OCR Text |
Show terised the activity of the imperial jiEIS J j i ' German navy within the war zone in substantial accord with the accepted practices of regulated warfare. 'The whole world has looked with Interest and increasing satisfaction at the demonstration ol that possibility by German naval ccr iiRand-erIt Is manifest) possible therefore, to lift the whole prmtKe o sub e marine attack the which it has aroused and remove the chief causes of offense In view' Admission rtf I gniity made by the imjxral gnvernmi pt when it pleaded the nglit of in defense of rfs acts and view of the manifest possibility of to the established rules of nival warfare, the government of the In't-e- d States cannot lielieve that the imperial government will longer refrain from disavowing ih wanton of its naval commander in sink ng the or from offerng reparation for the American lives lost, so far avrepw. ration cant be nude for a needless destruction of human life by an lileg.il act. Suggestion Not Accepted. The government of the United States, while not Indifferent to the lriendly spirit ln which It is made, cannot accept the suggestion of jibe imperial government that certain ves-aeltie designated and agreed upon which shall be free on the seas now illegally proscribed The very agreement would, b) Implication, subject other vessels to illegal attack, and would he a curtailment and therefore an abandonment of the principles for which this government contends, and. which in ttmcB of calmer counsels every nation would concede as of course. The government of the- United States aud the imperial (iermon government, contending for the same great object, hfv long stood together In urging the very principles upon which the government of the United States now so solemnly Insists They are both contending for the freedom of tiie seas. The government of the United States will continue to contend for that freedom, from whatever quarter violated, without compromise and at any coat, it Invites the practical of the imperial German" government at ths time when cration may aciouipllsh most, aud this great common ohjei t he most strikingly and- effectively achieved Can Be Accomplished. .The im pc rial German- government expresses the hope that this object may be in some measure accompl. shed even before the present war ends It can he. The government of the United States not Oaly feels obliged to Insist upon It,, by whomsoever violated or ignored, and in the protection of its own citizens, hut Is 'also deeply interested inhering it made I I 11,000,00(0) NOTE UNSATISFACTORY rnt-u-isn- . W atolngton. The text of the reply of the United States to the Get man note on the Lusitania and the general subject of Germany's submarine' warfare was made public on July 23 t the state department. Following Is the official text of the latest American note to Germany. The secretary of stale to Ambassador Gerard. Department of State. 1913 You are Washington, July instructed to delivertl,textual) the following note to the minister of foreign affairs. The note of the imperial German government, dated the 8th of July, 1915, has received the careful consideration of the government of the United States, and it regrets to be obliged to say that it has found it ery unsatisfactory, .because it falls to meet the real differences between the two governments and indicates no way in which the accepted principles of law and humanity may be applied In the grave matter 'in controversy, but proposes, if the contrary, arrangements for a partial suspension of these principles which virtually et them aside. . One Point Satisfactory. The government of the United States notes with satisfaction that the imperial German government recognizes without reservation the validity of the principles insisted upon In the several communications which 'this government has addressed to the 1m-- . perial German government with regard to Us announcement- of a war son and the use of submarines against merchantmen on the high seas the pilnclple that Ihe high seas are free, that the charaiter and cargo of a merchantman, must flist be ascertained before she can lawfully be seized or destroyed, and that the lives of may In no cee be put in jeopardy unless the vessel resists or seeks to escape after being 'summoned to submit to for a belligerent act of retaliation is per se an act beyond the law, and the defense of an act as retaliatory is an admission that it is Illegal, Keen Disappointment. The government of the United State !a, however, keenly disappointed to find that the imperial German government regards Itself as In large degree exempt from the obligation to . observe these principles, even w here neutral vessels are ebncernd, by what It believes the policy a ad prut t. tv of the government of Great Britain to be In the present war with regard to neutral commerce. The Imperial German government will readily understand that the ro'ernment of the United States cannot discuss the policy of the government of Great Britain with regard to neutral trade except with that government Itself, and that It "must regard the conduct of other belligerent governments as irrelevant to any discussion with the imperial German government of what this government regard as grave and unjustifiable violations of the rights of American citizens by German naval commanders. Illegal aud inhuman acts, however Justifiable they may he thought to be agaiust an enemy who is believed to have acted In contravention of law aud humanity, are manifestly Indefensible when they de prive neutrals of their acknowledged Tights, particularly when they violate the right to life itself. If a belligerent cannot retaliate against an enemy without injuring the lives of neutrals. . as well as their property, humanity as well a justice and a due regard for the dignity of neutral powers should dictate that tire practice he discontinued. If persisted In. it would, in euch.circutnstames. constitute an unpardonable offense against the Rover-- , eignty of the neutral nation affected The government of the United States is not unmindful of the extraordinary conditions created by this war or of the radical alterations of circumstance and method Of attar k produced by the use of instrumentalities of naval warfare which the nations of the world cannot have had in view when the existing rules of international law were formulated, and It Is ready to make every reasonable allowance for these novel and unexpected aspects of war at sea; but it can not consent to abate any essential or lundamental right of Its people because of a mere alteration of circumstance. The rights of neutrals in time f war are based-upoprinciple, not ipon expediency, and the principles -- exam--lnalio- n Are immutable. Duty of Belligerents It Is the duty and obligation of belligerent to find a way to adapt the s -- co-op- - - practicable between .the belligerents themselves, and bolds itself reads at any time to act as the common friend who may be privileged to suggest a way. In the meantime the very value which this government sets upou the long and unbroken friendship between the people and government of the United States and the people and government of the German nation Impels it to press very solemnly upon the German government the Imperial necessity for a scrupulous observance of neutral rights in Oils critical matter. Friendship Itself piompts It to say to the Imperial German government that repetition by commander of the German naval vessels of nets in contravention of those rlgnts must he regarded by the government or the United States, when they affect American citizens, as deliberately unfriendly. LANSING (Signed) - Barnes Attorney Die. Bomb" Plot Thwarted. A ) bung German, whose Cleveland name the authorltiea refuse to divulge, wai arrested Sunday night on a charge of suspicion In connection with au alof leged plot to blow up the American Steel & Wire --company. Peerless Motor Car com pan aud the White company. the-plant- s Salazar Again Lodged in Prison. Santa Fe, N M Geueral Jose Ynez Salazar, Mexican factkmal leader, on Friday was placed in the New Mexico penitentiary here, having been brought here in charge of United States Marshal Hudspeth and a special deputy. Radicals Win Concession. Tlie Russian governPetrogr&d ment lias decided to give socialists new circumstances to them The events of the past two months and labor members of the duma rephave ilearly Indicated that iris pos resentation on the military and naval citle tnd practicable to conduit such committees submarine operations as. have charac- - In proportion to their numbers. Canal cn Paying Basis. Counting only Jhe "Washington cost of operation, civil government, sanitary work and the administration and handling of ships, the Panama canal Is now on a paying basis, aceord ing to official reports. Charged With Inciting Riot.' New York Samuel 11. Edwards, general superintendent, and thirty-tw- o guards of the Tidewater Oil company's plant iu Bayonne. N J, were arrested Sunday charged with incising to rfot b) Sheriff Kinhead and his deputies. McClure's Editor Passes. New York Edward C Martin, cne of the ed.tors and part owners Uf McClure's magazine, died Ftiday in his country home at Watchung, N' J after a short illness. He was 54 years dispatch to .the Times from Sofia, dated last Friday, says that a convention ceding to Bulgaria the Turkish portion of . the DedeagLalc n railway was signed tn Constantinople Bulgary Gets Railway. London- A oid. Thursday. Sunk by Turkish Mine. Berlin A dispatch from The Hague to the Overseas News Agency says that according to reports from C airo. the British steamship Theresa, while passing through the Suez canal, ran upon a Turkish mine and sank German Ambassador Leaves. Washington. Count Bemstorff, the German ambassador, left Washington Sunday to remain away from the capl tal nntll instructions from his govern ment or new developments make it necessary for him to confer ggaia'with Escape Death In Forest Firer Laramie, Wyo Five Mexican laborers who, it was feared, had been lost In the forest fire in Carbon county Sunday, have been found unharm- t ed, accord. ag to an auiraunceinc jnade by the ferest supervisor. officials 3 . , J.C.JES5EN - Syracuse Captures Convention. San Francisco Syracuse, N. Y was chosen as the ctty for the 1916 convention of the National Association of Auditors, at the closing eessicn oi the organization here. see Staff Correspondent CQK577?IfC7TI scartiifmrYQMCznTo lending motion picture theaters-th- i form of entertainaneut.cai trul) be termed the universal amusement The film constl lute the programs of more than twenty thousand' theaters tn tills country attended by 11,000,-- t in dally, and this great army of .pleasure seekers does not represent any one, hut every class of Ameri can citizens old and young, rich and poor, the e highbrows and the untutored The gigantic amusement purveying organizations require the investment of more than a billion dollars in studios and factories tn this country alone, and fully one third of that amount Is expended annually for the, making of film More than 65 per cent of the motion pictures of the world are produred in United States, and of these 80 per rent ere made in and about Los Angeles, now known as the photoplay stage of. the world & film get on wit a his ing Nicely, sir." . "The Clansman." of tb,r' he can read h I suppose one "Ah, reels, one-hal- f and teen o Bible comfortably Jtow' thousands realizes the Bless con sir! wa he you, Bible, details that must be Into t Bible and the the of spur eidered in writing or pages long ago! scenario, arrangement t in and sets or scenes, Superfluous GnL making of the picture a particularly nast--v scenario, During the Receiving at one of the camps a re rult the director and players re to seek shelter in the ac-eventured and read the story are precincts of the cooks domain hearsals of all scenes a After a time he broke an awkward held to give' th player retheir silence by saying to the cook. keen insight into If you put the lid on that camp spective parts of kettle you would not get so much dust There are two kinds in your soup. . scenes In all photoplays: The irate cook glared at the inon s' i termed "interiors, can comprising tboBe that and truder, antlYhen broke outr studio be made at the Sfytoere, me lad, your businp., i, scenes, rve yourmountry. represent indoor es, replied the recruit, but not and the other "exteriors out-oto eat those that represent In practicaldoor sittings Cause for Gloom. Presold day ly alt play of at I ask the cause of all this made 'May the exteriors xare build- excitement? said the stringer in the public rented homes, mountains, little village. ings, beaches, in Certainly, replied the cc untry-mah-. aUrindustnal plants, as demand Were celebrating the birthstory may to oldest inhabitant, sir She i of the impossible is it day hen find such scenes as are 101 today. Indeed !c And may I ask ho Is needed they are designed that little man, with the dreadfully and built to fit the requirements of the photoplay. In sad countenance, walking by the old thecase of filming "Damon ladys side? and Pythias" amphitheaOh, thats the old ladys son inters and replicas of law, sir. Hes been keeping up the for anCierY Syracuse 'reconstructed ; payments tm her life insuram-palj- ry mgs Tit Bits. for the last 30 years? u entire Irish . The Rosary' Kl,ITa. and bus n dwellings, churches, public . we e How the War Hit Him. Jngs of early nineteenth century type are buildings said the tattered and special Madam, and for almost every play cos torn suppliant to the benevolent lady erected . In some Instances these bve only-iwho answered his timid rap at the much as 5,000 or more, tnd were used on or two hundred feet of film. door, according to the Harrisburg have you any old The scene of a photoplay are not taken tn clothes you- - can Bpare for an unfosequence, but according to convenience At the studios from one to ten. or even fifteen, rtunate' victim of the European war? different ;J think I have, my poor man, but companies ,may be making scenes for size of the to one according: all at time, subjects how does this happen? You cannot stage and the size of settings In use. At the to have been ,in this war, surely. largest producing plant In the world, No madam, humbly replied ths twenty-fou- r companies of players are constantly sufferer, hut my wife has scat all at work. to the Belgians." clothes my The raw film Is made in stripe four hundred ex' Well Named. feet in length, wound on spools . After being posed they are sent to laboratories, where they Whats that you call your mule?" are developed. I call him Corporation, answered The negative film is next threaded into a print- the old negro. ing machine and an unexposed positive film is How did you. come to give him from piacednext to it but on the opposite side autosuch a name? an electric lamp. This machine operates "Pm studyin de animal and read-imatically and "prints" the positive from the de papers, boss. Dat mule gets negative at the rate of several- - thousand feet per mo blame an abuse dan anythin' hour else In de township, an goes ahead A motion picture studio is a veritable curiosity havin his own way jes de same." shop In the wardrobe are to be found costumes National Monthly. of 11 ages and sizes, representing a great in- tof1 r - r , , V f . entertain a sensational nature. About this time a Kansas City operator of thes machines, learning of the projecting machine made plans for a concession at the Buffalo exposition, which consisted of a railway Illusion made possible by rocking the coach while pictures were projected on a screen In exhibited iJiter this one end of the car throughout the country in a specially constructed- railroad coach, and the name Hales Tour of thtc Norld," became famous The greatest step of the industrr folowlng the perfection of projectors, films and cameras of was made simultaneously by- Miles Prot-c- rs New Ylfk and Eugene Kleine of Chicago They established film markets or exchanges, where negatives were bought and prints sold or rented This system served to solve the problem of distribution. by renting films to ehib tors for this method is successfully used today throughout the xorld n t - The exchange system assured a permanent film to exhibitors and storerooms were cp verted 'into theaters In all parts of the cojuftry In less than two years more than ten thousand picture theaters were opened In Tfie United alone toStates The number in New Yoriricity , taled mor than 1,200 January-!1907, and In Chicago there were 800 oUamushrooni growth Many motion picture nrfiduclng plants were established in many cities, and the film supply iwoved abundant for the rapidly increasing number of theatersBut there was no system to the production, the making of prints, preparing for exhibitors, or giving heed to what Is today considered the most important phgse of the business that of arranging a Supply dust-stor- program Manufacturer, saw the necessity of not only klng subjects, hut also maintaining their own system of exchanges for the purpose of safeguarding their own interests by controlling the films, and merged their Interests In releasing Now there are no less than' ten corcompanies porations composed of owners of producing companies that Have national releasing systems, with exchanges in all principal cities. These are capitalized in the millions and one is reputed to have made 1.600 per cent profit, while on the other th"s "Plated continuously at a loss. With the formation of big releasing companies and the general improvement of conditions of the industry, with regard to all phases, the most important to the ten millions- of people of the United States , who daily witness the show cbane for the 0Lm0,.ion.pictUe8 ,8 the betterment of production, and the realization by the manufacturers of the possibilities of photo- h' - . plays In the standardization of the film the celluloll strip was gradually reduced in size from one having a picture two inches wld$ and one and one-hal- f s Inches deep, to untform size of picture of an inch deep by ode inch in width There are sixteen separate pictures to each linea! foot of film, pr 16,000 to a reel of 1,000 feet, which, when properlv projected, is "run off in Few motion picture loveps eighteen minutes know that every minute approximately one thousand separate picture are projected on the screen, each one separated from the adjoining one bv a black line of the thickness of an average railing card Still stranger. It nitv seem. Is the fact that about one fourth of the time the pictures are hidden from view of the audfenre and the screen Is black This Is caused hv a revolving fan wheel shutter passing fn fronbof the projecting lens :jr each time the film is advanced from one picture to another by the intermittent sprocket moveA thousand feet of film which ment passes machine is stationary through the projecting three fourths of the eighteen minutes required in projecting it and In action but approximately This prevents blurring four and a half minutes of the pictures and makes each individual picture of frame" sharp from point of focus The pictures are magnified from two to four hundred times their actual size by the projection, according to the size of the screen, distance from the lens and the lens itself The making of motion picture is most interesting. and all studios are visited daily by hundreds At a few visitors are emitted, but at the ma joritv aN'o Admlttame' sign hangs 6ver the entrance and no amount of talk or money will get the stranger past the gates The studio in platform., one ln- reality consists of an open-ai- r closed entlrelv bv glaa or a hall like building with movable electric lights of such candle power as will make it light as day. in ail producing plants now the story for the photoplay is first written From this is prepared ihe scenario, which briefly outliaes every scene, describes the settings and action of the players. When tt is comidercd that each reel of pictures requires from fl'tv to- seventy five scenes, and many of the photoplays of today consist of as and seven reels, while the, many as five, larger ones, such as "The Spoilers." eonsisted of nine reels. I.es Miscrables" eight. "Cabrria' of twelve, and the photoplay yet made. :The three-fourth- si - la-g- lar or systematic In the occurrence rtf th profitable nitrate hearing material o that each small area must he exara- ' Nitrate Industry In Chile Wou d Seem Tlttle rdatiou prk(d to Be Something Rsemb mg t otlier deposits --Contracts atre let Game of Chance. . 0 the miners, who have to blast the z round and sort and cord jp the ore n - vestment. The jiroperty" room containsf almost - any thing that can be thought of. The pay rolls of the manufacturing companies range from 1,000 to $25,000 weekly where twenty or more companies are busy, the amounts varying gccord'ng to number of prpducing companies, the class of professionals employed and quality In addition to this great ex- of subjects made penditure totaling more than a quarter of a bll lion dollars a year for all companies in the United States, must be added cost of film, studio equipment and a hundred and one little Items of expense that come up in the making of every picture This vast amount constitutes the lions share of production costs for motion pictures of the world or 65 per cent xTtoe industry of the United States Is centered at Los Angeles. Producers have found there are more Sunshiny picture-makindays in this vl cinitv than in any other part of the world, and. furthermore, any kind of scenery can be found within a radius of fifty miles of this southern Cal Ifornia efty Mountains, sea, desert, tropical and frigid zones. metropolitan. Tillage or " country scenes are to be had by a short automobile ride In addition to the pictures made at studios there are hundreds of camera men employed or working independently traveling in all parts of the world securing travelogues or scenic pictures, and topical scenes of incidents that arfe used to make up what-ar- e termed Weeklies. It is estimated that there are mor than one hundred now with the various armies of the nations at war in Europe and scarcely a week passes that some traveling film makers do not market pictures depicting life and conditions in some remote part of the globe The principal ed tators of today have come to realize tb importance of the motion picture for use in schools and colleges, and the time it not far distant wrfen a projecting machine will he an important part of the equipment of our schools, the universities and many schools of the larger cities now having adopted this means of teaching Motion pictures, fifteen years ago a novelty, ten years aro a feature added to vaudeville pro and termed "chasers by the theater mangrams agers because they constituted the last number of the entertainment, usually to causing leave now swve as amusement to the people greatest number of people. They have replaced and the better subjects now command as high admission as eoihedv, drama and musical shows twice the speaking stage in a majority of the best thea-of ters of the large cities, and by their universal topularuy have become known as the American g .amusement , ; Tbeldea 1 trtaerelfStoS depends largely on j the ground enough so that the nitrati good Judgment of the man in ore can be dug out by the workmen fhe material ince all ere t . paid on a basis of the value of the material, that a contractor may run into lean ground and abandon that and also particular working Before the min tng of any particular area can he de- - aoae by fri7t Evidently. these peas were from asked the sumyour own garden? mer boarder. Yes, alree, replied the fanner,. 'Picked em myself early tfiis Did yon say morn--In- Is it necessary to shoot them before you pick them? inquired the boarder, removing a piece of solder from between his teeth. She Paid Cash. She was notorious for wanting credit, and the druggist was on his guard. You keep soda water? . Oh, yes. And can I have it changed? To ten pounds pressure, he answered urbanely. And then she fished up the necessary coin. ' Consoliation. Is it true 'that Miss Peaches has broken off her engagement with you? Yes, its all over between us now." Thats tough luck. Oh, I dont know. I wont have to wear any more of those neckties she crocheted for me." Marks of Travel. 'Yes, John received his trunk this Its been somewhere over morning. there in Europe for eleven weeks." Where is John, Why, hes out in the garage, shooting bullets through the trunk. H thinks they'll make it look so muck more interesting dont you know." Shallow. Society Is so shallow, mused th parlor philosopher. Its a good thing It is, retorted the mere man, or half the people who are wading around in it would get drowned. Judge. Th Dy. Ts this FYiday, mamma? " No, darling. Thia Is Thursday Oh, dear! I can hardly wait f Saturday. Uncle George promised t take me to the drugstore then aid buy me s sundae. large enough to contain a good chargi Unreasonable. of black, homemade powder near "How is your son' getting along" th bottom of the bole. When air drilli I dont know what to make of that are used, it is nefiessary to Hes been at college four year boy. th holes first, after which the spring U learning to be a baseball player, and ground loosened with !Lhewaatmeta-Ren4JiImt0- succeswl-dyMmit- LuiUi rapport rf" the . amplihg To a Thus it is , ciJed upon it is necessary to sample it thoroughly and the quet'on always arises as to how thoroughly the sampling is to be done that is, how close together the sample pits shall be dug As these holes are dug by hand the j Chile is, the ore beds themselves an seldom of vast size, though they spread over large areas Occasionally he ore is found wnhm a foot or two of the surface, and at other times tt ts 0 fjet detp. There is nothing regu n d " Greats Ife. How does he it. ment was hut a nov city, there were but a few places where subject could be rented, and the number of theaters show-- Ing motion pictures exclusively could almost be counted on your fingers invention of motion pictures can he attributed to a California Incident. partially Two race horse men argued as to whether a horse, whlia running had more than two feet on the ground at fcny time. To prhv this, 24 threads were stretched across the track', and the end of each attached to a separate camera A horse ran down the stretch breaking each thread separately and exposing 24 photographic plates. One of th men took copies of the photographs to Europe where they caused numerous experiments Finally the task of making motion pictures was given up because no flexible substitute for glass could be found Year, later a New Jersey minister, trying discover a way of making nonhreakable aterve tlcon slides for ns in his Sunday aehooUlhade th discovery that celluloid was suitable The substitute was Immediately employedHy a photoenabled which graph aupply manufacturer, Thomas Edison to perfect hje kinetoscope, or peep hole machine, first shown at Columbian exposition. Chicago, in 1R93r Forty feet of ribbon film, wllh continuity oFaitlon rolled past ths lens In a hole tn a cabinet with an intermittent tnove--. ment that retard each picture before the peep-as it required to move the pichole twice ture to this sflot Back of the film was an elec trie directly in front of the lens a small hoWfhroush which' the people could peep for the stfm of five rents - The film had sprocket hole in tfi margin on one wide and a corresponding sprocket was placed on the rollers This device served as an idea for Robert V Paul of lamdon, the firm of Lutniere & Sons of Paris and a man named Grev of New York citv Simultaneously these men thought of attaching the film to a steieoptioon lamp and projecting the picture on to a screen, amd began working out The machines which would do this properly first projected mot ton picture In America was that of Grey's efdolosrope in a basement store room in New York citv tn lva;,. Paul perfected 1896. and his projecting machine in March At a later date William KenLumfere In 1897 nedy Jjiury Dixon, formerly with Paul now cm ployed by Thomas Edison, perfected the Edison kITietoscope .This device was a combination of the "peephole" invention, with sprockets on, each side of the Aim introduced- - bv Lumiere, a more accurate Intermittent movement for the film car rlare, and a powerful lamp perfected by Thomas Other muchines apieared in America Edison about the same time, but later patent rights were The projecail mefiged with that of the Edison tion machines were crude and it has required much time nd mechanical ingenuity to bring them to the state of perfection t With machines made, a still greater problem of securing new Interesting subjects confronted the showmen who took up the novelty There being no completed motion pictures for sale, it was necessary for each exhibitor to make alt his No one thought of making picown subjects ture of plays instead, they caught finishes of races, scenes in prize fights, and topical events of w Hirth of a Nation " adapted from the historical novel. jM 1 Hut of matters connected with the motion picture Industry none Is more sens tional than the fact that the present day of making, s)tem d I s t r lb u t! n g. and showing the films has bey; .established and developed to a state, of near perfection in a period of less than ten years Up to 1995 toe founocd mez SALT LAKE CfTT Johns Progress. clergyman had taught an old maa in his congregation to read, ant ' . act him an apt' pupil Calling at .be house some time atter, he found nu y the wife at home. Hows John 7 asked he. "He la well, thank you." of the Motion Picture News ITM one of every ten persons tn t tie i'nited Blares now daily at jo, . A ilfth-ffan- New Foot Disease. A new foot disease New York known as endaprtritas ohlierans has made it apepcance fix New York and treattw enty eight cases aie under ment UritUe hospital for deformities andjfiint diseases, The disease, pity-an- a say, is frequently mistaken for rheumatism ot; gout be accomplished without MAKERS OF JEWELRY as-lon- g Ivins, a New York.- William well known lawyer and for man years prominent In polities, died at his home here Friday, aged 64 )ears. Mr. Ivins was recently taken ill aftej hla labors in behalf of William Bapies in his suit against Theodoie Jusiae-elt. M - KQOfC BOYD .PARK. i at lAUlUl silver, . Come and our beautiful stock. of-th- Repetition of. Contravention of Right of American Citizen Will be Re-- 8dea by United State a Deliberately Unfriendly. el Vlrf 19 freshing, Aese hoi days, than set table. . And this - a IT FAILS TO MEET THE REAL DIFFERENCES. il l. other college so he can learn to doctor." be J ark' the0f ,ate a,r but B0t nonh Pttherue the been sampling rial As the ore is easily brokenrttl for the breaking of the i hammers, the larger the pieces f th blast, the less the low hLd the b? lh6 workj,iK ipad J fa mining. 10 Too Much. "Every dog has his day, you kno "Yes, but that mutt of yours wH-the nights, too. He kept tut untQ 3 oclock this morning with h Infernal howling." 1 |