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Page 1: The QTBflToIYE Tat - University of Kentuckynyx.uky.edu/dips/xt76t14tjr70/data/0141.pdf · t The Citizen Afinlly aewapspsr for ill that It rlfM true and Interesting tMbllthttl entry

t The CitizenAfinlly aewapspsr for ill that It rlf M

true and InterestingtMbllthttl entry Thuraday at sues Ky

BEREA PUBLISHING CO

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tnl7 Frost Editor and Manager

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KENTUCKY hlhSS AbbOCIATlOM

The daughter of Lombroso Is com-

Ing to this country to study our prlsons We may bo thankful after allthe other fulminations against It thatshe Isnt coming to study our society

All tho world Is ready to admirethe tasto of tho man who fell In lovewith a young woman and married herbecause she thanked him when hogave her his seat and when sho turnedand sat down her waist and skirt didnot separate

A Philadelphia man left his son lnlaw EO cents with which to buy a ropeto hang himself The beneficiary willprobably forego tho bequest ratherthan comply with Its conditions butIt Is certainly a terrible tale to comefrom the City of Brotherly Love

Prof D C Jackson of the Massa-chusetts Institute of Technology hasbeen retained by the Massachusettshighway commission to make a reportregarding the telephone situation withspecial reference to the practicabilityof a reduction in rates and a higherefficiency of service

The official denial of tho AbruzzlElkins engagement will shatter a romanco In which two continents weredeeply Interested and many will re ¬

fuse to give up tho hopo that the pathof true love may yet be smoothed fortho royal lover and the beautifulAmerican girl of his heart

Tho recent refrigeration congress InEurope has reminded a student of his-

tory that Francis Bacon made tho flrstexperiments in the use of snow for thepreservation of meat The people ofNew Zealand who havo been largelydependent on refrigerated meat haveshown their appreciation of Baconsdiscovery by erecting a statue of himsuitably inscribed

A minister recently read a be¬

fore a Congregational church confer ¬

enco in Boston In which he called at ¬

tentlon to the fact that in the membership of 56 churches In that vicinityonly one child to each church wasborn during the year His conclusionwas that Congregational families arcceasing to perpetuate themselves andthat Puritan stock Is dying out Presl ¬

dent Roosevelt ought to look into this

At the recent dedication in Bath ofa tablet to Edmund Burke WhitelawReid spoke in behalf of Americans inhonor of their best friend in GreatBritain Burke has become almost anational hero in America and it wasbe who phrased most eloquently manyprinciples that are part of our tradi ¬

tion His Speech on Conciliation Isa difficult piece for schoolboys but itought always to be a part of tho pre-scribed reading of young America

The OhioMississippi coal tradewhich persists today Is one of thegreatest single movements of cargo In

the world From Pittsburg to NewOrleans is 2000 miles all downhillCoal In 1000ton barges Is rafted Intofleets and towed down this distanceby powerful steamboats at a cost ofless than 76 cents a ton against arailroad rate of about four dollars andfifty centsfrom Pittsburg to Mem ¬

phis for 43 cents against a rail rateof =270

The president of the university ofIllinois has announced that dismissalwill in future be the punishment ofhazing which he denounces as a vio-lation of the right of Individualityprovocative of public disorder In Itsmilder forms nonsensical and in itscoarser forms vulgar brutal alwaysdemoralizing and sometimes danger ¬

ous Hence he says tho universitycannot countenance or tolerate ItSuch a stand in the opinion of tho In ¬

dianapolis Star generally imitatedwill soon end the practice

A Chicago burglar broko into a bospltalpltal and took everything but thepatients temperatures we presume

Our referendum among the leadingpersonalities of this country on thequestion What Is your opinion of the

l great men of Europe and Americal has resulted as follows Washington

and Napoleon arc the greatest favor-Ites after whom come Hannibal CteGar and Charles XII of SwedenAmong the most disliked are Brutus

j Cromwell and Darwin NlhanoyablNlhonjlu Tokyo

w

s

QTBflToIYEI7oDERY LIFE

I

TfPPIwc AIlUBBFR TIlEEJItOMAPHS ffEXCO

Rubber is one of tho great essentialsof modern industrial life With Ironor steel with copper and with glassJt may be compared In the diversityof Its use it has the advantage overthese and may bo compared In thislatter respect to corn wheat and thenecessary foods In that it is capableof eternal reproduction If mankind willbut apply to its cultivation his ex¬

perience and scientific knowledgeThere Is scarcely a device of dally

commerce Into which rubber docs notenter as a necessity and yet in thoannual statistical publication of thedepartment of commerce and JaborCommerce and Navigation of theUnited States the student will lookIn vain for the word rubber andnot until ho examines the word or thephrase Indlarubber India rubberor Indiarubber will he bo able tosee how vast and Important Is the sub-Ject before him This conservatismif the term may be hero appliedIstraceable throughout all the literatureof all the libraries of the Englishspeaking world The aboriginal nativeword describing the substance firstdiscovered by the early Europeans wascahuchu probably pronounced butsurely corrupted Into caoutchouc Thislatter word has spread into the lan ¬

guages of Europe In French it is thesame word In German the only modi ¬

fication is to substitute a k for the cand in Russian nearly the same changetakes place To be sure the Spanishuses frequently the word goma equiv ¬

alent to our gum and this Is mademore specific by adding the adjectiveelastica and the Portuguese has theword borracha but caucho Is com ¬

mercially well understood as might bosupposed from the first associationwith the source of supply Rubber orIndia rubber however is undoubtedlythe term which will continue to be em ¬

ployed in English to distinguish thisIndispensable product of the tropics

Caoutchouc directly explains thedescent of the gum and its adoptionInto arts but India rubber embracesnot only this history but conceals oneof the romances of tho industriesTravelers and It Is said Columbushimself was one of them noticed thatthe Indian Inhabitants of Americathought then to be an unkonwn portion of the Indies played ball with acurious substance grown in the primi ¬

tlvo forests and prepared accordingto native ways This substance wasalso made into shoes It formed aprotective coating for garments andfrom it were made bottles which couldbe squeezed together so as to eject tholiquid contents This substance wascalled caucho in some parts of Amer ¬

ica and the gatherers were caucherosIn other parts the gatherers were calledbecause of tho shape of the bottles andtho uses to which tho Portuguese sawthem put serlngciros sjringemenFrom this origin tho India prefix oftho word Is derived At first the gumgoma elastica according to tho Span ¬

ish was merely a curiosity It wasImported into Europe and studiedchemically with great Interest Itwas mado Into tubes and put to prac ¬

tical use in the laboratory But In 1770the English chemist Priestley recom ¬

mended tho use of the gum for effac-ing

¬

tho marks of the lead pencil Itrubbed out these marks land wastherefore a rubber It became morewidely known as experiment nhowed Itsvalue and In 1823 Ma lntonli discovstud tile method of wntcroruoflne gar

1

RUBBER flArliFREIIJ tOfteort THEPPER ASMZOSf RV5f A

ments and added another ford to tievocabulary From this date India rub-

ber¬

was more and more an article ofcommerce It served many purposesbut it also balked the Inventors inmany directions In which they hathoped it might bo applied Experlments wero constantly being madeoven tho incorporation of sulphur hadbeen tried but It was not until 183Jthat Nelson Goodyear in the TJtiltcdStates hit upon a practical method olcombining rubber with sulphur so al-

to retain all Its good unique propertics while losing those that had madeit hitherto unsuitable This procesiwas called vulcanization

Rubber India rubberIs u dcflnltichemical combination of carbon anthydrogen expressed by tho propertlonate formula C5 H8 or CIO HitIt is a whitish solid opaque scarcereacted upon by the ordinary solventsbut forming fluid or gelatinous massewith the ethers and the coaltar outAll this refers of course to the dietsically pure rubber It will also melland burn Physically rubber witstretch and when tenslea Is releasedIts mass returns to tho oilglnal postlion and form Unfortunately howover rubber In the pure state halthree awkward qualities It loses thlidistensibility at certain degrees olheat and cold It softens under heatand has a great tendency to stick toItself or to other masses of rubloiwith which It Is brought in contactNow these three qualities of rubberas refined after entering tho marketfrom the tropical forests are overcraoewhen It is mixed with sulphur thatIs vulcanized It can then bo moldedInto various shapes and still remaindistensible The degrees ot temperature between which it retains thesegood qualities are very much widerapart so that climatic changes areless felt by the manufactured productand consequently rubber articles of anInfinitely more varied typo can boturned out from the factories Vul ¬

canized rubber is therefore tho sub ¬

stance really implied ordinarily by theword alone

Max Pemberton First BookMax Pembertons first book was

called The Diary of a Scoundrel andhe had the usual trials and tribula ¬

tions with it Soon after Its publica ¬

tion ho received a letter from a firmof wellknown solicitors complainingthat he had grossly libelled a client ottheirs Tho publisher of tho book wasIn a stato of alarm and Mr Pember ¬

ton took the bull by tho horns andwent to see the lawyers He was atonce shown Into tho principals room

Your client claims to bo the originalof this picture doesnt she the au¬

thor askedSho does was the replyHave you read the book contin ¬

ued the authorNo I havent-Is there any trouble about the age

of my characters and the lady yourepresent was Mr Pcmbertons nextquestion

Why do you ask exclaimed tho

lawyerBecausesaid Pemberton my

character happens to bo seven yearsoldThe lawsuit fizzled out but the bookdid not sell and Mr Pemberton de-clares to hIs positive knowledge thatthere was only otto copy ever boughtby anybody and that was by a friendot his Tho friend asked the boy inthe book shop for The Diary of aScoundrel

Humph ejaculated the boy look¬

ing up I suppose that is tho personar experience of tho author aintIU

Plants Grow In DarknessWhile many plants close their petals

or fold their leaves as darkness ap-proaches the testimony of most scientists is to the effect that none ceaseto grow A serIes of experiments wasrecently made In the east with quickgrowing plants such as asparagus let ¬

taco radishes and tho like with aview of ascertaining whether thegrowth continues at nlgnt with asgreat rapidity as during the day Theresult determined that while thegrowth is continual with moat plantsit is by no means so rapid during thedark hours as during the Ucftt Thereare however many exception to thisnot a few plants being nocturnal andgrowing more and fester during thenight than In the daytime Thesehowever are usually tropical andtheir habitat is commonly in denseforests when oven during tbo daytime co great amount of light la ableto penetrate

MAY OMIT INCOME TAX

FROM TARIFF MEASURE

Many Congressmen Agree With TatIt Should Not Be Adopted Unless

Needed for Revenue

Washington April 2GFrequent uttcrnnccs by President Taft expressiveof the hope that congress wilt hastethe passage of tits tariff bill in orderthat business may bo restored tOltdnormal condition at the earliest paulblo day may postpone tho real test ofstrength over the income tax propoaltion At tho present tlmo sentimentof tho senate Is pretty evenly dividefor and against an Income tax amend-ment to tho pending bill and theroIare many differences of opinion amongthose favoring tho idea as to detailof tho legislation Some senators be-lieve it is Impractical to tax laconicof less than 50000 whllo others beHove It will be necessary to go as low

as32000Thorn

are others who argue that thefixing of a minimum of any figure witresult In unfair discrimination andfurthermore many of the championof tho proposition to tax Incomes talethe position that It will require tinto work out a satisfactory plan toreach corporations

Added to all these complications Is

the fact that estimates of possible revenues from a tax on Incomes differ tosuch an extent that the whole Idea Isplaced by many in tho realm of exporl merit

Many members of congress believewith President Taft that the inconutax amendment should not be addedunless It can be shown that it is need-

ed to produce revenueMembers of the finance committee

declare that tho Payne bill as amendcd by the committee will yield sumcleat revenues for the operating expenses of the government-

If tho truth of this statement is est-

ablished it will turn a number ofvotes away from the income taxamendment unless the bill Is materially amended so as to reduce the rateon necessaries and likewise the revcanes from imports on all such articlesos to offset the collections that wouldbo mado upon Incomes

HURLED FROM MOTOR CYCLE

Earhard Went Over Fence Into Audi

ence Where He Fatally InjuredTwo Spectators

Los Angeles Cal April 2GTwospectators werb probably fatally injured and a third suffered a spralnciright wrist Sunday afternoon whetAl Earhardt riding a fivehorsopowed motor cycle struck the fence at litColiseum park Tho force of the impact was such as to hurl Earhardover tho fourtoot board fence into titaudience In the grandstand on thnorth side Ho struck two men Howand H Piper of Los Angeles andCharles IL Henry of Hiawatha Kanon tho head knocking both men unconEcious Piper suffered a basal fractureof the skull and Henry a dislocatedvertebrae and both will probably dieR Boyd was the third man In Earhardta path and ho sustained a badlysprained right arm and wrist

After hitting the three men Earhardrstruck the fence at the end of thestand broke out a board and went orthrough feet first to tho ground 20

feet below escaping with no moreserious injury than a brulso underthe right arm Tho cause of the accldent was a bump between Earhardand Freddy Huyck tho Chicago rideras the two men ran onto the northcurve at more than a mllo aminute

Bomb Exploded In a ChurchNow Orleans La April 6Wild

excitement was caused in Chartedstreet Sunday afternoon by an explo-sion of a supposed bomb in the towerof the famous old St Louis cathedralThe shock was felt for a number piblocks A riot call was sent in and anumber of arrests were made The explosion occurred at a time when therewere few worshipers in the church andno one was injured The damageamounts to about 12000 Tho policeexpress the belief that dissensionamong somo of a party of Italian workmen engaged In making repairs in thosouth tower of tho church was res-

ponsible for the explosion

Fire Raging In Kansas City MoKansas City Mo April 26Flre

started at 2 oclock Monday morningin the Ridge building a sevenstorystructure In the heart of the down-town business district The buildingwas apparently doomed at 216 theentire Interior being a mass of flamesThe National Bank of Commerce andother large office buildings Immedlately adjoining the Ridge buildingwere threatened tho fire being fannedby a stiff wind At 225 a m the firehad spread to Main street Tho sparkat this time were being driven threeblocks away and tho burning of morobuildings was regarded as certain

Jealousy Cause of KillingWlnstonSalcm N C April 26

George Busbee aged 35 years andmarried was shot and killed In hishomo In East Winston by EarnestHorn a young man who boarded atthe Busbee home Jealousy was thecause Horn was arrested

Fooled the OfficersBontonvlllo Ark April 2GAftet he

had filed on E Miller tho bullet passIng through the mans coat but Inflicting no injury C Graham 78 shot andkilled himself at his homo now horswhile in the custody of the officers

ILLINOIS WOMAN THE VICTOR

MRS MATTHEW T SCOTT TO

HEAD D A R

Administration Candidate Defeats MrsStory of New York by

Eight Votes

Washington Men and womenof Illinois hero in Washington arehappy over tho victory of MrsMatthew T Scott of Bloomington In her race for the presidency ofthe Daughters of the American Rovelution Backed by the administrationMrs Scott defeated her rival MrsWilliam Cummings Story of NewYork 436 to 428

Mrs Scotts election was a victoryfor tho administration faction Anumber of delegates refused to makethe election unanimous on Mrs StorysmotionTho

second office In point of honorthat of vicepresident general Incharge of organizations howeverwent to Urn onN administration fol-

lowers by tho election of Mrs MirandaB Tulloch of this city

Tho congress approved tho electionof the various state regents Thuy in-

cluded the following Alabama MrsRobert A McClellan Arizona Mrs

Mrs Matthew D Scott

Walter Talbot Arkansas Mrs JohnHarrow California Mrs Frederick JLaird Colorado Mrs Frank WheatonFlorida Mrs J M Mahoney GeorgiaMrs P W Godfrey Idaho Mrs DavidII Tarr Illinois Mrs John C AmesIndiana Mrs John J Dlnwlddle IowaMiss Harriet Lake Kansas MrsGeorge T Guernsey Kentucky MrsSarah II Chcnault Michigan Mrs JP Drayton Minnesota Mrs Edgar HLoyhed Missouri Mrs Samuel G

Green Montana Mrs Emil H RenUch Nebraska Mrs O S WardNew Mexico Mrs 1 B PrinceOhio Mrs Clayton R Trucsdall Oklahoma Mrs William J Pettee Pennsylvania Mrs H P Perley South Carolina Mrs Robert M Bratton Tennessee Mrs William G SpencerTexas Mrs Seabrook W SydnorWashington Mrs D A Gave WestVirginia Mrs R H Edmondson Wiscousin Mrs Ogden II Fethers Wy-

oming Mrs H B Patten

LAKE SHIP SINKS FIVE DEAD

Steamer Eber Ward Strike Ice FloeIn Lake Michigan and Goes

to Bottom

Mackinaw Mich nro men weredrowned Tuesday when tho steamerEbor Ward collided with a heavy Icefloe and sank five miles west of here

Tho dead are John Horn JamesPerry John Meberoth Kinney McKayand an unidentified deckhand

Tho survivors aro Capt T Lo MayFirst Mate A P Gallno Chief Engineer Frank Baldwin Second Engineer S R Shipman WheelsmenCharles Lester and Frank DutchDeckhand August Palmer StewardJohn Wlnterhaler and Mrs Winterbaler and Al Quln

The boat went to the bottom In oneof the deepest spots of the Straits ofMackinaw and will bo a total loss to-

gether with her cargo of corn Showas bound from Milwaukee to PortHuron Mich

80 completely was the bow of thesteamer shattered by tbo collisionwith tho ice lice that she was floodedfrom stem to stern almost InstantlyFive of her crew were caught withoutwarning asleep in their bunks andwent to the bottom with tho sinkingsteamer

No Parole for Stentland NowJollot 111 Paula Bteniland

will not bo pardoned nor paroledat present In spite of a most eloquentappeal made In his behalf by AttorneyClarenco Darrow of Chicago Tues ¬

day afternoon While tho decision ofthe board bad not been made publicand will not bo until the official reportof the board Is made to GOT Deaconat Springfield tho attitude of theboard is known

Commits Suicide on Husbands GraveDetroit MichMrs Amy Wilkie 30

years old whoso husband died lastNovember was found dead Fridaylying on her husbands grave in theGerman Lutheran cemetery A car-

bolic¬

acid bottle and a small glasslay near the body-

ExSenator Stewart DeadWashington Tho body of former

United States Senator William M

Stewart of Nevada who died atGeorgetown hospital Friday will betaken to Nevada for burial Saturday

oDu-tiUV

PENALTY OF INTEMPERANCE

Drunkenness Fills Our Prisons InsaneAsylums and WorkhousesCauses-

Debility and Sickness

Drunkenness Is of no recent dateIt abetted tho first dishonor of parentsof which wo read In tho Word of God

Gen 92025 Its fruits are sin oftho worst kind writes Mrs M BaxterIn the Christian Herald And God haspronounced this powerful woo to thedrunkards Woo unto then thatrlso up early In tho morning thatthey may follow strong drink thatcontinue until night till wine Inflamethem I And the harp and the viol

tho tabret and pipe and wiiio are In

heir feasts but they regard jot tilework of the Lord neither consider theoperation of his hands Therefore mypeople are gone Into captivity becausethey have no knowledge and theirhonorable men aro tarnished and theirmultitude dried up with thirst Therefore hell hath enlarged herself andopened her mouth without measureand their glory and their multitudenail their pomp and he that rololcethshall descend into It lsn 51114 W-

It is no light thing when God himself declares that hell hath enlargedherself and opened her mouth withoutmeasure because of the drunkennesswhich Is found upon tho face of thisour earth Hut does he overstate thotruth Who flll our prisons In It nottho drunkards Who fill our lunaticasylums Is It not tho drunkardsWho fill our workhouses Is It nottho drunkards Who fill our lies ¬

pital Ask tho medical men what liesat tho root of much of tho sicknessand debility of those who are carriedinto hospitals Is It not tho drink whichIs often tho cause Yes hell hathenlarged herself Tho words whichcomo from tho drunkards lips savorof hell tho acts which come from thodrunkards hands savor of hell Lookat his homo his poor wife boatersblack and blue his poor children ragend nnd shoeless his furniture brokenthe panes out of his window tho gratewithout fire tho bedstead without bed ¬

ding What has done It al1 Surelythe cursed drink against which Godutters his woe

But Gods woo goes out also to thosewho encourage others to drink Woounto him that glvath his neighbordrink that puttost thy bottlo to himand rankest hint drunken alsoDrunkenness IM contagious one drunk-ard

¬

makes moro God says of thodrunkards of Kplirnlm that theirglorious beauty Is a fading flower

that shall bo trodden under foot andalia not simply common people haveerred through wine and throughstrong drink are out of tire way buttho priests and tho prophets haveerred through strong drink they are

swallowed up of wino they are out oftho way through strong drink theyerr In wisdom they stumble In judg ¬

ment For nil tables are full of vomitand filthiness so that there is no place

cleanStrongdrink Is In Itself displeasing

to God Wino Is a mocker strongdrink Is raging And again Winoand new wine take away tho heartIn the tabernacle the priests of Godwore not allowed to touch It when theyexercised their ministry The Lordspake unto Aaron saying Do notdrink wine nor strong drink thou northy sons with lice when ye go intotho tabernacle of the congregation lest70 die It shall bo a statute for overthroughout your generations Andtho same command Is repeated Ezek442123 In the prophecy of thotemple yet to be rebuilt In JerusalemGods priests must bo holy unto theLord Nothing hinders our sensitiveness to the Spirit of tho Lord so muchas being slaves to another spiritMany a Christian who has been a mod-

erate drinker Iran found that wine hin ¬

ders prayer and communion with Godand though it may nover have been atemptation to them as to many othersthey are conscious that for their soulswelfare they were bettor without IU

Total Prohibition for IcelandRecent reports from tho Danish col

ony of Iceland show a further advancefor tho 5auso of temperance Lastrmonth this northern Island celebratedthe twentyfifth anniversary of tho establlshment of Good Templary Byorder of tho bishop a general thanks¬

giving took place In all the sate +

churches of the landFurther encouraging news Is sot

forth In tho report of tho result of avote taken on tho question of absolute ¬

ly prohibiting the sale of Intoxicating 1

liquor in the Island Returns had beenreceived from 21 out ot 27 electoraldistricts and the voto stood as fol ¬

lowsFor prohibition 7271Against prohibition 2611

Majority 4660-The smaller nnd more remote elec

toral districts still to bo heard fromcannot change tho result so that ab-solute prohibition of tho importationand sale of strong drink will soon bean accomplished fact In the islandcolony

Saloons arent good asthey used to bo In 1908 nearly 6000 i

of them had to roao But thero areJstill 230000 of them to bo shut up J

Tho drinker Is simply amusing him ¬

self with the rattle of his chainswhen he brags of his power of moder-ation

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