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}:" - Ruined By Iron \‘%
iz’ A I SR R s
é. By James ]. Hill Railroad Magnate. é
3“0““00 UR available iron deposits have heen carefully catalogued.
All the fields of national importance have been known for at
§ least twenty years, Within that time their boundaries and
probable capacity have been estimated, and the whole coun
i try has been prospected for this king of minerals. The
most remarkable computation of secientific authority af
firms that existing production cannot be maintained for
.i fifty years, assunming that all the available iron ore known
to us is mined. In fact, the limitation is likely to be less
than that period.
By every possible means we are stimulating consumption, especially by
a tariff that places a bounty on the exhaustion of the home supply of both
coal and fron, thus prohibiting recoursge to outside supplies and compelling
the exhaustion of our own reserve, In the year 1950, as far as our own re
sources are concerned, we shall be approaching an ironless age. For a pop
ulation of 200,000,000 people, our home supply of iron will have retreated al
most to the company of the precious metals,
There is no substitute whose production and preparation for practical use
is not far more expensive, Not merely our manufacturing industries, but our
whole complex industrial life, so intimately bullt upon cheap iron and coal,
feel the strain and must suffer realignment. The peril is not one of remote
geologic time, but of this generation. And where is there a sign of prepara
tion for 1t? Where, amidst our statistical arrays and the flourish of trum
pets with which the rise-of our manufactuhed product is always announced,
do we bear go much as a whisper of care about the needs of the time march
ing ®o swiftly upon us? Instead of apprehension and diligent forethought for
the future, the nation is engaged in policies of detall and opportunism.
If any man thinks this prophecy of danger fantastic, let him glance at
Gireat Britain. That nation was not so extravagant as we, because it did
not compel the instant exhaustion of its resources by a tariff prohibiting such
imports, and because its surplus population could and did scatter over the
globe. But it has concentrated effort upon the secondary form of industry—
manufacturing—at the sacrifice of the primary-—the tillage of the soil. Its
iron supply is now nearly exhausted. It must import muech of the crude ma
terial, or ciose its furnaces and mills. Its coal is being drawn from the
deeper levels. The added cost pinches the market and makes trade smaller
both iu volume and in profits.
The process of constriction has only begun. None are advertising it,
only # few understand it. But already there is the cry of want and suffering
from every street in England. And this is only the peginning of that in
dugtrial readjustment which the unwise application of industry and the de
struction of natural resources must force everywhere,
Financial Suicide
Number Has Grown With Surprising Ra
pidity in Last Two Years.
By the Editor of the Chicago Tribune.
& bpasaadas 3 INCE the panic in Wall street last October twenty-eight sui
::__‘:_:;”““___::i cides have taken place which have been caused directly or
indirectly by it. Even now, six months after that panic,
guicides are recorded, one of the last being Charles Custer,
the New York broker, who, a few days ago, after valnly ‘
striving to retrieve losses amounting to a million and a half |
.. dollars by operations of a purely gambling character; at
m! last gave up the hopeless game and shet himself. |
: Among these men who took their own lHves because gfm
ruinous finance are five prominent brokers, five bank cashiers, and saven
bank presidents, showing that some bankers had imperiled their legitimate ‘
business and the money intrusted to them by others by illegitimate dealings
in stocks or investments in risky projects.
It is a curious feature of this sad record that so many bank officials
should have been urged to death, the victims of their own folly and dishon
esty. But they are not the only ones. The total list of those who have com
mitted suicide since the Ist of January because of husiness misfortunes of
various kinds is sixty-seven, and some of these cases also probably were due
to tge October panic, How many more will appear in the records time will
show.
i The significant feature of it aill is the rapid increase of this class of sui
cides. During the last twenty years the number has been small, but during
the last two years it has grown with surprising rapidity. This may be due
in part possibly to the general increase of suicides all over the coluntiy, for
they are now increasing much faster than homicldes. It may be due in part
also to the increased social strain and competition, and the mania to get
riches measured by millions, for hundreds of thousands are hardly consider
ed as constituting wealth. But in the majority of these cases, and in all the
cases where brokers and bank officials have been concerned, it was the inev
jtable exposure of dishonesty and illegitimate practices which could be con
cealed no longer, and which threatened the penitentiary and public disgrace. |
The o Y
Earliest Known Trousers ?
03 AT B LR TST €V
Ey Prof. Friedrich Delitzsch. *
. HE head of the ancient Babylonian was carefully protected
from the sun by various wrappings; it was sufficient for the
I rest of the body to wear a thin woollen or linen garment
bound at the hips with a girdle or shawl, over which some
eemeeeeee el times another garment was picturesquely draped. In Baby-
I lonia and Assyria also head and foot coveripgs were subject
- to fashion, but the long, close-fitting garment fortunately
L KR __l] ,ever went out of style. rousersthe un-aesthetical invention
of the Medes—are first found on the Parthian stele of about
the first century B. C.,, which was excavated in Assyria.—Harper's Magazine,
FMY i The e T
$ JSensations of Youth T
é s ———_ é
-
By G. Jtanley Hall, of Clark Universi'y. P
sw—u L e 2 &)
smm—m—m———m QUNG people need to tingle with sentiments, and the appe
’ tite for excitement and sensation is at its height in the
i teens. Here is where the principle of vicariousness gives
the teacher one of his chief opportunities and resources.
—l| Excitement the young must have, for feelings are now their
| life. If they cannot find it in the worthy, they are strongly
! predisposed to seek it in the grosser forms of pleasure.
] Hence, every glow of aesthetic appreciation, every thrill
) aroused by heroism, every pulse of religious aspiratien
weakens by just so much the potential en®rgy of passion, because it has
found its kinetic equivalent in a higher form of expression. It is from this
point of view that some of our German co-laborers have even gone so far as
to advocate a carefully selected course of love stories, chosen so as to bring
out the most chivalric side of the tender passion at this age, when it is most
plastic and capable of idealization; while others have advocated theatre
going to selected plays, palpitating with life, action and adventure, that emo
tional tension may be discharged not merely harmlessly, but in an elevatiag
way.—American Magazine.
SCENE AT ANNAPOLIS NAVAL ACADEMY.
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UNITED STATE NAVAL ACADEMY.
A Unique Umbrella. L
Owing to the fact that the handle
rod or stick of the ordinary umbrella
is centrally disposed, a single person
can occupy only one-half of the space
beneath the umbrella, with the re
sult that his outer shoulder is usually
exposed to the drip and rain. To
remedy this defect, two inventors of
Bridgewater, Va., have designesl 2n
umbrella which when raised will have
the handle located to one side of the
centre, leaving the central portion of
the sheltered space unobstructed.
This umbrella when closed has sub
stantially the appearance of the or
dinary article. The umbrella stick
{s provided with the usual runner,
but the stretchers instead of being
connected to the runner as in the or-
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A Unique Umbrella.
dinary umbrella, are attached to a
carrier which is connected to the run
ner by means of a pair of links.
Hence, when the umbrella is closed,
the ribs fold closely against the u{'n
brella handle, but when the umbre”la.
is raised they are tilted with respect
to the handle, #® illustrated in %e
enf;;ax‘i'ng_. Sg;levx‘xti&c gfibrican. f“’,f~/'
Don’t Expect Enough. }
Most people do not expect enough
of themselves. They do not realize
that things they see other people do,
and envy them the power of doing,
they could do themselves if they only
tried. So much of what seems to
‘“‘come natural” to other people is
only the result of long continued ef
fort. We may not be able to do as
well as they have done, but some
measure of success in the same direc
tion is within our power. — Home
Chat,
Sprayer For Hose Nozzles.
A simple attachment for hose noz
zles has recently been invented, which
will permit the operator to comntrol
the form of stream issuing from the
nozzle. Thus the water may be per
mitted to low either in a solid stream
or it may be sprayed to any extent
desired. The device consists of a
pan-shaped blade, which is hinged
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Sprayer For Hose Nozzle.
to the nozzle in such manner that it
may be rocked toward or from the
stream. The blade is formed with a
handle which by means of a leaf
spring bearing on the nozzle is nor
mally pressed upward to keep the
blade or deflector clear of the stream.
When the operator so desires he may
press on the handle, bringing the de
flector into engagement with the
stream, and thereby spraying the
water.—Scientific American.
Not One to Deride.
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Doctor—"“Now let me seen if you can put your tongue out.”
Tough Boy—*“What would I put me tongue out at you fer? You
ain't done nawthin’ to me.”—Brooklyn Life. g 1
Cooking Cattle Whole.
One of the most popular forms of
entertaining guests in the South is to
hold a barbecue, as it is called. The
host generally employs a skilled white
or colored barbecue cook. A trench
is dug in the ground and the bottom
filled in with kindling and hard
wood which will burn to coal. After
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Roasting Carcasses Who!a For Bar
becue,
‘the fire has been made, carcasses of
isheep, fowls, sometimes steers are
fastened above the bed of coals and
Ithus roasted to be cut up and served
on long tables with vegetables and
other viands. One of the features
of the barbecue is the roasting of the
carcasses in the presence of the
guests. This picture shows one of
the roasting trenches with cattle be
ing cooked over the live coals.
Reversible Type Cabinet,
A sectional type cabinet of interest
to printers has been devised and pat
ented by a Wisconsin man. With the
ordinary printers’ type cabinet but
one man can work at the cabinet at
the same time. Three or four com
‘positors may be waiting to use the
}cabinet to get at some of the fortv or
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fifty different cases of type. These
objections are overcome in the im
proved cabinet shown here. Instead
of all the type cases opening on one
side, they are arranged to open on
all four sides of the cabinet.—Wash
ington Star.
Crusade Against Cocaine.
Baltimore, following the lead of
‘New York State, has started a vigor
ous crusade against the cocaine evil,
which is said to be particularly prev
alent among the negroes of that city.
An ordinance prohibiting the easy
sale of the drug and making persons
found with it in their possession sub
jeet to arrest has passed the City
Council and Mayor Mahool has prom
ised to sign it.
l GCHINGS
ORTH,‘
No man ever ate himself to death
on a meal ticket.
The Government has just ordered
750,000 yards of khaki. for soldiers
vniforms.
The first recorded mention of go}d
is in the second chapter of Genesis,
4004 B. C.
A potato that is said to be disease
proof has been introduced in France
from Uruguay. .
The shipping tonnage passing
through the “Soo” Canal so far this
year is 15,000,000.
One of the fastest growing cities in
the world is Kobe, Japan; its popula
tion increased from 190,000 to 360,-
000 in ten years.
Rejected by the British War Office,
an aerial torpedo, the invention of a
Swedish artillery officer, has been
purchased by the German army.
Although but a few miles from the
mouth of the River Thames, noted
for its fogs, the atmosphere of Horne
Bay, England, is rarely obscured.
Two monster whales have just
been killed on the Eden coast of New
South Wales, thereby furnishing a re
minder that the whale fishery was
once looked upon as the staple indus
try of the Australian continent.
The discovery of the Mammoth |
Cave of Kentucky was due to a search '
for saltpeter in 1807. Congra2ss had
forbidden American vessels to sail for |
Europe, and foreign vessels to land
cargoes in this country, and salipeter
was needed for gunpowder.
How the French Farmer Lives
By VANCE THOMPSON.
The French farmer, Pierre, whom
I visited that yvear, raised 2000 meas
ures of wheat; 100 were laid aside
for* seed; 150 went for the family
flour; the remaining 1750 measures
he sold at sixty cents, for $750. His
rye, barley and fodder, after deduct
ing seed and supplies for the cattle, |
brought in $420. He sells every vear
a pair of oxen—the old ones; last }
year he got $l3O. The sale of other |
stock brought him $2lO. Another |
source of income is the poultry vard.
But this and the dairy may be set
aside as equivalent to the many
taxes that weigh upon the peasant-‘
farmer. In round numbers, then,
Pierre’s income in an average year is
SISOO. Over against this he places
his expenses, thus: ;
Two men at*sloo a Yeaß Sy et 200
Ope map. 00 eit TR
One hand . i Rt el
One Jal. Lo, S e e
Onewoman, 0.0 000 Sy e b e,
Avdaivy mand. L ie e gy
Two haymakers at 85 a week.......... 10
Extra hand for harvest and so forth.. 60
8502
Food for seven laborers (Pierre
and wife not included):
INVRR R e e e $92
fßger oL e e R e e
BRehn 1 G s e e
BIREOhBr S mnanta 00 (0 T i Sy
fypocenias. % S e lan eßbl el
Petvoleum for highting.. .. /. . 000 15 ‘
£254 ‘
Bladkemith 0 0
Harhegsmalter. ./ 058 i vl S iicep
Whigslwnight, = - on ede o S
woals abe L Ll ee S e
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Cost of attending fairs, selling cattle
gchdeian ceht s LG sG S ean
SEatrance . S AR RRS Y DR
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And the total is ‘5979. Thus be
tween income and expenses there is
a difference of $521, which is Pierre’s
profit for the year. With this sum
he provides for his family and meets
the needs of life.—From “The French
Peasant in His Fields,” in the Out
ing Magazine.
A Cultivated Memory.
E. C. Laston, who issued a chal
lenge to the world for the memory
championship, although only a young
man of twenty-thtee years, is a verita
ble walking encyclopaedia, for he has
memorized 40,000 dates of the princi
pal events in the world’s history since
the creation. It was quite by accident
that he discovered that he had an
exceptional gift of memory. He was
being trained as an army officer, when
an attack of rheumatic fever dispelled
his hopes in that direction. At that
time he happened to meet the Zancigs
in India, who, noticing what a re
markable memory he had for dates,
advised him to cultivate it. He then
purchased a copy of Haydn's *“Dic
tionary of Dates,” and sought to com
mit to memory the dates of the most
important events in the world’s his
tory by writing fifty to a hundred
dates on a piece of paper, and re
writing them three or four times until
he had fully grasped them, with the
result that he has a repertory of
thousands of dates, and can give the
correct answers without the slightest
hesitation.—London Tit-Bits.
————_——
Cat Not Guilty.
A cat accused of killing a chicken
was found guilty on the grounds of
seli-defense by a jury in a Justice's
court at Marysville, 111., recently,
e—— e —— e ——. ———————
French scientists are studying a
peculiar movement of the sands along
the northern coasts of France, Bel
gium and Holland. A fine sand orig
inating on the coast of Normandy has
been found as far away as Denmark,
Roads and the Farmer, .
Good roads cannot be secured with
out the co-operation of the ramer in
maintaining them after they are once
properly constructed under the super
vision of the County Court. They
need as much attention as the corn or
tobacco crop, and the farmer is per
sonally interested in their mainten
ance after they are once put in proper
condition. It has become a custom
to look upon the road proposition as
a necessary evil, a utility that ao one
has a part in but the County Judge,
the magistrate and the district super
visor or overseer, and that no one has
a voice in the matter of keeping them
up but these officials. The farmers
are interested in the matter of good
roads individually as well as collect
ively, and without their earnest co
operation they need not expect a bet
ter condition than now exists.
An earnest, united effort will soon
bring about a better condition, and
with this condition comes the en
hancement of the value of the farm
and city property. From an eco
nomic standpoint, less wear of horse
flesh and twice the amount hauled at
one load, easy access to market at all
seasons and under all conditions.
Caldwell County has an abundance
of material with which to build good
roads all over the county, and it is
up to the present generation to issue
bonds and do its work. Get good
roads and enjoy them while you live.
If they cannot be paid out during
vour lifetime, you will help your
children and grandchildren to good
highways and better resources to
meetabonded indebtedness.—Prince
ton (Ky.) Leader.
American Roads Bettering.
From the maledictions scattered
broadcast in the mire of roadless
America by despairing bicyclists
fifteen years ago hopes of better
things have taken root. So writes C.
F. Carter in the Technical World
Magazine. No gift of prophecy is
now required to foresee a time when
these hopes will have so far mate
rialized that a team, if it is a good
one, will be able to haul an empty
wagon over the gumbo roads of the
Mississippi Valley in spring, and the
public highways of the South will be
so well buoyed that light draught au
tomobiles may navigate them in
comparative safety.
From every part of the country
comes the same encouraging news.
Sixteen States now have highway
eommissions that are trying in va
rious ways to supply the greatest
need of the nation, which is good
roads. At one extreme is New York,
which, in 1905, voted to expend sso,=
000;900 in building roads. TUnder
the Plan adopted the State will build
and maintain 333 miles connecting
the prinecipal cities, and pay one-half
the cost of 4700 miles of local roads
to be built by the counties. - ‘
At the other extreme is lowa, the
third State in the Union in extent of
road mileage, where the use of the
public highways is so vast that if
teams eneugh could be assembled to
do in one day- all the traveling done
in the State in a year the line would
reach once and a half round the
earth, which doles out an annual ap
propriation of SSOOO to defray the
expense of the State college faculty
while acting in the capacity of highe
way commission.
Rural Mails and Rural Reads.
A notification sent out by the
Postoffice Deparitment should and
doubtlessly will have considerable ef
fect in stimulating the good roads
movement, The notice is in sub
stance that those rural communities
which desire a continuance of their
free delivery of mails must provide
roads practicable in all sorts of
weather and keep them in good con
dition. It will be the policy of the
department to cut off the service over
over roads that may not be traversed
with comparative ease and in safety.
It is not the wish of the depart
ment to deprive any community of
the rural delivery service that shows
appreciation of it, and no route will
be discontinued on account of poor
roads until after a reasonable time
has elapsed following notification of
the necessity for improvements. For
some time the department has been
collecting data with respect to the
condition of roads covered' by rural
free routes, and as far as possible,
communication will be had with the
road overseers or other persons re
sponsible for the condition of the
highways, and efforts will be made to
have the road laws carried out.
The rural free delivery system is
not operated for profit. As a matter
of fact it costs a very great deal more
than it earns. Its deficiency each
vear is one of the heavy items of the
department. But it is of great ben
efit to a large number of people, and
that was the object of its creation.
It is not more than fair that those
who benefit by the service should give
it all of the aid they can, especially
in the way of making the roads safe
and easy.—Savannah News.
ee e i iet e SO
American Cigarettes.
Even the extraordinarily low priced
cigarettes with which American man
ufacturers have flooded India hardly.
hold their own with the native “biri.”
The biri is now made in large quanti
ties at Tirora. The tobacco is brought
from so far afield as Madras and As
sam,
: S ————————————— i
j Methodists at Seattle will build a
large institutional church for the Jap
anese of that city, preferably install
ing as pastor the Rev. 8. Yoshioki,
the preacher at the First Methodist
Church, Renal ;