the sun. (new york, ny) 1916-07-02 [p...

1
OLD MAN GREENLAW OPENS HIS CODRT Xn SpHIp n Dispute Between Blr.ls.lrll niul n Casual Stronger. m'.VOSTA RTER AS GAVEL By DAVID A. CURTIS. "TiiltiRs Is sometimes m'not'nou In rknns.is City," said old mnn Green-- ! one day, "but they nln't never mceiltotilous," lie added on If grateful for even so smnll n mcneure of con- - (Olstlnn. "Mouelit ns well lie one way as t'other." 'aid Jim nintsdcll, rilscon-tfntfdl- "I'm le rtnxvggoncd If I c'n f(t no diff'rence." "That's 'long ' yo' till not boln' MioAled phllosophlc'l," retorted tho old nun with n lofty nlr. "It's like It la In ho kiw. Tli" nln't no dlffrenco In tho quality " murder, f r Instant, hut they'' a hollovn lot, !n the d'greo, If yo' fan" a pond lawyer when yo'ro lining to trlni. "What murder in tho first d gree t'n be made out Justifiable If tho law yer c'n prove what he none railed yo' a tar. or If yo done caught him chentln' nt cyards, or 'moat nnythln' what the Jury r'n be 'njuced to c'reldcr n good 'xcuse. If tho co'ta didn't p'vlde the laws thataway they wouldn't be no safety fo' nobody tiln n weepln Into a 'mergency. Home o' the best citizens In Arkansas City 'd 'a' been strung up long ago. "Now m'not'ny is like murder. It lustltlable up to a certain p'lnt, but ater Hint It's monltonlous an' gits onto to' nerves like. They Is times when If thoy don't Homebody come In nfo' lone Id feel like shuttan up the shebang nn' git to hell outcn hynr 'a quick 's poselble." "Well. I don't mind suyln' what I feels thatawny right now." said Blals-del- i. "I r'n stand m'not'ny 'a well 'a the tieM. but 'pears like m'not'ny Is n riotous whirl o" 'xcltement 'long side o' it hat Arkansas rity 's done been recent. Th' ain't been a stranger In town fo' a month o' Sundays. "I'm p'lmreil to admit." he con- tinued, "whnt m'not'ny sho' Is a heap :.ke murder. Mnkrt me feel like It, ant way, but I'm a H.iyln' what 'taln't never justititible. not to no such 'xtent i tis right now. ir sotnepln nlut did to'able this ycr c'munlty Is llablo fo' to bust up tvllh a loud noise, nn' I'm liable fo' to be tir.ikln' the noise." "Jim's right." said doe Rigsett em- phatically. "1 dono been gltlln' blue molded my own self recent. Somepln' U got to bo did. an' that right speedy." "Mebbo that's light," suld tho old man. "but what?" "I dutino." said Basset! "They notisht le 11 lynchin' Ue If somebody on'y do somepln' Irres'lar: but th' ain't even been it chicken stole fo" a rdlovu while. 'Pears like even the n:rpers is got the dry rot." "Well." said nial.s.lell, us if catching at a sudden suggestion. "I got to r'lievr my ftelln's some way. I reckon 1 so out an' kill one on 'em fo' luck." And without further talk he arose nnd left the saloon. The others looked at him with nomo intcre.- -t as he wont out, but languidly, u if not greatly concerned, and for a moment nothing was said. Then Juke Wlntrrl'jttom observed: "Th.it s the wust o' beln' a artist. Jim sho' is tot the temper'ment. He Jits strung up to a eertnln p'lnt an' tfien he snaps, like n fiddle string." "Can't he'p it. I reckon," said ho "Id man, "but that tliur artistic nt sho' Is liable to make mo' 'rouble fo' a man 'n 'must anythln" '!e. If It hadn't V been fo' havln' It Jim moucht 'a' been a single man 's onx 's he lived, but they 's somepln' bout id tth.it 'pears to 'peal to a artist strong, nn' when It's a wldder th' nm t no lesif-tln- ' of her. Her Iwln' liMr an' redheaded like she sho" is, th" rnnihinatlon was Jiiht nachully loo much." "They don't have to be wldders," HM ,,im Peat sail, gloomily. Ik enoiiKh. even If 't ain't ', it. Hie eye on, jo re married., " riif.-- . iMiiiuway inMuo sue n gu a man ev'iy time. I reckon It's some ie b'lles. If yo' lias 'em It's n heap etter fo' Vtn to show outside 'u 'tis n have rui r'maln Into yo' system ik' Same with rrd. 'Taint 's bad fo th' outside irf her Imld to be tha:- - away s 'tis fo' the inside.' one tenturcd it reply. They know i" tpoke from experience and they respirtcd his drspontlent mood, at least ti the oMent of keeping silence when, 'is sometimes happened, IiIh suffrrlnga "termatchcil hts endurance nnd ho cate volte to liis emotion. Kven tho old man teiilized that nn udolinte cott-"latl- could Ik- - otfered. "ii! ithMe they paused, unable tw thiiiK of anything III for words tintJjr Hie i ,r uinstanccs, there came from 'nn- - little distance up the levee thn ound of n shot, and the old matt said. "I rti :un ,llm Is done come acrost ono "i 'em a'ready." Then i iime seterul more similar re- ports in rapid, 'Irregular succession, "n't .lui li.tsMdt sprang to his feet 'ser't As he left the saloon his face "eined a.) lighted up with pleasurable anttt tput .mi. . 'Io. s nnother one L'nt temnrr'mont." "'mrtni the old man thoughtfully. ll i'ais to g!t mo' 'njoymcnt. outen a fi.ht n he doe.s glttln" drunk ins Uing merely the statement of t Id" well known to all of them, It brnviiker no repy. Penrsnll ttns too "irouuiiiy enKrovK,.,) jn icllcctlon to srciily interfsted In current events "id U'.iiteibottnm seemed contented to '"Hit iv rcpoii which would come ""i on from the scene of the disturb-'K- e liside They smoked right "'"ni: i and the old man I Jltf-i- l out frenh cigar. 'int. cod of this tv.in eaten and tho ntli'r w,., ni,.), hmokeil out liofom ItitlMli'l nni Hnssett returned to tho hI'kiii touethiT. needmii.iiiliil nnivlll- - ln;l bt It lmill wr,() wan unknown to of them and followed by a small U'iwiI (, rltlzens, MUlin of whom thotted in.tlKDiillon, while thn others I" mr i merely curious. . Us ycr tmiti Ih done d'manded a hparm' in co't nfo' beln' took to tho calabirfn.o," Hasett, almost npolo-tftlca'- -t "an1 I fotchetl hltn hyar "rdin' to law, but 'pears llku th' uln't n" ere t K ii.i. Into it, Hlulsdell knows nil in, f,1( !, ,,. .,n jijafj, rct;ly nec'ary " ' un a rope." "MeiiM. ," sit lil tho old man, "an' "Iiik ( ii Is- - did tlritaway satlsfnc-f'- f c ich nfo' the e'muiilty gits clvl- i.fcn , n . lot' wotilfln't be nn use d ilrabls. Th' objec' o' brlmring a man to trial ! f0 t0 give him a chanat fo' to git off If he's got money enough fo to pay the costs o' co't. "Yo1 oil 'done right to fetch him ofo' me," he went on. "O co'ac yo mought a' hung him yo own self, beln' Bherlff, an" they wouldn't 'a' been nothln' aald, but when they la a Justice o' tho peace handy It'a a heap better fo' to p'eced accordln' to law, Olvea me a chanst fo' to git some profit outen It. "la yo' all p'pared fo to stand th 'xpenae of a trial?'' he demanded of the atranger sternly. "I reckon that II d'pend on how much 'tla," said the stranger sullenly. "If It's reasonable I kin. but If the eharea u too heavy I reckon 'taln't wuth It.' "About what 'd yo' all c'nslder reos'-nalilo- Inquired the old man. "Beln'a this 'pears to be yo' first offence, the co't 'II be merciful, an' charge to the size o' yo' wad." "Well, If 'taln't mo'n $100, I reckon I'd ruthcr put up that much 'n to bo hung thouten a trial," said the atranger. "That'll be enough to start the p'cecdln'a," aald the old man, reach- ing out for the money, "but o' co'se If yo' all d'manda a Jury It 'II be mo' xpenalve. That'a up to yo' nil fo' to d'clde, but the co't don't recommend It. Mebbe It 'd be better fo to hang onto the r'malnder o" yo' wad, case o' tho fine beln's 'a heavy 'a It's liable to be 'cordln' to th' evidence." "Under them elrcumstants," said the atranger, "I reckon I can't .affo'd no Jury." ' "Then th" ain't no 'caslon fo' no d'lay," replied the old man briskly. "Sheriff, whot'a thla ycr man did?" "I reckon Blalsdcll c'n tell mo' Txut It 'n I kin." aald Hossett. "Him an' the stranger waa flrln' at one another when I come up, but I dunno how It begin. How waa It, Jim?'' "I was lookln' fo' a nigger," said Illalsdell, "an not Interferln' with no- body. They waa three or fo' on 'cm down by the round house, an' I done knocked one on 'em down, but the others done got away. 1 was klckln' of him peacable an' quiet like when this yer yap butted In. Tears he hud some 'bjectlons. I reckon he must bo one o' them Abolitionists.' At the sound of thin word there wns an outhurst of Indignation from the audience, but the old man rapped hard on the bar with his hungstarter "Order in the co't!" he shouted. "If he's a Abolitionist, hell be dealt with accordln', but 'taln't been proved, not yet. He's 'ntltled to the benefit of a doubt, tempornncously, anyway. Prls-onc- r, yo' all Is done heer'd the charge. What Is yo" got to say to It?" "I c'n lick any man what aays I'm a abolitionist," said the stranger with much vehemence. "I fit Into the wah, my own self an' I done had fo' bun dred niggers o' my own, ufo' they was set free. "Just nachully I knows the value of 'em. nn' when I seen this man man- - handlin' a likely one I says to him what th' nln't no sense In dVtroyln' prop'ty like lie was doln'. Wn done hail some words nn' he drawed. O' co'se they wa'n't nothing' to be did a'ter that on'y fo' me to draw my own K-l- "I.lkely they'd 'a' been mo' damage did If the nigger hadn't V got up an' run betttlxt us. I reckon he must 'a' got two or three o" the first shots was tired, an a'ter that they waa mo' 'r lesa c'nfusion. I don't rlfihtly know how 'twas they wa'n't neither one on us killed nfo' this yer big mini yo' calls the Sheriff done come up. but a'ter that they wa'n't nolsjdy but him had no chanst. He sho' Is one tlghtln' man." The enrnest, straightforward way In which this statement was mnde com- mended the speaker to his hearers ns one devoid of guile, nnd Hassett wus specially moved to favorable considera- tion by the unaffected admiration with which the prisoner referred to him. Even Halsdell seemed little Inclined to press any complaint, though he showed some resentment at having been Inter- fered with while he waa nmuslng him- self. "I reckon I must 'a' been mlstooken, Judge." he said, "when I done called him r abolitionist, an' beln' 's they ain't nn charge ag'ln him I reckon me on' him c'n settle this ycr quar'l our own selfs. We c'n go out on the leveo nn' have It out, man to man, 'thouten no trouble to nobody." "That'll suit me," said the stranger promptly, but old man Greenlaw dis- - KAnfert stronult. ... . . I .1 an lie sain. ro(nil . drlnKS f(y c'ntempt o' co't fo' Interferln' with the nVertlin's. The co't '11 take n recess fo u few minutes fo' the puppose o' c'lect-i- n the flue an' c'nslder the case a'ter- - WJThM wns done, and while the drinks v.in ennsumed there was a full "J.,;"' hi. m of the clrcum- - " ..e which the stances. In tne course tu ..".. ... , rv irrpnrit' SireilKllieiit-- ine favorable Impression ne nnu nu made. . .... ,t Then he clinched tne maner for nnother round even before the ... -. ii Mulshed, and the discus sion continued till the old mnn grabhed his bung starter again ann rappeu nn order, , ... ,, "These yer festivities is an ngiu. Fiild, "but the case In co't" 'd ought fo' to l settled first off. Heln's th nln t no charge agin this man o' be n ntiolltlonlKt. the co't 'II acquit him that, but this yer quar'l b'twixt nials-de- ll an' him is dono been fetched Into co't n n' 1 got to be settled." "Th' nln't no quar'l no mo, an l.'sldes thut we una la gwtno to meet up outside fo' to settle It our own bt'lfs," said Hlalsdell earnestly. . "Tli' co't 'II fine yo' all some mo drinks if yo' keep on Interrupt 'n'." said the old man severely, "an' mo n thut theys done been gun piny enough n'ready. They is other ways o' settlln a dlflleultv what's a heap sight mo satlsfacfry,- - on' this yer caso c'n be compermlzeil to mo' 'dvnntage If him an' yo' Ml tuke a llttlo friendly 'dvlce. Heln's the costs o' co't Is done been imld. I won't make no chnrgc fo' It If it's tooken. hut If 'toln't the Inw 11 have to he cytiriied out to the bitter en"i'm wlllin' to hear what 'tis," 'hl the stronger earnestly. "I don't want no mo' to do with tho law. I'd a heap .Iruther blow my wad Into a poker game 'n to iay no mo' costs o' co t. "Now yo'ra tulkln'," said the old mnn. "That's Just what I was gwlne to Bay. Th' uln't nothln' llko draw poker fo" to even up matters when, they's bad blood 'xlstlsV. Yo' h11 c'n play a freeze. out with Jim fo' the reBt o' yo wad. or they c'n be n live handed settln' ar- ranged If that's mo' prefnble." wa handed Is mo' sociable like, suggested the stranger, nnd at no in wns offered hy nny one. a gome won soon eitarted In the hack room of tne llttlo suioon. "Old man (Sreenlaw ho" la a wonder," snld one nf tho cltlgeivs as the i little crowd of spectators meucu away ii iVih if Juatlcu wus all 't was "Ho glla 'em comln , on , goUi POEMS WORTH KEASnro. Men. I aee them In a vision, They are masters of death. I aee them Laying mines To annihilate thousands; Sighting lnlrenchmente To guide their gun plar: Unleashing deadly gate Wind driven, tonard the enemy. 1 aee them in a vision, Theae maetera of death; Not beasts enortlng hell Are Are they; Just men Strong men, brava men, (lood men, wit men, All bent on achltrlng death. 1 aee them before me. They arc muliri of lite. 1 ate them I Digging tunnel For th transit of thouaandi; Hearing wonder atructurea of steel To ahelter their own kind; In their laboratories Enslaving air, water, earth and Are For the eervlra of millions. I see them before me, Thtea masters nt life; N'ot nnget shining In celeill.il glory Ar they; Just men Strong men, brav men, flood men. wise men. All bent on promoting lite. Men Just men. Cuts I.iter.uMtx. J tin Account nf the tt'jr. John tlronn cannot pay me the money h ow"- - .. i "On account of the war. i Th. cook want. tn dolt.r. we.k. or ah. goes, I "On account of the war." I ?n:buhe7rn?,re.;.lrh.,o;:l::dbru': ter as lead, Th tailor's wool suits are of shoddy In- -' ta- - nn iMAtint nt (ha war" ! The tinner can't patch up my root whrr It leaks, "On account of the iar." in car inai i oougni noi come lor j six neeks, j "On account of the nar" Th cost of my shoes mounts each time tlmt I inn. The prloea on drugs are prodlgloualy high. nut when t demur I receive the reply. "On nciount of the sr." And fthat can I do when they nlrtly say ' "iiu .iccount of the war"" What ele can I do but oMlKlncly pay. On account of the war " Tet often 1 under what tome folk xltjlof do When all of the world with Its arfare l through. And they can no longer paaa by In review "On account of tiie war!" c n. i:. It hat Is Christian; ! What Is a Ohrlntlan? He who tinea hl bct To make this warring ttorld loe's dwell- - Ing place, I Who rentla the tells of greed and eeir- - unreat Which hide hl brothers from their Father's face; Who, ftuinbllng oft. yet up th trep tloth ptud And hf!p tafHrera tottard Christ's shtnlng goal Hy service to hi fellow men tl,l Ood Make lilt abt.de within rtruaitltng soul. Who bears uluft hla torch, though for and fears Ot.soure It oft and dim with doubt's itUsent; t'nwarped by woe, though battle sctrred b) yesra Of toll for prace and human betterment. The Christian greets life's nnitt undla- - mayett And, dlng, meets life's Master unafraid In the Held Hospital. From Xtrf Rattan Trattncrin1 some laughed, s.nno groaned atva the Ir Through all hla agonv no murmur made: Till as he passed Into the myaier) Under Ills nreatn he prae,i: "TtSf rtheouian''o "n'l ''"Vra nMmshre" Are tirlgluitt'ult0thenpa'niwH""ol,'tl"-r(l,.Mi- ,a ll ane uecst'oeu witn it snine non said Oh welcome ho.ne' I .latened for your Hhe plitnted them while 1 was gone, one lay. Ood who made life so sweet. Let net thU life of mine be thrown sway ' Amkiii .Io.ki iiim: Hi nn Ileht. Vn.ii f,e St. .i.wla 'oaf tikmtrt. Dent batks beneath the hubbies In cham- pagne Debt's hid behind a boat of milling faces-- - At nlKlit it wakes Hie sln.pcr from hla dre.t ma And puts hla guilty coma-trin- through Its paces. In whirl of tango on the lisltroom II. mr ntit'a mirrored In lovclv eyes And haunts ou through each enrtleaa day VX'TJal ,oua;e"r.i'V..ur - ,cif To be your comrade on jour way through life Debt Is the price of what ou spend For things of which you neter tell your wife. rnrgrlfiilness, tram tlit M .utitn I'ntt hftatrl What ciin hold the present, past or future To present my spirit, nriuging mv neart, Asuiul torn i.y iiouiit, errsui imiii HenillnB my wild being all apart? The present la n mimic- - spul, unsettled, tvnere ine ounu grepo in tne oiirKiiess for light And 1, nmong the derelicts of thought Am tiimlillng, lo- -t foreter from friend's sight The past, a llttlo. blue eyed nial.b-- U tin. ra ureiinis, una tiose.i inr H7.urs And I Ik l t has sunk In darkness, terrible Ami stars ni.ie in tut; niackiicss m inn skies. The future what a t piled hiippyliind Upon the edge nf pilldllg hearts unseen, Holds shrouded linngis In make liellete And terror stricken creatures- inignt hate been; Heart 1. 1.1 ti if, wake, to find a friend is one. And naked self out of the tnrnt Is hurled To ine not sun, an lucrum itno for- lorn ! AlSN llKHIUIIT. . (erianles, rVofl t.e llimtan Trantcriit Not only ICngland's Ariel sprite Is ours, Hut all that fulls iiiiren.ann'a arid relrn fly pricking windbags, digging deep to drain AU ,,u ,.P u,Ot ...nr.. ...at... All that uiupura the strutting knight of Demanding of true chivalry a brain With common een-- a. So, turn awhile to Spain) (Jive Stratford time to smile nt all .our dowers! Close on the day whine theft asaureil the world Of one so deathless few could grasp It then, The banner of as Hue a soul it as furled On courage mulching Hi.lt "f Nelson a ftjlutonoerVanlis, warrlor-t- t It ! He hurled Hpears whose least splinter nllm our sharpest pen I .ItlCIISIIO TllUKU Oi.Agvii.a. The V Islam. When the Joyous sea the Joy Shining bright the wholo world o'er, There Is never ono more amlle, There la never one song moie, When the grieving see Hie grief That upon the world nltisl pro, Thero Is never ono less pain, There la nover one tear less, Hut Hi" world Is puhr, I iilons And la helprd beyond I. filer When the grieving see the Joy And Hit Jojnus ars the gilcf, Mcl JMun "'ill Wil.auu, THE SUN,' SUNDAY, JULY 2, 1916. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS. Can some render tell me the author of the following lines? , There Is no lr, but change; no death but el n ; No parting, but Hie .lull corroding pain Of murdered faith, that never Uvea nxaln. .1. C. TMrase publish tho following poem and glto the name of tho author: When Freedom from her mountain height Unfurled her standird to .the air, Hhe tore the axuro robe of night. And set the atara of glory there. Mrs. C. A. J. Theae are the opening tines of Joseph Hodman Drake's extremely well known poem "The American King," which may )be found In "The Home Hook of Verse" (Henry Holt A Co.) nt page 2125, and In many other collections of poetry. Pleaae give the dnte of Judge Alton n. Parker's resignation from the Court of Appeals and state whether it was prior to hts nomination for 1'rcaldent. A. M. Judge Parker was nominated on July 9. lfni, but did not resign the Chief Justlcesblp of the Court of Appeals un til August !i. I nm curious to know the derivation of cascade, Ionokauus. It Is derived from the Krench word cascade, which has parallels In the Span- - Mi word oascaila and the Portuguese casonta : all these are dcrlted from tho Italian cairnta, a waterfall, from the verh to fall. This verb Is np- - parently associated In thought with the Latin radere, past participle rusus, to ,ml u " pro,,al,,y (1,kp t,,e vm- - I"1' cascar, to Preak In pieces, beat. atrlke, and the Portuguese oawcar. to strike) nn extension of the l.atln verb casare, cassare. .miw I'usnre iir vass;uc Is a variant of qu.issarc, to shake, shat- ter, shiver, and frequently of quatere, iwat participle quansum, meaning to shake. Thus the word cascade has a dlstnnt relationship to such words as quash nnd llcuss. The rnot Idea was appareutlj not so much that .of a fall of water as of water shattered mettllv Ion the roiks below. I .1 ti .'II.V .It... full (i... mi tlil.it. f.liMMt (leorge Harvey, an I'hiitllnhman who was an associate of the National Academy Deslun In New York from S" to l!.1l and a frequent rxhlliltm" lie published (Ixindon IM:') .1 book tailed 'Weties of the Prlliletal I'ttrests in North America." Hut none of the dozen books on art and p.ilntt rs that I lute consulted at the New Yotk Public t.l hr.iry Kiwx any Infoi m.mon atmul him. J nor does the tllrlltmarv of National Hlographv t London) lie was no: ,tr tleorge Hnrtey the Scottish artl't V. Ami.tTT. with regard to H. '.. II. s Inquiiy In 'question nnd Answers of M.i 2S roiicernlng the oricln of tirkum ftrities, our attention Is railed to .in article b ilaik Ma run In tin Philadelphia S'iiii-iln- ti 7'nmsi' (;f nf June II. Mr. Mason gives eett-r.i- l P.'tiliciil references that may Indicate n dKiiiictit e prison at- tire, bediming with Uenesls ll 14, which runs. "Then Pharaoh sent and tailed Jo- - soph, and tin brought him hastily out nf the dungeon nnd he shaved himself, nnd changed h!" raiment, and came in unto Pharaoh." In Jeremiah Id, .12, incur the words 'prison garments.' M Mason adds' specltlc leference to btlipes first itppears In the old (latlit tale of tha 'Curio, whith was published In the four ' cfiiturt. There the woitl itctn ally used was "hre.n an." which Is the tiaellc wonl meaning "trlttes as the word stripes now mot commonlv ut'tl. In the translation of that period the word w as wp,.cd "sttaip" or "rtteip.' In Hie older language the wm.l stripe meant. In Its eonimonest use, what the words l.inl, 111.1 a.tfi,- - t,i tll.t (,l.l,1Mtl imlnd. "Somewhere bit ween the petiod "',lcn Joseph changed his ptisoii ral- - ment to appear before Pluiaoh and Hie nine n.-- o.itm- - iiim-.- t nnc ..ipimi- - culshed by tlit Ir breac.in (stripes) prl- - loners In Jail were br.iuib- i'iit. con- - , vlct g.ub. Including slnpes. umloubtetlly followed." Stripes as ,t mo-- e .humane mode of branding thn prisoner sounds ' . . (l in,,l 1,1.-- , You were not quite correct in ouri answer to r". tt . .tl. in liucstions ami Answers of June Iv The rails of 'street car line aie lis .1 letuin circuit. The high itust.ince of the rail Joints nukes "bonding" nece.ir, that Is, n copper wire is perinaneiitl) con- nected from tail to rail. In i.is-- of' 'broken or poor bonds the curieiit goes ,tliiough thu t.tith and follows gas or water Pities that parallel Hie line. In 'many Instances partlcularls when trcets ale being lepallt-d- , the tiaiks !re earth, nnd If a itorse should put Ills - from fct t on the ra.ls ' with his hind feet on wet ground Just ahead of or behind a moving car tu a pootly bonded zone Mr lloise would take the count. I hate seen hoiees jtliop ill such case" nnd know of one where the horse was killtd. . C. Was the re a light opera called The llct'fcnteis' ".' I ! We think not ; but we recall that Will-i- n til Sch wen. I. 1 Illicit wanted to call one of ills librettos by that title. Sir Ai tliur Sullivan, the t on poe r tefused Io agree i to so "ugly" a name, ami we Know the ittork, consetUeiitly, lis "The Yeomen of tilt tlunitl." When did Hughes make Ids spteili the fallacy of 111 an's doctrines in the Hrynn-Ta- fi campaign'.' (1. You probably hate in lit nil the spt'Ltii delivered by !ov. Hughes nt Youngs-tow- Ohio, on September 5, 1!HIS. What Is the derivation of tint word mosaic when used to denote a foim of t riaiiicnliitliitr.' I!. V. It comes from the Italian mos.tlco, phi! that Is supposed to be derived from tho flteek mousfloH, "belonging Io thu i Muses," I Is Hie name u f Coos pi onouru'i'il In j cue s) liable A. '!'. I'. Ill the case of lite Oregon town, yes; tlte New Humpslilie pronunciation Is Co-o- s. Whnt is the origin nisi ineaulug of the wold "Auxins" which Is so frequently applied to Hie Aiisti .iliau nnd New Zea- land troops now- - moving on I lie Hiitlsh f milt in the West'.' William C. Ii.vtis. Tlicho men, or many of them, served Hist at (ialllpoli, where tho name Anzac Cove was given to a Hiitlsh point of nltack. Ansae Is derived from the Ini- tial letters of "Australia (and) New Zealand Army Corp.'," My motlier-lii-l.t- was in cousin, for we were the children of liiothers, Was not my wife my second c nisln',' A. J. S. Yes. What Is tile oiigln of the lei in "liv- ing the life of Itlley"? J. T. K. He) nnd noting Its meaning In be "a life nf ease," wu tu c unable tu account for It. SCHOOL FOR .CARD FLAYERS. Auction llrldge. C, It. M, sayst We want to know the correct method for playing two foams nt duplicate. At the 'le eland Whist Club tliey play the .V nnd H hands only, nnd the same players TTever play the K and W hands. The cemparlsoti Is with other tennis that tdajed the ?C Hnd H hands. W play the N nnd H hands, and after some time has elapsed the K nnd W hands, so that each team plays all the N ami S at one sitting and nil the K nmt W at another, a stiltuble tlmo having elapsed. Kxperlence has shown that the longer the tttne nllowcd to elapse between the original play and the overplay of the same hands, tho better class of players that are fit to go on n team will remember the raids. This Is called "memory" duplicate and Is not allowud under league rules, There are a great I minis' ways for teams to play so that one pair on the team get the X and H end of tho hands, while the B and W pair pair play thn same hand against the X nnd ,H pair on the opposing team, Theae are given In any good Iloyle. C. P, It. says: Third band holdtnt seven clubs to the king iUCeu ten, and not a trick outside, bids two clubs over his pattner's original no trump, is thli conventionally correct? Ily many It Is considered safer to bid tho minor suit, ns there Is nothing In the . hand unless the dealer has enough clubs to clear the suit and then put dummy In. t'nlesa the denier hns the nco of clubs and one or two small ones, such n hand might never take a trick. If the dealer ran make three odd without the clubs, It It a game hnnd nt clubs. O. T s.ijs: We should like nn opinion on this bidding; ' deal' nnd says no trumps, A two spades, y three diamonds and It three spades. Dealer three no trumps, A four spades. Y passes, does II. niul dealor says four no trumps, which A pase, Y now bids Iltv dia- monds. Y's first denial of any ability to stop the spades, ami his showing a diamond nit strong ennimh to bid on, was enough. After that thi dealer should hate been let nlotie. The the diamond bid Is In direct contindlctlnn of the partner's wish to pliy the hand nt no trump and to li.'tve the lead come up to him V .M M. says: In a no trumper, c.ubs being ltd a third time, dummy and U both discard hearts, covering up the c.ird letl ly tlir. wli.r. tlirlr cuds on the flub The dei later ft Idently thought th" heart .was l and look the trick with the .ice of hearts, turning It down, anil at mice led tile club queen. A cn attention to the revoke, which Is ndmittetl. but A nUo wants to take j Inck the tlub trie'.. The declarer de nies tlifi- - rlitlit lo the trkl; that Is turned down, which would hate set the contract, and will concede only the 100 for Him retoke. It s only when a pkitrr wins Hie trick In which he has' revoked. it by trump- ing, that he Is entitled to keep tt after It Is tutiicd and iUitteil The declarer did not win tills flck and mii't glte It UP. so tli.it lie It for one trick on his contract ami loes the 10U besides. M S. ' asks how much A should be paid nt the end nf a three hand game In nhieh tie Mnul store was A, L',500 plus; It, l.rtoii. and C, SOO. These score lie.tia all plus A wins 900 from It and I..100 from C As It wins, tne uinerence. .on, from I , lie pajs only of A s wiimiiK", ,t!ii!e C pays 1. 100 f tl as A bltl Is made out of tip li The de tier a t.t Ins jinrtm-r- . ''Shall tte liate ,t new deal"" Is there liny penalty for llil iiuestion? l.an '.li ic) ! supplied to enter all matters of consultation or lemaiks 1'""'""" "n" ''ve' i partners to ask which unnll enforce u penalty, that they are certainly harrfd fioin nllli t.tch other w hat penalty 1'iey shall uleet. If any. Poker J C. S says: We have a b- -t ns to the cntnp.ii.it I ve probabilltv of a p.ior ill a set en hand game hating Ja Ks or 4oticr to nm n. and of his having a four card straight or lluh. I there any way of settling tills" According K the latent woik on the gntno, "Poker. Its l.ttta and 1" inclples," published by Wycll .t Co, tliere are r !!..", t". I hands which show Jacks or bet- - '"tual then s.is: call" and I" It must show all the cauls up, it not enniiKli a will hand II. sa.ts; hot ten chips n bet There two more raises, cannot borrow an.t more, ho call" for I sight. Must tills be con- ceded? illd-no- t Imped tli.it was the ,,f It Ih onlv wb... nl.ce,. i raise iiui"t afterward call. W s.tvs: Hlght playing, dealing for tiie di.nt there arc two ranis left when for two The denier gives the card nnd eaitl ileatlwood before giving n'Ci.ml is entitled last It Is laws of the gnnie to deal out lust fan I puck, dealer is light provide against the poslh! Its having been seen di.uvl . In Hie oltl days tho bottom card was "burnt" hy being turned T. S. says: A oMner must show his entire hand there are nny or not If asked to do so. is only when no nie ilrnttii that the opener must show nil lite cards face up. If not called after Hie thaw all he need Is openers lit cauls fuce down. Ciibli.ige. (I, kiss H the laid out it caul too which not until he tins letl, lines iliavv a crib t.ue down, or must he his and play as if lie had in hand'.' It Is loo late mistake, nb'l thn non-deal- miint play the short hand When llu slinwn dealer pol obliged to leturn stlpir-tliio- cud, iii.tt count the six card nib lor all tie l III HOVEL POINTS OF THE LAW. A sermon on the subject of marriage end divorce has been delivered In the re- port of a Pennsylvania referee in recom- mending n decree for n wife on the ground of her husband's, misconduct. The refetee, H. V, Clark of Kreeport, heard the rase of Dinger vs. Dinger, ami his vlnws, ns reported In Mlinpson's Hatly l.rmler of Klltannlng, are In pnrt ns follows: "Prom the plaza door of many new American home y the word appeam on the hurlxon of Its future, plainer than the Hoc Hlgtin Vlncea of Constantino In the eentful flays of the nld Itoman Kmplre, Relig- ionist and ecclesiastics are from their point of xlew erUtiii out against The State Is beglnrlng to feel the milter of (lie onc(iiiil::g unake. What Ood Is alleged to have Joined together Is often sawn asunder by the nimble- - liens of u professional tien. The long revered mid worshipful matrimonial knot is In too many dally Ing to have been tied with a lustful of sand. However aolemn and awe Inspiring the ceremony performed nt thn nuptials thu knot la no tighter tied than the will, purpose and love of the have ptedetermlued It shall lie. The mind Is tho seat of ronjiual fellcltv, the sanctuary where the divine union of foul Is consummated, Ceremony ap- peals to fenso and mav serve recollec tion, but Hod alone can liquefy spirit and jinur two instinct personalities Into a slfglfi mould, theieby joining together whnt no man not even a Master In in. ...... ... . . . ... i.'ii,ii-- . oy ins tucnemic process oi legal sepniatlon. can nut asunder. ".ttinils so run together cannot turn Human language lias denonil nated home Into a bedlam of Infelicity, nor go staggering and down the highway of life seeking to indulge inise concepts in unsatisfying non spiritual practices. The pendulum of life swings out from the centre Its circumference, controlled by law of gravity and by a law of Its regres- sion, swings back perpendicular to its base, where It waits on reaction and tne law or retribution, tolling out the sejiteme Separation, Separation nnd ueatn. "I nuirojch the marriage relation- al. IP of K. T Dinger and his wife, niKr uinger. more than a sens io jieriorm a professional or perfune tory ottlelal duty They are In the eye of the law mote tluii discordant Indltldiiallllis. The) are by law, lius- - t'.tiMi tvne une. in mis report I am not trving to throw a halo of sanctity aininiil nnd Alice as man and wife, nor octroi incirs a ease ror ypvcl.il con- dolence nnd tear dropping, hrard and rend the testimony in this ease and Imi. had opportunity to obserte Ixith parties mis sun nnd am satisfied that the ugerous manifestations of temperament lire surrielentlt liichm to mn ilun they hate neter Jointly euteteil the melt- ing put of self. sact itlce, in the lalsiratoiy of sltlKli-lies- of purK)e with a desire to work for their common irood Tha enni. Ing or refusing to reeonimend the raer "f th" petitioner In tl.vorce may seem to worn a nnriisnip and eten collaterally do an Injustice to some Innocent person nt time, as in the of the little children of thee patents. To orphatiatv a chllil, even by legal process, N an act serious and far reaching than to bombard a cathedral." In a ditoico rase, the children of the parties arc waids of the tourt, which Is (oncerned with their welfare ami not with the wishes of either of the parents, nnd which has the power and the duty to see to their welfare when the matter Is properly brought to its attention. Houghton VI. Houghton, S. D It.T N. W. 3K. "In the present lase tha widow Is ear of nge. on both sides a nbll ttiA tlil ...... 1.. .I...... ,,,,. t.oetermine th. probable duration or Per widowhood, and there fore the present table of homestead estate could not U' ,it.ei t, lined and awarded io in gross fo us also widowhood l an uncharted sea whose shores the future veils from sight. How liefoie her bark reach a huten we cannot guess, though we are informed by the Insurance Department that In I Europe there are tallies determining the expectant'' of tvltlow hood nt different ngc, tint that such tables are nut in use ill the I'mted State" " Per Vluje, .1, In In re S.tdow, liil Wis. 15 1 V. 371. itet.'islim a Judgment for 110.000 ob- tained b a who sued ituotlier woman for alien. iting Hie affections of lier husband. Chief Justice l'eemer of Iowa in vs. neisnmaii saiu : "ine i case differs sotnowh.it from one where u man awu the affections of a wife. In such affair the Is gen-eial- the aggressor. Hy nature It Is the male of the species, ami not the female, who makes such ndvumes. is not true In such matter that the female 1" more deadly than tho male. Of comse, a In the c.ttegort of cats, monkeys, par. lots, singing birds and similar animal" kept for pleasure, curiosity or caprice" Hrown, In Sentell ts, New Orleans, &c, It. Co. A f. T01 The hnhils'of the mule ale discussed 111 the derision of Justice of Ken-tuck- y lu Consolidated Coal Comp.ui ts Pratt. In which the said The kicking piopenslty of tne mule it mailer of common knowledge and has the subject of. comment from the earliest time, it Is almost universally recognl.i'd ns the f.ut that a duck will stvlm or a cat will scratch However, a duck cannot Indulge bis propensit with- out water and ordinarily a cat will not scratch unless Irritated or attacked. Hut the mule requires no particular setting for the exercise of Ids high prerogative. He Is liable to nt any ami no one can plead Ignorance of this " The question of whether menial resulting from delay lu the ilellv-ti- y of it casket and grave g.ivu the shipper a cause of action for damages against an company was before the Hulled Slates Supreme Court in Southern Kxpiess Co vs Hyers, 240 C S. fill'. Holding that no cause of action resulted, Justice .Mcltcyholds for tliu court m.i Itl "Having been requested In apt time, the li) court refuses lo the Jury as follows 'As the shipment Is allegtsl to have been delayed was a shipment lu Interstate rnminercn nnd as Hie damage claimed by the plain- tiff Is damage for mental suffering only on nccount of the delay of tho delivery of said shipment, the court Instructs the Jury that limit r Hie evidence In this caae the plaintiff Is not entitled to recover any such damage: the Jury is therefore to render a verdict for the de- fendant ' Thh Instruction should have been given. The action Is based upon it claim mental suffering only nothing else wan set up the proof discloses no other Injury which compensation had lint heeu made, In such cliciim-stance- s as those presented heie the long recognized common law rule permitted thn dcclsiomi to thin effect tqion the elementary principle mere mental pain and atixlet are too vague for legal redress wlieie no Injury Is done to pei'bun, property, health or reputation.' " in fine the draw, anil JTJ.nK, that are woman may become so deputed, In matters, as to be caul straights tu Hushes, tt Ithout .i worse than the man. but even the ,t tlflli that I" good enough to make. lnl,e Mlay make,, the Hrst advances- .- a pair of Ji ks or belter. This would Indicate that it ST o lis against Jacks "The ver.t fact that thet idogs) or better, and onlv nr. to In ngalnt the wltliout the protection of the criminal ll.iws shows that propert In tlogs is of The number of players in the j !(M Imllrf,.cl r ..alllle.l nature nnd that game has nothing to do with It. he stand, as ll were, between anl- - ' ii'.iist fene natur.e, In which, until killed M T, A bets tho limit and r subdued, there Is no property, and A s'liows a pair of kings. II domestic animals. In which the right of hows a pair oi ace" tlirte cards properly is ptrfect and complete They face down, saying thai enough to are not considered as being Uhhi the beat A Another pla.ver, not in the same plane with horses, cattle, sheep and cull, demand" to see It's whole hand. ! other domesticated itiiimal", but rather face is to show pair th:t beat the other C I. , rows Io see are and A so Yt s. because A hummed to call, but iitlse, lie end It o " to lli.it lie borrow to W A asks in top proceeds to shuttlii the last with the A t lie. card A bets lie I" the caul. ugalnst the the of the and thn in the Tills Is to of anil the d.ier's being icgiilaled accordiiigl upside down. tl. bits the whether sln.vers It eaids lie Is show and I co T. .l. mistake inanv, lie daes notice he card frnni the name caul It his lo correct tho with crib Is the Is the but Hi 11. a it. cases prov- rope connubial parties t... wnnt up of the Willi two uiui T Dinger u" coin case more Counsel .w.,,k. her her long will 325, N. wife steals man It .1, I S. Cln court is I'Ct'll as kick time clothes express charge, which for ami for no 'rest that ter caul is mo bobtail. 11 f CHESS FOR PLAYER, LOVER AND STUDENT Koslic Wants to IMny Kitlicr 7 riinjos or Sho- wn III 11 It or. 12 I.I 1 If. in A QTIKT SUMMER SKAS0X 17 IS tho The liungariati master Horls Kostlc ni to does not care to remain Idle. He Is try to ing pretty hnrd to arrange a match with the local crack Oscar Chajes, the secre- tary of the Isaac I.. Itlce Progressive 9 by Chess Club, slid It Is stated at the head- quarters of that club that such a con be test would be looked upon rather favor- ably, la the more no as this actlte club Is desirous or making things lively for their Kt members even at midsummer time, llotli men would be wilting to plav for h com- paratively small purse, and It Is belleted P that It could be easily subscribed for by enthusiastic members of tho club, seeing to that both these plnets lire rather popu- lar nnd that such a contest would be la highly Interesting, As Is well known, tho styles of the two blasters differ much, nnd this circumstance Is sure to produce some very fine, exciting mid In terestlng chess. When this subject was discussed at the clubrooms one uay ll last week. It became evident Hint Chajes would at once be declared u favorite, and IS even Koslic himself admitted that he would have a pretty stiff tight before him, but that he would do bis best to give u good account of himself. Simultaneously with this scheme the Hungarian master sent i letter to Jack son W Showalter, congratulating him on his splendid tlclory ovr Norman T Whltaket. At the same time lie proposed to play n match with Hhowaltir under f miliar conditions us were prevalent In the Showalter-Whltnk- er bout. Inasmuch as Kostlc proposed tery easy terms as far as the fluunrlal part nf the contest Is concerned, it Is confidently expected that the Kentucklan nnd his friends at tleorgetnwn and Lexington will be ready to accommodate the Hungarian master, the moie so as the latter has offeietl Sho walter to stay with him the lest of the summer In order to coach him b means of practice games for unothei match for the championship of the 1 tilted Stales with Marshall, should Showalter maK up his ii. hid to enter the field again for United States championship Illinois Otherwise It seems most likely that tue summer season will not be any more productive this yent than formerly In addition to tho two matches retorted to ii bote there is nothing on the pro- gramme In tills country with the ex- ception of the Buffalo meeting, about which pittltiiinrs were gtten in these columns Inst Sunday, and the met ting of the Wf stern Chess Association whblt is scheduled t take place at Chicago, How-ete- r, It Is Just as well for chess platers to have a rest during the coming months, There will be plenty of good games to be plajeil nt Huffalo on. I Chicago, and moreover the games from the ("open, bageii International tournament, about winch reference was made In these col- umn" ls"t week, will retch this e'ty In spite of the Irregular postal connections I.ociillt, wsth one txceptlon, namely. Hie Empire Pity Chess Club, the popular up- town resort, things will be pretty unlet. Tlit Umpire men, hiweter, are reported to have made arrangements to engage In midsummer contests right along. The tent of the games finm the contest, not gltt-- be- fore, are herewith pieM-nte- d to the iead-ei- s of the Sun : FIHST (l.tMK-QPK- KN S ti.ttlltIT Hi:- - ci,im:i) ShowattiT WhliaWer. Miosiilicr Whlt il.t-- r While Illack. ' While III i.U 1 I'- - OI I 04 2tl I'll' i b Ki- lling 2 Kt-K- III Kt Kill 27 UtOtli .1 I' III I'-- 2S V , li u 4 Kt ill uit-g- 'j 20 P K4 f in. a li-- 2 I .10 Kt K'l ll gi ' n I'- - K:i Pasties ai it pith 7 o KM p in .12 It tit Ktxit s lll'xl' KI'll' .1.1 I'll It lit i V II-- I'll.-- . " .11 I' KS It Kt III It K .1. I'vltili till' Castles, Kt II an li li1.' Kt KJ 12 Kt-- i' Kin a: ii in lit gi i:i HiKt llxll as p in Kt Kl'. 14 V 114 II K I :ei It li- -' I' lit. 15 11 III lllKl in p liltl Kt III III lll'xl) II Kl o li lit Kl 114 17 OK-- 0 Kt KM 1.' It- - K4 lit lit is P KKtl O Kt I 4 I I1 Kl! I' gut til Ktxl' tit Id II I' M'. I' It I 20 II Kl Kit l.i l.'t I' 111 Itl K jj, jj, m II III iii It gt Kl III j2 llxll Ktvll 47 11 g-- . liltl J.l l)K K Oil II IS It oil ill li li'.' P KKtl i'i llxylitl' lit litTih g lJ si l It FHCOXH UAJ.tr. iter i.ot'iiz . WhtlaUer liositller liit,il,er sleewdi,,,- - Willie lltack. White lll.i.'l, I I' Kl P- - K4 3. It II tttltp J Kt Kill Kt gin JO It 11.' It lis .1 II- - Kt.t l' yit i '.'7 lit II.- It lit i.N 4 II Itl Kt III Js It Ks y It. I , ltllfs - yt Sit y lit I it Itu r, Kt III n I..' an y Kt It gv.li 7 HiKt ill I'xll .ii K Its I' gi s I' yi I'll' is Kttlt I'vKI o Ktxl' li ys a.i It yj g Kilt in o y I t'ssi lea it t It ll t ytl'cti 11 Is MU I' III :r. li it Ittl.l' i K Kt t! It ti- ll an I'ti' It lit, Ki. Kl Kt Kl I Kit .17 It till y ii i 14 II Kt.'t I' It.l as It y.'i lilt.: yo t.t ItxKt yxll ' :to y Kts tu It l in Kt y tj-- g 411 yxr It. liil KS i; git g 11 Ml 41 0 Kill I' i.e. is v gut 11 III is y lit gvt.i in i' At HiKt ta I'xy It K7 so gill II Kl 1 K fits I' III si r ki i I' gut t.t Itxl! -- ' llxll . ll '.. o yj ' I' 14. Hi II- - IIS ! g7 21 PxP It Kl.'t 17 Kxlt I' llIH'W a g n- - g K lieslttus THiitn rami: gt HKNs tiVMiiiT nn ri.txnii Siiofsller VVIiit.iker shottidi W llll.lker Vtblle lllmk. VVhlle Ilia. I, i i' y p yi IK Kll'tl' I' OKU S Kt lilll lit -- Kill in p yn l'l it I' 114 I'- K.I SO Mil' llxll 4 Kl II I glit-g- s si yiit Kl I,' I ,. II Kl.". ti - KS ss Pl' t,i Kllih n I' Kit Kl K.'i s i li it KUKI' 7 litvlil I'xlil si it K 1st g Itl s Hill ytit s.-- . g ks I' II'. II Kl ys r Kin Sll Kl lit I' Kt Ill I' II'. I 'list I- t- S7 p y7 It KS II II III li It Ss Ktxl- - ItxKi IS t '.nl lea I' Kl s' yit yn it y. ta y lis lit III an It 117 it g i i in ii gs .11 Kit (HI y gi i.-- i i' yiiti Oil li as Itxl' it i,i, in .t v yiiit ItlMUIIs 17 Ki Kit KI'xP SIXTH 11 ami: itrv t.ori: Wbltnlier Slios.'tll VV hi1.il.i - -- li, .w .ill,. While Illack Willi. llla.l. I I'- K I I' Kl Illtt liil II It I S Kl Kill lit gll.'l 50 Kl H i llvlil I it iti. 51 Kill I' Klil 1 11 Itl Kl III '.'. g it i I'xlil ,', I 'asl les I' gt si gi ni- si It li C. It K i gut i I' Kill I' gut 7 Ki gut - It gi II KIS h p-- gi littii sn yxP li lia li ItPxKt lii ys '.'7 It Kit g in 111 l'xl' Kur ss it g '.'vy 11 II lit tit lit.) so i'xy it in 12 11 lit. I II KS an it Kit K II ii Ki-- yi II Kl.' ai it gt II It I Kt gin fast lea as it iti It li- lt is ft II lilt :u I' KKtl ll-- , ini.'it g Kl lit :n it Kin not 17 Oil llxll Iteslu'lia is Kt-- y. P lit I SRVKXTH AND r.AMH -- QI'IHIN.' IIAMIIIT lli:ri.l.Ni:ii Mm alt or hll.lkl'i-Illack- . Muni ,lt r Ul.ll.ilol VVhlle White lll.iik i p-- p lia ' ss g-l- ti i li K KlS a p gt S'.l I' II'. r mi a Kt gin lit Kill :illlit 11. tell K lit, I 4 li lis a p Hi'. lit 1.1 1 a l'-- KI-- ' as Kt III th li KlS ii llxll gxli a i gig Kity 7 II-- I Ktilit :ti it lit it i K I'xKt pip at lit yt M tin o noil' P K4 Mil llxlil I' U.l 10 It Kt I'aatllM .17 llxlil' K II I 11 Kl lit Kt US as p lt:t It li ' IS rastlos 7. m it nn IV V i:i Kt-- r.l III '.l K-- .k tal '' 14 It Kl.l P III i it r fit r in in Itoil' , IS II IIS ll K.i III It li.". g us I.I I' 117 ll li 17 n Kts II Itxl' not ih g Ki.i km ii ' I.- -, llxll itxl' lii Itxlt ch itxit 111 It II.', i ll K l,H so It H I' KKtl 17 Itxl' it il.' tli si lit ll I'- Kill IS K 111. I li . ss g Kt,' K II III It III. ill K Kin ' s.i P Kl.t .Ml It l.llitll it lit si g- - Kt.'t 'J It OIIO it ii S.'i PxP Pxl' .2 It II i it lu sn Kt Kl I II II ,vi l y i Ite.imi- - S7 P gut II Kt Appended is Hie lln.il s. me o i n match between 1. I Hsiiui .ind " 11 White In the championship tournament ui iiic iiainpsienu v.ness t,iuu. HttY LOPEZ. Kstrln. White. Katrln. White, While. Ulaik. Whltn. Illack. PP-K- 4 P-- 20 QKt-Q- 2 .Kt-K- ul 2 Kt K 11.1 Kt- - on.i 31 Kll-- K II ItJ :i It Kit II- - Ilia J2 I'- - US O-- ll I illes& I 2.1 Kt Ql H t.1 24 Kiiw-n- a n-- a ll-- lt tr 10 I'-- ll- -l II K lOse 20 P-- It-- W SOT" lit-I- II 27 Kt-II- A . t'oallittf 2X ilxKin lt-K- an q-i- It It 4 II 02 an itxKt r. I' OI It M.I :il o-- K itt I'llil' Kl-- K :i2 i.i O 02 a.t o k.i Kit Kt II ty, V III'; :i4 Ktxl' II Kl-l- o inr en llxll a;. It-- n Kxltt I'll Klxl an K-- Kt Ox lit-I- II- - Kt :t7 I2 O OI O 112 at ch Itwlgn t Tina la rnnen tha rias.leat itareivt ta I.ope It is one 4t tlii weakest niat'uM merlin the altactt. ns II enani; wrjlo gain tune by playlnt P 113, threatening atlacU Hie bishop by I'-- OI. i'.i Thn usual ami perhaps atronier con titiuatioii la I' tu nt once. ni White now threaten" to win a pawn I'-- oi, v it.. ?, JI, VxV; t. l'xl. Ji-- lti: P-- tn, I OKH; 10. I'xKt. Pxll: 11. Qxltl'. irfi The ndrnnee of the pawn weaken bl.iili'a but II la doubtlul whether hnd any lieiter move ici The ttealtiiea of tho claslc.il defence allow li by the t.irl that even nl Ihla atntti black hail nn perfectly satisfactory more. IIS, the unit- - alternative tu thn text move, would alo hare enabled while to sain Hie mlvautaie. e, x : ...Kt U3: x, l'xl": I'll". H-- 10. II KIT., lU Ki .: ii. ii- - q'.. o-- q: hi JI....H cji: n. H.M. 1? ItxKKt, I'xll; .Q II and win. Ill stroncer than the tempting move It OS, which, however, black's only satisfactory replv would have been 0.'. in It would bate been better to play P !M lore In order to prevent U Kt5. ,! A. dautcroua move; K-- Kt would have licen saler tli The In-- " of a pawn could hara ben avoided exchanging pawns before retir-lu- x the II would hate tsen still ttoran than the text move, e t.'.. .I'll': M. PxP, Kt '.i H I'-- KS, l'xl': If.. I'll', Kt K: l. l'xl' and wins If. Instead of H....KI K It K, threatening: Pxl' and wins. II Not 13. Ktxl', liecauaa of 14. TlxKt, Qxll; IS. II O"', winning the (A) It- - Kt would have Wen better, Tha text move loea nnother pawn, atlcr whtcli black a xamn la hoisleaa. (Ii Overlooking while's intrenioua reply, lie nurht to have played B Kt, but His game lot In any caae. Iil Threatening to win at once by 0 Bt, nil Tin- - only niove to prolonr tho game on If ::t . .KxKt. then 33,11 Il ch. K-- Ilt O-- ami white tones mate In thrcs) more inovea, (;o An itilerollur and Instructive game, excelbutly playeil tir while, but In which Mack waa handicapped by the Inferior de- fence Ii selected Hntrits for the Itlce memorial Inter- national tournament: i'i:oni.i:.ti .'t c; motto: "TUB VIKINO " mack 10 Plecea. its Ti Pi M m m mm m m .rs Whit IO Pieces. White to pint- - and in tie In Hires move. PltOHI.Ktl NO iiT'i MOTTO! "Wtl'tJU HIHN'K A rt'l' OI' KINPXKSS YBTT." Itlnck 4 Pieces. v, i. r Ra! f?'e f ' rrfl el a 1.1 1 ' iV Whit. 10 Plecea VV lilts to plav iiod mute lo two tnovea. Mit.rriuN rn I'ltoiil.HM no 1T8. K - li."., i K'V ch A. I' 11'. J g t.'l h. Arc gT. I' K'l. '.' i.'- - K.I . ll .Vf i'". J g- - Kts li. ttc, g7. 11 -- KtJ. '.' g Its ill. AC. K K.'t '.' g - Kts 111 tie. sir: Itxl': '.' g K.i tune. -- g7, I- t- Kl. '.' gtlt mate )' ant otto r . III h ,c e. MlI.t'TION tu I'm ihi.i;m no i;;t. ,t it'i.,r s sobc "ii I It H": ,v k' i Kit Hit It:: .v. ,i,iio. is- - t. 1'i.iiiiein- - No i',7'l an '.T7 Trout ,l..hn New Vursx i t. I'l.-- Norm il I. rrr llr.iok It. N. s ii ii,leh. liuliror.l I'.inii H -I .tin. I II i .i i Hartford, t'l.nn , .1 I'. Iturril'. V. . t.alt i If Ilnjiim.n Adams, N.'.l Vi.tk it .In.ili II Mil. 111. llr.Mil.lt o, t . N .1 I. tie N. w Y..ik do. John 1'.1 I'.itik Sew t III t'll, Culm N .s'tern, llri.i.klvii. X V s,,,i,..i i.i I'riiblem N.. 0. il icelteil ft .tin 1st mr ltln.i"i PUtsll. d. tins. S...UI .'ii l" l'r..l..i'in No 'i'i tecelte.l - ni .l.iltn I. I.i'.iuln I '..tit tir.inite, X. J.; It.. i'iiIii y.iok.o N,-t- t..rk .1 Henry y M 'tt it Yullki l X Y I'oititr.srtisiir.N'i:. n II .ok tu. N v Veil may .a 'i.i -- iiluttoiis that reall ..III l.tl.ll'.l lo li 'hi,!, o. I. ii aliillford. fonn Thli o iiiii.-iiii- ilin ma iiiaiention or Hvlir .i.f.itiuK li n,iihor aoiuiion or U- - KT i.tetrt.l 'a I'n, ni. in Xu f.TO ana jl .1 1.. 11 iib'.on No 117 EAT PLENTY OF FRUIT. lllll He attra- - It In I'letin, Snym 1 en 1 It I ooi mission er. lit' i. nt in I'i. I'li.t 1 I'lult and veget il.les should be eaten free'v In th xx at iii we.iihei. s.tvs In s.nniiel !. IiImi". State lieilili t'oiiiniissionei, b'lt it scould be .'.llffullc pit IU red Dr. IUxoii s adviie along this line is suminetl up thus Inning the h"t wentbei' frtnls and tegil titles .ne a (ii'iessaiv pail of tha tilt'. Mailt of tin so .ire IllOle appellzillg. tvlitiii t'tt.'ii taw Hemes. r,id,islies, cinoiis .in.l -- itl nl-- t appear regularly on the ill. nil at Ibis anil have their t allle as fond "t'ne should si r i"t in the piepa- - rnlon and sort ing ol aieui I Is. how- - evtr, as thet aie siili.lt.it to nm ll hand- ling lilt tt ' II the g.ll'th'l' and the mine. I till Hie bunds tin migli tic. tiny p.ls ille el i lean I net .lie tnoto or less i .i it it Hit It, I .In 1. 1. n.t inaiket ginleiis Hie g. itli. rim: ' '! i.ttslucf Is eiiti listed to a i lass of line vv bicli is. not nut loo I ' eil i .illil i ale is It'' e- -t i c's. il to I Usui e . t ill h - "I'ooil i Miost'd toi' sat. ii n.iikett is also often siibjei t to liuli- -. . inn ttc hand- ling h llioslicclive piilf'iasei . a 1. Is seldom Idopilly piotetled fi.nu tlust aiiij tllri "As II lU'iltivt loll bet le ' oots utl's t .it en law should be ihoioii .t wiiebed befol." lii'lllg "i r veil ll - ll ' H ! t'l iisK a sllghl Impairment ' lie tlavu' than to chante eating m ' ' ""b "Nlglit soli should not be 'cd f"i gaiiblis fi fitii win ' Hu I'.siii.'o milt be ealt u raw W'.t hmild not be ilin it'd I stie.nn- - wo.'h nro liollnled bt sewage, .tl.u t . - ne on It', Ol.l ttllioe lyplhihl let.' 'ii ".all'lfd fli.lll 1.1 lute lo obselte II. I r.' I'lllO'l." Mites Ills lllrtls III H 1 ail. ii Ni w iiiui.vvs. I ilt ni ni'il to save the live- - of a ' song lords In bad hi cages Ii nm ng on the. lunch of his Inimi. hlHc Hi. tnl fham. bers. in. risked 'us lite ,o opet. ng the eayt s mil "" nc I' pi s tt inlo his hninn bin If' il ' ' ' .:'' Mr. nnd Mi- - i ' uiiiil'i tv ' c b th , molt ng "f i"i'" os ' i nd h.irely sn. ecd. ' dien In,, I o 'ft t s Holy out ' t .0 bill

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OLD MAN GREENLAW

OPENS HIS CODRT

Xn SpHIp n Dispute BetweenBlr.ls.lrll niul n Casual

Stronger.

m'.VOSTA RTER AS GAVEL

By DAVID A. CURTIS."TiiltiRs Is sometimes m'not'nou Inrknns.is City," said old mnn Green-- !

one day, "but they nln't nevermceiltotilous," lie added on If gratefulfor even so smnll n mcneure of con- -

(Olstlnn.

"Mouelit ns well lie one way ast'other." 'aid Jim nintsdcll, rilscon-tfntfdl-

"I'm le rtnxvggoncd If I c'n

f(t no diff'rence.""That's 'long ' yo' till not boln'

MioAled phllosophlc'l," retorted tho oldnun with n lofty nlr. "It's like It la Inho kiw. Tli" nln't no dlffrenco In tho

quality " murder, f r Instant, hutthey'' a hollovn lot, !n the d'greo, If yo'fan" a pond lawyer when yo'ro liningto trlni.

"What murder in tho first d greet'n be made out Justifiable If tho lawyer c'n prove what he none railed yo'a tar. or If yo done caught himchentln' nt cyards, or 'moat nnythln'what the Jury r'n be 'njuced toc'reldcr n good 'xcuse. If tho co'tadidn't p'vlde the laws thatawaythey wouldn't be no safety fo' nobodytiln n weepln Into a 'mergency. Homeo' the best citizens In Arkansas City'd 'a' been strung up long ago.

"Now m'not'ny is like murder. Itlustltlable up to a certain p'lnt, butater Hint It's monltonlous an' gits ontoto' nerves like. They Is times whenIf thoy don't Homebody come In nfo'lone Id feel like shuttan up theshebang nn' git to hell outcn hynr 'aquick 's poselble."

"Well. I don't mind suyln' what Ifeels thatawny right now." said Blals-del- i.

"I r'n stand m'not'ny 'a well 'athe tieM. but 'pears like m'not'ny Is nriotous whirl o" 'xcltement 'long side o'it hat Arkansas rity 's done been recent.Th' ain't been a stranger In town fo' amonth o' Sundays.

"I'm p'lmreil to admit." he con-tinued, "whnt m'not'ny sho' Is a heap:.ke murder. Mnkrt me feel like It,ant way, but I'm a H.iyln' what 'taln'tnever justititible. not to no such 'xtenti tis right now. ir sotnepln nlut didto'able this ycr c'munlty Is llablofo' to bust up tvllh a loud noise, nn'I'm liable fo' to be tir.ikln' the noise."

"Jim's right." said doe Rigsett em-phatically. "1 dono been gltlln' bluemolded my own self recent. Somepln'U got to bo did. an' that right speedy."

"Mebbo that's light," suld tho oldman. "but what?"

"I dutino." said Basset! "Theynotisht le 11 lynchin' Ue If somebody

on'y do somepln' Irres'lar: but th'ain't even been it chicken stole fo" ardlovu while. 'Pears like even then:rpers is got the dry rot."

"Well." said nial.s.lell, us if catchingat a sudden suggestion. "I got tor'lievr my ftelln's some way. I reckon1 so out an' kill one on 'em fo' luck."And without further talk he arose nndleft the saloon.

The others looked at him with nomointcre.- -t as he wont out, but languidly,u if not greatly concerned, and for amoment nothing was said. Then JukeWlntrrl'jttom observed:

"Th.it s the wust o' beln' a artist.Jim sho' is tot the temper'ment. HeJits strung up to a eertnln p'lnt an'tfien he snaps, like n fiddle string."

"Can't he'p it. I reckon," said ho"Id man, "but that tliur artistic nt

sho' Is liable to make mo''rouble fo' a man 'n 'must anythln"'!e. If It hadn't V been fo' havln' ItJim moucht 'a' been a single man 'sonx 's he lived, but they 's somepln'bout id tth.it 'pears to 'peal to aartist strong, nn' when It's a wldderth' nm t no lesif-tln- ' of her. Her Iwln'

liMr an' redheaded like she sho" is,th" rnnihinatlon was Jiiht nachully loomuch."

"They don't have to be wldders,"HM ,,im Peat sail, gloomily.

Ik enoiiKh. even If 't ain't', it. Hie eye on, jo re married.,

" riif.-- . iMiiiuway inMuo sue n gu aman ev'iy time. I reckon It's some

ie b'lles. If yo' lias 'em It's n heapetter fo' Vtn to show outside 'u 'tisn have rui r'maln Into yo' systemik' Same with rrd. 'Taint 's bad

fo th' outside irf her Imld to be tha:- -away s 'tis fo' the inside.'

one tenturcd it reply. They knowi" tpoke from experience and they

respirtcd his drspontlent mood, at leastti the oMent of keeping silence when,'is sometimes happened, IiIh suffrrlnga"termatchcil hts endurance nnd hocate volte to liis emotion. Kven thoold man teiilized that nn udolinte cott-"latl-

could Ik- - otfered."ii! ithMe they paused, unable tw

thiiiK of anything III for words tintJjrHie i ,r uinstanccs, there came from'nn- - little distance up the levee thnound of n shot, and the old matt said.

"I rti :un ,llm Is done come acrost ono"i 'em a'ready."

Then i iime seterul more similar re-ports in rapid, 'Irregular succession,"n't .lui li.tsMdt sprang to his feet

'ser't As he left the saloon his face"eined a.) lighted up with pleasurableanttt tput .mi. .

'Io. s nnother one L'nt temnrr'mont.""'mrtni the old man thoughtfully.

ll i'ais to g!t mo' 'njoymcnt. outena fi.ht n he doe.s glttln" drunk

ins Uing merely the statement oft Id" well known to all of them, Itbrnviiker no repy. Penrsnll ttns too

"irouuiiiy enKrovK,.,) jn icllcctlon tosrciily interfsted In current events

"id U'.iiteibottnm seemed contented to'"Hit iv rcpoii which would come""i on from the scene of the disturb-'K- e

liside They smoked right"'"ni: i and the old manI Jltf-i- l out frenh cigar.

'int. cod of this tv.in eaten and thontli'r w,., ni,.), hmokeil out liofomItitlMli'l nni Hnssett returned to thohI'kiii touethiT. needmii.iiiliil nnivlll- -ln;l bt It lmill wr,() wan unknown to

of them and followed by a smallU'iwiI (, rltlzens, MUlin of whomthotted in.tlKDiillon, while thn othersI" mr i merely curious.

. Us ycr tmiti Ih done d'manded ahparm' in co't nfo' beln' took to thocalabirfn.o," Hasett, almost npolo-tftlca'- -t

"an1 I fotchetl hltn hyar"rdin' to law, but 'pears llku th' uln'tn" ere t K ii.i. Into it, Hlulsdell knowsnil in, f,1( !, ,,. .,n jijafj, rct;ly nec'ary" ' un a rope."

"MeiiM. ," sit lil tho old man, "an'"Iiik ( ii Is- - did tlritaway satlsfnc-f'- f

c ich nfo' the e'muiilty gits clvl-i.fcn , n .lot' wotilfln't be nn use

d ilrabls. Th' objec' o' brlmring a manto trial ! f0 t0 give him a chanat fo'to git off If he's got money enough foto pay the costs o' co't.

"Yo1 oil 'done right to fetch him ofo'me," he went on. "O co'ac yo moughta' hung him yo own self, beln' Bherlff,

an" they wouldn't 'a' been nothln' aald,but when they la a Justice o' tho peacehandy It'a a heap better fo' to p'ecedaccordln' to law, Olvea me a chanstfo' to git some profit outen It.

"la yo' all p'pared fo to stand th'xpenae of a trial?'' he demanded ofthe atranger sternly.

"I reckon that II d'pend on howmuch 'tla," said the stranger sullenly."If It's reasonable I kin. but If theeharea u too heavy I reckon 'taln'twuth It.'

"About what 'd yo' all c'nslder reos'-nalilo-

Inquired the old man. "Beln'athis 'pears to be yo' first offence, theco't 'II be merciful, an' charge

to the size o' yo' wad.""Well, If 'taln't mo'n $100, I reckon

I'd ruthcr put up that much 'n tobo hung thouten a trial," said theatranger.

"That'll be enough to start thep'cecdln'a," aald the old man, reach-ing out for the money, "but o' co'seIf yo' all d'manda a Jury It 'II be mo'xpenalve. That'a up to yo' nil fo' to

d'clde, but the co't don't recommend It.Mebbe It 'd be better fo to hangonto the r'malnder o" yo' wad, case o'tho fine beln's 'a heavy 'a It's liableto be 'cordln' to th' evidence."

"Under them elrcumstants," said theatranger, "I reckon I can't .affo'd noJury." '

"Then th" ain't no 'caslon fo' nod'lay," replied the old man briskly."Sheriff, whot'a thla ycr man did?"

"I reckon Blalsdcll c'n tell mo' TxutIt 'n I kin." aald Hossett. "Him an'the stranger waa flrln' at one anotherwhen I come up, but I dunno how Itbegin. How waa It, Jim?''

"I was lookln' fo' a nigger," saidIllalsdell, "an not Interferln' with no-body. They waa three or fo' on 'cmdown by the round house, an' I doneknocked one on 'em down, but theothers done got away. 1 was klckln'of him peacable an' quiet like whenthis yer yap butted In. Tears hehud some 'bjectlons. I reckon he mustbo one o' them Abolitionists.'

At the sound of thin word therewns an outhurst of Indignation fromthe audience, but the old man rappedhard on the bar with his hungstarter

"Order in the co't!" he shouted. "Ifhe's a Abolitionist, hell be dealt withaccordln', but 'taln't been proved, notyet. He's 'ntltled to the benefit of adoubt, tempornncously, anyway. Prls-onc- r,

yo' all Is done heer'd the charge.What Is yo" got to say to It?"

"I c'n lick any man what aays I'm aabolitionist," said the stranger withmuch vehemence. "I fit Into the wah,my own self an' I done had fo' bundred niggers o' my own, ufo' theywas set free.

"Just nachully I knows the value of'em. nn' when I seen this man man- -

handlin' a likely one I says to himwhat th' nln't no sense In dVtroyln'prop'ty like lie was doln'. Wn donehail some words nn' he drawed. O'

co'se they wa'n't nothing' to be dida'ter that on'y fo' me to draw my ownK-l-

"I.lkely they'd 'a' been mo' damagedid If the nigger hadn't V got up an'run betttlxt us. I reckon he must 'a'got two or three o" the first shots wastired, an a'ter that they waa mo' 'r lesac'nfusion. I don't rlfihtly know how'twas they wa'n't neither one on uskilled nfo' this yer big mini yo' callsthe Sheriff done come up. but a'ter thatthey wa'n't nolsjdy but him had nochanst. He sho' Is one tlghtln' man."

The enrnest, straightforward way In

which this statement was mnde com-

mended the speaker to his hearers nsone devoid of guile, nnd Hassett wusspecially moved to favorable considera-tion by the unaffected admiration withwhich the prisoner referred to him.Even Halsdell seemed little Inclined topress any complaint, though he showedsome resentment at having been Inter-

fered with while he waa nmuslng him-

self."I reckon I must 'a' been mlstooken,

Judge." he said, "when I done calledhim r abolitionist, an' beln' 's theyain't nn charge ag'ln him I reckon meon' him c'n settle this ycr quar'l ourown selfs. We c'n go out on the leveo

nn' have It out, man to man, 'thoutenno trouble to nobody."

"That'll suit me," said the strangerpromptly, but old man Greenlaw dis- -

KAnfert stronult.... . . I .1 anlie sain.ro(nil . drlnKS f(y

c'ntempt o' co't fo' Interferln' with thenVertlin's. The co't '11 take n recess fo

u few minutes fo' the puppose o' c'lect-i- n

the flue an' c'nslder the case a'ter- -

WJThM wns done, and while the drinksv.in ennsumed there was a full

"J.,;"' hi. m of the clrcum- -" ..e which thestances. In tne course tu .."..

... , rv irrpnrit' SireilKllieiit-- inefavorable Impression ne nnu numade. . .... ,t

Then he clinched tne manerfor nnother round even before the

... -. ii Mulshed, and the discus

sion continued till the old mnn grabhedhis bung starter again ann rappeu nnorder, , ... ,,

"These yer festivities is an ngiu.Fiild, "but the case In co't" 'd ought fo'

to l settled first off. Heln's th nln t

no charge agin this man o' be n

ntiolltlonlKt. the co't 'II acquit him

that, but this yer quar'l b'twixt nials-de- ll

an' him is dono been fetched Into

co't n n' 1 got to be settled.""Th' nln't no quar'l no mo, an

l.'sldes thut we una la gwtno to meetup outside fo' to settle It our own

bt'lfs," said Hlalsdell earnestly.. "Tli' co't 'II fine yo' all some mo

drinks if yo' keep on Interrupt 'n'." saidthe old man severely, "an' mo n thuttheys done been gun piny enough

n'ready. They is other ways o' settllna dlflleultv what's a heap sight mosatlsfacfry,-- on' this yer caso c'n be

compermlzeil to mo' 'dvnntage If him

an' yo' Ml tuke a llttlo friendly 'dvlce.

Heln's the costs o' co't Is done been

imld. I won't make no chnrgc fo' It If

it's tooken. hut If 'toln't the Inw 11

have to he cytiriied out to the bitter

en"i'm wlllin' to hear what 'tis," 'hlthe stronger earnestly. "I don't wantno mo' to do with tho law. I'd a heap.Iruther blow my wad Into a pokergame 'n to iay no mo' costs o' co t.

"Now yo'ra tulkln'," said the old mnn.

"That's Just what I was gwlne to Bay.

Th' uln't nothln' llko draw poker fo"

to even up matters when, they's bad

blood 'xlstlsV. Yo' h11 c'n play a freeze.out with Jim fo' the reBt o' yo wad. or

they c'n be n live handed settln' ar-

ranged If that's mo' prefnble."wa handed Is mo' sociable like,

suggested the stranger, nnd at no in

wns offered hy nny one. a gomewon soon eitarted In the hack room oftne llttlo suioon.

"Old man (Sreenlaw ho" la awonder," snld one nf tho cltlgeivs as the

i little crowd of spectators meucu awayii iVih if Juatlcu wus all 't was "Ho glla 'em comln

, on , goUi

POEMS WORTH KEASnro.

Men.I aee them In a vision,They are masters of death.I aee themLaying minesTo annihilate thousands;Sighting lnlrenchmenteTo guide their gun plar:Unleashing deadly gateWind driven, tonard the enemy.1 aee them in a vision,Theae maetera of death;Not beasts enortlng hell AreAre they;Just menStrong men, brava men,(lood men, wit men,All bent on achltrlng death.1 aee them before me.They arc muliri of lite.1 ate them I

Digging tunnelFor th transit of thouaandi;Hearing wonder atructurea of steelTo ahelter their own kind;In their laboratoriesEnslaving air, water, earth and AreFor the eervlra of millions.I see them before me,Thtea masters nt life;N'ot nnget shining In celeill.il gloryAr they;Just menStrong men, brav men,flood men. wise men.All bent on promoting lite.

Men Just men.Cuts I.iter.uMtx.

J

tin Account nf the tt'jr.John tlronn cannot pay me the money h

ow"- - .. i

"On account of the war. i

Th. cook want. tn dolt.r. we.k. or ah.goes, I

"On account of the war." I

?n:buhe7rn?,re.;.lrh.,o;:l::dbru':ter as lead,

Th tailor's wool suits are of shoddy In- -'

ta- -

nn iMAtint nt (ha war" !

The tinner can't patch up my root whrrIt leaks,

"On account of the iar."in car inai i oougni noi come lor j

six neeks, j

"On account of the nar"Th cost of my shoes mounts each time

tlmt I inn.The prloea on drugs are prodlgloualy high.nut when t demur I receive the reply.

"On nciount of the sr."

And fthat can I do when they nlrtly say'"iiu .iccount of the war""

What ele can I do but oMlKlncly pay.On account of the war "

Tet often 1 under what tome folk xltjlofdo

When all of the world with Its arfare l

through.And they can no longer paaa by In review

"On account of tiie war!"c n. i:.

It hat Is Christian; !

What Is a Ohrlntlan? He who tinea hl bctTo make this warring ttorld loe's dwell- -

Ing place, I

Who rentla the tells of greed and eeir- -

unreatWhich hide hl brothers from their

Father's face;Who, ftuinbllng oft. yet up th trep tloth

ptudAnd hf!p tafHrera tottard Christ's

shtnlng goalHy service to hi fellow men tl,l Ood

Make lilt abt.de within rtruaitltngsoul.

Who bears uluft hla torch, though for andfears

Ot.soure It oft and dim with doubt'sitUsent;

t'nwarped by woe, though battle sctrredb) yesra

Of toll for prace and human betterment.The Christian greets life's nnitt undla- -

mayettAnd, dlng, meets life's Master unafraid

In the Held Hospital.From Xtrf Rattan Trattncrin1

some laughed, s.nno groaned atva the Ir

Through all hla agonv no murmur made:Till as he passed Into the myaier)

Under Ills nreatn he prae,i:

"TtSf rtheouian''o "n'l ''"Vra nMmshre"Are tirlgluitt'ult0thenpa'niwH""ol,'tl"-r(l,.Mi-

,a ll ane uecst'oeu witn it snine nonsaid

Oh welcome ho.ne' I .latened for your

Hhe plitnted them while 1 was gone, onelay.

Ood who made life so sweet.Let net thU life of mine be thrown

sway 'Amkiii .Io.ki iiim: Hi nn

Ileht.Vn.ii f,e St. .i.wla 'oaf tikmtrt.

Dent batks beneath the hubbies In cham-pagne

Debt's hid behind a boat of millingfaces-- -

At nlKlit it wakes Hie sln.pcr from hladre.t ma

And puts hla guilty coma-trin- throughIts paces.

In whirl of tango on the lisltroom II. mrntit'a mirrored In lovclv

eyesAnd haunts ou through each enrtleaa day

VX'TJal ,oua;e"r.i'V..ur -,cif

To be your comrade on jour way throughlife

Debt Is the price of what ou spendFor things of which you neter tell your

wife.

rnrgrlfiilness,tram tlit M .utitn I'ntt hftatrl

What ciin hold the present, past or futureTo present my spirit, nriuging mv neart,

Asuiul torn i.y iiouiit, errsui imiiiHenillnB my wild being all apart?

The present la n mimic- - spul, unsettled,tvnere ine ounu grepo in tne oiirKiiess

for lightAnd 1, nmong the derelicts of thoughtAm tiimlillng, lo- -t foreter from friend's

sightThe past, a llttlo. blue eyed nial.b--

U tin. ra ureiinis, una tiose.i inr H7.urs

And I Ik l t has sunk In darkness, terribleAmi stars ni.ie in tut; niackiicss m inn

skies.

The future what a t piled hiippyliindUpon the edge nf pilldllg hearts unseen,

Holds shrouded linngis In make lielleteAnd terror stricken creatures- inignt

hate been;Heart 1. 1.1 ti if, wake, to find a friend is

one.And naked self out of the tnrnt Is hurled

To ine not sun, an lucrum itno for-lorn !

AlSN llKHIUIIT.

. (erianles,rVofl t.e llimtan Trantcriit

Not only ICngland's Ariel sprite Is ours,Hut all that fulls iiiiren.ann'a arid relrnfly pricking windbags, digging deep to

drainAU ,,u ,.P u,Ot ...nr.. ...at...

All that uiupura the strutting knight of

Demanding of true chivalry a brainWith common een-- a. So, turn awhile to

Spain)(Jive Stratford time to smile nt all .our

dowers!

Close on the day whine theft asaureil theworld

Of one so deathless few could grasp Itthen,

The banner of as Hue a soul it as furledOn courage mulching Hi.lt "f Nelson a

ftjlutonoerVanlis, warrlor-t- t It ! He hurledHpears whose least splinter nllm our

sharpest pen I

.ItlCIISIIO TllUKU Oi.Agvii.a.

The V Islam.

When the Joyous sea the JoyShining bright the wholo world o'er,

There Is never ono more amlle,There la never one song moie,

When the grieving see Hie griefThat upon the world nltisl pro,

Thero Is never ono less pain,There la nover one tear less,

Hut Hi" world Is puhr, I iilonsAnd la helprd beyond I. filer

When the grieving see the JoyAnd Hit Jojnus ars the gilcf,

Mcl JMun "'ill Wil.auu,

THE SUN,' SUNDAY, JULY 2, 1916.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS.

Can some render tell me the authorof the following lines? ,

There Is no lr, but change; no deathbut el n ;

No parting, but Hie .lull corroding painOf murdered faith, that never Uvea nxaln.

.1. C.

TMrase publish tho following poemand glto the name of tho author:When Freedom from her mountain height

Unfurled her standird to .the air,Hhe tore the axuro robe of night.

And set the atara of glory there.Mrs. C. A. J.

Theae are the opening tines of JosephHodman Drake's extremely well knownpoem "The American King," which may

)be found In "The Home Hook of Verse"(Henry Holt A Co.) nt page 2125, andIn many other collections of poetry.

Pleaae give the dnte of Judge Altonn. Parker's resignation from the Courtof Appeals and state whether it wasprior to hts nomination for 1'rcaldent.

A. M.

Judge Parker was nominated on July9. lfni, but did not resign the ChiefJustlcesblp of the Court of Appeals until August !i.

I nm curious to know the derivationof cascade, Ionokauus.

It Is derived from the Krench wordcascade, which has parallels In the Span- -Mi word oascaila and the Portuguesecasonta : all these are dcrlted from thoItalian cairnta, a waterfall, from theverh to fall. This verb Is np- -

parently associated In thought with theLatin radere, past participle rusus, to

,ml u " pro,,al,,y (1,kp t,,e vm- -

I"1' cascar, to Preak In pieces, beat.atrlke, and the Portuguese oawcar. tostrike) nn extension of the l.atln verbcasare, cassare. .miw I'usnre iir vass;ucIs a variant of qu.issarc, to shake, shat-ter, shiver, and frequently of quatere,iwat participle quansum, meaning toshake. Thus the word cascade has adlstnnt relationship to such words asquash nnd llcuss. The rnot Idea wasappareutlj not so much that .of a fallof water as of water shattered mettllv

Ion the roiks below.

I .1 ti .'II.V .It... full (i... mi tlil.it. f.liMMt

(leorge Harvey, an I'hiitllnhman who wasan associate of the National Academy

Deslun In New York from S" tol!.1l and a frequent rxhlliltm" liepublished (Ixindon IM:') .1 book tailed'Weties of the Prlliletal I'ttrests inNorth America." Hut none of the dozenbooks on art and p.ilntt rs that I luteconsulted at the New Yotk Public t.lhr.iry Kiwx any Infoi m.mon atmul him. J

nor does the tllrlltmarv of NationalHlographv t London) lie was no: ,trtleorge Hnrtey the Scottish artl't

V. Ami.tTT.

with regard to H. '.. II. s Inquiiy In'question nnd Answers of M.i 2Sroiicernlng the oricln of tirkum ftrities,our attention Is railed to .in article bilaik Ma run In tin Philadelphia S'iiii-iln- ti

7'nmsi' (;f nf June II. Mr. Masongives eett-r.i- l P.'tiliciil references thatmay Indicate n dKiiiictit e prison at-tire, bediming with Uenesls ll 14,which runs.

"Then Pharaoh sent and tailed Jo- -

soph, and tin brought him hastily outnf the dungeon nnd he shaved himself,nnd changed h!" raiment, and came inunto Pharaoh."

In Jeremiah Id, .12, incur the words'prison garments.' M Mason adds'

specltlc leference to btlipes firstitppears In the old (latlit tale of tha

'Curio, whith was published In the four' cfiiturt. There the woitl itctnally used was "hre.n an." which Is thetiaellc wonl meaning "trlttes as the wordstripes now mot commonlv ut'tl. Inthe translation of that period the wordw as wp,.cd "sttaip" or "rtteip.' In Hieolder language the wm.l stripe meant.In Its eonimonest use, what the words

l.inl, 111.1 a.tfi,- - t,i tll.t (,l.l,1Mtlimlnd. "Somewhere bit ween the petiod

"',lcn Joseph changed his ptisoii ral- -

ment to appear before Pluiaoh and Hienine n.-- o.itm- - iiim-.- t nnc ..ipimi- -

culshed by tlit Ir breac.in (stripes) prl- -

loners In Jail were br.iuib- i'iit. con- -

, vlct g.ub. Including slnpes. umloubtetllyfollowed." Stripes as ,t mo-- e .humanemode of branding thn prisoner sounds' . .

(l in,,l 1,1.--,

You were not quite correct in ourianswer to r". tt . .tl. in liucstions amiAnswers of June Iv The rails of

'street car line aie lis .1 letuincircuit. The high itust.ince of the railJoints nukes "bonding" nece.ir, thatIs, n copper wire is perinaneiitl) con-nected from tail to rail. In i.is-- of'

'broken or poor bonds the curieiit goes,tliiough thu t.tith and follows gas or

water Pities that parallel Hie line. In'many Instances partlcularls when

trcets ale being lepallt-d- , the tiaiks!re earth, nnd If a itorseshould put Ills

-from fct t on the ra.ls

' with his hind feet on wet ground Justahead of or behind a moving car tu apootly bonded zone Mr lloise wouldtake the count. I hate seen hoiees

jtliop ill such case" nnd know of onewhere the horse was killtd. . C.

Was the re a light opera called Thellct'fcnteis' ".' I !

We think not ; but we recall that Will-i- n

til Sch wen. I. 1 Illicit wanted to call one

of ills librettos by that title. Sir Ai tliurSullivan, the t on poe r tefused Io agree

i to so "ugly" a name, ami we Know theittork, consetUeiitly, lis "The Yeomen of

tilt tlunitl."

When did Hughes make Ids spteilithe fallacy of 111 an's doctrines

in the Hrynn-Ta- fi campaign'.' (1.

You probably hate in lit nil the spt'Ltii

delivered by !ov. Hughes nt Youngs-tow-

Ohio, on September 5, 1!HIS.

What Is the derivation of tint wordmosaic when used to denote a foim oft riaiiicnliitliitr.' I!. V.

It comes from the Italian mos.tlco,phi! that Is supposed to be derived fromtho flteek mousfloH, "belonging Io thu

i Muses,"

I Is Hie name u f Coos pi onouru'i'il In

j cue s) liable A. '!'. I'.

Ill the case of lite Oregon town, yes;tlte New Humpslilie pronunciation Is

Co-o- s.

Whnt is the origin nisi ineaulug ofthe wold "Auxins" which Is so frequentlyapplied to Hie Aiisti .iliau nnd New Zea-

land troops now-- moving on I lie Hiitlshf milt in the West'.'

William C. Ii.vtis.

Tlicho men, or many of them, servedHist at (ialllpoli, where tho name AnzacCove was given to a Hiitlsh point ofnltack. Ansae Is derived from the Ini-

tial letters of "Australia (and) New

Zealand Army Corp.',"

My motlier-lii-l.t- was in cousin, forwe were the children of liiothers, Wasnot my wife my second c nisln',' A. J. S.

Yes.

What Is tile oiigln of the lei in "liv-

ing the life of Itlley"? J. T. K.

He) nnd noting Its meaning In be "alife nf ease," wu tu c unable tu accountfor It.

SCHOOL FOR .CARD FLAYERS.

Auction llrldge. C, It. M, sayst Wewant to know the correct method forplaying two foams nt duplicate. At the'le eland Whist Club tliey play the .V

nnd H hands only, nnd the same playersTTever play the K and W hands. Thecemparlsoti Is with other tennis thattdajed the ?C Hnd H hands. W play theN nnd H hands, and after some time haselapsed the K nnd W hands, so thateach team plays all the N ami S at onesitting and nil the K nmt W at another,a stiltuble tlmo having elapsed.

Kxperlence has shown that the longerthe tttne nllowcd to elapse between theoriginal play and the overplay of thesame hands, tho better class ofplayers that are fit to go on n team willremember the raids. This Is called"memory" duplicate and Is not allowudunder league rules, There are a great I

minis' ways for teams to play so that onepair on the team get the X and H endof tho hands, while the B and W pairpair play thn same hand against the Xnnd ,H pair on the opposing team, Theaeare given In any good Iloyle.

C. P, It. says: Third band holdtntseven clubs to the king iUCeu ten, andnot a trick outside, bids two clubs overhis pattner's original no trump, is thliconventionally correct?

Ily many It Is considered safer to bidtho minor suit, ns there Is nothing In the .

hand unless the dealer has enough clubsto clear the suit and then put dummy In.t'nlesa the denier hns the nco of clubsand one or two small ones, such n handmight never take a trick. If the dealerran make three odd without the clubs, ItIt a game hnnd nt clubs.

O. T s.ijs: We should like nn opinionon this bidding; ' deal' nnd says notrumps, A two spades, y three diamondsand It three spades. Dealer three notrumps, A four spades. Y passes,does II. niul dealor says four no trumps,which A pase, Y now bids Iltv dia-monds.

Y's first denial of any ability to stopthe spades, ami his showing a diamondnit strong ennimh to bid on, was enough.

After that thi dealer should hate beenlet nlotie. The the diamond bid Is Indirect contindlctlnn of the partner's wishto pliy the hand nt no trump and toli.'tve the lead come up to him

V .M M. says: In a no trumper, c.ubsbeing ltd a third time, dummy and Uboth discard hearts, covering up thec.ird letl ly tlir. wli.r. tlirlr cuds on theflub The dei later ft Idently thoughtth" heart .was l and look the trickwith the .ice of hearts, turning It down,anil at mice led tile club queen. Acn attention to the revoke, which Isndmittetl. but A nUo wants to take j

Inck the tlub trie'.. The declarer denies tlifi- - rlitlit lo the trkl; that Isturned down, which would hate set thecontract, and will concede only the 100for Him retoke.

It s only when a pkitrr wins Hie trickIn which he has' revoked. it by trump-ing, that he Is entitled to keep tt afterIt Is tutiicd and iUitteil The declarerdid not win tills flck and mii't glte ItUP. so tli.it lie It for one trick on hiscontract ami loes the 10U besides.

M S. ' asks how much A should bepaid nt the end nf a three hand gameIn nhieh tie Mnul store was A, L',500plus; It, l.rtoii. and C, SOO.

These score lie.tia all plus A wins 900from It and I..100 from C As It wins,tne uinerence. .on, from I , lie pajs only

of A s wiimiiK", ,t!ii!e C pays 1. 100

f tl as A bltl Is made out oftip li The de tier a t.t Ins jinrtm-r- .

''Shall tte liate ,t new deal"" Is thereliny penalty for llil iiuestion?

l.an '.li ic) ! supplied to enter allmatters of consultation or lemaiks

1'""'""" "n" ''ve' i

partners to ask which unnll enforce u

penalty, that they are certainlyharrfd fioin nllli t.tch other w hatpenalty 1'iey shall uleet. If any.

Poker J C. S says: We have a b- -t

ns to the cntnp.ii.it I ve probabilltv of ap.ior ill a set en hand game hatingJa Ks or 4oticr to nm n. and of his havinga four card straight or lluh. I thereany way of settling tills"

According K the latent woik on thegntno, "Poker. Its l.ttta and 1" inclples,"published by Wycll .t Co, tliere arer !!..", t". I hands which show Jacks or bet- -

'"tualthen

s.is:call"

andI"

It must show all the cauls up,it not enniiKli a will

hand

II. sa.ts; hot ten chipsn bet There two more raises,

cannot borrow an.t more, hocall" for I sight. Must tills be con-ceded?

illd-no- t Imped tli.it was the,,f It Ih onlv wb... nl.ce,. i

raise iiui"t afterwardcall.

W s.tvs: Hlght playing, dealingfor tiie di.nt there arc two ranis leftwhen for two The denier gives

the card nndeaitl ileatlwood before

giving n'Ci.ml isentitled last

It Is laws of the gnnie todeal out lust fan I puck,

dealer is lightprovide against the poslh! Itshaving been seen di.uvl

. In Hie oltldays tho bottom card was "burnt" hybeing turned

T. S. says: A oMnermust show his entire handthere are nny or not If asked todo so.

is only when no nie ilrnttiithat the opener must show nil lite cardsface up. If not called after Hie

thaw all he need Is openerslit cauls fuce down.

Ciibli.ige. (I, kiss H

the laid out it caul toowhich not until he tinsletl, lines iliavv a cribt.ue down, or must he his andplay as if lie had in hand'.'

It Is loo late mistake,nb'l thn non-deal- miint play theshort hand When llu slinwndealer pol obliged to leturn stlpir-tliio-

cud, iii.tt count the six cardnib lor all tie l III

HOVEL POINTS OF THE LAW.

A sermon on the subject of marriageend divorce has been delivered In the re-

port of a Pennsylvania referee in recom-mending n decree for n wife on theground of her husband's, misconduct.The refetee, H. V, Clark of Kreeport,heard the rase of Dinger vs. Dinger,ami his vlnws, ns reported In Mlinpson'sHatly l.rmler of Klltannlng, are In pnrtns follows:

"Prom the plaza door of many newAmerican home y the word

appeam on the hurlxon of Itsfuture, plainer than the Hoc HlgtinVlncea of Constantino In the eentfulflays of the nld Itoman Kmplre, Relig-ionist and ecclesiastics are fromtheir point of xlew erUtiii out against

The State Is beglnrlng to feel themilter of (lie onc(iiiil::g unake. WhatOod Is alleged to have Joined togetherIs often sawn asunder by the nimble- -liens of u professional tien. The longrevered mid worshipful matrimonialknot is In too many dallyIng to have been tied with a lustful

of sand. However aolemn andawe Inspiring the ceremony performednt thn nuptials thu knot lano tighter tied than the will, purposeand love of the haveptedetermlued It shall lie. The mindIs tho seat of ronjiual fellcltv, thesanctuary where the divine union offoul Is consummated, Ceremony ap-peals to fenso and mav serve recollection, but Hod alone can liquefy spirit andjinur two instinct personalities Into aslfglfi mould, theieby joining togetherwhnt no man not even a Master Inin. ...... ... . . . ...i.'ii,ii-- . oy ins tucnemic process oilegal sepniatlon. can nut asunder.

".ttinils so run together cannot turnHuman language lias denonil

nated home Into a bedlam of Infelicity,nor go staggering and down thehighway of life seeking to indulgeinise concepts in unsatisfying nonspiritual practices. The pendulum oflife swings out from the centre Itscircumference, controlled by lawof gravity and by a law of Its regres-sion, swings back perpendicular toits base, where It waits on reaction andtne law or retribution, tolling out thesejiteme Separation, Separation nndueatn.

"I nuirojch the marriage relation-al. IP of K. T Dinger and his wife,niKr uinger. more than a sensio jieriorm a professional or perfunetory ottlelal duty They are In the eyeof the law mote tluii discordantIndltldiiallllis. The) are by law, lius- -t'.tiMi tvne une.

in mis report I am not trving tothrow a halo of sanctity aininiilnnd Alice as man and wife, nor

octroi incirs a ease ror ypvcl.il con-dolence nnd tear dropping, hrard andrend the testimony in this ease and Imi.had opportunity to obserte Ixith parties

mis sun nnd am satisfied that theugerous manifestations of temperamentlire surrielentlt liichm to mn ilunthey hate neter Jointly euteteil the melt-ing put of self. sact itlce, in the lalsiratoiyof sltlKli-lies- of purK)e with a desire towork for their common irood Tha enni.Ing or refusing to reeonimend the raer"f th" petitioner In tl.vorce may seem toworn a nnriisnip and eten collaterallydo an Injustice to some Innocent personnt time, as in the of the littlechildren of thee patents. Toorphatiatv a chllil, even by legal process,N an act serious and far reachingthan to bombard a cathedral."

In a ditoico rase, the children of theparties arc waids of the tourt, which Is(oncerned with their welfare ami notwith the wishes of either of the parents,nnd which has the power and the dutyto see to their welfare when the matterIs properly brought to its attention.Houghton VI. Houghton, S. D It.T N. W.3K.

"In the present lase tha widow Isear of nge. on both sides a

nbll ttiA tlil ...... 1.. .I......,,,,. t.oetermine th. probableduration or Per widowhood, and therefore the present table of homesteadestate could not U' ,it.ei t, lined andawarded io in gross fo us alsowidowhood l an uncharted sea whoseshores the future veils from sight. How

liefoie her bark reach a hutenwe cannot guess, though we are informedby the Insurance Department that InI Europe there are tallies determining theexpectant'' of tvltlow hood nt differentngc, tint that such tables are nut in useill the I'mted State" " Per Vluje, .1, InIn re S.tdow, liil Wis. 15 1 V.371.

itet.'islim a Judgment for 110.000 ob-

tained b a who sued ituotlierwoman for alien. iting Hie affections oflier husband. Chief Justice l'eemer ofIowa in vs. neisnmaii saiu : "ine i

case differs sotnowh.it from one whereu man awu the affections of awife. In such affair the Is gen-eial-

the aggressor. Hy nature It Is themale of the species, ami not the female,who makes such ndvumes. is not trueIn such matter that the female 1" moredeadly than tho male. Of comse, a

In the c.ttegort of cats, monkeys, par.lots, singing birds and similar animal"kept for pleasure, curiosity or caprice"Hrown, In Sentell ts, New Orleans,&c, It. Co. A f. T01

The hnhils'of the mule ale discussed111 the derision of Justice of Ken-tuck- y

lu Consolidated Coal Comp.ui tsPratt. In which the said

The kicking piopenslty of tne muleit mailer of common knowledge and has

the subject of. comment from theearliest time, it Is almost universallyrecognl.i'd ns the f.ut that a duck willstvlm or a cat will scratch However, aduck cannot Indulge bis propensit with-out water and ordinarily a cat will notscratch unless Irritated or attacked. Hutthe mule requires no particular settingfor the exercise of Ids high prerogative.He Is liable to nt any ami noone can plead Ignorance of this

"

The question of whether menialresulting from delay lu the ilellv-ti- y

of it casket and grave g.ivuthe shipper a cause of action for damagesagainst an company was beforethe Hulled Slates Supreme Court inSouthern Kxpiess Co vs Hyers, 240C S. fill'. Holding that no cause of actionresulted, Justice .Mcltcyholds for tliucourt m.i Itl "Having been requested Inapt time, the li) court refuses lothe Jury as follows 'As the shipment

Is allegtsl to have been delayedwas a shipment lu Interstate rnminercnnnd as Hie damage claimed by the plain-tiff Is damage for mental suffering onlyon nccount of the delay of tho deliveryof said shipment, the court Instructs theJury that limit r Hie evidence In this caaethe plaintiff Is not entitled to recover anysuch damage: the Jury is therefore

to render a verdict for the de-

fendant ' Thh Instruction should havebeen given. The action Is based upon itclaim mental suffering only nothingelse wan set up the proof disclosesno other Injury which compensationhad lint heeu made, In such cliciim-stance- s

as those presented heie the longrecognized common law rule permitted

thn dcclsiomi to thin effecttqion the elementary principle

mere mental pain and atixlet are toovague for legal redress wlieie no InjuryIs done to pei'bun, property, health orreputation.' "

in fine the draw, anil JTJ.nK, that are woman may become so deputed,In matters, as to becaul straights tu Hushes, tt Ithout.i worse than the man. but even the

,t tlflli that I" good enough to make. lnl,e Mlay make,, the Hrst advances-.-a pair of Ji ks or belter. This wouldIndicate that it ST o lis against Jacks "The ver.t fact that thet idogs)or better, and onlv nr. to In ngalnt the wltliout the protection of the criminal

ll.iws shows that propert In tlogs is ofThe number of players in the j !(M Imllrf,.cl r ..alllle.l nature nnd thatgame has nothing to do with It. he stand, as ll were, between anl- -

' ii'.iist fene natur.e, In which, until killedM T, A bets tho limit and r subdued, there Is no property, and

A s'liows a pair of kings. II domestic animals. In which the right ofhows a pair oi ace" tlirte cards properly is ptrfect and complete They

face down, saying thai enough to are not considered as being Uhhi thebeat A Another pla.ver, not in the same plane with horses, cattle, sheep andcull, demand" to see It's whole hand. ! other domesticated itiiimal", but rather

faceis to show pair th:t

beat the other

C I. , rows Iosee areand A so

Yt s. because A hummed to call, butiitlse, lie end

It o "

to lli.it lie borrowto

W

A asksin top proceeds to shuttlii

the last with theA t lie. card A bets lie

I" the caul.ugalnst the

the of the andthn in the Tills Is to

ofanil the d.ier's

being icgiilaled accordiiigl

upside down.

tl. bits thewhether

sln.vers

It eaids

lie Is

show andI co

T. .l. mistakeinanv,

lie daes noticehe card frnni the

name caulIt his

lo correct thowith

crib Is theIs the

butHi 11.

a

it.

cases prov-

rope

connubial parties

t...

wnnt

up

ofthe

Willi

two

uiui

TDinger

u"

coin

case

more

Counsel.w.,,k.

her

her

long will

325, N.

wife

stealsman

It

.1,I S.

Cln

courtis

I'Ct'llas

kick time

clothes

express

charge,

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bobtail.

11

f

CHESS FOR PLAYER,

LOVER AND STUDENT

Koslic Wants to IMny Kitlicr 7

riinjos or Sho-

wn

III11

It or. 12I.I

1

If.in

A QTIKT SUMMER SKAS0X 17IS

thoThe liungariati master Horls Kostlc ni

todoes not care to remain Idle. He Is try toing pretty hnrd to arrange a match withthe local crack Oscar Chajes, the secre-tary of the Isaac I.. Itlce Progressive

9by

Chess Club, slid It Is stated at the head-quarters of that club that such a con betest would be looked upon rather favor-ably, lathe more no as this actlte club Is

desirous or making things lively for their Kt

members even at midsummer time, llotlimen would be wilting to plav for h com-paratively small purse, and It Is belleted Pthat It could be easily subscribed for byenthusiastic members of tho club, seeing tothat both these plnets lire rather popu-lar nnd that such a contest would be lahighly Interesting, As Is well known,tho styles of the two blasters differmuch, nnd this circumstance Is sure toproduce some very fine, exciting mid Interestlng chess. When this subject wasdiscussed at the clubrooms one uay lllast week. It became evident Hint Chajeswould at once be declared u favorite, and IS

even Koslic himself admitted that hewould have a pretty stiff tight before him,but that he would do bis best to give ugood account of himself.

Simultaneously with this scheme theHungarian master sent i letter to Jackson W Showalter, congratulating himon his splendid tlclory ovr Norman TWhltaket. At the same time lie proposedto play n match with Hhowaltir underf miliar conditions us were prevalent Inthe Showalter-Whltnk- er bout. Inasmuchas Kostlc proposed tery easy terms asfar as the fluunrlal part nf the contest Isconcerned, it Is confidently expected thatthe Kentucklan nnd his friends attleorgetnwn and Lexington will be readyto accommodate the Hungarian master,the moie so as the latter has offeietl Showalter to stay with him the lest of thesummer In order to coach him b meansof practice games for unothei match forthe championship of the 1 tilted Staleswith Marshall, should Showalter maKup his ii. hid to enter the field again forUnited States championship Illinois

Otherwise It seems most likely that tuesummer season will not be any moreproductive this yent than formerly Inaddition to tho two matches retortedto ii bote there is nothing on the pro-gramme In tills country with the ex-

ception of the Buffalo meeting, aboutwhich pittltiiinrs were gtten in thesecolumns Inst Sunday, and the met ting ofthe Wf stern Chess Association whblt isscheduled t take place at Chicago, How-ete- r,

It Is Just as well for chess platersto have a rest during the coming months,There will be plenty of good games tobe plajeil nt Huffalo on. I Chicago, andmoreover the games from the ("open,bageii International tournament, aboutwinch reference was made In these col-

umn" ls"t week, will retch this e'ty Inspite of the Irregular postal connectionsI.ociillt, wsth one txceptlon, namely. HieEmpire Pity Chess Club, the popular up-

town resort, things will be pretty unlet.Tlit Umpire men, hiweter, are reportedto have made arrangements to engage Inmidsummer contests right along.

The tent of the games finm thecontest, not gltt-- be-

fore, are herewith pieM-nte-d to the iead-ei- s

of the Sun :

FIHST (l.tMK-QPK-KN S ti.ttlltIT Hi:- -

ci,im:i)ShowattiT WhliaWer. Miosiilicr Whlt il.t-- r

While Illack. ' While III i.U1 I'- - OI I 04 2tl I'll' i b Ki-

lling2 Kt-K- III Kt Kill 27 UtOtli.1 I' III I'-- 2S V , li u4 Kt ill uit-g- 'j 20 P K4 f in.a li-- 2 I .10 Kt K'l ll gi'n I'- - K:i Pasties ai it pith7 o KM p in .12 It tit Ktxits lll'xl' KI'll' .1.1 I'll It lit iV II-- I'll.-- . " .11 I' KS It Kt

III It K .1. I'vltili till'Castles, Kt II an li li1.' Kt KJ

12 Kt-- i' Kin a: ii in lit gii:i HiKt llxll as p in Kt Kl'.14 V 114 II K I :ei It li- -' I' lit.15 11 III lllKl in p liltl Kt IIIIII lll'xl) II Kl o li lit Kl 114

17 OK-- 0 Kt KM 1.' It- - K4 lit litis P KKtl O Kt I 4 I I1 Kl! I' guttil Ktxl' tit Id II I' M'. I' It I

20 II Kl Kit l.i l.'t I' 111 Itl Kjj, jj, m II III iii It gt Kl IIIj2 llxll Ktvll 47 11 g--

. liltlJ.l l)K K Oil II IS It oil ill li li'.'

P KKtl i'i llxylitl' lit litTihg lJ si l It

FHCOXH UAJ.tr. iter i.ot'iiz .

WhtlaUer liositller liit,il,er sleewdi,,,- -

Willie lltack. White lll.i.'l,I I' Kl P- - K4 3. It II tttltpJ Kt Kill Kt gin JO It 11.' It lis.1 II- - Kt.t l' yit i '.'7 lit II.- It lit i.N4 II Itl Kt III Js It Ks y It. I

, ltllfs - yt Sit y lit I it Itur, Kt III n I..' an y Kt It gv.li7 HiKt ill I'xll .ii K Its I' gis I' yi I'll' is Kttlt I'vKIo Ktxl' li ys a.i It yj g Kilt

in o y I t'ssi lea it t It ll t ytl'cti11 Is MU I' III :r. li it Ittl.l'i K Kt t! It ti-

llan I'ti' It lit, Ki.

Kl Kt Kl I Kit .17 It till y ii i

14 II Kt.'t I' It.l as It y.'i lilt.: yot.t ItxKt yxll ' :to y Kts tu It l

in Kt y tj-- g 411 yxr It. liil KSi; git g 11 Ml 41 0 Kill I' i.e.is v gut 11 III is y lit gvt.iin i' At HiKt ta I'xy It K7so gill II Kl 1 K fits I' IIIsi r ki i I' gut t.t Itxl! -- ' llxll . ll

'.. o yj ' I' 14. Hi II- - IIS ! g721 PxP It Kl.'t 17 Kxlt I' llIH'Wa g n- - g K lieslttusTHiitn rami: gt HKNs tiVMiiiT nn

ri.txniiSiiofsller VVIiit.iker shottidi W llll.lker

Vtblle lllmk. VVhlle Ilia. I,

i i' y p yi IK Kll'tl' I' OKUS Kt lilll lit -- Kill in p yn l'lit I' 114 I'- K.I SO Mil' llxll4 Kl II I glit-g- s si yiit Kl I,' I,. II Kl.". ti - KS ss Pl' t,i Kllihn I' Kit Kl K.'i s i li it KUKI'7 litvlil I'xlil si it K 1st g Itls Hill ytit s.--

. g ks I' II'.II Kl ys r Kin Sll Kl lit I' Kt

Ill I' II'. I 'list I- t- S7 p y7 It KSII II III li It Ss Ktxl- - ItxKiIS t '.nl lea I' Kl s' yit yn it y.ta y lis lit III an It 117 it g

i i in ii gs .11 Kit (HI y gii.--i i' yiiti Oil li as Itxl' it i,i,in .t v yiiit ItlMUIIs17 Ki Kit KI'xP

SIXTH 11 ami: itrv t.ori:Wbltnlier Slios.'tll VV hi1.il.i - -- li, .w .ill,.

While Illack Willi. llla.l.I I'- K I I' Kl Illtt liil II It I

S Kl Kill lit gll.'l 50 Kl H i llvlilI it iti. 51 Kill I' Klil1 11 Itl Kl III '.'. g it i I'xlil

,', I 'asl les I' gt si gi ni-si

It liC. It K i gut i I' Kill I' gut7 Ki gut - It gi II KISh p-- gi littii sn yxP li liali ItPxKt lii ys '.'7 It Kit g in

111 l'xl' Kur ss it g '.'vy11 II lit tit lit.) so i'xy it in12 11 lit. I II KS an it Kit K II

ii Ki-- yi II Kl.' ai it gt II It I

Kt gin fast lea as it iti It li-

ltis ft II lilt :u I' KKtl ll--,

ini.'it g Kl lit :n it Kin not17 Oil llxll Iteslu'liais Kt-- y. P lit I

SRVKXTH AND r.AMH -- QI'IHIN.'IIAMIIIT lli:ri.l.Ni:ii

Mm alt or hll.lkl'i-Illack- . Muni ,lt r Ul.ll.ilolVVhlle White lll.iik

i p-- p lia ' ss g-l- ti i li K KlSa p gt S'.l I' II'. r mia Kt gin lit Kill :illlit 11.tell K lit, I

4 li lis a p Hi'. lit 1.1 1

a l'-- KI-- ' as Kt III th li KlSii llxll gxli a i gig Kity7 II-- I Ktilit :ti it lit it iK I'xKt pip at lit yt M tino noil' P K4 Mil llxlil I' U.l

10 It Kt I'aatllM .17 llxlil' K II I

11 Kl lit Kt US as p lt:t It li '

IS rastlos 7. m it nn IV Vi:i Kt-- r.l III '.l K-- .k tal ''14 It Kl.l P III i it r fit r inin Itoil' , IS II IIS ll K.iIII It li.". g us I.I I' 117 ll li17 n Kts II Itxl' notih g Ki.i km ii ' I.-

-, llxll itxl'lii Itxlt ch itxit 111 It II.', i ll K l,Hso It H I' KKtl 17 Itxl' it il.' tlisi lit ll I'- Kill IS K 111. I li

.

ss g Kt,' K II III It III. ill K Kin '

s.i P Kl.t .Ml It l.llitll it litsi g- - Kt.'t 'J It OIIO it iiS.'i PxP Pxl' .2 It II i it lusn Kt Kl I II II ,vi l y i Ite.imi- -S7 P gut II Kt

Appended is Hie lln.il s. me o i nmatch between 1. I Hsiiui .ind "

11

White In the championship tournamentui iiic iiainpsienu v.ness t,iuu.

HttY LOPEZ.Kstrln. White. Katrln. White,While. Ulaik. Whltn. Illack.PP-K- 4 P-- 20 QKt-Q- 2 .Kt-K- ul

2 Kt K 11.1 Kt- - on.i 31 Kll-- K II ItJ:i It Kit II- - Ilia J2 I'- - US O-- llI illes& I 2.1 Kt Ql

H t.1 24 Kiiw-n- a n--

a ll-- lt tr 10 I'-- ll- -l

II K lOse 20 P-- It-- W

SOT" lit-I- II 27 Kt-II- A .

t'oallittf 2X ilxKinlt-K- an q-i- It It 4II 02 an itxKt r.

I' OI It M.I :il o-- K itt

I'llil' Kl-- K :i2 i.i O 02a.t o k.i Kit Kt

II ty, V III'; :i4 Ktxl' II Kl-l- o

inr en llxll a;. It-- n KxlttI'll Klxl an K-- Kt

Ox lit-I- II- - Kt :t7 I2

O OI O 112 at ch Itwlgnt Tina la rnnen tha rias.leat itareivt taI.ope It is one 4t tlii weakest niat'uMmerlin the altactt. ns II enani; wrjlogain tune by playlnt P 113, threateningatlacU Hie bishop by I'-- OI.

i'.i Thn usual ami perhaps atronier contitiuatioii la I' tu nt once.

ni White now threaten" to win a pawnI'-- oi, v it.. ?, JI, VxV; t. l'xl. Ji-- lti:

P-- tn, I OKH; 10. I'xKt. Pxll: 11. Qxltl'.irfi The ndrnnee of the pawn weaken

bl.iili'a but II la doubtlul whetherhnd any lieiter move

ici The ttealtiiea of tho claslc.il defenceallow li by the t.irl that even nl Ihla atntti

black hail nn perfectly satisfactory more.IIS, the unit-- alternative tu thn text

move, would alo hare enabled while tosain Hie mlvautaie. e, x : ...Kt U3: x,

l'xl": I'll". H-- 10. II KIT.,lU Ki .: ii. ii- - q'.. o-- q: hi JI....H cji: n.

H.M. 1? ItxKKt, I'xll; . Q II and win.Ill stroncer than the tempting move It OS,

which, however, black's only satisfactoryreplv would have been 0.'.

in It would bate been better to play P !Mlore In order to prevent U Kt5.,! A. dautcroua move; K-- Kt would have

licen salertli The In-- " of a pawn could hara ben

avoided exchanging pawns before retir-lu- x

the II would hate tsen still ttoran thanthe text move, e t.'.. .I'll': M. PxP,

Kt '.i H I'-- KS, l'xl': If.. I'll', Kt K: l.l'xl' and wins If. Instead of H....KI KIt K, threatening: Pxl' and wins.

II Not 13. Ktxl', liecauaa of 14. TlxKt,Qxll; IS. II O"', winning the

(A) It- - Kt would have Wen better, Thatext move loea nnother pawn, atlcr whtcliblack a xamn la hoisleaa.

(Ii Overlooking while's intrenioua reply,lie nurht to have played B Kt, but Hisgame lot In any caae.

Iil Threatening to win at once by 0 Bt,nil Tin- - only niove to prolonr tho gameon If ::t . .KxKt. then 33,11 Il ch. K-- Ilt

O-- ami white tones mate In thrcs)more inovea,

(;o An itilerollur and Instructive game,excelbutly playeil tir while, but In whichMack waa handicapped by the Inferior de-fence Ii selected

Hntrits for the Itlce memorial Inter-national tournament:i'i:oni.i:.ti .'t c; motto: "TUB

VIKINO "mack 10 Plecea.

itsTi Pi M

m m mmm m .rs

Whit IO Pieces.White to pint- - and in tie In Hires move.

PltOHI.Ktl NO iiT'i MOTTO! "Wtl'tJUHIHN'K A rt'l' OI' KINPXKSS YBTT."

Itlnck 4 Pieces.

v,i.

r

Ra! f?'e f '

rrfl

el a 1.1 1 ' iV

Whit. 10 PleceaVV lilts to plav iiod mute lo two tnovea.

Mit.rriuN rn I'ltoiil.HM no 1T8.K - li."., i K'V ch A.I' 11'. J g t.'l h. Arc

gT. I' K'l. '.' i.'- - K.I . ll .Vfi'". J g- - Kts li. ttc,g7. 11 -- KtJ. '.' g Its ill. AC.

K K.'t '.' g - Kts 111 tie.sir: Itxl': '.' g K.i tune.--g7, I- t- Kl. '.' gtlt mate

)' ant otto r . III h ,c e.

MlI.t'TION tu I'm ihi.i;m no i;;t.,t it'i.,r s sobc "ii I It H": ,v

k' i Kit Hit It:: .v.,i,iio. is- - t. 1'i.iiiiein- - No i',7'l an '.T7

Trout ,l..hn New Vursxi t. I'l.-- Norm il I. rrr llr.iok It. N.

s ii ii,leh. liuliror.l I'.inii H -I

.tin. I II i .i i Hartford, t'l.nn , .1 I'.Iturril'. V. . t.alt i If Ilnjiim.n Adams,N.'.l Vi.tk it .In.ili II Mil. 111. llr.Mil.lt o,

t . N .1 I. tie N. w Y..ik do. John1'.1 I'.itik Sew t III t'll, Culm N .s'tern,

llri.i.klvii. X V

s,,,i,..i i.i I'riiblem N.. 0. il icelteilft .tin 1st mr ltln.i"i PUtsll. d. tins.

S...UI .'ii l" l'r..l..i'in No 'i'i tecelte.l- ni .l.iltn I. I.i'.iuln I '..tit tir.inite, X. J.;

It.. i'iiIii y.iok.o N,-t- t..rk .1 Henryy M 'tt it Yullki l X Y

I'oititr.srtisiir.N'i:.n II .ok tu. N v Veil may.a 'i.i -- iiluttoiis that reall

..III l.tl.ll'.l loli 'hi,!, o. I. ii aliillford. fonn Thli

o iiiii.-iiii- ilin ma iiiaiention orHvlir .i.f.itiuK li n,iihor aoiuiion orU- - KT i.tetrt.l 'a I'n, ni. in Xu f.TO anajl .1 1.. 11 iib'.on No 117

EAT PLENTY OF FRUIT.

lllll He attra- - It In I'letin, Snym

1 en 1 It I ooi mission er.lit' i. nt in I'i. I'li.t 1 I'lult and

veget il.les should be eaten free'v In thxx at iii we.iihei. s.tvs In s.nniiel !.

IiImi". State lieilili t'oiiiniissionei, b'ltit scould be .'.llffullc pit IU red Dr.IUxoii s adviie along this line is suminetlup thus

Inning the h"t wentbei' frtnls andtegil titles .ne a (ii'iessaiv pail of thatilt'. Mailt of tin so .ire IllOle appellzillg.tvlitiii t'tt.'ii taw Hemes. r,id,islies,cinoiis .in.l -- itl nl-- t appear regularly onthe ill. nil at Ibis anil have theirt allle as fond

"t'ne should si r i"t in the piepa- -rnlon and sort ing ol aieui I Is. how- -

evtr, as thet aie siili.lt.it to nm ll hand-ling lilt tt ' II the g.ll'th'l' and the mine.I till Hie bunds tin migli tic. tinyp.ls ille el i lean I net .lie tnotoor less i .i it it Hit It, I .In 1. 1. n.t inaiketginleiis Hie g. itli. rim: ' '! i.ttslucf Iseiiti listed to a i lass of line vv bicli is. notnut loo I ' eil i .illil i ale is It'' e- -t

i c's. il to I Usui e . t ill h -

"I'ooil i Miost'd toi' sat. ii n.iikett isalso often siibjei t to liuli- -. . inn ttc hand-ling h llioslicclive piilf'iasei . a 1. Isseldom Idopilly piotetled fi.nu tlust aiiijtllri

"As II lU'iltivt loll bet le ' oots utl'st .it en law should be ihoioii .t wiiebedbefol." lii'lllg "i r veil ll - ll ' H ! t'liisK a sllghl Impairment ' lie tlavu'than to chante eating m ' ' ""b

"Nlglit soli should not be 'cd f"igaiiblis fi fitii win ' Hu I'.siii.'o

milt be ealt u raw W'.t hmildnot be ilin it'd I stie.nn- - wo.'h nroliollnled bt sewage, .tl.u t . - ne onIt', Ol.l ttllioe lyplhihl let.' 'ii ".all'lfdfli.lll 1.1 lute lo obselte II. I r.' I'lllO'l."

Mites Ills lllrtls III H 1 ail. ii

Ni w iiiui.vvs. I ilt ni ni'ilto save the live- - of a ' songlords In bad hi cages Ii nm ng on the.lunch of his Inimi. hlHc Hi. tnl fham.bers. in. risked 'us lite ,o opet. ng theeayt s mil "" nc I' pi s tt inlo hishninn bin If' il ' ' ' .:'' Mr. nndMi- - i ' uiiiil'i tv ' c b th ,

molt ng "f i"i'" os ' i nd h.irelysn. ecd. ' dien In,,I o 'ft t s Holy out

' t .0 bill