Cents the Copy. 1 t ; Sl.00 Per Year in AdvanrA THINGS. Subscription Price, COLTTMRn , muUAl, UJ J OtSSSR 10, 1907. Cartoon from the New York News. GIVE UP COLLEGE ATHLETICS, OR $3,000,000WHICH? Hwarthmora Puzslsd Whether to Withdraw From Intercollegiate Sports as a Price For the Big Bequest of a Rich Quakeress. Philadelphia. By the will of Miss Anna T. Jeanes, member of one of the oldest and; wealthiest of Pennsylvania Quaker families, Swarthmore College is to receive coal lands valued at, possibly, $3,000,000 if it gives up forever all participation in intercollegiate athletics. If the trustees sol emnly pledge themselves to forbid every possible form of physical contest with other institutions of learning, from football to lawn tennis, the lands on which are collieries paying heavy royalties go to the institution abso lutely; if they fail to do this the property goes to other charities. Miss Jeanes was almost the last immediate member of her family, and died recently in the Friends' Home, which she established. The surviving members of the family are too wealthy to be affected by the disposal of the 14,000,000 she left. All are strict adherents to the ancient faith and their wealth has come from the increase in value of property acquired genera tions ago. Swarthmore College is a co-educational institution, maintained by Sttlthv Quakers of Phlladarohia. on the outskirts of the citv: It has always teen riistinsrrffah1 for thA nth latin nrowsa of its atiidpnts Tts fonthnll baseball and lacrosse teams particularly have excelled, while it has pro duced several intercollegiate champions in general athletics. Members of the Jeanes family have from time to time helped the college, until to-day Its productive fund is about $900,000. Miss Jeanes was always opposed to athletics, holding they absorbed too much of the students' time and engen dered harsh feelings between colleges. She made known this in her will. The question of accepting the bequest came up at the fall meeting of the Board of Managers and a committee, consisting of Joseph Wharton, Charles F. Jenkins and Howard Cooper Johnson was appointed to investi gate; the lands and make a report to the board at the next meeting in De cember. . Mr. Wharton, who is one of the executors of the Jeanes estate, read that portion of the will of the Quakeress relating to the institution, and the board, several members of which are women, listened attentively. No one seemed anxious to give up the money, but none seemed willing to ta"ke the initiative in advocating the abolition of athletics. While the committee is investigating the pulse of the college will be felt. From interviews with men prominent In the Quaker college affairs It looks as if the gift would be rejected. Dr. G. A. Hoadley, chairman of the Faculty Committee on Athletics, said: "Athletics are the blood and bone of a college. They should not be cut out for any amount of money. The faculty are opposed to the accept ance of the gift under the conditions imposed." Walter Clothier, chairman of the Alumni Athletic Committee, says that so tar as his committee goes he does not believe athletics should be given up for any amount. He is also credited with having said that the college would rather win a victory from the University of Pennsylvania on the ath letic field than hae the money. Professor Hoag, who represents the liberal element of the faculty, said: "I talked with Miss Jeanes frequently about athletics. She was par ticularly opposed to football, as she said she had read so much in the papers about the accidents which attended the game. She was also opposed to the gambling that so frequently develops over games." Herman Pritchard, captain of the football team, said: "We would rather have intercollegiate athletics than all the money left by Miss Jeanes, or even all the money in Wall Street." . Swarthmore enjoys at present an endowment of $900,000. An addi tion of $3,000,000 to its productive funds would place it at once on the financial standing of Brown, Princeton, the Northwestern University and the University of California, and within a million dollars of the University of Pennsylvania. WOULD CURB POWER OF FEDERAL COURTS AHnun ave'p.an oral THirtftAn States Consider Means Of '"wi nojro-Mw-' w - .... - - Ending State Conflicts. Evansville, Ind. President Roose velt telegraphed to Captains Moore and Williams, the Evansville steam boat inspectors, directing them to suspend by telegraph the license of the master of the Fred J. Hart wig, of Paducah, Ky. Reckless navigation ofc that boat in the fleet going down the Mississippi, from Cairo, 111., to Mem phis, is the reason for the order. The Hartwig indulged in a race on the Mississippi with another boat and endangered, for a few minutes, the steamer Mississippi,, the Presi dent's craft. Mr. Roosevelt's tele gram, which was dated on board the Mississippi, follows: "I direct that the license of the master, or whoever isresDonsible for -the Fred Hartwig during the present voyage, d suspended at once, for ninety days. I wish this" done by telegraph, wherever the boat may be if such procedure is possible. Col onel Sears can give you the details of the misconduct, which has been of a serious nature, and might have'at any time caused an accident to this boat, as well as to other boats. The Hartwig carried the Pittsburg delegation. In the trip from Cairo there was some jockeying among the. pilots of the river craft for positions near the Mississippi. Thfe behavior of the Fred Hartwig, which repeated ly crowded the boat of the President, angered nearly every other, boat's master. Just as New Madrid was ap proached, the pilots of the Lily and Alton pocketed the Hartwig and gave her their smoke. Inspectors Moore and Williams im mediately suspended the Captain cf the Hartwig by telegraph, and inves tigation of his conduct on the river will be had at once. St Louis. Action that may have a far-reaching effect in anti-trust and corporation litigation, and which may bear fruit in almost every State, was ken by the convention of Attorneys-General of thirteen States in its final A mmmutofi was annotated to draft a scheme of anti-trust legislation lo be sent to all Attorneys-General, and as a climax the Attorneys-General adopted a resolution which is expected to aid in removing a thorn in tne flesh of the State officers the interference by Federal circuit courts with "ie operation of State laws. , ' , w r. xj-, n(otiAn ien 1X75X1 atferfffl . under the name of tne rtm Jonal Association of Attorneys-General of the United States, and a united fro&t will be presented in legal actions brougrjfcby different States against tile sanifl onrnnratlnn rr trust. Thft rARfrfntinn to a memorial to Congress, and was framed by a com mittee composed of Attorneys-General E. T. Young, of Minnesota; Dana Jalone, of Massachusetts; A. M. Garber, of Alabama; W. T Thompson, of a. . xt tt t-!i nio otiri h s TTadlev. or Missouri, it lollruv nn i, n Vnnncr The memorial is as IOllOWS. "Whereas . The efficient administration, as well as the preservation, or ur dual system of government requires that each sovereignty be permittea t( exercis u fnnifm na dftflnprt hv the Federat Constitution, unhamperea y the nth or- . "Resolved, By the convention of Attorneys-General of the several States ubseruDiea, tnat we earnestly recommeuu w mo i,,y. . tion of the President and the Congress of the'United States the enactment t a law providing that no circuit court of the United States, or any judge exercising powers of such circuit courts, shall have jurisdiction in any case ?rJught to rPRtmin anv nfflnoi nf a State, or anv administrative board or a ate, from instituting in a State Court any suit or other appropriate pro ceeding to enforce the law of such State.-or to enforce any order made by Jttcn administrative board, but allowing any person or corporation asseri JJS in any such action in a State court any right arising under the constnu m or any law of the United States to hate, the decision -of the Wghest J2urt of such State reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United States, s now provided by law.- t x'We also recommend that suits .in Federal circuit court by persons in rioted in corporations to restrain such corporations from obeying the laws tates in which they are doing business be prohibited." - NO. 24. RIVER PILOT IS SUSPENDED Presidents Boat Put in Peril of Collision by Jockeying. Roosevelt Demands Punishment of the Hartwig's Master For Ninety -Days Order by Telegraph. It ' . r I TAFT IN JAPAN; T ROD MEXICO Rooseveit's Cabinet Ministers Welcomed in Both Countries. T0KI0 CHEERS PEACE TALK NO RETREAT IN TRUST WAR. President Roosevelt at Keokuk, Iowa, Denounces "Great Wrongdoers." Keokuk, Iowa. Declaring that his program for the prosecution of large moneyed Interests was only a contrib utory cause and not mainly responsi ble for any business depression in the country, but that in any event he would not retreat from the campaign he had begun, President Roosevelt addressed an immense throng here at the beginning of his Mississippi River trip. One sentence especially caught the crowd. It was: "If righteousness conflicts with the fancied needs of business then the latter must go to the wall." The President was cheered when he said representatives of great mon eyed interests had beseeched him to stop his prosecution of "great wrong doers" in business and had refused. He said that it would be "infamous not to do all that can be done to punish these men" whose deeds are peculiarly reprehensible. CANADA YIELDS TO JAPAN. Will Pay Damages and Not Demand Direct Passports. Ottawa, Canada. Japanese Con-Bui-General Nosse has formally pro tested to the Dominion Government against Japanese being detained at Vancouver because they did not have passports from the Japanese Govern ment. His contention that it is a violation of the treaty was accepted by the Canadian Government, and the immigration agent at Vancouver has been so instructed. Mr. Nosse presented claims for damaees sustained by Japanese in the Vancouver riots amounting to nearly $6000. At a Cabinet meeting it was decided to pay the claim. Van couver will later be asked to refund the amount. Secretary of War Declares Hostilities Between Nations "Would Be a Crime" Conciliatory Utterances Make Profound Impression. Tokio, Japan. Secretary Taft's speech at the banquet given him by the municipality and the Chamber of Commerce is regarded here as the most important event in the history of the relations of Japan and the United States since the treaty nego tiated by United States Minister Al fred Buck in the late '90s, when he issued his appeal to American resi dents to respect Japanese laws and institutions, whi h made Buck the most popular of Ministers. Taft's speech is regarded as restor ing the warmth of the , old national friendship. The Japanese who at tended the banquet and who were representative of .all classes, are unanimous in comniending the speech as reassuring beyond expectations. Taft's fearless and outspoken treat ment of the dreaded topic appealed strongly to the admiration that Amer ican sincerity has always commanded here. Marquis Matsukata, a leading member of the Elder Statesmen, said that the speech ought to end all talk of war, for it had voiced the true feelings of both sides. The speech of welcome at the ban quet was made by Baron Shibusawa, governor of the Bank of Japan. He said the Japur ?se regarded the Amer icans as their own people and he wished Mr. Taft so to tell their broth ers over the sea. Secretary Taft's speech was in part as follows: "I wish to express my heartfelt thanks for this magnificent evidence of good will. Since my visit in 1905 Japan has been through a titanic struggle, but peace is dawning. The hAmericans are proud that Mr. Roose velt, witn tne prestige or tne Amer ican Presidency, hastened the end of a peace that is honorable to both Japan and Russia. , . "Japan has proved, -as great in peace as in war. She has taken first rank among the nations Her growth from a hermit nation in fifty years is a marvel to the world. The Amer icans are proud of Japan. She has always had the cordial sympathy and effective aid of the United Stated. The names of Perry, Harris, Bing ham, Grant and Roosevelt are insep arable from Japan's attainment of her position as a world Power. "Now for the moment there is only a little cloud over our friendship of fifty years, but the greatest earth quake of the century could not shake our amity. I do not intend to con sider details. . "The word war is not allowable in diplomatic correspondence, but those who are not diplomats can talk war. I do not hold that war is entirely un justifiable when international griev ances cannot otherwise be redressed. But war is hell, and only a great cause which cannot be settled by diplomacy justifies it. "A war between America and Japan would be a crime against civ ilization. Neither people desires it, and both Govc.aments will strain every nerve, to prevent it." BURNS BOY TO DEATH. Tramp, Failing to Get Food, Cremates Four-Year-Old Lad Alive. Oquawka, 111. Because food had been refused to him, a tramp took vengeance by beating Mrs. .John Hathaway to unconsciousness and then tying her four-year-old son to a tree and burning him to death. Mrs. Hathaway lay unconscious for an hour after the assault. The tramp mean time took her son into the orchard and tied him to an apple tree. He saturated the boy's clothing with oil, set the garments afire and fled. Recovering consciousness, . the mother went in search of her' child and found him dying. WILL KEEP OUT JAPANESE. Investigations, at Bellingham, Result in Guard on Canadian Frontier. Bellingham, Wash. As a result of the investigations made by G. B. Bab cock, a special agent of the United States Treasury Department, a force of Federal officers will be installed on the Canadian border to beep back the Japanese who are crossing into the United States in large numbers. Mr. Bnbcock found that hundreds of Japanese had illegally crossed, and were continuing to do so. Foreign Immigration Condemned. Heads of the Immigration Bureau were criticized in the Knights of La bor official publication for enoourag ing foreign immigration. ROOT IN MEXICO. Secretary and Party Quartered in Ciapultepec Castle. City of Mexico. Secretary Root and party arrived here and he was greeted by thousands. As the frain pulled into the National station the Artillery Band played an American patriotic air and the statesman re ceived a rousing welcome. The Secretary of Foreign Affairs, who headed the local reception com mittee, was one of the first to greet Mr. Root. In accordance with the Mexican custom Chapultepec Castle was for mally turned over to Mr. Root, who was told the historic palace would be his residence during his stay in Mexico. The apartments that Mr. Root and family occupied- are the most elaborate in Mexico. With all the members of the Mexi can Cabinet present, President Diaz received Secretary Root in the Hall of Ambassadors in the National Pal ace. Mr. Root was presented by Ignacio Mariscal, the Foreign Minister. He said he was delighted to meet the man who had made Mexico one of the foremost of Latin-American countries, and he hoped for a contin uance of the good results arising from the cordial relations between the United States and Mexico. President Diaz in reply said that Mr. Root's zealous work for a better understanding between the United States -and Latin-America was well known and duly appreciated, and he welcomed the Secretary in the name of the Mexican nation. In the evening there was a ban quet to seventy persons at the Na tional Palace, the guests including the Ministers of State, the city offi cials and members of the diplomatic corps. President iMaz offered a toast and Mr. Root responded. After the banquet the party attended a special performance by an Italian opera com pany at the Arbeu Theatre. , . PROMINENT PEOPLB. - T . George Mayhew Moulton willfc the first major-general of the IMnoia National Guard. The late John Bright wept as for a brother when he spoke before Parlia ment of the death of Cobden. In Richmond, Ind., Secretary of State Root stated emphatically that he has no Presidential aspirations. Allan A. Ryan, son of Thomas F. Ryan, will, it is said, build a summer home at Suffern, N. Y., to cost 000,000. Thomas T. Crittenden is the oldest living ex-Governor of Missouri. The State has had thirty-one Governors, of whom five survive. General Botha, the first Prime Minister of the Transvaal, is forty four years old, and speaks Dutch and English with equal fluency. Dr. Wilfrid T. Grenfell, of the Labrador Deep Sea Mission, has been oreated a Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George. Ferdinand Bonn, the eccentric Ber lin actor manager, accuses the author of Sherlock Holmes of plagarism from Poe, Gaboriau and many others. " Sir Langdon Bonython is one of Australia's journalistic knights. From the position of reporter he worked his way up to the editorship. Frank B. Kellogg, the special at torney for the Government in the Standard Oil prosecution, began life as a farmer's boy in New York State. Emperor Francis Joseph of Austro Hungary, the "dean oY the world's royalties," celebrated his seventy-seventh birthday at his summer home at Ischl. . i Sir W. S. Gilbert, a London Magis trate, said the other day to a little boy as he entered the witness box: "Do you know what will happen to you If you tell lies?" "Yes, sir," re plied the boy. "Then you know mora than I do, remarked the Magistrate. NEWSY GLEANINGS. Berlin reformers now have a suicide" agitation. Japan has subjugated a part of the Island of Formosa. The cost of Illinois public schools is more than $25,000,000 per year. The Peaee Conference at The Hague promises to be barren of ma terial results. Great Britain agrees with the rest of Europe in regarding the peace con ference as a fiasco. The latest and most exciting form of sport in France is the chasing of airships by automobiles. . Frank B. Kellogg and his associ ates assert that their case against Standard Oil is complete. Argentina, it appears, has 245, 000,000 acres of land that it will give to those who will' occupy it. Many of the German troops en gaged in army maneuvres were over come with fatigue and heat. Representative Sereno E. Payne, of New York, wiBhes the United States were well rid of the Philippines. General William Booth, Salvation Army founder, in an interview at Boston talked of the organization's worldwide work. Five departments in the South of France are suffering from floods, and the damage in Herault alone is esti mated at $4,000,000. More than 500,000 Jews, accord ing to figures compiled at St. Peters burg, have emigrated from Russia to the United States since 1899. Publishers in discussing the war on the paper manufacturers for the ad vanes in news paper asked the re moval f the tariff on wood pulp. A tesolution was offered at the ses sion of the American Bankers Asso ciation, proposing that each denom ination of bank notes be made of distinguishing color. UNMARRIED WOMEN AND VISIT ING CARDS. Much doubt seems to exist on the correctness, or the reverse, of young unmarried women having visiting cards of their own. A girl never has 1 a card of her own hi the best society. To do so argues one of three things, either that she has become an old maid, or is in a business or profession, or has adopted a quite undue inde pendence of character. To define the age when a single woman may have her own card is a matter of some difficulty. One girl becomes a mature woman at thirty, while another re mains a mere bantling oven after she has reached that mile-stone. Char acter has much to say on the subject, and a great deal also depends upon circumstances. Nowadays, even girls in a high position strike- out in a line for themselves. They write, paint, go in for nursing, or study music al most as a profession. In such cases as these, a girl would have many friends apart from her parents' circle, and might have a card of her own while still in the later twenties, says Woman's Life. But, as a general rule, this flag of freedom should never be waved before a single woman has reached the age of thirty-five or forty, especially if she has a mother alive on whose card her name could appear. HIS SECRET. The Man in the Iron Mask explain ed. "I was in an auto smashup, and so won't give my name," he said. Then they saw it was nothing out of the usual. New York Sun. telephones) It is estimated that all the Inhabi tants of the world could stand com fortably in the soace of SO aquas KilOS Are a Necessity in the Country Home. The farther you are ' removed from town to railroad station, the more the telephone will save in time and horse flesh. No man has a right to compel one of the family to lie in agony for hours while he drives to town for the doctor. Tel ephone and save half the sufferincf. Our Free Book tells how to or ganize, build and operate tele phone lines and systems. Instruments sold on thirty days' trial to responsible parties. THE CADIZ ELECTRIC CO., 201 CCC Building, Cadiz, Ohio. WS8.5 Retsular PrSt 1 CENTfl ILL IT WILL COST Y0Q write for our big FREE BICFCLE catalogue owing the most complete line or nigh-eracM ICYCtES, TIRES and SUNDRIES at PHIC1 I BELOW any other manufacturer or dealer in the world. M DO MOT BUY A BICYCLE 11",? S or on any kind of terms, until you have received our complete Free Cata- lOfum illustrating anu oacnuiug every uiiu ui uign-giauc uiu witkim bicycles, old patterns and latest models, and learn of our remarkable LOW PRICES and wonderful new offers made possible by selling from factory direct to rider with no middlemen's profits WE SHIP ON APPROVAL vnthont a cent deposit, Pay the Freight and allow 10 Days Free Trial and make other liberal terms which no other house fn the world will do. You will learn everything and get much valu able information by simply writing us a postal. We need a Rid Of Aacnt in every town and can offer an opportunity to make money to suitable young men who apply at once. 0 PUNCTURE-PROOF TIRES .80 ONLY mm NAILS. TACKS OR GLASS WONT LET $480 i PER PAIR i A? lU Notice the thick rubber tread L03. Ujm "A" and puncture strips "IT Uts, can JfT and "D," also rim strip "HT Ifl to prevent rim cutting. This fv,-. "KgW tire will outlast any other se. uvor make SOFT. ELASTIC and EASY BIDING $S.5U per pair. To introduce Wo Well Soli You si Sample Pair for Only out the air- (CASH WITH ORDER $4.55) NO MORE TROUBLE FROM PUNCTURES. Result of 15 years experience in tare making. No danger from THORNS. TUS. PINS. NAILS. TACKS or O Serious punctures, like intentional knife c be vulcanized like any other tire. Two Hundred Thousand pairs now in actual u S4ventvfiv8 Thousand pairs sold last year. r FSCRlPTIOR I Made in all sizes. It is lively and easy riding, very durable and lined side -Th a soecial Quality of rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small punctures without allowing the air to escape. We have hundreds of letters from satisfied customers stating that their tires have only been pumped up once or twice in r whole season. They weigh no more than, mT ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities being given by several layers of thin, specially prepared fabric on the tread. That "Holding BAck" sensation conimonty felt when riding on asphalt or soft roads is overcome by the patent "Basket Weave'; tread which prevents all air from by-tag? soueezed out between the tire and the road thus overcoming all suction. The regular price of these Sesis $8 50 per pair, but for advertising purposes we are making a special factory price to the rider of onlv S4.80 per pair. All orders smppea MS "c 7"rfm , f,."PP yon do not We will a nr- w d A Oil 'aed brass hand pump and two Sampson metal puncture closers on full paid orders (these metal rnmcture closers te be used in case of intentional knife cuts or heavy ga3hea). Tires to be returned at OUR expense if for any reason they are not saiisiaciory on examination. we are oerfectiv reliable and money sent to us is as safe as in a bank. Ask your Postmaster. Banker Express or Freight Agent or the Editor of this paper about tw. If you order a pair of r, &A Ynt thrv will nde easier, run faster, wear better, last lontrer and look. finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. Teknow that you will be so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will, give us -jour order. We want you to send us a small trial order at once, hence this remarxao'e urc ouci. 1 1:1 . . . v. a. a v n t n a ofin t fin n fi rnoTn cTTinriTT a c rrnmrmTrn fiow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price S34.55 per pair) w 1 T n hk ikk and enclose tnis advertisement, we win aiso wau if voui one nickel and usual oruei built-up-wheels, saddles, pedals, parts and repairs, QA&TEfiBilAKi&9 everything in the bicycle line are soid by us at hall the t . 1 j 1 j l t-n roro i-r mpi vh 1 1 tr lur uui uih kjun a. t:3Ld.iUL' lic SSSnswSir bt write vs a postal today. DO NOT THINK OF BUYING DO MOT WAIT bicycle or a pair of tires from anyone until you know the new and. , Z , ..-, Tt ntiiv mis a oostal to learn evervthlnz. Write it NOW. HEA CYCLE COiPAHY, Dept. "J L" CHICIutflLU