Newspaper Page Text
DEFERRED ITEMS. A young steer that remained in an abandoned well for seven weeks without a sign of food or water and was taken out alive a few days ago is the story vouched for by George Liskey, the owner of the steer, and neighbors, residing about four miles north of Harrisonburg, Va. The cattle turned into the field in -' ' were' well is located ?nteh the dry | ago. Se'"- *oout seven weeks pi"* ..ral days after they were . ^.ced in another field, one of the oiccis waa IIH99VU, anvi at| wiiui is ?" locate it proved unavailing, the owner believing that the steer had gotten out on the pike and had been taken up. Friday an employee was passing the well and heard a noise. He removed the boards covering the hole and saw the 9teer at the bottom, almost a skeleton, but still able to stand on its feet. Help was summoned and the steer was hauled out with a block and tackle. The animal weighed over 900 pounds before it was missed and when weighed Friday barely reached 400 pounds. The steer had lived at the bottom of the well without food or water. It is believed that the animal will survive the experience. Killing a 1,200-pound bull in the course of a wild charge with a rock weighing a little over three pounds, thereby saving his family, is the unusual achievement of Clay Winter, a farmer of Henry county, Va., whose act is reported in a dispatch from Martinsville. Winter, his wife and three small children went into a pasture and were picking up apples when the bull made its appcaarnce and, after a preliminary pawing, lowered its head and charged. There was small chance of escape, for the fence was some distance away. Winter told his family to run, and picking up a rock stood near an apple tree, hoping to divert the animal. When it was a few yards distant Winter let fly the rock with all his strength, striking the bull squarely in the forehead. It fell dead as though it had been pole-axed. The fairy story of the Sleeping Beauty and the Prince, which has caught the fancy of youthful minds for many years, has been revised in the romance of Edwin D. Ross, of Gettysburg. Pa., and Miss Marilla G. Prouty, of Meridian, Conn., whose wedding took place at Meridian Saturday afternoon. Several years ago Mr. Ross was employed in Connecticut and one day while traveling on a train from New Haven to Hartford he was curled up in a seat enjoying a good sleep when he was awakened by some one shaking him. Upon looking. up he beheld the face of a prettv young girl, who informed him she wanted half of the seat, as the car was crowded. He graciously complied and the young folks were soon engaged in conversation. The friendship developed into a love affair, the story of which will end, "And they lived happily ever afterward." Qrlando Spinson, of Birmingham. Alabama, came to his death in a peculiar way. Two years ago young Spinson, it is stated, accidentally swallowed a cockle burr. For some time he experienced no ill effects. More recently he complained of feeling ill. He was taken to a local hospital, where an X-ray examination revealed tihe cockle burr lodged in his right lung. Death followed in a few days. Now that the long evenings are coming on, no family in this neighborhood should be without the Shepherdstown Register. It will give you the local news and general articles of real interest Frederick Fair the Greatest Ever. The Great Frederick Fair, to be held October 17-20, promises to be greater than ever, if the extensive improvements just completed shall serve as a criterion. The new day-light, fireproof, domestic arts building, 60 x 200 feet in dimensions, the largest and finest exhibition building in Maryland, will be devoted exclusively to exhibits to be made by the women of Frederick county, merchants' displays, and kindred demonstrations Other important changes will afford an enlarged midway, where everything under the sun will be on display for instruction and amusement. The program of free attractions will be the largest ever offered, and will include daily balloon ascensions by lady and gent with triple parachute drops from bombs exploding in mid-air, and the auto polo games each day in front ?t J ... ? nit niiii'a siana will atiord the first opporunity Riven in Maryland to witness a form of sport that attracted and interested thousands at other fairs There will be. of course, plenty of racinR, and the exhibits of live stock, and farm and parden products, will be larRc as usual. The four days of the fair will be followed, on Saturday, October 21, by automobile races, eight in number, in which will appear some of the lcadinp race drivers of the country. These will be the only auto races ever Riven in Maryland and lovers of sport cannot afford to miss them. Who Was Kupsr Baawr? 11 When the police of Nure^urf fir#f j discovered this youth, apparently about eighteen years of age, leani-- '( against a wall in one ... , squares with his - - the publ,C ; to protec' - - wct his eyes s?? . mem from the glare of the. they at first thought was some idiot who had escaped from a sanitarium. But investigation soon developed that here was a case as unique as that of the man in the iron mask, and resembling it in a number of ways. | Not only were the boy's eyes weak. | but his muscles were as flabby as those of an infant and the soles of his feet were convex, like those of a baby that had never learned to walk. He had to be carried bodily to police headquarters and even there, the sight ! of the commonest objects appeared to terrify him, while the slightest of i sounds caused him to cover his cars and wince as if his car-drums were accustomed only to total silence. On the other hand, his face indicated that he was of good parentage, and the clothing which he wore was fashioned of the softest, finest materials. In an effort to discover something about his identity, one of the police j officials offered him a pencil which, much to the surprise of those present, he seized and wrote the two words "Kaspar Hauscr," which, as it afterwards developed, was the only cluc he could give to the past. Prof. G. F. Daumcr of the Univer- j sity of Nuremburg, hearing about the i^iiaiigc tasc, imm mc young man to | his home?amazed not only by the j fact that he could neither talk nor | walk, but that he would eat nothing I but bread and water. The professor, however, started to educate him at once and in a surprisingly short time j the youth had progressed sufficiently to give a graphic story of his experi' cnces. For as long as he could remember i he had been confined to a dark cell, I into which the sun had never pcnct tratcd. He had been visited once a day by a man who washed and drcss| ed him and fed him a ration of bread i and water. It was this man who had taught him to write the words "Kaspar Hauscr," which Professor Dautncr believed to be a false name Riven him in order to conceal his real identity. Finally, he declared, he had been blindfolded and led int0 the street where the police had found him. The young man's story naturally ' created a vast amount of comment in ! all sections of Europe and the Daumer j house became the center of attraction i for the curious, many of whom mainI taincd that they might be able to iden! tify Hauscr, but none of whom were ' able to produce the proof of their contention. The next development in the mysterious chain of circumstances surrounding the youth, came about five months after Hauser's discovery by the police, when he staggered into the Professor's library, half-blinded by the blood which dripped from an open ! gash in his forehead. It was some, time before he recovered consciousness sufficiently to state that a maski ed man had struck at him with a saber, that he had dodged the blow and that his assailant had fled before he could t give tne alarm. The inference which the police drew from the attack was 1 that the same person who had imprisoned the hoy was now striving to I kill him, lest he divulge the secret of his birth. Shortly afterward, the case came to the attention of the wealthy Lord Stanhope, who, convinced that Hauser was of aristocratic and perhaps of royal parentage, adopted him and sent him under guard to Anspach, where j he was educated. Some three years j later, Lord Stanhope arrived in Ans-1 pach with the intention of taking his protege hack to England with him. On the morning of the day that they were to leave Hauser received a note, telling him to come to a certain place where he would learn the secret of his birth. Less than an hour later the English nobleman heard moans from outside his apartment and, opening the door, was just in time to catch Hauser as he fell, blood welling from a knifeI wound in his side. He had barely gasped the words, "Uzcn Monument?( palace grounds," when he fell dead. Lord Stanhope hurried to the IJzen monument and found there a slip of paper bearing, in the young man's handwriting, the cryptic message: "Kaspar Hauser?murdered at the age of twenty-one. Know by this that I , come from the Bavarian frontier on the river. The initials of my name arc M. L. B.u And not even the offer of n reward of 5.000 florins by Lord Stanhope nor the investigations of countless amateur and professional detectives could eve*- throw the slightest light upon the birth or death of this human enigma. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CAS T.O R I A 1 I Children Enl- ^ pi^t Tubercu-'< Ionia. The chivalry of health, based on the L tournaments and titles used in the dayS ot the Crusades when knightbrw^ - C in flower, i? th* a|juring pian to in- r tertsl children in the practice of the 1 rules of hygiene being offered by the ' West Virginia Tuberculosis Associa-|| tion, in its educational program for ' the prevention of tuberculosis. Beau- ' tiful banners and pennants are being offered as prizes to ungraded schools and graded classes in which the pupils earn credits of 75 per cent or over for practicing daily eleven health chores for a period of fifteen weeks. For the (faithful performance of the qhorcs pupils are given the titles of squire, knight and knight banneret. Suitable badges arc provided for presentation to the children when the titles are earned. Over six million pupils in the United States took part in the health tournament last year. For having the highest enrollment of kinghts banneret in the national inter-city tournament, the schools of Washington, D. C., won a silver cup offered as a prize by the National Tuberculosis Association. This cup was presented to the superintendent of schools by President Hard- ! ing. A valuable silver cup is offered also | to the State in which the largest number of pupils become kinghts banneret i during the school year ending on the' second Saturday in June, 1923. The West Virginia Tuberculosis Association is so interested in having the cup won by this State that it has offered a set of DeLuxe scales valued at S40 to the county in each congressional district in which the greatest number of pupils become knights banneret. Complete information regarding the supplies needed to carry on the Crusade program can be obtained from Isaac N. Bonham, Summit Point, county superintendent of schools, to whom descriptive ilterature was sent for distribution to the teachers at the countyinstitute. Investigation has shown that children are particularly susceptible to tuberculosis, says George C. Rowell, the executive secretary of the West Virginia Tuberculosis Association, whose headquarters are at Charleston. In the September number of the West Virginia School Journal and Educator, Mr. Rowell states that more than 50 per cent of all children are infected before they are ten years of ;tgc. wneincr in is injection Decomes ; a disease later in life, depends on the strength of the wall of physical resistance built up in youth through good health habits. The daily practice of the health chores of the Modern Health Crusade is one way in which boys and girls can help in the fight to control and prevent tuberculosis. o Roanoke College. According to a statement made at Charleston, West Virginia, by President Chas. J. Smith, Roanoke College faces the greatest opportunity in her history, for the General Education Board of New York City has made a conditional gift to the college of $11>5,000. This gift, according to Dr. Smith, is conditioned upon the securing of an additional $335,(XX) during the next tWO months. He Illsn aHHerl (hit enrno 1 preliminary Rifts, by individual ^ friends of the coIIcrc, now broiiRht the , total amount well over S200,00u. Great rallies of alumni during the ' past week at Radford and Wytheville, Va., Bristol and Knoxvillc, Tenn., evidence the determination on the part of the alumni and former students to see that Roanoke realizes on this great possibility. These meetings have all been, so far, well attended and genuinely enthusiastic. The college opened last week with the greatest enrollment in her I history. It has a most enviable record for producing leaders, having j given twenty-eight college presidents j to the nation. Fifty-one men now I holding administrative and teaching positions in leading colleges are Roanoke College men. There are eight Virginia colleges with Roanoke Col-1 lege men on their faculties. Four! deans of Virginia colleges were edu cated at Roanoke College. Ten di- j vision superintendents of public in- ; struction in Virginia claim Roanoke College as their alma mater. A former State superintendent of public instruction is a Roanoke alumnus, as well ns i a graduate of Roanoke. At least j twetny-five members of boards of trus- ' tees of Virginia colleges are alumni of Roanoke College. Alumni of Roanoke arc also members of the board ' of visitors of the University of Virginia, V. P. I. and William and Mary. ' More than a hundred former Roanoke ' students arc concerned with the pub- ' lie high school system of Virginia, in- ]' ..uy>i>i; miwc iiitinot-rs Di Koanokc 11 iuli School. Roanoke College graduates arc executives and teachers in ; four leading theological seminaries in the South. i oa! Miner Karns ?68< in One Month. A news item from Washington, Pa., s as follows: Not in many years have coal miners .arncd such targe wages as they are iow receiving from the coal companies n this district. The rocord wat?e, in he memory 0f 'he oldest m'ner in this _ listrict, was earned by C. D. John Slifko, vno is emplo>cd by the Fred-, ;ricktown Coal and Coke Company, in September. During the first two weeks Slifko drew $324.02, and in the period since the 15th of the month he nas earneu :n50w.*<?, maxing a toiai , earned during the month of S684.46.1 | Slifko, while an expert miner, has no greater earning capacity than many , other miners in the pits hereabouts ! His greatest day's earnings followed the loading of forty-nine cars of coal, 1 which is cosidered close to the re? ord in this territory. Since the re- | opening after the strike settlement many of the big mines have been paying their miners an average of $20(1 to $250 every two weeks. The first known advertisement appeared in a Greco-Roman drinking cup, it is said. It bears the inscription, "Made by Ennion. Let the buy- j er remember." castoriaI For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears ^ Signature of YOUNG AT 60 ? i i fThe choice is largely tip ^to you. If your blood lacks rc/i corpuscles, you're going to be fagged and dragged out, you're going to lack "pep," to look sallow and unhealthy, to crow old before your time. DR. MILES' TONIC actually increases the number or red corpuscles in the blood. It makes the cheeks plump and rosy, stilmulates the digestive organs, creates a healthy appetite, and leads to increased vigor and vitality. First bottle * guaranteed to help you or money refunded. ASK YOUR DRUGGIST , Farm For Sale. ' A desirable farm, 150 acres of clean i land, flne timber tracts and good buildings. Close to town. Limestone country and low-grade railroads. Pos- i i session April 1st. House has ten t rooms, bath and lights, steam heat, new i barn, good fences and a good road t Inquire at the Register office., Shep- I ( Over 12 Years Actual , Experience. Mow About the Dental 1 |Service You Get Dental service rendered by Dr. Hutchison stands for something defnitc, it has a real meaning to those who appreciate good things; it represents "The Best in Dentistry," embodying all those essential features, that real dental science teaches, which are: Thorough diagnosis, mechanical perfection, diligence, sanitation nnd thoughtful service. In my large, handsome offices you will find everything tha't will add to the comfort of my patients is provided. Every instrument must be thoroughly sterilized before using. Write far appointment. ji DR. CHARLES HUTCHISON J Surgeon HerOta* MARTIN'SBLIU;, W. VA. ! Suite 1-7 Hobbs Building, Opposite ? Hotel Building. ^ Itch! Itch! Itch: Scratch! Scratch! Scratch! The m re vnu scratch, the i worse the i#ch. Trv Bonn's Ointment/ For eczema, any skin itching. 0(lc ] a box. j ' 4 Geo. M. Be!Leh<yoVrtj? shephekdst^Vn, w. va I rieC. m. Beltzhoover, Jr., CHARLES TOWN, W. VA. lu ? - - ? miuiucyd aiiu v^uuuseiiurs. ieneral Law Practice and Collections Dr. Roy S. Proctor ] Veterinarian Martinsourg, W. Va. Calls answered promptly, day 01 night. Charges reasonable. Bell phone No. 88. Winchester Phone 19.1-Y. DR. S. iW. LANGFORD Graduate Veterinarian MARTINSBURG, WEST VA Call Owens' Drug Store. HARRISON SCHLEY General Insurance. Ottice in Jefferson Security Bank Building Shepherdstown, W. Va. 1 Grove Brothers Hagerstown, - Md. "Manhattan" Shirts "Society" Clothes "Banister" Shoes "Knox" Hats "Interwoven" Hose j -van neusen ' collars Windows, Moulding, flooring, Siding, Poors, Blinds, Framing, Shingles. ). Y.BLACKFORD, Shenandoah Junction, W. Va., ?dealer in? LUMBER and BUILDING MATERIALS. Stag Paint, Hardware and Plaster Board State, Galvanized and Steel ROOFING !W. C. and B. D Suman KEEDYSVILLE, MD C. & P. Phone 21-F S Undertakers and Embalmers. Furniture o( all Kinds. Night Calls Promptly Answered. Automobile or Horse Drawn Hearse as Preferred. At the Old Stand Lowest Prices. Hay & Straw Wanted. Baled orloose, delivered either at the ailroad or at my place of business. Aisr. ?ood CORN, for which the highest cash 1 trice will be paid. Always have on hand 1 he best of Anthiacite and Cumberland 1 Run-of-Mine and Lump. COAL at Lowest Cash Prices. \Ipha Portland Cement always or hand. W. H. KNODE , Stylish New Millinery 1 AT MISS LOUD.MANN'S,! Shepherdstown, W. Vn. Everybody invited to come and'y ;ee the stylish new hats and milli-j terv DR. FAHRNEY DIAGNOSTICIAN Specialist in chronic diseases, I make study and treatment of any kind of disease the family Doctor is not curing. Tell me your trouble and I'll tell 1 you what is your disease and t what can be done for it. I'll | send blank and specimen case. (live me your name. , HAGERSTOWN, MD, TYPEWRITERS! Ill roalci and nil *tyli?fi $16 up. 8oroc that w>ro sod and rcloaaod hy the U. 8. Gov't. ItarRains. Itatoyour needs and wo will deaoribe and quota, 'ho LINOWHITER, a printing office necessittI tihbon* any color 75# dolivorod. Give name and todol. Carlion papor 6x13 100 uhctU $105 doliv'd. I '.mplre Type Foundry, M frs. Wood Tvpe, I rial Type, Printers Supplies, Buffalo, N.Y? Children'Cry ! FOR FLETCHER S j C A S TO R I A 1 Esuimvitc ie>-. 1 D1EHL & BRO.,1 Charles Town's Old Hehabie ' I Maible and f.tatiiie Viwfe I Manufacturers ol Monuments, T?fc. I ttones, Statues and all kinds 01 Marbu jaS I Tranite work tn their line. M promptly filled and samtacticm I OlFHl *-Dn" .. ?*-. vx I Charles Town. W. Vs. I DR. G. R. BEDDOW I DENTAL SU1 I Register 1. : ^ SHEPHERDSK )\C N, V VA. I Hours 9 to 12 A. M 1 to j ? I Evening by a^rr "tment. I FOR SALE I Nine-room house on Princess street,? cellar, garden, electric lights, etc. KM good, comfortable home. I Lot on Main street 40x203, ur.itn.1 proved. I C '? nousc and an acre of? land, all necessary outbuildings, near? Duffields. Fruit and plenty- of water. I Small farm, about 45 acres, on the? pike, one mile from a shipp.ag jnintH Comfortable house of eight rooms,? small barn. Twenty acres of this? place in orchard, in full bearing, pep.? ular varieties. H One brick house, 7 rooms, cellar J cistern, large garden, electric lights^? and necessary outbuildings. ? One frame house of 10 rooms sail large lot. H One buflding lot 90x95 feev :: l sirable part of town. H Wanted, a small place in or nearH Shepherdstown, two to ten acre?. im-H proved or unimproved. J. StnderH Moler. H J. STRIDER MOLER I REAL ESTATE AND INSURANClH H. C. Marten? gPPST /'llPin wi?jl.ai v^nlai' Hardware Store,! Shepherdstown, W. Va., I ?manufacturer of? H TIN and sh eeti RON WAReB and wholesale and retail dealer id H Hardware, White Lead, Stoves! Pumps, Putty, Glass, Oils, H Paints, Leather, Rims, H Hubs, Spokes. H Hardware Department. I Bar Iron, Nails, Horse Shoes. UrpH Iron Wash Kettles, Brass, CojxrH and Porcelain Kettles, Skillets, Irons, T?ace, Butt, Cow and Halta^l Chains, Farm Be Is Screen and Windows, American FenceWirt,^! Barbed Wire, Saws, Black Hawl^^l Corn Shellers, Lawn Mowers, Fila,^B All Sizes Bolts, Loaced She.s, der and Shot. H| Paint and Oil Department. H Raw and Boiled Linseed Oil, Hamtt Oil, Machine^ Oil,.Black Strap, penune, in. i.ananas lar, u4>u:idc^k Varnish, Japan Dryer, Knot White Lead, Red Lead, Snaaisl^B Brown, Calcined Piaster, PcrtlafM Cement Lard Oil, Flattering Hiir^B Coal Oil, Neat Foot Oil, Fsh Oi^B Bath Brick Soap, Sulphur, Copperas^B Borax. JH ^atent Plasteridg prepared for rxeditl^B International Stock Food and Ginsaft^B Horse and Cattle Powders. Frank Miller's Harness Dressing, V/hl^B Black Lamb's Foot Harness Oil. The Perfection Blue Flame WicklfttO^B Stove?safest. ^B I lie Lour Leaf Clover Cr< n SeparaM^B where the milk is not mixed cri^B luted with water, leaving it puren^B sweet for family use. vValI Paper furnished on short reduced prices. Reduced Prices on Haying !oc's?^M Barn Doory ,Hangers and Track. ^^B Jorce Pumps. Deep Well Pumps, vanizea Bucket Pump and ?^^B Purifier, I X L Chain Pumps. \ I arge Stock of Coc C TO\/ P!!l iJ X W y liv m to bum coal or uood. Also*^B pairs furnished for allpalW^M stoves. The Kcystoneand I X L Cider Mills, per Kettles, Apple tvers. <Sc. ^icycles foi sale and re;- 'nrrsM^^^K I'in and Galvanized Rooting jng put on by experienced in the best manner. Vhite Enameled Iron Hedsteai?i^^M Steel Spring Malt rf Hammock Chairs and Swings. H. C. Marte* Shepherdstowi W. Jrices to contorm to the times?* A healthy man is a k'"C 'n lave. For impure blond a" , Rish liver, use Kurd ^ ers. On the market ,V>