Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 148, 12 July 1908 — Page 2

Jf AGE TWO.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, BTTXDAY, JULY 12, 1903

OLYMPIAN

GAMES

BEGIN

MONDAY

Everything Is in Readiness for The World's Test of Brawn. MILLIONS TO ATTEND. PEOPLE OF EVERY NATIONALITY WILL GATHER AT SHEPHERDS BUSH TO WITNESS THE INTERNATIONAL CONTESTS. London, July 11. Everything Is now In readiness for the opening of the international Olympic games at the Stadium at Shepherds Bush on Monday. The athletes are fit to a hair and folk of every nationality have gathered from the ends pf the earth to witness the great exhibitions on the field and track. The weather promises to be very good on Monday when the opening events on he program are carried cut. Reservations have been made for two million seats and the great arena has been put in perfect order for the two weeks of athletic matches. Imre KIralfy. commissioner-general of the great white city, is the busiest man In London, likely, today. Speaking of the plans for the Olympiad he Is certain of success. Another reason why reservations have been made for two million seats and people are pouring into Iyondon from all nations to witness the great contests of brawn. He said: "Not only is the stadium the largest in the world, but it is the most complete sporting ground for such events as we have carded for the fortnight. It provides three tracks, a swimming bath and dressing accommodations for 2,000 men." Already hundreds of athletes have tested the grass track for the hurdle races and the cinder track for running. There Is much feeling over, the rumored ineligibility of Tom Longboat, the Romantic Canadian athlete. But as Longboat is scheduled for the Marathon race which does not take place until the twenty-fourth, there is much time for arbitration and revision. KioucYS ARE LOSERS Again the Haberdashers Are Trounced h City League Game.EASTHAVEN WINS 13 TO 12. In a game,' marked by hard hitting and loose fielding the Starr Piano b ise ball team defeated the Kibbeys yesterday nfternoon in a city league contest by a score of 13 to 12. Marine for the Kibbjys was knocked out of tbe box. Summary:

Kibbeys AR R. H. O. A. E. Martin, If ..3 2 2 1 0 0 Pchattel, cf .. .1 0 0 0 0 1 Allison, ss.. ..5 1 0 0 3 1 Lancaster, rf. .5 1 0 2 0 1 L. Quigley, 2b. 4 0 0 2 0 4 Snaveley, c. ..5 2 2 11 4 2 Eggemeyer, lb .3 2 0 9 0 0 Marine, p 0 0 0 2 0 0 Iliatt, cf 3 3 0 0 0 0 Bulla, p.. .. ..11 1 0 2 0 Totals 37 12 7 27 11 9 Starr Pianos AB. R. H. O. A. E F. Cooney, cf..6 1. 1 4 1 0 R. Schattel, 3b. 6 2 2 1 2 1 Rohe, If 4 2 1 0 0 0 J. Kuhle'bk 3b. 5 2 16 10 Sudhoff, 6S.. ..4 1 1 0 1 2 ?ullivan, c. ..3 1 0 8 8 2 fcittloh, rf 4 1 1 1 0 0 Lichtenfels lb.. 4 1 .0 7 0 3 T. Kuhl'bk, p.. 5 2 2 0 3 1

Totals 41 13 9 27 16 10 Kibbeys .. ...0 0500043 012 Starr Pianos ..19100011 0 13 Struckout Kuhlenbeck 7, Marine 1, Bulla 11. Bases on balls Kuhlenbeck 5, Marine 2, Bulla 2. Wild pitch Bulla 4. Possed balls Sullivan 1, Snaveley 2. Two base hits J. Kuh lenbeck. Three base hit Martin. Hit by pitcher Bulla. Rohe, Sullivan. -ouble plays O. Quigley (unassisted) EASTHAVEN WINS. t - Defeats Hoosiers In Well Played Game. Easthaven defeated the Hoosiers yesterday afternoon in a city league contest by a score of 5 to 2. Yaggi and Johnson each pitched great ball but the latter received miserable support, sixteen errors being made back of him. Score: Easthaven 5 2 6 Hoosiers 2 2 16 Yaggl and " Nolan. Johnson and ' Brlcker. Bringing It to a Climax. "I know what's passing in your mind," suddenly said the maiden as the habitually silent -caller stared at her. "I know, too, why you are calling here night after night, appropriating my time to yourself and keeping other nice young men away. You want me to marry you, don't you?" "I I dor gasped the young man. "I thought so. Very well: I wilL Judge. She Soac people profit by the mistakes of others. He Yes; like the minister who got a guinea for marryIng us. London Express.

WHO WILL WIN?

NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. Chicago ....44 28 .611 Pittsburg 46 30 .500 New York 43 32 .573 Cincinnati 40 36 .526 Philadelphia 31 36 .463 Boston 33 42 .440 Brooklyn 28 43 .394 St. Louis 28 46 .379 AMERICAN LEAGUE. Won Lost Pet. St. Louis 44 31 .587 Detroit 44 31 .587 Cleveland 41 34 .547 Chicago 42 . 33 .560 Philadelphia 36 36 .500 Boston '. 34 41 .453 Washington 28 43 .384 New York 29 47 .382 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Lost Pet. Indianapolis 53 32 .624 Louisville 49 35 .583 Toledo 47 37 .560 Columbus 46 40 .535 Minneapolis 41 39 .513 Milwaukee 38 47 .447 Kansas City 35 51 .407 St. Paul 27 55 .329 RESULTS YESTERDAY. National League. Chicago 2; Philadelphia 6. Pittsburg 6; New York 2. Cincinnati 3; Boston 2. Brooklyn 1; St. Louis 0. American League. Chicago 5; Philadelphia 4.( 16 inn.) New York 3; Cleveland 2. First game. New York 3; Cleveland 2. Second game. Washington 4;St. Louis 2. Boston 7; Detroit 3. American Association. Columbus 3; Toledo 0. Indianapolis 3; Louisville 1. St. Paul 12; Milwaukee 4. Minneapolis 10; Kansas City 4. First game. Minneapolis 6; Kansas City 3. Sec ond game. FIGHT FOR CHILD Suit of Mary Mannering for Divorce Marked by This Feature. CLUB ON HACKETT'S HEAD. New York, July 11. Hurrying back to fight the suit of his wife for divorce, James K. Hackett, the actor, reached this city today on the French liner LeBrotagne and at once consult ed with his attorneys as to the ans wer to be put in to Miss Mannering's complaint. Mr. Hackett also will make a fight for the custody of the four-year-old child of the couple, whom Mrs. Hack ett got possession of by means of a writ of habeas corpus. Whether or not he will be willing to get the child at the cost of revealing the name of the woman mentioned as co-respondent will be seen from his actions of the next few days. Miss Mannering is very anxious to retain possession of their only child, however, and it is said that if Mr. Hackett will relinquish his claim to the baby the name of the co-respondent will never become public. At any rate it has been decided by the lawyers not to make the name a matter of public record until a referee is appointed, and even then the papers will be sealed, if possible, as they were in the recent Alfred Vanderbilt divorce case. TWICE DEATH WINS Mary 6. Trimble Loses The Eve of Her Wedding. ' on A REMARKABLE STORY. Pittsburg, July 11. For the second time within three years Miss Mary C Trimble, daughter of Justice of the Peace John Trimble, followed her fi ance to the grave this afternoon when Frake D. Creese, of Aspinwall. was laid away. They were to have been married this week. Three years ago Miss Trimble was engaged to Walter McKee, and the date of the wedding had been set when Miss Trimble's sister died and the wedding had to be postponed. An other date was set. but two weeks be fore the day arrived McKee was taken ill with pneumonia and he died on the day they were to have been wed. Frank Creese was the most inti mate friend of McKee and after a year of mourning had passed he began to court Miss Trimble. Finally they became engaged and the wedding was to have been this week. Ten days ago Creese was taken ill with typhoid fever. It developed into pneu monia and he died Friday night. "An Army Contract." In a street of Edinbureu a dustv sol dier went up to a little bootblack and told the boy to brush his boots and polish them well. The lad looked at tne Dig scots gray and Bhonted blithe ly to another. bootblack: 'Haw, Sandy, come over an gie us a haundr with his hands curved round his mouth to form a speaking trumpet "See wha's here wl me! I've got an army contract. Mahaxa: TSIA wia meaaj r lour saves worrv. Hxtubjlh.

COIIDITI0HS WILL NOT CHANGE SOON

Stuyvesant Fish Before Sailing for Europe Talks of Financial Conditions. RICH DO CREDIT BUSINESS. BIG RAILROAD MAN SAYS THAT HE EXPECTS ENORMOUS CROPS BUT THE NET PROFITS WILL BE SMALL. New York, July 11. Stuyvesant Fish accompanied by Mrs. Fish before sailing for Europe today on the American liner New York, where they will spend three months touring the continent, gave out an interview in which he said that the conditions existing in this country as a result of the panic of last October would not change for some time to come and that although better times would probably follow, the presidential election he could see no hope for any improvement over conditions of the present. "There is absolutely no indication of a business improvement in any part of this country," said Mr. Fish to a reporter on deck of the liner. "This is shown too plainly by the fact that the wealthy people are not paying cash for household expenses but instead are running up large bills with the merchants and shopkeepers, await ing better times when they will have cash enough to pay them. "I expect that there will be an enormous crop this fall and the railroads will show large gross receipts but the net profits will be very small because of the high wages now being paid for the gathering and the progress of the crops. The farmers are the people that will profit by the situation. The wealthy will be milked to the limit for campaign contributions for the coming lection in the hope of electing a man to the presidential chair whom they believe will bring about better times." Mr. Fish when asked his opinion as to the outcome of the election this fall would say nothing. BURIED LIVING PERSONS. Horrible Cnitom of Japanese Prior to Tear 04 A. D. Trior to the year 64C A. D. the Japanese bad one of the most horrible burial customs that ean be imagined that of burying all the immediate friends and retainers of a prince or other person of note in a standing position around tbe potentate's grave and leaving them in the earth up to their necks to perish of thirst and hunger. Tbe custom cannot be said to have been general as late as the date given, for the Japanese records Drove that in the time of the Emperor Suinin (97-30 W. C.) the burial rites of royal personages were so modified as to partially abolish former cruelties. Speaking of a young brother of Suinin, who died and had his retinue buried standing around bis grave, the old record says: "For many days they died not, but wept and cried aloud. At last they died. Dogs and crews assembled and ate off their beads. The emperor's compassion was aroused, and be desired to change the manner of burial. M'hen the empress died, soon after, the mikado Inquired of his officers if something in the way of a change could not be suggested, and one proposed to make clay figures of men and bury them as substitutes." That this did not entirely do away with the former custom is proved by an edict issued in the year 646 A. D., the date given first above, which forbid the buri.il of living persons and provided a penalty for further adherence to the awful rite. St. Louis Republic. Carlyle' Blaitntu. Thomas Carlyle once took Lord Houghton (Richard Milnes) to task in regard to the proposed pension for Lord Tennysou. "Richard Milnes," said Carlyle, taking bis pipe out of bis mouth, "when are ye gaun to get that pension for Alfred Tennyson?" Milnes tried to explain that there were difficulties in the way and that possibly his constituents, who knew nothing about Tennyson, would accuse him of being concerned in a job were he to succeed in getting the desired pension for the poet. "Richard Milnes," replied the sage, "on the day of Judgment, when the Lord askj ye why ye didna get that pension for Alfred Tennyson, it'll no do to lay the blame on your constituents. It;s you that'll be damned." A Careful Patient. A woman whose throat had troubled her for a long time, says a writer in the Philadelphia Ledger, grew impatient at the slow progress she was making and made complaint to her doctor, who said: "Madam, I can never cure you of this throat trouble unless you stop talking and give your throat a complete rest." "But, doctor," objected bis patient, "I'm very careful what I say. I never use harsh language or anrthing of that kind.' . What Xoah Did. The story is told of a congressman that he once declared in an address to the house, "As Daniel Webster says in his dictionary." "It was Noah who wrote the dictionary, whispered a colleague who sat at the next desk. "Noah nothing," replied the speaker. "Noah built the ark." ' Doable. "Apparently yoa don't admire Mis Streech." "No. I don't like her airs." "What airsT "Those she sings and thosa shs waars.' Exchagfr

BERLIN BEER HALLS. Where- One Must Display Great Formality and Preeiseness. Berlin is organized for eating and drinking, and so are the Berliner organized for it Scattered ail over the city are enormous places where food is served, wine halls where only wines are served and beer halls which deal in beer alone, some of them most respectable and some not so impeccable, it is the rule that it is perfectly proper to take your mother or your wife or your sister to a beer hall or a wino hall that is frequented by the officers of the army. They go only to the proper ones publicly. The etiquette of these places Is most formal. If the hall is crowded and tables are scarce, before you sit dewn you draw your beels together and make a military bow to everybody sitting at the table you select; then also yon raise your glass or stein to those at the table when your refreshment is served. On leaving you bow all around again, or the other people at the table bow it they leave before you do. The American way of asking the others at the table for permission to sit down is not ceremonious enough for the Germans.

wno are me most rorma uy po.ue peo-; pie in the world. Samuel G. Blythe in 1 pie Everybody's Magazine. A The Story FAMILY MIX. as It Is Recorded on the Tombstones. In the early part of the last century there lived In an old New England town a Mr. Church, who. In the course of his pilgrimage through this vale of tears, was bereft of four wives, all of whom were buried in the same lot. In his old age It became necessary to remove the bodies to a new cemetery. This melancholy task the much bereaved widower undertook himself, but in the process the bones of the lamented quartet became hopelessly mixed. Priding himself on possession of a New England conscience, Mr. Church would not, under the painful circumstances, permit the use of the original headstones, but procured new ones, one of which bore the following Inscription: "Here lies Hannah Church and probably a portion of Emily." Another: "Sacred to the memory of Emily Church, who seems to be mixed with Matilda." Then followed these) lines: Stranger, pause and drop a tear. For Emily Church lies burled here. Mixed in some perplexing manner With Mary. Matilda and probably Hannah. Philadelphia Ledger. The Star Arcturus. It is probable that the star Arcturns Is one of the six greatest of all the 1 stars In the sky. Notwithstanding Its' brightness, it Is so far away from nst that It Is not displaced In position In the slightest measurable degree, as we change our position 136,000,000 miles In our annual journey around ! tbe sun. Could we be placed midway ' between Arcturus and our sun we would receive thousands of times mors light and beat from tbe star than from j our sun. and this notwithstanding that , tbe star's radiation Is smothered by a dense blanket of metallic vapors. la spite of its Immense distance the star, is drifting slowly in a south westward direction over the face of tbe sky, Iti motion changing its apparent position by an amount equal to the diametei of the moon In tbe course of about 1,000 years. So great an apparent motion must indicate an enormous relocl ty In space. New York Press. Peppermint and Tobaoco. If you have a boy who has begua smoking too early and whom 70a wish to cure of the habit, feed him peppermints. Dr. O. Clayton Jones of Silverton, England, writing in tbe London Lancet, is authority for this simple cure. Dr. Jones writes: "To break the smoking habit in a youth there Is nothing better than peppermint drops. He cannot smoke with a 'bullseye la bis mouth, and even for some time after it is dissolved tobacco will not blend kindly with the taste that remains. Socially the cure may seem worse than the disease, but from a medical point of view the sucking of peppermints Is far less hurtful. A common 'bullseye' will prevent smoking for nearly an hour, so the amount of sweets used need not be great." His Discharge. A touching instance of the humot which never deserts a true Irishman even In his worst troubles Is recorded. A soldier was seen in the trenchee holding his hands above the earth works. His captain asked: "What are you doing that for, Pat?" He replied, with a grin, as he worked his fingers: "I'm feeling for a furlough, sir." Just then a rifle ball struck bis arm Just below the wrist. Then a queer ex pression of pain and humor passed over his face as he exclaimed: "And faith it's a discharge." Lon don Answers. So There Is. know you intended "I didn't move." "We don't" "But your wife told me 6he was oui looking at houses all day yesterday." "Well, that's true enough, but don'1 you know there is a vast difference be tween looking 'at' houses and looking 'for, houses?" Not Very Consoling. Humorist The editor makes fun o: my jokes. Spacer Well, I don't se that you have any kick coming. That'i more than you are able to do. Chicagc News. He that blows upon dust fills hil eyes with It Danish Proverb. GARDENER COUNT N0WA BENEDICT Repeals Ceremony to Insure Wife an Inheritance. New York, July 11. Hans Peter InfSfaua, who taye he is a Danish

Count, but whose present occupation is gardening for the department of parks, obtained a license to marry Nicoline C. Frick, a housekeeper at West Farms Road and Castle Hill avenue, the Bronx. The Count, who is seventy-two years old and lives at No. 461 East One-hundred-thirty-fifth street, said that he married Frick, who is forty, the Countess of Ingerslau, but he was not married under his full name and will now repeat the ceremony to assure his wife inheritance of a $50,000 estate in Denmark.

HOW LINCOLN CLIMBED. A Usf, Har4 Path Reach a Ooafl Fee fare the lmr Coart. The lawyer who works his way up from a five dollar fee in a suit before a justice of the peace to a f5,000 fee before the supreme conrt of his state has a long a ad hard path to climb. Lincoln climbed this path for twenty-five years, with Industry, perseverance, patienceabove all, with that self control and keen sense of right and wrong which always clearly traced tbe dividing line between his dutv to his client and his 8oo n,s fect .,.,-wi hi th frankness of statement assured him the confidence of Judge and jnry in every argument. His habit of fully admitting the weak points in his case gained him their close attention to his strong ones, and when clients brought him auestlonable cases his advice was always not to bring suit. "Yes." he once said to a man who offered him such a case; "there Is no reasonable doubt that I can gain your case for you. I can set a whole neighborhood at loggerheads; I can distress a widowed mother and her six fatherless children and thereby gain for you $600, which rightfully belongs. It appears to me, as much to them as it does to you. I shall net take your case, but I will give you a little advice for nothing. You seem a sprightly, energetic man. I would advise you to try your hand at making $600 in some other way." He would have nothing to do with the "tricks" of the profession, though he met these readily enough when practiced by others. He never knowingly undertook a case in which Justice was en the side of his opponent That same inconvenient honesty which prompted him in his storekeeping days to close the shop and go in search of a woman he had innocently defrauded of a few ounces of tea while weighing out her groceries made it impossible) for him to do his best with a poor case. "Swett," he once exclaimed, turning suddenly te his associate, "the man is guilty. You defend him; I can't," and gave up his share of a large fee. Helen Nicolay In St. Nicholas. STAGE EPIGRAMS. The theater Is the chssteaer of life. Euripides. An actor Is a public instructor. Euripides. Tbe theater la the mirror of lifeSophocles. Actors are the only honest hypo crites. Haslftt. The theater la the devil's own territory. Edward Allyn. The stage represents fiction as if It were fact. Befterton. The stage is the field for the orator as well as the comedian. Rosclus. A passion for dramatic art is inherent in tbe nature of man. Edwin Forrest. Tbe drama Is tbe most refined pleasure of a polished people. Dion Bouclcault. It Is in drama where poetry attains Its loftiest flight Don Luis I. of Portugal. The stage Is more powerful than tba platform, the press or the pulpitAnna Dickinson. A comedy is like a cigar; if good, every one wants a box; if bad, no amount of puffing will make it draw. Henry James Byron. Some Blsr Oyster. The usual size of the shell of an oyster is three to five inches, but away back in tertiary times there were oysters in California that had shells thirteen Inches long and seven or eight inches wide. The animal and shell doubtless weighed fifteen or twenty pounds, since the shells were five inches thick. These oysters have long been extinct, but their fossil shells are abundant. If the oyster farmer could produce individuals of such enormous siss now and the flavor were good in proportion to its size we would be most fortunate. In that case a single oyster would be enough for one stew at the church festival. St. Nicholas. The First Skate. As late as the sixteenth century skates in England were very primitive, for we learn that the London apprentices used to tie bones to their feet and under their heels. Writing in 1C61, Evelyn tpeaks of "the strange and wonderful dexterity of the sliders" in St. James' park, "performed before their majesties by divers gentlemen and others with scbeets, after the manner of the Hollanders, with what swiftnesse they pass, how suddainly they stop in full carriage upon tbe ice." An Eakiaaa Da I at r. The greatest treat known to the Eskimo boy or girl is a lump of sugar. Perhaps you think there is nothing very strange in that. Tbe strange part Is the very funny way they have of eating the sagar. They roll the sweet morsel in a piece of tobacco leaf. This they place in their cheek and, smacking their lips delightedly, bold it there until it Is dissolved. This dainty is called "laloop" and is the choicest morsel known to tbe little Eskimo stomach. DiaTereat Service. "Yes. sir," said the soldierly lookilf man. "I have spent fifteen years of my life ia the service of my country. "So have I." volunteered the lew browed Individ nil, offering his hand. "What were you In for?" Houston Post Tkt Way at It, The Missus Mary Aan, pleas explain to me how it Is that I saw you kissing a young man in the kitchen last night. The Maid Sure, I dunno how It is, ma'am, onless yex were lookin through 12m keyhole. Cleveland Lead.

TEST OFJHE RING Court Takes Woman's Hand to See If Lovers' Circlet Can Be Removed. LOVING SWAIN FREED.

"Bill" Phillips, in the city court yesterday afternoon, was exonerated of the charge of assault and battery on his sweetheart. Mrs. Myrtle Martin, u married woman who is not living with her husband, just because he had given her a ring which fit her finger so snugly that no one could jerk it off. This was proven. Attorney H. U. Johnson, representing Phillips, tried to take the ring off Mrs. Martin's finger and failed. Judge Converse then descended from his throne and made a similar attempt, but his efforts also met with failure. After the "test of the ring" thow's that for a title for a yellow-back novel) Attorney Johnson arose triumphantly to his feet and demanded that his client be exonerated. "Foiled again." hissed Prosecutor Jessup. "Your honor has heard the evidence given by Mrs. Martin that Phillips met her in a dark alley last Tuesday night, grabbed her and, after tearing from a chain, a watch he had given her, proceeded to pull this ring, which he had also given her, from her finger. I ask your Honor if it was possible for him to pull that ring off? I tried to do so and failed. You tried to do 60 and failed. Supposing this defendant's life depended upon the question, would you rule that it was possible for him to pull the ring off her finger? I suppose he has held hands with Mrs. Martin at least a thousand times, so it is foolish to believe that he attempted to take ring off her finger, as he probably knew how tight it fitted." This in part was the argument made by Mr. Johnson. After the hearing or the case Prosecutor Jessup remarked to Chief Bailey: "You remerber that I told you that ring business would be powerful evidence for the defense If Mr. Johnson got next to it? Speculation Is now rife as to whether some secret agent for the defense overheard Prosecutor jessup make this remark, then tipped Mr. Johnson off about the tight fitting ring. Judge Convrse states that in the future he hopes that no more lovers' quarrels will be brought before him. The case which was given an airing in court yesterday grew out of the fact that Myrtle Martin threw Willie Phillips into the discard and for revenge he seized upon her and in a somewhat strenuous manner, proceeded to collect valuables tie had bestowed upon her prior to the time when her affection for him became refrigerated. KING EDWARD DEAF English Monarch Becomes Unable to Hea: "Soft Wom an's Beautiful Whisper MUST CONSULT SPECIALIST London, July 11. King Edward Is said to be in very low spirits because of his ever increasing deafness. For a long time he has been suffering from a catarrhal affection of the throat and it is thought that his ear trouble is indirectly due to this. Three months ago no one but the king himself knew anything of his trouble because everybody at court speaks in a very loud voice owing to the queen's infirmity, but since King Edward returned from Biarritz it was noticed that he was almost unable to hear anything said in an ordinary tone of voice. The evening before he sailed for Reval to meet the czar, he said to his intimate friend Lady de Grey thai "the softest whisper of a beautiful woman no longer reached his ears," and she noticed that it was evident he was not joking, although he smiled. It is now said that his majesty will have to call in a famous German specialist or go abroad for treatment No Cruel Piano Perf orminctl. "Every big city has some Individual characteristic that commends it" said a retired New York business man who Is a confirmed glob trotter. "Now, there is Berlin, which long ago won my hesrt by its freedom from noises. It is the quietest of sll the big towns of the world. I am not sure but I'll settle down there to live out the balance of my days for this very reason. They go so far at the German capital as to regulate the hours in which piano playing will be tolerated. It must not start early in tbe morning or be kept up late at night else a policeman will know the reason why. Banging on the piano so as to produce an inharmonious racket is not permissible at any time. This may seem a bit tyrannical, but there are thousands of suffering Americans who would like some such ordinance in this country."

The Destructive FiRE ol Friday nlgbt did not cripple tne . BATHING PLACE in tne least. In fact It has been kept, running during tne tire. Further Improvements will be made, and tbe way from Glen Miller Park to tbe ponds will be Illuminated. FIVE MINUTES WALK FROM GLEN MILLER PARK.

Amusements

Cutter Stock Company. The popularity of The Cutter Stock company seems to be of the unwaning sort, inasmuch as the company is now on its 97th successful week, playing to audiences that are increasing in site rather than diminishing. In the cities where this organisation has been playing, many people have been unable to gain admittance and W C j-v 1 v . --,-'' : MI8S MYRTLE BIGDEN, Leading Lady. the same conditions may prevail during their engagement here at the Gennett theatre commencing with Monday evening July 20 on which occasion "For Home and Honor." a sensational society drama, will be produced. During the intermission vaudeville acts will be introduced. The prices are popular with ladies free tickets the opening night only. The advance sale of seats will be open at the Westcott Pharmacy at 9 a. m. Friday. BLAMES THE TURKS Catholic Priest Declares That They Incited the Persians To Do Murder. MOUNTAINEERS MERCILESS Chicago, July 11. The Turks are blamed for tbe bloody Persian riots by a Catholic Persian priest. Rev. reter Elyah, who has Just com from Persia to minister to the 100 Catholic of his 600 countrymen In this cosmopolitlan city, because they couldn't be understood by sny of the Catholio priests in the city. All Catholic Persians In the United States will be his parishioners but of a different sect " than the Persian Mohammedans and of the same sect as the Turks," he said. "Through them the Turkish ' government has caused the killing of Persians, whatever their faith may be. ' The Kurds are mountaineers, wild and trained to arms. They have no mercy. They are terrible. I can think of nothing but my poor city, surrounded by those savages. The Persian government always has treated the Catholic Persians as well as any other citizens. Why should they not? We have been good Catholics and good Persians for nineteen centuries and are on good 1 terms with our Mohammedan fellow citizens." Did you ever stop to think of tbe number of cigars that have been on the market In the last ten years and how many of these you never see any more? The Pathfinder Is the only one you can find In the cigar case today that has been selling continuously for 30 years. Honor: Order Gold Medal Hour next time. Felicitt. "M Theatorium ? 620 Main 8t. J. H. Broomhall, Mgr. Tbe Greatest Ever! Damon and Pythias In two parts Monday and Tuesday first part, Wednesday and Thursday second part.

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