J Amp:
THE CHABIOTTE EVENING ' CHBONICLE, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1912
I it ffffli Wili
NATIONAL.
Cubs Take Two.
rbicaso. July 21. Heavy hitting
vahind Leifleld and Reulbach gave
rlirpe both games of - a double
ij jlr here today against Brooklyn,
5?rco-pp of 6 to 1-Wid 11 to 4, re
rt'vv Northen's home run and
8E taVting of Bvers and Daubert
featured the second game. ;
Bii"": ,.f
Tinker, ss
Leach, ci ,
Saier. 1
gvers.
irchef. c
LeifieW. P
If
AB H
... 3'0
.. 4
.. 4
... 4
. . 4
... 4
Brooklyn AB H
Moran, cf 4 0
Northen, If .. .. 4 2
Smith, 3b .. .... 4 1
Daubertr lb 4 1
Cutshaw, 2b .... 4 1
Hummel, rf .- 4 2
Fisher, ss .... 3 2
Miller, c . -. 4 1
Fuckert p 2 0
Phtips .. ...... 1 0
nn -til ni4..1n ' ' IJ 1 A
TTtaU Al 01 i
, rated for Rucker in 9th.
"ore- First game: R. H. E.
rhicago. . . -002 010 03 6.11 0
gooklyn .000 001 0001 10 2
batteries: Leifleld " and Archer;
r,ucker and Miller. Time, 1:35. Um
pires, Owens and Brennan.
if
Chita?-rriiliams
grhulte, rf ..
Tinner, ss ..
Leach, of
gater, -t
vvs, 2b
eedhdm, c
peulbach P
AB H
..1 01
.. 4 1
..5 0
.. 4 1
.. 4 1
..3 2
.. 4
Brooklyn - AB H
Moran, M .;. .. 4 2
Northen,. rf, If.. 5 1
Smith, 3b T4 1
Daubert, lb ... .. 4 4
Wheat, lf .... 2 0
Hummel, rf .. .. 1 1
Cutshaw, 2b .... 3 n
Fisher, ss .z.:w4- 1
Erwin, c ,.....,..3 0
Curtis, p .. ..... 0 0
Knetzer, p .. ..10
Kent, p .. .. ..11
Phelps 1 0
...mid
Tnta's .. - -35 12 Totals" '-;
nattea ior auco i h ovu. -
Score: Second game: - 4 R.H. E.
rwra-o . . -052 004 00 11 12 0
Brooklyn . .000 003 001 4 1 1
Batteries: Reulbach and Needham;
Curtis, Knetzer, Kent and . Erwin..
Time, 2:00. Umpires, Brennan and
Owens. - - - ' J ' ' .
Giants Beat Reds.
Cincinnati, July 21. -New York
von the first game of the series with
Cincinnati here today in easy fashion.
Cincinnati used three pitchers. All
were hit hard and given poor sup
port Wiltse for New York - was
driven from the box in the fifth Inn
ing, Crandall, who succeeded him,
pitched well.
New York
Snodgrasa, If
Dovle, 2b . .
Becker, cf ..
Merkle. lb ..
Murray, rf ..
Shafer, 3b ..
Meyers, c .. ..
Wilson, c ..
Fletcher, ss .
Wiltz. p .. ..
Crandall, p ..
AB
.. 6
.. 5
.. 4
.. 5
.. 6
.. 3
.. 5
.. 0
. 4
.. 0
.. 5
HI C'cinnati AB H
4 Bescher, If .. 6 1
2i Bates, cf 4 1
2i Hoblitzell, lb"... 5 3
Mitchell, rf .. ...3 1
Phelan, 3b .. ... 5 1
Egan, 2b .i ..- .t 4- -
McDonald, ss ... 4 "0
0 Clarke, c 3 "1
Benton, p 0 0
Sovereid . 1 0
Davis, p .. .. .. 1 1
Keefe, p .. .... 2 0
Totals 42 16 Totals . .
-Batted for Benton In second.
Score:
New York
Cfcclnnati
.220 040 004
.220 000 002-
...... St 9
!R XI. E.
12 16 5
6 9 4
Batteries: Wlltse, "Crandall and Wll
son and Meyers ; Benton, Davie, Keefe
and Clarke. --- vTime,; KljKVnjplres,'
igier ana nnneran. - -
Lose Through Errors.
St Louis, July 2L Errors by.the visi
tors in the trjird and fourth -innings, per
mitted the locals to defeat Philadelphia
three to nothing.
Phila.
Paskert, cf .
Lobert, 3b .
Magee, if . .
Cravath, rf
Luderas, lb
Nabe, 2b ..
Doolan, .ss .
Coin, c .. ..
Moor, p
Schultz, p-;
'Miller .. .!
AB
'..! 3
.. 3
... 3
.. 2
.. 0
... 1
H
1
1
21
1
0
1
. 0'
0
e
o
St. Louis AB H
Tillffcrtna 9K A A
L. Magee. If .... 3 2
Mowrey, 3b , 2-: tt-
Konetzy, lb .'. ..2 0
Evans, rf 3 1
Houser, ss .. ..3 0
Oakes;,cf .. i... 3 1
Wmgo, c .. .... 3 l
Harmon, p I.' 3 l
'-Batted foor Moore in eighth.
score: . . .. , , , -,-RHE
Philadelphia ....000 000 0000 6 3
St. Louis ; . .002 100 00-3 6 1
Batteries Moore, Schultz and'Dooin;;
Harmon and YVingo. Tmierl:35." Umpires,
Klem and Bush. t.-V-. ? , .
CHAMPIONSHIP GAMES.
Stonecutters Defeat Iiaundrymen in
the Deciding Game of . Prison Ueague.
Atlanta, Ga,, July 21. The stone
cutters carved their numbers indeli
b'y in ' the Atlanta Federal prison
hall of fame yesterday, when they de
feated the laundrymen 12 to' ll in a
game for the first basebail champion
ship of the prison. ; .. .... ., '
All season the prison league, com-
If you are a housewife you tsannot
reasonably hope to be healthy or
ceautiful by washng Wishes, sweeping
and doing housework all day and
crawling into bed dead tired at night.
ou must get out into the - open air
and sunlight. If you do this every
ay and keep your stomach arid bow
eis m good order by taking Cham
berlain's Tablets when needed. you
would become . both healtny and
Beautiful.. For sale by all dealers.
posed of eight teams has been play
ing regular games.- The stonecutters
and laundrymen outstripped all oth
ers and keen Interest was manifested
In the championship :; game. , More
than a thousand striped convts
cheered the contesting teams: "to vic
tory. . . : -. ' l ' :-
Number 3885 twirled for the stone
cutters and number" 388 for the
laundrymen. The umpire was a
famous get-rich-quick artist from
New York. H.e made several close
decisions but escaped being mobbed
as he was carefully w protected by
prison guards with rifles.
YESTERDAY'S GAMES,
NATIONAL.
CHICAGO 6; BROOKLYN 1. -
(First game.)
CHICAGO 11; BROOKLYN 4.
(Second game.)
NEW YORK 12; CINCINNATI 6.
ST. IOms 3; PHILADELPHIA 0.
v SOUTHERN.
NEW ORIiEANS-ATIiANTA, rain.
MOBILE 1; CHATTANOOGA 0. (15
' innings.) .
MEMPHIS 4: BIRMINGHAM; 2.
AMERICAN ASSO.
TOLEDO 1; KANSAS CITY 5.
MILWAUKEE 7; COLUMBUS 1.
MINNEAPOLIS 4; LOUISVILLE 2.
, (First game.)
MINNEAPOLIS 3'; LOUISVILLE 4.
(Second game.) 1
ST. PAUL 5; INDIANAPOLIS 0.
HOW THEYSTAND.
CAROLINAE AGUE.
ANDERSON
CHARLOTTE " .
WINSTON . . .
GREENSBORO.
SPARTANBURG
GREENVILLE.
Won lost Pet
45
43
40
33
32
26
27
29
35
40
41
47
.625
.507
.533
.452
.438
.356
NATIONAL.
NEW YORK .
CHICAGO .
PITTSBURG . .
PHILADELPHIA .
ST. LOUIS
BROOKLYN ...
BOSTON ...
'Won Lost .Pet.
. 62 - 21 - ..747
. 51 32 .614
.47 34 .580
.44 42 .512
. 39 40 ' .494
. 31 44 .413
.23 60 .277
AMERICAN
Won Lost Pet.
BOSTON . .... 61 27 .693
WASHINGTON . . . 54 34" .614
PHILADELPHIA. . 50 38 .568
CHICAGO ..... 45 ' 40 .529
DETROIT ...... 43 46 .483
CLEVELAND ; . . 43 46 .483
NEW YORK ... 25 57 .305
ST. LOUIS . ' . . . 25 59 .298
SOUTHERN
Won '- LOSt 0".
BIRMINGHAM, i 54 - 35 .607
MOBILE . . ..x.i-.. 42 34 .553
MEMPHIS' . . . . 43- 41 .512
NEW ORLEANS. . 42 41 .506
CHATTANOOGA . . 41 43 .488
NASHVILLE. . . 39 44 .470
MONTGOMERY . . 39 49 , .443
ATLANTA : . . . . 35 46 . 432
SOUTH ATLANTIC.
Won Lost P.C
COLUMBUS ..... 15 . 6 , .714
SAVANNAH , . . .. 13 7 .650
JACKSONVILLE . . 14 8 .636
MACON.. . . . . .10 11 .476
ALBANY 7 15 .31
COLUMBIA . i . . . 5 17 .227
VIRGINIA LEAGUE.
- "- Won Lost P.C.
PORTSMOUTH . . '. 48 32 .600
ROANOKE . ... . 49 35 .583
PETERSBURG. . 47 36 .566
RICHMOND; . . .45 37 .549
NORFOLK . - . . . 44 40.. .524
NEWPORT NEWS . 34 47 .420
MR. CONE TO BUILD
A $40,000 HOME
Special to The ' Chronicle. ; .
v GREENSBORO, July 22. A force
of men", this morning began tearing
away the home of Mr. Caesar Cone on
Summit avenue preparatory to the
erection of a handsome new home for
the head of the Cone cotton manu
facturing business. The new residence
will .cost approximately $40,000 and
.will be built by the Cones' personal
corps 'of carpenters. The residencg
will be located almost in the center
of m. Cone's handsome lte arid al
most immediately . upon the site of
the present building. Just across the
avenue from Mr. Caesar Cone ' th
$20,000 residence of Mr. ' Bernard
Cone is nearing completion.
Kisses For LifeSaving. " -New
York World.
Four girls who arrived at Hudson
Park, New Rochelle, yesterday after
noon In an auto went In bathing there.
One fciFl... who was about 20, at
tracted much attention in her dark
brown bathing suit. All apparently
were strong swimmers.
- But as they were returning from a
raft the girl in the brown suit sank.,
Julian Diaz - a volunteer life-saver,
swam out, dived and brought her up.
He took her to the shore, where she
soon regained her composure. ; .
"Whom have r to thank for saving
my life?" she said. Dia told her.
She hurried into the bathhouse and
soon reappeared, fully dressed.
'- "1 suppose' you want to know who
I am," said she to the expectant
Diaz. Well I'll only tell you I'm -Ethel
Jameson and that X live in .the
Bronx. But I -want to reward you."
Whereupon she . threw her arms
about his neck and kissed him on
both cheeks. x
"That's reward enough," gasped Di
az, as the girls climbed into their car
and sped away. .
'ILL
visit
n
THIS SECTION IN FALL
Some Gf Best, Known Experts
Jn The World Will Be In
eluded In Touring Party -
? No Wonder He Hated War.
"War," cried the old gentleman in
the Pugsbury Arms smoking room ac
cording to Th:eNew York Times, "is
a curse and a disgrace. War," he
continued, thumping the able with his
continued, thumping the table with
his fist, "Is an abomination and a blot
on -civilization. The very name of
waxsrV he shouted, sweeping two
glasses and a pint pot off the board
in his excitement, "the very name of
war Is enough to make a decent, re
spectable man go and 'ang hisself out
of pure disgust!" He then. rose and
left the room, his face showing signs
of stron gemotion.
"Gentleman seems to feel : rather
deeply on the subject,", said a com
mercial' traveler who naa Deen listen
ing to his remarks. f
"He do," assented one of '.the natives.--
' - . u '-. . '
"Has he lost some j near relatives
through .the war ? . inquired the com
mercial. . . '. . ' K-'
"He 'ave," replied the other oracal
ly. ' -
"Who was it?" asked the querist. '
"is wife's first 'husband," was the
reply. t.- . '
T Tho Only National Hymn.
Frdm The Philadelphia Record.
Senator Rayner is correct in speak
ing of "The Star-Spangled Banner"
as the national anthem, which he'oid
in his effort to get Fort McHftnry
preserve as an. historical monument
now that it is no longer valuable as
a fortification. Senator Heyburn de-;
nies that it Is "the national anthem
more thatf "any '.other patriotic song,
and while he does riot name an of
ficial and authentic anthem he thinks
"My Country 'Tis 6f Thee" is prob-:
ably 'the one. The objection to this
is that the air is that of "God Save
the King." "The Star-Spangled Ban
ner' is not verv easy to sing, nor are
the words even easy to commit to
memory, but If Senator Heyburn will j
consult ine miiuary ana nnvai au
thorities he will learn that it is': at
"The Star-rSpangled : Banner, that of
ficers and men rise and uncover or
otherwise salute.. -
Thought Car Was Packed.
From :The Kansas City Journal.
He was very much Intoxicated, very
polite and very much alone, although
he did not seem to realize that fact.
He was .the only passenger on a west
bound Quindaro boulevard car . and
the conductor was keeping' a watch
ful 1 eye on him. He was occupying
a rear side . seat.
Presently a Woman got on. The in
toxicated man arose, lifted his hat
with an elaborate bow and said :
"Exschuse me, ma'am. Realish I'm
no condlshun to addresh a lady but
I jish can't bear to see you standsh
up. Kin'ly take muh seat."
The woman did so and the intoxi
cated man stood up all the way to
the end of the line. -
. - ' .. ?
Big Game.
Montgomery. Journal.
In SaVannah, Ga., some . visitors
chartered an old seagoing hack driv
en by a negro. The driver, was a
knowing old fellow and pointed out
all the places of Interest along the
route. As they were . hearing - Mrs,
Bannon's place, Which is four miles
from Savannah, - a squirrel appeared
in the road'.
"George," said one, after all had
noticed the Squirrel, "do you have
any big .game around here ?"
' "Yas, indeed, sah," replied the ne
gro. "We has baseball."
... t . ,
Careful About Spelling.
It is denied that the bandana par
ty will be, changed into a banana par -ty.
If it were a fact, then Baltimore
would have to roll up a big majority
as this Is the banana emporium of
the United States, . The mistaken Im
pression probably gained currency
from the fact that the Roosevelt par
ty sought to peel the hide off the Re
publican party and slipped up, on the
peeling process and is in for a big fall,
Baltimore American.
The following from The Manufac
turers' Record will be read with in
terest here: - '
The South is to have the advantage
of a visit of delegates to the Eighth
International Congress of Applied
Chemistry, which is to meet in New
York in .September. As soon as an
nouncement of the congress was made
more than a year ago, The Manufac
turers' Record urged that steps be
taken to induce delegates to the con-"
gress to make an . excursion to the lo
calities in the South : whef e either the
materials for the application of chem
istry to industry are produced or the
application Is being made. At various
points in the . South this suggestion
was 'given practical support in the way
of activity on he part of commercial
bodies and representatives of mining
and manufacturing industries to, in
fluence the management of ' the con
gress to arrange the excursion. Out of
these activities came propositions for
half a dozen tentative tours for the
delegates following the adjournment
of the congress. The executive com
mittee now announces that these ten-
tatlve. tours have taken the shape of
two trips which; in the light of all in
formation that the committee has
been able to obtain, will answer - the
requirements .of ..the delegates.
The "long trip" of these two is the
one in which the South is specially
interested. For it is proposed to have
a special train of two 12 -sectioned din
ing room sleeping cars, two 16-Sectlon"
sleeping cars, one 10-staferoom. or a
7-stateroom 'double drawing room car
and one 6-stateroom observation car
and a parlor smoking car, in all ac
commodating "140 passengers. The
train Is. to leave New" York on Sep
tember 16 and return to that city on
October "22, traveling by the Penri
sylyanla; New YorkfCentraly, Michi
gan Central, Chicago & Northwestern,
Union Pacific, Denver' & Rio Grande,
San Pedrp, Los Angeles & Salt Lake,
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe; Sbuth
ern Paclfic; Texas & Pacific, New Or
leans & Northwestern Southern,
Louisville & Nashville and Seaboard
Air -Line Railroads. This trip will
last 36 .idays, and the party will trav
el 8,169 miles,': will cross 22 States
and visit 25- cities. v -. '
After visiting Philadelphia, Pitts
burgh, Niagara" Falls; Detroit, Chica
go," "Omaha, ' Driver," "Gienwood," Salt
Lake City1,' Barstow, Cat.: Bakersfleldr
Cai.;' Sah' Francisco, ' . Los ' Ange
les,' Grand Canyon, Ariz., 'ari Albu
querque, N." M.!, the excursionists will
enter the South' by' way of .El Paso,
Tex., , and will make stops there and
at Fort Worth, Tex.; Shreveport, La.;
Sulphur, La.; New Orleans, Bir
mingham,' Atlanta, Ducictowri. Tenn.V
Great- Falls. S. C. ; Charlotte," Danville,
Va., and Washington.
The thirteen " days' Itinerary In the
South as now arranged will" enable
the visiting chemists to obtain a rap
id view of typical centers of sulphur,
mining, of petroleum and natural gas
production, of by-product poke ovens,
of fertilizer manufacturing, of the
smelting of zinc and other metals, of
copper reduction, of cottonseed-oil
Industry, of packlng-h6use Industry,
of Iron ana steel making, of cotton
manufacturing, of water-power devel
opment, of the derivation of nitrates
from air, of the manufacture, of wood
pulp for paper and of sugar refining
and to obtain a fair Impression of
the rapid strides made in recent years
in the growth of Southern cities. Rep
resentatives of the material interests
of the communities: 4n . which the vlsr
itors will stay from one hour .to 12
hours may be depended upon to give
them every facility for becoming ac
quainted with the local opportunities
for applied chemistry, and it . is not
unlikely that the hosts may be given
many valuable suggestions .. by their
guests. ' ' . ' . ,
b rec6rd "of ioV ' " ;C
.". YEARS AS OFFICEHOLDER
BELLEFONTAINE O. A. Har
ry,, nicety-four years 1 old, , has held
public office 109 years. He lives in
Miami . county. He has . given up,the
office of Justice of .the peace, and now
the only offices, he holds are those of
member of the Soldier's !i -'
member of the Soldiers' Relief Com
mlssicn and notary-public. -
'r Hardy accomplished his record by
holding more than- one office at a
time, and once he - held four at the
same time. , ,
Her- is hV record! Justice of the
peac, twenty-five years; city clerk,
ten years; water works clerk, seven
years ; board of education clerk, twen
ty years; ward assessor, twenty rf our
years; member tax equalization board,
two years; appraiser of real - estate,
two years. A total of 109 years.,
He also served fifty-six years as a
volunteer fireman and served , in the
Mexican arid Civil wars.
Inability to Get Servants.
Chicago Record-Herald. ' ;
"Now York's commissioner pf li
censes, in his annual, report,, says that
100,000 more servants can find work
in that city. ; What is true of New
York is true of Chicago, and in les3'
measure, hut with striking similarity,
qf English cities. r-The truth Is. that
this is an industrial age in. which cer
:ain feudalistic institutions, such as
the old-time relation between mis
tress and maid of all work, are .be
coming impossible. .
Mr. Robinson says that girls dis-:
like household service because they
wish Sundays off, and Sunday is the
day when a servant must work hard
est; because servants can have few
or no caljtrs; because there are no
fixed hours of t-mployment, and be
cause household work means solitude.
All these complaints have been voiced
many times by many representatives
of the household workers and social
Investigators, but they gain strength
by reiteration,
,- -., Are e approaching the servantless
agi? It seems probable, though the
change , will be slow. Specialization
arid co-operation will make possible
the doing cf most of the work that
the household servant does outside
the home, or by labor at a fixed rate
of remuneration per hour. In the end
tho change will be beneficial to, every
body, but the transition period will
be full of difficulties. We may well
prepare for if. by iecognizing that the
wise citizen is -the one who sees signs
of the times and act& . in according
with them.
A. M. Nason, farming near Canaan,
Me., was badly crippled with sciatic
rheumatism due he says to uric acid
in his blood. "Foley Kidney Pills en
tirely cured me and also t removed
numerous black specks that were con
tinually before my eyes." Foley Kid
ney Pills are a uric acid solvent and
ar etrecelve for the various forms of
rhtumattem. Bowen's Drug Store, e-o-tf
. ...
Nobody Won the Prize.
"The walking craze for a few years
ago gave a well-known sport man an
opportunity which he could not resist
taking advantage of. says - Tit-Bits.
He ' had " handbills" widely distributed
in which was stated: y
"A great Crosby gentleman will
give $50 to the man, woman or child
who ' first succeeds in doing the fol
lowing tasks: To walk from the Pier
head (Liverpool) to Crosby village.
There . each competitor must buy a.
meat pie and walk around the Big
Stone -and eat It." .
About ; a . hundred entries were - re
ceived, and the walk took", place" on
Whit Monday. Much excitement pre
vailed and a great. cheer arose as a
local pedestrian was seen leading the
rest of the! crowd-. His meat pie was
soon ;eateri as- h5 iwalked around the
stone, and he went to : the judge for
the 450.
"Why.V exclaimed the judge, "I did
not think : you could have done It,
The stone? seemed too hard to eat."
"Everything to do with It," an
swered the Judge, "and nobody gets
the $50 till they do." - - (
. Curious Chinese Criminal Code. -An
interesting feature of the Chinese
ethical system which the criminal code
brings into prominence, is the idea of
mutual responsibility. It is provided
that when the parties to an offense are
members of one family, the senior and
chief members of that family shall alone
be punishable; .but if che be upward of
80 years of age, or totally disabled by
his Infirmities, the. punishment shall fall
upon the next in succession. By virtue
of this principle, the burden of criminal
responsibility has been known to de
scend from father to son for genera
tions while a litigation was taking Its
leisurely way through the, courts to the
board of punishments in Pekin and
finally to the Emperor,' until In the end
the penalty fell upon some person born
long after the event. Of the same char
acter is the mutual responsibility of per
sons residing in this same neighborhood.
A typical case Is where a parricide
having been committed, all the houses in
the vicinity are demolished, the . theory
being that the residents have been
culpable in falling to exert a better
moral Influence over the criminal.
: 1 ;
Pointed Paragraphs. '
Chicago News.
A woman says that all men must
be equal because none are superior.
Maids may come and maids may
go, but the housework goes on for
ever. ' , .
Just when a man begins to show off
before a woman, his hoodoo gets
busy. )
Most men know what nofefxo do, but
few .have sense enough to refrain
from doing it. '.. ,
Shakespeare was mistaken when he
said "All the world's a stage." It's
a treadmill. - .
" The world sympathizes vwlth the un
fortunate except when he is a wid
ower who marries again.
A woman takes " the same chances
in selecting a husband as she does in
selecting a bargain counter shirtwaist.
Tracing the ' Origin, of the' Alphabet.'
Professor Flinders Petrie" in a lect
ure before the Royal 'InstltW in Lon
don recently, attacked the ' long-accepted
theory that" the origin of .the
alphabet is to be found in Phoenicia,,
The researches of . the last ( twenty
years, says Prof essor petrieC According
to The . New York Sun,' i have shown
that signs were earlier than pictures
and it wag the sign that survived to
become the alpha and, beta of one
civilization and the ABC of another.
" Just as the philologist has discover
ed one entire system .of languages, so
the a.lphabetarian has discovered In
the diversity of alphabets an original
prototype ; of all. In. . Professor Pe
trie's words: "The Phoenicians are
people of yesterday compared, with
those who wrote the signs that" are
the origin of all alphabets."
It was to pottery, said the profes
sor, that Egyptologists and' others
were indebted for these signs, and
their development was worked out on
these lines. . Flatnose made a pot and
put a mark on It to show that it was
his. In time, because it ! was his
mark,- the sign stood, for Flatnose
himself, and then the sign became at
tached to a sound Irrespective of the
thing itself. Gradually the wearing
down. -went on until the. sign stood,
not for a sound, but a"! syllable, and
then for a letter. ' ' -
The signs, -of .course, were not an
alphabet; that did not arrive until
perhaps 1000 B. . C, whereas signs
were-, found in nearly prehistoric
Egypt, probably 7000 BC. Proofs
of this common origin were plentiful,
for the eigne spread by trade ' far
north and south, and appeared sim
ilarly in , Runic, Iberian and Karian,
and, yet. were unknown In Phoenician.
r '.-n- ' T '
GASTORM
For Infuitf and Children.
Ths Kind You Have Ahrajs BsnjM
Bears tho
Bignature of 1
Tribute to the Onion,
ifill - the onion and ' you leave a gap
in the universe. Kill anything else and
there is a substitute. ' The potato Is akin
to the cereals, squash and cabbage and
turnips and cauliflowers ar.e of tne same
family, beans are elongated peas, the
lemon Is a pessimistic orange, beef
reincarnated grass, watermelons just the
survivor of a very fit cucumber, and so
on. But the onion is sul generis, alone,
unique, triumphant. It is a v special
creation to tempt the palate, of" a weary
world. .It proves the futility of man's
wisdom. He might have guessed at
everything else under' the sun, but he
would have never guessed an onldn.
Science may deduce a new star before
It becomes visible, or radium before its
discovery, but this succulent, fragrant
starry vegetable would have gone un
Invented forever had not Its own In
sinuating, yet not bashful qualities
forced themselves ; Into tear-brimmed
eyes and liquescent anticipatory lips.
With what a mixture of gratitude and
awe should we view the spectacle of
nature turning her energies to the trans
muting of mere clay Into a vegetable
with an artistic temperament ;
Did it ever occur to you that now
is the future you longed fr several .
years ago? .
WINS HEIRESS IN WORLD'S CH ASE MISS EDITH LEE BAKER,
v .
m fifty fifsSix ' - '
V T I v-w M$M1$bkA )
a ft iM m -. y-
A Chicago heiress has been pursued around the world by a rejected suitor
and captured., Miss' Edith Lee Baker, heiress to the millions left by her de
ceased father, Edward F. Baker, prominent amonghe women artists of Eu
rope, out-door enthusiasts and one of Chicago's most prominent debutantes,
Is the heroine of the pretty romance. Henry Charles - Charplot, wealthy
and famous .International lawyer is the persistent and successful suitor.:
Miss. Baker and Mr. Charplot met for the first time about three year,
ago. On one side it was a case of love at first sight. But Miss Baker ?
was wrapped up in her art -and love of outdoor sports. Her rejection of hjs -advances
did not shatter the determi nation of ; the attorney, and several
other-proposals followed in rapid-fire sequence. At last the. young lady con
cluded to make a tour-of the world with her mother, o did Charplof He
proposed in Tangiers, - Cairo, India, Hong Kong, Toklo, Manila, "San Fran
cisco,. Chicago, New York, but accord- ing to the latest cabled reports he did
not receive the desired answer until last week, when the party arrived at
Its starting point, Paris. Miss Baker has the distinction . of being the only,
woman who ever climbed the Breithorn, one of- the difficult peaks of the
Alps. ". . ' . ' ''. f - ." ''.'''i'",-
On The Level, Ain't Mutt A Terrible Boob? ...
By Bud Fisher
fGZ WHO. 50 MUCH ) T J . fLU, YOM'W ' I HCXoCA J- ' 'V-;..- TENBfWS !
iN YHtciYW'A CgN-WNYv Vg-R. HOHOR, I WANT 4 jjX INO (GOT A J - L
MvYfeT-rG0,N, J ' ToGerp ' 3s it now; ' pgRtAVT? rir -'-Ki" h -
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