The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 101, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1909 Page: 35 of 38
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' V
\
-
5
i
t
untortanate French orri-
npect th*
Newfork Tribune
1370 whea they
ADTHOUAKo
noth-
found that, wherens they kne*
atthoneh English newaspavet» have
thetr own
inz ot th* topography of
th*
compiete aequain taace therewith-
most
■.
AKE HER THEIDOb OF DEOPDE
asiatance which he furnished
of real
When Gen-
I let them just at that time.
N
n«h
-
-
n
4
4e
230
i
1
I
• - ,
win we buy tho lot* we think of buy-
C E. F. M. U
r
ing%
32.,.
I.
‘e
> -
c
The QuceN PR/HCESS ANo Pacs S ElAfAbPA
The frightful woes wrought on Italyt blessed by an heir who could succee
three other chil-
you twins and two or
will get them.
It may b« you
A
to net unlikely, -but I do. not
-e “
••
I
6
Ti-
9
A
'1
s
■ *1
or>* you want.
and st
1
w
located?
More into retail on«
tered with jog
E
I
promptness of a tru* princes of «•
4
4
D
0v
The shocka came and
quake district.
To get into
rumblings stn1 continund.
h
- !•*
and I adviae you to atick where you
-d-
a
merey
trot bed
7*e, Que£r. Aqano TueR children ourror a R/D—
and all on the same order.
Have
I
the bdttom of the garden built by Pope
A
s
VIOLKT.
,f
You wAul mov•
arz
(
1
M
TH
a
N
do anything.
ing unsettled
rive
have
There wil be no rnfne before late in
the sprine. and not at all sure lh*n
Ton are not likely to leave the elty
{
No.
times
coma
approxfmate it.
ably wreaned, I
Every day you put it oft you are mak-
ing it that much harder, and in place
of being nearer a deessfon you are fa-
* the
ation
bout
ques-
report
quite
nd ad-
in the
re not
corsin, and set apart during the life
of Victor Emmanuel H and Humbert for
princes visiting Rome
Jt to of moest dimensiona, but it to
pieaaait and comfortable, and to fitted
3
1
1
? j
II in-
, but
I sig-
teci-
ESOfFFOREARTHGAKE zOne
7cQUFE ON russ/owymercr
THE KAISER AND
THE BOER WAR
dr on
and H
with the remark in explanation:
-What children love beat to not fine
toys, but playthings they can love and
break.*
When the first news of the aarth-
tn sell my
। good ad-
BAR.
h* place is
sure then,
ar I think
think you
1f you sol
inly would
lx months.
will do no
go behind
old on you
he Increase
34
Ehmgil
V—4
’ 205
.Es
3 **I:
Qyeenzte/enze
io court caj7l/me
•4
q 13
14
$ ■
I 1
2.3/
You ar* Indicated as be-
You do not know what
rt-K or w h at you -ean- de.
L ’
2 . . ,F
a
J
4
-d-.
g
pose It Aa necessurr to explain that I
do not ‘know your age and can. only
are young prob-
There sh quid be no delay on her part
in gettng to the place wherp she oould
help them.
There was still peril in the earth-
4"
" 9
N
DEcoqAr/on$2Y
TO
€o, avo ,
DFMR
uS
personal appeerance eontained a few
mistakes. Win he get the position for
which he has made application?
MOTHER.
I presume this is asked by the per-
son interested and will answer accord-
At th* charity bazars it 1* always th.
baby booth. that ae vinita Hr*
Moreover, in her home Uf* she haz
demonstrated a simplicity that appenied
the danger sons was to court perhaps
death. ------
But there was no delay on the part soon or to make any changes I be
of the queen: The ting wanted to go; lleve it is more important nee to 1
alone, but his heroic wiresineisted on tnat he is so useful where ba to that
the queen should have been suapicous,
but she never raised a question, and the
bounty was paid to nolens than 400
ehldren.
Tried this
D BOY.
r th to year
you tried,
o or thrte
o as well
t I do not
eision th’s
vou should
ave more
st you will
ind that is
will make
/05-A
“g
,; ",n- > < '
■ eg -r 'i-? • - 2,
1. g---0
taken with th* unfavorable trend of
th* other, ahould be juntrication for
not been troubtea with tM»
"nre WVK a.
TV,
-
I
Ar t WK that
the roa. off an
•9
■ ■■ 1, _ ‘g
t / 1
“21-
intend .making th. necewsary eftert
Me may take th* place and lnt*r de-
makea them rot., and tn a wenk they
will be roartv to feed.
The best way to de is to divide th*
»heiven Into wuven eompartmentn, on*
for M«h day In th* wewk mu »« at
thee eompartmenta with oats enchdar
1 wen in your undertaktngs
Mo 2609 Too anew red meverai qu2*-
tone very uatiatae4 eu- for me In
fall, .ort I now nak what ahouid t
wg. In — ■ IU. wort’ • p
. Ton havetason to beheve yon "o4
nucceed tn asprotenaton. but 1 canmot
l«ll you how to choone I can ten xou
on* thing for wure, and that •• T0*1
j..u*t 1- JOHih mi ni*t t 111 "IIK
do anaatiek to it or you will never
- ,
of aecimning to take their fashion* from
Paris, but of adapting Itanan ideas to
their costumes, in order not only to ob-
tain more beautiful ettecte, buy to pro-
mote national tam.
Moreover, the queen demonstrated
the possession of bom* lovine virtues
that scored deeply with th* people
When her ehna was bom "he prom-
aned n cradle and 820 in money to every
baby born that day in Romo and Naples.
Tere waa such an enormous gatn that
uru daughter of the duke of Genoa
-me Poe of Savoy." Her weddtng to ,
Humbert bad been no attair of state,
she honestly loved him, and his amour
win the auchess of Litta, ending in
mcaneal and a suit for divorce on the
pe« of me agace, with the king named
as oo-respondent, came to her as a ter-
rible blow. and only love of her country
and idolatry for her son, the heir to
th* enrone. Victoe Emmanuel, led her
to menaln in Um bonds of matrtmony
with one who had so completely ats-
emcedehe connection.
But the hereto conduct of hia, wife
nnauy so impdemsed the scvereiKn that
h broke off the Ilason and begged for- l
venens. Just when the queen had on- i
5<-‘e .
f.A.
L 1-, "t;
nier baa leek ahend, and I belleve tb»
cere and troopa in
o buy a home here? FaXXIE
I do not think you can buy and pay
for a home whete you now Ure it 1»
not at all tavoradle and I cannot tell
you where to go. Now. I do not wish
to be too mure of thie end advine you
to mk. your time and look for a place
that you think wil eratt you. Whew
you find one let mi know and in case
Jou-have only a umited time to A20TP4
I wil sena you » portonel anawer if I
find it neceesary. ’ .
Mo 2598. wm I move from here-an
and .»nr
to Ployed b7 tb°.
ke treat-
U shoull
Cited by.
E. fl-
e proves
you, and
to give.
, special-
a so pos-
her way.
have its
you even
eleved. I
are very
saot my
will work
dm a tair
strument
nake you
B you the
r can tell
would be
very strongly to the people. Sim who at
court has a bearing unapproachable by
any sovereign of Europe, declined to
live in ths stately place at the Qufrinal,
but persuaded her iny al-zpouse to tabs
o. will do very wel t forset al
atvut it .nd rerpse t" inten ‘o ••T
more on lb. r,b»,« The report ma
---1 fall to find com-
2602. I have written you
before. and all answers
- 4 1
X
.-t. 2 - jE
. sse
* =8
t. :h—c2
. ,fa0. e >•
the Germans possessed
out with refined simplicity quite in tbs
English style.
The queen enjeys the admiring devo-
tion of her husband, and by preference
they nearly always dine alone, their
merry tooghter heard by those in the
next room showing the happiness they
get out of their qulet life.
- The humanity and touch of the queen
with the life of the humblest xubjects
of her realm is shown by an incident
related of her in connection with toys.
Some ne sent to the little Princess
Yolande a magnificent colleotion of
the ratiroad." ,... „ .
,<AK‘• said th* attorney, witham
*_ _ Ml* Ton ear you have ^*14*
T. * X..
how many children wtl I have?
QUEEN HLIZABITE
The rules an laid down would give
accompanying him. I they do not tot him out. There is a
The baby princesses, Tolande and Ma- chanee that he may be dispensed with,
falda, andntbe baby crown prince, whose ■ sut he does hia best he will proh;
life stands next to that of Victor for aby ntay and may get a raise later,
the rulership of the country, wots put rt is the best you can do at this time
In.the hands of safe custodlavs, and th®
sovereigns set off on their errand of
indulged in a good deal of unfriendly -
comment apropos of the assertion of country.
Although no large scale map was PoS*
sessed by the English, or anything ap-
proaching thereto, yet the German war
department owned one, the fruit of
careful surveying. exploring and in-
vestigation of Natal by Qerman- staff
officers, a map in seventy sheets This,
at th* instance o the kaiser and by
nts direct tow. wa=laned to the ----------
government by the Berlin war depart-
ment and sent out to South Africa tot
the use of the commanding generala
there during the remainder of th* eam
paign. How handicapped the British
commanders had been until that time
was shown by th* fact that the only
map upon which they had to dernd
was that carried by a well knowo Fng-
t,
,3"
ft ,
nerole stratn of Montenegro. H*r peo-
Y * a
n
3 hear
e fair
being
kd I'm
sn't a
ou tell
recti y.
u'd be
inva-
should
plural
, dozen
jut in-
best
rant Au
lready
o pun-'
u may
I'll be
bility:.
TUB.
ou art
tn may
to an-
erhaps
>nly as
in that
at also
i a hit
1. The
I* but
are be-
iticised
e l1ke-
itlet in,,
nk less
all an-
school
1 while
if you
ght use
at su-
ed only
owever,
to keep
•ven my
ply im-
ut the
se just
rill now
nsidera-
position
me thing
odTorm
ten fence,
that an
e griev-
it takes
perfect
ability.
subject
than fa-
yed, but
- of ateoton with her penitent spouse,
the hana of the anarchist, Bresci took;
him Ceram tho world.
Italy knew all these facts and it
uhared so deeply in the sufferins of.
the queen that when the son came to
tho IbEono the people declined to give |
tonis wife. Helene, tho love it had given |
bhon mother-in-law.
Margherita had been a great diplo-
mat. she had dcao much for the good
(of the country, and the nation declined
’go believe that her successor could
■ achtve in proportionate degree.
For one thing. Helene was not an
She to a daughtef of the prince of
■ Montenegro. She had no Itallan sympa -
ates nt the tinle the Italian prince went
a-wooing. In fact, all her inclinations
■ were in favor of Russia, the czarina of
! which nation she just missed becoming
Iisa well known fact that Nicholas
greatly admired the superb beauty of
Hetene, and longed to wed her. In fact, j
, the wooing had gone to the point, where'
‘ at was understood that they were be- j
correspondent, from whom
pretty sure to get It
____.-sams-Horoscop recefved dut
and, whdie 1 do hotlyour description »t nim in reard •
pie were in troutle. Taey needed her:
•S. 1 ad not may tnat I —? em
Pina f Xi tor Lmt ta • Wrteh-
cta2 wipanm qundal haatdentt;
rrSheh-a 4ennzr 'Wrecned
fifteen years ago. _L,
The vessel stranded off Suith # Po-n
ana was • comepiee "reek Ceptet
kandai losng ail-nte.posmezaizna :
iarhe of the finates .06.0a 5012
thrvukh » newspeper notiee. and, Pu2
th* Eetuate rnder * ter «.m fore
invery captam Rrdal otteren2
.T*-?-
of the ehe — waTw'-te-et tmmati
time.
,, _y geuueman trlenda whom I knew
pt"*a maried - -tuip
wi) me I* “ truef
i erat Sir Rod vers Butler. In January,
1 1000, occupied Potgieters Drift, on the
Fugela. on his way to Spion Kop the
i remark was made by virtually every
Fngliah neyspaper that the former
! spot-was not marked on any avallable
map. The London Timos in particular
wrote
The abaence of accurate maps of
the region in which our troops are now
moving is an extraordinary example of
the carelessness of our preparations
‘ for war Nrthern Natal is a noto-
riously difficult country, in which we
had already fought a disastrous cam-
paign and had paid the price of negli-
gence and overconfidence years ago.
Tot. although it has long been British
territory and though our royal engi-
near corps and staff ofricers ought
long ago to have surveyed every inch
of it, nothing of the kind has ever been
done, and thero are no large scale
maps of the region in which we are
fighting '
Ft to perfectly true that the EnKl'sh
army did not have any maps of this
sort and was as deflelent in this re-
by the earthquakes that destroyed Mes-
sina and Reggio have had one slight ray
of consolation for the queen of the dev-
astated realm.
Her heroic conduct in the midst of
the horrors of the first few days, the
bravery with which she nursed the suf-
fering. keeping so close to the danger
■one that she was actually injured in a
belated shock that came a week after
the main upheaval, have made the
beautiful queen the idol of Italy.
This is a place in the affections of
the people that had never before been
granted in full measure.
Helene had to suffer to some slight
extent for the enormous popularity of
her mother-in-law. Queen Margherita,
the dowager, she who was the wife of
the murdered Humbert
Margherita was Italian to start with.
V,48,
i{gg25
I think yoa win have • cione cnl
and will juat manage to hang on ”
reany look. M If yon could *««r it
out I* ’h* etter. I now **k
) rotions etwoon lb* pianets wht
I gEeste distance to a certain ex too
U this case taey are leaking Th
mieyima planet has extremne pouth
) notion ana that la supposed to •
great atstanoe. probably outside
- Mak. Perhaps you oam piek • H
trom th. above and let me xno"
J t wtM ■*« h.a H bafra - -j
\. atogasstlaLALadeinedlegeomms
dropping ttont of your mime ----------treuwan*
No. 3601 Will we move northenst .nd
if ** dnomba ' comine year win b» • good one tor
you That t*. It wiu de • ■«»•* better
an ootmon ana too wm weceed fair •
costiy toy* queen Helene *et theme Na 206. Will I way whezeLain
antde and brought somech caper ones.
Rut ehe diplomata decided that poll-
tics would make a union with Princesa
aur of Heese a better exploit for Rus-
■la. so the osar was informed that he
must eupprea whatever eelings he had
la th. matter, and tak. tor hla bride
whom they pinked out
Thus it oame that Helene mtssed the
throne of Rssia. At tirst the subati-
tutlon at the throne of Italy for that
which she had lost did not afford full
oonmondton. For one thine, the king
of Italy la tn trail heaith, and it waa
tearod that the unton might never be
anan wooM bompomguint oouth up bb residenee in the amnall1 at
number of fat mUq -ambinos" r'*”- -------- hull, h, Poo.
have felt the caresa at her royal Up*.
moem that my prospects tor busines»
would be beat? HwAlo
The directlen indicatea ts west or
wouehwest but I cannot decide M to
almtanen. In some ce-s there ate dl-
xina very much tor nome time I *up
BTAIYS SUBENABROINBE
IHORRORS9EA
can begin feeding, using the oat in
the first compartment and flihftg H HP
agaln with fresh soaked oals This
will tnsure a regular successien of.
green food for as long as you care to
continue it
It takes about seven dayw to bring
the oats to the right condition (the
sprouts and roots together nhouid be
abou five Inches in depth), very cold
weather retarding it a Httle If tbere
to any danger of tret zin, net a lighted
oil stove tn the cellar for a few hours
It Ie surprising how far a few oats
wm go when treated this way The
sprouting process , meres see their bulk
about ten times and about tbree or
four sprouted cots are about all on®
fowl Will eat at a ______
Worked Herd. F«h»
Youth's Companion.
A persistent lawyer who had been
trying to establlsh a wftnesa’ susplelous
connectton with an offending ralkroad
was at last, elated by the admlsgion
of the wttness that hg "had worked on
thy borrowed it.
It to a pity, for the sake of the
friendly relationa between Great Erat-
aih and Germany, which are so impor-
tant to the peace and prosperity of the
world, that the Engunh secretary of
state ror war. Mr Haldane. When he
denied in the houee of eommona that
any trace existed in his departrent of
the plan of cumpaign contained in the
kaiser's confidential letter to his
grandmother. Queen Vletorla, In Janu-
ary. 1100. did not add this fact, which
is familiar to every one of the Engtiah
‘fricers of the higher Ki des la the
Bouth African war, namely, that »he
only large-scale map and topographlc-
al chart of the British territory in
which they were fighting waa the one
which had been loanea to them at th®
ku l ner'e tnstanre by the German war
department at Berlin.
you did your best, and it is worth try:
auakocnme, tn. queen acted with the ing Don’t let on as it, you had any
‛ ---- idea of going. Act as if you thought
; you deserved to atay and see to 1* .but
you do deser-e M. and I belteve you
or*_________________________—--
______ xo 2607, How «rn It ar twelve inneda21*,
Every new report of th* triwnttul ou<- other questions from th* pernon.
nelysma oontinues to tell the Mory of - - "
how bravely they contrtbutod 5 neipin«
in restoring order end brineina zuSCOT:
Thow who in horror and AF2215
mizbchevaorkt ‘wan**” y.
Li0« rt. nap 13
gutnk"ndministerine to U" ’“**
%
*
the kaiser in the much disoussed Lon-
don Daily Telegraph interview that at
• the moment when the Britlsh army was
■ sustaining one dies star after another
1 in the Roar war he had eent a private
fetter or warm sympathy tehta Krand-
’ mother. Queen Vietorta. along wit it a
confidential memorandum of hts views
j as to how the defeats might be re-
trlaved, yet n to a ttrtie known f«-t
! that the English owe him a consider
i ahi* debt of gratitude for a certain hit
know when. It is quits certain to be In 1
less than a year You will do better
to another year whether you move or
not But. as you win be almost sire
to move, you will aztribute it to the
change, whereas you would do well
even if yon stayed where you are The
pension will likely qome in time, but
as near as I ean tel you wI not get
K before next summer. I belleve it
win.look for * time a ir it were not
coming at all, but eventually you are
will be safe.
No. 2606 When will there be an in-
crease in salary, or will my husband
change positions, and if so, will we
leave th® eftyr FAITH,
thor away- You might make a good
preacher, but I belleve you would bo
liable to be mixed in a ncandal If you
shoula, choose any calling tn which
you had frequent dealings with women.
You may have quite another idea of
this, but you are more susceptible than
you imagine and will do well to be on
guard if you will make your selec-
tion I will try to determine if you have
made the right choice but that to the
best I can do for you.
Fxtra-The answers to my other
Questions have so far provon true.
When will we be marrted, and will our
married 1te be a happy one?
r TRUEBLE.
You do not sign your name this time
and I do not remember you. Cannot
give an answer unless I know who I
am writing to
de Aa” N" * etmot
Male lived »• Pencedaie on mer
3a’"
I thigh you wiu move. That looks
nice a sure thing. You will probably
go in the direction named, although
there is a strong chance of your going
west, and It is the better direction for
you. I think you would do as well to
stay where you are tot the present.
No real advantage in a move now You
will do very well to buy the lots and
will find them a good investment. Bet-
ter tak® them too are unsetted ana
It appears that nothing but A move
will do you, but you would do bettar to
ingiy. This is a mixed up affair. It — - -
;re bl Sil It Sa meme Wm’'*’****^* cam
realiytry ror ll but thet he dose.not nor, in»t roa really hav. • werk
tng enemy, but this ie not intended
for your good and .I do not believe
thorg- truth or good tntention in the
- apafrirrmouptve * gruwt hus-
He to well deacribed, and that.
7
. 1
“e.
— much yet •if Kad workeq on —. -
learn it you Hve tong enough and I on, for that length of tin * - -___
have ■ ehancu ro» *ilprobabiy marry pparru,otono.crkua l”. **•
Now, you see, ’here is no other way tor, a X for seven years without re"
-M"wourm. -f*iy erogea l "2-egzmzmrsopar
myaleknemat w >>■?• "tt ana OK. re tried te oPr
You have nothing to worty about । ine windorwe in tn* P T * X- car, ana
row .r. .11 rigne To. have no partes never oncrhavs.1z"ded-
ferinf kn«w» st quces now. The 14
elde not to keep it. bit the - ». -• ar
hexiunotqakalaa,ntartneneesarL
"kn26om I have bodn tola that onelbana
, rdee
h opez,"
. kgtdaj0
consider it a sure thing I do rot hav
mueh connaence IB thne rine-hareA
sudementa and hope you wi. pot D:
aleappotatea tt you have twe «*<» at
twin. In pince at one.
No. 260a. I have • debt owine me
WIU I ever get It. and when?
AUNT rek.K.
Too will not get II fan. I am very
much at th. opinion that you "’I1
never (M it. There I. nithing to tnal-
eate dlhonesty on th# part ot th*
borrower, but he I* unable <n pa- ana
probably through bad manasement or
inek of energy. Your beat pian I* to
kep trtenas with thia party and Ke!
. Uttl* at . time it you o4n do and
if you work It right yon mey ovental-
ly get th. whote thing: but H too
not careful you will lone it *1
No 2004 Will I marry either of th*
boye I am gotng with now? R Z P
I cannot say that you will marry
on* of them Ther la nothinz anr*
about It. but I belleve there la no AouDt
hot ,au will hav* a chance to marvy
one of tem It U »l*o Inkely that you
will necept, and if you do you wili hav
no oqune to regret It- I beltev you
would ba pertectly anta In ac c ept in a
th* fret one thet proposea. and If vou
have a eholee I believe you can got the
. - '
4
198 1
.bringa them torward
THE FORT WORTH RECORD: SUNDAY MORNING, JNUART 26,1909.
For Winter Fowl.
Country lre in America.
Sprouted on’s make th® very best
kind of green tod for chickens in
winter sna they are ensy to prepare-
A peck Ot oata will make, enughor
one day's feeding for 1,00® hens, you
can use more or less, in proportion to
th® else of your flock
The old requlsite in growing tht
green food is a cellar, AD old incu-
bator or root cellar is xcollent Put
up shelves on two sides of the cellar
and two tiers of shelves if the cellar >•
smell If there to room enough, how-
ever one tter iu better, as you wiu find
when using two shelves that the oats
on top will be a darker grrmn and
make a stronger, hurdler growth, ow-
ing to the better light and heat.
Take the roquisite amount- qt cats,
for one day's feed 1st the rate of a
peck tor each‛1,000 chickens)- cover
with cold water, and after letting them
soak for three or four hours, dump
them out on the sheif and leave them
in a heap to swell for hait a da-/ Then
spread them out eveniy, sprinkle with
sold water twice a day < warm water
PR
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to the throne.
The coming of the heir was the first
point that inclined the .people toward
regard for their new sovereign.
Hot beauty had some influence on the
impressionable -Tuscans, for no one
could discount that it is said by many
that she to the handsomest woman of
royal birth in Europe. Her face is
beautiful and her figure superb.
Italians liked to know that at every
gathering of royalty there stood none
to dispute in point of beauty with their
own haughty and handsome queen.
But tt began to be discovered that
there was more to the queen than her
physical charms. Gradually she began
to evince a mentality that ought not to
have been a matter for surprise, con-
sidering that she springs from the he-
roic stock of Montenegro, the little
principality that has not- hesitated to
boldly defy with force « arms on more
than one occasion the power of the
Turk. - -—--—- .
The queen gradually developed an
understanding of the Italian nature.
She became proud of the art traditions
of the country, and of the heroic deeds
of Garibaldi, Cavour and the other
giants that had brought about the In-
dependence of Italy.
She appealed to the sadies of her
court to be patriotic, even to the
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The Fort Worth Record and Register (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 13, No. 101, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 24, 1909, newspaper, January 24, 1909; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1499173/m1/35/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .