Article clipped from Titusville Herald

T BE TITUSVILLE HERALD.LY.andLCfll LtailsJCIllplyiityare.000 c* of trly n Lo 'Ins l as the Iblyage(ledamirimtved■ainail’dTheforthekissboil fie an any ion. en-■atv:carItan)l'0-uii-entOllHtll(*ion.of-ids-■ist.-II011 10(1.nt-and but ’oal or Us ria-la--n y.KENNEDY’SREMEDYPIcuNnnt to tnlie,lJo\vcrl'u I to {lureAiul Wultomc In oviiiyJSojiio.KIDNEY anti LIVER cure.^ ,, Hr. Iwimedy'H EnvorUo ItasnfciKyIS «ulaptm to ;ilI ay.vA nnlt;t Loth Kt*xi?s aftordJn^ iu»r-nmmoit- rvllof ju aG vatvn i-aoAnd by InmurJiv of iho blnofl, awli tin, KbiJify, iMmMrM* u\id L1vlt;-r Oojji-l»lu1 ssConrlpjitllt;in; him] wiuiknrwp* ppm'iUai' to ^vonji'ti. S4lrrlt;»*wfil f /nr W pour#, IVujfiiriuJ bv lift. I). KKXXKIJYVJ 80\'S, Hnmlon,. |\\ y.bix Leith* sr?,rjo.* * ♦If. JULES VEREIE LIESDEAO IT JMIENS.NOTED FRENCH AUTHOR PASSED AWAY .FRIDAY.FORESAWHISDISSOLUTION.W.ic ConccioiiG Almost to the Last. Sketch of His Career and Visit to His-Home.AMI IONS. Franco, March 24.—Jules Verne died at 2:10 p. m. today.M. Verne had boon subject to chronic diabetes, but it did not assume a critical aspect until.March .it). Since then he gradually failed and the end was hastened by a stroke of paralysis covering bis right side until (he tongue was affected. The sick man retained consciousness until shortly before bis death, the brain, being ibo last organ to fail. He calmly foresaw death, called the members of his family to his bedside and discussed his departure. The publisher of M Verne's works was among those who were admit ted to his bedside during his last hours, but. M. Verne did not recognize him.Klyeftshat•ofbal-nos10Wicv-s of. Air. one=5 tOtheJers•onsD.mor lirsi died assy lem-siek due i 5n-who New ions rket id a ' Rat said earsndy. i t hei the•5 t llCmu i! is on rain, stn-from i on-■ ride.Tulns Verne was born at. Nantes on Feb. fi, '1828. Ho loft school when vcit young and studied law, but practically all his life was devoted to authorship.Verne's comedies, dramas and burlesques written for the Paris theatres, many of them while he was yet studying law. were very popular. “Lea Paillcs itompuos” was produced at the Uymnase Theatre in '1850. when he was but 22. _ “Onzo .Tours do Seige” was staged scion n.t'icr. His first novel in bis strong scientific strain was “Five Weeks in a Balloon,” published in 18(111, which scored a groat success. Sines then .lie has written more than sixty, many of which have been successfully dramatized.After writing various comedies and operatic librettos and turning out much hackwork he struck a new vein in llction whereby he earned a worldwide reputation. I fir cleverly exaggerated the possibilities of.:the then-current science ail'd. gnA* ingenious vcrsimill-tude to narratives of wild, adventure atrried put by inventions of the most marvelous nature. Among the stories of this typo, which have been translated into almost every modern language, including Arabic and Japanese, may be mentioned: “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea. “A Journey to tlu flontrr of tlio Earth” and “i lector Sor-vmlne,” Hie last, named being a wonderfully clover story of a (wo y.qurs’ journey oil a emnet. ‘‘The. Mysterious Island” and “Around Ilm World in Eighty Days” have been universally regarded as his best, books, the latlor being a masterpiece of construction and exciting narrti live.II. has been said of Verne’s books that t.hour* is not a drop of human blood in the eharaelers: Uiey are the veriest automata. It is a clockwork crowd of explorers, sailers, engineers, reporters, scientists and punpois with labels iu-nnmeralde. . The, reader's interest depends as solely oil incident as iL does In the Arabian Nights. In Mr. Verne's earliest stories the interest was wonderfully well sustained, bul. the amusement to be derived from his later works is not lliat which the author- intended; as, for instance, in the. cose of his Glasgow worthies in the *T'lio Oroon Ray,” Ini makes llit-ni ''quail foaming tankards of usoipichuugh and do other tilings equally characteristic (?) of Roots.—o—“An Antarctic Mystery was written in IS9S. The volumes named after It4formation regarding phyfics. chemistry, astronomy ami natural history in which Ills stories'abound arc* the rc-sult of his favorff.er reading from early youth, and to this store he constantly added. ioMe was anxious, wrote De Amicis, to write books enough to describe the geography^ history and natural history of every country on earth, and hoped to live long enough to do It, but in the meantime lost not a day. writing two novels a year, but giving only one to the publishers, lhai they might not Issue, too 'close together.“We went, upstairs,” said De Amicis, “Everywhere was there a severe and simple elegance. Mis study and bedroom were one-—a very small room with a great worl. table in one corner and u small camp bed in another. On this soldier's co'eh .Jules Verne has slept from shortly after sunset to Ihe fii-st hours of daylight, winter and summer, for I know not how many years,”On a shelf hi bis library were all his works, ill J'Toncli. “Eighty volumes,” sairl Verne. They wore arranged according to iheir dates, in a great variety of bindings.Do Amicis speaks -of Verne giving him lii.'i photograph, on which boi.it 'Verne am] his wife wrote their mimes, but nowhere else in the books or records in ihe Carnegie library is an allusion made to Mrne. Verne.—Pitt burg Dispatch.aGlVEIvYoung LGrIt is withthat I toll wcl no has donecough ami wrily physician blit throe da. ihat I began Medicine. A then would hs so well, and Father John brother drink ler and llirivr A. E. KOvnoUl III.There is nothing like ill Wo have to keep San-Uura in the house.PRETTY MODELS PROVEDRESSMAKER’S THEORY.inlay to ilemedtimediblommt room is s and dlow-•eetor •nogio• rop-Gliuly !77 Chetrain ti-ain d the four on to©oi,nIt.c-n-(■!’were written since and have not been translated.For many years Verne’s homo has been at Amiens. In 18% Edmondo do Amicis wrote an account of a visit, to the aged writer by him and his two hoys.“To find Verne wo went to Amiens.” ae said, “where he stays ill! the year, two and a half hours'from Paris by rail. On the way we talked about the curious fart that (he readers of this living French writer, celebrated as h” is.- should have so little information tboul him, while of all flit* others there ire ininuto. eoiistnnt an.I abundant, de-mils both of their lives asid characters.—o—Wo knocked at the gate of a miniature palace, situated at the entrance of •t deserted street in a lordly quarter. A woman opened it. tor us and made us cross a little garden and enter a room, on iho ground Moor, which was full of light. Suddenly Jules Verne appeared. with smiling face ami outstretched hands.If meeting him without, knowing who ho was I had had been asked r* divine bis profession I would have said Im v.as a retired general or a. professor of physics' anti mathematics, a cabinet officer—never ?,n artist. ' Apartfrom I he. friendly look and affable demeanor • I could recognize nothing in common wiih the Verne who stood iieiovc me and the one who had a place n my imagination.lie spoke of his works with an abstracted air, as ho would have done of •onieonc vise's writings, or ral.hor of •kings in which entered no merit of his --as lie would have spoken of a coliee-lion of engravings nr coins he had acquired and with which bo had oe-■upied himself more from the necessity i doing Homdhiug than from any pas-■ ioii for (lie art.Uoni vary to what 1 had thought he loos iitii llrsf Imagine the characters Old facia of (he novel he is to wrile ami I hen make investigations for his wene ami. ilm ails of nclion. TTe rend a up ihe history aud geography of the ruimlrics Uj-hL. * * The varied In-Chicago Modistes Throw Off Yoke of Slavery to Paris Styles. Revolution lias been proclaimed by Chicago dressmakers. The thralls of shivery to Paris styles have been thrown off ami the American modiste is declared to be a free and independent tirlist. with right lo life, liberty aud her customers’ patronage, uninfluenced by French competition. Mme. Linda Ross Wade, vice president of the national dressmakers' association^ announced the declaration of independence yesterday, say n Chicago dispatch.We feel,” she said, “that the yoke of Paris has been on our nocks, figuratively speaking, altogether too long, it is time for us to break away, and create national styles of our own. At next fall’s exhibit iliero possibly will not ix* one Iktristan model shown. Wo gain nothing from them except the conviction that, our workmanship is better than theirs.“Styles made right here are belter adapted to the American [woman’s figure and leperamont than the French gowns. Rut until we take the law into our own hands, and refuse to import gowns, Parisian gowns, at great expense, we will not be inventors and artists, but copyists.Behind locked doors, with a strict prohibition placed on. the presence of men. Mine VVaderlectured to a large audience of women - j'-regarding the properAnncthods of walking, sleeping atul wearing corsets, accompanying her theories with demonstrations. Among lf.er dicta were:Sleep flat on ihe face, with the limbs stretched out straight. This keeps down Ihe abdomen and double chin. Do not curl up like ,a hibernating groundhog.,_\Vnlk oti the toes, not on the heels; do not scrape thb foot; but step .along fighlly. Try, ta:;avoi'd.s;attracling ntten-tion to, your feet if you want them to seem small. ,v 'Any woman can have a shapely figure if _sho..wears..t.he I'ight kind of corset and puts ifmr properly. If you have a had figure, blame yourself rather than the corset..^ Fasten tho bodom catch of the corset first and then mold it to your figure. After drawing ihe strings’ light, exercise a little before fastening all the catches.“You must have an hour-glass figure with an IS-ineh waist The proper waist measure is 20 inches, but yon must make it look IS.“Don’t you have In squeeze awful bard? piped a. wide-eyed girl In a Napoleon hat, who liad never been Irmght that she “musn’t speak up at meet in’.”“You don’t have to squeeze at all.'' returned Mine. Wade. “Von must wear a proper corset, get inio it properly and lake the simple physical culture exercise which T shall show you.Then Mme. Wade, with the aid of some ravishingly preti y models and some corsets that have been adopted by the national drespmakois’ association, proceeded in do stunts that astonished and interested her audience.First Thought in Burns—San-Cura.“The greatest stuff I ever saw in my life. The flesh on my hands was burned to the hone by the flames from a leaking gas pipe, and T hal not slept for three days and nights.. A few minifies after putting the San-Cura Ointment on my bands the pain was gone and I fell to sleep in my chair, and did not awaken in four hours, in one week my bands were completely healed, leaving no scar.”PAUL ARNOLD,Oct, 12, 11104. Boughton, Pa,San-Cura lias the widest range of usefulness as a surgical dressing and for slopping pain. For sale by all druggists. 25 and 50 centB.Take care of your pennies while young U7Ul give some olmp a chance to bunko you out of your dollars when you gel. old.tNU-TRI-OLATREATMENT. Tluit;M:xw*ment, may not con* viH4!o yon» but 3odays’ uso %vill.We Cure You or Pay the Bid.ColliAre stimulants, whips, tluit. weaken, not st ivngllieii, sIl-Ic killin'vs. Once used. you must keep using until vlt;m die. There is «mu treatment, 1 hat CITRKS— just. oii«:i box NUTRIOLA, 2 boxes NUTRIOLA r.tVi-at K1DNF.V THFATMI-INT lasts U.t cures most, cases. f« tin rail teed by your druggist. Money back i f request,-t;d—1wo pay the druggist. If very bad. consul!, our Physicians PfiF.K.YVe guarantee a cure. .*$uOO,OOO.m yapltal backs guarantee.NUTRIOLA CQ,, Chicago.Sold anti GuaranfiBcd by THEO. W. REUTING, Cor. Spring St and Exchange 1M., Titusville, Pa.SDEtar,uriE$ WIURE ALL. List FAILS. IIcki*. OmitfU Nyruit Tn*M*d Ult;*.d. Ubo In Umo. Snld by ilniirulst*.1SEEMSSUM-PTiOM♦t♦t♦:*♦❖❖toi;Vanilla pounds ( Yon can10c0♦♦♦ot❖*t❖♦♦❖❖•*♦ThBy bo the day onl;fi-incb V senile7-inch r peclns7-inch T tins w8-inch • spceiaCups an sjicciaBOOTESTIMON INLos Angele; ncsscFred S. T .1. D. Frode golos conn! city and vilt; hauling tin other nows early days the old-tini (o the use lenses ■ Fretu.iY'T-Rvnnch. Cj« Roads eon Long Bran anil the Dn to be ati in I'd by Mr. 1SJ10.The attoii*
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Titusville Herald

Titusville, Pennsylvania, US

Sat, Mar 25, 1905

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Anonymous A.

WI, USA 12 Oct 2021

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