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Show "n f JIIE M0BX1XQ EXAMINER OGDEX, CTAII. SUNDAY MOUSING, a: Egging underneath a MILE i,e FEAT OP UNDER- f,:r i Heat Subterranean Torrents and Boiling Springs Wars Soma of the Most Stupendous Ob- - 2 Tlt Had to be Overcome An Almost Impossible Task That Has Taken More Than Sis 9X to Accomplish. 0if ptmfriaMdlWOOfrO(KOW0OHHOfrO:WOMKHWfClCfrOWHbHSCMfrMMO measures adopted for 011 raran hv srtifii-is- l v. Curtis Brown. tutfcguartling human life and health under (traditions of deadly and stupendnus peril, Tbe 8t. Oothard tunnel, ttwv miles shorter, and where the natural obrta- ties encountered were far less serious, tlslmed a toll of no lives, of whom too perished of pneumonia or tunnel worm." and 2i0 were killed by ft-ik- e plosions or crushed to death by pasa- taMfSthiUy Iu the wilWn a few ing trucks of failing rocls. t dspUr Simplon tunnel m 1 running pass- - construction of the 23r sswifl. ton4 pf solid, not one single case of miner's phthisis -.lag Bdfr.ll among the S.dOO laborers nr.in with the rock has occwed over a mile engaged ia the borings, while only a . doien men have been killed at the tunnel roof. JXs encountered have works during the mors than sis years thjj Nature that they have been in progress. and stupendous. Just as the terrible slaughter In the -- i.a all the might of her ha oppoara a measure of the (2a invasion of Far East affords to war-thuman burrower. Urad- .progress of aciencs applied intervened to slay their fare, no the immunity from disease and lb4cee lfest haa done ita best to amall loss of life that has occurred in streams, the making of the longest and doepeal Imprisoned them. world reveals the Hd spring and hot sprlnRS, have tunnel In .the the bowels of the advances msde by science linked to fnfth from peace hath her Truly sometimes from industry. dirgiug no lets renowned than war. 15,000 gallon a minute to victoriea Jmwhelm and destroy them. These d erte fwyaoifwjrpaoinfwypaoinfwypao The Aral of the Alpine tunnels, the have greatly retarded the prog-lTo- f occasionally Mont Cenla, seven snd a quarter miles the engineer, them tu halt for weeks wlills- long, begun In 1817. took thirteen sclyears to complete, the average cost be-l- " raw summoned fSh powers of $1,100 for every yard of lta length, t,cir aid; at other lime re- lng The second Alpine tunnel toeing their advance by boring pnd Piercing the Ud lhr aim is a bee line a auaner mu. tb0 ttDw Nf lilM the lonsest in the Sissploo .TPatrst underground uorli undertaken, Is eaiinrrtlPE 1 week were no rTitilisu borings conflsnd it Is 4 T"" ! yt .IJTrhe "vl ?btoid h S. 1 aitsr.menl. " J o piioii, and t,, j.iiv half an hur win,- - ih and supplying fresh air snd cooliug the tcmperutiiir sufficiently to make boring opeiatiuns possible. Throe things co.isiliutvil Uu chief difficulties of the problem, ami xeicral eminent eugineera declared tlicm Insurmountable. REALLY IS TWO TUNNELS. The contract for the r.ilussal a 01k was undertaken by Mesar. nr;in!t. Brandau Co., of Hamburg, and l.'ieir l riper at ions were made with rliaiavirr-iti- c f German foresight and thorough-n.-sf- . To rope with all the vastly greater than there encountered In any other subterranean railway, a form' of oor.strurtiun nan adopted differing from that of the piadcally rixded i: tlm-- Hu I n, eiurr ! ii. fmiu tailing outside. - . Copjrw l"-.'- lY'-- t NOW THE SIMPON TUNNEL, THE WORLD'S GREATEST A GROUND' ENGINEERING WILL BE PRACTICALLY COMPLETED. pH train inrn are KieijUiiK III OF SOLID ROCK N at eiu,r provided lh iiirj-- j n , ;a lhai yre j I'NDEK A MILE OF flOUH DOCK. Nuiuithstanding tha: were u:,vum;.1v so mu, h W aier, it was exp" i iha'i i in? a.i-jimethod adiii:i cl more ispid coiisiiitcTira than in ihe M. (iiubard tunnel. Iln .iMi, ontmu'M iu ijie first track tunnel, the pnralli-- ! h,n!lng and !ue siipnraehe to Mber sid, in nv.. and a half years St a io- -' r f 14.tn'.0- '. j Bir human ilitellig'iu r cannot fore- srt with vxsctiiuUe i in-- conditions '!ui; exist over a mile undu ground. In the last 800 fee; of the Swiss ad vane no less than th:riwn hoi bpriio; . eivd. Aft.-were rxveediiigiy powerful pump had t.ou iusutllrd to j theiv meuned a grcir cope with them, Alpine i'jrm followed by a Ian. 'slide. 1 hi water rv.ppl;- at the in- cut off the lake. Mopping the moure p.iwci- (,f the , at Brigue. njiau which depended the voiitilntion. r,fr and drainage of all Ihetutiucl workingi j on the Swum side, ll was, therefore. ; i j iliu iiled in May of la--t to operations on that section and inureu-traiail efforts on the Ual.aii working. Owing to the olisiac'.c piuving than had been far more giupcudou foroeern the work lia already cupled nearly a year longer that whk expected. arWhile ouly one track 1k rangement will he made, hy widening iho tunnel at the ventre, f..- the meci-snpassing of trains there. One of the traiiisvrrbf galleries will lie c inverted into a station. While eating in a room whose root 1 over a mile thick, the waiting iavwn-gp- i may stimulate their apiieiites by speculating as to wliai wuuld hapiten to them if it hould cave iu. f OFFER MADAME brings a monthly message of culture to your homo and contains sN that Is best in literature and art it Is endorsed by OVER THREE MILLION OF THE MOST CULTURED WO. ! MEN OF AMERICA, being adopted by the National Council of Women of America as their official organ. . TO... - - office for s freo sample copy so that ye i a can see exactly what beavtlfpl magazine this Is, or sign sad return ths following coupon for $ months and wo will mail you the magazine free for six months, or sign ths coupon for six months and ws wiH mail the msgssino free of charge for twelve months. Sign nnd send this coupon today. . Call I READERS e Alpine tunnel already built rlnglo tun-reThey are all double-trac- k The Slnipnn ronslhi of twin feet apart, tunnels, fifty-siand connected with one ano'lier ly transvef-- e galleries at interval of .'6 yanls. la this way each tunnel serve, sss ventilating shaft for the other. Tlie. twin perforations have been piifhed through eimultnneoualy, but only one, that on Hie rastern side, hat been hewn out of ita full dimension. Until the traffic demand a second traek No. 2 tunnel will serve merely as a ventilating shaft. While tha work of excavation haa been under wav thla suhsi- i. x munity; these very- rirrumstancr agi-uc- er Gentlemen: 1 hereby subscribe for ths MORNING EXAMINER, 'or six months at ths regular rates os coed tlon that you rend mo MADAME postpaid every month for twelve months. WMWVWWVWWMMMSASSAWi NAME siir .v vi POSTOFFICE in as i,.r STATE Ml Ml III MS All 1111 IMi I ggBjjiiwr ..J kuowa as Infantilism, In which ndoles-reni'does uot coma ut the appointed lime, or Is deferred until the twentieth p year or later, snd is Hum Iruinnpletu, so tbat the chlldUh mind and tje childish form and features remain. Tbs uejlal eounturpan is even mure common among mi. Intellectual Infantilism is a well recognized disease, sad just ns imperfect nutrition may cause failure of the marvelous change which accompany puberty In Iho body, u tha mind too long fed on the same diet In one place may be rendered rickety. or even iiifuuillo. Worsa than ibis may happen. A rare, but still more extraordinary bodily state is that of progeria, in which, as though touched with the wand of some malign fairy, the child does nut remain infantile, bin skill adolescence, maturity and manhood, and pusses at once to stuillly, looking at eleven or twelve r like a miniature Til bonus, 'marred and wasted wrinkled snd siunied a little old man among his toys. It takes great rare on the part of anyone to live x mental lifts, corresponding to the agea or phase thruugn which hi body pusses. How few minds reach puberty, ho wfew come to adolotcence, how fewer attain maturity! It ia really tragic this widespread prevalence of mental infantilism, due to careless habits of intellectual feeding. yi-a- in- sure an demand upon him, nnd when (jifi call of fhe Kant cotne. which in one 'form or another la whirh gtowa heard by all of louder a we grow older, the call may route like the summon to Elijah or, happier far yet, as It did Das in to Puran Kiplings story, not to new liber, but to s life private, (inactive, calm, contemplative. us-an- diary tunnel has served also as a drain to carry off the great flood that have guaheil from the Interior, to transmit In m&ina the glacial water to cool the sir ami the heated surface of the rack and dilute the hot springe. Other mains have conveyed tha high pressure stream to work the hydraulic drills. Water, that great miracle worker of Nature, which in countless aeons of time has hewn out tlwt most stupendous wonder of earth. I he Grand Canon of Arisons, has been the chief in' the accompalninent of this greatest twentieth century feat of engineering. fans pure AlBy pine air is forced into the tunnels at the rate of 60,000 cubic feet a minute. The hydraulic power whirh works the Brandt drills is obtained forthe 8wls cutting by gravity from the Rhone, the water being brougnt down from a point three miles tylgher up the valley. At the works 1 ufbine s of 2.225 horse power each generate and transmit through a hydraulic main a pressure giving ten tons upon the cutting point of each drill. On the Italian side similar pnw-is derived from the Diverts In much the same fashion. THE PERFECTION OF MECHANISM. these Wonderful machines are at ths Examiner TO THE MORNING EXAMINER, ADDRESS -- THE WORKS AT THE SWISS RID OP THE SIMFLOS TI'IIGL. la tka rirtura I a Psamir Use tar CaanMtia IU VaatllaUae nan w'tk IU Trunk OF THL d damaged oerioualy by iliac-- , you may well wonder at the motive that have induced me to give up a position of such Influence and import nee: to part from colleague so congenial, from associates and students o devoted, snd to leavs a country in which 1 have so many warm friend and In witlrlt I hoive been apprerlated at so murh more than my real worth. After years of hard work, At the very time when s man' energies begin to flag, and when he feels. the need of more leisure, the condition and surrounding that have made him what he is and that, have molded hia character and abilities Into aomolhing-ipiefu- l in the com- WMias TMrar ' tlon fro of cost to all sad any reader of our paper who signs snd sends In ths coupon below at ones. r university. Addressing those of his eltes, and friends who listened to him. Dr. Osier said: Neither stricken deeply In year nor p Having contracted at Contiderabls expense with the publishers of this high grado Magaaina we beg to offer cno yoar'o subscrip- - - efficiency that it may be interesting to know precisely what Dr. Oder nhl. Tim occasion ws an addrr-- i delivered on the 22d of last month at John Hop-kin- a University, Baltimore, on the occasion of I)r. Osier' retirement, (nt the Sgs of 57) from s long period of service in the medical department of the d FREE Midt-rino- -- Bothard, nine and a quarter mile long was bagun in 1872, and eight years later the borings met with wonderful exactness. the coat being $710 a yard. The third tunnel, the Arlbrrg, running In a perfectly straight line for ilx and a third miles under the Arl mountains, afforded still mure striking evidence of engineering progress. Begun only Uve months after tlie successful junction of the 8t. Oothard borings Its cost, was only $5110 a yard snd it was completed in three years, the average rate of advance being three times sa fast as at Mont Cents and nearly twice that of the St. Gothard. Immediately upon the successful termination of the Arlberg the scheme for the Slmpion tunnel was broached and the Swiss snd Italian governments were petitioned for the necessary consents and concession. But so colossal seemed tha undertaking that ten years elapsed before the project crystallized and another thirteen years before the Conventions were guaranteed on both nidi. Work was actually begun on the: tnnnel two year later, operator from the being started simultaneously Boris snd Italian sides.- The ' difficulties nf- - the1 undertaking were enoripously 'increased by' in II ( ' There has bren so murh talk shout Professor William Osier's outgiving concerning the age limit of individual blasting to s few Inches s day. But never were they beaten; never did tlipy deviate by s hair's breadth from the straight ' course that had been mapped out for them. SUBDUING A BOILING FLOOD. Irast October, when only two bun-driyard separated the 8wsa snd Italian sections, the pent-uforces of old earth, as though bent on s last supreme effort to put an end to the attack, of dynamiie and hydranlie drill, let loose a boiling flood. That was how It was described at the time, though to be precise the temperature of the water was 133 degrees Fahrenheit quite sufficient to put a slop to human labor, when the rate of flow was several hundred gallons a second. In many quarters it was gloomily declared that the work would have to be abandoned, and that six 'years of Incessant labor and millions of dollars had been wasted. It was darkly hinted that the center of the mountain was s great "molten mass, through which nnihing could penetrate. The hot . spring was several hotter snd much greater In volume than any that had bean previously encountered. Its outburst at this point has not been expected. But little did laymen the skill and appreciate ID, 190.". fur i WHAI OSLER REALLY SAID Sk MATCH . T am going to be very bold and touch on ajulacr question of some delicacy, but of infinite importance to unlvaruiiy life one that bus not liecn settled in thla country, 1 refer to a fixed period for the teacher, cither of time of service or of age. Kxcept In uraie proprietary schools, I do not know of any institution in which there is a time limit, say twenty years' service, as in some of tha 1 hospitals, or In which a man is engaged for a term of yearn. Usualt vltam aut ly the appointment la culpam, as the old phrase read. II is a very serious matter In our young universities to have all the professors growing old at the same time. In some places only an epidemic, a time limit, or an age limit, can cave ths 'This question may be asked whether as professors we do not star too long In one place. It passca my persimmon to tell how pome good men even lovable and righteous men In other respects have the hardihood to stay in tne same position for twenty-fiv- e years. To n man of active mind too long atIs one tachment to college apt to breed to nairow hi outlook, to foster s local spirit and In promote senility. Much of the phenomenal success of this Institution has been due e to the concentration of a group of intellect nils, without loesl ties, situation. 1 have two fixed ldas well known whose operations went not restricted and whose allegiance Indeed was not to my friends; harmless obsession always nntional, yet who went willing with which I sometimes bore them, to serve faithfully in whatever field of but which have a direct bearing on action they wen placed. And this this Important problem. The first Is should be the attitude of n vigilant the comparative uselessness of men As 6t. Paul preferred This may above 40 years of age. professoriate. an evangelist without attachments, ns spem shocking, and yet read aright the more free for the work, so in ths generthe world' history bear out statement. Take the sum of human al interest a of higher education a university president should rherkh s prop- achievement In action, in acleoce, in er nomadic spirit In the members of art. in literature, subtract tho work hia faculties, iven though It lie on oc- of the men abovo 40, and, while we even casions of seeming detriment. A well should miss great treasures, organized college trust could arrange a priceless trensurrs, wo would prartlsin-du- n light-hors- L . boa paused his rlimarierin and is po longer s productive factor. He cau play the midwife, as Borratca did to Three-tetuwhether tlm and dctmmln are thought which tlm young uk-ibringing to the light are falrc idols or true and noble birth. "My second fixed ides fs ths Useless-nes- s of men above 80 years of i;e, and the incalculable benefit It would be In cnnum-rctal- , political and in paofe-tonIlfs If. ss a matter of course, men stopiied work at tills age. Donne tell us In his 'Hiathanato- -' that by the law of certain wlss 8tate sexagcnsrll were precipitated from n bridge, and in Borne men of that age ware nut' ad milted to the auffrage, and were called because the way To the Bcnate was per pout cm and thev from ago were not permitted to runic hither. III that ' lerind charming, novel, .The Fixed tlm pracAnthony Trollope d incurs tical advantages In modern life of a ret the turn to thla usage, and of plot hinges n tlie sdinirablit aelu-ma college inlo which at 60 men retired a, THE ITALIAN v SWISS COLONY al am-b-n- e an tha Paelfio coast raise tha finest grapes on tb Pacific eoaat.Thelr wlnea are absolutely pure. If you wish to dispense good cheer for the holldnye order acme of their wine from IUZZINI BROS. k too III! MM eH MM MM 26th Street Tom W atsons Magazine s for a year of The Magazine That Haa An Idea peaceful departure by chloroform. That Hack of IL incalculable benefit might follow such a scheme is apparent to anyone who, like Hava yon heard that Hon. Thus. K. Watson of Ueoigla haa begun the myself, is nearing the limits, and who lies made a careful Study of the calpublication of a magasfno? amities which may befall nirn during You know who Mr. Wation ia? Ha's tlie men who wrote The Unary of the seventh and eighth decades. France," Life of Napoleon," and Still more when he contemplate ' The Life and 'limes of Thomas the many evils which they perpetuate Jefferson." lia waa tho People's unconsciously and with impunity! A Party candidate for Prealdent last it can he maintained that all the great advantages have coma from inca under of Tom Watson's Maga-sln- a 40, so the history of the world allows First number will be published eb. 25. For that a (very large proportion Of tlie a sale at all price 10c. evils may be traced to tha sexagenBy mail $1.44 per year. You wni arian nearly all the great mistake e miss the moat intrirraling politically and socialy, all of tha worst magazine in America If you fail to bad the of few not a and poem, get tills number. Ask your newsnot to he It and speeches. dealer for Tom Watson' Magaxlne denied tbat occasionally there Is X or, better still, send a dollar tor sexagenarian whose mind, as Cicero rea years subscription to of reach the out of Imdy'S stands mark, TOM WATSON'S MAGAZINE, decay. Rurh a one has learned the se121 Went 42nd Street, cret of IlernilppiH, tliat encient Roman, Ivew York City, A. Y. who. feeling that the sliver cord was loosening, rut himself clear from all rompaiibins of hia own age, and betook himself lo the company of young men, mingling with their games and kindle, ami an livnl to the age of 153 educa-lu- a purronim hnllt.u rcfnclllet.ua et Anl there la tmik in the story, ince It e only thone wlm live with the OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. young who maintain a fresh outlook here tn beat Short ordera Everything on the new problems of tha world. at all houra. The teachers life should have three All kinda of game ob flY H aeaacn. periods -- study until 25, investigation Extra fine dinner wuntfay, from until 40, profeenlon until 60, at wbtrh 12 to 2 p. m-- i 25c. Fine lunch from on a him retired would have I age 11 to and to p. m. Whether Anthony JIM A YOUNG double allowance. Prepe. and a of college suggestion TroHojxv Street 224 Twenty-fiftor out be carried should chloroform not, I have become a little dubious, as my own time is getting eo shorL" rmitt-inplatio- n newa-sland- 128-pag- eer-mu- n 1 WHERETO EAT BOSTON" CAFE Owl Saloon The St O'Neill Broa Props. No. 2S2 26th Dealers la first class liquors of all kinds, wines aad brandy. Ail goods delivered to any part oi city every Saturday. Whisky 75 eta to $1.76 quart. Wine 25 eta per quart, S quart, $L Brandy, II quart Whiskey $r. gaL $2.25 to $5. O'NEILL Phone 135Z. FURNITURE VAN Sectional View o tke Simplon Tunnel inrraii!ik' twin "the? diln.if J ,he wiRineers pro'a t1 the situation which from nrki with C( fbed7Ji' rg fciLv,n,y'fiT' At the same time 01 ,he r " cooled degrees by means - hFT" ,,,cr ,PrnJr-- . And Winn. ,hir ,he h t n were bla ,0 comfortable on i.f Pr hoer. hath. As for the course turned myjh. . nf nal,?f,J,.dB, of tl,e SJtBPlon forces ' and controlled, employed to combat ether f,L m,,1 nd rebellious or tnU0' ,ht' IB,h.bt,'!,oslcsl bn y P,iv- - Water deriv- Hhon on the Swiss aide ! ?In,nK Divprt on the Italian ,vT lip,J. the iower tbat has driving 'll- flri,ta through the TOck' TOhdued and diverted the .? I"1 nood" forced inn rl ,hf fr"h p " cool-frnIre klselal streams, which work in what bWI lac Infeo TliE BROWNING TRIUMPH OF HPIEXCE. opowjIng glory of Ybe J?''. ment lies in the success of the si aadra?1 i Plble the perforation of the mountain at a comparatively low altitude instead of at a 'high altitude, whirh would admit of a much shorter tunnel. It la of course, obvious that 4he higher up a mountain a tunnel is driven through it the steeper must be the approaches to It. It w decided that the tracks of the Simplon tunnel should not be carried to greater altitude of 2.810 feet, the Swl entrance at Brlgne being 2.250 feet and the Italian one at Iel!e, 2.076 feet abovs aea level. The increased length of funnel rendered neeeseary ' wa one of The least Of tlie difficulties which the adoption of this plan Imposed on the engineers. The great .lepth of the perforation under the surface at the summltt exceeding 7.000 feet made it impossible to sink .vertical shaft for purposes of ventilation. Weight Involve pressure and praaeiire produces first. At the middle of the tunnel it was estimated that the cruehing weight of the great 'f mountain superincumbent mass would heat, the rock there to be burad through to a temperature approximatetoo. ly HO degrees. It wae foreseen, tW subterranean spring and stream of varying volume and temperature, would be enrountered. Provision had to he made for draining' the tunnel while the work of cowtriietloa .went direct- - aistenre on T Brandt drills. They are the Maxim Like guns of fUlHetranean borings. Maxims, one of their advantages is extreme portability for only four men are required to woik and carry the drill. With three machines, which ran all be fixed on one carriage, rix holes can be drilled In the hardest rock In a little more than two hours. The air drills used In the St. Gothard tunnel necessitated sixteen attendants and a cumbersome carriage. The Brandt drill has rendered possible a attained rate of progress never in similar tunnel borings, frequently averaging ten yards a day. Another ingenious invention of Mr. Brandt's employed in the Simplon tunnel la a com pressed air gun of six and a half inches calibre and 204 feet in length, which discharge a projectile ' containing 400 gallons of water. It fired simultaneously with the rxplo-io- n nf the dynamite cartdrise in the holes made In' the drill. This great volume cf water. Impelled with termen-don- a furr. pulverises and sweeps away ne debri. preventing that accumulation of dust whirh plays havoc with miners' lungs. ; Never before haa an engineering work of such magnitude been attended hv such careful provisions for the safety and cimfort nf the men. To .d.viai'-th- e risk of pneumonia, dressing halls rnm-press- BROS, PROPE. rally be where wc are today. It is SCHOLARS AS NEWSPAPER EDITORS. difficult to name a great and conquest of the lulnd whirh has Editing snd printing of a newspanot been given to the world by a man on whohe hack the sun wan still shin- per hy ths pupils is part of tho curriculum of ths Pupa Public School in new surroundings and oilier ing. Tho effective, moving, vitalizing which may last for work of the world is done between the Hr. Louis. The idea Is to teach chila man gets a dren lo wriJn a ronrlso and comand 40 years-the- se several years. ages of 25 manner, to observe what of prehensive plenty, years fifteen golden It is morn particulsrly on the is going on around them, and to get in eousirurlive or annhullr. period, the I younger men ths. would uree the adthere Is always a balance in ths quickly and tersely to the kernel of vantages of en early devotion to a which is still every happening. the credit peripatetic philosophy of life. Ju-- t. menial bank and Mr. L. W. Rader, principal of the o soon as you have your second teeth good. school, supervises the work. The ediIn the science, and art of medicine tors think of a change; get away from the and their assoeiales are taken nurse, cut the apron strings of your there has not bn-- an advance of the from the eighth grade, and these lire now ties in a fresh fir-- 1 rank which has imt been IntisteJ old teachers, se-assisted by correspondents from each environment, if possible, where you by young or comparatively young men. room. These correspondents write of Hunter. Bichat. tho salient events In their classes, can have a certain measure of freet, Hurvey, dom and independence. Only do not Larmier, Virchow, Lister, Koch the and learn to bo on tbe alert wait fur a fully equipped billet al- green yams wein s(,t on their heads fer news. quickly most as good as that of your master. when lhir epoch making studies were The paper is issued monthly. It A amall one. aying a contains assays by the pupils, articles apjKiintnd, with made. They modify an old few and mentally si rich 35, many etudents or maga-zin- c opportunities man is saae morallv selected from daily pain-rfor research. Diy bo just what ia at 4. wise spiritual')' at 54 or never. with a view to their educational out ihe latb" eliouhl encouraged value, editorials and news notes from needed to bring The you'.g men gnius chance to the different classes. ent and perhaus unrecognized tiiat and affnided every do to In well an un- show what is in ijnm. If there is one will enable you Advertisements are not printed, the favorable position what another could more ilmn another upra whirh management holding that it ' bet to thi.tg not even in the most not do at all, derive all the revenue from circulaof the university are to b profef-oi- s hopeful surpoucigs. Tcngnituhiied it Is this vejy syrnpa- tion and to use all the space for reading matter. Parents of the children There are Ppailing disease thy and fellowship wth their junior which only a fehne restlessness of s.ila'e. upon whom res Ilyin many de- are the subscribers, and they take n a grtat interest in the papr. It Inmind and body may head off in young i liartini-nts- , in m'ne ("rtalnly. ha- in the academic career. Thpre!,. :,s burnt of the wnrk. An.l herein duces in no small degree, it is said, to is a remarkable bodily condition, jjM ,jje chief .value of the teacher who good dciKirtment among the children. STORAGE rotation nf tesrlicrs which would he. most stimulating all along the line. We are apt to grow rtule ami thin mentally If kept too long in the ;im pasture. Transferred to fre-- h ficMa and Heavy Draying coHi-agii'- flil-u- s Allen Transfer Co. Phones: f Ball 22; Indepcadeat 412 25th St MONEY LOANED SALARIED PEOPLE Real Batata and Chattel 22. 5 J i f H ' i Bevvies quick, confidential aad I private. No commlwtoa. WESTERN BROKERAGE C& 1 223-- 4 EcIa. B!dg. Those 624-x- . le I l' I ! fall-me- a:,.- - & Carpentering, Building, of pairing and Remodeling Houses Promptly attended to. All work Guaranteed. Enquire ala Nelsw. 545 16th street Telephone 329-y- 1 . i |