.-VOL XLT GRAHAM CHURCH DIRECTORY. BaptiaWV. Main Si.—J as. W. Rose. Pastor. Preaching services every first and Third Sundays at 11.00 a. m. and 7.30 p. n». Sunday School every Sunday at 9.4* a. m.—C. B. Irwin, Superin tendent. Graham Christian Church—N. Main Street—Rev. J. F. Truitt. Preaching services overy Sec ond and y Jfourth Sundays, at 11.00 a. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 10.00 a. m.—E. L. Henderson, Super intendent. New Providence Christian Church —North Main Street, near Depot- Rev. J. G. Truitt, Pastor. Preach ing every Second and Fourth Sun day nights at 8.00 o'clock. Sunday School every Sunday at 9.46 a. m.—J. A. Bajtliff, Superin tendent. Christian Endeavor Prayer Meet ing every Thursday night at 7.46. o'clock; Friends—North ol Graham Pub lic School—J .Robert Parker, Pas tor. Preaching every .Sunday at 11 a. m. and at 7.30 p. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 10.00 a. m.—James Crisco, Superin tendent x Methodist Bpiscopal, south—cor. Main and Maple St„ H. E. Myers Pastor. i Preaching every Sunday at 11.00 a. m. and at 7.30 p. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 9.45 a. m.—W. B. Green, Supt. . Methodist Protestant—College St., West of Graham Public School, Rev. O. B. Williams, Pastor. Preaching every First, Third and Fourth Sundays at 11.00 a. m. and - every First, Third, Fourth and Filth Sundays at 7.00 p. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 9.46 a. m.—J. S. Cook, Supt. Presbyterian—Wst Elm Street- Rev. T. M. McConnell, pastor. Sundfty School every Sunday at 9.46 a. m.—Lynn B. Williamson, Su perintendent. Presbyterian (Travora Chapel)- J. W. Clegg, pastor. Preaching every Second and Fourth Sundays at 7.30 d. m. Sunday School every Sunday at S.3o'p, m.—J. Harvey White, Su perintendent, Oneida—Sunday Bchool every Sunday at 8.30 p. m.—J. V. Pome roy, Superintendent. PROFESSIONAL CARDS E. C. DERBY Civil Engineer. GRAHAM, N.C.. Nallossl Bank of Alamance BTtfl. BURLINGTON, N. C, BOOK 111 st National Bade BatMlfsfl. 'Phone 470 JOHN J. HENDERSON Attorney-at-Law GRAHAM, N. C. Office over National Bank of Alamance J, S- C OOIC, Attorney-at- Law, ■i HAH AM, N. C. Offloe Patterson Building Beoood Pteor. UK. WILLS.Lip,JK. . . DENTIST . . . •raham - ■ - . North Carolina OFFICE IN EMMONS BUILDINI- A COB A. LOSS. J. ELMKB LONG LONG A LONG, * rtomeja and Oountelon 1 GRAHAM, N. A JOHN H. VERNON Attoraey and Counselor-at-taw PONES—Offlee 6SJ Residence all BURLINGTON, N. C. Dr. J. J. Barefoot OFFICE OVER hadlet'b store Leave Messages at Alamance Pbar macv ,p hone 97 Residence Thone 382 Office Honrs 2-4 p. m. and by Appointment. NCI HOME ' i/V 77/ aret it I \ J or NQ OTHIR LIKE IT. Sb NO OTHER AS GOOD PurchM* tb. "NEW HOME" ud roo .ill have a lil« HMI at the prica you par. The elimination of repair expeaM b j superior work manship and best quality oi material iaaaraa life-lone service at mi aim urn COM. WARRANTED fOf. ALL TIME. Insist on bavin, the " HEW HOME". .It to krunrn the world over Tor superior sewing quali ties Not told uade. any other naase. THE HEW HOME SEWINB MACHINE CO., OftANQC. MASSACHUSETTS. _ WMI aaaa wm CASTOR IA For Infants sad Children In Uaa For Over 30 Years THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. AUSTRIAN ARMY TAKEnCUTARI Press South Atfer Capturing Montenegrin Ports. THE GARRISON ESCAPES Italian Reports Bay Occupation on Albanian Town Was Effected Aftsi a Two-Days' Battle. Scutari, the most important trad lng town in Albania on the eas bank ol ..Lake Scutari, has beei occupied by the Austro-Hungarlai troops, according to an - official announcement Issued .by the Auslro Hungarian headquarters in Vienna. Several thousand Serbians wh lormed the garrison retired towarc the south without offering any resist ance. The text ol the statement fol lows: "Scutari has beeri' occupied by Aus tro-Hungarlan 'troops: Several thou sand Serbians who lormed the garrl son retired toward the south with, out resistance. "Austro-Hungarians also have, occa pied Nlkslc, Danllovgrad and Podgor ltsa> "The disarming ol the country hat been carried on up to the pre&nl without trlctlon. At several placei the Montenegrins have not even wait ed until the Austro-Hungarians appear ed, but have laid down their arms be 1 lore the arrival ol the troops in ordeil to return to their homes. At othei' places a majority ol those disarmed! prefer Interment to being sent home.' j The occupation of Scutari, accord, lng to Italian reports, followed a dea perate battle that had been ragint for the- last two days, the Serbs ant Montenegrins making their violent re slstance on the Tarabosh mountain; before Seutarl. However, as they had but little artillery, most of their gum having previously been captured b) the they virtually had n means of making an effective resist ance. Military operations in the Balkant are just at preseat mainly confined tc Albania, Austrian occupation of Mon tenegro having virtually been com pleted with the taking of the Adriatic coast towns of Antlvarl and Dulclno reported previously. In tbe Interior the disarming of Montenegrin soldleri is progressing, according to advice* from Teutonic sources. • In Albania, according to a Salonika correspondent, there is taking place a renewal of the Austro-Bulgarian 01 lenslve which Is declared to be men aclng the Italian expeditionary force Bulgarians and the Austrlans are said to have occupied Berat, an important town in the interior, northeast of Av lona, and their advance on Avlona whlcti is held by the Italians, Is in dlcated as Imminent. Other Austrian forces are reported moving toward Durazzo, where Albanian troops under Essad Pasha are expected to oppose them. * MINERS OPPOSE TAFT Urge President Not to Appoint Him to Bupreme Bench. A resolution protesting against tbe appointment of William Howard Tall to tbe supreme court bench to suo ceed Justice was unanimously adopted by the United Mine Work ere ol America in Indianapolis. A committee was named to see thai a copy was sent to President Wilson at once. The resolution said that Mr. Taff was unfair to labor; knew nothing oi the working conditions of the masses and was unsympathetic with their In terests. FRANCIS JOSEPH ILL Condition of Aged Monarch Suffering With Bronchitis Alarming. Press despatches trom Rome aay that anxiety is felt in Vienna In con sequence of tbe illness ol Bmperoi Francis Joseph, whose chronic vron chltls has assumed an acute lorm. They add that he is confined to bed, that all court receptions hare been suspended and that he is not even re celving the military authorities. The emperor is being nursed by the Archduchess Zita, wile ol the heir tc the throne. Chiropodist for Police. Mayor Meals appointed J. B. Lawrence aa official chiropodist lor the Harrisburg police force. •"I'm tired of seeing a lot ol bob bllng cops In this burg. From now on, every officer with sore feet will have them treated promptly," said the mayor. Pipe Burna Death Results. Captain Ceorce Broadwater, a retired aea captain, died at Union hospital, In Elkton, Md., from burna sustained when he sat hla cloth Ing on lire by placing a lighted pipe into a vest packet. Deceased waa seventy years of age and leaves a family. Believe Twelve Fishermen Drowned. Twelve fishermen who left Mount Pleasant, S. C., Friday, in the row boat Dart, are still missing. It »»■ said all were negroes. It Is bellevec tbey were drowned. Girl, 10, Cets Verdict Agalnat Boy. Suing for f 10,000, through a guard ian, Florence Mil er, ten yeara >ld, won from a } iry Reading, Pa, a verdict for $913.54 for the loaa of her arm. Oacar Lenhart. fourteen years old, said to have struck bis play mate In an Albany townahlp school because she "tattled," was the da fendant. The boy Is an orphan and heir to a large estate. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE GLEANER, SI.OO A YEAR _ INCOME TAX LAWJJPHELD Supreme Court Declares Act Constitutional SOUND ON EVERY POINT Sweeping Decision Handed Down by I Chief Justice Sustain* Government'! Interpretation of Measure. The supreme court upheld the in come tax law in a decision given by Chief Justice White, which swept said* all. the many .objections to its constitutionality in whole or in part Chief Justice White announced the decision in the case of Prank R. Brush aber, stockholder of the Union Pacific railroad, who sought to enjuln t.i« company from paying the tax on tb«' ground that it was unconstitutional Most of Justice White's opinion was directed toward overrmling the con tention that the income tax amend ment provided a hitherto unknown power of taxation. Oolng far lntc the history of the Income tax legists tlon, the chief Justice concluded th« argument was without merit. Advanc- Ing to other points, the chief Justice held that the tax waa not unconatitu ( tlonal because It waa retroactive. The argument that the law waa un constitutional because labor, agricul ! tural and horticultural and such or [ ganlzationa were exempt, the chiel Justice held, was ankwered by decis ' lons under the corporation tax law I He said the point was only anoth«i I Illustration of an erroneous assump tlon that the tax was imposed under s new power conferred upon the govern ment by the sixteenth amendment, whereas it was a power recognised tc exist from the beginning of the gov ernment, and thus decisions deflnint the taxing power previously rendered were applicable to It. Then grouping a number of othei contentions against tbe law, all based on the clause of the constitution re quiring uniformity In taxation, Chlel Justice White pronounced . them all lacking in merit, because of preyloui decisions which determined that the clause exacted only a geographical uniformity. N, ____________ \ FIFTEEN KILLED IN EXPLOSION Others Hurt When Wrecked Plant In Buffalo Falla Upon Workmen. Fifteen workmen were killed and others probably fatally injured in an explosion at the plant of the Kelkei Blower company, in Buffalo. Without warning, the boiler In tfi plant exploded with terrific force, and the three-story building crumpled to thp ground, burying the two scon workmen In its ruins. Few escape! uninjured, and these entered Into tiie work of rescuing their i!e-s fortunate comrades. Fire started in the ruins and three alarms brought the principal (Ire fight ing apparatus of the city to the scene.; The explosion broke every pane ol glass in school No. 26, across the I street from the factory, and frightened the several hundred pupils. Tin school fire alarm was sounded and tbe children marched out without dis order. The blower company Is operated tin i der the Larkln company, and man i factured glass and pittery ware. LANES MMNAWAY ~ Secretary and Wife Shaken Up When ,7" Carriage Hlte Lamp PPst Secretary Lane, of the Inte I r de partment, and Mrs. Lane were badly shaken np when the bcrses drawing their ferriage smashed the vehicle In to a lamp post In Washington and dragged it half a block down a side walk. Tbe runaway ended when tbe became entangled In the harness ani Boy Savee Friend From Drowning. William Malone, agey eight year of BetMehem, Pa., was saved from drowning by tbe heroism ot Olive: McOeady, another bqr. Malone ven lured on thin ice on the Lehigh cana and broke through. He went down twice, when McOeday appeared on tbt scene and plunged In and effected the rascue. Indian Woman, ISO, Burled by Tribe Mary Tecuyaa, an Indlsn woman reputed to be 160 yearn old, who died recently, was burled by the few re ■Mining members of her tr be at Bv kersfield, Cal. The aged squsw was tb« oldest member of an almost extinct tribe, known as the Tejons, who llve» In a canyon near here. Cattle Disease In Illinois. The foot and mo'lh disease ha* again broken out In Illinois, la *ai announced by the department ol agriculture In Waiiiln 't in.' Infection haa been found In Christian county farms, and the department ordered the county quarantined. Aged Miner Crushed to Death. Emmanuel Maddock, seventy yean old, waa cruahed to death at the scrap ar line cA the North Mabanoy colliery af the Lehigh Valley Coal company Italy's Losses 114,500. A semiofficial statement given out In Rome by the war office, but cenaored, fires the total Ital. Lan losaee up to December 31 a 134,- 600, distributed es fo'lows: K| ed. '11,000; wounded, 94/.00; ml a ng,j «Oi>; prisoners. 450 ft. I UP-TO-DATE JOB + PRININO i I DONB AT THIS OFFICE. | % OIVB US A TRIAL. I GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 27,1916 A GENERAL SURVEY OF THE WAR TUESDAY. Despatches from Sofia say the en tente nations have ordered Greece, in an ultimatum, to expel within forty sight hours, all consular representa tives of'the central powers. German reports say the allies have landed lorcea at Piraeus and Phaleron, su burbs ol Athens, and that King Con stantine Is preparing to leave bis capital tor Larlssa. Vienna reports say Italy Is prepar ing to withdraw her expedition from Albania. London, on the other hand, Insists Victor Emmanuel's troops will stay. Turkish despatchea admit Russian advances In the Caucasus region. Petrograd official statements say the civil government of Dvinsk, which re moved to Pskov, some months ago, before the German advance, has re turned to. Dvinsk. Unimportant Rus sian successes near Riga are admit ted by Beri'n. - WEDNESDAY. French reports say Montenegro has 1 broken off peace negotiations with Austria, end King Nicholas Is plan -1 ning to seek refuge In Italy. Confuglng. reports come from Greece. London discredits 1 from Teste nlc sources that allied '■ troops have been landed near Athens, ' and that the Greeks have received an 1 Ultimatum demanding the removal ol 1 diplomatic envoys of the central pow 1 era. I The Russians announce tbe capture of lmportaoppositions In the Caucasus and say several Turk regiments were Ainlhllated. Constantinople, on the other hand, says Russian advance* In this field have been checked. German prisoners at Kiev are re ported to have said the Austro-Cer mans have begun the evacuatl-n ol Lutsk, Volhynta, the troops mjvlni westward. An announcement was made In thr house of commons In London that German casualties, as published In official lists to date, total 2,535,768 the killed aggregating 588,986. THURSDAY. Montene -re, acrcrdtng to an officta communication to Rome, has broke q ft pear e negotiations with Austria and Bghtlnir has been resumed. Russian despatches announce rn Im portant vlct' ry over the Turks In th> Caucasus re l"n, saying the Turk's center lias been smashed, an I tha the Ottoman troops have been drive back on a front of sixty-live m le upon Krze/.m. Brltls i forces In Mesopotamia bavf advanced to within a few ml'es of Kiit el-Amara, where part of (le-eral Town •bend's (prces are supposed to be be leaguered by the Turks. An official statement In Vlepna say*, the Russians have renewed their of fenslve In Bessarabia, but have been repulsed In all attack*. FRIDAY. Despatches from Vienna daredll tbe report tljat Montenegro has re entered the war. Reports from othei sources say the Montenegrins not onlj have resumed hostilities, but have been beaten and are retreating toward j Scutari. Berlin Reports that the allies' ultt I matum calling upon Greece to oust ' consular representatives of tbe central powers has been rejected. The allies never have admitted that such an ul tlmatum has been sent. Fighting continues between Rurtlan and Austrian armies In Bessarabia. Russian warships have bombarded points on the Bulgarian coast, and ar. English fleet has shcdled Turkish towns on tbe Aegean. Australia has forbidden the export of any product* to Holland. SATURDAY. Grand Duke Nicholas, with his Rus slan army, has inflicted heavy losse on the Turks In the Caucasus. The Ottomans are reported In flight In thai sector, and the Russians now are bom barding the forts of Ezerum. Till* stroke has relieved the Turkish prest ure on the British In Mesopotamia. The Montenegrins are reported U have bested two Austrian army corps near Berane, but the Teutons have been heavily reinforced, and K'n Nicholas probably will be compellel to lead his army across the bordei Into Albanls. Advices from Russia tell of the !bn tlnuatlpn of the lighting In Bessarabls and Gailcla. Vienna announces th Russians have been definitely check' ed. J SUNDAY. Two air raids over Kent are mad* within a few hours and one person was killed and six hurt and consld ersble damage dpne to property. Austrlans occupy ports of Antlvart and Dulclgno, on the Adriatic. Mon tenegrins continue fighting. ' British relief expedition In Mesopo tamla Is unable to dislodge Turk from trencbe* after severe flghtln near Kut-el-Amara. It Is ssld Turkey will lasne state ment admitting submarine 'at'ack cr tbe liner Perr.la. Capture by the Germans of en at lied position 259 yarls long to th Bortli of Arras, wss announced by tb German war office in a statement. Mrs. fleenberger Acquitted. After being out almost f rty-flv* hours, the Jury In the case of Mrs Annie Elsenberger, charge l with the murder of her husband, In I.anraster Pa, returned a verdict of not guilty In tbe trial a confession, declared U have been made by ber was Introduc •d, but *be repudiated It on thetstand Tbe commonwealth asserted she shot bar husband to obtain the Insurant* •a bis life. toikwsWkit Yus Are Taking When you take Orove'a Tasteless i Chill Tonic because the formula Is , plainly printed on ever* bottle showing that it la Iron and Qui nine in a tasteless form. No cure, no pay.—6oc, adv. 1 MISS TREHAWKE DAVIES Woman Fllsr'a Death Revsaled by Bsle of Property In London. X2M Photo by American Press Association. Mias Davies was the first woman to loop the loop and had In 1912 made a passenger record between Paris and London. PENNA. UVE STOCK 4,230,000 Head, Worth 1167,000,000, In the Btate. Live stock on Pennsydvanln farms waa worth $167,843,200 on January 1, according to a summary of township reports Issued by the state department of agriculture. The statement covers every county In the state and shows a total ol 4,280,000 head. The number of horses is given at 596,000, which is believed to be con siderably lets than a year ago, be cause of. the heavy shipments to Europe on account of the war. One. estimate la that fully 15,000 hcrses have been sent from this state to tbe countrlea at war. The horaes on the farms are rated at 72,116,000, an average of sl2l a head. Figures on other live stock are: Mules, 46,000, valued at $5,888,000,' an average of $lB per head; miicb cows, 952,000, valued at $52,836,000, worth $65.60 per bead; other cattle, 644,000, valued at 18,676,000; sheep, 806,000. valued at $4,362,000, worth $6.40 per head; bogs, 1,186,000, valued at sl3, 974,900, an average ol $ll.BO per head The condition of wheat and rye in the ground is given as ninety-seven per cent of an average. WINS SUIT AGAINST SALOON Proprietor Who Sold Man Drink Must Pay $2600 for Hie Death. The first case tn Philadelphia county In 'vhich damages were granted a saloonkeeper lot the deVli of a patron due to ex cesslve use of liquor purchased in his establishment was declde.l In Jid*i Patterson'a court, when a Jury ret'irn ed a verdict of $2500 In favor of Mrs Virginia Alexander against Jacol Bosch, the pr printer of a saloon a 2621 North Twenty-seventh street. Mrs. Alexander sued to recover foi the death of her husband, who, she cjplmed, died In March, 1914, sfter twe years of ex esslve use of Intoxicants the majority of which she proved ha been Kold to him by (loach despite Jier pleadlnsis and requests. Several cases In which s'mlla claims were ma lo are recorded in the legal annals of McKean, Lebanon, Al legheny mi l Kraddock co -n les, but tbe Philadelphia county files cn'a'n no mention of an Instance where s plaintiff bis obtained a verdi t. FINDS TOOTH A LIFE-SAVER It Btops Bullet Fired Into a Young Woman's Mouth. Mrs. Anjclli'o la-'H, fonty-flve years cf who liven tt Laipef vllle, near Chester,. I'a., ha* a remark able esca|.e fr. m bdig I'll ed whtn t revolver tha Clcmerfl e Mocc'a wa handling wa i accl 'e tilly discharge ! The bullet struck her in the mouth knocking out one ti ot i and tea in away part of her upper lip. 81;e wai taken to the Chester b-nrpltal foi treatment, but le suTering more from shock than from serious InJ ry. Plunge* 16 Storlee and Still Uvea Mlsa Minnie B. Werner, twenty four years old, a stenographer, [Jug ed from the sixteenth floor of tin transportation tu Idlng, In Cblcato but atftl Uvea. Her (all wax broker by a motor tiuck loale.l with paper boxes, but her skull wia fmctureii and ahe wa« Internally injured. Tb police nay she Jumped from a window. She U expected to die. Slayer Beat Guard and Eecapea. Cbarle* Doap'wa, colore t, held In the copnty jail at Oreenaburg, Pa., under aentence of death for mur der, atta/ke I hi* guard an I beat him Into Inaenal! Hlty. He Ihen took the guard's key* and opening the door, escaped with two other prison era. 1 Dead: 1 Hurt In Mine Explosion. Veto Pre la, ■ miner, wan killed at the Blackwood colliery, near Potts tllle, Pa., and John Borango probably fatally Injured, when the men drilled Into a dynamite charge that had foil to explode when prepared for bleat lu. •' *""* ( onatlpatlon and Indlgeatlan. "I have u*ed Chamberlain a Tab let* and must aay they are the beat I have ever uaod for conctipailon and indlgeation. My wife alao uaed them for indigestion, and they dja her good," write* Eugene 8. Knight of Wilmington, N. C. Obtainable everywhere. - adv. SUBSCRIBE POR THB OLBANBR, I 11.00 A YBAR WOMAN SUICIDE BELIEVED SPY Wllkes-Barre Police Probe Ac tion of Mrs. Marie Leahm. SHOT - HERSELF M HOME A Code Book With Messages in Ger man Is Found—Husband Says She Handled Sums of Money. Mr* Mar.e Loahm, aged fur.y, a native of Lcrmaiiy, and said to be the wife 01 i*u*uut Lealim, a mill worker, lu beiloed by t.ie austeri ties In W l.ki.s ti.irr., Pa, to , a TV been a spy .a mu employ of tbe Qer mon government, a.d through whom large suing UL ui .icy were paid to spies of tiie Fattier, and in Bagdad. Her seli-lniii. t. d 'uetttn brougut to ligbt evi.ciiv.e w..th Deputy Cor ner Stanley btlleves will sub stantiate tbe theory that the mysteri ous woman wus one of the secret agents in the tieat spy system of the kaiser. \ Mrs. I.Aaiim was found dead in ber home with a bullet wound in the head and a revolver clutclied in her right hand. The only moiive for the suicide was luund in a note written by her, in wnlch it was slated that the cause cf her death would be found on page 2# of a memorandum book which she haJ left. Inspection of this book brought to light several disconnected German sentences, which are believed to have been a code system which the woman employed in her •fork. On an oppo site page were the npmes of flity per ■ons, after which appeared large sums ol money. There was nothing else to shed light on the woman's act. ° In the past year and a half Mrs. Leahm had lived a life of mystery While her husband claims that be did not mlstrnst his wife, be is puzzled now to explain what she did with largt sums of money she frequently bad in her possession. He declared she often bad large bundles of currency In hei home and neighbors have informed the coroner that Mrs. Leahm often displayed big bundles of paper money. Leahm said his wife had been mak ing weekly visits to New York in the past year. She told him taht she was the agent for property In New York city which was owned by people liv ing in Kngland and that because ol the war they were not able to cc,m« here and transact their business Leahm admitted that his wife told bin that she raised large sums by mort gage on the New York property. Thii money, she said, wss converted lntc gold and at regular Intervals was placed In a suitcase and given to the captain of a certain steamship ol s certain line. This captain, the woman once de clared, was under secret orders tc carry the money to England and give it to people who met his ship at Its port of destination. Leahm said tbe woman waa the wife Ol Karl Kicker, who live i In Brooklyn N. Y. Eight years ago Leahm and the woman came here and not until ber death was the fact revealed tbal they'were not married. Farmers Own Many Autos. Pennsylvania farmers own ovet fourteen per cent of the automobile registered In the state during the past year. * On the first of the year there were 22,608 automobiles in the hands of the farmers of the state, according to the estimates of the bureau of statistics ol the department of agriculture. Thi renorta show that 9.5 per cent of tli* farire-s are car owner* and thU means that there Is sn automobile on one out of every ten farms. In ISIS there were 150,984 automo biles registered in Pennsylvania. German Losses 2,535,768. The total Herman casualties In the war up to date are 2,635,768, Is wa> announced In the house of commons in London by H. J. Ten nan t, undei secretary of state for war. Of this number, Mr. Tennant said the dead are 588,986. The wounded total 1,566,549 and the prisoners and missing 356,153. Of the prisoners 24,"80 have died of woundt and sickness since they fell Into the bands of the allies. These fig-ires are compiled from the Berlin casualty lists. GENERAL MARKETS PHIiftDKIJ'HIA. KIXM'K Arm; winter clear 35.5000.90; |ty mil *. |7® 7.50. • RYE PI .OUR—Steady; per bi rel, ss.so££ 6. WHEAT steady: No. 3 red, 11.35 1.37, CORN quiet: No. 2 yellow, MfifeSc OATS steady: No. 2 white, 67 OSBc. POUI/TRV: I.tre steady; hena, 1«® 18c.; old roomers. 12ftl2tyc. Dresam ateady; choice (owls, 20% c.; aid roos ters. 14'j.c. BUTTER Arm: Pancy creamery, 86c. per lb. '* BCKiS ' steady; Selected, 33035 c.; nearby, 31c.; western, 31c. Live Stock Quotation*. CHICAGO. HOGS Slow and Biady. Mixed and butcher*, 17,1 0© 5; good heavy, Mrt avy, »7.15«7.J5: light, »7ft7.5J; Pigs, i5.60H8.75; bulk, $7,206 7.«0. CATTI-E Steady, 10c lower. Reeve*. »6J0©»75; cowa and helfera, 81188P —Weak, 10c. lower. Native and wo*tern, »7.«0©7.85; lamb*, t0.50 OH. Women of Me4eatary Hablta. „ Women who get but little ex ercise arelikely to be troubled with conatipation and indigestion and will find Chamberlain's Tablets highly beneficial. Not so good as a three or four mile walk every -day, but very mtich better than to allow the bowel* to remain in a constipated condition. They are ea»y and pleisant to take and most agreeable ib effect. Obtainable everywhere. adv. SUBSCRIBE FOR THB OLBANER •1.00 A YBAR JOHN P. WHITE President of United Mine Work., ora, Mooting In Indianapolis. f |B . a ■ Photo by Amorieaa Prsao AmocUUm. Bridal Coupls Dsad In Oarape. Harried less than a week, a Bellefonte, Pa., couple m»t tragic death when abont to start on an automobile ride from their home. The couple, William Noll, proprietor of jutney auto service, and his wife, It Is believed, were killed by escaping gasoline fumes from the car they we e about to IISA. The bodl«s were found In the garage located' in the rear of their home. Physician* slated that they had been dead about nine'hours and bad smothered to death. Mrs. Noll was sitting In their auto mobile, and the husband was standing alongside the car, leaning over the door. Paaaporta. Passports are a very ancient Institu tion. Home of the old monkish chron iclers mention as an achievement on the part of King Canute that be ob tained free passes for bla subjects through varloua continental countriea, on their pilgrimages to the shrines of the Apostles Peter and Paul at Homei. Each pilgrim was furnished with a document in the nature of a passport called "Tructurla de Itinera Pera geuta." Hall In his "Cbroulcle" makes reference to a system of passports la the time of Kdward IV. and the en forcement of thla system Is known to have been very strict In tbe reigns of Elisabeth and James.—London Chroni cle. PLAY THE GAME. Play lh« garnet We are not Kara to whine and complain, ta atay down baoauaa wa ara knocked down, to blama tho Inequalities af tho ground ar tho unfalrnooa a' tha umpire. Whoro thoro ara no didloultiaa thoro can bo no viotorioo. Wa ara hara to win, )f wa can, in avary oondition that confront* ua, to do our boot in any caae, and to do It to tho and. Fining Engliah Servant* In IMOI Nan Newton, fur breaking a teapot In I'Ulll'N ciiHinber, 2a. (id. It lr bar. I Knlglit. for pride aqd ■lighting. 2*. lid. • William llcliinioKlog. for not being ready to go lo church three Hundaya, 10 ablllhiga. Tboma* lllnlail, for being at Nunea ton froui morning to nlgbt. 5 abllUnga. Cook, dead drunk. 10 abiding*. Anne Attains to bo waxhinald at Lady day. Hhe went away tbe 29th of June for lielng wanton and caralaaa. Bbe loot Ave |ialm of *beeta and 8»e pUlowbeera. for which my wife made her pay £l.—Diary of 81r Rlcbard New» dlgate THE SHADOW*. Oe not borrow trouble and de net anticipate miefortunea. Ware a man'a aorrowa and dlaquie tudea aummed up at the end of hi* life it would generally be found that he had ouffered mere from tho epprehonoion of ouch •vil* aa never happened to him 'than from thoee evils which had istlly befallen him. :: TIMELY FARM NOTES. : 11 IIIIIIHIIIH 11111 I I I II Cover carrots, beets sad other root crops lightly with dry sand to prevent willing Tbe man who lets bis plows stand In the field during tbe whiter should re member that manufacturers hsvs not yet discovered Iron sod steel that will not nut. Professor li. A. Surface says tbe use of pore white lead and Unseed oil tor borers sod mice will not Injure the trees. Tbe feed cotter should be In use ou every farm The corn shredder Is aa excellent thing. But why not put all of the corn crop In a silo ss tbe best probabje position to get every pound of value out of It? The man who markets his products only when he has nothing else to do Will never get the most out Of his farm. The moment-* «i>eat In reading market reports sre golden. Are yon keepingsthe fertility of your land? Till* fs e-jiect.'illy Impor tant to t'le fruit «' i| vcset.-tWe grower. Study .vour fertiliser |-r>;ilwii this win ter and sret rx-it'lj- to'act nest spring. It will papt Subscribe for THB OLEANER— |i.M a year in advance, x ;: - 5 . ♦ CREATED WEALTH.^ ♦ The farm crops of m 5 >'«H ♦ worth a plump $400,000,000 morfM ♦ than hut jea*, according to + partment figures «ent out reAti^H ♦ ljr. The grnnd aggregate tor *■ teeu crops la »5>i0.i00;000. NsISW ♦ u rally corn led. with *1 7XVOoftSM + 000, followed by wheat, MB§iM *• 000,000, both of these stowfcgH ♦ (olus over a year ago. Cotloiljß + totaled $1102.000,000. owlngj^^^l ♦ higher price ami ' (le«p!t^^^^H ♦ smaller bulk. It in worth ♦ than lu 1014 by + The impressive thing about It aDgfl ♦ Is the fact that the vast sum tjijfiH ♦ dlcated represents actual la- * ♦ crease iu national wealth. All of m ♦ this will be further swoiieiffjl *■ through the conversion of ranewH ♦ of the forage cropa Into llwm ♦ stock and dairy, products. B % Through such magnificent cren- 9 ♦ tlon of wealth It Is not strangW'jM ♦ that legislators, financiers nnd'jfj ♦ manufacturers all bold In high M ♦ esteem the agricultural prdS^^H ♦ Hon.—Orange Judd Farmer. • * MM LOSS OF OA6ANIC MATTER.^ Cultivated 8oil» of Kaneae Have Leefi| a Third of Original Steele An enormous loss of organic matter 1 from the soil la the moat serious prob ton in aoll fertility which now con. J front* Kansas farmers, a O. Swanson, appelate professor d9 agricultural chemistry and associate 4 chemist In the agrlcnltnral i Tpi iliiiiMfjM station, who haa personally taken MmH plea and analysed representative tynMfll of soils. "Results based on analysis of a||H rated and uncultivated soils in representative counties show that tfc|9 cultivated soils have lost from 1,200 hH 1.800 pounds of nitrogen and from 32,400 to 48,000 pounds of orpide.flH tar per acre in the surface soli,'' Profeaaor Swanson. "It means MH round numbers that these solla hn|H lost from one-fifth to two-flftfas nitrogen and from nearly one-half of the original organic The cultivated soils of Kanaas' lost on the average mote than odfl third of their original atock of matter. The seriousness of this sttlflH tlon cannot be overemphasised. "'Mors live atock' la mentioned some persons aa the panacea for soil troubles, if raising more stock by Itself waa the cure, typical live atock county, grain Is fed than raised, should show this decrease In crop produetfSH Butler Is such a county, and In faH period between 1872 and 1801 the tfU emge production of corn was tbbfyjiH two bushels per acre, and hi the 1802-1011 the average was twenty-dflfl "In addition to returning the materials In the form of stimw term manures, some substances be added which restores the nltrogijH removed In grain. A bushel takes one pound of nitrogen antffl bushel of wheat one and pounds. "The best method for obtaining ttflH nitrogen la by gmwlng leTurow, 'sqH as alfalfa. But this nitrogen win i|9 be restored to the soil |f all the Is exported from the farms. the beat agricultural of the opinion, baaed on scientific «£9 perknentation, that legumea on the anH erago take only aa much nitrogen fqH the air as la found In the hay. "Therefore, the growing of alfelCadjH grown for export, will not solve problem of soil fertility any more ttiH live stock farming when the fertllltM Is wasted on the banks of s ravine."H A Praotical Bnowplew. The anowplow pictured the only one that was successful backing the heevy snow we had hjH year. The advantage of this plow JH that the horses push the snow MH under their feet, and they are dowtiH the solid ground where they can their strength Instead of using It NH wallowing through the drifts ahead the plow.—Farm and Home. •latere Burn to Death. Miss Mabel Warden, twentythMjH years aid, and her sister, Warden, thirteen, were bunted fjH death, and their mother. Mrs. Warden, was seriously lajared their home In PunxsutawMy, FjjH was dsstroyed by fire. The propetffl loss wss s*oo. EUREKA Spring Water 1 FROM EUREKA SPRING, ! A valuable mineral »pring J has been discovered by W. HL 1 Ausley on hia place in Grahasa. > Ik was noticed that it broach},! health to the users of the water,j and upon being analysed it was 1 found to be a water strong iasl mineral properties and good j for atomach and trouble*. | Physicians who have seen thai analysis and what it doM§|| recommend its use. Analysis and ti»timoatal4l will be forniahed upon request J Why buy expensive mineral! waters from a distance, whcafl these is • good water reeanH mended by physiciaas right (jfl home? For farther infonMH tion and or the w desire if apply to