The Syracuse Journal, Volume 6, Number 11, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 10 July 1913 — Page 2

The Syracuse Journal GEO. O. SNYDER, Publisher. Syracuse. ... Indiana. SERVIA DEGUWES ’ WAR ON BULGARS Declaration of Hostilities Issued Against Former Ally. GREAT BATTLE IS RAGING Heavy Casualties Are Reported Fifty Miles South of Uskub—Bulgarian Victory Announced at Belgrade —Towns Are Burned. Uskub, July 4.—Servia formally declared war against Bulgaria. Proclamation was issued by King Peter of Servia declaring Servia and Bulgaria to be in a state of war. Great Battle is Raging. Vienna, July 4. —A great battle between Bulgarian and Servian troops is being fought at Veles, 50 miles southeast of Uskub. Heavy casualties are reported. A Bulgarian army had begun to march upon Salonika. King Constantine is rallying an army to defend the city.’ A Greek fleet is being concentrated in the Salonika harbor to bombard the Bulgarians if they get within artillery range. Salonika, July 4.—According to a current report, the Bulgarians have burned the town of Guevgheli and the villages of Stoyacoti, Soho and Berovo, massacreing old men, women and children. Bring in 3,000 Wounded.Geneva, Switzerland; July 4. —The casualties during the fighting in Macedonia between the Servians and Bulgarians and the Greeks and Bulgarians have been much heavier than the published figures would indicate, according to the Servian Red Cross society. The society telegraphed to the Swiss Red Cross society asking it to send doctors and nurses to the scene of hostilities. The message stated that 3,000 wounded had been already brought from the front and that fighting continued. JAILED MAN SUES MAYOR Memphis Executive Accused of Falsely imprisoning Contractor Who Failed to Give Testimony. Memphis, Tenn., July 4.—Mayor E. j H. Crum£ was sued for SIOO,OOO by O. A. Keys, a contractor, who claims in the bill that he'was falsely imprisoned by Crump a week ago, following graft charges made by Keys against City i Engineer J. H. Weatherford. Keys refused to gtve testimony before Crump and a committee he appointed to investigate, charging that Crump was getting ready to whitewash Weatherford. Crump claimed that under a state law the city commission of the city of Memphis could constitute itself a court and demand testimony or send the accused to jail. Keys’ sentence followed. He remained in jail half an hour and was released by orders from Crump. < I NO VERDICT IN I. W. W. CASE — Jurors Declare They Cannot Agree in Case of Girl Accused of Rioting. Paterson, N. J., July 4.—After more ! than twenty-eight hours of superheat- ' ed discussion, the jurors of the Industrial Workers of the World, charged with inciting to riot, declared they could not agree, and were discharged. Patrick Quinlan, another leader of the I. W. W. convicted on his second trial for inciting to riot, was sentenced to imprisonment of not less than two or more than seven years, and to pay SIOO fine. 3,000 FLEE BIG EARTHQUAKE Two Small Towns in Mexico Destroyed and Inhabitants Live in Tents. Douglas, Ariz., July 4.—Residents of Guasabas and Granados, towns in Sonora, Mexico, are living in a tent city. The two towns, 120 miles below the border at this point, have been destroyed by earthquake shocks occurring at intervals since May 17. The adobe buildings in neighboring towns were razed. It is estimated that 3,000 persons are living in tents. The earthquake caused boulders to roll down the hillsides. Helen Keller to Los Angeles. Los Angeles, Ju’ 4. —Helen Keller, the deaf and blin< wonder, is coming to Los Angeles to ipeak to the school children. Arrangements were made for her visit by the city teachers’ club. Fourteen-Year-Old Boy Drowned. Crawfordsville, Ind., July 5. —Nevine Stockton, 14, was drowned in Walnut creek here yesterday, where he was wading, when he stepped into a deep hole. Knight Killed. Columbus, 0., July 5. —Harry C. Knight, of Indianapolis, was almost instantly killed, and his mechanician, Milton McCallis, of Houston, Texas, was fatally injured here yesterday afternoon when Knight’s car blew a right rear tire and turned turtle. Youthful Hunter Slays His Father. Brazil, Ind., July s.—Albert Harrison, 28, of Knightsvllle, was shot and probably fatally wounded when his ten-year-old son mistook him for a squirrel while hunting. Destroys 25,000 Gallons of Oil. South Bend, Ind., July 25.—Nearly 25 000 gallons, of oil valued between $20,000 and $25,006 were destroyed along with tanks and sheds Thursday afternoon at the South Bend Oil Com pany, 1512 South Lafayette street, yyhen fire broke out.

GOVERNOR SULZER MOJO™ Daugghter of Former Attorney Files Breach of Promise Suit. HAS LOVE NOTES, SHE SAYS Miss Mignon Hopkins Declares She Expected to Be Bride When New Executive of New York Married in Atlantic City. j Philadelphia, July 3—Miss Mignon Hopkins, the daughter\of a Brooklyn attorney, now dead, entered suit In this city Tuesday against Gov. William Sulzer of New York for breach of promise. Miss Hopkins, who is one of three ■ attractive sisters, stipulates the date of her engagement to the governor, and in her claim that that she has endearing letters from him to show that he intended to make her his bride and that he jilted her and married a Philadelphia woman in Atlantic City on January 8, 1908. Miss Hopkins is a blonde of about twenty-eight. Why she waited until this time to bring the action was not made known ' by either Mr. Patterson or C. Stuart Patterson, Jr., his nephew, who is as- ' sociated with him in the case. The elder attorney was absent from the city all afternoon after he obtained ; the papers in the case from Judge Ferguson in the court of common pleas No. 3. He applied for a capias for the arrest of the governor, but the court would not issue this as the defendant In the cose is a non-resident of Pennsylvania. In the affidavit which Miss Hopkins made and which Mr. Patterson took oath’ to the charges recite that “one William Sulzer of New York broke a contract of engagement with Mignon Hopkins made' in New York on September 15, 1903. “At this time the deponent swears that the aforesaid William Sulzer became engaged to her and that he asked her to keep it secret until he was to marry her, as for him to do so at that time would have injured his political career. “From time to time the aforesaid deponent swears tliat she lived with the aforesaid William Sulzer for a brief period in New, York city and other places and that the aforesaid William Sulzer introduced her as his wife, to his acquaintances. “The aforesaid deponent Mignon Hopkins, further swears that she continued these relations with William Sulzer until November 7, 1907, when by reason of illness of her sister in Kos ton, she left him to visit that city and that while there she received from him several endearing letters which frequently referred -to his promise to wed her.” Albany, N. Y., July 3.—“ Nothing to it. Merely another story started by my enemies.” This was Governor Sulzer’s only reply when questioned concerning the suit brought against him by Miss Mignon Hopkins of Philadelphia. GOMPERS REPORT UPON ‘PLOT.’ Morrison Said Labor Chiefs Knew of Conspiracy in 1907. Washington, July 2.—Frank Morrison, secretary of the American Federation of Labor, said that President Samuel Gompers of that organization and its other high ranking officials were fully aware in the latter part of 1907 that the National Association of Manufacturers, through an agent, w-as trying through a plot to discredit Gompers, as alleged in the Mulhall expose. Gompers was not aware that the purpose of the plot was to embarrass him, but was convinced the motive was ulterior, and arranged to have VicePresident Duncan and other officials of the federation present during conference® which were held with Broughton Brandenburg in New York city. MILITANTS PLAN TO SLAY. Suffiagettes Will Avenge Deaths of Hunger Strikers. London, July 2. —The Daily Express announces the discovery of a suffraget murder plot, -which, it declares, has hitherto been known only in the inner circles of the home office. It is a scheme of a small and dangerous section of the suffragets to avenge the death of any militant, through selfinflicted starvation, upon members of the cabinet The paper says: “Should one of these militants die while under sentence, the life of no member of the cabinet would be safe, and the life of the prime minister would be in the greatest jeopardy.” Boy Delivers Wilson Note. Chicago, July 1. —President Wilson’s message to Mayor Carter H. Harrison, formally opening the Olympic games, was delivered at Grant park by Scout Lauron Chenaweth. 101 Dead From Heat. Chicago, July 3.—Sixteen additonal deaths from the excessive heat, as reported by the coroner, brought the total to 101 In the list of heat victims were many infants, particularly of the tenement districts. Women Suicide to Thwart Rebels. Mexico City, July 3. —Forty women residents, most of them of the better class, have committed suicide in the eity of Durango. The women became desperate as the result of their treatment by rebels. Former Head of Peace Union Dies. Philadelphia, July I.—Alfred H. Lowe, 84 years old, a prominent manufacturer in this city and for half a century the president of the Universal Peace union, died at his home here, after a short Illness. Bryan Acts on Hemet Affaik Washington, July I.—Bryan notified Viscount Chinda of his action in asking the department of justice to make prompt and searching Inquiry into the expulsion of Corean laborers from Hemet, Cal.

WALTER ELDER s Walter Elder was elected to congress last fall In the Fifth district of Louisiana without opposition, and of course is a Democrat. He is a lawyer, married, and is but little more than thirty years old. TWELVE YOUTHS ARE HURLED TO DEATH Boys Die When Bridge Falls Near Lawrence, Mass. —Four Sisters Die in River. Lawrence, Mass., July 2.—Twelve boys under ten years of age were drowned when a wooden bridge connecting the municipal bathhouse with the bank of the Merrimac river collapsed. It Is possible that niore were drowned. The boys, ranging from nine to fifteen years, were waiting for the bathhouse keeper to open the door. No one knows how many there were in the party, but it is thought that forty is a conservative estimate. The boys were jumping up and down as they shouted for admission, when the supports sank and the walk extension dropped like a trap door. There is a swift current at this point, drawn by the falls, a quarter of a mile below. Many of the boys could not swim. Witnesses on the river bank say that all disappeared in a flash, but a moment later there was a struggling mass oh the surface. The stronger ones, who could swim, struck out bravely for the boathouse and a score saved themselves. Their cries brought aid and several others were pulled ashore. Five unconscious forms were brought from the water and two of these were finally resuscitated. Efforts to restore the others were futile. It was thought at first that only three drowned and It was not until two hours later that the probable loss of life was realized. A boy in the crowd of distracted persons on shore, missing his chum, set up a cry: “I don’t see Rollie. He must be drowned.** Boats and grappling irons were then brought and the river bed was dragged. When the work ceased late at night 12 bodies had been recovered. IMPORTS SET NEW RECORD. Pqrt of New York Hits Billion Mark, With Domestic Exports Ahead. New York, July 2.—Customs house merchandise imports at this port for the fiscal year aggregated $1,054,364,643. This is a new' high record. Customs officials say soundness in general business conditions is reflected in the billion dollar mark, because a reduction had been expected in anticipation of tariff revision. The figures for the previous twelve months, ending June 30, 1912, were $995,132,046. During the current year domestic exports amounted to $911,560,128, also a new high record. Last year the total was $789,425,632. > Foreign exports amounted to $17,056,922 this year, against $15,469,675 for 1912. CAPITAL SUNDAY NOW “DRY." New Law Bars Even Beer at Hotels and Clubs on Sabbath Day. Washington, July 3.—Absolutely “dry” Sundays are provided for and many novel restrictions are Imposed in the drastic excise law for the national capital, which went into effect this week. Hotel guests henceforth may not have cocktails, highballs or a bottle of beer or wine even with meals on the Sabbath day, nor may liquors be served in clubs to the members thereof. There is a question whether persons entertaining in their homes on Sunday may serve wine at table. The new excise commission will be called upon to pass on this point, which is likely to reach the courts. French Beat ‘Yankees’ at Golf. La Boulie, France, July 3. —France won the international golf match between teams of professionals representing France and the United States. The Frenchmen beat the Americans in all of the four single matches. Count Rail Strike Vote. New York, July 3.—Eastern railroads are confronted with another serious dispute that may demoralize traffic. The countipg of the strike vote of 100,000 trainmen on 45 roads was begun here on Tuesday. Postpone Money Bill Action. Washington, July 2.—The Democratic members of the house banking Ing and currency committee postponed action on the administration currency bill. The members declared that they wanted time to study the question. John D.’a Old Homs Hospital. Cleveland, O.» July 2.—The historic old mansion home of John D. Rockefeller has been transformed from a beautiful family residence into a semipublic institution for the redemption of alcoholic victim*.

HEROES OE GRAY LAUD THE BLUE Confederate in Speech Gives Credit of War to Yankees. PICKETTS SURVIVORS UNITE Veterans of Famous Charge Retread Ground Where Once They Marched in Step With Death —Heat Causes Two Fatalities. —. Gettysburg, Pa., July 3. —While the sun poured down a terrific blast of heat, the armies of the north and south began the formal exercises of the semi-centennial of Gettysburg Tuesday. Veterans to the number of 15,000 filed into the big tent set apart for the exercises, sat in the haze of heat for two hours and shook the camp with theft- cheers when the speakers made reference to a reunited nation. Every seat under the canvas was taken long before Secretary of War Garrison and Governor Tener, the orators of the day, arrived. Although the men in gray were far outnumbered by those in blue, there were possibly a thousand southerners through the amphitheater, and what they lacked in numbers-they made up in lung power. When Governor Tener finished his speech Gen. Bennett H. Young, com-mander-in-chief of the United Confederate Veterans, rose slowly and bowed to him “I can give you something that no one else can give you,” he said. “We will now give you the rebel yell.” . Nine famous Confederate generals and a thousand veterans of the south gave it so loudly that it was heard far back in the camp toward Gettysburg. When General Young stepped forward to deliver his address he was greted with wild enthusiasm, the’ Union veterans, led by Commander-in-Chief Beers, giving him three lusty cheers and a “tiger.” He took as his keynote the conviction of each side in the great struggle that it fought for a principle, which it believed was the truth. One of his opening statements was that the northern soldiers deserved more credit than the southerners for the promulgation and successful realization of the present great reunion, which he characterized as the greatest movement of its kind in the world. His speech captured the audience, and he was overwhelmed by handshakes. Before the morning exercises began and after the veterans quartered in the big tent made their slim toilets, the reunions of regiments and companies and squadrons began. Confederates who were in Pickett’s charge took keen delight in marching with fife and drum to Spangler’s woods, where the columns of Pickett formed on July 3, 1863, to begin the charge that marked tlfe high tide of the lost cause. The first death of a veteran in the town of Gettysburg occurred. The victim was J. D. Albert of Washington, about seventy years old. He Is said to have been prominently connected with the United States pension office. Death was due to a stroke of paralysis. The fifth death reported fn camp was that of Christopher Yates, aged seventy, a veteran from Latrobe, Pa., who died as a result of heat prostration. WEDDING PARTY IS STRICKEN. Guests Are Taken Seriously 111 Following Feast. Upper Sandusky, €>., July 2.—-Twen-ty-two people were poisoned at the wedding of Charles P. Troup and Miss Nettie Swihart at the home of the bride in Pitt township, several of whom nearly died, the bride being the most critically ill. The couple were married at the M. E. church at Harpster, then with 24 guests went to the bride’s home for wedding dinner. Chicken salad was served with pimento dressing, which was purchased in canned form. All but two were taken very ill, the lawn where the dinner was served being covered with convulsed, writhing victims. Doctors worked until midnight before all were out of danger. STATE SENATOR IS GUILTY. West Virginian Convicted of Accepting Bribe. Webster Springs, W. Va., July 3. — State Senator Smith was convicted of bribery in connection w'ith accepting $2,200 to vote for Col. William Seymour Edwards as a candidate for the Upited States senate. Senator Smith and his wife were overcome when the verdict was announced. Smith wrs taken into custody. The penalty is from five to ten years penitentiary. Six members of the lower house of the legislature, charged with a similar offense, are under indictment and awaiting trial. 136,000 to German Army. Berlin, July 2.—The German government procured from the imperial parliament the entire army increase it had demanded, Including the six new cavalry regiments totaling 136,000 men. Twenty-Two More Dead From Heat Chicago, July 2.—Thirty-two deaths was the toll of the heat wave. - The torrid weather that is gripping Chicago promised to break all previous records. The temperature reached the 100 mark. ■ I Brother of Solon a Suicide. Kansas City, Mo., July 1. —George Townsend, the Chicago railway promoter and brother of Congressman Edward Townsend of New Jersey, committed suicide by throwing himself into the Missouri river at Kansas City. Offers New Skin for Explosion Victims. Buffalo, N- Y„ July I.—Enough people have volunteered skin to supply all that will be needed for grafting on the victim* of the Husted elevator explosion. Seventy volunteers, including women, are on the list

WILLIS J. HOLING V Ir y Ji w' "''■•"•'al' A retired general of the United States army and an ardent “Bull Mooser,” Willis J. Hullng now represents the Twenty-eighth district of Pennsylvania In congress. He has been an officer of the national guard for many years and at the outbreak of the Spanish-American war he went to the front wltl) his regiment. He was promoted to the rank of a brigadier general for gallantry in action. FEDERAL COURT APPROVES RAILWAY MERGER PLAN B. & O. Stock Will Be Exchanged for -That of Southern Pacific, Beginning November t, 1913. St. Paul, Minn., July 2. —The federal court here Monday approved the plan agreed upon by Attorney General Mcßeynolds and attorneys for the Union-Pacific railroad, and the famous Union-Southern Pacific merger. The decree will become effective with its filing in the federal court at Salt Lake City, Utah, which probably will take place next Wednesday or Thursday. With the handing down of the final decree years of litigation came to an end, the first suit of the government to dissolve the merger having been filed at Salt Lake City in 1908. Shortly before four o’clock Judge Sanborn, who presided, called in the attorneys and announced that the court to enter a final decree, approving the plan as presented by the attorney general and the road’s counsel, with practically but one exception. This exception was the, naming of Louis C. Krauthoffi of New York city as a commissioner of the court to see that the letter and spirit of the plan is carried out. The court also directed him to report to it from time to time. In brief the plan, which had the approval of President Wilson, presented by the attorney general and counsel for the road and approved by the court, provides that the Union Pacific shall exchange $38,000,000 of its $126,000,000 holdings in the Southern Pacific for the Pennsylvania railroad’s entire holdings in the Baltimore & Ohio, varutally an equal amount; that the remaining $88,000,000 shall be sold to the general public through the Central Trust company of New York; that no present stockholders in the Union Pacific, continuing as such, may buy any of the Southern Pacific stock so sold; that the transaction shall begin November 1, 1913, and if not completed by January 1, 1916, the court should direct the disposition of any Southern Pacific remaining unsold. STILLWELL READY TO CONFESS Former New York Senator Accuses Members of Legislature. New York, July 3. —Former State Senator Stephen J. Stilwell, who was convicted on May 20 •of soliciting a bribe of $3,500 from George H. Kendall, president of the New York Bank Note company and is in the Tombs awaiting transportation to Sing Sing to serve a sentence from four to eight years’ imprisonment, sent word to the district attorney that he was prepared to make a complete confession of bribery and corruption in the state legislature, involving not only himself but others In the senate and assembly. Mr. Whitman sent word back to Stilwell that he would be willing to listen to any story worth while. Two-Cent Rate Is In Effect. Kansas City, Mo.; July 3.—The twocent passenger rate became effective in Missouri on the Chicago & Alton, the Burlington and the Wabash railroads at one minute past midnight. The Missouri Pacific and the Rock Island also will make a two-cent rate between Kansas City and St. Louis at the same time to meet this reduction. At 12:01 the morning of July 4 the two-cent rate became effective. Lee O’Neil Browne Weds. Ottawa, 111., July 3.—Representative Lee O’Neil Browtie and Miss Nellie Riordan left for Chicago Monday. It is supposed by relatives the marriage took place shortly following the issuance of the license. Saves 400 Men From Death. Duquoln, 111., July 3.—Four hundred miners were rescued from the burning Paradise coal mine, a mile and a half east of this place, on Tuesday, through the heroism of Charles Matthis, chief engineer. Publishers Not Guilty. New York, July 2.—Frank Orff and John F. B. Atkin, president and counsel, respectively, of the ColumbianSterling Publishing company, were acquitted at the court’s direction on the charge of using the malls to defraud. Auto Crash Kills Man. Grand Rapids, Mich., July 2^—Turning two complete somersaults at a curve near North Park, three mile* from here, a taxicab caused the deeth of Cecil Powell, thirty-five, Grant Rapids, and seriously hurt six other*.

MEAD’S HEADQUARTERS AT GETTYSBURG <• ;" - \ «./ ” ... - . 7

VETERANS HEAR ’ THE PRESIDENT Mr. Wilson Delivers Address at Gettysburg Celebration. DRAWS LESSON FROM BATTLE . ' — Declares Great Army of the People Must Fight Peacefully to Perfect the Nation All Love. Gettysburg, fa., July 4.—National day in the semi-centennial celebration of the Battle of Gettysburg was made especially notable by an address delivered by President'Woodrow Wilson. In his audience were many thousands of the veterans who fought in the great battle, as well as a great throng of other visitors. The president’s address follows: Friends and Fellow Citizens: I need not tell you what the battle of Gettysburg meant. These gallant men in blue and gray sit all about us here. Many of them met here upon this ground in grim and deadly struggle. Upon these famous fields and hillsides their comrades died about them. In their presence it were an impertinence to discourse upon how the battle went, how it ended, what it signified! But 50 years have gone by since then and I crave the privilege of speaking to you for a few minutes of what those 50 years have meant. What have they meant? They have meant peace and union and vigor, and the maturity and might pf a great nation. How wholesome and healing the peace has been! We have found one another again as brothers and comrades in arms, enemies no longer, generous friends rather, our battles long past, the quarrel forgotten—except that we shall not forget the splendid valor, the manly devotion of the men then arrayed against oae another, now grasping hands and smiling into each other’s eyes. How complete the union has become and how dear to all of us, how unquestioned, how benign and majestic, as state after state has been added to this great family of free men! How handsome the vigor, the maturity, the might of the great nation we love with undivided hearts; how' full of large and confident promise that a life will be wrought out that will crown Its strength with gracious justice and a happy welfare that will touch all alike with deep contentment! We are debtors to those 50 crowded years; they have made us heirs to a mighty heritage. Nation Not Finished. But do we deem the nation complete and finished? These venerable men crowding here to this famous field have set us a great example of devotion and utter sacrifice. They were willing to die that the people might live. But their task is done. Their day is turned into evening. They look to us to perfect what they.established. Their work is handed on to us, to be done in another way but not in another spirit. Our day is not over; it is upon us in full tide. Have affairs paused? Does the nation stand still? Is it what the 50 years have wrought since those days of battle finished, rounded out, and completed? Here is a great people, great with every force that has ever beaten in the life blood of mankind. And it is secure. There is no one within its borders, there is no power among the nations of the earth, to make it afraid. But has it yet squared itself with its own great standards set up at its birth, when it made jthat first noble, naive appeal to the moral judgment of mankind to take notice that a government had bow at last been established whicn was to serve men, not masters? It is secure in everything except the satisfaction that its life is right, adjusted to the uttermost to the standards of righteousness and humanity. The days of sacrifice and cleansing are not closed. We have harder things to do than were done in the heroic days of war, because harder to see Daredevil Photography. A naval photographer gets many duckings, and, after a time, takes them a* a matter of course. Being thrown into the sea isn’t considered by him at all a serious event. It is during battleship practice that he encounters grave dangers, for much of the work done at thia time is from the tops of the fighting masts, which are •t an elevation of 130 feet above the sea. During different practices I have taken my position in these masts la

clearly, requiring more vision, more calm balance of judgment, a more candid searching of the very springs of right. Tribute to Their Valor. Look around you upon the field of Gettysburg! Picture the array, the fierce heats, and agony of battle, column hurled against column, battery bellowing to battery! < Valor? Yes! Greater no man shall see In war; and self-sacrifice, and loss to ‘ the uttermost; the high recklessness of exalted devotion which does not count the cost. We are these tragic, epic things to know what it costs to make a nation—the blood and sacrifice of multitudes of unknown men lifted to a great stature in the view of all generations by knowing no limit, to their manly willingness to serve. In armies thus marshaled from the ranks of free men you will see, as it were, a nation embattled, the leaders and the led, and may know, if you will, how little except in form its action differs in days of peace from its action in days of war. May we break camp now and be at ease ? Are the forces that fight for the Nation dispersed, disbanded, gone to their homes forgetful of the common cause? Are our forces disorganized, without constituted leaders and the might of men consciously united because we contend, not with armies, but witii principalities and powers and wickedness in high places. Are we content to He still? Does our union mean sympathy, our peace content* ment, our vigor right action, our maturity self-comprehension and a clear confidence in choosing what we shall do? "War fitted us for action, and action never ceases. Our Laws the Orders of the Day. I have been chosen the leader ot the Nation. I cannot justify the choice by any qualities of my own. but so it has come about, and here I stand. Whom do I command? The ghostly hosts who fought upon these battlefields long ago and are gone? These gallant gentlemen stricken in years whose fighting days are over, their glory won? What are the orders for them, who rallies them? I have in my mind another host, whom these set free of civil strife in order that they might work out in days of peace and settled order, the life of a great nation. That host is the people them* selves, the great and the spiall, without class or difference of kind of race or origin; and undivided in interest, if we have but the vision to guide and direct them and order their lives aright in what we do. Our constitutions are their articles of enlistment. The orders of the day are the laws upon our statute books. What we strive for is their freedom, their right to lift themselves from day to day and behold the things they have hoped for, and so make way for still better days for, those whom they love who are to come after them. The recruits are the little children crowding in. The quartermaster’s stores aro in the mines and forests and fields. In the shops and factories. Every day something must be done to push the campaign forward; and it must be done by plan and with an eye to some great destiny. How shall we hold such thoughts in pur hearts and not be moved? I would not have you live even today wholly in the past, but would wish to stand with you in the light that streams upon us now out of that great day gone by. Here is the nation God has builded by our hands. What shall we do with it? Who stands ready to act again and always In the spirit of this day of reunion and hope and patriotic fervor? The day of our country’s lifd has but broadened into morning. Do not pqt uniforms by. Put the harness of the present on. Litt your eyes to the great tracts of life yefi to be conquered in the interest of righteous peace, of that prosperity which lies in a people’s heart* and outlasts all wars and errors of men. Come, let us be comrades and soldiers yet to serve our fellow men in quiet counsel, where the blare of trumpets is neither heard nor heeded and where the things are done which make blessed the nations of the world in peace and righteousness and lovs. The New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad has 22.716 stockholder*, of whom 10,102 are women. order to get detailed pictures. Once in these basket-llke tops, the question la how to stick. The gunfire photographs itself. I suppose you wonder what I mean, but it is just this: Every time the twelve-inch guns fire, the awful concussion they cause Invariably gives the snap to the shutter of the earner* and the exposure is made—Saint NichA olaa. The first university in the Germa* empire was at Prague, Bohemia 1348.