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NEWPORT DAILY INDEPENDENT PERCY H. VAN DYKE, Publisher and Editor. trr- ":r , . --.. NEWPORT, - - ARKANSAS. A THIRSTY SCOUT. Smvived a Dose of Alkali Water That Killed Mules. A prominent army official tells an. interesting story of the late Frank C. Bennett, one of the most famous scouts of the southwest 20 years ago, says the Baltimore Sun. “Bennett,” says the officer in ques tion, “was forced to follow a trail intothefamous Staked Plain of Texas, and, like many others, lost his way and wandered four dayswthout food or water. He was so long absent that the commander of the detachment from which he had been sent was at last forced to conclude that Bennett, despite all his wonderful knowledge of the country, and hi® almost super human power of endurance, had been added to the long list of that arid plain’s victims. “We were all sitting around the camp fires discussing the matter one night, when suddenly the attention of one of the group was attracted by a wraith-like figure coming out of the shadows some 30 feet away. “ ‘By the Lord Harry, it’s Bennett himself!’ shouted one of the men. “But as we arose to our feet the shouts of joy froze on our lips—Ben nett, crazed by thirst, had thrown himself prone before a pool of alkali water, from drinking which two mules had died that day, and was lapping it up with his tonguehanging out of his mouth and his breath com ing in short, quick gasps like a wind -| 1 T SPIKING HIS GUNS. w. w. JACOBS INTERVIEWED. A Little First Hand Information About a Novelist and Humorist. Mr. W. W. Jacobs, whose amusing novel, “At Sunwich Port,” has just made its appearance, is quoted this way in a recent interview: • “I do little work and I have no methods. I published my first book. ‘Many. Cargoes/ in 1896, and since-* then one book of mine—never a very large one—has appeared each year, ex cept in 1899, when I did nothing. “When 1 want a* idea 1 sit down and think of one, and take as long as I possibly can in working it out. Sometimes I publish a story exactly as I first write it; sometimes I make J many alterations. I really have no rules.” Mr. Jacobs is a slender, fair man. about 38 years of age. The reputa tion of being humorous is, he declares, a very undesirable possession. “People who meet me at tea wait ex pectantly for my conversation to scin tillate, and it never does. If I could be humorous all the time T should write a story a day. As a matter of fact, one’s jokes are often born after much tribulation.” Speaking of humorous writinggen erally, Mr. Jacobs said he thought the essence of the art of comedy was know ing -what to leave the imagination of the reader to fill in. He lives at Buckhurst Hill, Lon don, and says that the district is ad mirably suited for quiet literary work, as he and the milkman are the only AN IMPORTANT COMMA. A Court Bows to It, and It Determines the Import of a Contract. An agreed case between Thomas Mitchell and the Southern Railway' company hinged on a comma in the opinion of Judge O’Doherty, who de cided the ease, says the Louisville Courier-Journal. Mitchell is a contractor and con tracted to repair a tunnel in Indiana for the railroad. 11$ agreed to in demnify the defendant from all acci dents to employes or other persons injured in the tunnel while it was be ing repaired. Mills Buxton, one of his employes, was struck by a train while working in the tunnel and _ . ^ brought suit for damages, against the road, which was compromised by the payment to him of $355. The sum paid Buxton was deducted by,the rail road when it and Mitchell had a set tlement for the work. The plaintiff denied that he was liable for the sum., and a friendly suit was filed to have the the following clause in the contract construed: “Said contractor further agrees to indemnify and save harmless said rail road company from all casualties or accidents resulting to employes en gaged in the work contemplated un der this contract. c.r to any third per son who may be injured or damaged by the said contractor or hisservants or agents in the performance of this contract.” It was claimed that Mitchell’s lia bility in regard to employes was-limit ed by the clause “injured or damaged 4- Vi i-i "ini /T /i a Vi 4tin a4 Ati Vi n T* O 1 1 ■ Mr. Murphy—Now Oi guess that saw-bones won’t dun me anny more, an’ him just afther killin’ me woife.” tu iiuuuu. “It was a dramatic moment. The man had been slowly dying for days for want of water, and now it appeared that water was to cause lvis death. “But regular army officers don’t waste time in thinking of tliedramat ic interest of anything. We pulled Bennett away from that pool fighting like a half-starved hyena, and then we crammed lard down his throat as fast as he could take it. “He didn't die. He simply became an animated soap factory for a space and then he recovered. “We taunted Bennett after that by telling him that his constitution had been proved to be harder than that of a mule.” THE MOTIVES OF MISERS. Glamour of Gold au2 Mania for Collect ing Are Tniuencing Factors. Is there no charm or glamour in gold itself which attracts, and in a sense overpowers the miser, though it does not often induce him to steal? There may be in some cases. Doctors sav that kleptomania, though so often pleaded as a dying defense, really ex iste. esneeiallv amonsr children, and that it is in some way mysteriously limited and defined, the full strength of th'e passion being excitable only by certain objects, usually shining. The pursuit of gold for 5,000 years may have bred in the mind a hereditary tendency toward its acquisition, as a concrete and visible article, which is, we may remark, a# often manifested by the rich as by the poor. Asiatics often hoard coin and jewels to their own hurt, knowing that their posses sion involves extreme danger, and we could ourselves relate two authentic stories'of great accumulations of gold coin, made by Englishmen who seemed to derive pleasure from its actual sight and touch. These are. however, wc fancy, rather illustration® of the col lector mania, so often described and analyzed in the ease of books am: china, than instances of true miserli ness, which is based, we are convinced rather on fear and an abnormal kinc of mean pride than on the passion fot hoarding. That is often divorcee from avarice. It was not for thei: value that George IV. kept every coa he had ever worn, or that Mr. Blanl bought wardrobe after wardrobe it which to preserve every morsel o clothing that had ever been in hispos session.—London Spectator. A Needed Course. It is a great pity that the elaborat high school and college courses d. not include lessons in patience; it i about all the pupils will need afte leaving school.—Atchison Globe. A FAMILY OF CONSULS. History of an Appointment Held Since Washington’s Time. When Horatio Sprague, United States consul at Gibraltar, died a few months ago, says the New York Post, it was announced that the Sprague family had been longer in the consular service than any other, but recent in vestigations prove that this distinc tion belongs to the members of the celebrated house of Fox, who have continuously retained the consulship at Falmouth, England, since the es tablishment of the United States gov ernment. State department records at Wash ington, D. C., show that Robert W. Fox, the first consul, grandfather of the present incumbent, was appoint ed by George Washington, on May 30, 1794, and that since then his descend ants have controlled the post at Fal mouth against the protests of poli ticians of both parties, who enter as their plea that the position is held by an Englishman. But sentiment and the fact that the original Fox was ap pointed by Washington have defeated the aim of the office seekers. The holding of this consulship has always been a trust of honor with the Foxes, since they are a wealthy family, and the office yields but $300 yearly. During the career of Robert Were Fox, the first consul, Falmouth was the port from which mail packets sailed to all parts of the world, which lay to the west and south of the Eng ish channel, and was the scene of great i_ii- _a n.r- lju.. uucuc UiJU illiuuoi. iUi. a. UAJ ?» occupying this post, was engaged in extensive mercantile mining, and fish ing enterprises, and by these laid the foundations of the fortune that has been handed down to his descendants. Many noted people were entertained at his home, and in 1828, a few years after the death of Mr. Fox, his widow, Civilization has girdled the g China. And as civilization has n ++«M-+++++++++++++«M-++++++t J OUR CONFLICT jj $ WITH CHINAS :: i . . - -- -.- «• i Bu HON. JAMES R. NlftNN, i: 4> United States Congressman from Illinois. 1 • 4* ■ ■ ++'H4+WW-Hh++++++++++++++ would not if we could. We coulc forces of progress are too great years Japan has been revivified. A commenced to throw his morning pire has awakened from its long 5 of the most active and progressh doubt that similar results occur awakens with her hundreds of mi more imitative, and more willing t< nation, it will cause a reawakening justment between nations and pec , come deadly, but the skirmishes 1 west and the civilization of Cnina I wonder if the hordes of Chi awakened, will not attempt, throuj power American civilization as the , came the civilization of Rome. T1 ) ever, will be more desperate thai s Rome. The civilization of Chin; r civilization of America. The peop: ica are of two different races, whi who was noted for her hospitality, re ceived the queen of Portugal, who held a reception, there. Robert Were Fox, jr., appointed consul in 1815, devoted much time to the study of science, and made many discoveries. In 1815 he proved that there was a real increase of tempera ture experienced in descending Cor nish mines—a fact previously assert ed by th Saxons miners, but long dis puted by such men as Humboldt and Arago. Among his many valuable inventions was the deflector dipping needle, which has been used in every Arctic and Antractie expedition since that time in determining the magnetic condition of the different parts of the earth’s surface. President Lincoln appointed the third consul, Alfred Fox, in 1863. This gentleman won the highest commend ation from the government for his efficiency and faithfulness during the late war. The coast at Falmouth is very dangerous, and often ships are wrecked there; Mr. Fox did all in his power in rendering help to these ship wrecked crews, and for this was high ly rewarded by the heads of the na tions. Howard Fox, F. G. S., the present consul, was appointed by President Grant. He had been acting as depu ty consul, but in 1874 succeeded his father to the consulship. Fined by Telehpone. In Ontario a man summoned for e breach of the law, and being unable 4 __4.1_1._J „ ,1 i kj ci pp/eui iu euiu ij au mitting his guilt, and was fined a dollar and costs through the same medium. _ When Telling Your Troubles. Tell your troubles as you wish to have them repeated, not as they really are.—Atchison Globe. lobe. The oldest civilization is in loved westward from China it has changed in degree, character and force until now, having encircled the world, the civilization of Eu rope and America is forcing its way through the entrances into the Chinese empire. We may perhaps find that we are waking a sleeping giant, but it is impossible for us to stop. We not if we would. The impelling for our resistance. Within a few s the sun of western civilization has rays on her shores, that little <etn leep and has suddenly become one e nations in the world. Who can in China? And when China fully llions of people, more economical, > work than the people of any other of all mankind and possibly a read pies. The conflict has not yet be ave begun. The civilization of the are in conflict. na, when that nation is thoroughh jh mere force of numbers, to over Goths and Huns and Vandals over le coming conflict with China, how i the one which caused the fall of i will never amalgamate with the e of China and the people of Aniei • ch can never coalesce. .* / males living there- who do not go to the city by early trains. Two of his stories have been drama tized, and he is thinking of writing a p^y- _ ABOUT BIRD’S-EYE MAPLE. Really Cut from the Rock Maple—Ordi nary Trees Much Cheaper. “The man who said that the veneer known as bird’s-eye-maple is produced only by cutting any maple log around the log is very much beside the mark." said a woodworker who makes a study of fine woods to- a New York Sun re porter. “Bird’s-eye maple and curly maple are both cut only from the logs of the rock maple tree, Acer saccharinum. in which a beautiful lustrous grain is produced by the sinuous course of the fibers. “This tree is not at all the common hard maple. It is a hard maple, but is full of the little gnarls called eyes. “Men looking for bird’s-eye maple logs go through the standing timber and pick out the bird’s-eye- maple trees, paying for them from $30 to $‘50 a thousand feet in the woods. Ordi nary hard maple logs are worth only from six to seven dollars a thousand feet. “It would be impossible to cut a piece of veneer with eyes in it from a common hard maple log, and would be equally impossible to cut a bird’s-eye maple log, no matter how you cut it, so that, if wrmld not s.hmv the eves. “When a boy, many years ago, I have split up many a bird's-eye maple log, and stopped to admire the spots distributed all through it. Ordinary maple was then, and possibly is, so cheap that it was used for firewood in many places.” ELIZA GRIER. A Negro Woman Who Was a Successful Physician in Georgia. Eliza Grier, a colored woman and a physician, who was> a native of Mecklenburg county, died in Albany, Ga., recently, in her thirty-ninth year. She was a daughter of George Washington Grier, of Matthews, and has had, says the Charlotte (N. C.) Observer, a distinguished career. When young she was graduated with honors at Scotia seminary, in Cabar rus county. She was afterward grad uated from Fisk universitv, studving medicine, and subsequently took a post graduate course in medicine at another college. She stood a flatter ing examination before the medical board of South Carolina and practiced medicine at Greenville for a short while. She then went to Georgia and .located in Atlanta, after having passed an examination before the Georgia medical board. Some years ago -he moved to' Albany, Ga., and practiced her profession there until her death. She left considerable property. o i uu. cuxu vvxj u uoivx. a v * »** * road contended that the words quoted only limited the plaintiffs liability for the “third person,” and to support the claim called attention to the corn ua after “under this contract.” The comma makes Mitchell liable to his employes for damages inflicted by his agents and therailroad, accord ing to Judge O’Doherty, who gave judgment for the defendant. The conclusion of Judge O'Doher ty’s opinion is as follows: “The court has not the power to transpose or eliminate a comma, al though such action would diametric ally change the import of the contract. The court can only construe the con tract exactly as it stands. BENJAMIN SWIFT. Who He Is, What He Has Done and How He Has Done It. It is no longersecret that “Benja min Swift” is merely a pen name of the author of “The dame of Love,” about which, under the title of “Lu dus Amoris” so much is being written just now in England. The novelist’s real name is William Romaine Pater son. He is young, a Scotchman, and has written about a half dozen novels. He has been charged with following too closely on the heels of Carlyle and Meredith, each in turn, but the Eng lish press seems to be unanimous that he has now shaken off his models and, in “The Game of Love,” come to the front with a style of originality auu power, xnis is according to prophesy, for “Benjamin Swift” has been the subject of much English dis cussion, and there are wise men who declare that he will one day be pro claimed great. From the beginning Benjamin Swift has always made his stories striking. He has shown a tremen- v* dous originality, though somewhat eccentric and sometimes unpleasant in his earlier work. Out of these youthful extravagances he has, in the judgment of the current British press, now emerged* Benjamin Swift was born in 1871. He was the son of a Scotch physician and was educated at Lausanne,'Switz erland, and at Glasgow university. At Glasgow he took the degree of master of arts with first-class philo sophical honors. He is now a full fledged professional novelist, with his home in London. His first essay in fiction was “Nancy Noon,” published in 1896, when the author was 25, and this has been fol lowed by “The Tormentor” (1897), “The Destroyer” (1898), “Siren City” (1899), “Hartnell” (1899), “Nude Souls” (1900), “The Eternal Conflict” and an esssay (1901). To these he has now added a new novel, “The Game of Love,’ which has just been.' published in this country by the Scribe ners. Its English title is “Ludue Aiuoris.”