1
v:i'M *-- ».- ;';>lc«gei;.:' Helperp' i^lffl^fwemeat-vgaensourg, from'tie town f^^^l^^^OTilrelflieTlr", 19; .Fine, 4; Chateau- «^fl^|i" ferity Orphanage at Og- ^ ^ ^ ^ j j ^ i ^ ^ r ^ y t o w a ^ of Potsdam, '7?' '^•jg ^e^%.%s|i&,,' M $; v 6ouVern^ar, i .-'a! •--' l '"*' loipi 3j Total, seventeen children. [ o£-C^n^e^^nWw-l«i.|We6^«^'-:' . ^ ® O l W^as. <ftstodial Asylum, .•i,3**a 4i^h«ft ; m^.:|^7#5>£^ mtismeB'* 4Bi^'-$^*-i#*- tiati: ;^#to?M J3?&#i ?<#al fl^e children. " ' •=--»• #%£.-fc-p: '---Msi!^MjB0Biti$$6r crippled ehfl- j^la.':^' ^»K 4t##t''ggifr^^-w, from town naa re«ch*d %j» J, O'Brien, Agent of Society ^•/iP^e^nfiQB of Cruelty to , f, |!jj|iar6fci, plates Beport. ' been made the S. P. % 4 ^ j 3 f i ; ^ | # i j ) « .Good Shepard, i^t6rie»l*t/fl^^r^ from twn of'Oswe- __ _. . . _.. efet^kc . ..To»a. jfifi^ihgr.o^cniljdren placed In ^B^ai^tJnB- iit^Ss^^ahw'g^-'^^^^-'S^^&it't^s seventy-. e o r a » a * » n * i a • « # & > « £ ;<ni6*fc • ; : A%Jm¥. $$aj&- t &9. .hwa* 8 ?W* .\«* back *jHhft**'.Tdw;4^--S5$ .iedJahd •wofeiSBft;,; ftftj|', ?RB8«ans ty t«fee tiie: ISit Ptu»0a *j$f Haagaa^;V nounced by tlie Ituseiao vloieafc^n^Wltie b a t a t a : •ifcm.wmt .^^Mm^mW*., ¥ e . c^SHions j-Iourtag *o *tt6.^u»ta»'.Ttetf 4ra» ; .^^'^#4 J8*^p- imBro^' and no has been, received: *ia*e ifa* Geianianic, *gg^'^$i|$.ji£f}. mad£ to ^Society in . aJMar'tjtoew- .the"" w^h£rf ; o£'-" i^heij'. ~"~' *~ M strength to tfe& ; 6a.«I* *fonte.'Ot.east c , , .,_ . .,, .„._.., ^ , ., f ' e r a Baj«oi»e.: * " - - ; .= ; v M'"s. -"• --••• -is»".*tigf#SfeR •*!%$• i^ s n^" 164 Subor^oa4ta« tor'th&lniteent"Ihfe' %ay« ; 1>een > .|i l to«eC*o , ... iiapona»t anowcfcotents ; feat 'the piyingj>l^;tiie law « God an'd man^ RiOMiana h»y« »ei»d $oth1 'IwWfer o* ^ aJil e^e^that ^-^ ^ a inveati- tbe^Jwadvrators of .the r W ! Inster, In gate4 /Sm ,'not reported to society no East Prnwia, «.«u«eeM. which en- charge^stt^ei^jatl^e to the town for able* th«a to deliver a flant «itaclc i f e ^ , * ; \-> '"?* "..'. t . ,,• on. lnrterburg Jrom the north, -wihile I ^ ^ to^extentTiny sincere tfi^ctks t&e forces that have passed the An- tb.allnie'n^ers^Sotiety &r<the^.?odi &aap tQ- <i» aa\tib. aavaace straight adviee ana. <son , r^e&u'S treatinent ! «<' : 'aK .v»^«^-4l»'MMKwric«Betti that tto : ttoes.';;.';^;;;*;" ••«••;• ' '< "y •' >•; army wfttoi; dro"v« the*Aurtrian"6 Iromf I •wish "to o s t e a l sj - ~ •'" • "-- Carpathians I Miss •Pafke'r, Mr, Cushmaa,^-ftev. fath- ! \..;. the DulH^.I»» to to — ^ ^ 5UjGtomwi,'a»a Attorney D. M. Haz- ' of ti»|e#»» J,«e»l^*t I have been greatly ' x^'WijaBfAN 'km isfis }ngton.-f!Riofeert ^cri'ging:._ sn^ seat of i^retaryjBr^anv?$en. the! German statement t&eaUtfipjf^ wai zone around Great ,Eteifiitov.w^. disfcussed by the.cabinet., %hen See^l rot|ry .Bryan, if oof of the city, ffir. ^siug'aB.ithe {acting secretary of the ;e.,. EVUTJ. .iLanslngis official. title ;4i,| eoinseHor to itlje department of *tat% |>is.*he secretary's legal ad^jse^osQ allJimaitterB oertaining to jforeign-.tpoiiH 1 M «e rocelsre^ $10,000 4 J^ar^to^e, ,t' every ©e^oa *afcea &y '^j$fem artment is to accord jMih, th;%jgo^ jkigtoated by (fcjieipreEideat^fgjdR;; lurated -by | h e secretary ol,«t|tf** •'JSestt to the Secretary *Weou)i8e|i{ loitjite.it&e> r a n ^ n g offleer 1 ,ofi,,thfT#tif&» deiSartntent. ^ajder -toraier >adn^|tt&*J trspons the counsellor perior^ne^^i 1 ly t h o s e d«ties .which lares jnoacatfcf;5>35= trtfiion.he is'lipofced'-inoks^p^;^' pap^ta^nA^ general a u t f i i p ^ ^ i l ^ H ^ oi|er <hi3 desk, t- - - -]W,~S£^%?" .^en'Joha Bassett BibtB&ft^jt^l^a^j e | attd"wias sit^e'eded ; oit !^teek ^ 1§14, i&y'SJr. t^^n'g/-mosigeJie^t|«b>. W> toe-w little brtihe^ewrciES^eiief• He was 'weUT^ovm.-ho^v^.a^^aJ;^^ international' liwyerof ligh', i|r ithe- eniall circle iof Jlaaaf3®ra;'spij. jfercatlon of totenatienal^ ^mtt&yer- west.' -Now toe" , 1a"Te^r4eB 7 -a|t one ofj "tftfe- mtost' efflcifen*' officiate .of; the- ?«i- Tjt ^i^oTOati&'JcirelW ihe 1*^ iaowa the ''toead'Ofr the state ^department" -yjansa the atftbassadors and minis-' ^r*'to)EarI»biyl4we.'.«I>.witb. Mr. I4*jir '; At the time 4l Mr. Lansing's recent lit to his home in Watertown a i w«s « ! f d t e t e 3 <tj»-tti«, *$0[$& i^Pfl; woutiO eurre^ <teaosi t^tpjf*: clt., The ii|^Jt «C- "h« resi- ^ -im^SfMIW^WC-wois' '^;;'«?^^fer^#-lptna i oned and ^i^l^^^l^^^^oS^dr^TCen .'l&ree ribs.. ^K^^4tife#5|Mp^ eBlfc writin-g t^Wifeiii .severely Burned. to * fei ^^^i#>;' Oharles Cltobuig r $pt,B!Qisia„ all laborers em- I j l l g ' ^ . t h ' e TJntanvifte Mills of the ||fe^pfe&e River Paper company, ^^J., injured in a peculiar sequence Tpcidenits. at the company's plant " -& ay morning. Clm'burg and _ f .. La, were sevfereftf scald'ed about Pi|;I^gs, while Carbino sustained a iff-^'^nor bruises. Thy were atend- ^dr^D^s. Barnett and Kissane. r^ttt^^rg was the cause of all the ;^gf|ef$?!hen he, rolled a load of pulp -Ipo^^fexcavation at the bottom of ^V;®l«^ajp r shaft in. the sulphite ^Sipi^^riHie'ihole there was about a l^i^^ofjtoiaiing water. Foisia heard 'I [i^i^is,,writes and pumped in to ij^xfiph^ .Before he could get out, b^ s ifa(0^w^ , burned. Carbino was 'JMggg^l^'iie .could to get both men ^)0:ffiL^^6j^&hods let t(he elevator |cfens^^ft|t#r4vc3i him. i'iJfdilWjr'p.f y&rought- to his home to |tMsi"%t^^ja3mrsday noon while Ciin- .SlW&jW^vJcajred for at the plant. ,"^l/.®i^AavIgatIon Closed. *%rifj».,ja35sf.time in the history of ^T^sa^^^ween Ogdensburg and BpeseotW^es.is a. complete, tie-up. 'S^B^af-t^toJsBsfe week, no ferry^ no maiii- : '^-:~tt#jiii£, of •any kind, and the <S^%^.f$fe i toy way of Nysado and lhe,totefea*fcRal .bridge. 'The fiatise.of the blecade is be- liev»4 ^ h e v d ^ to the faa that the ,4ttHdBary boatt-ihat used to be placed jfljaar. the.^swiffe^.water below the city of.; Ogflen»bHr^,was burned a year ago, and -has, never been replaced. The (result 'has? been that. the slush P8A|««U4 .WocTfea of Jlee„ in. the river have HSH AIRMEN DESTROY GUNS FLY 132 MILES AND RETURN . SAFELY AFTER DROPPING SEVENTEEN BOMBS ON BATTERKES . J*ejpame ^loggfed jand created a bloc- kade. Students IVrrfng Hisfory. . The iunior c l ^ s o£ St. Laurence ttiiiwittity'ttt tompiling and will soon ' Mlsfca*«ok deaMog.wltti the de- If.- lay to Bght them, pass.Bel- lelgium^say, "f'am a country; i am , | 3 ^ . a road.'? And Belgium write a f %Yjfetfer to England about Germany, to ,;.*>5 : , J help them. So England help Belgium.—L'Echo de Chine. The following extracts are from a letter lately received from an officer at the front. "I burled one of my poor boys last week. There was no parson handy, and as I lacked* a prayerbook m the only true aevoteef of that M*. ^hTv Aav Hit ,,„„«, -«*," w- ls a,vitiatk«ft of,the .fflrtet primary law 1d ' *' ^ ^ mary idea. • - - - ' '*"'* And in the next breath they to restore the old system. Consistency minds." ' a perversiojn of the direct pri- E rge the Constitutional Convention s indeed "the I hobgoblin of little The real trouble lies deeper, and in a dering of the Thirt?-First ©istrlct is resFJfmsiole for it, prizes two sections separated by the Adir< close business or social ties and but little lems of the different sections are not the! geographical divisions should be the mos cause of this gerrymandering the republica: loyally supported in the past, have been _ *.--. -. an iron hand. That ring is about to be hv- I read the chapter in Corinthians (you Shakespeare says: know, 'For this corruptible,' etc.) and liferent direction. Tha gerryman- yThat district com- dack Mountain^,- and without any ommunity of interest. The prob- same and it is, only natural that /powerful consideration. But be- ring, whom these papers have so bio to control ithe situation with i ijken up for gooii and ah. And as om at Jarafl^ed in 5 the brjber may All' escape from. , he State's dis- Ib is slow, but SmeX For them aad the bigg« fr to political lib- nected with the whole"; : " to delay certain viefaft without remorse, try may obtain the best -regret, the State the stimulus of the mo & to tax women a.trutli : tinltl^,i^ Mr. SdUofi'.afecfi women Vffll obtain progress pi their c, dent.' daily. 'THE Lima; n The Tbuth's Co the doctor said a prayer. Then we lowered him just in his uniform and overcoat, with a waterproof v sheet . rourd him. R.LP. He was onlv a"little Bermondsey guttersnipe, but he g-iVe ill he htwi, and God knows.—Knicker- bocker Press. Among the effects of Frank Holt, the man who attempt to kill J. P. Mor- gan, was found a poem, "When I am . De3d." which he wrote to his sweet- heart, Leona \Sinsabaugb, now his ' widow, in 1908. Scver?.rverses follow When I am deaa Perhaps kind memory will .lose TWe sad mistakes I've often made And hold the.good—yes, let the best Reveal itself as errors fade. Oh, Lord my- God, 1 toil each day That I may have some good to stay; But will the blunders,' then forget r "It is sport to see the engineer Hoist with his ownj'petar." TRUTH STRANGER TljiAN FICTION j The developments of the past few dayspn regard to the man' who, in'ad- diiion to his attempt to kill J. Pierpont Morgan, placed a bijjmb in the eapitol at Washington, another on the steamship Mmnehaha, and filially mysteriously killed himself in the Mineola jail, are so fantastic and amazing that they star- tle the imagination. The positive JdentifleatlSon of, this Firanifc Holt, a 'brilliant student and indefatigable worker, admired bjkhis asspciates; a^Erieh .Muenter, the wife killer and a fugitive from Justice-foif! nine years, .adds to the astonish- ment.. He cannot be dismissed as a maniac, although! ; Ms hair-brained scheme would seem to write him down as silch. Nor can We believe that he was 'a sane person With a overcoming -beii for criminality. The solution of the puzzle was lost when he took his life [with has own bjind. Give balm to those that now are not? When I am dead And broken heartless sods of earth Will mark where last I seemed to be Perhaps—I cannot know—there will Be.heard the voice of praise for me. Oh, Lord My God, help me be strong In trials much, in labor long! For. me, who lives in hunger great, All praises then will come too late. When I am dead If I the silence of the tomb Could break, I would not think to stay The ea^ger band or lessened tongue; But sadly I to all would say: "Beloved, flowers no you cast No fragrance to hourB past; Belated words of love and tears Will never ease the broken r^rs^L* * •"» sh™;.^- - *,&sz£xi many, educated there, and distinguished himself early as a,' remarkable Iter .guist. Sometime in the nineties his parents, emigrated'to tl^e TJaited States and went to Jive in Chicago. There he was graduated from |?he* University of Chicago. While pursuing his course he taifgbt French an4 German in.the preparatory schools near the city- "-Has instructors praised ihim for untiring industry and he made a success, in his chosen work. AftaV graduation he studied in Europe. .Upon'his return,' he wfts married and jhis married life seemed to his friends a most happy "one. tee became'an- instructor, in- the University of Kansas at liawrence. No on]*" believed -he was' crazy at this time. He was looked upon as an unusually j?tudioas man' with a capacity for In 1904 he went to Harvard for posjt-grajaaatevWOTfe, and)two years later ^et, and the uneounter Ins wife joined him in Cambridge. His, diligence had earned! him a place as aird and tblosscm and instructor and he showed no signs of ihsaniiv. !FH«ftmrfiwI»^*~~-™-J —--^- - - to expend the arbitrarily and nomy. nd to enforce Ward to the len \.omen eitj- igefch. )0 <;j[j 0n lo to p %jority of countr ' The i1lre3S j on !t with *- m hav - e •eat purpi. t thte& a state o years •and conti,, n hstS em and kee j; e w try there; % the "arted on ^ re . >rer, conti ioa in untaxed, i A, and fil^ut j S t plan of hzU lts paths aj: , Jlds, and; mefl t i s of village S reen."fh'e " c f ! S ^ £ t ^anyof^hem-sometimefventowU^a ways to school, often a l s or afiLfa mTfmo r !f UntS ° f WO °F ayS * eSSi many-more are neighbor louse lfe a w ™5 farm and farm.-.or from hfcdlin?Jl 000 To- 7 ttoy highways of friels^ 41 '°° 0 W ° snnpte pleasures. Othe*r„overnment te mere short cuts tC^ot^ sove ' raIneat 1S fll uakno^n to ''bK'" costly pleasures. No ffl'" startles -them;, no Every civilized count) thousands of miles of that bind city and city run from business cent resort, that traverse nej lead to new settlemeii citizens' highways, JJUI taxes, planned for All of,them have nam' city or a town own^ them; paid labor built t\ them in order. But ,all over the eo other ways that, are road map, built by no la! Jed by no commission,] named, yet used and lo 1 a happy place in the gr< ^ They are the'little foo .. „__ _. —-.-<«. His family l|fe*seetaed very happy and he seemed fond of his three ehfldpn. His wife •'wias not well "and;j the doctors diagnosed her tiwTto* «•=• „+«~.~~.-u. *—-^- years. 1 It may not be necessary to throw cut a reminder that ft is not the con- vention now in session at Albany, but the electorate of New York- State that Will adopt the revise! Constitution of 1915, if it is t» be adopted at =alL But the reminder can do no harm-— Syracuse Herald. of insaniiy, liree eafldbe . .__ . . . . . nosed her trouble as stomaich trouble. ' 'One! j-way,' and- cared for her hiJhself. In th dead. An examination revealed the ; fact that the had been , . before this was discovered, Muenter had been ,able to gettOj<dhicago,. where he had had the body cremated, had, left the Children with thejir grandparents and had gone awav. nsJw'-nci.M-.f *~ •».*-«— *-"• - k - night JSSnenter was poisoned/ Andy4t,.| sent her nurse away,' and. cared for her hiahself. tfn t h e mornlag she revealed the'fact that the had been poisoned/ An<" arefl, Mu&nt&k had been ,able to get^toJGaicagB,.^ rauiated, had, left the -Children with the^r grandpa: gone away, ostensibly to return- to.'.-his work at Ha|*rArd. Be was never seen again. ' - ' ' •I; -' Enter Frank Holt. It seems incredible ^hat a wife killeTj should be able to form other family ties.'and sho^r family /affeetion in an ij'nusual degree, but such is the case. Holt's .father-ia-l^w akmits that nbthiiis was -known aWs life previous 1 t o 1808.. Jo tha" —'" ' dent at Fort .Worth Polyteehiioal college, wliere his wife m regard.to his son-in-laWs life previous 1 to 1808,. In that yeai? he was a stu- dent at Fort .Worth Polyteebiiioal college, wli.ere his wife wais jateo a'.studenL and he was graduated there, i He built'up the'-"—-"' -'-••" •- i Vv A Jfew One. \ "She has an .automobile face.'*- , "Why. she doesn't own an' auto." . '. 'I know, but that peculiar expres- sion of hers was caused .by her making taces at people -who have."—Florida Times Union. * ' zzzz*_--*y->* ^4'SZlTZ'zrs associates for these qualities. . He secured positions as instructor institutions of learning and for-"- " " nelU His family, life was apna . tr »w/ v^, »uu m people were.planning to stand behind him a|d eveh fjjrnlsh Iej his defense. , T ,_—M»M-. As one man. has expressed it, "I am beginning to h^iieve that'there is.ijjo're-mystery man being'-* f ** n : ° "*"*" •*—'—- --•••-- ;s than is ever dreamed Of by storyijeller®, in; reputable! such a book, of- n.has expressed in the "lives of liu- qity lots, as the childri you,-often have blossomi suspected by sidewalk y. to the country at least, rarely seen, on these Those 'who/use them Other's lives*—their joyl and tasks and pleasures. In a muchrquoted writer pleads for . - a house by the sidta; .Where the race of m*. But a house by the sid hilght still -fee .lonely if "wept by. Those who » ai-esthe ones -who mak] There should he a'well or two leadihg" to the do a-Qjd b a c k . ••' i la the rush and excite e*n life, a ad ;1 a the s ambitions .and desires,- sorgei uaial a is too la. the .little paths-the simi pleasures tha* keep lif sweet.'and strong. j Spite usually finds handy weapon. to secure the ople yet pays people -want. government is half its people fications to sov- s the other half i those canlap atf home wfRFthc«fVege- tsble is young i.nd tender. Wash the beets, cut off the tops and cook in boil- ing water about,au hour and a half, or until they are thoroughly cooki-d. Remove skins and pack into jars. .Ma- son jars will do in this case, ti-idilly fastened. Put ihem ,iu tiio boiler In cold water, bring to the boil and cook a half" hour. Rhubarb—Rhubarb is the -very eas- iest of all frnifs lo can. Wash it and flit in rhort pieces without paring,, this outside skin, when young, adds color hud richness, becoming perfectly soft Cool: in an open kettle an hour and place in carefully sterilized jars. No sugar is neoessary and the fruit heal- ed and.swerlened in winter v.hen used, is fresher in ta ite than when cooked •sith sugar. Strawberries—Strawberries cooked in the jara keep their color better than than tbo.se cooked, in an open kettle. A quart jar holds about a pound of fruit. To this add a half pound of sugar and cover with cold water. Place Jars in the boiler, covered wi£h cold water and bring to a boil, cooking one hour. Remove cooi and place in a dark, dry, cool place for winter U3C • Strawberries canned ia the open keltic keep very wc.l if all tho Uten- sils are carefully sterilised and the strawberries are very sweet, fresh and sound. Use the -same proportion of sugar and fruit and a very little wa- ter. Boil bard twenty minutes and place is slcrlizod air-tight cans. Stand tbem on their tops to cool and bo care- ful to plaee in a closet neither light nor damp, as strawberries are partic- ularly susceptible to light and damp: The fruit treated in this way makes gelatine and tapioea in wln^ea- Or it may be used to sauce over cottage pudding, boiled rice or Bavarian cream. Oairoy Egypt—'Three Turkish bat- teries east of the Suez canal were wrecked and another badly damaged in a daring attack by two British avi- ators on Saturday. The aviators cov- ered a distance "of 132 miles in their flight and returned safely. Setting out from their station on Sat- urday the aviators flew at a height of 5,000 feet over the positions held by the Turks. They dropped seven-, teen.homte upon the batteries! mount- ed by the Turks and three ot them were demolished, the gunners being killed. A bomb that exploded near an- other battery caused heavy damage there and killed three men. The areoplanes flew at a height too great to be reached by the Turkish guns. After wrecking the batteries the aviators flew above the caravan' with their bombs many of the wells routes east of the canal and destroyed upon which the Turks deperid for their water. They had been left weakly guarded and the aviators dropped their bombs with great accuracy. ' Upon their return flight tlie aviat- ors destroyed a convoy of supply wag- ons "with seven bombs.' SINGLE COPIES THREE CENTS NO HIT PUT Oil MBilK BEIflSH (JOYERWHENT ASKS UNUNITED CREDIT JOB PURPOSES OF mAifCiffl& s MONTANA One Vein Contains liighty-Klve Million Tons—Germ&n ^ JLon.ejMlly Broken. " The -discovery of rock phosphate at Melrose, Mont., by. H. S. ^Gale, of the United -States.Geological Survey,, lp October, 1910, suggested the strong possibility of its occurrence in thje western part of the State. In 1911 London.—The Introduction of -the largest military' budget in the 'Ws>- tory of Great Britain shared the stage in the House of Ooanmons with a discussion to! -the activities of 1 the Official -Press BureaSi. The t task of introduetog' the hud- get, fell upon the parliamentary secretary .of -the War,office, H. .J. Tennanit, as Earl •Ki'.'aheuer,, secre- tary for war, is a' member of the House of Lords. Two more days have been allotted to the discussion.of these "army e&-. !> tima'.es" which are called a "blank . check tjdget," because'the amounts of actual money which will be ex- pended under them are represented by nominal or token' iQgures Accounting to Be Mader After War. It is the first time in 200 years the British government ias intro- , duced in the House of ' Commona army estimates .without details' and without the aggregates of the expen- ditures, and when . Parliment has -has votes, the . nominal sum of £1,000. sterling ji?a,000) under each of the 15 groups of expenditures, It will have voted supplies without lim- it for an army of 3,000,000 or more men to be accounted for wh.en the • war is over, . j*> H. J. Tennant, parltaeiijjgp* secre- tary of the war office, paw a warm tribute to the work. of. the territor- ial troops. The British design of aeroplane, the secretary contended, has been found superior to that used by any other country- Mr. Teainant said, he was. debarred from dwelling upon-the size and the distribution cf the '/British forces, ( Recruiting 1 Satfsfactoi-y.*' ' "The enemy desires more' 'than anything else, to know the force We {may have in file ftrttire. It- Is true that- recruiting thus', far has heea —_*'_••' v~«i*- ^ao^eftepTiift'-r It i i In- for As soon as the war is over, Oenevlevo Caulfiehl, a icachcr at Pennjlvania Institution for the struct>on ot tho Blind, will sail .Tni/an where she will devolo her life to teaching the blind there. Parisian churches recently polled warnings to women lltai holy commun- ion will be refused all women :tttired in some of the latest clothes charac- terized by short skirts and waists with deep pointed* ner-k openings. England Ins 417 «vumen doctor?. Colorado has eight womm city treas- urers. An elemfnt of nobility must come into our politics' Ijfe, our governroent, our legis-i.ttion, our journalism. It will romc lo us ihrou%h our women and our workmen.—Hcnrik Ibsen. FASHION NOTES Wiiitr organdie is the material for ft ho, cool summer frock. -" Ucllghifi:! fiuiumer suits are made of heavy cotton <rcpe. "fVUiiniiiht blue is I be favorite color for smart taffeta suits. The fabric hat is more in evidence than the hat ol straw. Lingerie dresses msde half oi are novel and cliarftiing. Old-r'imc picture gowns show the coi Sages falling off the shoulders. Summer gowns of muslin are cap- tivating with frilled lace skirts. •', Short -slccv's of evenmg drecses are. uften nothing but simple friijs of pirated tulle. - '. \J V silk OOMBM ef ihe atauqua Habit SIX BIG DAYS OF JOY f ILL SOON BE HERE Purchase Season Tickets and Enjoy It All \ WAft BAB¥ STOB¥ BLOWN UP The .war baby, as a big social probr lem of the future, has come to an un- timely end. The registrar general's returns for the first* nine .months of {ha war sao-vr the percentage of ille- gitimacy to be just normal. Scotland Yard, moreover, has issued a warning to the public against sab- scribing to a charity described as "tho War Babies" and'; Mothers' {League," established by Mrs. Helen Best, by profession aad electrolysis operator. She says* she -started the league be- cause she knew waat.was t^oond to happen, .and still maintains it is hap- Jpening, but. fortunately there is no evi- dence to support her fears. Bishop Winnlngton Ingram of Lon- don, says the cry lias, turned out a great delusion, that it was a big Bub- ble and. now had exploded. '•Women, generally had heha-ved well, but there are a number of young giddy girls excited by the presence of so many young, men in khaki, who caused mischief at some camps,** he f w. <rMo KTrl sa M- "The troops set a remarkable! 11 Imt^ ^'""Jn'Pte ot S 00 ** -»-»v»o-- » t^-Peo-1 .ersv*t,the Eni- one. lutndred and rj*- of the proc- ortal .American in the'iiatfie of s and logic,,.for*} jt> the laws we Sre ,ame of our fore- side with our (rtltjon the opean, ejniess, In order i>r the oppressed name of those hardships of lir high- Courage !and the savage &or,_ and planted deep,1a.the te of 'those! wo- ( days woo-kept' jburning In their. nursed and i_ -1 won liberty for] It Is f^e Greatest Eatertalnraent Bargaia of tlie^ Year. It Meaiis Edttcatiofi, Inspiration; Recreation, Ftia, Frolic, a New Lease on Life. ALL W0EE, Am NO PLAY MAKES 4ACK ATOLL BOY And.t&e old folks need the uplift too, Chautauqua ts ! the lo^ spell of midsummer. An fesis in this dui 1 season. It Js a, ^ire cure for the blues. &Q0 Psiys ^ Season T|p|cd mop TOR rt ALL !te name of the pie'among whom they lived." Massena, N, Y. August 2nd to the 7th, inclusive. -•'- V^ ---x. K m:^W 4 ^> * or SV^ a wr^r-^f^,. -o-*-""' . r^*»> t ^iim\**ammmmi»mm w<>z±Mi~&*~- l <2!^Sa&s£j8-#-Siii3^^

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Page 1: ef ihe atauqua Habit - nyshistoricnewspapers.orgnyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn93063612/1915-02-09/ed-1/seq-1.pdfv:i'M *--».-;';>lc«gei;.:' Helperp' i^lffl^fwemeat-vgaensourg,

v:i'M

*--

».-

;';>lc«gei;.:'

Helperp' i^ l f f l^ fwemeat -vgaensourg , f rom ' t i e town f^^^l^^^OTilrelflieTlr", 19; .Fine, 4; Chateau-

« ^ f l ^ | i " ferity Orphanage a t Og-^ ^ ^ ^ j j ^ i ^ ^ r ^ y t o w a ^ of Potsdam, '7?' '^•jg ^ e ^ % . % s | i & , , ' M $ ; v6ouVern^ar,i.-'a! •--' l '"*' l o i p i 3 j Total, seventeen children.

[ o £ - C ^ n ^ e ^ ^ n W w - l « i . | W e 6 ^ « ^ ' - : ' . ^ ® O l W^as. <ftstodial Asylum, . • i , 3 * * a 4 i ^ h « f t ; m ^ . : | ^ 7 # 5 > £ ^

mtismeB'* 4 B i ^ ' - $ ^ * - i # * - t i a t i : ; ^ # t o ? M J3?&#i ?<#al fl^e children. " ' • = - - » • #%£.-fc-p: '---Msi!^MjB0Biti$$6r crippled ehfl-

j ^ l a . ' : ^ ' ^ » K 4 t # # t ' ' g g i f r ^ ^ - w , from town

naa re«ch*d

% j » J, O'Brien, Agent of Society ^•/iP^e^nfiQB of Cruelty to , f, |!jj|iar6fci, p la tes Beport. '

been made the S. P.

% 4 ^ j 3 f i ; ^ | # i j ) « .Good Shepard, i ^ t 6 r i e » l * t / f l ^ ^ r ^ from t w n of'Oswe-

__ _. . . _.. e f e t ^ k c . ..To»a. jfifi^ihgr.o^cniljdren placed In ^B ai tJnB- iit^Ss^^ahw'g^-'^^^^-'S^^&it't^s seventy-. eora»a*»n* ia • « # & > « £ ;<ni6*fc •; :A% Jm¥. $$aj&-t&9. .hwa*8 ?W*

. \«* back *jHhft**'.Tdw;4^--S5$ .iedJahd •wofeiSBft;,; ftftj|', ?RB8«ans ty t«fee tiie: ISit

Ptu»0a *j$f Haagaa ;V

nounced by tlie Ituseiao

vloieafc^n^Wltie b a t a t a : • i f c m . w m t .^^Mm^mW*., ¥ e . c^SHions j-Iourtag *o * t t6 .^u» ta» ' .T te t f 4ra» ; . ^ ^ ' ^ # 4 J 8 * ^ p - i m B r o ^ ' and no has been, received: *ia*e ifa* Geianianic, * g g ^ ' ^ $ i | $ . j i £ f } . mad£ to ^Society in

. aJMar'tjtoew- .the"" w^h£rf ;o£'-" i^heij'. ~"~' *~M

strength to tfe&;6a.«I* *fonte.'Ot.eastc , , .,_ . .,, . „ . _ . . , ^ , ., f

' e r a Baj«oi»e.: * " - -;.=; v M'"s. • -"• --••• -is»".*tigf#SfeR • * ! % $ • i ^ s n ^ " 1 6 4

Subor^oa4ta« tor'th&lniteent"Ihfe' %ay«;1>een>.|ilto«eC*o , . . . iiapona»t anowcfcotents ; f e a t 'the piyingj>l^; t i ie law « God an'd man^ RiOMiana h»y« »ei»d $oth1 'IwWfer o* ^ aJil e ^ e ^ t h a t ^-^ ^ a inveati-tbe^Jwadvrators of .the r W ! Inster, In ga te4 /Sm ,'not reported to society no East Prnwia, «.«u«eeM. which en- charge^s t t^e i^ ja t l^e to the town for able* t h « a to deliver a flant «itaclc i f e ^ , * ; \-> '"?* "..'. t . ,,• on. lnrterburg Jrom the north, -wihile I ^ ^ to^extentTiny sincere tfi^ctks t&e forces that have passed the An- t b . a l l n i e ' n^e r s^So t i e ty &r<the^.?odi & a a p tQ- <i» aa\tib. aavaace straight adviee ana. <son,r e&u'S treatinent!«<':'aK

.v»^«^-4l» 'MMKwric«Bett i that t to : ttoes.';;.';^;;;*;" ••«••;• ' '< "y •' >•; army wfttoi; dro"v« the*Aurtrian"6 Iromf I •wish "to os tea l s j - ~ •'" • "-- Carpathians I Miss •Pafke'r, Mr, Cushmaa,^-ftev. fa th-

! \..;.

the DulH^.I»» to to — ^ ^ 5 U j G t o m w i , ' a » a Attorney D. M. Haz-

' of t i » | e # » » J ,«e» l^* t I have been greatly

' x 'WijaBfAN 'km isfis

}ngton.-f!Riofeert ^cri'ging:._ sn^ seat of i^re tary jBr^anv?$en.

the! German statement t&eaUtfipjf^ wai zone around Great ,Eteifiitov.w^. disfcussed by the.cabinet., %hen See^l ro t | ry .Bryan, if oof of the city, ffir.

^siug'aB.ithe {acting secretary of the ;e.,. EVUTJ. .iLanslngis official. title ;4i,|

eoinseHor to itlje department of *tat% |>is.*he secretary's legal ad^jse^osQ

allJimaitterB oertaining to jforeign-.tpoiiH1

M « e rocelsre^ $10,000 4 J^a r^ to^e , ,t' every ©e^oa *afcea &y '^j$fem artment is to accord jMih, th;%jgo^ jkigtoated by (fcjieipreEideat^fgjdR;; lurated -by | he secretary ol,«t|tf**

•'JSestt to the Secretary *Weou)i8e|i{ loitjite.it&e> r a n ^ n g offleer1,ofi,,thfT#tif&» deiSartntent. ^ajder -toraier >adn |tt&*J trspons the counsellor pe r io r^ne^^ i 1

ly those d«ties .which lares jnoacatfcf;5>35=

trtfiion.he i s ' l i p o f c e d ' - i n o k s ^ p ^ ; ^ ' pap^ta^nA^ general a u t f i i p ^ ^ i l ^ H ^

oi|er <hi3 desk, t- - - -]W,~S£^%?" .^en ' Joha Bassett BibtB&ft^jt^l^a^j

e | attd"wias sit^e'eded ; oit ! ^ t e e k ^ 1§14, i&y'SJr. t^^n'g/-mosigeJie^t |«b>. W> toe-w little brtihe^ewrciES^eiief• He was ' w e U T ^ o v m . - h o ^ v ^ . a ^ ^ a J ; ^ ^ international' l i w y e r o f ligh', i|r ithe- eniall circle iof Jlaaaf3®ra;'spij.

jfercatlon of totenatienal^ ^mtt&yer-west.' -Now toe",1a"Te^r4eB7-a|t one ofj "tftfe- mtost' efflcifen*' officiate .of; the- ?«i-

Tjt ^i^oTOati&'JcirelW ihe 1*^ i aowa the ''toead'Ofr the state ^department"

-yjansa the atftbassadors and minis-' ^r*'to)EarI»biyl4we.'.«I>.witb. Mr. I4*jir

'; At the time 4l Mr. Lansing's recent lit to his home in Watertown a

i w«s «!fdtete3 <tj»-tti«, *$0[$& i^Pfl;

woutiO eurre^ <teaosi

t^tpjf*: clt., The

ii|^Jt «C-"h« resi-

^ -im^SfMIW^WC-wois' ' ^ ; ; ' « ? ^ ^ f e r ^ # - l p t n a i o n e d and ^ i ^ l ^ ^ ^ l ^ ^ ^ ^ o S ^ d r ^ T C e n

.'l&ree ribs..

^ K ^ ^ 4 t i f e # 5 | M p ^ e B l f c writin-g

t ^ W i f e i i i .severely Burned. to*fei^^^i#>;' Oharles Cltobuig

r$pt,B!Qisia„ all laborers em-I j l l g ' ^ . t h ' e TJntanvifte Mills of the ||fe^pfe&e River Paper company, ^ ^ J . , injured in a peculiar sequence

Tpcidenits. at the company's plant "-&ay morning. Clm'burg and

_f . . La, were sevfereftf scald'ed about P i | ; I ^ g s , while Carbino sustained a i f f -^ ' ^nor bruises. Thy were atend-^ d r ^ D ^ s . Barnett and Kissane. r ^ t t t ^ ^ r g was the cause of all the ;^gf|ef$?!hen he, rolled a load of pulp -Ipo^^fexcavation a t the bottom of ^V;®l«^ajpr shaft in . the sulphite ^Sipi^^riHie' ihole there was about a

l^i^^ofjtoiaiing water. Foisia heard 'I [i^i^is,,writes and pumped in to

i j^xf iph^ .Before he could get out, b^ s i f a (0^w^ , burned. Carbino was ' JMggg^l^ ' i ie .could to get both men ^)0:ffiL^^6j^&hods let t(he elevator

|cfens^^ft|t#r4vc3i him. i'iJfdilWjr'p.f y&rought- to his home to |tMsi"%t^^ja3mrsday noon while Ciin-.SlW&jW^vJcajred for at the plant. , " ^ l / . ® i ^ A a v I g a t I o n Closed.

*%rifj».,ja35sf.time in the history of ^ T ^ s a ^ ^ ^ w e e n Ogdensburg and BpeseotW^es . i s a. complete, tie-up. 'S^B^af-t^toJsBsfe week, no ferry^ no maiii-:'^-:~tt#jiii£, of •any kind, and the <S^%^.f$feitoy way of Nysado and lhe,totefea*fcRal .bridge.

'The fiatise.of the blecade is be-liev»4 ^ h e v d ^ to the f a a that the

,4ttHdBary boatt-ihat used to be placed jfljaar. the.^swiffe^.water below the city of.; Ogflen»bHr^,was burned a year ago, and -has, never been replaced. The (result 'has? been that . the slush

P 8 A | « « U 4 .WocTfea of Jlee„ in. the river have

H S H AIRMEN DESTROY GUNS

FLY 132 MILES AND RETURN . SAFELY AFTER DROPPING

SEVENTEEN BOMBS ON BATTERKES .

J*ejpame ^loggfed jand created a bloc­kade.

Students IVrrfng Hisfory. . The iunior c l ^ s o£ St. Laurence ttiiiwittity'ttt tompiling and will soon ' Mls fca*«ok deaMog.wltti the de-

If.-

l ay to Bght them, pass.Bel-

lelgium^say, "f'am a country; i am , | 3 ^ . a road.'? And Belgium write a

f %Yjfetfer to England about Germany, to ,;.*>5 :,Jhelp them.

So England help Belgium.—L'Echo de Chine.

The following extracts are from a letter lately received from an officer at the front. "I burled one of my poor boys last week. There was no parson handy, and as I lacked* a prayerbook

m the only true aevoteef of that M * . ^hTv Aav Hit ,,„„«, -«*," w -ls a,vitiatk«ft of,the .fflrtet primary law 1d ' * ' ^ ^ mary idea. • - - - ' • '*"'* And in the next breath they to restore the old system. Consistency minds." '

a perversiojn of the direct pri-

Erge the Constitutional Convention s indeed "the I hobgoblin of little

The real trouble lies deeper, and in a dering of the Thirt?-First ©istrlct is resFJfmsiole for it, prizes two sections separated by the Adir< close business or social ties and but little lems of the different sections are not the! geographical divisions should be the mos cause of this gerrymandering the republica: loyally supported in the past, have been

_ *.--. - . an iron hand. That ring is about to be hv-I read the chapter in Corinthians (you Shakespeare says: know, 'For this corruptible,' etc.) and

liferent direction. Tha gerryman-

yThat district com-dack Mountain^,- and without any ommunity of interest. The prob-same and it is, only natural that /powerful consideration. But be-ring, whom these papers have so

bio to control ithe situation with i ijken up for gooii and ah. And as

om a t Jarafl^ed in 5

the brjber may All' escape from.

, he State's dis-Ib is slow, but SmeX For them aad the bigg« fr to political lib-

nected with the whole"; :" to delay certain viefaft without remorse, try may obtain the best -regret, the State the stimulus of the mo & to tax women

a . t ru t l i : t in l t l^ , i^ Mr. SdUofi'.afecfi

women Vffll obtain progress pi their c, dent.' daily.

'THE Lima; n The Tbuth's Co

the doctor said a prayer. Then we lowered him just in his uniform and overcoat, with a waterproof v sheet

. rourd him. R.LP. He was onlv a"little Bermondsey guttersnipe, but he g-iVe i l l he htwi, and God knows.—Knicker­bocker Press.

Among the effects of Frank Holt, the man who attempt to kill J. P. Mor­gan, was found a poem, "When I am

. De3d." which he wrote to his sweet­heart, Leona \Sinsabaugb, now his

' widow, in 1908. Scver?.rverses follow

When I am deaa Perhaps kind memory will .lose

TWe sad mistakes I've often made And hold the.good—yes, let the best

Reveal itself as errors fade. Oh, Lord my- God, 1 toil each day That I may have some good to stay; But will the blunders,' then forget

r "It is sport to see the engineer Hoist with his ownj'petar."

TRUTH STRANGER TljiAN FICTION j The developments of the past few dayspn regard to the man' who, in'ad-

diiion to his attempt to kill J. Pierpont Morgan, placed a bijjmb in the eapitol at Washington, another on the steamship Mmnehaha, and filially mysteriously killed himself in the Mineola jail, are so fantastic and amazing that they star­tle the imagination. The positive JdentifleatlSon of, this Firanifc Holt, a 'brilliant student and indefatigable worker, admired bjkhis asspciates; a^Erieh .Muenter, the wife killer and a fugitive from Justice-foif! nine years, .adds to the astonish­ment.. He cannot be dismissed as a maniac, although!; Ms hair-brained scheme would seem to write him down as silch. Nor can We believe that he was 'a sane person With a overcoming -beii for criminality. The solution of the puzzle was lost when he took his life [with has own bjind.

Give balm to those that now are not?

When I am dead And broken heartless sods of earth

Will mark where last I seemed to be Perhaps—I cannot know—there will

Be.heard the voice of praise for me. Oh, Lord My God, help me be strong In trials much, in labor long! For. me, who lives in hunger great, All praises then will come too late.

When I am dead If I the silence of the tomb Could break, I would not think to stay The ea^ger band or lessened tongue;

But sadly I to all would say: "Beloved, flowers no you cast No fragrance to hourB past; Belated words of love and tears Will never ease the broken

r^rs^L * * •"» sh™;.^- - *,&sz£xi many, educated there, and distinguished himself early as a,' remarkable Iter .guist. Sometime in the nineties his parents, emigrated'to tl^e TJaited States and went to Jive in Chicago. There he was graduated from |?he* University of Chicago. While pursuing his course he taifgbt French an4 German in. the preparatory schools near the city- "-Has instructors praised ihim for untiring industry and he made a success, in his chosen work. AftaV graduation he studied in Europe. .Upon'his return,' he wfts married and jhis married life seemed to his friends a most happy "one. tee became'an- instructor, in- the University of Kansas at liawrence. No on]*" believed -he was' crazy at this time. He was looked upon as an unusually j?tudioas man' with a capacity for

In 1904 he went to Harvard for posjt-grajaaatevWOTfe, and)two years later ^et, and the uneounter Ins wife joined him in Cambridge. His, diligence had earned! him a place as aird and tblosscm and instructor and he showed no signs of ihsaniiv. !FH« ftmrfiw I » ^ * ~ ~ - ™ - J —-- - - -

to expend the arbitrarily and nomy.

nd to enforce Ward to the

l e n \ . omen eitj-igefch.)0<;j[j0n l o to p%jority of countr '

The i 1 l r e 3 S j o n

!t with *-m h a v- e

•eat purpi.t thte&

a state o years •and conti,,n hstS

em and kee j ; e w

try there; % t h e "arted on r e .

>rer, conti i oa i n untaxed, i A, and fil^ut j S t plan of hzU l t s paths aj: ,

Jlds, and;mef lt i s

of village S reen . " fh ' e " c f ! S ^ £ t ^ a n y o f ^ h e m - s o m e t i m e f v e n t o w U ^ a ways to school, often a l s or a f i L f a

m T f m o r ! f U n t S ° f W O ° F a y S * e S S i many-more are neighbor louse l f e a w ™5 farm and farm.-.or from hfcdlin? Jl 000 To-7 t toy highways of f r i e l s ^ 4 1 ' ° ° 0 W °

snnpte pleasures. Othe*r„overnment te mere short cuts tC^ot^ s o v e ' r a I n e a t 1S

fll uakno^n to ' ' b K ' " costly pleasures. No ffl'" startles -them;, no

Every civilized count) thousands of miles of that bind city and city run from business cent resort, that traverse nej lead to new settlemeii citizens' highways, JJUI taxes, planned for All of,them have nam' city or a town own^ them; paid labor built t\ them in order.

But ,all over the eo other ways that, are road map, built by no la! Jed by no commission,] named, yet used and lo1

a happy place in the gr< ^ They are the ' l i t t le foo

.. „__ _. —- . -<« . His family l|fe*seetaed very happy and he seemed fond of his three ehfldpn. His wife •'wias not well "and;j the doctors diagnosed her tiwTto* «•=• „+«~.~~.-u. *—-^-

years.

1

It may not be necessary to throw cut a reminder that ft is not the con­vention now in session at Albany, but the electorate of New York- State that Will adopt the revise! Constitution of 1915, if it is t» be adopted at =alL But the reminder can do no harm-— Syracuse Herald.

of insaniiy, liree eafldbe . .__ . . . . .

nosed her trouble as stomaich trouble. ' 'One! j-way,' and- cared for her hiJhself. In th

dead. An examination revealed the;fact that the had been , . before this was discovered, Muenter had been ,able to gettOj<dhicago,. where he had had the body cremated, had, left the Children with thejir grandparents and had gone awav. nsJw'-nci.M-.f *~ •».*-«— *-"• -k-

night JSSnenter was

poisoned/ Andy4t,. |

sent her nurse away,' and. cared for her hiahself. tfn the mornlag she revealed the'fact that the had been poisoned/ An<" arefl, Mu&nt&k had been ,able to get^toJGaicagB,.^ rauiated, had, left the -Children with the^r grandpa:

gone away, ostensibly to return- to.'.-his work a t Ha|*rArd. Be was never seen again. ' - ' '

• I ; -' Enter Frank Holt. It seems incredible ^hat a wife killeTj should be able to form other family ties.'and sho^r family /affeetion in an ij'nusual degree, but such is the case. Holt's .father-ia-l^w akmits that nbthiiis was -known

aWs life previous1 to 1808.. Jo tha" — ' " ' dent at Fort .Worth Polyteehiioal college, wliere his wife m regard.to his son-in-laWs life previous1 to 1808,. In that yeai? he was a stu­dent at Fort .Worth Polyteebiiioal college, wli.ere his wife wais jateo a'.studenL and he was graduated there, i He built 'up the '-"—-"' -'-••" •-

i Vv

A Jfew One. \ "She has an .automobile face.'*- ,

"Why. she doesn't own an' auto." . '. 'I know, but that peculiar expres­

sion of hers was caused .by her making taces at people -who have."—Florida Times Union. * '

zzzz*_--*y->* 4'SZlTZ'zrs associates for these qualities. . He secured positions as instructor institutions of learning and for-"- " "

nelU His family, life was apna . t r » w / v ^ , »uu m people were.planning to stand behind him a | d eveh fjjrnlsh Iej his defense.

, T ,_—M»M-. As one man. has expressed it, "I am beginning to h^iieve that ' there is.ijjo're-mystery man being'-* f**n :° "*"*" •*—'—- --•••--;s than is ever dreamed Of by storyijeller®,

in; reputable!

such a book, of-n.has expressed

in the "lives of liu-

qity lots, as the childri you,-often have blossomi suspected by sidewalk y. to the country at least, rarely seen, on these Those 'who/use them Other's lives*—their joyl and tasks and pleasures.

In a muchrquoted writer pleads for . • - a house by the sidta;

. W h e r e the race of m*. But a house by the sid hilght still -fee .lonely if "wept by. Those who » ai-esthe ones -who mak] There should he a'well or two leadihg" to the do a-Qjd b a c k . •• '

i l a the rush and excite e*n life, a a d ; 1 a the s ambitions .and desires,-sorgei uaial a is too la. the .little pa ths - the simi pleasures tha* keep lif sweet.'and strong.

j Spite usually finds handy weapon.

to secure the ople yet pays people -want.

government is half its people

fications to sov-s the other half

i

those canlap atf home wfRFthc«fVege-tsble is young i.nd tender. Wash the beets, cut off the tops and cook in boil­ing water about,au hour and a half, or until they are thoroughly cooki-d. Remove skins and pack into jars. .Ma­son jars will do in this case, ti-idilly fastened. Put ihem ,iu tiio boiler In cold water, bring to the boil and cook a half" hour.

Rhubarb—Rhubarb is the -very eas­iest of all frnifs lo can. Wash it and flit in rhort pieces without paring,, this outside skin, when young, adds color hud richness, becoming perfectly soft Cool: in an open kettle an hour and place in carefully sterilized jars. No sugar is neoessary and the fruit heal­ed and.swerlened in winter v.hen used, is fresher in ta ite than when cooked •sith sugar.

Strawberries—Strawberries cooked in the jara keep their color better than than tbo.se cooked, in an open kettle. A quart jar holds about a pound of fruit. To this add a half pound of sugar and cover with cold water. Place Jars in the boiler, covered wi£h cold water and bring to a boil, cooking one hour. Remove cooi and place in a dark, dry, cool place for winter U3C • Strawberries canned ia the open keltic keep very wc.l if all tho Uten­sils are carefully sterilised and the strawberries are very sweet, fresh and sound. Use the -same proportion of sugar and fruit and a very little wa­ter. Boil bard twenty minutes and place is slcrlizod air-tight cans. Stand tbem on their tops to cool and bo care­ful to plaee in a closet neither light nor damp, as strawberries are partic­ularly susceptible to light and damp:

The fruit treated in this way makes gelatine and tapioea in wln^ea- Or it may be used to sauce over cottage pudding, boiled rice or Bavarian cream.

Oairoy Egypt—'Three Turkish bat­teries east of the Suez canal were wrecked and another badly damaged in a daring attack by two British avi­ators on Saturday. The aviators cov­ered a distance "of 132 miles in their flight and returned safely.

Setting out from their station on Sat­urday the aviators flew at a height of 5,000 feet over the positions held by the Turks. They dropped seven-, teen.homte upon the batteries! mount­ed by the Turks and three ot them were demolished, the gunners being killed. A bomb that exploded near an­other battery caused heavy damage there and killed three men.

The areoplanes flew at a height too great to be reached by the Turkish guns. After wrecking the batteries the aviators flew above the caravan' with their bombs many of the wells routes east of the canal and destroyed upon which the Turks deperid for their water. They had been left weakly guarded and the aviators dropped their bombs with great accuracy. '

Upon their return flight tlie aviat­ors destroyed a convoy of supply wag­ons "with seven bombs.'

SINGLE COPIES THREE CENTS

NO HIT PUT Oil M B i l K

BEIflSH (JOYERWHENT ASKS UNUNITED CREDIT J O B

PURPOSES OF mAifCiffl&

s MONTANA

One Vein Contains liighty-Klve Million Tons—Germ&n ^ JLon.ejMlly

Broken.

" The -discovery of rock phosphate at Melrose, Mont., by. H. S. ^Gale, of the United -States.Geological Survey,, lp October, 1910, suggested the strong possibility of its occurrence in thje western part of the State. In 1911

London.—The Introduction of -the largest military' budget in the 'Ws>-tory of Great Britain shared the stage in the House of Ooanmons with a discussion to! -the activities of1 the Official -Press BureaSi.

The t task of introduetog' the hud-get, fell upon the parliamentary secretary .of -the War,office, H. .J. Tennanit, as Earl •Ki'.'aheuer,, secre­tary for war, is a' member of the House of Lords.

Two more days have been allotted to the discussion.of these "army e&-.

!> tima'.es" which are called a "blank . check tjdget," because'the amounts of actual money which will be ex­pended under them are represented by nominal or token' iQgures Accounting to Be Mader After War.

It is the first time in 200 years the British government i a s intro- , duced in the House of ' Commona army estimates .without details' and without the aggregates of the expen­ditures, and when . Parliment has -has votes, the . nominal sum of £1,000. sterling ji?a,000) under each of the 15 groups of expenditures, It will have voted supplies without lim­it for an army of 3,000,000 or more men to be accounted for wh.en the • war is over, . j*>

H. J. Tennant, parltaeiijjgp* secre­tary of the war office, paw a warm tribute to the work. of. the territor­ial troops. The British design of aeroplane, the secretary contended, has been found superior to that used by any other country-

Mr. Teainant said, he was. debarred from dwelling upon-the size and the distribution cf the '/British forces, (

Recruiting1 Satfsfactoi-y.*' ' "The enemy desires more' ' than

anything else, to know the force We {may have in file ftrttire. It- Is t rue

that- recruiting thus', far has heea —_*'_••' v~«i*- ^ao^eftepTiift'-r

It

i i

In-for

As soon as the war is over, Oenevlevo Caulfiehl, a icachcr at Pennjlvania Institution for the struct>on ot tho Blind, will sail .Tni/an where she will devolo her life to teaching the blind there.

Parisian churches recently polled warnings to women lltai holy commun­ion will be refused all women :tttired in some of the latest clothes charac­terized by short skirts and waists with deep pointed* ner-k openings.

England Ins 417 «vumen doctor?. Colorado has eight womm city treas­

urers. An elemfnt of nobility must come

into our politics' Ijfe, our governroent, our legis-i.ttion, our journalism. It will romc lo us ihrou%h our women and our workmen.—Hcnrik Ibsen.

FASHION NOTES

Wiiitr organdie is the material for ft ho, cool summer frock. -"

Ucllghifi:! fiuiumer suits are made of heavy cotton <rcpe.

"fVUiiniiiht blue is I be favorite color for smart taffeta suits.

The fabric hat is more in evidence than the hat ol straw.

Lingerie dresses msde half oi are novel and cliarftiing.

Old-r'imc picture gowns show the coi Sages falling off the shoulders.

Summer gowns of muslin are cap­tivating with frilled lace skirts. •',

Short -slccv's of evenmg drecses are. uften nothing but simple friijs of pirated tulle. - '.

\J

V

silk

OOMBM

ef ihe atauqua Habit

SIX BIG DAYS OF JOY f ILL SOON BE HERE

Purchase Season Tickets and Enjoy It All

\

WAft BAB¥ STOB¥ BLOWN UP

The .war baby, as a big social probr lem of the future, has come to an un­timely end. The registrar general's returns for the first* nine .months of {ha war sao-vr the percentage of ille­gitimacy to be just normal.

Scotland Yard, moreover, has issued a warning to the public against sab-scribing to a charity described as "tho War Babies" and'; Mothers' {League," established by Mrs. Helen Best, by profession aad electrolysis operator. She says* she -started the league be­cause she knew waat.was t^oond to happen, .and still maintains it is hap-

Jpening, but. fortunately there is no evi­dence to support her fears.

Bishop Winnlngton Ingram of Lon­don, says the cry lias, turned out a great delusion, that it was a big Bub­ble and. now had exploded.

'•Women, generally had heha-ved well, but there are a number of young giddy girls excited by the presence of so many young, men in khaki, who caused mischief a t some camps,** he

f w. <rMo KTrlsaM- "The troops set a remarkable! 11 I m t ^ ^ ' " " J n ' P t e ot S00** -»-»v»o-- » t^-Peo-1

.ersv*t,the Eni-one. lutndred and rj*- of the proc-ortal .American in the'iiatfie of

s and logic,,.for*} jt> the laws we Sre

,ame of our fore-side with our

(rtltjon the opean, ejniess, In order i>r the oppressed

name of those hardships of

lir high- Courage !and the savage

&or,_ and planted deep,1a.the

te of 'those! wo-(

days woo-kept' jburning In their.

nursed and i_ -1 won liberty for]

It Is f^e Greatest Eatertalnraent Bargaia of tlie^ Year. I t Meaiis Edttcatiofi, Inspiration; Recreation, Ftia, Frolic, a New Lease on Life.

ALL W0EE, Am NO PLAY MAKES 4ACK ATOLL BOY

And.t&e old folks need the uplift too, Chautauqua ts! the lo^ spell of midsummer. An fesis in this dui 1 season. It Js a, ^ire cure for the blues.

&Q0 Psiys ^ Season T|p|cd mop TOR rt ALL

!te name of the pie'among whom they lived."

Massena, N, Y. August 2nd to the 7th, inclusive.

- • ' -

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SV^ a wr^r-^f^,. -o-*-""' . r *»> t^iim\**ammmmi»mm

w<>z±Mi~&*~- l < 2 ! ^ S a & s £ j 8 - # - S i i i 3 ^ ^