1
/**$ "l />"* THE SPORTING WORLD. ,«nd Th»t In Amateur and Pr«fa». sional Athletics, Li* fiudalph, famou* pitcher of the iton Bravew* sent eighteen bicycle i j, w S off on their" gtiud tor sK days in bv 3toll£. > ' - f&Teduic Welsh of Wales, lightweight jLnplon of the world, was held to * rpfV Charli. White in a fiercely i»bt ten round coo test at Milwau- JciianiRlon A1 -McCoy, who holds the- flddleweight title, had his ciown bad- \, batteled by Soldier Bnrtheld. ex- lampion welterweight of the army. ^Ilb a haid. lough and tumble bout of m row""! 1 " which went the limit'at ~7—- ' •Che icsults _of the football garnis |*ycd lust Saturday by some of tl bl» colleges are .as follows Y,tle v n rljlncetoii H Haivard. 0/ Blown, i pirtmouth 41, Penn, 0 SSEtmy. 3\ jfnue, 0 Navy, 31;'<Colby, 21 Syn •cose, 0, (^lgatej-1,0 .Notre P.inie. I Cjrli'Sle Indians, 6 Cornell, 2S MHu Bin, 13 $ '"•( I *•*-«? flOIES fROM FOREIGN LANDS. ^VVhai Folks Are'"'Doing on the Other Side of the Globe. The king ,' _"ttgland ha* cohfern .1 |» peerage on' y, alter Cunliffe govci Lor of tbe Bank of England, for sorv fees In the financial crisis Dr Henry Vaju Dyke, the Unite 1 ^ States mim&ter to HA'laud, is suffe.rm„ Iftoraophthalmia* He sailed fiom Rut ||tcidam tor the ,Dmted, States on i } short lea\ e of abserice A dispamh from Havre to Lloyd « ' -agency In London sjjjs that the Frew li steamship Ducheslse de Giuohe foun dered in the Havre rotidstend during i gale and that eleven peisous lost their lives, •• \ ~ «*_*» greatest of all ^E n e n t •» deprived "I took your Com- Pound and have a fine strong baby. " — Mrs' JOHN MITCHELL, Mas- Sena, N. Y. "Lydi-a E, Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound isl wonderful medicine for expectant mothers." — Mrs. A. M, MYERS, Gor- donville, Mo. I highly recommend LydiaE.Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound before child-birth, it has done so much for me."-Mrs. E M DOERR, R. R. it Cofr shohocken, Pa. I look LydiaE. Punc- h-mi s Vegetable Com- pound to build up my •'J'-tern and have' the dearest baby girl in the woild." —Mrs. MOSE BLAKELEY, Imperial,Pa. I praise the Com- pound whenever I have a chance. It. did so much , for me before my little girl was born." —Mrs. E W. SANDERS, Rowles- burg, W. Va. ' I |ook y o u r Com- pound "before baby was born and feel I owe my life to it. "—Mrs. "WINNIE TILLIS, Winter Haven, Florida, '' t?M<r MpE* H iVnnVTlllis Business Depression Due *"*** to Great Destruction &nd Waste of Prop- erty Throughout the World By Judge ELBfcRT H. v GARY, Chairman of United States Steel Corporation \ 1 BELIEVE i n Uie early autumn Ave shall see an impiovemont'm our business conditions. "We a r e ahead}' witnessing an increase m ton- nage, and it Mill be ftirthei incieased, I tiust The mere fact that l tonnages are inn casing horn day to, dav will natuially influence some | improvement in puces Thciefoie I thmk OUR EARNINGS SHOULD jBH MOBE SATISEACTOBY I N T H E LATTER PABT O E T H E •i EAR. Indeed, as 1 have lemaiked "beloie, gcncially when we have a j very good six months during the eailj paitW the yeai there-is likely to be poorer business m the lattei hall ol the yeai, and vice versa .REGARDING CAUSES OF BUSINESS DEGRESSION IN THE FIRST PLACE THERE HAS BEEN THROUGHOUT THE WORLD DURING THE LAST TWO YEARS GREAT DESTRUCTION AND WASTE OF PROPERTY. WARS, WHICH WERE SEVERE, AND' PREPARATIONS FOR POSSIBLE. WARS BY WAY OF BUYING AND BURNING POWDER AND OTHER IN- STRUMENTS OF WARFARE HAVE MATERIALLY DEPLETED THE FINANCIAL RESOURCES OF THE WORLD / Again the agitation thioughout the mruveise piompted from good motives or 'sometimes ft o m motives of cupidity .md at other times by reason of individual effort to succeed politically have had a decided and adverse innuendo THERE SEEMS TO HAVE BEEN MORE UN- REST, .MORE DISTURBANCE; MORE OPBJf ANTAGONISM, BE- TWEEN DIFFERENT CLASSES OE PEOPLE THAN EVER BE- FORE.- And there is little doubt that business conditions everywhere have been influenced by this agitation This country is no exception. •I \ floating mine-exploded at Fossaee- a, on tbe "coast of Abruzzi on the ist coast of Italy, so close to the h shore that serious damage was done to ft the*railway along the coast No one •*• -was killed * r DEATHS OF NOTED PEOPLE. Mm and Womjui Who Have Died- In thegj-jSit Week. |p Julius HarBrirgei;,,former sheriff, as- semblyman and excise commissioner, died suddenly at his home in New 1 YorE" He was sixty-four 'c - r s old. li iMrs Caroline'M Severance, known fc is the "mother of women's clubs.V died : her home iu Los Angeles, Cat She would have bee/t ninety-five jears of P age in January, next James E Donnelly of tbe^Yale uni- versitr police and familiarly known'to Yale men the worlcTovei as Jim, diet! .-at his home In J^ew Havea, Conn. He •nas s a t y - t w o y e a i s old Jean Foure. tho old time singer and | composer, died in Paris at tbe age of eighty four He was author of world famous melodies', the most celebrated of which was "Les Itameaui' ("The Palms"! ••O t HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Mri Ellen M. Stuart, cuintor fur eighteen yeare of the Colt memorial connected with tbe Morgan Memorial building at Hailffoid. Conn died at Aruiseai, the liome for"woiuen found- -ed by Mrs. Elizabeth Jarvis Colt- The father of Miss StuaTt -nas the designer of the city seal of Hartford General Market*. p. BDTTEH—The high' prices "have curtall- I* *4 consumption to sycli an extent thit Uie market was not quite so tlrm and fine _, butter waa more In evidence Undergrades K *r« Irregular Good packtfiis stock scarce «id wanted Prlceii Creamery. e*traa, «*core, 36c; hlRhor «corliip. 36MiC : arsts, _ » to 91 score, 31aS5c ', held extrps. 92 1 "core, 32VSc; firsts, J3i4«82c , state, dairy. I- wta, nneat, 33a3<c.; good to prime. 28a «c.; common to fair. 23a2Sc; process er- t»s. 25^a26'jje.: flrata, 24a25c; lower m sriims, 22aKe ; Imitation creamery, ftfts. f Vb*U>ba.; ladles, current make, ftrsis. '• 54a23o.; seconds, 21%a22c; tower sraaea, »ac; pocklijjt stock, held fltio, 22c.; Ni *ij^c; lower grade*, 19a20c EGqs-Ther« in a acarelty of uniformly flue fre«h efegg. Prices an» firm, but a«er- *K lines are rather Indifferent and a little w*r« sluggish, Storage did not move lUlto so rtceiy oil account of Hghter **• JWt movement. Neaiby eggs ratper »»t«o arid wore or less defective Prices; **»* fjatbered, extras. 33a41c, extra nnts, 37a38fc.j flrsta, 3HW36c; seconds. M *«•. flrsts.. Ua%C, seconds, 27n32c.; dirt- H Wo, t, 23a«<-.; No % lR»22c , ehecM. /p«22cj rotrlgeriitorfc firsts, charges naid. ' >fta!S%cvt seconds/ tta^-to i Pennesrlvaula 6 Ha nearby hennery white'?, fancy, large. | "ft) hennery bgown*. WaWc.j mixed cot' t r v s POWlL.TBX'-'lliere >« a »«• ,,e - 2*nd tor choice fo«vt* und chickens. jWch are «tcsdy A,veraK« «"?» dW* •jtdlwn and ' large use CMKKCIM rather J - - -teese ;""<"» ana large siw> (iiiuw 1 " ••»>••••- J«w. Old roosters tlrm ptfeta and *wf W*ood demand and firm Prices.' OWICK **. HalCcf fowis. HalBftCi old roos^r* Danger of Sore Eyes. Persons with sore eyes, espe- cially if (here is a discharge-, •should be careful not to transmit the disease. The towels thoy use should lie kept entirely apart is/roni.tbe ones used by others aud care taken with the materials used for dressing or treating the sore eyes in order not to infect others.. - All persons should bear in mind the possibility of infecting tbem with their hands when they are handling -unclean or infectious material'of any kind, especially i-I'ithing or anything of a per- sonal nature which has been in contact with diseased persons. Some diseased people cause dan- gerous diseases I n't heir own eyes in this way. Workmen engaged in occupa- tions which endanger the eyes should employ, protective meas- ures. Eye protectors, such as gocgles or plalu glass .spectacles, should I* worn to protect the •>yei from injury fronv foreign bodies, su> b as chips of steel, emery dust, etc., -ybere the ma- chinery or implements in use are noi provided with eye protec- tive devices. No injury to the ,,..,.. however s'ight, is a trifling nialtcr.- A. phyMcinn is the person to re- move a foreign body from tlie eye when it manul be removed by simi'le measures, as by rub- .b'ing the other eye. wetting a corner of a Hean handkerchief and wiping it out or taking hold of the eyelashes or the upper Hd of the affected eye aud pulling it- down over the lower Ud. Q.»-»-«"«-»-*-*' ™.., uj^c^i, apnng, nan* «"»"»' «-r» J*}**. v»«*tetn and «>mi)erif. «W. W" •TO*". « & { p l a i n s . J6«3(le . J»ftE8«JDD pOULTRif-There •» « K « ^ ?W for fane* |«rir« rofi«tln« dilckene and **««» b r o i l e d ^Vtotm pscked fowl* n JK'fWe d«tn«t(d.' fewt Iced *cl( «»owiy S» roojtem IM moderate rtpPW «"« flr «<'„ **n« Island Ad »*»rtiy 4Mbk» almost out JC the market! t a r g e nfjuatw In goad de- ?•»* nnd ftrmef, IProwt) turttcy* .<JW 2*» IMqwi Wllojr- .TCttrkey*. Ic«*. *«Urn, milk. fed. A lb* unci over h'ta: gfey, *!W each, litffo . bwtieis iaa ; «j ; »**, « to-lbo* waxt^im %• lb" «"*.»**' »Jlp«rt, «e; we*t*r«. . 1 * plrKcd. \ lb » ST «*«>r, fdvto i aid nmwr-s. «<• J*™'* J™i«. 1t> in t«> doxen. *». 'J th* n-* 1 * 3 *: !«•» **,»**, dark »«ntlU». ««!«.'«»* **•«»« pv*t.%*m.; Kort* tui key*.. *«-f; Town Topics. Many a tOwnTnTuTcall itself "the city beautiful" If It wasn t for the people In it.-Charleston Kews-Couner. Some one says that New York pays nearly half the income "tax. Yes, but where does New York get the money o pay it with?-Detroit Free Press. | w e ' haven't yet investigated tie theory of standarlring the babies btit ! w Appose it means to have all tbe I tables of the country as nearly like I S o s e o ? Houston posslble.-flous- I ' ^ B o s t o n men had a fight over the i L„ whnther t> name Woodrow tfT*Z trochaic or an iambic dime- Mown in tbe bottle culture you've gX band » to Boston-Pittsburgh aflzettfrTlmes- '^f the o."mnrles. but trill run as S D iiS.£r candidate. ^ho«« if S. little foe of Boss Murphy bfts *t vft offlcialy announced his inteh from a CTcdthle source. Ton^tDeiay treating Your cough j 8 reduced- Yp^n^ e imitated Tar-Honey. « g^"™ ^ucooS »hd air passages, loosen' jg" Q . m RUSSIANS TAKE FORTS, IN ATTACK AT CRACOW Kaiser's Forces Are Rushing to Check Foe's Advance. No Doubt That Dirigibles Can Be Built to Cross Atlantic Bg Maior VON PARSEVAL, Inventor of Airships T HERE CAjM BE NO DOUBT THAT TECHNICALLY WE ARE ABLE TO BUILD AIRSHIPS THAT WILL KEEP AFLOAT FOR SEVERAL DAYS AND WITH THE NECESSARY CAPITAL WE CAN CONSTRUCT DIR- IGIBLES CAPABLE OF CROSSING THE ATLANTIC FROM \E\IR0PE TO AMERICA. NATURALLY THESE AIRSHIPS WOULD HAVE TO BE.VERY BIG. A SHIP OF THIS KIND WOULD NEED THREE DAYS TO COVER THE DISTANCE OF TWO THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED STATUTE MILES IF EQUIPPED WITH ENGINES DEVELOPING SEVEN HUNDRED AND TWENTY HORSEPOWER AND GIVING HER AN A V E R A G E SPEWED OF 43.47 STATUTE MILES THE HOUR, ADMITTING A REASONABLE MAR- GIN.FOR DELAYS ON ACCOUNT OF HEAD WINDS AND OTHER CIR- CUMSTANCES. THE FUEL AND OIL NECESSARY FOR SUCH A VOY- AGE WOULD AMOUNT TO THIRTEEN TONS OF BENZINE'AND LUBRI- CATING OIL. THE LIFT NECESSARY FOR THIS WEIGHT AND THE CORRESPONDING BODY OF A NONRIG1D AIRSHIP COULD BE OBTAIN- ED BY SEVEN HUNDRED AND EIGHT THOUSAND CUBIC FEET OF GAS. To this, hotvevei, must be added, the engines and their auxiliary ma- chinery, the equipment and the crew as w e l l a& a ballast leseive a n d t h e body of t h e balloons T h e t w o cars OUGHT T O B E CONSTRUCTED SO AS TO "SERVE I N A N EMERGENCY AS SEAWORTHY, EVEN IF SLOW, MOTORBOATS. , ' One can. build a noungid ship" of this kind with a gas capacity of 1,766,500 cubic feet. On the lines of the rigid system it would probably have.to be still bigger. The nonngid ship has the advantage of a smoother hull surface a n d a greater resistance against forceful impact on water or on solid ground Her length would measure ahout five hun- dred and fifty f e e t and the greatest diameter about sixty-live feet. Compel Parents to Visit Schools Attend- ed by Their Children Bu EDWARD C.JELLIOTT, Director Teachers' Training Coiftse, Universitu of Wisconsin I T is my best judgment, formed after many years of study *of schools and communities, that one of the greatest needs of education today' is the regular attendance oi individual parents upon the school. Ii this were the case it is certain that the GREAT MAJORITY OE MISUNDERSTANDINGS BETWEEN TEACHERS ; AND PUPILS WOULD DISAPPEAR, and particularly all 'of the misunderstandings between teachers and parents would be done away "with. IT SHOULD BE SAID TO* PARENTS: MUCH OF THE EFFORTS-OF SCHOOLS AND TEACHERS IS WASTED BECAUSE THE SCHOOL AND THE TEACHERS DO NOT UNDERSTAND YOUR CHILDREN. YOUR PRINCIPAL SCHOOL BUSINESSES TO SEE THAT THE TEACHERS DO UNDERSTAND YOUR CHILDREN. There will be little profitable co-operation between schools and homes until parents actually get into the schools attended by their children We Americans are apt to he talking about schools and it the same time have too little first hand knowledge ahout the schools. The- NEXT STEP IN "COMPULSORY EDUCATION SHOULD BE TAKEN IN THE DtREOTION OE PARENTS, one of whom should be obliged to attend the school of their children, at least one half day each month. * Public Schools Best Place For Grpwth of American Citizenship EB JOSEPH SWAIN of the National Educational Association "• iVEN & Cultivated trained teacher of sound mind and body, who ** ' goes to work at peace with God and man, the school will be the best jplace in the world for the growth of the chid fa practical righteousness and American citizenship. , , > ' NOT M06W INSTRUCTION,' ElTHEfc 8ECULAR OR RELIGIOUS, CAN &E WITHOUT^ A WELL EQUIPPED TEACHER, WHOSE PERSONALITY, LEARNllJG., NJORAL AND RELIGIOUS LIFE APPEAL TO THOSE UNDER HiR CAjfe. JHE TEACHER CANNOT TEACH WHAT SHE DOEsWr KNOW AND CANNOT GIVE TO OTHERS THE RELIGIOUS LIFE WHICH SHE DOES NOT POSSESS. •-!*'* " 'li* ' , fJisregaiding the menac'm^ activities oi t h e bi<, faerinan toice massing it Xhoin, the advancing Russian army in G-Uiua his seized tbe outer\ toits mound (Jiacow mcl is ptepaung fot aii afasaint on the city itselt iccoidmg to unoliicial advices leceived at Peliogiad fiom the front Gtaoow is tbe last Gd Ucian slionghold VMtbjthe exception of Pi^emysf leiuaining in the hands ot the Laisei's tioops Vccoidiui; to nn coiitumed tepoits, the onslan 0 lit ou the outei detents has bej,un With th£ aim\ suuounding PI/L my«il entuely tiee tiom the possibility of any attack fiom the icai the Kus siansj began a second general assault upon the tusnun loitiess sayi, a dis patch tiom Peuo B iad The Petiogiad loiiespondejrt of the ' London Daily News in a dispatch states that Uie Geiumns aie |iushing stioug le eniotcemonts to hold the hnj from Ti*jin to Posen Apparently the Russians aie planning to attack that section of the iiontiei line and hi leady have secured positions inside lntienchments to the south of the Waithe nver foitifiaations It was at this point ihat Russian cavaliy pene trated the GeimaU lines and occupied Pieschen A dispatch to London fiom Berlm via The Hague says that anothei litus hian'repulse on the easter& fiontier ol East Prussia has been lepoited to Ber tin from Gumbmnen. Simultaneously with their opeiatlons itgamst the triain Geiman aimy under General von Hmdenbuig, on the line of the Waithe river, the Russians at tempted to bieak into Bast Piussia by the old route south ol Wirballen, but they were met at-the frontier by Gen eral von Morgen's army and were driven back across the f rontiei Official denial is made of leports that General von Hindenburg has been captured on the Russian front The Petiograd correspondent of the London Morning Post telegraphs that Russian tioops have carried the outer forts at Cracow and are following up the assault with gum fury This in dicates the swift Russian advance that has swept the Geiman and Aus tnan armies back tiom Poland and through Gahcia CASHIER AGAINST SIEGEL i , To Be State's Witness at Merchant's Trial In Geneseo, N. Y.—Is Confi- dent of Acquittal. One of the prosecution's Uump caids was played igainst the defense, of Ueniy ^Siegel, who is on t m l ,xt Gene seo, N Y tor giand lticcny Thiougb the testimony ot Frank L Champion tashiei ot the savings bank which Sie gel conducted in his Fomteenth Stieet store, Assistant, JDistuct Attorney Ai thui C Tram stiuck his hatdest blow it Siegel Despite the sensational e-tposuie of the alleged juggling of books to con ceal tho manipulation of millions ot dollais" which Oscar A Piall, Siegel's confidential man, promises to give on t h e s t a n d , JNlt Tiain announced that Champion would be the stale's stiong est witness "I shall be acquitted 1 will start in business immediately this trial is 0 over and will pay off my creditors 100 cents on the dollar ( W]thm five years." This was the final statement of the bdnlaupt meichant prince, Heniy Sie gel, oefore his trial opened , Siegel. with his late paitner, Frank E5 Vogel was indicted foul teen times on grand larceny charges, but Assist ant District Attorney Aithur C Tiain will try the case on but one charge This is the alleged larceny of $<&4 05 BOMB ROCKS 1D0URT. Bronx (]fJ.<Y.) "Outrage Is Laid to An- archists—Sc/ught Revenge The explosion of the bomb which wiecked the beautiful poi tico and dooi way of the new Bronx (N. Y) couit bouse was either the work of anarch ists seeking belated leveilge foi the ex ecution of the Haymarket anarchists of Chicago twenty-seven years ago or the desperate effort of a gang of white sla\ers to kill Judge Louis D Bibbs who has been sitting in judgment ovei them. The explosion oceuired on the anni versary of the hanging in Johet piisdu yard, Illinois, otn Nov. il, 1887, of the five anarchists found guilty of the death-of Chicago policemen ui the HaV market riot , _ \ CONFESSES OLD CRIME. - Remorse Forces Farm H.nd to Ted of Slaying Aged Couple. John Wood, a farm hand of Pine Plains, near Poughk'eepsie, N Y.., is a prisoner in the putehess county jail, cbaiged on his own confession, the po lice say. With the muider of George Vosbuig and ids Wife on Dee 28, 1912 Wood, It is claimed^ has implicated three 7 other meh whose identity is with held until arrets can be effected The prisoner, according \:o,the police, de claied he w,as unable longer to staiid the remorse, which had rnctted him for two years. Vosburg antL his wife, who were nbottt seventy ffiears old, were buined U> death in their farmhouse near Pine )R»ins Rheumatism t Jusj; put a feV drops of Sloan's on the painful spot and the pain stops. It is really; wonderful how quickly Sloan's acts. No nee,d to rub it in—laid on lightly it penetrates tq the bone and, brings relief at once. Kills rheumatic pain instantly. Jlfr. James E. Alexanief, of North Harpswell, Me, writes: "Many straws in my, back and hips brought on rheu- matism m the sciatic nerve. I had it so bad one night when sitting in my" chair, that T had to-jump on my feet to get relief. I at onee,apfJlied your Liniment to the affected;-partrand in less then ten minutes it was perfectly easy*. I thmk it is the pest of all vLimmente I have ever used " ' •" SLOANS LINIMENT Kills Pain At all dealer*, 25c \ Send (our cent* in'stamp* for a TRIAL BOTTLE 5 f Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. DepLfi. . Philadelphia, Pa. ' S .?' SIRES AND SONS. ' Hwsry Lewis, twelve years old, of Baltimore, Md., weighs 190 pounds. Geoige Rae recently rowed 200 milea from r Keokul:, la., to St. Louis. ' John Wanamaker, the noted mer- ^ chant, celebiated his ^seventy sixth! " birthday on July 11. " William Kane, seventy years old, has letired on a pension after sefvmg fifty years as a porter in GTand Central station, New York. . Dr. James Richaid Lucas, archbishop of Mackenzie iiver since 1906, has the laigest diocese In the world, and his field includes the north pole. Vermont now has thrpe^former gOA ernors who have passed the eightieth milestone—John W Stewart of Middle- bury, eighty eight; Samuel B. PingTee of Hartfoid, eighty-two; B J. Orms- bee of Brandon, eighty. Seth Low, the new head of. New York's chamber of commeice. fills a position to which his father was > lect- ed fifty yeais ago He was recently given the honorary degree of doctor of laws by Columbia college, from which be graduated in 1870. He was the' 6 eleventh president of Columbia and served as a trustee for thirty-three years. The Great Mogul. The man known to history as the Great Mogul was Aurangzeb, emper- or of Hindustan, boin 1618. H e w a s the son of the shah of Jehan and be- came master of twenty one provinces! and a revenue of §200,000,000. Talking Shop. Physiciau—tlow is your circulation? , Newspaper Patient Daily or Sun- day?—Chicago News. "Here, waiter!" " "Yess~ah'" "You said you" h a d some fresh dew- berries The^e yon brought are over- due berries."—^Exchange. j; "Why does yp' call ddt ole mule 'Fac 1 " A dinged queer name, Epli Sings'" J 'yVhy, Rufus, I calls dat mule 'Fac' 'Cause lac's am stubborn things' * —Philadelphia Ledger "Time fli6s''i<[u0ted the sage "Yes,'" replied the tool "But he isn't crany enough tojoop the 16op like some of the modem fiieis."—Cincimiatl in- quirer. How beautiful tbo stal s appear Under tho lens wondi oUS spell. And yet it fetches, seems to me, , Tho chorus Bills out quite as well ' —New TorK Sun. CASTOR IA 3For Infenti and Children, The Kind You Have Always BoigM Bears, the Signature of ^^?*»>i^^mifm^^mv,9^^m'm^^'m-^'mmm>Kf^>---

SLOANS LINIMENT - nyshistoricnewspapers.orgnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn88075693/1914-11-18/ed-1/seq-7.pdf · l tonnages ar e in n casing hor da y to, ... t»s. 25^a26'jje.: flrata,

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/**$ " l / > " *

THE SPORTING WORLD. ,«nd Th»t In Amateur and Pr«fa».

sional Athletics,

Li* fiudalph, f amou* pitcher of the iton Bravew* sen t eighteen bicycle i j,wS off on their" gt iud t o r sK days in bv 3toll£. > ' -

f&Teduic Welsh of Wales , lightweight jLnplon of the world, was held to *

r p f V Charli . Whi te in a fiercely i»bt ten round coo tes t a t Milwau-

JciianiRlon A1 -McCoy, who holds the-flddleweight tit le, had his ciown bad-\, batteled by Soldier Bnrtheld. ex-lampion wel terweight of the army. ^Ilb a haid. lough and tumble bout of m row""!1" which w e n t the l i m i t ' a t

~ 7 — - ' •Che icsults _of t he football garnis

|*ycd lust Sa turday by some of tl bl» colleges are .as follows Y,tlev n rljlncetoii H H a i v a r d . 0/ Blown, i pirtmouth 41 , P e n n , 0 SSEtmy. 3 \ jfnue, 0 Navy, 31;'<Colby, 21 Syn •cose, 0, (^lgatej-1,0 .Notre P.inie. I Cjrli'Sle Indians, 6 Cornell, 2S MHu Bin, 13 $ '"•( I

• * • * - « ?

flOIES fROM FOREIGN LANDS. V̂Vhai Folks Are'"'Doing on the Other

Side of the Globe. The king ,' _"ttgland ha* cohfern .1

|» peerage on ' y, a l te r Cunliffe govci Lor of tbe Bank of England, for sorv fees In the financial crisis

Dr Henry Vaju Dyke, the Unite 1 ^ States mim&ter to HA'laud, is suffe.rm„ I ftora ophthalmia* He sailed fiom Rut

||tcidam tor the , D m t e d , States on i } short lea\ e of abserice

A dispamh from H a v r e to Lloyd « ' -agency In London sjj js t h a t the Frew li

steamship Ducheslse de Giuohe foun dered in the H a v r e rotidstend during i gale and that eleven peisous lost their lives, •• \ ~

«*_*» greatest of all ^ E n e n t • » deprived

" I t o o k your Com-Pound and have a fine strong b a b y . " — Mrs' JOHN MITCHELL, Mas-Sena, N. Y.

"Lydi-a E, Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound i s l wonderful medicine for expectant mothers." — Mrs. A. M, MYERS, Gor-donville, Mo.

I highly recommend LydiaE.Pinkham's Veg­etable Compound before child-birth, it has done so much for m e . " - M r s . E M DOERR, R. R. it Cofr shohocken, Pa.

I look LydiaE. Punc­h-mi s Vegetable Com­pound to build u p my •'J'-tern and h a v e ' t h e dearest baby girl in the w o i l d . " —Mrs. MOSE BLAKELEY, Imperial,Pa.

I p r a i s e the Com­pound whenever I have a chance. It. did so much

, for me before my little girl was born." —Mrs. E W. SANDERS, Rowles-

burg, W. Va.

' I | o o k y o u r Com­pound "before baby was born and feel I owe my life to it. "—Mrs. "WINNIE TILLIS, Winter Haven, Florida,

„ '' t?M<r

MpE*

H iVnnVTlllis

Business Depression Due *"*** to Great Destruction

&nd Waste of Prop­erty Throughout

the World

By Judge ELBfcRT H.vGARY, Chairman of United States Steel Corporation

\

1 B E L I E V E i n Uie ear ly a u t u m n Ave shall see a n i m p i o v e m o n t ' m our business condi t ions. "We a re a h e a d } ' w i t n e s s i n g a n i n c r e a s e m t o n -nage, and i t Mill be f t i r the i inc ieased , I t i u s t T h e m e r e f ac t t h a t

l tonnages are i n n casing h o r n day t o , dav will n a t u i a l l y inf luence s o m e | improvement in p u c e s T h c i e f o i e I t h m k O U R E A R N I N G S S H O U L D j B H MOBE S A T I S E A C T O B Y I N T H E L A T T E R P A B T O E T H E

•i EAR. Indeed , as 1 h a v e l e m a i k e d "beloie, g c n c i a l l y w h e n w e h a v e a j very good six m o n t h s d u r i n g t h e e a i l j p a i t W t h e yea i t h e r e - i s l ikely t o

be poorer business m the l a t t e i h a l l o l t h e y e a i , a n d vice ve r sa

.REGARDING CAUSES OF BUSINESS DEGRESSION IN THE FIRST

PLACE THERE HAS BEEN THROUGHOUT THE WORLD DURING THE

LAST TWO YEARS GREAT DESTRUCTION AND WASTE OF PROPERTY.

WARS, WHICH WERE SEVERE, AND ' PREPARATIONS FOR POSSIBLE.

WARS BY WAY OF BUYING AND BURNING POWDER AND OTHER IN­

STRUMENTS OF WARFARE HAVE MATERIALLY DEPLETED THE FINANCIAL RESOURCES OF THE WORLD /

Again t h e ag i t a t ion t h i o u g h o u t t h e mruve i se p i o m p t e d f r o m good motives or ' sometimes ft o m m o t i v e s of cup id i t y . m d a t o t h e r t i m e s by reason of individual effort to succeed pol i t ical ly h a v e h a d a decided a n d adverse innuendo T H E R E S E E M S T O H A V E B E E N M O R E U N ­R E S T , . M O R E D I S T U R B A N C E ; M O R E O P B J f A N T A G O N I S M , B E ­T W E E N D I F F E R E N T C L A S S E S O E P E O P L E T H A N E V E R B E ­FORE.- A n d t h e r e i s l i t t l e d o u b t t h a t bus ines s cond i t i ons eve rywhe re have been influenced by t h i s a g i t a t i o n T h i s c o u n t r y is n o excep t ion .

•I \ floating mine-exploded a t Fossaee-a, on tbe "coast of Abruzzi on the ist coast of I ta ly , so close to the

h shore that serious d a m a g e was done to ft the*railway along t he coast No one •*• -was killed * r

DEATHS OF NOTED PEOPLE. Mm and Womjui Who Have Died- In

thegj-jSit Week.

|p Julius HarBrirgei;,,former sheriff, as­semblyman and excise commissioner, died suddenly a t his home in New

1 YorE" He was sixty-four ' c - r s old.

li iMrs Carol ine 'M Severance, known fc is the "mother of women's clubs.V died

: her home iu Los Angeles, Ca t She would have bee/t ninety-five j ea r s of

P age in January, nex t

James E Donnelly of tbe^Yale uni-versitr police and familiarly known'to Yale men the worlcTovei as Jim, diet!

.-at his home In J^ew Havea, Conn. He •nas sa ty- two yea i s old

Jean Foure. tho old time singer and | composer, died in Paris at tbe age of

eighty four H e was author of world famous melodies', the most celebrated of which was "Les I t a m e a u i ' ("The Palms"!

••O

t HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY.

Mri Ellen M. Stuar t , cuintor fur eighteen yeare of t h e Colt memorial connected with t be Morgan Memorial building a t Hailffoid. Conn died at Aruiseai, the liome for"woiuen found--ed by Mrs. Elizabeth Ja rv i s Colt- The father of Miss StuaTt -nas the designer of the city seal of Har t ford

General Market*. p . BDTTEH—The high' prices "have curtall-I* *4 consumption to sycli an extent thit • Uie market was not quite so tlrm and fine _, butter waa more In evidence Undergrades K *r« Irregular Good packtfiis stock scarce • «id wanted Prlceii Creamery. e*traa,

«*core, 36c; hlRhor «corliip. 36MiC : arsts, _ » to 91 score, 31aS5c ', held extrps. 92 1 "core, 32VSc; firsts, J3i4«82c , state, dairy. I- wta, nneat, 33a3<c.; good to prime. 28a

«c.; common to fair. 23a2Sc; process er-t»s. 25^a26'jje.: flrata, 24a25c; lower

m sriims, 22aKe ; Imitation creamery, ftfts. f Vb*U>ba.; ladles, current make, ftrsis. '• 54a23o.; seconds, 21%a22c; tower sraaea,

» a c ; pocklijjt stock, held fltio, 22c.; N i *ij^c; lower grade*, 19a20c

EGqs-Ther« in a acarelty of uniformly flue fre«h efegg. Prices an» firm, but a«er-*K lines are ra ther Indifferent and a little w*r« sluggish, Storage did not move lUlto so rtceiy oil account of Hghter **• JWt movement. Neaiby eggs ratper »»t«o arid wore or less defective Prices; **»* fjatbered, extras. 33a41c, extra nnts, 37a38fc.j flrsta, 3HW36c; seconds. M *«•. flrsts.. Ua%C, seconds, 27n32c.; dirt-H Wo, t, 23a«<-.; No % lR»22c , ehecM.

/p«22cj rotrlgeriitorfc firsts, charges naid. ' >fta!S%cvt seconds/ tta^-to i Pennesrlvaula

6 Ha nearby hennery white'?, fancy, large. | "ft) hennery bgown*. WaWc.j mixed cot'

t r v s POWlL.TBX'-'lliere >« a »«• , , e -2*nd tor choice fo«vt* und chickens. jWch are «tcsdy A,veraK« «"?» dW* •jtdlwn and ' large u s e CMKKCIM rather

J - - • -teese ;""<"» ana large siw> (iiiuw1" ••»>••••-J«w. Old roosters tlrm ptfeta and * w f W*ood demand and firm Prices.' OWICK **. HalCcf fowis. HalBftCi old roos^r*

Danger of Sore Eyes. Persons with sore eyes, espe­

cially if (here is a discharge-, •should be careful not to transmit the disease. The towels thoy use should lie kept entirely apart

is/roni.tbe ones used by others aud care taken with the materials used for dressing or treating the sore eyes in order not to infect others.. -

All persons should bear in mind the possibility of infecting tbem with their hands when they are handling -unclean or infectious material'of any kind, especially i-I'ithing or anything of a per­sonal nature which has been in contact with diseased persons. Some diseased people cause dan­gerous diseases I n't heir own eyes in this way.

Workmen engaged in occupa­tions which endanger the eyes should employ, protective meas­ures. Eye protectors, such as gocgles or plalu glass .spectacles, should I* worn to protect the •>yei from injury fronv foreign bodies, su> b as chips of steel, emery dust, etc., -ybere the ma­chinery or implements in use are noi provided with eye protec­tive devices. No injury to the ,,..,.. however s'ight, is a trifling nialtcr.-

A. phyMcinn is the person to re­move a foreign body from tlie eye when it manul be removed by simi'le measures, as by rub-

.b'ing the other eye. wetting a corner of a Hean handkerchief and wiping it out or taking hold of the eyelashes or the upper Hd of the affected eye aud pulling it-down over the lower Ud.

Q.»-»-«"«-»-*-* '

™.., uj^c^i, apnng, nan* «"»"»' «-r» J*}**. v»«*tetn and «>mi)erif. «W. W" •TO*". «&{ p l a i n s . J6«3(le . J»ftE8«JDD pOULTRif-There •» « K«^ ?W for fane* |«rir« rofi«tln« dilckene and **««» broiled ^Vtotm pscked fowl* n JK' fWe d«tn«t(d.' fewt Iced *cl( «»owiy S» roojtem IM moderate rtpPW «"« flr«<'„ **n« Island A d »*»rtiy 4Mbk» almost out JC the market! t a r g e nfjuatw In goad de-?•»* nnd ftrmef, IProwt) turttcy* .<JW 2*» IMqwi Wllojr- .TCttrkey*. Ic«*. ' »

*«Urn, milk. fed. A lb* unci over h'ta:

gfey, *!W each, litffo . bwtieis iaa ;«j ;

»**, « to-lbo* waxt^im %• lb" «"*.»**' »Jlp«rt, « e ; we*t*r«. . 1 * plrKcd. \ lb» ST «*«>r, fdvto i aid nmwr-s. «<• • J*™'*

J™i«. 1t> i n t«> doxen. *». 'J th* n-*1*3 * : ! « • » **,»**, dark »«ntlU». ««!«. '«»* **•«»« pv*t.%*m.; Kort* tui key*.. *«-f;

Town Topics.

Many a tOwnTnTuTcall itself "the city beautiful" If It wasn t for the people In it.-Charleston Kews-Couner.

Some one says that New York pays nearly half the income "tax. Yes, but where does New York get the money

o pay it with?-Detroit Free Press. | w e ' haven't yet investigated t i e

theory of standarlring the babies btit ! w Appose it means to have all tbe I tables of the country as nearly like I S o s e o ? Houston a« posslble.-flous-

I ' ^ B o s t o n men had a fight over the i L„ whnther t > name Woodrow t f T * Z trochaic or an iambic dime-

Mown in tbe bottle culture you've

g X band » to Boston-Pi t tsburgh

aflzettfrTlmes-

H° ' ^ f the o."mnrles. but trill run as S D i i S . £ r candidate. ^ h o « « i f S . little foe of Boss Murphy bfts * t vft offlcialy announced his in teh

from a CTcdthle source.

Ton^tDeiay treating Your cough

j 8 reduced- Yp^n^e imitated Tar-Honey. « g^"™ ^ucooS »hd air passages, loosen' jg" Q. m

RUSSIANS TAKE FORTS, IN ATTACK AT CRACOW

Kaiser's Forces Are Rushing to Check Foe's Advance.

No Doubt That Dirigibles Can Be Built to Cross Atlantic

Bg Maior VON PARSEVAL, Inventor of Airships

THERE CAjM BE NO DOUBT T H A T TECHNICALLY W E ARE ABLE TO

BUILD AIRSHIPS THAT WILL KEEP AFLOAT FOR SEVERAL DAYS

AND WITH THE NECESSARY CAPITAL W E CAN CONSTRUCT DIR­

IGIBLES CAPABLE OF CROSSING T H E ATLANTIC FROM \E \ IR0PE TO

AMERICA. NATURALLY T H E S E AIRSHIPS WOULD HAVE TO BE.VERY

BIG. A SHIP OF THIS KIND WOULD N E E D T H R E E DAYS TO COVER

THE DISTANCE OF TWO THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED STATUTE MILES

IF EQUIPPED WITH ENGINES DEVELOPING SEVEN HUNDRED AND

TWENTY HORSEPOWER AND GIVING HER AN AVERAGE SPEWED OF

43.47 STATUTE MILES T H E HOUR, ADMITTING A REASONABLE MAR­

GIN.FOR DELAYS ON ACCOUNT OF HEAD WINDS AND OTHER CIR­

CUMSTANCES. THE FUEL AND OIL NECESSARY FOR SUCH A VOY­

AGE WOULD AMOUNT TO THIRTEEN TONS OF BENZINE'AND LUBRI­

CATING OIL. THE LIFT NECESSARY FOR T H I S WEIGHT AND T H E

CORRESPONDING BODY OF A NONRIG1D AIRSHIP COULD BE OBTAIN­

ED BY SEVEN HUNDRED AND EIGHT THOUSAND CUBIC FEET OF GAS.

T o t h i s , hotvevei, m u s t b e added, t h e e n g i n e s a n d t h e i r auxi l ia ry m a ­

chinery, t h e e q u i p m e n t and t h e crew as we l l a& a b a l l a s t l e s e i v e a n d t h e

body of t h e balloons T h e t w o ca r s O U G H T T O B E C O N S T R U C T E D

SO A S T O " S E R V E I N A N E M E R G E N C Y A S S E A W O R T H Y ,

E V E N I F S L O W , M O T O R B O A T S . , ' One can. bui ld a n o u n g i d ship" of t h i s k i n d w i t h a gas capaci ty of

1,766,500 cubic feet . O n t h e l ines of t h e r i g i d s y s t e m i t wou ld p robab ly h a v e . t o be st i l l b igger . T h e n o n n g i d sh ip h a s t h e a d v a n t a g e of a smoother hu l l surface a n d a g r e a t e r r e s i s t ance a g a i n s t fo rce fu l i m p a c t on wate r or on solid g r o u n d H e r l e n g t h w o u l d m e a s u r e a h o u t five h u n ­dred a n d fifty f ee t a n d t h e g r e a t e s t d i a m e t e r a b o u t sixty-l ive fee t .

Compel Parents to Visit Schools Attend­ed by Their Children

Bu EDWARD C.JELLIOTT, Director Teachers' Training Coiftse, Universitu of Wisconsin

IT is my best judgment, formed after many years of study *of schools and communities, that one of the greatest needs of education today' is the regular attendance oi individual parents upon the school. Ii

this were the case it is certain that the GREAT MAJORITY OE MISUNDERSTANDINGS BETWEEN TEACHERS ;AND PUPILS WOULD DISAPPEAR, and particularly all 'of the misunderstandings between teachers and parents would be done away "with.

IT SHOULD BE SAID TO* PARENTS: MUCH OF THE EFFORTS-OF SCHOOLS AND TEACHERS IS WASTED BECAUSE THE SCHOOL AND THE TEACHERS DO NOT UNDERSTAND YOUR CHILDREN. YOUR PRINCIPAL SCHOOL BUSINESSES TO SEE THAT THE TEACHERS DO UNDERSTAND YOUR CHILDREN.

There will be little profitable co-operation between schools and homes until parents actually get into the schools attended by their children We Americans are apt to he talking about schools and i t the same time have too little first hand knowledge ahout the schools. The- NEXT STEP IN "COMPULSORY EDUCATION SHOULD BE TAKEN IN THE DtREOTION OE PARENTS, one of whom should be obliged to attend the school of their children, at least one half day each month.

* Public Schools Best Place For Grpwth

of American Citizenship EB JOSEPH SWAIN of the National Educational Association

"• iVEN & Cultivated trained teacher of sound mind and body, who **' goes to work at peace with God and man, the school will be the

best jplace in the world for the growth of the chid fa practical righteousness and American citizenship. , , > '

NOT M06W INSTRUCTION,' ElTHEfc 8ECULAR OR RELIGIOUS, CAN

&E WITHOUT^ A W E L L EQUIPPED TEACHER, W H O S E PERSONALITY,

LEARNllJG., NJORAL AND RELIGIOUS LIFE APPEAL T O THOSE UNDER

H i R CAjfe. J H E TEACHER CANNOT TEACH W H A T SHE D O E s W r

KNOW AND CANNOT GIVE TO OTHERS T H E RELIGIOUS L I F E WHICH

SHE DOES NOT POSSESS.

•-!*'* " ' l i * ' ,

fJisregaiding the menac'm^ activities o i the bi<, faerinan toice massing it Xhoin, the advancing Russian army in G-Uiua h i s seized tbe outer \ t o i t s mound (Jiacow mcl is p tepaung fot aii afasaint on the city itselt iccoidmg to unoliicial advices leceived a t Peliogiad fiom the front Gtaoow is tbe last Gd Ucian slionghold VMtbjthe exception of Pi^emysf leiuaining in the hands ot the Laisei's tioops Vccoidiui; to nn coiitumed tepoits , the onslan0 l i t ou the outei d e t e n t s has bej,un

With th£ a i m \ suuounding P I / L my«il entuely t iee t iom the possibility of any attack fiom the icai the Kus siansj began a second general assault upon the t u s n u n lo i t iess sayi, a dis patch t iom P e u o B i a d

The Pet iogiad loiiespondejrt of the ' London Daily News in a dispatch states that Uie Geiumns a i e |iushing stioug le eniotcemonts to hold the hn j from Ti*jin to Posen Apparently the Russians a ie planning to at tack tha t section of the i iontiei line and hi leady have secured positions inside lnt ienchments to the south of the Wai the n v e r foitifiaations I t was a t this point ihat Russian cavaliy pene trated the GeimaU lines and occupied Pieschen

A dispatch to London fiom Berlm via The Hague says t h a t anothei litus hian'repulse on the easter& fiontier ol East Prussia has been lepoited to Ber tin from Gumbmnen.

Simultaneously with their opeiatlons itgamst the triain Geiman a imy under General von Hmdenbuig, on the line of the Wai the river, the Russians a t tempted to bieak into Bast Piussia by the old route south ol Wirballen, but they were met a t - the frontier by Gen eral von Morgen's army and were driven back across the f rontiei

Official denial is made of leports that General von Hindenburg has been captured on the Russian f ront

The Pet iograd correspondent o f the London Morning Post telegraphs that Russian tioops have carried the outer forts a t Cracow and are following up the assault with gum fury This in dicates the swift Russian advance t h a t has swept the Geiman and Aus t n a n armies back t iom Poland and through Gahcia

CASHIER AGAINST SIEGEL i ,

To Be State 's Witness at Merchant's Trial In Geneseo, N. Y.—Is Confi­

dent of Acquittal.

One of the prosecution's Uump caids was played igainst the defense, of Ueniy ^Siegel, who is on t m l ,xt Gene seo, N Y tor g iand l t iccny Thiougb the testimony ot Frank L Champion tashiei ot the savings bank which Sie gel conducted in his Fomteenth Stieet store, Assistant, JDistuct Attorney Ai thui C T r a m st iuck his hatdes t blow i t Siegel

Despite the sensational e-tposuie of the alleged juggling of books to con ceal tho manipulation of millions o t dollais" which Oscar A Piall , Siegel's confidential man, promises to give on the stand, JNlt Tia in announced tha t Champion would be the s tale 's s t iong est witness

"I shall be acquitted 1 will s tar t in business immediately this trial is0over and will pay off my creditors 100 cents on the dollar (W]thm five years."

This was t he final s ta tement of the bdn laup t meichant prince, Heniy Sie gel, oefore his trial opened , Siegel. wi th his late paitner, Frank E5 Vogel was indicted foul teen times on grand larceny charges, but Assist ant District Attorney Aithur C Tiain will t ry t h e case on but one charge This is the alleged larceny of $<&4 05

BOMB ROCKS 1D0URT.

Bronx (]fJ.<Y.) "Outrage Is Laid to An­archists—Sc/ught Revenge

The explosion of the bomb which wiecked the beautiful poi tico and dooi way of the new Bronx (N. Y) couit bouse was either t he work of anarch is ts seeking belated leveilge foi the ex ecution of the Haymarke t anarchists of Chicago twenty-seven years ago or the desperate effort of a gang of white s l a \ e r s to kill Judge Louis D Bibbs who has been sitt ing in judgment ovei them.

The explosion oceuired on the anni versary of the hanging in Johe t piisdu yard, Illinois, otn Nov. i l , 1887, of the five anarchis ts found guilty of the death-of Chicago policemen ui the HaV marke t r io t ,

_ \

CONFESSES OLD CRIME. -

Remorse Forces Farm H .nd to Ted of Slaying Aged Couple.

J o h n Wood, a farm hand of Pine Plains, nea r Poughk'eepsie, N Y.., is a prisoner in the p u t e h e s s county jail, cbaiged on his own confession, the po lice say. With the muider of George Vosbuig and ids Wife on Dee 28, 1912 Wood, It is claimed^ has implicated three7 other meh whose identity is with held unti l a r r e t s can be effected The prisoner, according \ :o , the police, de claied he w,as unable longer to staiid the remorse, which had rnctted him for two years . •

Vosburg antL his wife, who were nbottt seventy ffiears old, were buined U> death in their farmhouse near Pine )R»ins

Rheumatism t Jusj; pu t a f eV drops of Sloan's on the painful spot and the pain stops. I t is really; wonderful how quickly Sloan's acts . N o nee,d to rub i t in—laid on lightly it penetrates tq t he bone and, brings relief a t once. Kills rheumatic pain instantly.

Jlfr. James E. Alexanief, of North Harpswell, Me, writes: "Many straws in my, back and hips brought on rheu­matism m the sciatic nerve. I had it so bad one night when sitting in my" chair, that T had to-jump on my feet to get relief. I at onee,apfJlied your Liniment to the affected;-partrand in less then ten minutes it was perfectly easy*. I thmk it is the pest of all vLimmente I have ever used " ' •"

SLOANS LINIMENT

Kills Pain At all dealer*, 25c \

Send (our cent* in ' s tamp* for a TRIAL BOTTLE 5 f

Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc. DepLf i . . Philadelphia, P a .

' S

.?'

SIRES AND SONS.

' Hwsry Lewis, twelve years old, of Baltimore, Md., weighs 190 pounds.

Geoige Rae recently rowed 200 milea from rKeokul:, la. , to St. Louis. '

John Wanamaker , the noted mer- ^ chant, celebiated his ^seventy sixth! " birthday on July 11 . "

William Kane , seventy years old, has le t i red on a pension after sefvmg fifty years as a porter in GTand Central station, New York. . Dr. J a m e s Richaid Lucas, archbishop of Mackenzie i iver since 1906, h a s the laigest diocese In the world, and his field includes the nor th pole.

Vermont now has thrpe^former gOA ernors who have passed the eightieth milestone—John W Stewar t of Middle-bury, eighty eight; Samuel B. PingTee of Har t fo id , eighty-two; B J . Orms-bee of Brandon, eighty.

Seth Low, the new head of. New York's chamber of commeice. fills a position to which his fa ther w a s > lect-ed fifty y e a i s ago H e was recently given the honorary degree of doctor of laws by Columbia college, from which be graduated in 1870. H e w a s the ' 6

eleventh president of Columbia and served as a t rustee for thir ty-three years.

The Great Mogul. The man known to history as t h e

Great Mogul was Aurangzeb, emper­or of Hindustan, boin 1618. H e w a s the son of the shah of J e h a n a n d be­came master of twenty one provinces! and a revenue of §200,000,000.

Talking Shop.

Physiciau—tlow is y o u r circulation? , Newspaper Pa t i en t — Daily or Sun­

day?— Chicago News.

"Here , waiter!" " "Yess~ah'"

"You said you" had some fresh dew­berries The^e yon brought a re over­due berries."—^Exchange. j;

"Why does yp' call ddt ole mule 'Fac1" A dinged queer name, Epli S ings ' "

J'yVhy, Rufus, I calls dat mule 'Fac' 'Cause lac's a m stubborn things '

* —Philadelphia Ledger

"Time fli6s''i<[u0ted the sage "Yes,'" replied t h e tool " B u t h e i sn ' t

crany enough tojoop the 16op like some of the m o d e m fiieis."—Cincimiatl i n ­quirer .

How beautiful tbo stal s appear Under tho lens wondi oUS spell.

And yet it fetches, seems to me, , Tho chorus Bills out quite as well

' —New TorK Sun.

CASTOR IA 3For Infenti and Children,

The Kind You Have Always BoigM Bears, the

Signature of

^^?*»>i^^mifm^^mv,9^^m'm^^'m-^'mmm>Kf^>---