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Secret Practice Will Be Rul Virginia-University team th fa 1 Is uppermost In the mind i each candidate for the eleven, whlc Is In i rain log, here, all of them ai g some thought to the ope ; In* game with West Virginia We leyanfcoupge to he played at Soul Side Park,j7alrmont, on Saturda I r morning workout itlon and to accon Lhe University tie: sk?will be a busy period for th Mountaineer ^squ^d. In addition l getting through the cumbersoni process ; ot. registration they wl c practice jWiice dally on the athleti field in ft-Morgantown. Both tb morning and afternoon -workout will be two-hour sessions and in o dorgthat J the men may arrang their claase'siwithout delay'arrangi tnr,nts are being made whereby the ran plan their.'courses here. Ever: thing Wosilhle will be done to e: r?'i i' ? matters for them and the to be rushed through early 8 thoy Jatf have plenty of time t BjgoacHj 'Spears announced toda ?ihat aljj.o?the workouts in Morgai ' n williie secret. Fans and sti dents may hp allowed to witnes routine part of each sei sior.'s program but later the flel mmltetovdhared and he will go Int "expcutiye session" with his squat ? All of this indicates that he is tal | ing; the Wesleynn game ser'c-usl and does not intend to let nny c WNlffiahs reach even his own team' followers If he can prevent it in nn IojfiTgeneralty known that Wei l tfith Bob HIgglns at th I Again is going to have a 10 Bent'better team than the 192 iffiey -Under HIgglns. and sal Mbjaeybf his loading quartet ; candidates,vis Edward Gnrrit ^Igj.-Wbst Union hack wh ^Shn^the Mountaineer Iresl [ eleven last season. Garrity I tttraftQ being one of the bes nd-galners Lanham had is thos tjgjuaiu'ainted with the Spear Bl^ahd would have little trot groping"' out the Varsity playi Iejhe^has never said any thin WEGa'rrity it isn't any secrc thenoss of the big plunger an mflSOP^e In the Wesleyan lin< Is Causing Spears some worn ^ftfiTneceesary for the boss c ] Mountaineers to mane som cap,changes in bis system an w|i a little more than tw &;?to accomplish this and ? RSBwUme perfect the oreaniz: Ijjbtyhis team for othor games. makes the Methodit lest look more and moro dai >ub from a West Virginia stani F&and at the present time th i are talking more about the ba wL^Fairmont than either tho Pil 5^<anft:J.games. Wesley an mue ieateh'and the big question thi badly will Wei a^pe^beaten" but "Can th jffldheers do it again?" p|)HNS0N MAY BE I ; OUT FOR ELEVEN : Bt^CKHANNO, W. a., Sept. 1; Vlfcotbair. training camp yesterda I ' ij&orning when J. Johnson, Stella Methodist athlete bobbe dup a football todquar ters. J oh nso: , hps mq.de himself a conslderabl , reputation at the Mothodist schot II ere he has captained baseba'. H| qpd basketball teams, being selec ted last year as. a forward on tb . jQl ^Collegiate Tri-state baske -Just irhat Johnson's presence a f the footbpll camp means is ur ^.Khown, althougli it is hinted tha tJeSBj[ckhannon boy ma; bo dotn 3 gridiron work this biu?uood. Join 9 ?s Lib neyer played any colleg I me football trat was a star bacl C Held man on the Buckhannon hlg I tt a few years ago playing on th name team with Hoot Flannlgat <prmcr Wesleyan halfback, no ? with fop 'Warner at Pitt, and Do Irer Boyd,1 former Wesleyan tacl v In-Hugo Bezdeck's tralnln camp at Penn tate College. He wa a", team mate also of Cobe Rosi present Methodist quarterback. 'Johnson1 Is a fleet footed yount eter, and a splendid punter. Slot ol he has playe n class and lnd I those who hav r In action say h )t the fastest co the country wet II to his galey c dared quite prol | PUNTS AN At Pitt WINDBER, Pa., Sept 12?The University ot Pittsburgh Panthers F started yesterday morning on the eeeond week ot their training here, all greatly refreshed by the ? Sunday rest Head Coach Warner and his assistants held several conferences on Sunday, talking over plans and e discussing the relative merits of various members of the squad. They were almost unanimous In their judgment of the players. Warner has been doing a lot of experimenting during the work? outs thus far, and has been paying is particular attention to the way Is certain men do certain things. ?f While there has been no scrim:h maging to date, Pop has been as-e signing specific tasks to candln dates with a view to bringing out s- their ability along various lines. h Ho may Bprlng a surprise or 1-\ two on the fans when It comes to | the final selection of his firatS; string eleven for the opening n- game of the season with the Unl?>. verslty of Cincinnati, September r. 30. It Is probable that two or " three men who have been regardIs ed as baclcfield possibilities will be id found laboring In the line, and ie there may be a surprise also in the a selection ot the ends. 18 Nothing definite has been decided upon as yet, but Warner Is a 11 progressive, and Is willing to sac-' ID rlflce precedent to work out hist m own ideas. No member or the squad is showing more spirit this fall thnu Tiny Hewitt, the big fullback, who 1" was the hero of one or two games ! last fall. Hewitt's plunging ability | will probably be more fully devel-j oped this season than ever before,! 'Ji and he is likely to prove a genuine ?ti terror to opposing forwards'.es-J 111 pecially^if Warner Is able to de-l ?l velop a line that will render a. J: llttlo assiatance. 111 Marsh Johnson, the former; lc| Bollefonte Academy boy, and a |eI star on last year's freshman teara,| :s| is another fullback candidate who r"j looks good, 'and is commanding :?i considerable attention. y Hold 'Em, Newt k'* Having hod pretty much of c' everything else tried on them to y make thorn win games, football 0 players are receiving doses of ?J poetry now with that end in view, j The treatment is recommended by Professor. Howard R. Reiter, x' athletic director of Lehigh Univerh aity and Instructor in football 1R psychology at the Harvard Sums' mer School of Physical Education. " Verse should be administered 0 freely both before and after games, and between halves as; c* well, the professor assented in hlsj closing lecture to his class. I if 8 ' ~ T" y n?. " 71 i ! J | Wesley an J\otes\\ e 0 BUCKHANNON, Sept. 11.?Jos1 eph Babyak, oldtime Methodist grid d ran. who a few years ago .was al* ways a candidate for the WesleyarJ y eleven, came in from his home in, o Walker ton. Va., yesterday, and vis . l- ited the grid camp a few hours ben fere going on to Lost Creek, where it ho will be a member of the Lost p- Creek High School faculty ^this 8 year. Many of Bab's friends i- thought he would take up tho s. coaching game, for he has worked g under Drumm, Garlow, Neale, Higit gins and Felton in his years A d AVesleyan, but the Virginian has 3 decided to enter the field of pedap. gogy, flinging out educational leo> if hires in the fields of science, e d Carl Wellon. of Port Jervls, N. 0 J.. arrived in Buckhannon yester it j day and was busy for some time 1 1 shaking hands with grid acquaint lances. Wellon will not play footit! ball this season, but will enroll foi <- 1 nnllnnn it'Arlr lAmnnnw nn>1 lia 1 . j. come another one of the big host i e of Methodist rooters. t t- 1 tt Richard Treiber. old Wesleyan { it grid fan, now with Pitt w^io has c is been summering in the Catskill j b- Mountains, is back in Buckhannon el for a visit with relatives?before entering the University of Pittsburgh this fall. Dick was among the Sunday visitors at camp, and , stated that he would be a few days . J late registering at Pitt, because he J would stay over for the Wesleyan j ,* .University game at Fairmont, as J y usual. J Howard Hfll, whose caperi at | the training camp has marked him * as one of the leading contenders , for a backfield berth with'Wen leyan, spent a few hours Sunday at i u his home in Clarksburg. Head 1 '2 Coach Higgins allowed the Clarks- i - bnrger to leave camp to obtain J some broken in equipment that i l "Hilley" feels he cannot get along . , without in the scrimmages coming t off today or tomorrow. The Clarksburger is in great condition ana ^ should have a*good year. l* And now what's to be done? Halo Pauley who was thought to be retl ducing has added tour pounds to 0 his total poundage. Hale tips the scales at close 200 pounds, and it J was thought would trafin at about l* 180. He has worked bard, and long, but the additional four pounds \ are there, Just the same, and they I 0 are showing no bad effectB. Pauley ' states it Is because he was in tip top form when he started in. ; a Never were gridders worked o harder than at this year's camp. > Higglns and Boss are always leado lag. shooting, "More." e 1- With high schools In almost o every section ot the state having >? football training camps, there Is nc >- longer any doubt but that extenI slve preparation should be mads la put la the best-physical condl' ' , ' . V .. - ' I D PASSES, "I'rc teen a football team th had been outplayed, outfoug and reduced to a state of panic the end of the first half,?pulli together during Intermission Professor Relter says, "by tl leadership of a strong pereonall and by, the focusing of the mec energies upon teamwork, r seen a beaten team, literally swei their opponents before them at pull victory out of defeat. "Choice poems, on such occ slons, not only are uplifting, b they put the fighting spirit In the men. "Success is failure turned lnsli out "The silver tint of the cloud doubt, "And you never can tell ha close you are. "It may be near wben it seer afar; "So stick to the flght when you' hardest hit, "It's when thingB seem worst th you mustn't quit. "Sir John Ball's 'The Torch Life' and Robert W. Service's 'Tl Quitter' serve as the right sort tonic between halves and after tl game an excellent selection Charles Van Housen's 'On tl Square.' "When, during the World Wn they found Sammy Reld, ex-ca tain of the Princeton footba team, dead in No Man's Lan with, his ,gun pointing toward tl enemy, he had In his pocket ? unnamed poem? "When trouble slaps you in ti face don't run away and hid "For soon he'll find your hidir place and stick right by yoi side. "Slap back and when he ae< your grit, he'll leave withoi delay; "But he ran whip the ma who'll quit, to light son other day. / "For most of us life is an uphi struggle, and many of us lot simply because we haven't bet sutdents in the school of adve slty. "The hard knocks help. "It's the bumps you get and tl jolts you get, "And the shocks that your cou age stands, "The hours of sorrow and va! regret, **The prize that escapes yoi hands, "That-test your metal, and pro^ "It's not the blown you dea but the blows you take "That count on this good ol earth." Ion athletes who are to take pa n football contests. The stren tusness, qf the game demands It. The past week moving plcturt vere made of the West Virgin Jnlversity and of the West VI ;lnia Wesleyan football tralnlr :amps, not because these two ol Ivals are to meet on Septerabt tO, but as an educational featur [0 that high school athletes, an he general public may get an i: light to the methodB employed 1 ihysical training, taken by thet wo institutions in preparing the ithletos for the rigorous demanc >f the gamo. Football is not a da: serous game, when the men wk day it are in proper physical co: lltion. There is probably no otht iport which will develop and ir >rove the physical condition inoi ,han football training. The gan tself, Is the incentive for the trail ng. Best results are not obtaine f either is left.out Whoever originated the tbougl >f filming these grid-camp picture huS putting tho real facts in tl lands of high school athlete :oaches and patrons, originated step which is likely to go a lor vav toward improving scholast ootball In West Virginia, bol torn a view of realizing the vali >f the sport, and In making it moi >opular. TO FIGHT TONIGHT. NEW YORK, Sept. 12.?Johnt 3uff, fly-weight champion of Ame ca, and Pancho Villa, fly-weigl ind bantam-weight champion of tl Drieqt, will meet in a fifteen rout >put to a decifllon at Ebetta Fie! onlght FALL RACES. CLEVELAND, Sept 12.?A fa unning horse race meeting will 1 leld at Maple Heights track her t was announced by the Ohi fockey Club today. A, thirteen ds neet will open September 30. I FRECKLES AND ] l'ou-w- u *TA'A-*e /ifaoM -OBAB-MWEBEf ] ^ ^ ^ ''' "' itijsven ?? ' Jy Coach Ice Has Great -Prospects For a Winning Team ?i> This Year. id *- Coach Frank Ice of the FalrQt mont High School football eleven m to had forty players report for the I initial workout of the season at I South Side Park yesterday after- * le noon. The bunch of candidates Is the most promising looking mater?* ial that has come out for a high school team at that institution In recent years. Fifteen letter men of last year and twenty-five new as recruits make up the squad. In addition to the players who F r?, reported yesterday Coach Ice expects at least ten or twelve more at; candidates out within the next few! [ days. Among the candidates whoi , failed to show up yesterday were; ("Irish") Callahan and Hugh; i1? Mitchie, regular terminal men of last years eleven. These two ?! ?e players will be out a little later in a* " the week. a' 116 Callahan is Suffering with a H | large carbuncle op his right leg! JJf. tr?* while Mitchie Injured a knee'?. P" while taking part in an informal i " practice last Saturday afternoon. tlJ d? Coach Ice is aware of the ability 81 ie of these two players and it will) in; give him a good chance to work! u out on some of the new men who) th I are trying for end positions while M ie: the two are rounding into condl- of ^ tlon. 1? The practice yesterday consist- tc ir ed of, line plunging, tackling',! N punting and running back punts, ta 58 Friday evening Coach Ice will Kt 11(1 start his hoys scrimmaging and 1 from that evening on scrimmage'sc Ln| will bo the order o( the day every fr ie| evening until the first gauio of the fo season Saturday September 30. th I Fans who are familiar with w 11! some of the new material trying ei iel for the team this year say that it; th Jn: is almost a sure bet that some of'is r"| the veterans of last years eleven} w i will bo pushed off the team by . a | some of thp new candidates who i are exceptionally good players for w ie( a high school team. The fight for n, ? positions will be hard and it will gl r"j tend to make a good hard fighting fit . 1 team out of th? bunch that finally w make the varsity. m e FAIRMQNT DEFEATS ? a.) IOWESVILLE- 4 TO 1 Id! T 8t i Came is Featured by Heavy rtj Hitting of the N u"| Local Team. ssi Ia 1 The Fairmont .Athletic Club dor*;feated the Loweaville team by a j; 'K; score of 4 to 1 yestorday afternoon, j a, 1(1 The game was played on tho Lowes-rrville diamond and was featured by! i0 O; two home runs by the winning' jj ld!team. The two home run drives of( 8I n- the Athletic players were made i a( 'njwhen the Lowesville players lost- tl id the ball In the tall weeds in the out-! |r; field. I a.1 18 G. Shafer pltihed a good game a n" I for Lowesville but the breaks of tc 10 j the game went against him. Maro tt n* of the Lowesville team hit one over p, 2r the left field fence for three sacks. n* The box score apd summary: m o FAIRMONT AB. R. H. P. A. E. al ie ,T. Vaughn, ss ... 4 1 1 1 1 0 ot n- F. Barker, lb ... 4 1 1 11 0 0 Be id C. Vaughn, 2b ... 5 0 2 1 2 0 th Layman, c 4 0 1 9 0 (1 ni 11 H. Dexter, 3b ... 4 0 1 1 i4 0 le a, Robs, ri 4 0 a 1 0 0 di ia Stuckey, p 4 0 11 3 Oh: s, M. Barker, if ... 4 2 3 2 1 0 ti a G. Dexter, cfi 2 0 1 0 0' 0 ti ib Kendall, cf 1 0 0 0 0 0 M In ? ? ? ? ? ? :h Totals 36 4 11 27 11 0 pi le LOWESVILLB AB. R. H. P. A. E. ts re W. Shafer, ss ... 4 0 1 0 1 0 tt Simeic, it 4 0 2 1 0 0 tc Powell, 3b 4 0 0 2 2 0 b? Magro, c 4 1 1 13 3 0 ei G. Shafer, p....4 0 2 0 4 0 tt Eby, 2b 4 0 1 4 0 0 m ; Drake, If 3 0 1 0 0 0 m Ti Garnic, lb . 3 0 0 6 0 1 tt " Celll, cf 3 0 0 1 0 b la sc 2 Totals 34 1 8 27 10 lb. Score by Innings: R. w Lowesville 000 001OOO-r-l C Fairmont A. C 002100 010?4 sj 8uramary ? Two base hits?P. bi Barker, Slmsic, Eby. Three base tt 11 hit ? Magro. ' Home runs ? J. al >e Vaughn,, M. Barker. Stolen base* ei e, ?M. Barker, Simsic, Drake. Passed is lo ball?Layman. Struck out?By w iy Shafer,'12'; by Stuckey, 3. First li on balls?off Shafer, 3. tt us PAIS r ~7~7 * ' ' IF I they win today?they , ' LOSE . NATIONAL LEAGUE WIN \ LOSE I W. L., Pet. W. L. Pet GIANTS NOT SCHEDULED. I 77 59 .565 PIRATES 76 60 .559 ! REDS NOT SCHEDULED 1 74 62 .644 CardinalB 73 63 .637 | American League i No games scheduled ? '! 10 NINE WILL PLAYGLASSIES irst of Series of Three Games to Be Played Here Saturday. ' One of the best -baseball games ' the present season Is expected ; 3:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon . South Side Park when the fast elsy Glass Co.. of Newark, Ohio, ill meet the strong Monongah; lass Co. team of this city in the| rst of a series of three games for-r ie glass house teams' champion-] lip of Ohio and West Virginia, j Recently the Heisy team issued; challenge to the local team irough the Flint Glass Workers agazine. When the management ! the local team saw the chair nge they immediately got in tuch with the manager of the ewark team and steps wore ken to arrange a series of three imes for the title. On account ot the football sea-j >n starting In this city a week om Saturday It was ntfcesuary j r the local boys to work fast and tey got in touch with Newark oy iro yesterday afternoon un?l j trapleted the arrangements for | e three games. The Heisy team, one of the fastest in Newark ami ill probably give the local team! good fast game. , > j The second game of the series! ill be played at Newark and if' dther of the team*: win twoj imutj iu h row ueciumg tne isle the th rd and deciding game ill be played on a neutral * cMu-' ond. Manager Jako Truog of the i onongali Glass team will make; 'cry effort possible to have a; rong team in the field against i e Ohio Glassies and baseball ' ns are guaranteed a good fast i tme to wind up the season. > 0 CHANGE-GIVEN | WRESTLING CHATTER; i 1 BUCIvHANNOtf. W. Va., Sept. 2?With foot ball soaring high ad the chief radio talk between )orts fans throughout the Wesyan College territory, there is ttle time for discussion of other lorts. However, old sports wiseires took considerable interest in! ie r&mblings of Brooks Cottle's I >ortive pen concerning the prob-j Jilities of the Methodists having . wrestling team this year. Cottle tok up the subject at length in | cuiuiuna 01 me a:organ town oat There la no doubt but that the at sport would be u popular one : Wesleyan. Sports wrlterB on ;lier papers have voiced this mtlment at various times, but tere is no consolidated effort Jtlceable arouml ".'osleyan Athtlc circles for the sport. It Is oubtful indeed if college officials ive ever given the idea more tan passing thought'. Just how te sport would be greeted at the athnslltst stnhnnl l? n ... UlllUULOl OV.I1UUI JO a JJIUU1UU1, With the State University dropi&S the sport, It would hardly be iken up by the Methodists, for le reason that matches would be' 10 expensive. Were the sport to 3 again placed on the state cal-| idar of sports, It Is possible that | te Methodists might take up the' at problem seriously. There Is! ihch Interest In. the game, iroughout West Virginia, espec,lly In somo of the larger high! ihools, Since the mat game has scome one of the most popular of inter sports, and since Wesleyan ollege Is In easy reach of such lort centers as Clarksburg, Pitts' urgh, Fairmont, and Wheeling, le mat game might be a profltble one for the Methqdlsts. Howter, right now curb sport chatter too much foot ball 'to get anyhere with wrestling, although a t,tle of the mat game "do seem in le atmosphere." Tag Cares FIFTEEN VETS OUT FOR EAST SIDE ICoaches Gamage and Ridglf . Give Thirty-Five Men First Workout. Thirty-five candidates for t! East Side Hifeh School footbr eleven reported to Coach O&m&i and Assistant Coach Qoat Ridgl at the East Side High School At letic Field yester.day afternoon f the. first* workout of the seaso The field was a little soft on a count of the rain of early aftc noon but the boys were p through a passing, kicking . ai catching the ball drill. After two hours' of tills woi Coach Gamage dismissed the bo for the day. Coach Gamage w pledsed to learn that almbst t the candidates were in exceptio ally good physical ocndltion. T1 list of-Candidates out yestardi afternoon included fifteen lett men of last year's team ai twenty new recruits. The letter uien out . include Captain Stealey, Layman. Keenc Hentzy, Traugh. Mitchell. Crif Dumlre, H. Woody, Hanawa Hill, E. Mdrgan, W. Morgan, Morgan, and Jorjett. Later in tl season Arnett . and one or t\ other letter men will join tl squad. At least ten of the new canc dates show?<l up well in the fir workout yesterday and will pro' a greet help to Coaches Gamai and TMHcIpv In irpthni* ?v?o hn out ot the letter men of last yei as they are going to have son stilt opposition td retain their o positions. Some of the more pr mlsing of the new candidates a Garlow, the Lawler brothers. Woody.'Meredith, Johnson. Com Connell, Howe and Schooley. Prior to the workout idst eve ing uniforms were given to all tl candidates and Coach Gamage. i structed the boys as to their co duct on the field at all times. T! workout started at 3:30 o'cloi and continued until 5:30 o'cloc The work at the practice it afternoon; will be a little hard and by the last of t week Coach Gamage hopes to ha the boys in condition to sto scrimmage. The Kast Side bovB will pl their game Septeruer 23 at Sou Side Park when the Shinnsti High eleven comes here for game. The coaches will ha hard work to ha^e the boys real for the opener. \ PLAYS LAST SINGLES. PARIS. Sept. 12.?Suzanne Leo en played her last singles in toi lament matches, she told friem loday upon her return to Par rrora Le Touqet, where she expo meed a recurence of the heart tro !>!e to which she has been suhje ecentlv. Suzanne's decision, u ess she changes her mind mea ime, means that she will not d 'end her world's title at Wimbl ion in 1923. ? ; A $20 Suit IF you never have carefully examined one of the Suits I tailor to measure and sell for $20 you don't know how much clothes value money will buy these days. Come in and let me show, you a few I have made for other Fairmonters. I Dan Block Tailor "100 Mliej to a Tailor A> Good" 106 Main Street : Little for the Future WUAD'MWttr IK SEB UE ,-VrTHBNEX I HOW THEY || t :-: STAND x NATIONAL LEAGUE, ' ??? y ,v Results Yesterday. '" New York, 7; Boston, 6. New York, 7; "Boston, *. ? Others not scheduled. i Standing of the Clubs. W. U Pet! tie New York 81 53 .604, ill;Pittsburgh 76 .59 .563; ge, Cincinnati 74 62 .544 eySt. Youls .... 73 62 .641 h-' Chicago 72 62 .587 or} Brooklyn 66 69 .4S9 n. i Philadelphia .; 48 S3- .36u .c- Boston 46 S6 .348 ,r-j ?; ut Games Scheduled Today, id Pittsburgh at'Boston. 8t. Louis at Philadelphia, rk Other not scheduled. yg ?: ... " AMERICAN LEAGUE, nvj . . lie! Results Yesterday. ,v! K?*r York, it; Philadelphia, 4. er Washington, 12: boeton. 3.' . ,1 ? [ nil lu r. rialenlt J ' v, 11 I Cleveland-Chicago, rain. d.i T . Standing of the Clubs. M'. W. L. Pet.; y'New York S4 63 .613 C] St. I^ouls 83 !?6 .601, he Detroit .72. 07 .516' v.0 Chicago 60 08 . .504' 3o Cleveland 67 ' 70 .489 Washington 61 7*4 - .455 [j. Philadelphia 57 78 .41'/ gt Boston 1. . 55 82' .401 ce \ ; I 5P Games Scheduled Todays J at Xo games scheduled. 1 ar ?. * | $500.00 "i For Informati n"e the Arrest ar ck k ; i* (Jf anyone representi he salesman cr agent oi n taking orders for clotl ay stores. th J!! We have no agents on v our clothes, therefore, senting himself is an i j! The United Wc 1 \ COLUMBi High St., PITTSBURGH, PA. 339-41 Fifth Aoe. i PARKERSBURG.W.VA. > 302 Market St. I' CLARKSBURG, W.VA. 314 W. Pike St. CHARLESTON, W. VA. 206 Capitol St. HUNTINGTON, W. VA. 326 Ninth St. WHEELING, W. VA. 1220 iZarket St. FAIRMONT, W. VA> Adams St. at.S.S. Bridge BLUEFIELD, W. VA. Princeton cor. Federal ASHLAND, KY. 214 Fifteenth St. HAMILTON, OHIO High St. cor. Third1' Adams St. at Stores also In Clarksburg, Parker lesion and Bluefleld, W. Va.; Marlet I Title, Portsmouth, Springfield. Dayt f Cincinnati, 0.; Ashland Kjr., and P ' '< fx ' * MAN- 1/ T"TIME r CALL.. 7 .6WE-VOJA t [y'Ai^ NA ?hr'"erTsr ?rrt't0V^? ' ^ "'J 8TART INVESTIGATION. ' PIT,T8BUKOH. Sept. 12.?Three newspapermen end, three merchants coniposert the coroner's Jury which today began Its Investigation or ihe recent tire whtth destroyed a hirak house of the Pennsylvania Kailroad here with the loss or seven lives. / WVER8 , Parkershurg JOj" , reel. pool, drar. . ^ Point PHaaant "5.5 feet, clear, falling. : ' Huntington ' 7, "falling, part ilondy.' Portemouth 12.5 feot, pool, clear. ' . - v, Cincinnati U.5 feet, pool,- y dear . BANISH NERVOUSNESS Wendell's Pills. Ambition Brand, for Run-Down Tired out People d If you feel tired out, out' of sorte.Jffl despondent; mentally or physlcallVJa depressed, get a "60 cent- box otvjfl Wondell'e PUls, Ambition .Brand,/afiaj the H. H. Drug Co. today and takSsi the first big step toward feeling better right uway: ".JflV If you work too'hard, smoke tWV 'much, or nro nervous, -WendellSs Pills, Ambition Brand,, wfll-hhjtfg you feel better in three days Sr,, money back from the-H. H. Drug; Co; on the first hoxf'ptifchns.edf*' 1 As a treatment for affection!*' oK the nervous system, constlpatlbmB loss of appetlto,- sleeplessness or I Nervous Indigestion,, get i^-bog-of- I Wendell's puis, ambition- brana.'ir today on the money. Reward on Leading to ' id Conviction ng himself to be the f this institution, in I les, outside of our outrj-ji 1 the road "peddling " J any person so repre-M Impostor. )olen Mills c|fl President J rre . r\ rrrr% i/o,^ vniu cor. Gay A CINCINNATI, OHIO I 17 Fountain Square ZANESVILLE, OHIO 1 Main cor. 4th STEUBENVILLE, OHIO I 127 North FourthSt. Z MARIETTA, OHIO 193 Front St. 81 CAMBRIDGE, OHIO A 727 Wheeling Ave. PORTSMOUTH, OHIO H Chillicothe, cor. Sth SPRINGFIELD, OHIO i Bookwalter Hotel Bldg. I DAYTON, OHIO 38 South Main St. LIMA, OHIO it I Lima Houte Corner MARION, QHIP 1 136 South Main St. S. S. Bridge JhI sburg, .Wheeling, Huntington. Charts, Zaneavllle, Camonoge, Steu: on. Lima, Hamilton, Columbua and I ittaburgn, ,4