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Show , THE RICH COUNTY NEWS. RANDOLPH. UTAH ASPIRIN 1 Introduced by Beyer to Physician in 1900 want genuine Anpirin the j Neuralgia, Lumbago, ftheumstiuu, Aspirin prescribed by physicians Neuritis and for Fain generally Tbs name for nineteen years. Always say Bayer" when buy Bayer" means the true, Aspirin. Then look for the lag Aspirin, proved safe by safety Bayer Cress" on the packmillions of people. -age and on. the tablets. Each unbroken package of Handy tin boxes ol twelve tabBayer Tablets of Aspirin conlets cost but a few cents. tains proper directions for Colds, Earache, gists also sell larger padcagss.' Toothache, You t welrld-famo- Monoeeetkadd ester ef SelierUeacM Aspirin is trade nark ef Bayer Manufacture i i Well Fitted., A Cause for Anxiety. The boat you want me to takeClarice Jims wife is never at out is nothing but an old tub. peace when he is out of her sight. Then isnt it all the better fitted Netta Is it because she loves him for the wash of the sea? so well? No. Its because she knows him so Candid Explanation. London well ! I notice you left the room, sir, while my wife was singing. Dont yoio An Inducement. The prices in this fashionable res- care for music? I care for it very much. That I taurant are very steep. why I left the room. r Maybe that is why so many are to be seen here. Practical Man. Wliat would life be She (sweetly) Usually one or two long visits convert one to short visits for the rest without me, dearest? He Much, less expensive. Boston Transcript. of his life. Tit-iBt- s. - Welcome Relief From the Tortures of Rheumatism it is one of the most thorCan Come Only From the cause blood known to med- ough purifiers ical science. This fine old remedy blood of impurities, the cleanses Many forms of rheumatism are caused by millions of tiny germs and acts as an antidote to the germ that infest the blood, and until the of rheumatism. blood is absolutely freed of these S. S. S. Is sold by druggists gems, there is no real relief in everywhere. For valuable literasight. ture and advice address Chief MedThe most satisfactory remedy ical Adviser, 107 Swift Laboratory, for rheumatism is S. S. S. be Atlanta, Ga. Proper Treatment. The Eight Way 'in all cases of DISTEMPER, PINKEYE Zohlfo UPER TERRESTRIAL is the suggested name of the latest thing in flying machines. It will be an aerial submarine kind of a thing. This sounds like an Irish bull, but it readily suggests the thing itself an enclosed machine which will protect both the machine and the flyer from the air. - High-flyin-g haslately proved so that Iffascinates both the aviator and- -' Ithe scientist .The Roof pf the World is evidently a most astounding place. And as it is a dan- Igerous thing to try to reach it it is just the place that the daring want to try to reach. A scientist 'worth his salt Is a man with an imagination and that imagination is busy these days with conditions super terrestrial. What little we know of these upper heights - toiakes us keen to know more. For example, we know of heavy trade winds blowing many miles above the earth at such a terrific speed that could they be utilized in accelerating machines, men might circle the globe at several hundred miles an hour. Also there are Indications of a rise in temperature after a certain altitude is passed, of belts of mysterious gases and vapors, and of other strange phenomena, all of which combine to make h trip to the outer edge of the atmospheric ocean Surrounding this planet the most romantic and !alluring of all voyages ever attempted by man. 'So. it is small wonder that planes are made for specially constructed airplanes, designed to meet the conditions existing at great altitudes and to minimize the dangers that have hitherto rendered high flying such a hazardous undertaking. The Super Terrestrial is not yet an accomplished fact, but it seems to be well on the way. Major Schroe-Idehaving recovered from the effects of his recent 36,000-foo- t flight, is said to be interested in the construction of such a machine, in which he hopes to reach the altitude of 50,000 feet. It is further reported that Louis Breguet, a French aeronautical engineer, has announced that an engine has been perfected capable of ascending 100,- 000 feet, or nearly nineteen miles, and that flight to that altitude is immediately in prospect. The main feature of the new type of aircraft will be an enclosed fuselage or cabin to protect the avi- ator and the machinery itself. The Super Terrestrial would seem to me to . be the answer, said August Post, secretary of the Aero Club of America, giving the proposed carrier the name he himself had coined, as quoted in the New York Tribune by Arnold D. Prince. From what man already has experienced in his attempts to pierce the heights he has learned that some form of protection not yet devised is necessary. Something designed along the lines of the submarine would seem to be what is needed. .The inclosed cabin for the aviator suggests itself as the most sensible scheme. Sitting in this air-tigcompartment, he would be within easy of the levers controlling the mechanism and regulating the supply of oxygen needed by him-- self as well as by the super chargers By which air at sea level pressure Is now fed to the carburetors In altitude flights. He would not only be safeguarded against the physical hardships which have beaten him back heretofore, but, with adjustable propellers capable of Increasing their purchase on the rarefied atmospheres, he could push his way into -levels now beyond his reach. 7 What is it like up there among the stars, or even a little lower down? Some things we know already. We know, for example, that some distance above the earths atmospheric envelope, but below that stratum of inflammable air which science has discovered, are trade winds which blow from west to east with unfailing regularity; and we know, too, and this is even more reassuring, that at that level it Is far legs cold than had long been supposed. For some of this knowledge we are indebted to scientists like M. de Bort, discoverer of what is and for the called inversion of temperature, pestto our own courageous aviators, and to bal- , r, ht ! loonists like Henry Glaisher and his assistant, James Coxwell, both Britons, who In September, 1862, rose to an altitude calculated by them as about seven miles, which was higher than that attained by Major Schroeder, the American flyer, in his recent sensational jump at Dayton, O. Glaishers experience was especially valuable from the standpoint of the person who wants, to knor what it is Uk up there because the aspi- miles. rater quit worklngafan altitude of Writing for the British Association for Balloon Experiments as to what happened after reaching -- the level, he said: Up to this time I had taken observations with comfort, and experienced no difficulty whatever ; ' in breathing. . .. , Then, having discharged sand, we rose still higher. The aspirator became troublesome to work I and I began to find difficulty in seeing. could not see the column of mercury in the wet bulb thermometer, nor the hands of the watch, nor the fine division of any Instrument. Shortly after I laid my arm on the table, possessed of its full vigor, but on being desirous of using it a little later I found it powerless. I tried to move the other arm ; I found it powerless also. I tried to shake myself and succeeded, but I seemed to have no limbs. . I dimly saw Mr. Coxwell and endeavored to speak to him but could not. Then, in an instant, intense darkness overcame me, so that the optic nerve lost power, suddenly, but I was still conscious with as active a brain as at the. present moment, while writing this. I thought I had been seized with asphyxia and believed I should expedience nothing more, as death would come unless we speedily descended; other thoughts were entering my mind when I suddenly became uncon- 137 feet several months ago, the average of a fall of one degree in temperature to every 300 feet of , altitude was fairly well maintained. Moreover, in all these flights, when the men level and had risen had passed above the four-mil- e beyond the screen of atmospheric particles which make our sky," they entered the stratum in which absolute silence reigned and in which vision was remarky- - clarified. - Tfaajflubent above became almost black, due to the absence of light refraction ; the stars were easily visible, even in brightest day, and the eold ' was terrible and intense. But in each instance certain phenomena were observed, which brings up the next question of importance to the inquirer as to conditions up there, and this is the subject of inversion of temperature. For a great many years man believed that tem-- . perature invariably changed with altitude, and that as height Increased there was always a corresponding drop in the mercury. M. de Bort proved that not only does the principle of Increasing cold cease to function at an altitude of from six to eight miles above the earth, , but that exactly the opposite occurs, and from there up It constantly grows warmer. instru- Sounding balloons with ments have been sent up to a distance of seventeen miles and have invariably confirmed this ' discovery. So, then, the situation presented to those who are planning the Super Terrestrial and arranging to launch man on his greatest adventure in the air ' Is tills: They know as, of course, do we who are fairly consistent readers of newspapers the conditions as they exist up to six or seven miles. It is there that nature, plays the parts with which we are most familiar. There thunders roll, lightning scious. I cannot tell anything of the sense of hearing, flashes, clouds gather and elements clash in never as no sound reaches the air to break the perfect ending strife. It Is from there that we get such silence of the regions between six and seven' miles wintry storms as recently experienced, and where above the earth." the humble drama of rain, snow, sleet and weather The balloon finally began to descend after Coxunfolds Itself. well, who retained consciousness even longer than ' They know, too, that atmosphere, as we know his chief, had managed to pull the valve rope with it, although in constantly thinning quality, ex' . tends above the .weather strip to a height of . his teeth. Both men regained consciousness after the bal-- , about twenty to thirty miles, but beyond that, loon had descenJBfed several thousand feet, and . what? It is here that real difficulties will begin, and they managed to make a safe landing. the Super Terrestrial will encounter its greatest Two facts having a direct bearing on the quesobstacles provided, of course, that long before tion as to atmospheric conditions above the earth that bourn is reached the presumptuous craft "has were established by them. One is that sounds not been destroyed. like that made by passing railroad trains can still Here new dangers will appear in the shape of be heard at a height of about four miles, but that drifting ice clouds. which for imaginative purat six miles there is perfect silence. poses may be likened to icebergs ; the void will asThe other is that up to a certain point, scientifisume a totally alien aspect; meteors and shooting level where as to the of inversion cally referred across the path, and atmosphere occurs, the fall of the mercury av- X stars will occasionally flash will enter the boundary of "inflam traveler the to Fahrenheit one 300 about every degree erages mable air,' or pure hydrogen. feet. Passing through this always supposing, of In April, 1875, M. Gaston Tissandier and two that it is not snuffed out long before like course, confirmed when these findings they companions shell under the foot of an elephant-tha to a balloon a in of peanut rose from Paris height nearly Super Terrestrial will emerge into the stratum six miles, but in this case the expedition was of helium which on earth is created from radium marred by the fact that both companions of M. Tisand encountered in practical quantities only in than he Britor . less stamina the sandier, having r test tubes. ish aeronauts, died before the gas bag returned ' Then but perhaps this is enough' for the mo to the ground. ment. Even the most voracious seeker of knowlIf further corroboration is desired as to conedge as to what things are like up there will ditions as they exist on the first lap of the aerial have been satisfied long ere this, and the first voy- -' Journey into the void they can be had from the age of the Super Terrestrial need not be charted experiences of the aviators who, since the advent further. to reach tried the lid of the of airplanes, have Provision would, of course, have to be made worlds atmosphere. Two of the most prominent of these, at least . for changed conditions, Mr. Post concluded, in . touching on the mechanical necessities of the un-among the American aviators, have been Major the the of Of with thinning course, dertaking. Schroeder and Roland Rohlfs, who have engaged atmosphere the Super Terrestrial would encounter in a unique contest for highest records above the less air resistance, and provided the propellers clouds. were adjusted to increase purchase, tremendous Major Schroeder in his flight a few weeks ago at'speed would be attained. tained an altitude of 36,020 feet, at which height The propellers would revolve much faster and his thermometer registered 55 degrees below zero the craft would shoot ahead like a meteor. centigrade, or 67 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. And it that is, the Super Terrestrial, if you So, in his case, as well as In that of Rohlfs when desire to call it that is the next tbhig on the he reached 30,300 feet in July last, and that of cards. Adjutant Casale, of the French army, who rose 33, five-mi- . le ... , . . . ' v . - e INFLUENZA, COLDS, ETC. of all horses, brood mares, colts and stallions Is to SPOON THEM on the tongue or In the feed with SPOHUS DISTEMPER COMPOUND Give the remedy to all of them. It acts on the blood and glands. It route the disease by expelling the germs. It wards off the trouble, no matter how they are "exposed. - A few drops a day prevent those exposed from contracting disease. Contains nothing Injurious. Sold by druggists, harness dealers or by the manufacturers. 60 cents and 11.15 per bottle. AGENTS WANT, ED. OPOHN MEDICAL COMPANY. GOSHEN, IND. . Songs Up to Date. Really Bored to Death. The expression, bored to death, iy Bishop Theodore S. Henderson, general superintendent of the Methodist no mere fanciful figure. A person die from boredom.- The MediEpiscopal church In the Detroit area, whq has become associated with the cal Press, in commenting upon Interchurch world movement, said at refers to a statement by Dr a recent conference that ten years W. H. R. Rivers, that interest in life-- , ago one of the favorite hymns was is the primary factor in the welfare of When, the Roll Is Called Up Yonder the people. Doctor Rivers contends; Ill Be There. Now that hymn- - has that the dying out of native races been displaced by The Son of God not so much to what the white-maGoes Forth to War. In other words, has introduced In the shape of said the bishop, the young people of new diseases and new modes of cloththe present day are singing songs- of ing, housing and feeding, as to the fact . service. . Many of them who are still that by uprooting native institutions,, singing the old song should change it without providing adequate substt ' to express the idea that When the tutes, he has deprived them of nearly job of saving the world is on, Ill be all that gave interest to their lives. , may-actual- - this-subjec- is-du- there. She Had It Buried. In illustration of the extent to which gold and silver are being hoarded in China, the far eastern division of tho bureau of foreign and domestic commerce gives currency to an incident reported of an old woman paying for her purchase of 'a cotton mill with $500,000 worth of gold bars, which she-hadug out of its hiding place. It is ' estimated that, due to the disturbed Perhaps you thought they kicked political conditions and lack of adethe bucket, she ,said flippantly, as quate banking facilities throughout she skidded round thd corner into the China, at least a billion dollars worth road leading to the State hospital. of silver is similarly hoarded, which may partially account for the present Class rule is the worst menace to exchange situation. Burying and Berrying. It was In the blueberry season, and ahe was showing him around the small town. "That, she said, as they drove along, is the burying ground, pointing to the cemetery. I noticed a number of people with pails, going that way, he remarked absent-mindedl- y. democracy. It is difficult for a young man to The mightiness of the pen Is due understand what attractions his sister to the ink. has for other young men. ' . -- Some rather mens ideas of reciprocity are one-side- Adam also got his eyes open his marriage. A Rod That Builds! ' A staunch food made of wheat and malted barley, ready to eat .easily digested, and full of sound nourishment For those who work with brain or brawn there is no better breakfast or lunch than -- Grape-NutseresaJeasa- n Sold by Grocers Mrit 1 if Fortum Cereal Co,In&, Battle Gwk. Michigan.. after |