Show THE SAUNA CALL SALINA UTAH HIRED HI MAN KNEW THE GAME on First Base Surprised Until They Learned Youngsters ' More of His Career Dexterity the In the American Magazine Hugh S Fullerton writes an article entitled "The Making of a Big Leaguer" It is the story of one ot the greatest ball in the United States as old players This by himself to Mr Fullerton and ol player was a country boy cours began to play the game early He tells the following story about an incident of his boyhood: "Father had a hired man named Ned a tall quiet fellow with a pair ol blue eyes that seemed always about to laugh but seldom did He had been with us a year Ha got drunk periodically and after each spree father hunted him up and brought him back Oo work We asked him to play with us and he laughed and said he reckoned he would try to play first base il paw’ would let him oft I fixed it with father and Ned played first barehanded making catches and stops that filled us with astonishment Also he made five home runs two Into the railroad pond and three Into the barn lot back of left field Walking home that evening he told me he had played ball professionally yet It was not until two years later that I learned he once had been a famous outfielder with a great team" ITCHING TERRIBLE ON LIMB F D No 3 Clarkfleld Minn— It “My trouble was of long standing started with some small red and yellow spots about the size of a pin head on my leg and every morning there was a dry scale on top covering the affected part and when those scales were falling off the Itching was more than I could stand at times The first year I did not mind it so much as It was only Itching very badlji at times but the second year It advanced all around my leg and the itching was I had to be very careful to terrible have my clothing around the affected part very loose At night time I often bappified to scratch the sore In my sleep Then I had to stand up get out of bed and walk the floor till the spell was oyer "I bought lots of salves and tried many different kinds of medicine but I got a cake of without any success box of Cutlcura Soap and a Cuticura Ointment and when I had used them I was nearly over the Itching But I kept on with the Cuticura Soap for six 'weeks and the cure was complete” (Signed) S O Gorden Nov 20 1912 Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world Sample of each free with Skin Book Address postcard “Cuticura Dept L Boston" — Adv Knew What to Expect Husband (at 11 p m) — Well good I am going home night you fellows to a vegetarian supper "What do you mean by that?” askof one ed the coVnpany "Well my wife said that if I was not at home by 10 o’clock she would give me beans” — Stray Stories No Dubious Situations "Do you assimilate your food Mrs Jones?” "No we don’t We pay cash on the spot” MrsWlnslow’8 Soothing Syrup for Children teething sof na the gams reduces Inflammation allay pain cures wind colic 25c a bottle! Some Bpinsters Advance step until they become stepmothers by step A man Isn’t necessarily a coward cause he Is afraid of consequences be- WOMAN TOOK FRIEND'S MICE And Found Health in Lydia E PinkhamV Vegetable Compound s Windoh Kansas -‘- ‘I had a displace ment which caused bladder trouble and I was so miserable I didn’t know what to do I suffered from bearing down pains my eyes hurt me I was nervous dizzy and irregular and had female weakness I spent money on doctors but got worse all the time “A friend told me about the Pinkham remedies and I took Com Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable pound and was cured I cannot praise your remedies enough fori know I never would have been well if I had not taken It Mary A Horner Route Ho 2 Box 41 Windom Kansas Consider ‘Well This Advice No woman suffering from any form female troubles should lose hope unshe has given Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial of til This famous remedy the medicinal In from gradients of which are derived native roots and herbs has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valuaof the feble tonic and invigorator Women everywhere male organism bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound If yon want special advice write to Lydia BPinkbam Medicine Co (confidential) Lynn Mass Your letter will be opened rend and answered by a Inroman ami held in strict confidence Installment 23 had been stretched across in front of the house where he lay to check the noisy traffic that might have disturbed him more deepBut the government ly in his fever He had had not stood still the while matsteadily attended to Important he as could ’Twas scarcely necters essary he should be out of bed and abroad again to make all who handled and by the affairs feel his mastery time the summer was ended that mastery was founded upon knowledge The First Cabinet By the end of September (1789) Its work of had completed congress ' had and Washington organization drawn his permanent advisers about him The federal courts too had been erected and given definitive juhad risdiction The new government taken distinct shape and was ready to digest Its business In detail Washto Hamilton ington chose Alexander be secretary of the treasury Henry Knox to be secretary of war Thomas Jefferson secretary of state and Edmund Randolph attorney general — and young men all except Jefferson he was but forty-siThe fate of the government was certain to turn first of all upon ques: tions of finance It was hopeless poverty that had brought the Confederation into deep disgrace the new government had inherited from It nothing but a great debt and the first test of character to which the new plan in affairs would be put whether at home or abroad was the test of Its ability to sustain its financial credit with businesslike thoroughness and statesmanlike wisdom Hamilton’s Critical Post Alexander Hamilton was only He had been a spirited years old and capable soldier and an astute and eloquent advocate but he had not had a day’s experience in the administration of a great governmental department and had never handled — so far as men knew had never studied — questions of public finance Washington chose him nevertheless without hesitation for what must certainly turn out the most critical post in his No man saw administration than ' Washington did how large a capacity for statesmanship Hamilton had shown in his masterly of the Constitupapers In advocacy He had known Hamilton tion moreover through all the quick years that him from had brought precocious youth to wise maturity had read his letters and felt the singular power that moved In them and was readv to trust him with whatever task he would consent to assume Henry Knox that gallant officer of the Revolution had been already four years secretary of war for the Confederation In appointing him to the same office under the new Constitution Washington was but retaining a man whom he loved and to whom he had l'or long been accustomed to look for friendship and counsel Wide Experience Jefferson’s He chose Thomas Jefferson to handle the delicate questions of foreign affairs which must press upon the young state because John Adams being there was no other man of equal gifts available who had had so large an experience In the field of diAgain and again Jefferson plomacy had been chosen for foreign missions the Confederation under ha was American minister to France when summons called him to Washington’s the secretaryship of state and he came of that race Of Virginia statesmen from whom Washington might reasonably count upon receiving a supwith personal loyalty port touched Richard Henry Lee Patrick Henry and George Mason were spirits and doubted of the puccess ihe new government but Jefferson? though he had looked upon its making from across the sea approved and was ready to lend his aid to Its successful establishment In appointing Edmund Randolph to be attorney general Washington was but choosing a brilliant young man whom he loved out of a great fairilly of lawyers who had held a sort of primacy at the bar In Virginia ever rince he could remember — almost pver rlnce she had been called theOld Dominion Knox was Edmund Ranbut if Washington dolph thirty-sichose young men to be his comrades and guides In counsel It was but another capital proof of bis own mastery In affairs Himself a natural leader he recognized the like gift and capaceven when fortune had ity In others not yet disclosed or brought them to the test Hard to Fill Offices It was hard in filling even the greater offices to find men of eminence who were willing to leave the service of their states or ihe security and ease of private life to try the untrodden The paths of federal government states were old and secure — so men was thought — the federal government new and an experiment The stronger sort of men particularly amongst those bred to the law showed many of Gram a great reluctance to Identify themselves with new Institutions set but five or six months ago and though he meant (o make very A chain the street liberal allowance for difference opinion wouTd Invite no man to p‘ with him in the new service not thoroughly believe In it He was careful to seek out si the best lawyers to be had lu country when he made up the Su preme court and to choose them from states— John Jay of as many York to be chief justice: John W Carolina South ledge of John Bla Cushing of Massachusetts of Virginia James Wilson of Pennsylvania and R H Ilarrlson of Maryland— for he knew that the government must draw Its strength from the men who administered it and that the common run of people must learn to respect it in the persons of its officers But he was equally careful to fifid out In advance of every appointment what to ask the man whom he wished thought of the new government and V wished Its future to be Many to whom he offered appointment declined minor offices’ seemed most to go amongst men of assured position Buch as it was his It needed all the object to secure tact and patience he could command to draw about him a body of men such as the country must look up to and revere 'His letters again went abroad by the hundred and as so often before to persuade men to their duty build a bulwark of right opinion round about the government make his purposes clear and his plans effective He would spare no pains to make the both great and permanent government Tours Eastern States In October 1789 his principal apall made the government pointments In full operation and affairs standing still till congress should meet again he went upon a four weeks’ tour of the eastern states to put the people In mind there by his own presence of the existence and dignity of the federal government and to make trial of their feeling toward It They received him with cordial enthusiasm for he was secure of their love and admiration and he had once mprsa royal progress from place to place a the way to far New Hampshire an back again He studiously contrived to make felt nevertheless by ev everywhere and behavior ery turn of ceremonial that he had come not as the hero of the Revolution but as the president of the United States At Governor Hancock Boston sought by cordial notes and pleas of Illness to force Washington to waive the courtesy of a first call from him and so give the executive of Massachusetts if only for old precedence sake But Washington friendship’s would not be so defeated of his errand forced the perturbed old patriot to come to him swathed as he was in flannels and borne upon men’s shoulders up the stairs received him with grim courtesy and satisfied the gossips of the town once and for all that precedence belonged to the federal government — at any rate so long as George Washington was president him and feted him the seen Having eastern towns had seen and done homage to the new authority set over them Washington was satisfied and returned with a noticeable accession of spirits to the serious work of federal administration Hamilton His Support No man stood closer to him in his purpose to strengthen and give presthan Hamiltige to the government ton and no man was able to discover Hamthe means with a surer genius ot the ilton knew who the new government were whence Its wras to be drawn what it strength must do to approve itself great and with an Insight and thorpermanent himself could oughness Washington not match: for Hamilton knew Washington and the seats of his strength in the country as that man himself could not He knew that It was the commercial classes of the country — such men as he had himself dwelt amongst at the great port at New York — who were bound by to the new government a them which promised single policy in trade in the stead of and that the policies a men who were standing to Its support out Qf a reasoned prudence out of a desire to secure good government and a place of consideration for their country amongst the nations of the world weretndividuals merely to be found only In small groups here and there where a special light shone In some minds He knew that Washington was loved most for his national character and purpose amongst the observant middle classes of substantial people In the richer counties of Fennsylva nla New Jersey New York and New while his neighbors in the England south loved him with an individual affection only and rather as their hero than as their leader In affairs He saw that the surest way to get both popular support and International respect was to give to the government at once and In the outset a place of command In the business and material Interests of the country Such a policy every man could comprehend and a great body of energetic and fluential men would certainly support that alone could make the government seem real from the first — a veritable the southern men would constm t4 vote for the assumption of the state debts If the northern members would vote for a capital on the Potomac? The suggestion came as If upon the theught of the moment at a chance meeting on the Btreet as the two men wtiked and talked of matters of the but It was very eloquently day Mr Jefferson declared he was urged "really a etrangerTo the whole subject" but would be glad to lend what aid he could Would not Mr Hamilton dine with hint the next day to meet and confer with a few of the southern In the genial air of the members? was the whole difficulty V 'vdnfluence and a shadow tulked away Two of the diners agreed to vote for the assumption of the state merely' a secure If debts Hamilton Mr could was a man unquestionably a quick genius In affairs and majority for a capital on the Potomac and congress presently ratified the gave him leave and bargain and sympathy There was not a little astonishment support as only a na at tho sudden clearing of the sides bold and equally original The waters did not go down at once ava given Hamilton’s with Washington’s pur hints of a scandal and of the shipwreck of a fair name or two went ran with Washington's pereep-onational Interests and they about the town and spread to the Hut congress had come out were with Washington's aid put into country execution with a promptness aud de- of Its angry tangle of factions calm cision which must haTe surprised the had returned to the government and and friends of the new government no less Hamilton's plan stood finished lie had nationalized the than It chagrined and alarmed It en- complete emies government as he wished Hla Plan of Finance Jefferson Is Chagrined It was this fact that most struck Having done Its work of organization during Its first summer session the eye of Jefferson when he had setthe congress came together again tled to his work and had come to see January 4 1790 to attempt the formu- affairs steadily and as a whole at the lation of a policy of government and seat of government He saw HamilHamilton at once laid before it a "plan ton supreme in the cabinet and in legfor the settlement of tho public debt” islation — not because either the presiwhich he had drawn and Washington but bedent or congress was weqk He proposed had sanctioned that cause Hamilton was a master in his provision should be made for the paynew field and both congress and the ment of the foreign debt in full— that president had accepted his leadership of course that the domestic debt the It chagrined Jefferson deeply to see end paper of the that he had himself assisted at Ham despised promises Confederation should be funded and Uton's triumph had himself made it paid and that the debts contracted by complete indeed He could not easily the several states in the prosecution brook successful rivalry in leadership should must have of the war for Independence expected to find hlmBelf be assumed by the general govern- not Hamilton preferred in the counment as the debt of the nation sels of a Virginia president was be No one could doubt that the foreign measure dismayed to see the yond debt must be paid in full: to that con- administration already in the hands gress agreed heartily and without hes- as it seemed of a man just two months itation But there was much In the turned of He began ere rest of the plan to give prudent men long to declare that he had been To pay off the paper of the "most pause ignorantly and Innocently made would be to give to the to hold Confederation to candle” the tha sharp work who had bought It up In of the speculators secretary of the treasury hav a the hope of just such a measure "‘a stranger to the circum ing been had what they gratuity of many times stances" Hut it was not the circum paid for it To assume the state debts stances of which he had been ignorant would be taken to mean that the it was the effect of what he had done states were bankrupt or delinquent his own wish to play the chiei that the federal government was to upon role in the new government b their guardian Jmd financial proviWhen he came to a calm scrutiny dence an! that the capital of the of the matter he did not like the ascountry must look only to the governthe state debts and what ment of the nation not to the govern- sumption ofserious for a m&n of politiment of the states for security and was more cal ambition It was bitterly distastenawas This profitable employment ful to the very men from whom he tionalizing the government with a venwhen a following draw must to look geance And was a plain bid besides he to win the money class to Its support parties should form He felt that he knew that he had been tricked Members whose constituencies lay had been outrun in the race for leadlooked trade of the from centers away and ership askance at such measures What he did not understand or deemed them no better than handing over to the money know how to reckon with was the the government lenders of the towns But boldness place and purpose of Washington In and energy prevailed as they had pre- the government Hamilton had been aide and confidant when Washington’s vailed In the adoption of the Constitution itself and both measures were a lad of twenty and knew In what way carried through the houses — the first those must rule who served under at onde the second after a close and such a chief He knew that Washdoubtful struggle— by stratagem and ington must first be convinced and won did not for a moment doubt that barter the president held the reins and was Part of Plan Opposed Jefferson had been in France when master was aware that his own plans called him to assume the had prospered both in the making and Washington headship of foreign affairs at home in the adoption because the purpose had not reached New York on his re- they spoke was the purpose Washingturn voyage until December 23 1789 ton most cherished Washington had and did not take his place In Washing- adopted the fiscal measures as his AH own ton’s council till March 21 1790 Hamilton’s strength consisted in of Hamilton’s great plan had by that having his confidence and support time passed congress except the asWashington and Jefferson debts of the state Upoip sumption Jefferson had slowly to discover a crisis had been that leadership in the cabinet was to that question reached It had wrought congress to be had not by winning a majority ol Mema dangerous heat of feeling the counsellors who sat In it but by bers from the south where trade was winning Washington That masterful not much astir and financial Interests man asked counsel upon every questold for less than local pride and tion of but took none consequence a too great central sharp jealousy-odid not approve his own judgment were set hotly against the Ho had chosen power because he Hamilton measure most of the northern mem- knew his views Jefferson only bebers were as hotly resolved upon Its cause he knew his Influence ability adoption When he and experience In affairs Mr Jefferson must have caught did test Jefferson's views he found echoes and rumors of the great debate them less to his liking than he had exas he lingered at Monticello In order to adjust his private affairs before en- pected (TO BE CONTINUED) tering upon his duties In the cabinet The measure had been lost at last Cocking Main in a Church In the house by the narrow margin of A most spectacular raid was pulled But the minority were In off here by Constables Lindey two votes no humor to submit They declined to Anderson and Tilley when they transact any business at all till they surprised 200 sports holding a cocking to In this matter main In an old mill near here whic’i should be yielded There were even ugly threats to be was remodeled several years ago an heard that some would withdraw from has Bince been used for a churc’i dissolution of the by the United Brethren of Gillespie and a force congress Union rather than make concessions Religious services were held on Sun upon the one side or the other day In the big room where the cockSuppoj-Won Jefferson's ing main was held In the crowd were bankers bar It was to this pass that things had come when Mr Jefferson reached the bers policemen former policemen doctors detectives miners seat of government ami his arrival politicians About the only gave Hamilton an opportunity to show clerks and others not represented was tha how consummate a politician he could profession of his statesmanship clergy be In support All but 50 succeeded In esThe southern members wanted the caping — Fayette City Pa Dispatch seat of the federal government estab- to Philadelphia Record lished within their reach upon the Potomac where congress might at least Go Back to the Humble and be rid of Importunate merchants When'Mulal Hafld sultan of Mor at its doors occo succeeded to the sultanate he money lenders clamoring with of Quakers found the sacred city of Fez Infested and Impracticable their petitions for the abolition of by rats Without any loss of time he slavery and were almost as hot at at once nationalized nil the eats of their failure to get their will In that Morocco and Issued a command that matter as the northern men were to many thousands of them ' should be defeated find themselves upon the marched Into Fez for service For Borne time a law has existed In Hongquestion of the state debts Mr Jefferson was fresh upon 'the kong making it compulsory to keep field was strong among the southern cats In every house the number members was not embroiled or com- varying according to the size of tha mitted in the quarrel Hamilton be- house Only a short time back the sought him to intervene The success governors of the German colony of was at Btake he Togo Issued an order for cats to be bf the government said and Mr Jefferson could pluck kept In all hospitals schools nd prisIt out of peril Might it not be that ons vsvN " Changes Her Mind "I used to think Gus Simpson was a nice young man duc I just hate him DOW" f "Why what has he done?" “He treated me shamefully” "In what way?" "Why the other evening at a party I said to him: ‘Let's play the old game of "Questions” If I say "Yes" or “No” to your questions I owe you a box of gloves and if you say "Yes" or f "No" you’ll give me a box’ " "Then what?" ’’Well after the party he took me home and all the way there he talked as sw eetly as could be about love and that man should not live alone and all that and when we got to the front will you marry gate he said ‘Fannie me?’ I of course answered 'Yes' in a suppressed voice" "And what did he do then?” inquired her listener eagerly "He just chuckled and said' ‘You’ve lost Fannie I take No 9s Then laughed with all his ' mlght—that'B what he did” No wonder she hated him! 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