The Paden News. (Paden, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, October 30, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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PROMINENT MICHIGAN DEMOCRAT
mom GQHN SULKS
GOVERNMENT CHEMISTS ASSERT
THEY CAN MAKE PAPER.
THE JOURNEY'S END
novo *J Moffett Stuillo, Chl«c&
Daniel J. Campau, the Michigan member of the National Democratic com-
mittee, li well-known In trotting turf circles throughout the wuntry. He> Is
the owner of The Horseman and Spirit of the Times, devoted to breeding and
turf news. Mr. Campau is a lawyer by profession and was collector of cus-
toms at Detroit from 1886 to 1890.
HIDDEN IN BOILER
SUPPOSED PENNILESS WOMAN
HAD MUCH MONEY.
Aged Jersey City Resident and Her
Daughter, Believed by Neighbors
to Be Paupers, Furnish
Surprise to Town.
Jersey City, N. J.—A strange story
of wealth hidden in an old wash boiler
and sent to a storage house has been
revealed by the unprecedented case of
Mrs. Anna Mangels, 70, and her daugh-
ter, Miss Anna Mangels, a spinster of
46 years.
It was discovered by neighbors re-
cently that Mrs. Mangels and her
daughter had barricaded themselves in
their house at Twelfth and Grove
streets, and that once a day they low-
ered a pall from the second Btory to
a boy employed to purchase food for
them, and th£> they denied themselves
to everyone. Everybody supposed
they were penniless.
The daughter seemed to be as
alarmed over some unknown happen
Ing as was the mother.
Investigation disclosed that 14 years
ago Mrs. Mangels' husband died and
left her and the daughter the house
they lived In, as well as another. Aft-
erward the two houses were said to
have been sold, but the widow and
daughter denied this. The deeds,
however, were on file in the chancery
court. The only money turned Into
the court was $2,000, which is still
there, the women persistently refus-
ing to accept it.
Three years ago the elder woman
was adjudged insane. Her two
nephews offered to provide a home for
the two women, but they declined to
accept it, saying they were not related
to the men. September 11 the women
were taken to the Hudson county jail
that the'r sanity might be inquired
Into.
Still affirming that they had never
consented to the sale of their proper-
ty, they said they were not only
wealthy, but that they had a large sum
of money concealed in the household
goods that had been sent to storage.
Lawyers John J. Treacy and Charles
C. Kelley, the latter of whom had ob-
tained their release from the Jail and
the appointment of a guardian, went
to the storehouse with Mrs. Mangels
and were astonished to see her draw
from an old wash boiler a bundle of
money as big as a brick. It contained
$1,212. Then she unearthed bank
books with deposits aggregating $15.-
00 >.
Henry C. Inzleman of New York, ap-
pointed guardian of Mrs. and Miss
Mangels, took action at once looking
to the reopening of the sale of their
property, which took place several
years ago.
Mr. Inzleman expects now that the
whole tangle will soon be straightened
out and the women will be in peace
ful possession of their property.
Means Much to Iron Industry.
Marinette, Wis.—The cost of reduc-
ing iron ore to iron is lowered from
$9 to $1.50 per ton, according to a dis-
patch received here by J. T. Jones
from his son, Elmer Jones, the mes-
sage stating that an experiment with
a new process at the Jones new iron
furnace having proved an entire suc-
cess.
It is said the success of the new pro-
cess means a revolution in the iron
making industry. Aside from the big
reduction in the cost of converting
ore into iron, it is said the new process
will permit the utilization of low
grades of ore which at present can-
not be worked, and are valueless.
The furnace which was tested cost
Mr. Jones and his associates about
$250,000. The success of the new pro-
cess will have a widespread effect on
the iron and steel industry of the
country, and will make valuable mill-
ions of acres of ore holdings now con
sidered almost worthless.
Discovery Promises to Do Away with
All Fear of a Pulp Famine-
Process of Manufactur-
ing Is Easy.
Washington.—The chemists of the
department of agriculture believe thej
have solved the problem of cheapei
paper that will dispense altogethei
with the use of wood fiber. The new
material is the ordinary corn stall!
now used only as fodder.
The government chemists predicted
when the manufacture of the new kinc
of paper is started on a large scale it
will be at least 50 per cent, cheapei
than the print paper now made from
wood pulp.
It also will put an end to the danger
of a pulp famine, which already has
begun to assume alarming proportions
Prodigal extravagance in the cutting
down of forests, forest fires, and th*
increased demand for wood of the
spruce tree caused by the growth ol
newspapers all over the world have
threatened to exhaust all the world £
supply of paper material.
Many experiments have been mad«
to discover some other material to
replace the wood pulp. Some 5,00(
different materials have been tested,
but vainly.
The chemistry bureau of the depart-
ment of agriculture lias been one ol
the most earnest workers in this mat-
ter for years, but not until quite re-
cently have the results been so posi-
tively successful as to permit any an-
nouncement. The first practicable
samples of the new paper have been
manufactured by Dr. H. S. Bristol and
his assistants.
Dr. Bristol has carried his expert
ments to the point of making the pa-
per in five shades.
The white paper is made from the
hard outside shell of the stalk and the
yellow grades from the pith. The
yellow grades have much longer fiber
and resemble the paper made from
linen rags or cotton. This kind of
paper is soft and pliable.
Millions of tons of corn stalks will
be available for this new manufacture.
At present the stalks are cut and
used only as winter food for the stock
on the farms.
The process of manufacturing the
new Invention is much easier than
that involved in reducing wood pulp
to paper. So far the new paper has
been made in a laboratory without spe-
cial machinery or tho wholesale pro-
duction necessary to insure cheapness,
but the department is going to experi-
ment at once on a larger scale and
the officials believe the price of white
paper as well as other grades will be
I reduced to a startling degree.
The estimates of the department are
' based on the present cost of wood pulp
paper, which is $13 a ton. With wood
costing eight dollars a cord, that is
the price of the paper. With corn
stalks costing about $15 a ton, adding
in the cost of bringing the bulky mate
rial to the Washington laboratory, the
cost has been about $14 a ton. Theie
is no doubt in the minds of department
chemists that increased production
will cut tMTs cost in half.
"No special growth of corn is need
cd," said one of the chemists. "We
have used the ordinary stalk from the
Virginia fields, and the kind which is
destroyed in wasteful quantities each
year can now be turned to use. Not
only will the cost of paper be greatlj
reduced, but the farmer will have an
added asset in a by-product that ought
to net him a neat sum each year."
BOURNE TO WHICH NONE OF US
TRAVEL ALONE.
"For No Man Liveth to Himself, and
No Man Dieth to Himself"—
Beautiful Allegory of the
Last Dread Day.
The man was dying. His landlady,
kindly soul, had sent for the vicar of
the parish, and when the sick man
heard a step on the stairs he strove
through the agony of almost fnsup-
portable pain to unclench his hands
and Bmooth his brow. As the parson
-squat-figured and plain-faced—en-
tered, the man smiled a twisted smile.
"Ah, padre, old chap, come to speed
the parting guest, eh? I'm afraid 1 m
not a very promising subject for your
ministrations."
But the clergyman, too, was a man,
so wasted no time beating about the
bush, but came straight to the point.
"No, I'm not here to-night to preach,
but—we've known each other some
time, and lately I've come to look on
you as a friend"—here tho man turned
his head away and grinned quietly at
the cheap wall paper—"how is it be-
tween you and your God?"
The man raised himself in the bed
"Look here," he said. "I have lived
my life without him and am 1 now to
go to him whom I have defied whin-
ing for mercy? I have lived alone and
I die alone. Do you—"
He fell back in a fresh paroxysm of
torture; the bedstead quivered like
the shaft of a racing screw under the
grip of his one hand, while with the
other he fiercely motioned his visitor
to the door. The latter, seeing his
presence was, for the moment, useless,
retired—to spend long hours of the
night on his knees in the lonely vic-
arage agonizing for the soul of one he
loved. When he called next morning
the end had come.
The long agony was over, and the
naked soul lay alone.
Only vast silence and illimitable
space. The man stood erect and cried:
"God! God! See me! Know me!
Throughout my life on earth. I have
transgressed thy laws, knowing thy
will and thy power. Judge me. Cast
me to the hell Thou has devised for
me, and try whether, through all thy
torments, the creature will not mock
at the Creator. Here, a man, I stand
before the Almighty for judgment,
alone!"
There came no voice, no stirring of
the calm; clear depths, but the man
was shaken by the question:
"Art thou alone?"
Suddenly there came pressing on
him from every side presences, faces.
The face of a gentle lady, who,
through all, had loved her boy—the
face of a stern, gray-haired man, hop-
ing ever for the son of his body—the
sweet face of a brave girl, eating out
her heart in lonely, trustful longing
for the one she loved—men's faces,
full of belief in the bright promise and
friendship of old college days—chil-
dren's faces—the brown eyes of faith-
ful dogs—these all oppressed him,
thronged around him, while through
his being swept the words:
"For no man liveth to himself, and
no man dieth to nimself!" Through
space the cry rang out:
"Have mercy. God!"
PERUNA A TONIC OF
GREA T USEFULNESS.
HON. R. a THARIN.
Hon. R. S. Tharin, Attorney at Law
snd counsel for Anti-Trust League,
writes from Pennsylvania Ave., N. VV.,
Washington, D. C., as follows:
"Having used Peruna for catarrhal
disorders, I am able to testify to its
ijreat remedial excellence and do not
hesitate to give it my emphatic endorse-
ment and earnest recommendation to
ill persons affected by that disorder. It
is also a tonic of great usefulneis."
Mr. T. Barnecott, West Aylmer,
Ontario, Can., writes: "Last winter I
ivas ill with pneumonia afterhavingia
grippe. I took Peruna for two months,
when I became quite well. I also in-
duced a young lady, who was all run
down and confined to the house, to take
Peruna, and after taking Peruna for
three months she is able to follow her
trade of tailoring. I can recommend
Peruna for all such who arc ill and re-
quire a tonic."
Pe-ru-na Tablets.
Some people prefer to take tablets,
rather than to take medicine in a fluid
form. Such people can obtain Peruna
tablets which represent the solid me-
dicinal ingredients of Peruna. Each
tablet is equivalent to one average dose
ol Peruna.
Advice.
The man who comes to you for ad
vice will be almost sure to take it if
It agrees with what he has made up
his mind to do.
Not Fully Equipped.
"I fear," said the observer of events^
"that public sentiment is not with us
as strongly as it used to be."
"Never mind," answered Senator
Sorghum, "you can let that matter
wait until after the campaign funds
are collected. Public sentiment is
valuable in its place, but it doesn't
carry any check book."
WHERE HARRISON'S WIDOW LIVES
Spread Happiness.
Is not the first duty of those who
are happy to tell of their gladness to
others? All men can learn to be
happy; and the teaching of it is easy.
—Maeterlinck.
OLD NOTE WORTH MUCH MONEY.
Issued 137 Years Ago for Few Dollars,
Now Calls for Thousands.
New York.—A ten-pound note of
the English colon' of New York, ie-
traed February 16, 1771, 137 years ago.
aad before the Declaration of Inde-
pendence, has been presented to Con-
troller Metz, with a request for pay-
ment. He has been staggered by the
Sguring of his experts, who make out
that If the city is obligated to redeem
tbe ote with compound Interest to
date it will have to fork over some-
thing like $39,000. The controller has
asked the corporation counsel for
legal advice.
The note was Bent to Mr. Metz by n
•ommerclal agency. It is In a very
good stato of preservation. Authorized
flve yoars before Now York, with the
other original states, became free from
British rule, it bears the old coat of
arms of the colony of the grant to the
duke of York. This ooat of arms 1b
the same as that used now by the city br w.id™ r«wcott nf President Harrison
of New York with the exception of the j Qn|nt country home where the widov^_^0jj 9
removal ef the crown. °
Imam
r
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w also Stoves and
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COLIC?
An Exception.
"So you think they're not well
mated? I thought you always de-
clared that 'matches aro made in
heaven.'"
"Yes, but in this case there seems
to have been a mistake in delivering
the goods."
At the Knot Hole.
"How's de gabe, Chlmmle?"
"De home team's got two men
down."
"Say, dat's tough."
"G'wan. One of 'em is de guy dat
made de home run off us, and de utter
one is de umpire."—Puck.
Of Course.
"What do you think of these ni-
trates?" inquired the first physician.
"I think we ought to raise 'em," an-
swered the second physician. "It's
worth something to get out of a com-
fortable bed."—Washington Herald.
t it adc o. •. mt.
Then what he needs Is a few doses of
t WATSONS
rOLIC MEDIC
0
Have Fez-Making Monopoly.
For centuries the Moslem population
of Turkey has made the fez the head
covering of men, but the manufacture
of fezes Is almost monopolized now
by large concerns In Vienna.
The famous remedy of that successful
veterinary, Dr. Watson—the remedy
which quickly, surely and safely cures
spasmodic Col ie flatulent colic and otlior
forms of bowel troublesiu horses, mules
and cattle.
$1.00 per bottle at your dealers
If he's out H«nd us the $1.00 aud we'll sup-
ply you Immediately.
We milk* all the fatuous Watson Liv* Stock
Remedies— Watson'* Liniment, Watson's Statr-
err Remedy. Watson's Pure* Mix. Watson'$
Liquid Blister, Watson's Febrifuge. Watson'
Fly-Proof Healer. They enre sick stock.
Write now for our interesting free booklet
containing valuable veterinary information
that y _>u should have.
THE WATSON COMPANY
PINK BLUFF, ARK.
PENSIONS^
|fcna Volunteer!, lttWJO entitled. Write Nathan
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WAMTCn LADUM TO MAKH APllONH;
If AII I CBJ down. No cost to g«H work. MutorUuM
Bent prepaid. Knolow stamped, addrowed envelop*
liutue Apron Company, Lo* Angeles, tulifocuiu.
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Lindsay, J. H. The Paden News. (Paden, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, October 30, 1908, newspaper, October 30, 1908; Paden, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc139654/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.