Stone Harbor Gazette, 3 July 1915 IIIF issue link — Page 4

Ill SCENES AT PINE RIDGE HOME 111

SEA CAPTAIN TELLS OF MUTINY AT JAMAICA ftntir «l fislt Shamir Raima Tali Ttot Ms Ttin at Captain Kldd ▲ story of a wottsy 5a Jssaatoe feey I B*t rivals some of the tales of Captain KHtd was to-14 fey oaptata Sm&m, Of th# steamship Admiral Be3d«y, -wtslefe | Bocfcad at this port with a ear -go, of Btrit. The mutiny took plaee aboard tfes Norwegian bark Ravsnsocna*. anshored !a Jamatoa bay. and before the mutiny had been auriled, four men, Btambara of the ship's crew, were Stabbed, and are dying In a hospital as a Moult of the sallor'e revolt. Prom Captain Duus, of the Ravenscourt, Captain Jensen learned the story of the mutiny. Soon after leaving Dunkirk, France, for the West Indies, a Swedish sailor named Gold man began to oause trouble. ( The second day out the eabht. boy , heard Goldman and. three other sailors planning to murder Captain Duub ' and assume command of the sWJ> The boy related what he had overheard to the captain, and Goldman was Imprisoned In the brig. Captain Relents at First , After a week at Imprisonment the man's pleadings to be released so lm- ' pressed the captain that Goldman was given his freedom. He was taken from the brig and' again put to work. t On Saturday, July 30, Goldman armed himself with a long sheath 1 knife, and then, like a raving manloo, ! ran about the deck wielding the knife [ and attempted to stab all the crew. ( Before the weapon could be taken from trim three members of the crew were lying on deck unconscious from severe stab wounds. 1 In an attempt to save the lives of , hit men, Captain Duus ordered all sails set for Jamaica bay. This was done, and the three wounded men, together t with the captain, were plaoed in a rowboat and taken to a hospital. When Captain Duus started back to / the Ravenscourt *ne saw the ship making off to sea. He immediately put 1 back and requested that a gunboat be 1 sent after the vessel. As this request t could not be granted, the captain went j to Port Antonio and had government officers overtake and seize the ship- ' Knlfewiolder Escapes It was tjien learned that Goldman, i after being Imprisoned again In the . brig for his murderous attack on the crew, had succeeded in getting out of ( the Irons In which he was placed- He I came up on deck and ordered the re- t malnlng seamen to set sail, threatening ( them with death unless they complied with his commands. The Ravencourt is now anchored in Jamaica bay, unable to proceed until a t full crew can be obtained. Goldman Is , to Jail awaiting trial under the marl- , Cms laws of Jamaica. -

LAUNDERING OF LUGES AND OF FINE BLOUSES The Safe and the Economical Way Is to Do It Yourself. AND NEVER USE HOT WATER Have Warm Water, Pure Soap, Handle Gently and Dry Carefully. eNE of the useful arts is the washing of fine blouses and laces, something for which we pay the goodly prices or fret with a laundress at home. There are fine pieces of lace in nearly every woman's wardrobe which It would a shame to trust to the laundry or the average laundress. Just Do It Yourself. However, the beautiful finish that you may get and the greater care that you will take of your own treasures will well repay the trouble of learning how to do up these delicate things. In the first place, never use hot waBe sure that your water is merely warm. Hot water would be most disastrous, indeed, for it would shrink and pull the blouses and laces hopelessly out of shape. Use a good, pure white soap. And be sure that it Is pure. Soaps that are not will eat into your fine material like acid. Hake a good lather and dip the blouse into It. rinsing it several times. Do not rub the material either together or against anything. Squeeze it. Two or Three Rinsings. Next take the blouse out of the suds and rinse it through cold, clear water or three times. Be sure that the temperature in which you dry the blouse not too hot, as that also might be disastrous to the shape of your blouse. Throw the article over a clothes horse and remember to change its position several times while it is drying, that it may dry evenly. Otherwise the weight of the wet portions of the garment, however slight that weight may be, will drag down on the blouse and pull it out of shape. —Morton McTurk, superintendent of the Hazle Mountain Coal Company operations of the Black Ridge, has been promoted to be general manager of the McTurk Coal Company, at Girardville. - ■it'SIMiaiiiS

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I Today's Philosophy i By J. H. THOMPSON j I am going to take up the cudgel in behalf of men. In this day of 1 feminism they need a supporter. We hear so much of the patient devotion i of women. Is it more wonderful than the devotion of men to duty? i Go to work; get supper; go to bed; get up; go to work — millions of I men pursue this routine wiA dumb, unerring faithfulness. What do they ; get? Half? How many men do you laiow who get half their earnings? j And after fighting the world all day, a business » n„r. "ran is too often compelled to fight his home at night. in Defense a man can make fits business a success, 0f but he can't built a home without aid. Today a horde of idle women are screaming about Mere Man the.roen. They are living off the fruits of the labor of industrious men. Despite all the mouthings of orators, the rise of the race -1. as been through men and the women have been pulled up along with the r male leaders. The exceptions to the rule are so few that they are negligible. The men who are the real force back of i he greatness of the world do not get the recognition they deserve — the great mass of toiling, faithful, untiring, quiet men who, uncomplaining, give all they have to others, who pursue a dull round of labor and gain their own salvation through providing salvation for others. When it comes to a man's day off, he goss to church and hears abuse heaped upon his head for what he has done. If a woman is a failure, it is easily said, she married wrong. If a man fails, he must take the blame. No contributing caira is ever allowed to miiigate his sin. . Man has been called the lord of creation. The great mass of men are slaves of creation. They unselfishly give up their birthright that some one else may enjoy ease and luxury. How many of the common men that you know enjoy one-half of their earnings? In the first place, the man does not have time to spend money. He's too busy paying instalments on an insurance policy that some one else may enjoy life after he is dead. A lot of slanderers have bruited it around that men are a class who care only for barrooms, poker and the society of proscribed women. No baser falsehood was ever told. The average man whom I know has no time for such things because they interfere with the fight he is making to keep somebody else supplied with money. And the lords of the earth sit calmly by and smile at the attacks upon them. Maybe thev have not even enough time to listen. But anyway, I believe that no class in existence is so thoughtlessly abused and get so little credit for mighty deeds as the men.

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c. FINCH HITTER IS : RARE SPECIMEN IN j NATIONAL PASTIME ; T&s pinch hitter ts a rare specimen < of the genius athlete, popularly sup- £ posed to be all bat. But any member ( Of the home rooting clan will tell you the plnoh hitter Is the big lobster who draws his salary for warming the 1 bench or getting a hit when it doesn't i do any good. , The pinch hitter usually Is sent to olout for the pitcher In the last of the ninth, when the home club has run- i nerB on second and third, a run needed to tie, and two to win. He always pops to the pitcher or hits out to However. If there's no one on the danger circuit and the home team's so far rearward the regulars already have ducked for the shower, the pinch hitter may be counted on to cross the crowd by knocking a double or a home run. These instances of pinch (or pinchless) hitters refer only to the home club. The pinch hitter of the visiting teams nearly always makes good, whereupon many persons 'n the stand get up and go home. But the pinch hitter of the vislt'ng team who stalks to the plate with two pals on the red lantern route and the game a tie carries fear In huge gobs to the heart of every quivering home The home pitcher has been chucking recklessly all afternoon and the Invader# have been waiting him out. Hence the pitcher figures the pinch hitter probably will look at the first one, so over the groove he lays the. ball. Now the pinch hitter Is executing a bit of thinking on his own part, and swinging to meet the first groove pitch he blngs It merrily and rambles round the route while his mates rell home with the tallies that send the town bug# home to bait the family dog and the cook. The eomments from the stand -re Interesting l "Why couldn't Casey Jones do th. when he batted for Jinx In the fifth 1 a hug laments. "Why, that hig Joke couldn't hit a balloon with a pickax," rejoins a bug :who probably lost a stogie on the game. "He never made a hit In his life when It was needed. He must have something on the olub owner or he wouldn't Stick around on the payroll." There have been many famous pinch hitters. One of the greatest 'was John Alden, a member of the PUjgrlm olub .in the early Puritan league, ijoha went to bat for Miles Standlsh end mads .p hit. j ..JRENU.se j BREAKFAST Peaches with Cream Cold Cereal Breaded and Fried Tomatoes Buttered Toast Coffee LUNCHEON Chicken Sandwiches | Lettuce and Tomato Salad Sponge Cake Iced Tea DINNER Cream of Lettuce Soup Steak Creamed Potatoes Spinach with Eggs Cherry Pudding Coffee Cherry Pudding. Half fill a pudding dish with stoned cherthe top with aB light sweet-cake batter and bake steadily until well raised and nicely browned. Serve inverted (cherries on top). When carefully made and neatly served this padding Is delicious.

ERLIN WAR CHIEFS IN VIENNA SEE RULER AND HIGH MINISTER Coincident With Report to German Officials of Gravity of Issue With United States. Vienna, Jr ; -.--Dr. von Bethmannlollweg, the German Imperial Chan:ellor, and Gottlieb von Jagow, the Jerman Foreign Minister, arrived in Vienna today to confer with the Ans-ro-Hungarian Foreign Minister, Baron Stephan Burian von Rajecz. During he day Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg had in audience with Emperor Francis JoAwakens Berlin to Crisis. Berlin, June 27.— It is learned thai Dr. Anton Meyer-Gerhard's report tc the officials charged with drafting th< German answer to the American note indicated the serious nature of the situDr. Meyer-Gerhard was sent to Ber lin by the German Ambassador a Washington to indicate to the Germat Government the real attitude of thi American Government and people. Hi reported that the sentiment in thi United States had been growing some what more favorable from the Germai viewpoint, and particularly more favor able regarding the prohibition of thexport of munitions of war to the al lies. The sinking of the Lusitania however, undid all this. The state o feeling in the United States at the pres ent time, he explained, is such that i will not be satisfied with unnecessar delay in the answer, nor with an ar swer which appeared to be evasive o failed to meet the issue squarely. WOUNDED NOT FORGOTTEN Paris May Be War Hardened, Bu Not So Rural France. Paris, Jul,.' — While there may I no diminution of patriotic sentiment t the war drags . n, military spectacli have become an old story to the passin throng in Paris. Italian reservists rjoining their posts recently reawakenc the boulevards, because the Italian ii tervention was new and welcome. Bi not so many people as formerly stop I greet the limping soldier or to watt sympathetically the passage of amblances, which have become so nume ous. In country railroad towns, hot ever, stations are as thronged on tl arrival of every ambulance train as i the beginning of the war by woffle young and old, girls and children, wt provided with sweets and comforts > all kinds and flowers. A train of wounded from Than Hartmannsweilerkopf and Donnemari passing through the Franche Comte tl other day, accumulated offerings of th sort at every station until when it a rived at Besancon every soldier's clot was. garnished and the racks and wi dows of every car were filled with fie flowers of France; blue bottles, wi poppies and daisies. The roofs of tl cars had disappeared under green fo age; the train looked like, a travelii flower show.

41 THE EXCURSIONS DUE HERE THIS SUM Two of Them Have Already Arrived, With Buyers From the West. ALL BOUND FOR SEASHORE Stop-over Privileges Granted by Railroads Bring Them to This City. The first of the 41 trade excursions which are scheduled to pass through Philadelphia this summer on their way to New Jersey seashore resorts reached here last Friday over the Pennsylvania Railroad from the Pittsburgh district. It carried a huge contingent of people from the prosperous coal and iron regions of Western Pennsylvania, and included among the many pleasure seekers were a large number of buyers who, in making the trip, planned to combine business with pleasure. On the day following the arrival of the first trade excursion the second crowd of excursionists passed through the city. They came from Western New York over the i Lehigh Valley-Reading route. As in former years, stop-over privileges in Philadelphia have been arranged for the excursionists through the efforts of the Pennsylvania Rail- , road. Each year an increasing number j of the excursionists take advantage of . the opportunity to spend several days a in Philadelphia. Not only the buyers, g but many of the pleasure-seekers who j make the stop-over principally for the h purpose of sight-seeing have come to regard the stay in Philadelphia with its many historic associations as one of the prime features of the trip. 1 Big Business Anticipated. e While in former years the buyers have patronized local business houses liberally, it is expected that this year they will buy more heavily than ever r. before. Because of the resumption of Lt activity in the iron and steel trade, due „ to the heavy orders placed for muniie tions by the warring nations of Ei> ;e rope, the business men of the coal and ie iron sections are in a better position to a. purchase heavily this summer than they n have been in many years past. In many r- instances visiting merchants have wired ,e in advance that they are in the market ,1- to purchase heavy summer and fall a, stocks. if Not only are the big wholesale houses s- benefited by the visit of the excursionists, bul the small shopkeepers and ho■5" telmen reap a harvest from tne visiQ- suipBPi sqi jo iuuui oo.isramoo jo .iaq or -muqo sql jo sj-iojjo aqi "qSnoiqx -sjoj hotels of the city have made special arrangements for the entertainment of the visitors. In the June issue of the Chamber of Commerce Journal there is a list ot of the principal hotels, together with the names of the local jobbers in all be )iuesas From now on the trade excursions will es be a weekly event until the close of the -e. | Baltimore & Ohio, Lehigh Valley and e<3 1 Reading will each bring its quota of n_ j the visitors. So well has the excursion ut i plan been organized that every section to | of the country adjacent to Pennsylvach . nia in the North, South and West will iU_ - be tapped. DIVE IN AUTO INTO CANAL >n, Seven Occupants of Car Ail Come ell Out Alive, One Badly Hurt. | Marysville, Pa., Jui.s .-'.—In attempti ing to avoid another car a big automol.n' bile belonging to A. J. Ellenberger, of 'e' ! this place, and driven by his daughter, :1!ei Miss Virginia Ellenberger, slipped over 1118 1 an embankment, turned over twice and ak landed on its side in a canal, near in- New Buffalo. Miraculously, no person sld was killed. ;he Miss Ellenberger crushed several >li- ribs; but the other six members of the D3 party suffered only minor injuries. The ear was badly broken.

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