Journal. Always Heady. Wigwag My wife threatens to go on the lecture platform. Henpeckke My wife doesn't need a platform. Xew York Tribune. Reality may be only skin deep, but the impression It makes extends much deeper. A if & 1. '4 'J .' '." LIKE EGYPTIAN BONDAGE. Deplorable Condition of tba Hebrew In Koumnnia. noutnania Impoverished by the ex haustion of her natural wealth, the failure of crops and the lagging of In- dustries. cursed and disgraced by i r Vi.fM heartless rulers' whose laws have j made degenerates of the peasants and have forced the Hebrews Into a state worse than that of brutes and not unlike that of Israel in Kgypt of old t h 1 s shadow of a nation is a t. i KI.NU I'll Alil.l.s. blot on the civilization of Europe. At tention has recently been directed to the wretched condition of the Hebrews by Secretary Hay's note to the signa tory powers of the treaty of Iterlln which guaranteed protection to the peo ple of ltoiimaiila. This action of the chief adviser of our President has aroused much sympathy for the unfor tunates, but only the most heroic meas ures can rescue not only the Hebrews, but the Christians of this blighted country from their awful wretched ness. Kuin confronts Uoiiuiiinia. Her government is ns Imbecile as It is cruel, and the people themselves are Impo tent. Their King Is a man of broad sympathies, but Is powerless. Their Queen Carmen Sylva is a woman of extraordinary intelligence and mental caliber who can write romances and poems, but fiction will not appease gnawing hunger and rhyme cannot clothe the miked. The Christian world has stood aghast at the horrors of Turkish rule In Armenia. No less should It shudder because of the aw fuluess of Roumanian destitution and Israeli tic persecution. ltouimuUa Is one of the llalkan states a crescent-shaped territory of about the same size as New York and with almost an equal population, viz., about (i.iMMi.iHiO. Ititeharest, with a imputa tion of I'oO.tHMj, has many of the archi tectural features of Constantinople and much of the poverty of that great city. It is the residence place of King Charles and his Queen. The former comes of a branch of the Hohenzollern family and has reigned since lSdU, but did not assume the title of King until Koumanla clnlms to be complete ly Independent politically, yet she pays nnnuiil tribute to Turkey. The consti tution Is liberal, guaranteeing- to nil citizens equulity before the law, yet the Imposition upon the Jews shows Unit the constitution Is a meaningless Bham. The legislative power Is exercised by two elective bodies, the representatives of the people. The daws which they pass prove that our sympathy for the supposed Christians of the east of Eu rope has been misplaced. They are In reality barbarians, for the laws against the Jews made In the past few years are amazing in their unfairness. In the first place, all Jews were made aliens. Later the police were given rights of domiciliary visitation and ex pulsion, so that in Itoumiuila a Jew's house was no longer his castle. Then they were prohibited from street hawking, which ruined 5,000 families. They were excluded from memliershlp iu the Chamber of Commerce and Trade. Law by law they were driven out of the profes sional classes nnil confined to the artisan class. Then the artisan employ met its were slowly clos ed to them, until In March of this year a law was passed prohibit ing the employ ment of Jewish work Ingnien in CAUMKN SYLVA. any trade or calling, nnd forbidding their even taking part In the meeting of the1 trade or artisan societies. Although they had to pay school tax es free education was limited to Rou manians, the Jews being compelled to pay, and even then were admitted only lf there was room after all the others were accommodated. They were ex cluded altogether from the higher schools and from the technical schools. They were not only driven out of the public service and from public works, but lines were enacted for Roumanians employing Jews In retail trade. It Is estimated that the artisnns law of last March will soon deprive 25,000 Jewish workmen of all means of livelihood and reduce over 100,000 men, women aud children to beggary. Although taxed for the support of local hospitals, they may not enter those Institutions. Pun ishments lor offenses committed against them are made light or remit ted altogether. They can be arrested and beaten with Impunity. Their sons are recruited for the army without re gard to any of the exemptions allowed by law to other Roumanians. They may not write letters to the newspa pers. They mny not hold public meet ings and they have no right of petition to the government But the Injustice of the law Is not all the Hebrew In Uoumanla must contend with. There are 210.000 of the race In the country and not more than 800 have wealth ninountlng to $500 nl though a few years ago many were comparatively rich. The average earn ings per inniiiy oefore employment wns prohibited was $1 per week. No wonder that hundreds of Hebrews nr Biiirviiig in mo sired. n,.v. l)r ; tcr, of London, chief rabbi of what are known as tho Heplmntl communi ties in Migiiuid, has recently visited Itoumiuila, to leiirn 1, fomlltli.li ..f things, and, If possible, ) nv tl)0 mug. no was given ri'Mpecifiil hear- lip! which create the hope that the conn, try- may be awakened to the frightful hardships It Is Imposing. SEMINOLE WAR SURVIVOR. Only One Man ft of the 500 Wh Marched Under Col. Taylon, Of the 500 soldiers and volunteers who marcneii unoer tiie command of -..! I rt I ft- , oionei iii'iiiiry juyior IlglllllSt tll mmiiiiioU-8 In Flurl. . oui one uuw lives, so far as ia Known, to tell the story of that cam- puign. The last military operation against the Semi holes took place the latter part of 1S:;7. The sole pen sioner of that witr iioiim: wi:uu. and probably th only survivor, is Claiborne Webb, wlio lives near nine "Springs, Mo, Mr. Webb Is now In his eiglity-ev- emu yeiir. lie was nut .' years of 1 1 go when lie and htty oilier young men r .Jackson count-, Missouri, enlisted in the Volunteer company of Captain j tunes minis or independence. Il was In service but six months, recelv- lug Injuries in the last and most de cisive buttle near Lake Okeechobee, la Southern Florida. Of all Indian wars tlint in Southern ! lorldn is described by the aged veter- nil as being fraught with ns hard, if not with greater, dillicultles than nny itncr. Disease, swamps, venomous in sects nud dangerous reptiles were com mitted ns well as red men. Long inarches were undergone nud often whole companies were for days with out their rntlons. The Seminole wnr wns caused bv nn endeavor upon the part of the United States government to drive nil Indians westward across the Mississippi River. The Creek tribe as n whole were forced to terms of submission by General An drew Jucksou In 1SH and were com polled to yield their hinds. Hut the Seminoles, who were members of this tribe, escaped Into Florida. There, under the leadership of Osceola, who had become a trained soldier in the government ranks, nud Sam Junes, an Americanized Indian, they committed many depredations upon the popula tion, destroying both lives nnd property and devastating whole sections of the country. Severnl campaigns against Osceola nnd Jones, all of which proved futile, were made by Generals Clinch, Call and Jessup. A detachment of 112 men under the command of Major Dade wns surrounded Dec. 28, 1S3C, and all but three privates were killed. This wholesale slaughter aroused the United States government to renewed efforts to put an end to Indian warfare lu the South. During the summer of 1837 a com mand of 500 men was given to Colonel Taylor nud he was sent against the Indians. Mnuy doubted the wisdom of; the campaign, undertaken as It was with a mere handful of men, outnum bered by Sum Jones' braves three to! one. But It wns successful. Tiie semi noles were put to rout at a battle In one of the marshes of the Klsslinmeel Kiver nenr Lnke Okeechobee. A treaty! was made during the ensuing winterf which provided for the removal of the! Indians to a tract of land west of th Mississippi Hlver. In spite of years and nn active life, Mr. Webb Is still nn energetic old man, one to whom time has been kind. H hns living eight children, twenty-sla grandchildren, nnd eighty great-grandchildren. He has outlived three long lived wives, the lust of whoimdietl last summer. Thn Oueen's Ilebuke. I Some venrs ago. when the presen Queen of England wns I'rlncess Wales nnd her children were ver: small, thev were staying at a QUie wntprlnir.iiliice. The Xlontreal Starn peats this little story of the royal famj lly, which shows that Queen Aiexauu.. Is much like nil other good mother! and that her children are like cnuun- thp world over: A,,,.n rritiirnlnir from fl 8hort 88 one of the little princesses wns walklnl up the plank. An old sanor iusi ly said: "Take care, little lady!" The child drew herself up hangntu and said: "I'm not n indv. I'm a princess. n,i.. , ..! Vnl,ia who OTP , ,.i.n i.. i.. ..tin nnd til nenru tne muuiy uijuuio"" rather Ill-bred reply, snld quickly: "Toll tho mind sailor von arc not tie lady yet, but you hot. 10 he wfj day." -.r- Ttncr Views. Twvn- whft "wluh to nor off the day of . spectacles should accustoi themselves to long views. i" .1 11 ,i i iom bettefi ttlWHju reuevini, u " - after reading a while, we direct 1 sight to some far distant object, v for a minute. Great traveler. . 1 . i,i,. nonr slirhted. "a ore discern objects at a great dwl with considerable distinctness tv-L.T nt nil. ' common eye sees uuu"n - , Is reported to have such acute that he could tell when ue 1 see an object. On one occasion w ' the ship was In n sinking and all were exceedingly anxious 1 0 sight of laud, he reported. look-out that he could not exici . the shore, but could pretty so. .-rotlntV no-i xi !" "- kin In the early morning Leeds wjii can travel five miles .for a the municipal electric traunviy- The women think men have BO'-j to do, nnd the men aro " the women haven't. There Is more work In t"e " i t fl.Al i" ami lung cimrliw mmlo prunilsii Kai'dun than In the ca.e u- " t