Show TERSE UNS ON PERSONS Secretary Shaw tells this story about Prof Hyatt the weather observer observer observer ver at St. St Louis Prof Hyatt has t the ie appearance of a business man During During Dur Dur- ing the recent street t car strike he was about to get on a car when a a. member of the strike committee stepped up to him and asked if he intended riding on the car The weather man replied th that tha t tsuch such was his intention The striker sought to persuade him not net to ride bu buthe but the professor preferred riding to walking walking walking walk walk- ing and started to get on the carWell carWell carWell car Well if you ride on that car we wil will wUl withdraw our patronage from you said ald the striker I care whether you lyou patronize me inc or not Im I'm in the weather business replied Pr Prof f. f Hyatt as h he hopped on the car ar The Countess of Minto is at the head bead of a Canadian movement whose purpose purpose purpose pur pur- pose Is to too secure a a. common burial burla ground for all the Canadians who have hav fallen in South Africa No les less than two thirty fell tell at Pard alone The The Countess' Countess idea is and is-and and it Is sh shared by those supporting her that her that th the bodies of the unfortunate men should be remove removed 1 from their present resting nesting places and that a granite column co I should record their names and deeds Col Blanton Duncan a wealthy Kentuckian Kentuckian Kentuckian Ken Ken- who died in California re re- re left a strange will Twenty one Kentuckians are named as legatees among there them being Col John B. B Castleman Castleman Castle Castle- man Senator J. J C. C S. S Blackburn and Ab Ah Sam Sara a Chinaman of ot Louisville who long had been beer a firm friend of Mr rr Duncan Each ot of the legatees receives receive 1000 number of legatees i is sixty Alfred Moody Mosely a weal wealthy thy English so sociologist sociologist sociologist so- so who is making a tour of th the American cities clUes ays that after an in inspection inspection in- in of New York slums he agrees agree with Richard Croker roker that New Yen Yen- York Is a a. Sunday-school Sunday when compared with the slums of London I marvel marve at the decency of your New York dives he said i The late Pr Prof t. t O. O M. M i L' L Fernald Fenald of Wl Wil- Wil Hams liams college could not Ot be induced t to toI tomake I make public addresses He declined decline the headship c of Phillips Exeter academy academy acad acad- emy because h dip did not t wish to be a public character and would accept n no place that that would require him to speak in public t Jules Verne the nov novelist though now in his year still works at his des desk for four hours a day dar He has several severa new books in hand which he hopes 1 to finish before the close of the year |