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A A Entered at the Pgostorrice at Lexington, Ky,, as second—class mail matter. _ _    
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3 ‘ R. Q. GRANT. A‘ Q    
' f Among the many interesting features connected with the g' _f` A gr 
{ · State College not the least is the local oflice of the United .   J
T States Weather Bureau, established a little more than a year Ti .   V
· ‘ _ ago. The station is fully equipped with modern self—recording . {-’ ,; _ A
l A instruments by means of which a complete history of meteor-     A
i · ological elements which go to make up Lexington weather is  
»'• obtained. An instrument known as the barograph, manufac· A   V
A tured in Paris, records the virying weight of the atmosphere;    <
» A the thermograph, the temperature; in like manner the wind ;  _
L _ velocity, wind direction, rainfall, sunshine and clouds arc ·    
  recorded by means of expensive and delicate instruments. The I  _   }
  cut on the opposite page expibits a portion of the oflice equip-  
ment. ‘   _
A The present age has been one of remarkable progress in all  
branches of human knowledge, more particularly the sciences,  
» and in none has greater advancement been made than in that   ._
Q A of meteorology. To American scientists belongs the credit of I  ;
_ discovering the circumpolar track of storms and from that L ·
demonstrating the practicability of weather forecasting. The i
wide extent of territory from which simultaneous observations
of various meteorological elements are obtainable have proba— »
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to the natural acumen and energy of the American a large
[ share of credit be given. _ _
The VVeather Bureau of the United States obtains twice
_ daily, 8 a.‘m. and 8 p. m., a photograph, as it were, of the
weather conditions over territory extending two thousand
miles north and south, embracing Canada and Mexico as well
, as the islands comprising the West Indies, and three thousand
miles, east and west. Two hundred stations of observation,
·— 1 established at the most favorable points for the collection and
_~,, dissemiation of weather information, keep the Central Office at
  Washington and the forecast centers at Chicago, San Francisco ‘
{ · and Portland, Oregon, fully advised as to the development and j
,1 progress of weather conditions as they take their general course
_   eastward. At the Central OHice only are reports from all sta-
' · . tions utilized in the preparation of a weather chart and the i
V . deduction of forecasts. At smaller stations reports from such
, stations as are necessary in forecasting for that. particular sec-
tion, or which in any way affect ·_ the agricultural or commer- Y
· , cial interests of the community only are used. The Lexing-
  a , ton office receives reports from territory extending from New
‘ l York City on the east to Salt Lake City on the west, and from
.4 Calgary, British Columbia, to Galveston. These reports are
used in the preparation of a daily weather map which is de- l
h livered to the public free of charge. In addition to the map
over three hundred postal forecast cards, containing the weather
and temperature forecast for the following 36 hours are deliv-
ered daily to the public in Lexington and to points outside the
city. A A p V "
The bureau is sustained by an annual appropriation made
V by Congress, amounting to about one million dollars, an appa— -
l·,_ rently large sum at first glance, but when it is remembered that
  by the forcast of a single cold wave in the State of Florida h
  alone, crops whose value was far in excess of that amount, i ~
were saved from destruction, the cost of maintenance of this
luv/" `
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 ,_,,.,_   "'”"’ ·— to - — · r·~—  ..¤—~ ~ K --- ~ —-  — ·
f. `  all
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. 1 *
  ` >   ` 
  "` —-
’—’ department of the public service seems small indeed. The .  
l»,’   greatest returns are derived from warning to marine interests . ·  _ - [
which, while difiicult to obtain in figures, amount to many ·
million dollars annually. -   ,
_° _ The West Indian service. established at the inception of the gc .
Spanish-American war, is one of the most interesting and val- ‘ it
uable departments of the bureau. Since its installation it has `
paid for itself many times and by its timely warnings contrib- _
A uted largely to the success of the American fleet during the
war. ’ ‘·
. To Professor Willis L. Moore, Chief of the Weather Bureau _  
since 1894, is due ther present high standard of the bureau.  
Possessing thorough knowledge of every detail, obtained by    
· actual experience, he has been enabled to give to the public  
, just such service as it needs. Much cumbersome machinery _ i i  
which served as a detriment in the earlier years has been dis- , ,
pensed with, mathods have simplied and profitless labor dis- I .  
. continued. To—day the Weather Bureau stands superior in dis- l I 
· cipline, most of its members students and scientists and all .
animated with an admirable esprit de corps.   ·`
, >l<   >i=   >%< >1<
The local oflice is in charge of Mr. R. Q. Grant, a gentleman
of wide experience, having served in Georgia, North Carolina,   4
New Mexico, Arkansas, Pikes Peak, Colorado, Pennsylvania,   in
i Michigan, Minnesota. and Vtlashington, D. C.    
. l Mr, Grant took charge of the bureau at State College in ' ii?
, r January last, and a more pleasant gentleman, competent ob- _ ?   ,
y server could not have been placed in charge of this oiiice. He  
. is very popular with all the students and has many friends in c  
; the city.   ·
  _" - Everybody knows Gary. He is one one of the most promis-  
3 ing young men in the State. , G
- . Mr. \Villiam E. Gary received his appointment as Student- ·
5 Assistant December 1, 1898, and has been connected with the "
L I ollice since that time. He is pursuing the classical course in g ~'
, i ~ the State College and is now in his sophomore year.- [E1>1’r0R.
s .
9
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  @@@@§§@§§@§i§@§E§i§€§€§@@§§® =i£  ls .
  mr ll/IANSFIELDS   is  
.   ur a sa is   a
    it CHANCE   it  
— it at   § uq  
‘   h
`L I , • • ein   •;•¢• •;¤§ • '  _ · {
V. or ( success.)  ·
i » Success is a most fleet-footed-almost a phantom—goddess.  
  You pl1I‘Bll€ her eagerly illld SGGID to gI`2LSp hél`, and tl'1SI1 yOU U I  
  see her speeding on in front again. ‘ This is, of course, because  
` ` · erre is rarely satisied with present success. There is always  
  something yet to be attained. To speak personally, I never  
  worked harder in my life than I am working now. If I should  it
V ° relax, I fear that the structure which I have built up would  2-
  come tumbling about my ears. It is my desire to advance my  
standard every year, to plant it higher upon the hill, and to  .
». never yield a foot of ground. This requires constant effort.  
    I had my reward, not in financial returns, for these are hardly I   ·
~, _ s commensurate with the outlay of labor; nor in the applause of  
.· “ others, for this is not always discriminativo or judicious ; but  ,
i ' in the practice of my art. This suggests what, it seems to me,  
l is the true secret of success.  
. “Love your work; then you will do it well. It is its own re-    ·—.
ward, though it brings others. If a young man would rather  I
be an actor than anything else, and he knows what he is about,  Y
let him, by all means, he an actor. He will probably become  
a good one. It is the same, of course. in many occupations.  
If you like your work, hold on to it, and eventually you are  
_ 4 likely to win. If you don’t like it, you can’t be too quick in  
i"“ · getting into something that suits you better.  
I "I began as a dry goods clerk in Boston, and was a very  
mediocre clerk. Afterwards I became a painter in London,  
and was starving at that. Finally, like water, I found my `  
i A level in dramatic art." I  
 I Q, ,  
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1  ·  . V The thing about Mr. Mansfield which most inspires those li`;
{ij  who come in contact with him in his wonderful store of ner- I
if  vous energy. It communicates itself to others and makes I , *1
  - them keen for work. · _  V
  "I cannot talk with him five minutes," said his business V V
 ·é  representative, "before I want to grab my hat and ‘hustle’ ont "
  Y and do about three days work without stopping. For persons
  who have not, or cannot absorb, some of his own electric spirit, V     ,
  he has little use. He is a living embodiment of contagious  
  energy." 4 ‘i ` 
  His performances before audiences constitute a compara- _ `V
  tively small portion of his work. It is in his elaborate and I
_   painstaking preparation that the labor is involved, and it is to `
  this—to the minute preliminary care that he gives to every de- Y
  tail of a production--that his fine effects and achievements be- »»*i `V
  ‘ fore the footlights are, in considerable measure, due.  
 Y- ns civss insinrrs ATTENTION TO DETAIL.   __
  The rehearsals are a vital part of the preparatory work, and    
  to them Ms. Mansfield has devoted a great deal of time. For    
  weeks, between the hours of eleven in the morning and four in  
  the afternoon, he remains on the stage with his company,   A
  , seated on a line four or five deep on either side of him, like _ T  .
  boys and girls at school, deeply engrossed in impressing upon ,
  the minds of individual members of the company his own ideas ` i V
  of the interpretation and presentation of the various parts.
  Again and again, until one would think he himself would be-
 __ come utterly weary of the repetition, he would have an actor 4. ,
  repeat a sentence. Tot until it is exactly right is Mr. Mans-
  field satisfied} Nothing escapes his scrutiny. At dress re- _ _
 ; hearsal he may see, to mention a typical case, a tall man and
 Y_ a small one of no special importance in the play standing A Z ll
  together, and the tall one may be made up to have a sallow ‘
  complexion and Beard. Mr. Mansfield glances at them quickly, i
  Something is wrong. He hastens to the smaller one and sug- V
  gests that, for the sake of contrast, he make himself up to look {
  stout and have a smooth face. The improvement is quite .i .
`   noticeable, Mr. Mansfield carefully notes the effect of light i
  , and shadow on the scenery; and sometimes, at the last mo-
  ment, will seize the brush and add, here and there, a heighten- ' `
 V ing or softening touch. V
 .,
  me `
    V   ,
 2 · _ .._.,» ~.  ·.    
  · V V ` · ..     ~·¤~e»3'¤a·z *&·r~·*   ~·-    » ·+w~.·e  " ’i"° " - V TV~V `_
» `V `  ‘“··‘*'*"*°` ” ’  M   ‘i V ‘V`V ’  

 A  p     »;``' ,_   __ ,3   »-i:   R  Q?        .  
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\ An incident of his early youth will tend to illustrate his _  
"_· T" ` spirit of self-reliance. His mother was an eminent singer who  L 
1 . frequently appeared before royal families in Europe, and  
_   L usually had little Richard with her. On one occasion, after  
  her own performance before royalty in Germany, the little  
' ‘ crown prince, who was about the same age as Richard, and an  
‘ accomplished boy, played a selection on the piano, and played   ,
( it well. When he had left the piano, the company was very  
  much surprised to see Master Richard Mansfield take his place,  
without an invitation, and play the same music, but in a con-  
._—’¤».. siderably better manner than had the crown prince. \Vhen   .
" the boy had become a youth, he was compelled to support  
_ ‘ . himself; and, having come to this country, he obtained aposi-  
  · tion as a clerk in the Jordan & Marsh establishment in Boston. i  {
  Meanwhile, he was devoting all his spare time to studying  
A5 painting. He afterwards tried to make a living at it in Lon-  _
l don, and failed. He was finally given an opportunity as a l  
  comedian in "Pinafore." He had the small part of Joseph. '  
, ’ It was but a short time afterwards when he entered the employ  
  of Mr. Palmer (who is now his manager) and got the chance  
_ of his lifetime. ,  
Q"' wimfrs.  
V V"., Little W`illie was a Freshman, . 4  
  , i Green as grass and greener too.  
_, Not a thing in all creation `  
_ Ever had so green a hue. »  
‘ One day while out exercising,  
Through a field he chanced to pass, _  
And a brindle cow devoured him,  
T Thinking he was only grass.  
. Little Willie is in heaven,  
 __ Vacant are two places now,  
` _ In the class there is no Willie, `  
In the field there is no cow. —Ex. ·  
  1
The man or woman who will not work is a supernumerary—  
A the economy of the universe. ,  
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  HIE COLLEGE GIRL. _ fr; ·
iii  _ _ ! N
 ° . . » WILL. came. = — l .
  “I do not approve of the °College Girl’ " said the military f r   Q
  man. °°I do not think she ought to be here. She is not ad- __ 3
  mitted to many of the big Universities; and it is not natural . _ gi
  for girls to he classed along with all us military men. _ Why! { 
  I am confident that there is not a cannon in the armory that is I  
  of the feminine gender. They are big and massive and mas-  
  · Hculine, and require men to manage them, while all the men in l _’
  the battalion cannot manage one college girl. Now, when a
_   cannon is duly loaded and asked to express an opinion on a I "
  matter of civil or international importance, it does so in a stern, V A
  dignified way and quits; but when the college girl opens fire, a   "
  rapid-fire machine gun or a Kentucky Colonel’s revolver on a ° Q
 !· ' Frankfort court is not a circumstance. There is nothing femi—  
  nine in my line, I tell you."    
  "Nor mine either," said the man of the signal corps. "Talk { il
 _’ about her aesthetic taste. Why! she has no more idea of the l  
 T beautiful than a Philipeno. Haven’t I displayed my yellow  
  stripes and gorgeous cheverons before her all the year to no ’ lr lr,
 _ purpose, and signaled to her from afar off without response? . i {
  You con flag down a freight train easier than her. She does i .
  not move in my set." i
 if “That is right," said the drum corps man. "She don’t belong
 · in my instruments. You can’t beat her and you can’t blow
 __ her. Youcan puff your cheeks, but you can’t puff her. Blow , -`
 “ her, indeed! I went down town with her the other day, and it ·
  was 0 case of `bugler, blow thyself,’ and I did." · y ·
 , MI beg leave to differ," said the infantryman. On the con-
  trary, I am confident that my rifle is feminine. It is slender ! `
' __ and graceful, beautifully adjusted to fit the shoulder, and war-  
  ranted to bring down a man at a thousand yards. When I . ,
 , ·graSp the breech of my gun I can easily imagine that it is her {
·   slender hand, and when we march off across the campus I
  ' imagine We are strolling along some shady lane at sunset, talk-   "
  ng of the weather and other things. Whengwe fix bayonets it »
  - .  
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  ala
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R   ‘ ’ ? a ·     a , {, 
 VA , _ _r, ._Y,?A_.,:,___f‘;_.·: 2   _;., `_   _ V, k I . ) _ A > . \  
r I   `  
‘· , is but the quill in her Tam O’Shanter hat. At order arms we  
` 4 are one the brink of some woodland lake posing for our picture  
\\’ in its placid water, with all the beautiful things in nature about  
[S" g us moving in clrcles of which we are the center. At parade  
g ,x rest, I am telling her good-night—for the tenth time—over the , i ·
J, _ J front gate, under the seductive influence of an August moon.  
" ~   And at port arms—we1l! here my imagination goes beyond  
fi . _ description—but that gun is feminine." _ L   ‘
, Then the innocent cause of the discussion, who had over-  
I , » heard, came up, and giving the first three speakers a stony  
l stare, she bestowed such a smile on the fourth as made him  
Y feel like Admiral Dewey after the battle, or, more properly,  
/*_ y like Hobson. "Excuse me," said the man of the infantry, as  
° E he walked off with the college queen.   -‘
.· "I guess I took my finger off the touch-hole too soon," said  
‘   the artilleryman. Then the drummer crossed his sticks and  
  put a skull over them, and the flags on the coat of the signal ,  
g - * man went to half—mast.  
2* ~   his
L  — ' l’ ‘
  THE BACHELOR GIRL.  
l;.__ _ ‘°One may laugh at the love lorn and lonely old maids,  
  And pity their husbandless state,   I
  . Since their hopes one by one they have tenderly laid  
  ` It In the narrow graves fashioned by fate; l:·°
` · But the other. who loses not maidenhoods ways   Q
I- Of setting men’ hearts in a whirl,  
She is not an old maid, though she’s thirty today; j
She is simply a bachelor girl." i
- °‘Men who have the right kind of material in them will assert ·
gg their personality, and rise in spite of a thousand adverse cir·¤ ` .
custanoe. You cannot keep them down. Every obstacle seems `
only to add to their ability to get on."
 i ·»i ’ _. g
n I, ’ _ N 1 if va.--· Es
\ "' I lm

 · r {gil- 
  LOCA Ls. é 5 
  E #
  Dont fail to go to the K. U. Contest Friday night. It will f~ v
'  g he a thrilling affair. E   I,
  Crirler: Say John, you’l have to go to Van Hoose tor your     .
  ` photograph. § gy
  John: Why?   *"  
2  Crider: Well, because he’s so good on ugly fellows. He can i .· `   
  make any fellow