Image provided by: Klamath County Museums; Klamath Falls, OR
About Klamath republican. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1896-1914 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1903)
AMO KIDNEYS ' important that these or- properly perform their fcaWWl the - - JL . .. ? don’t, what lameness of 1 back, what yellowness of The Sultan of Turkey requires that 'it constipation, bad taste < -S, siclc-4><ladaelie, pimples all atate document* and papers Intend L *-ud loss of courage, tell ed for his perusal shall Bret pass through a careful process of disinfec J ¿tive and tonic tion. nnsÄ» »> saleswoman the Compelled to Be on Her Feet the Larger Part of tl Pe-ru-na in Day Finds a I onic Miss Curtain of St Paul, Gives Her £ Sarsaparilla A curious sight in the streets of To- Experience. organs vigor and tone for kio is to see an old mail seated on a nerformance of their func- cures all their ordinary ail- g Did It. ’t have a dollar; he didn’t me. Hia clothes and shoes ing just aa though they’d r time. He didn’t try to all to dodge misfortune's Instead, he got some ashes lied five dozen sacks. Then, >gged a dollar. In the paper orn he advretised tin pciish J put the sun to scorn. He advertising, and. just now, isay, he’s ont in California at e on the bay.—The Lyre. . Í-,... ST RATES To Chicago, Dubuque and the Des Moines, Kansas City ■nd beast, via Chicago Great West ray. Electric lighted trains, led service. Write to J. P. 9. P. A., Chicago, foi informa Women No Longer KI**. mart women kiss one another, 5 moat they now do ie to rub This is aa it should be. In all rd world of women nothing has bergasted the mere man as the ■ i valor with which ladies used se on each other’s complexions t the slightest provocation.— Fair. Cultivate a Calm Temper. >n the worriea and caree of the at you and begin to wear on you ou chafe under the friction—be ' Stop, rest for a moment, and let ess and peace assert themselves. let these irritating outside influ- get the better of you, you are con- g your inferiority to them by per is them to dominate. Not a Dangerous nalady. hope that Jenkins will puli .gh bis siege of sickness,” re ed one friend, “for he was always a jolly fellow.” “He must be in y good condition and still very vol- answered the other friend, is morning I overheard his maid my wifs that Mr. Jenkina was ring from amonia.” - h.»i Great Demonstration. Ihey say when the great pianist 'ed in this town the teople went I,” lemsrked the comedian. They did tbs same when I played,” arked the young lady who blows cornet. ’Were they demanding that you ie back?” ’No, they were demanding their ney back.” — Confession. ‘Do you make much out of your li- xry work?” asked the inquisitive non. “Yes, replied’the man who scribbles casionally, “much more out of it than io in it. Canada Is Buildlag Railroads. The number of miles of railroad ■mpleted in the Dominion of Canada 18,868, an increase of 574 miles over is previous year. I Undoubtedly. “Wisdom,’’ remarked the man with • chronic quotation habit, “ie better an riches.” “Of course,” rejoined the philosophi cal person, “you refer to your wisdom and other people’s riches.” WTM’A 5//V¿ ketiing drain; the system cannot leng withstand the loss of mucus, hence it i* that women a filleted with catarr hal affections of the pelvic organs feel tired and languid, with weak back and throbbing brain. A course of Reruns is sure to restore health by cutting off the weakening drain of the dsiiy loss of mucus. An Admirable Tonic. Congressman Mark H. Dunnell, National Hotel, Washington, D. C., writes: “Your Peruna being uaea by myself and many of my friends and acquaint ances not only as a cure for catarrh but also as an admirable tonic for physical recuperation, I gladly recommend it to all persons requiring such remedies.” — Mark H. Dunnell. If you do not det ire prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of Peru na, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giv ing a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valua ble advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitraium, Columbus, Ohio. Woman Given Piece of Honor. Mrs. James R. Hopley of Bucyrus, O., is the only woman who has been given a place upen the centennial pro gram commemorating the 100th anni versary of the admission of Ohio to the union. The theme of her addreae will l>e ‘‘The Value of Good Women in in fluencing Civilization.” Mrs. Hopley is a former president of the Ohio Fed erated Clubs. i.. Hallway li*« luaugunih'd th* The Indianapolis aud ha* I rm first Interurbau railway sleeping s«t Interurban sleeping c«r service It I. world. With the starting of the ¡fit |L run on .11 th. el^rlc Hue. of any expeetwl that sleeping car service couwquviice In the country. u -k Ita allied traffic lines. b«s l>eguu ...............* The Ihillanapollfi and Eantern. ,XX a through limited service out of ton au<! Columbus, Ohio, t .koueh traffic will have bwn estab- Before many months has P*Tu.uls, M-A. I- V“’ ‘’’.T llahed the entire distance from St . rffiiiwiiv Nvitti'iii In ili# world* , aysteni of Interurban Cincinnati, Ohio, making the S longest ln,,‘r'ir me complet!- of ¿ ........... . All that Is now lucking for I r^n..... ..... of track * lNTEHL BBAN SLEKl’tNG f AU. stretch five mile, es.t of Richmond. Ind. .nd . stretch from Newark to A Steubenville. Ohio. Tlicac lines are already under course of construction through line from Chicago to Cincinnati wlU .Iso b.v. been completed the close of th. year. it-—-, m--» The course of the St. Ixmls Pittsburg line will be •• follovv e. East at. «t Louis lo Coillnavllle, III. (line under construe- I.ouls Traction Company, —— — ... , .,i „ Hou from Collinsville to Terre Haute. Ind j ; Terre Haul, »nd Hi.sll I r*. Company. Terre Hunte to Harmony. Ind Indl.n.polt. .ml I l.lufield I a. tlon Company. Plainfield to ludlanapoll.; Indianapolis sud Eastern. Imli.ui «poll* to Dublin. Iml.; Illcbmond Street snd Interurban Traction < ornpany. Dublin to Richmond; Dayton and We*teru Traction < otupany. It limond to Dayton. Ohio; Coluuibu». I-ondon and Springfield. Dayt-m to Columbu»; t o luuibus aud Newark Traction Company, Colutnbus to Newark. Ohio, Newark to Steubenville. Ohio (building!; Steubenville to Pittsburg. Pa. th. Pittsburg aud Steubenville Interurban. Plso s Cure fs a remedy for coughs, colds and consumption. Try It. Price 25 cents, St druggists. THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH. Not a Success. Patriotic Celebration of Ita Analver aary in Freehold, N. J. A scum—Were you one of her chafing dish party? Al. Way Seaton—Huh! we were a chafing chafing-dish party. The chafing dish didn’t chafe as much as we did and some of us are hungry yet. —Philadelphia Press. riTQ Permanently Cured. No flteor nervousneaa I I I U after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerva Restorer. Kend for Free •*£ trial bottle and treattia* Dr. K. H. Kline. Ltd. Ml Arch St., Puiladelpbla, Pa. The Inference Obvious. District Attorney Jerome tells of a prisoner recently brought to a Harlem police station whose condition was so uncleanly that he was advised by the desk sergeant to take a bath. “What!” exclaimed the hobo, indig nantly, “me go into the water?” “Certainly: you need it How long is it since you had a bath?” The hobo grinned. “I never wasar- rested before."—New York Timis. P. N. U. 1 Freehold, N. J., recently spproprl ately otiserved the auulveraary of the battle of Monmouth. Patriotic citi zen* from all of the Eastern Btate*. prominent government and New Jer ■ey State official* and troops of mllltls lent dignity to the celebratlou. A cen tury and a quarter have pa»»»*! away since that memorable day when Wash Ington checked the disgraceful n-treal of the troop* under Maj. Gen. Lee. turning defeat Into victory, and brave Molly Pitcher |*,rfornii*l the heroic deikl which won for her undying fame and enshrined her name In the heart of every American citizen. The battle of Monmouth wa* the first engagement of Importance which the troop* under Washington fought after leaving their winter quarter* at Valley Forge The privations and *uf ferlng* endured by the American pa triots at Valley Forge Lad well nigh troops received from Huron ttteuben at Valley Forge stood them In good stead They fought Ilk* veteran*, and the day waa won. There waa one other who ahnred ths honor* of the Imttle of Monmouth » Illi Washington, and that was brave Molly Pitcher. Iler husband, an artillery man In Oswald's command, waa ata Honed with hia battery In an exposed |K>altloo In the American tins. Time and again the men at the guns were mowed down, but the survivor* eontln ue<l the light with vigor Molly I’ltchrr had l>een carrying water from a near by spring for the gunner* to Wet the sponges when they swabtied out thr cannon. While returning from one of these excursions to the spring Molly saw her bushand fall. There waa no one to take his place at the gun. With out a momenta hesitation the brave woman set down the water ahe waa carrying, aelxed the rammer ami took her husband's ¡dace The army cheered her wildly as she discharged the cau Ns J4-IS0J. Lost Hair There s as Embryo Mosquitoes. Certain specie« of mosquitoes hiber nate in the adult state, others In the larvae stats and soma In ths egg. Larvae live through a winter in solid ice. _ ___________________ If so then your system is out of balance, and there is a flaw somewhere in your constitution, and a possibility that you are losing health, too. Thefailingoff in weightmaybeslight, but it makes a wonderful change in one's looks and feelings, and unless the building up process is begun in time, vitality and strength are soon gone and health quickly follows. If you are losing weight there is a cause for it. Your blood is deteriorating and becoming too poor to properly nourish the body, and it must be purified and enriched before lost weight is regained It requires something more than an ordinary tonic to build up a feeble constitution, forunless the poisons and germs that are lurking in the blood are destroyed, they will further im poverish the blood and weaken the system, and you continue to lose weight. In S. S. S. will be found purifying and tonic properties combined. It not only builds up weak constitutions, WONDERFUL GAIN IN WEIGHT. but searches out and destroys germs and poisons of every description and Huntavllle, Ala., J*w. 10,ISOS. cleanses the system of all impurities, Some years ago my general health gave way; my nervous system wsa thus laying the foundation for a healthy, steady increase in weight shattered, and I could get nothing te do me any good till I began to use and future good health. 8. 8. 8. I commenced to Improve at Food may be bountiful and the onoe. liy appetite became splendid appetite good, but still the system and from 135 poundo I increased te weakens and we remain poor in flesh 180. I became well again by taking nnless what we eat is properly digested 8. 8. 8. and would take no amount for and turned into rich, pure blood. the good it did me. My health la S. S. S. re-inforces the Stomach and now perfect, and I believe if every, aids the digestion and assimilation of body would take a bottle of 8. 8. 8. food, and there is a rapid up-building occasionally, they would enjoy life of health and strength. S. S. S. acts as I am doing. W. Z,. WINSTON. promptly and beneficially upon the nervous system, strengthens and tones it up and relieves the strain by producing sound, refreshing sleep. You can find no tonic so invigorating as 3. S. S., and being composed . >se<! exclusively c a?d herljs *bi use >s attended with no bad effects. ------------------------------------------ ----- - Old people will Will find that it braces them up, UD. improves imDroves the circulation of the blood, hlnnA and nnA stimulates all the bodily organs, and persons of delicate constitutions can take S. S. S. with safety, as it does not derange the Stomach like the strong mineral remedies, but acts gently and without any shock to the system. Those whose feelings tell them they are not strong or well and who are growing thinner and falling below their usual weight, should take a course of S. S. S. and build up again. S. S. S. is recognized everywhere as the leading blood purifier and the safest and best sll ‘ontes. We cheerfully furnish medical advice, without charge, to all who will write us. mc swlrT spccino COtf ATLJUITA. GA, Southwick Hay Press The Southwick hu the largest capacity, la fastest and eaateat worker of any Hay Pres* made. Send for catalogue. Mailed free. ""OHELL, LEWIS « If »rifluì ,f ** to p'O.Jwc.4 ” Don’t licMltutr to write to Pinkham If thrrr I* anvi"^ islH.ut your cis*»» which you not uiulrratniul. Mu- wlfl tr-at you with kltuliic** and her ml- a Ics- I» frrr. No woman everrv- itrrttr»! writing her and ab. hai u* I|.« m I thousands. Address u L)nn, Maas. Rul.rann Nliivliliw Co. »I Ci t'KIIII* TO iull'i Io,>|k I «Hit Morri non Ät«, Partían J. tlrtgaa, l*ar«ot<8 llaw«aya at|< iwiiat • 9 t h 1 ... a U a . V - ■ J tngltir« M rit« tu in ma* hlnarr tina. MtHàlia ‘ COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PORTLAND,OREGON lOlWCtTD IY rut CiWúrtfcA tIUfi Of fHk IM Y IRIS X® adii lA i ip wit h na unm MIY O NU I Si DAMI StAodarJ A.xJrml. lour year Gann Is (buio. EnglUh and Sdami Ow rest and four ytar Commentai Gun**. Frg ulsr Collcttate Cdurm in Caula, t*f li*h. Gennai Xktxr. History and tosas la. t Inane.* aad Coaunnt*. Ort! Infer Inf. Mn hank a I Eaftnrcrlnf and Electrical EntlMcrint. The athoUdie year, brrin- ning Sept. 7, IMH, end* Jun* le.iKM. Catalogue **nt free on appli cai ion. Addr*»> UNIVERSITY PARK.OREGON. PIMPLES Milk in «be Form of Powder. Milk Is now reduced to a powder by a new Swedish invention. Five quarto of skim mH* yield one pound of pow der. pleaaant dl», barer * gr,ul J,.,“J* and at times * faint», « W1>(lW over m. which m. diet, or .avrei*«. M<1Urd to ,urrZ' Your \rgrt.bin t mupuund h.llhlf£ weak spot, however. * ¡U,iq . ... wm-k* und nutrii iUr> (r„m ’ o|M-rutlon all U1y ir.iubl... ¡¿à appear.»!, and I found iuv*rtf more healthy and well. , J* den-rille th., real, true griitefu| that I. In my heart, and I w»al" 3 • very *i< k and *uff*rlug slater, b,,.« dally with madiclnc* you know Both issar alKMlt, but take l.idlis U. plok huui’fi V'-grtal.ln < oni|K.und and lake uiy word for It. v„u w;u different woman in a »hort Ums* Mns I.Al liA E mmoss . Walkerville n« mention this paper. ••Mr wife ha4 plsplae *»■ bar fart.M Bha ha« t>a*u tAitlQff <^AS< AKKTH an-! iMf Save ell dieappeered I hail )*•* imt** with roBiuim on fur some tone but etier ie* In* the Sr*v ‘ arcarvi I have h*4 •* me*« with ist* *1 meat. We r*nt>oi *r<»* ur lili- ly of i »«caret* ** t ulli W *» i***■ *?0S i.aria**Iowa Ave rhuKtelySn.r* L l OSINGIJ&^I been engendered by the tone-poems of Richard Strauss. He has sought to make music express abstract thoughts and emotions, to reproduce realistic facts, to be philosophical, sensual, hu morous, as demanded by the subject matter. In doing so he has employed not so much melody as harmonic de vices and Instrumental combinations. " I Buffered f..r over five yura.iw ovuriun troulilea, ,’w|* REV. M. A. QUINLAN. CS.C TITHEN writing to ndFertiawm plea«« V▼ Vcartable« ouI lh‘ a duty aud a prlvil*..« u, wril'HIH about it. Wr,u ?<■« — IKMM »ARSXotUrclGHT Queen Alexandra’s Epigram. Teaching • Dog to Read. “It is a pity,” said Queen Alexan The Intelligence of animals seems, dra to the late Bishop of London, one day, “that women are not as devoted to as a rule, to be underrated rather than the birds in the air aa they are to the overrated. A dog breeder described the other day a wonderful collie that biids in their hate.” bad belonged to 81r John Lubbock. "This dog,” be said, “would, when It was hungry, lay at its master's feet a card marked ‘food.’ When It was thirsty it would fetch a card marked ‘drink.’ When It wanted to take a walk It would bring a card marked ‘out.’ Sir John Lubbock trained It to “ My hair came out by the hand do this trick In less than a month. ful, and the gray hairs began to He put the food card over the dog’s creep in. I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor, food and made It bring the card to him and it stopped the hair from com before he would allow It to eat, and In ing out ana restored the color.”— Mrs.M. D.Gray, No. Salem, Mass. the matter of drinking and going out he used a llks method. Ths cards were similar In shape and color; noth ’ a pleasure in ing but the writing on them differed. offering such prepara Since, therefore, the dog distinguished tion Ayer s them by ths writing slone, it may truly be said that ths animal could gives use it read.” If poor druggist cannot aupply you, send u» on* dollar and wa will expre»* you a bottle. Ba *ure and rive the name •t your nsarae« ex pre*» office. Addreae, J. C. A YKR CO., Ixnrell, Maa*. nn operation for Ovaritis telh how she was tured bylvdiip Pinkham’s Vegetable ¿om^ An Indication of a new tendency tn scientific study Is furnished by the plan of the Geographical Society of Baltimore to send to the Bahama Isl ands a ship carrying a staff of fifty persons, who will study the geology, geography, botany, xoology, climatol ogy, physics and medical and hygienic condltiona of those islands. The ship, specially chartered for the purpose, will be fitted aud equipped as the home and laboratory of the party during the entire trip. Mi*s Nellie Curtain, 646 Pearl street, Accounta of early writers show that St. Paul, Minn., head saleswoman in a squlrrela must formerly have been department store writes: amazingly numerous. Golman says “I have charge of a department in a that the gray coat waa a fearful dry goo«Ss store, and after standing scourge to the Colonial farmers and the larger part cl the day, I would go home with a dull ache, generally that Pennsylvania paid £8,000 In boun through my entire body. I used Pe ties for their scalps In 1749 alone. Thia runa and feel so much better that I meant the destruction of 040.000 with walk to and from the store now. I in a comparatively small diatrict. In know Peruna to be the best medicine the early daya of Western settlement on the market for the disera.’s peculiar regular hunts were organized by the to women.”—Miss Nellie Curtain. Nottin g is so weakening to the 1 n- inhabitants, who would range the man system as the constant loss of mu woods In two companies from moruing cus. Catarrhal inflammation of the till night, vying as to which band mucus membrane produces an excessive should bring home the greatest num- formation of mucus. W nether the mu ber of trophies. The quantities thus cus membrane be located in the head killed are almost Incredible now. or pelvic organs, the discharge of mu An African chief’s umbrella la of cus is sure to occur. greater Importance than many people This discharge of mucus constitutes a Imagine, apart from Its enormous size. Its loss in battle more than equals the Sweet Memory. loss of a standard of a European com Kind Iafly—Why, little fellow, how mander. Some of the umbrellas are of prodigious dimensions, being no less did you ever get that black eye? Urchin—Well, ye see, leddy, me than 25 feet in diameter, with ribs 12 feet 6 Inches long. They are made brother went away dis mornin' an* he of lancewood, and the covering la of guv me that to remember him by. gorgeously colored chintz. In varied huw ' v Tifiar sections of crimson, yellow and blue. The opening Is performed by means of We offer One Hundred bollars Reward for aay pulleys and ropes attached to the "run Base of Cattarrb that cau not becured by Hail's ner,” this operation requiring the serv Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY A Co., Prop«., Toledo. O. ices of three or four men. The pole, We the undersigned, have known r. J. Cheney for th'- past 15years, and believe him perfectly or handle, la of birch, and la about 14 honorable in »11 bu>ine*s transacti. nn and fin- or 15 feet high. anciallv able to carry outauy obligations made by their firm. A new method of discovering beds of W ist A Tsvax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, ore hidden underground. In which elec W ilms « K ixnan A M*nvi*, tricity serves for a detective, la said Wholesale Druggists, Toledo. O. Hall'sCatarrh Care is taken Internally.acting to hare met with some success In directly on the blood and muooua surfiersai Wales and in Cornwall. A current of the system. Price 75c per bottle. Sold by all Irugglsts. Teatimoniala free. high potential—30.000 or more volts— ■all's Family Pills are the best Is led to two metal rods set in the ground. From these. Hues of force International School of Music. spread In all directions, and can be de Prof. W. L. Whitney of the Poston tected by means of a telephonic receiv conaetvatory of music is to establish er connected with another pair of schools of opera in Boston, Paris and metal roda, which may be placed In Florence, the headquarters to be in any desired position. When no sounds, the first-named city. or only very faint ones, are beard, that fact Indicates a deflection of the lines Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing of force, and by shifting the place of Syrup the best remedy to use for their children the teething season. the rods the location of the metallic masses which produce the deflection He Knew One. can b« determined. “I have here,” said the industrious book agent, “a volume which is es MIFE SINGS HIS SONGS. pecially helpful to business men. I'm . A feature of the Richard Strauss or certain it would F ns It you if”— “Can you men! on iny businessman chestral concerta In New York is the singing of bls songs by his wife, a re it has benefitted?” oroke in the skep markably pretty and talented woman. tical one in the office chair. “Sure. There’s me, for instance. Few musical compositions have ever excited the discussions which have I get a big commission.”—Kansas City Journal. He Ties Cravats. An enterprising draper in New York employs an assistant who is particular ly expert in arranging cravats in the most fashionable shapes The assis tant attends weddings and helps the bridegroom and beet man to properly adjust their ties for so auspicious an occasion. a ’ Hair Vigor. It to all who such satisfaction. The hair becomes thicker, longer, softer, and more glossy. And you feel so secure in using such an old and reliable prepara tion. Sl.tt a te«l«. Alt Arattlst*. CHICAGO lu. » >5 • 2 smooth piece of ground having round him little piles of sand of different col ors, red. blue, yellow, black, etc. Plac ing a pinch from each pile In hia right band, he will draw on the smooth grouud the figure of a man or woman, the drees all properly colored by the sand trickling through his fingers. It Is done with great rapidity and shows remarkable dexterity. Couldn’t Fool Her. | “My dear Miss Milliuni,” said the impecunious young man, “I love you more than I can find words to tell.” [ “But I presume you could tell me in figures,” rejoined the beactiful heiress in tones that suggested the ice man. As Aesop Mifht Write It Nrw. One day a fox taw a fine ripe plum, but it waa beyond hia reach. So, aa he bad no friend to ahake the tree for him, be turned up hia noee at it and pawed on. “It’s wormy!” he said.—Chicago Tribune. 11,1 OO._ _____ CANDY CATHARTIC -KE THE BATTLE OF MONMOUTH WAN FOUGHT. discouraged them, and Washington realized the advisability of winning a victory over the Brltl*h, which would tend to hearten til* men and ral»e the flagging spirits of the nation. Accord lngly, when the British, under Sir Hen ry Clinton, evacuated Philadelphia, on June 13, and marched toward Bruns wick, N. J., with a view of embark Ing on Raritan river, Washington broke camp at Valley Forge, sent for ward some light troops to haras* the enemy, and then with the main body started in pursuit. At Allentown Clln- tou suddenly turned to the right by a road leading through Freehold to San dy Hook. The evening of June 27 found the mnln body of the British en carnpeil at Monmouth Courthouse, In the town of Freehold, while the Amer lean advance, under Maj. Gen. Lee, was five miles away. Early on the 28th I^e engaged the rear division of the enemy, his orders being to hold It in check until the main body should come up. The Amor leans were successful at first but the charges of the British regular, soon threw them Into confusion ami they began a disorderly retreat In wlihh their commander participated Wash lugton, coming up with the main body of troops, beheld Lee’s flying men The iace of the American comnmnder In chief flushed angrily, ns he spurred hl, hors, through the demoralized troops to Lee’s side. Sternly he re buked the commander, and then, rally. Ing the fugitives, hastened buck bling up the main body. Washington succeeded In placing his troops on an eminence In a favorable position and soon was turning defeat Into victory. The British made an In effectual attempt to turn the Amerl can left wing and then turned their nt tention to the right, where they Wer- also repulsed. All through the day the fight went on. The drill which the ImericM I non again and ngnln. Washington per »onally complimented her and appoint cd F----- ... In the American army. h*r a captain F1s*«*nl. Palatable. r* i«m T»»l* ¿ Soud. Ma»»r Sirka.i Ws«a»a at l.i'.v w a. w ... CUSÍ CONSTIPATION. ... a-.»«« a—•«, «««oMr. i *» h * »«wo«». *•• ’»* * Hare American fiat lor. The American Bailor Is getting to be a very rare bird In those days, saya a writer In Lealle'a Monthly. I'erhap* •t I, not a well known fact, tliougli «»y man familiar wllh ahlpplng mat- tor* know* It. The recruiting officers for the navy have the very greatest difficulty In getting American*, even for our men of war. If we have not sailors trained in the merchant ma rine, where will we get crews In time of war? 1 have been with a crowd of navy men who were on shore leave In »era Cruz, when there were not ten word* sfiokeii In English, Even on the big line* which fly the American flag In the foreign trade, the crews are In reality foreigners, though many of them have taken out first pa pers In order to get liertha In the ||ne. Throwing Away a Fortuno. A poor Austrian official In the civil «ervlc. recently Ixiught two ticket* In the Ilungarlati Philanthropic Ktnte lottery, a little while afterward* hl* fluid* ran very low. and be sent back one of the tickets to the lottery office 11,111 ""heil that the money he hull paid for It might he returned. Thia very ticket won the first prize at the <lr»w- ng, amounting to one hundred mid llfty thousand kronen n auin which would hnve made the official rich be Fond hln utmost drenms If be had not •t the last moment let lila own good fortune slip out of hia hand. Tft Bin M •IU-VAU \< • H ’S™* ro BEAunrv SE® “j* 67Z4/Æ5. roR F MBit5 ; ¡L ■■ W/U A/OT SCMK*, MAÍXS* COLORS /f/S/ST OfJ AW Built by Anirrh !niiN. The twenty seven railway bridges on he ligands (Africa) road are Amer lean. « lazy mnn condescends to *00" '•'"‘'»ver» he's a little too good for the Job. Sold snd susrseleeil »' */* amsioAJi nxn»«**"“-*. h* M fleet < Join m co