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The Lincoln Herald from Lincoln, Nebraska • 5

The Lincoln Herald from Lincoln, Nebraska • 5

Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

na USErUL CF.D FC HOSPITALS MM THE GIFT SEASON A Corner in Ancestors I about here. Commencement Time, June the 4 Wedding Season Time to inspect-our complete line of pect our compl By ELEANOR Hayes JEWELRY, WATCHES, SILVERWARE Cin Bs Lowered or Raised at Hd Any Position Comfortable for Patient. A boon to the bed ridden and thotiHands of huxpltat patients throughout the country Is the invention of Kentucky man. This is a bed wblcfc tan be raised or lowered at the bes to any ponltlm comfortable to tho patient, and having a rest for the lee In addition. A pair of standards will a crossbar, looking like a horizontal bar on rollers, holds the upper end of the bed suspended.

At one side of the Htandards is a wheel and gear by which the head of the bed may raised or lowered to change the posV Everything Kept 1. a First (Copyright by UeClura 8rndlot J. B. TRICKEY CO. 1036 Street Lincoln, Nebraska WHEN 1 Get Ready to Build I let Us Estimate Your Lumber Bill Class Emporium.

YOU LUMBFR CO. J. Me, Is? jOHN MOORK Lincoln, Neb. iv ww F. W.

BROWN viT Both Phones. R. K. MOORF SECURITY INVESTMENT COMPANY, i (Incorporated February 1, 1886.) Loan9 on improved farms in eastern Nebraska; 5 per cent interest for a term of years with privilege of payment before due in borrower's favor. 1300 Street.

iv vvww www ww GOOCH'S BEST FLOUR MADE IN LINCOLN pleases the Most Particular People. ALL GOOD AND SCIENTIFIC NOTES. Klgnty-Mcvep In every 100 Canadian fanner own (heir farms. A rapid fciowtb of the linear nails Is considered to indicate good health. Only i Lout one out of every fifteen person, lias both eyes in perfect con-tlUloii.

The number of horses In the Trilled States January 1, 1900, was nearly 14,000.000. A healtny horn oats nine time its weight iu fooil-iu-aju'ar, a healthy Sheep six. timea A new putty knife, the invention of New Yorker, has a scraper attached to remove the surplus putty. French mines yielded 37.n71.7fiS metric tons of coal last year, 687.374 ton. more than the year before.

A Louisiana man has patented a combined pickle fork and tonga, the latter operated by a ring in the handle. bihij i ith iuiii mm uuu, wuiv.il emits sparks when rubbed, has been Introduced in a recently invented gas lighter. A Georgia mcui claims to have discovered the secret of producing a black rose and is seeking a patent for his process. An experimental osone plant will he established at St. Petershurg to purify the city's water supply drawn from the river Neva.

Doubly secure Is claimed to he new safety pin patented by an Illinois man. which has two points, one each sldo of a central bar. A coin purse recently patented by a Washington man is Bald to be rao.e safe than usual because the flap Is kept closed by a rubber cord. It is a Kansas woman who haa been granted a patent upon a fan provided with a sheet of absorbent material to hold water to cool the air which it agitates, One. of the most Ingenious French aviators is trying out.

'a combined dirigible balloon and aeroplane, a cigar-shaped gas bag helping to raise and support the machine. A hog's habit of scratching Itself against a post has led to the Invention of an automatic dlsinfector for it sprays as they rub against a supporting column. A patent has been granted on a roasting pan for meat which automatically bastes its contents by collecting the juices through a percolator and delivering them In the form of Epray. The word "caloriculltire" has botn coined to designate the new system of horticulture which is designed to replace the old French style of Intensive fruit and vegetable forcing by soil cultivation. DRINKING TUBE IS SANITARY So Arranged That When Mouthpiece Is on Level With Person's Mouth Water Spouts Gently.

A common fault of ordinary sanitary drinking fountains is the waste water, but a drinking device of and, although only running 'when in use, it is likewise claimed to be impossible to got a drink from it before the mouthpiece is thoroughly It la attached to a water pipe in jthe same manner that a faucet is attached flush to the wall. When a drink is wanted, the lever is pushed upward and the mouthpiece forward on a line with the drinker's mouth. ine water spouts up gently with a sufficient scouring- action to cleanse the mouthpiece and In a stream suf flclently great to obviate the necessity of touching it with the Hps. In this Fountain Drinking Tube. It en3 bodies the principle of the flow ing cups which are frequently found on street fountains, with the added advantage that the water is running only when a person is drinking.

When the lever Is let go the water is auto matically shut off. Moving Pictures In Color. i he Literary Digest translates from the Paris Nature an account of a device for producing moving pictures In It Is the Invention of William Friese-Green. He uses filters made of thin celluloid ribbon to take his negative films. The band Is dl vided into sections, colored In the order, red, green, blue and so on, indefinitely.

The sensitive film and filter ribbon pass the. shutter of the camera together as the successive pictures are taken. The samo ribbon Is used when the pictures are repro duced on the screen, when If Jho ma chine is operated swiftly, the per sistence of vision gives the appearance of a sins' moving picture ia natural colore. WMION LEXINGTON Family Hay in the Scottish form of the name, and Hayes in EngllBh. If there are those who do not accept the theory of (he origin of the name Hayes here given, other theories are at hand.

One traces the word to the Sanskrit kak, pronounced in English, like hag, or hagh. It means to surround, or gird, and from it, are the Latin words haya or haga: the Dutch, haag or.hague or helj: the French, hale or hala; the Anglo-Saxon haga or liege; the English, haw, hay; the lowland Scottish, hag. haig halgh, hay. All mean a fence or boundary. In Arublc, the word Is haugon.

In Normandy, there were lands and a lordship of Hale, a hundred years or more before the Conquest, Le Sieur de la Hay was one of William's Knights, 10CC. De Haga, le Hawe and de la Hayo are old forms of the name. Several of the Hayes, Hays, or Hay name were among founders of towns in this country. In Connecticut, about 1C45, we find Thomas at Mllford. Nathaniel at Xorwalk, and Richard at Lyme; in 1680.

at Windsor, George, and In Dover, N. John. One of the founders of Newark, N. along with the Cranes, Treats and a few others, were descendants of Thomas of Mllfovd, and of the Hayes' name. George, of Windsor Is supposed to have been born In Scotland and a Hay.

He addd or "es" to his name alter arriving in this country, or he had lived In England before coming here, and had there added the extra two letters to his name. George married, for his second wife, Abigail Dibol, or more probably Dibble, who wonltLbe aJJibol, if Dibble was just as easy?) Their wedding day was August 29, 1683. As Georgo had three children by his first wife, he must have been married when he came to this country. He was tho proud father of 11 five were sons. Rutherford D.

Hayes, nineteenth president, was descended from George of Windsor. George Hay of Virginia married a daughter of President Monroe. The coat-of-arms illustrated is blazoned: Three escutcheons, gules. Crest: A falcon rising, proper, Motto: Serva Juguni -keep yoke. the Spare Nought is the motto of the Marquis of Tweeddalej whose family name is Hay, as it is also a Hay or Hayes motto.

The Hayes of Chester, were granted arras in 1615, which is bla zoned: Sable; on a chevron, argent, three leopards' heads, or, a crescent, gules. Crest: A demi-lion holding a pheon, argent, staff, or. Family On May 13 the colonists found a suitable spot for a settlement, and the next day the men started to build a fort, which they called Fort James, and the settlement war known as Jamestown. Newport returned to England, but came again in 1608, and among gifts which he brought were presents for Powhattan, whom he styled "Emperor of the country." He went- again to England, and his last voyage back was made in 1610, when he brought Lord Delaware. The first recorded marriage on American soil took place at this time, and was that of John Laydon and Forrest, a widow, who came over from England In Newport's ship.

Capt Newport's wife was Elizabeth, and he had two sons, John and Christopher, and daughters, Elizabeth and Jane. To Elizabeth, the captain left 400, as her marriage to Jane only five pounds, "on account of her many and great disobediences toward me, and her misdemeanors to my great heart's grief." The captain died before his wife, for we find that Sir Francis Wyatt, in 1621, "set off the land given to the widow of Christopher Newport." Burke's "Peerage" blazons many coats-of-arms for the Newport, and Judging from their simplicity they were granted In the early days of heraldry, and for faithfulness to king and country. The coat-of-arms Illustrated is blazoned: Gules, (red), six annulets, argent (silver), three, two and one. No crest or motto Is given. There are two arms quite similar: One Is: Gules, six annulets, or (gold).

The other: Or, six annclets, gules. The Hayes family has enough romance, In its history, to stock a three-volume novel. The romance bpglns with the origin of the name, in 980, A. and at ihe battle of Loncarty, when. In the time of Kenneth, the Danes invaded Scotland.

At the battle, the Scots fleeing before the enemy, were stopped by a countryman, of great strength and courage, and his two song. Their only weapons were the yokes of their ploughs. The three brave men rallied the troops, the battle was renewed, and the Danes fled, defeated. The old man, wounded, and lying on the ground, cried out, "heigh! heigh!" which translated in modem language, Is the equivalent of "hur rah! hurrah!" It is easy to understand how this word became the Hay, Hays, or Hayes of to-day, after of course, passing through a process of evolution. "Let him be called Heigh," pro claimed the king, "and his posterity forever more." And thus it was, with the gift of as much land in Perthshire, as a falcon should fly over without alighting.

The falcon, (knowing what was expected of him) made it exactly six miles, alighting upon a stone, which is called Falconstone. The record Is auite exDllclt upon this point The falcon was granted as a crest, and three shields or escutcheons one for each man-were the charges, with the motto "Serva Juguin." This then is one theory of the origin of the name, and the granting of one coat-of-arms. Forty arms, more cr less, have been granted at different times, to branches of the Hayes, Hays and Hay families. Heyes is also another form of the name. Newport Newporte, Nuport and Niewport are i variations of this name, or at least, these are orthographies found in the records.

The was added for airs, probably. The Nuport may be called euphonic spelling and Niewport is also airs, or akin to It, Newport seems to have been the original, first, and only form, if we accept the name. Novus Burgus the new borough as it was called, and afterwards, Newport. This was on the isle of Wight, and about the ninth century. Carls-brooke castle Is near Newport, which is also the name of towns in Yorkshire, Essex, Cornwall.

Shropshire and of towns in Ireland, Wales and Scotland. The charter of the borough of Newport, in Pembrokeshire, Wales, dates to 1215, and the quaint custom of "walking the boundaries" is still kept up, and here is the castle of Newport Present seats of the Newport family include Castle Bromwich, Birmingham. The earl of Newport is one of titled members of the family; the first earl of Bradford about 1650, was Sir Francis Newport, the present earl, or Viscount Newport, born 1873, married a daughter of Baron Aberdare. Earl Newport, who also has the title captain, and has distinguished himself In South Africa, was private secretary to Prime Minister Balfour. 1 Other notable members of the Newport family are Richard, who was of London, and Sir Thomas, was at the "Field of the Cloth of Gold," accompanying his sovereign.

Capt Christopher Newport, admiral of Virginia, has been called the first real estate speculator In this country. If the colony of the London com pany, with its 105 colonists, which found shelter 301 years ago behind Point Comfort, may fairly be called a real estate speculation. The actual settlement at Jamestown dates from 26th of April, 1607, when the little squadron of three ships the Susan Constant, the Godspeed and the Discoveryunder the command of Christopher Newport, completed its long voyage. It entered the estuary, between the capes, afterward called Charles and Henry, in honor of the two sons of the king. The vessels took shelter behind the promontory, which the weary voyagers called Point Comfort.

Newport News also owes Its name to the Admiral, as it is generally accepted by those who have gone into the local history of Virginia, that it was thus named in his honor. Clean Up Your Premises Turn Crank and Bed Mov. tlou of the person occupying it Running up from the foot of the bed T-Bhaped bar to be placed under tas-legs of the patient, so that when tbt bed is tilted at a steep angle he to kept from sliding downward. the bar beneath his legs giving him the feeling of being in a reclining chair. Any person who has been forced to lie abed for any length of time, unable to change his position, will appreciate tho relief such a bed will afford.

MOST UNIQUE BUTTON-WATCH In Many Cases It Is Worn Unprotected on Sleeve of Coat Fastened by Shank. One of the most novel of the many novel forms of watches is the button watch invented by a New York mam. The case of this watch Is the eixtr and shape of an ordinary button, such as Is worn on a man's coat sleeve, but hollow, and the works are Inside. Tb dial is fastened to the case by a km. Odd Button Watch.

strong shank. There can be a pocke in the cuff of the coat sleeve Into) which the little time piece will flt, but in some cases it is made to wear unprotected on the sleeve. Except for the face it would be almost impossible to tell it from the other buttons, on the coat Tthere used to be si novelty watch that was worn In th buttonholes of the coat lapel, but tht one is used as a regular button. WIND GUIDE FOR AERONAUTS Furnishes Aid Corresponding Pllotf Charts of Ocean Navigator- Record of Years. A unique sign of the times, is Dr.

Richard Assmann's guide to the winds of Germany, prepared from the rec ords of the direction and fores of the-winds kept at forty-nine well-distribo-ted stations for an average of, nearly twenty-one years. It furnishes the-aeronaut with an aid corresponding ts the pilot charts of the ocean navigator. For each season and eacb station it shows how often, on the the wind blows from each of eight directions, and the average frequency; of the various degrees of wind between a calm and a hurricane. It indicates the best places and times for making ascents, with the direction afa- Bhips without high power will prob-( ably drift. Mere than this.

It suggests the best location for airship sheds an ports, and gives evidence that notj only are places near the coast unsult-I able, but that many inland station are uncomfortably stormy. Friedricb4 hafen, chosen by Count Zeppelin for hls" great sheds. Is an unfavorable place for handling the huge airships. The records show that it has an average of twenty-four stormy days a year, while Celle has only twenty-two such-days, Berlin and Cassel only four, seven other stations less than ten. Stomach Telescope.

A stomach telescope, invented by London surgeon and in constant nset In ft Yinanltnl fn that ritv. miMm Spring is Ilere. Get Oat the Rubbish Before The Health. Officer Gets You. Let Us Haul It Away We-will do it ricfht.

No need to watch when we do the work because we do it right. Satisfaction CITY GARBAGE CO. 114 North Twelfth St MVVV WW VIVIVVV VW VV-V VW vww Auto 2473, Bell 473 2 Gettier Jarket WALT E. SHAFFER, Prop. Fresh and Cured Meats We Handle Only the Best Gold Fish and Gold Fish Supplies Bell 72, Automatic 1172 120 South Eleventh Street VWWVWWAWVWWWii We are the Recognized j.

For First Class CLEANING AND DYEING We Clean Ladies skirts, waists, Jackets white dresses. Mens coats, vests, pants, overcoats. Bilks, Satins and Childrens Clothes Altering and Repairing J. WOOD CO. 1320 Street Ueil 147 Auto 1292 wwywwwwwwwww( HEAD 0 DARTERS doctor to see the exact condition ofi.

the entire Interior of patient's stou4 ach..

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About The Lincoln Herald Archive

Pages Available:
9,598
Years Available:
1890-1936