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PAGE FOUR $ftc(fnlumrt -Nrnis Foundfd 1880. i'ublishe-d by tho MINING GAZETTE COMPANY. DAILY KXi'KIT SUNDAY. U W. YOL'Ni ;d, Kdltur. v. H LYON Business Manager ntered at ihe Peel OfSeg Bl v'aluruel, 111- hlgan, mm Set Tld Claua Mall Matter. TBJBPHONIIi Business otflie Editorial Rooms 209 4 tmi Or UBSCRXFTSOIti Hy Mail or Carrier. Per year. In advance 15.00 Far year (not in advance) (.00 Per month 0 Single iH.sue 05 Complaint if ,rrenuUrlt in eleliv ary will receive promnt and thorough Investigation. WEDNESDAY. JULY 15. 1914. THE COMING OF MAYOR ELLIS Another Republican candidate t tin nominatioa for lovernor is coming to the upper peninsula. Mayor Willi. in Btlla of Grand Rapids, w ho ihortly will make- tOUff of the diMri. t. Be Will b given a cordial welcome, li.-te-neij to at- t e-li 1 1 V e h :ilnl invited to come avMtli Wa do not know what effect his isit will have, hut we do know Mr. Bill was riot in svmpathv With the in turn of Quimw l-'erris la ordering the mi litia to the npp.r country at the out- Break of 'h' strike. In a recent inter view the may of was emoted as arias If 1 were governor the National Cuard would never he used In a lahor dispute until every other maty or niam it lug order had aeea fully tried." So the j.eopie of the topper country have reason to bo thankful that Mayor KIlis was not governor at the time of the strike. We know if HoveMlor I'ei ris had not nent tin- militia IMN thai than would have been numerous san- lalaaiy aaeotaatafn, that the mines would have aaaa ii lad awl millions of dollars worth of propi-rtv d strayed. It was not a time to parlev ; it was n time for decisive action. It was due only to the prompt action of the gover nor that the situation was so sonn con trolled. Mayor Kills, we take it. is after the labor v ote when he says he would par ley rather than ad promptly in deal inn with a labor dispute. It is a view wiu.h win not appaal 'o tins regit in. THAT OLD TIME BOOK AGENT Batter Hoeaor Oaea of the Mining Qaaatta mourns the passing of i in "old time hook avast" ami writes .u, epitaph for him. He fa li 'With all Ma faults we loved him. that feib.w who . b. eUiiv abovad hi foot into the ;mall ( t o k of the door. dleanaed vvith his angaging araita and more erm.-iKin palaver your hatred of nil hook agents, offered not only to give y..u the costly and exclusive net of volumes hut to sound fear name and fame through the town as anoag its literary lights. hypnotized you into i?nlnj up and made you forget that you must confess to your bitter half your contract to pay 'fifty down nnd fifty a week. Just for egpenaa Bf ship ment. " Of oure the editor of the Gazette Is sin ere in his remarks. It is evi dent he has Rot been afflicted with hook agents. POTftapl UM fact It re quires a climb of several tedious 0jhta of stairs to reach him has aaaaeinlnaj to do with it. At any rata he seems to be immune, hut lor our selves we have not noticed that e old time book agent has passed. X know ay raeattl experience We are payiag on a "s. t " now, and Just the- othe r day mi. ggaig ataaoal harmed into payini three or four doinra down and t dollar a month foi the rest of our i . Vis. he w is an old timer, the kind wftli tJte. rraraglng paraanallty, flu ent conversation and convincing argu merit. Somehow w managed to es eaoe, but have wondered ever since I, oa it was done. Had we but known then the Mt'nt- . f the editor of the Gaaette! with exceed lag plaaaura wa uo, iid have raconnaaded hiaa thai be might be disillusioned of the idea that the oid-time book agaal had naaanl Come Ye who lag Behind a way You're loing eollart, Ever day. Now do not tare, "Why how'"' you "It can't be to, Each hdl I pay." Yet, we agree The bills you pay, And more than thots Yea, every day. Take our advice, Buy coal thia day. Save money, time And so be gay. The M. Van Orden COMPANY Houghton Laurium. a Good used organ for $15.00 at GRINNELL BROS. BIG PIANO SALE, opposite city 9 hall. LHurium. Hut perhaps even yet h will be Kiven an oppoi unuty to again cultivate the acuaintanc' of thene old timers en gaged ill the fascinating plolession of Helling book bargains. We will take plenenra m aaaaratMf to the fullest ejctetit in dispelling the- . nines our fellow scribe has ae turn hingly reveal ed. THE MILEAGE GRAFT. The MatMt yesterday voted to gag tinue the aattoegs graft gltanigal twaa tv cent a mile each wav each sess'oi tor senators and ropra BtattVae Conv-'ress is unat on i.iim when .ts reform measures do not concern itself The mileage- ra ft mis each niemtie seventeen or eighteen vents a mile, and at that it Is Ineit'itably distributed The members living near the cant:. I get oiilv a small amount in PorgpartaOB with those who live at great distances GOVERNOR FERRIS WILL RUN. tSov-rnor l-Vrris has dellnitely ail' ROUDCad 'hat he will seek another term Tins will good news to I, is inaiiv ad mirers in the copper count! y, who, ir raepectiva of party, fat i taoj owe a dei.i of gratitude la tba governor far the i IHrlagtl manner in vvhii h he did his duty durum the strike in this district. The governor wis forced into the raii- by the insistent demand of VotetS throughout the state, and his entry means a hotly contested campaign this fall. The governor is easily the strongest man the IKmo.r.itH pally can offer. He is the only one among the Demo crats with a chance of winning. Against any other standard hearer "t the Democrat! the Republicans would have a walk away. Mr. I-Yrris has made a good gover nor and nil admlnlstiation will stand ? a distinct credit to the state. His ladMacy wiU receive rtroag support in the copper cutintry and upper iien- laaula gaoarally. THE NEW HAVE N AFFAIR. The New Haven iiffiiir will never he straightened out right- with equity for the .stockholders, and for the fil mic assurance of the investing pub lic until every fairly recoverable dol lar of quaadarad and Juggled away money is back In the company' treas ury, and every demonstrable ease of rlminality under the statute is brought to iook in the courts. The New Haven ease is a good one ti use for tlu exemplary purpose of put tinp an end once for all to that typ f company control and financial ex ploitation In America it ought to be in ide far too dangerous to be tempting for gentlemen whose chief contention f a railroad is something to ba gam bled vvith. and who niuicar to reirard he ordinary man w ith money to InV if a foolish fish of the sort that the gamblers My is "born every minute. d)d MICHIGAN AND THE JAP. W are unable t i believe that ther serious (lankier of attempt to colon IN tlM Japanese in the Upper Bggjlg sola of Michigan, n-marks the Grand nap:. is iterant. I las is a long wavs from home for our slant -eyed brown skinned p.,. H0 neighbors; and lavtUag tla.uc.ii Mi. btgaa'i auricutturiil oppor tunities ..f ...urse are, we are moved to fe-1 that antl Japanaao agitators are aagagad in Oghtlag vvind mills. N' !:!:. . I payi to be on guard. I: is go relic tion oa the Jap to say thai cxt.nsnc coloaiaatioa in Mlehl- BIUI vcnid not be viewed vvith iiulli approvaL Hla point of view, his stan dards if living, his environment, are so totally different that Michigan as similation would not be a pleasant ex- pariaaaat for either of us. Having be.-n recently rescued from the agitator! it would seem that the upper peninsula ought to be entitled to ' tat on ol undisturbed peace. HOPE IN THE CROPS. If nnything will save the country from hard times it is the stupendous eropa that now seem to he .assured. rnmaal experts, revising their Hi ttajatat ..; tba wheat crop, now aaj that it grill exceed the figures pre loualy announced by thirty millions of bushels. If, a- in . die ted. we have a he.it efOp of nine hundred and tbrfty million boahala, all our past rei i.nis w ill be eclinaed. The same authority declares that air ..rn crop will ba almost three bil lons of hushels; thnt we will have one bille.n tWO hundred anil ten million ot oata and more than two hundred million bushels of barlev. Ih. crop Itaalf is real. There Isn't any paychoiogy in connection with the rveat. Preac ntly we shall know hither the pogt records have ln-en broken or not, and If thev have been UVl sum will be pal into immediate ulatioti, g sum that should Htimu- lata btialnaaa and industry generally. OUR SAN DOMINGO BURDEN. Hoavv responsibility in Mexico dl- ; labile attaatlofl from our trou bh lomt burden In Baa Dotal agn since Ihe i in s of the world were shouldered ri McKlnleya time, every president pf OoUar hurden of this aort to hear, i! i all andartooh to contest the Re den of San I lomingo I for Amerhnn collection ot I he coatomi and division of the re ceipts batwaan the Dominican irovern marrt and the bondholders. The gv WW lit se. ms c ither loo much or too little, vet it Is as hard to let go ;is to take firmer hold. The thaory was that safeguarding of (lie CU Stoma WOO Id starve- the revo lution" that used to feed on their sei zure. I;. it revolutions seem to breed like gthai pl c.rues and to feed on air. Amartcan laajhagda i'nn protect the custom houses, hut they can neither nfeguard tha government to which half 'In r. venues arc- due, nor And ti tle for another to succeed to its claim. Fine $300.00 Piano, Rood as new for $98 at GRINNELL BROS. BIG PIANO SALE, op posite city lull. Lau riii ni BIG ARRAY OF LOST ARTICLES Parcel Post Contributes Much to Dead Letter Matter TTarhlaatirn July If w. adrrful ba- v.. lid belief is the collection of alll . li s whKh the DOatofSag an make within it year from the mail that can l be delivered because of bad addresses. Thiough the benevolent agency of the panels post the department has this yaar aaoaaalad all racotatBi aad upon the shelves of the historic dead letter afflra are a ser.es of pa, k.t gaa cob tain iu crylhin fragj Hibles to b;is- SootlS. All of these arti. les were sent to the wrong address. Their original pa k- igea w.re stamped nnd rea tamped un til the aaaar was worn out. Thev have such announcements, "Not that address, try MO and so." "Tiv the next coiintv." In fact, there are more suggeatlona is to iiiiTin m thing's to trv than WOUM Bad in the office of a patent Ine vendor. I'or the sake of inn- irein e, the ornVials of tha de ad Ict- r ottice have lumped certain articles, together in large packages. Ihu- ..in ; iaaea a pacaage .a nanuKercnieu ana runs Into a brlghl young assortment of braga caatiaga- Oa taraiai froaa ;i par ticnlarly melancholy collection ooks, he runs smash into a collect! f to) a thai night have come right ut of the b;ig of Satitit Chtua, Aprons by the Score. Think of the j,.y ,,f Kiim Solomon la.... i ..id Miigbam young it thev bad lived ill these da.vs and times and ha'd givetl to them the .ulltetlts of the di.ol lattai efflca. Than is g siimie paekam that ...in. mis J41 women s aprons, with i a.-sotted lamania. which tha ..ling dappers ..f these parlous times Onsidar obsolete. The n there are 17i pain of hose bun- lied together. Bven the most p. ssimistic aoffrrrr from bay fiver . beers up when he goal b) the handkerchief deiiartment of the lead letter otlii e. There is il single lUndle at l.ltt initiiile.l iin. I unitial- ad handkef. hiefs, 1 1 posing near him, which la about the number that a ha fever patient uses during a L't-hoiii day. If the post office dep.lt ttlient decided to give away its toys it could piesent one and pr..bab mole to even boy arid girl in this city. Thev are in abun dance. Thev are everywhere dolls and elephants, and little carts and dishes, and all tl iIict thlMN that an- reminiscent, of t'hristmas time. Aviation Caps Also. Sixty-six aviators in the- United States ate Bondefing where tBOBP aviation caps are lhat they were told about fl a letter, but which they never received. The caps gn In the dead latter afflca with some automobile h Is. ii is aatonlahlng how naay motor cyclist must have broken down in the road ami written for help during the last yaar. la tha ch ad leite-r affce there repose- font speedometers, 17 tiles, L'O Bain of goigles and N pails of ma-ehine-rv tha kind of furniture which .me always finds around the gieasy and perspiring man who has Stopped his machine M miles from anywhere on a hot Sunilay afte rnoon. And the dead letter otl'ne must ring at night with the disappointed cries of BUM) fishermen. It has received 1,841 fish hooks and .VC, pieces of llsh iBg IB! Me. The only thing the dead letter oAce hasn't got is the llsher- maa'a alibi, Has Musical Instruments. Vet th. ofAoa tuts done some good. It i or railed during the last year "m mis callaneoua mualcg instruments ami ,N4 talklni gaachiae needles. That meant that there ate' al t tiOO elisap- p .luted mualelana in the United states but think of the several hundred thousand persons who would have bad to listen t,, then if the instruments had arrived safedv. in musical Instruments to their switches is nothing for the- dead letter otiiee. They have ninety-eight switches .and sitv-IWo acessorie-s stoieel away. This Is nearly oiiual, in bulk, to the. Crop of whiskers laiseel by the popu list party la Kanaag dining tha Bryan i ampalgn in 1 mm;. A few other little side lines in the dead letter afBee are awl, blcycla t treat ahoisnjaasj bona btauaketa and picture postal rarda to tlM number of about 70,ea, There are also brass ciistings and parts whose aggregiito we ight is lim ited at two and one-hall tons. "THIS DATE IN HISTORY." 1740 Iticbanl Ward became governor of Ithodc Island. 11", Napoleon I. went on board the "Hedb i ophon" after abdicating. is:i7 Cartlata defeated near Valencia by forces of the Queen of Spa. ii I MO -Convention signed in London between Cnut Britain, Austria, Prussia and RBggia for pacifica tion of the Levant. lSCjfi Commodore Stockton took pos session of IiS Allgedes. is7o War declared between France Bud Prussia. 1 H74 The shore end of a new Atlantic cabh' landed at Pye lice h. If. II. 1S77 one hundred lives lost in the wreck of the steamship "Klin" near Valparaiso, Chill. 1885 International park at . i . ; 1 1 a l"alls opened. lVtn Tw.tit v-liltb anniversary or the Salv.itlon Army celebrated ill Laandon agjiajgajnHtttttTtTfTtttTTT Don't delay Buy that piano today, very easy payments, at Grin- nell Bros. Big Piano Sale, Laurium, Mich. Austria-Hungary Is Described as Land of Strange Contrast uaahingioii, 1. C, Julv 1. Aus li la Hun earn, toward which the ayea ..f the world arc now turned because of the recent assassination of An h duhe rrain is ("erdlnanel hole to the throne of the dual moTi.li.hv and his consort, the puchaaa of lloheiibirg, is a land of strange c. ntrast, gl'Stlldlahj to a statement Issueel bv the National eie ... i.tphie- Sc.ety iit Washington. n. c. "In spite of Its important position, both geographically and politically, hut few pee.pie naihsa atactiy what they mean when the speak of Austriu Hunanry, and to many the words Aus tria and iiungai.v se sag Interchange' able tOfBBg for the same' ...iilitrv.' leads the stale emtlt. "What, the'll. IS Auatrla, what is Hungurv, and why are thev alwavs bra elated toueth.i ' The Austrian empire is a constitu tional monarchy formed of three hiatal dolus, inhlgflla. Halle ia an.! Palm it. a. two nr. h. in. hies, tipper iinii laowar Alistlia, and a collection of duchies, count ships, and margraves of prince ly rank; ail of them united In tho per son of tiie Baaparor lrant is Joseph The adjacent ami entirely Independeni Kingdom of Hungary, in addition to Hungary proper, includea Croatia, sia vonia and TranaylTnnla. countrln for merly independent, hut now. through interniat t :aue. oliiUest and inhei i tance, all iossessios of the' Apostolic King of Hungary, who happens bv a purely hlatorlc chance to be .also aov rehja of the Bgapin of Auatiia. The possession of a unifying link in the Hereon of their ronnioa rular baa i - to the Ausgicdeh. or 'Compromlaa,' whereby the two countries, for mutual convenience, have agjreed to join forces in maintaining joint diplomatic ami naval and military servi.es. Beyond this the two c ountries are e ntire lv In dependent, each having Its own e-onsii-tutlon, la islaturi' and administration. "No countrj in Burope, excepi onls Hungary, contalna within its borders so many diverse nations and tongues ;is the Austrian laiiiure. lib ot the trine great ethnic tucks of Buropa is repnaented the Latin, the German j- BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER. Dr. Benjamin Ida Wheeler, preal- deni of the Univenlty of California. waa born in Kandoli h, Mass., Julv l.i, ls34, the son of p.e-njamiti Wheeler, a Baptlat clergyman, lie received his preliminary education in the public schools nnd at Colby BCUdeUfry. where he was graduated In 171. lie enter ed Brown Univenlty ihe same year ind was graduated with honors in 1875, delivering the- classical oration of that yaar. i-'or four yean ba aerv- ad as a teacher in the Providence high school, .and the two yean following he was an instrueeir in Brown I'niver- sity. I'rotii lss to 1885 he studied and iit Lalpotc.Jenn, H4itdelberg and Vienna. Upon bis return to America he served for a brief time as an in structor at Harvard In Ism; be R - cepted the position nf profeaaor of oompantive philology In Cornell Unl versitv and reinaincil with that insti tution until called to the preeldency of ihe Univenlty of California In M.irie Tempe-sl, celebrated Kuglish actress, 4S years old today. William Winter, noted dramatic ritie unci author, "s years old today. Kranklin K. Ijitie, secretaty of tin interior In Prealdenl W ilson's cabinet, UJ yean old today. Lord Northcllffa (formerly sir Al fred Harmaworth), noi.d pubiisin-r ot newspapers and tnaga.ines, 4!t .veals old today. Blahop Lee HajM, abbntl of tha fnm mis Belrnonl Abbey, In North Carolina, r,: ve ins e.ld today. WHA T OTHER PEOPLE THINK Subscribers Are Invited to Con tribute to this Column. A communicstion should be aignad by the writer's own nsms, not necessarily for pub lication, but as evidence of good faith. Calumet. July tft. Editor Ne-ws: Winn are- we going to get some kind oi telephone nan tea between Calumel and Houghton? it certain!) has be en moal anaatlafactory for the- past two months It Is sehloin thai one can gal a line, and when a connection finally Is made, you can't hear clearly, Prevlout too few months ago, the service was sat isfactory and I see BO reason why we should be compelled to put up with the poor se rvi. tin' telephone people have given recently. Telephone Subset ilier. I'll I .' il d Kit! hen. i a , pointed I :i ,1 -Ish Ageait In I'.gypt to succeed Sit Bldon Curst. BIG PIANO SALE ends this week. $550 Player Piano for $298 at GRINNELL BROS. BIG PIANO SALE, op posite City Hall, Laurium. ami the Slav, with the later pndoml- natinc as to it belong 13 out of the 20 million people lahablflBd the Baaptri The RugsBarlaB, or genre peeassrty, th Magyar, is pet haps tin- keenest patriot in Kurope-, ai 1 he- nianlfesls his en thnslasm b seeking to impose hi ii inigc ami customs upon his Sl;i- Voliic fellow -eil iec.s with a persisted linn neither opposition nor passive te- , stance can dlWllgll b. In these lands, so mixed In nation allty and language, there is no less a varietv of religion: Roman Catholica urenonderate. but Qreeh Orthodox. I'niat Creeks, Lutherans. Calvlnists, lews ami aevea Amenian Oreaoriaaai are fennd within their borders. The customa-unlon between Auatria and Hun .iiry has nnderod these countries a commercial unit: but, rough! BBOBh ing, Hungary is the agricultural ami paatora country, while Auatria hi In dustrial, Hunger) la nlaa tha richest c ountry of fdurope in mineral eh posits, the range of which is singularly wide. Austria is, after Sw iterlanel. the' ni..si mountainous region in Kutopi m ac than four -fifths of her vast territory betm aver IM feet above scm level. btoUBtaia climbing is the agreed nation al ganae, like baseball in tin- United states. Old, young, m Matte-aged, all take a keen intereel in it. Been Bm pear or Ptunchi JOeaph is an anthuelaetli mountaineer at more thai) mi veins of a c. In his time he bag scaled most of the great peaks of his eountry. "Vienna, the imperial City, the enpl tnl of Auatria, owns her own electric and gas light, street railways and on albuaee, bo gganufacturlnal plant, warehoueea, atoeh yardOi brewery, wine collar, ail the pawnshops and even the andertahlag eatabllshmanta. Budapeet, the capital ..f Hungary, formerly two cities, Piida am; Pesi. is Paris, Vien na and London in one, a combination of Ihe g;iv. lie's of the capitals of the world, with ii little diatlnctlve Hun garian paprica aptce thrown in. "Even in tin- remotest corner a of Austria-Hungary the strong arm of the law li ever nreaent, the river atreti he- ami the back COUntry being policed bv a ln.iv.lv aimed constabulary." NEWSPAPERS AND TRUTH. Bdltlng a newspaper in some re spects is a good deal like pleaching, savs the BdnUHton Capital. The gos pel truth must be- prese nted in the' form . i gene rail ties or aoane feBaw win ge-t hit iitid howl, says a noent writer, l ew people- like' truth, even in homeo pathic doses, if it hits them Bui while preac hen ami editors are criticized for what the y do say, na one thlnka of giving them credit for what they do not Bay, Vet what tli. v keep to themselves constitutes the- major portion of what thev know about peo ple. .tv gaa iiv people that newspapers ar. derogatory tblnga. harbor the belief eager to publish It's a mistake. There isn't a newspaper thai could not spring a sensation In the community, at itn.v time bv ineiclv telling vvh.it it knows. Then is not a newspaper that does not keep under the lock afeeerec) seres of eh rogator.v thin s w hich tte-v -BT mei t I hi' public e v e- eir I each t hi' public gar. Deciding what not to print is the most trouble-some part of ROWapepe r work. How many good stories an aup preaaed for innocent relativea ami for the public good riobo.lv otilsid. a ni-ws- paper office has any Idaa of. In some instances be who nnaj into :i passion hei-ati.se a newgpaper prints some thing about him which h natd- an nticomplime ntiiry hag e very reason to feel profoundly grateful to the aewapaper for publishing so little af what it knows of him. Ami oftitnes the loudest bluffer is the most vulnerable to attack, a big noise is often a device employed to cover iiepiilatioii. Newspapers put up With more Muffing than any other agency would endure, it is not he-cause- they lack Murage; II is laaraun they an unwilling lo use their power to deetro) or ruin unless the- interest of society Imperatival) deananda it. it mlghl in- we ii i.,f aoaaa i pie to reflect upon these truths and in silent gratitude accept mild eedggonlttea leal worse befall them. BEING A ROY AGAIN. In the- August Woman's Home Cm (anion on a page devoted to stmtfc Hons for happy vacations a Kam nam COntHbaitM the following: "i.ast summer i gpanl my raoatl wiin my mot nor :u the old home whe-ro I was horn. It was forty pP.ee yean agO Ih.at I had left home. "The dinner was served In the same i.i dlnlngrooaa, and whe n i taated Ihe o im. mciiot v -S'lloked. and Ihe that I got out of the m- is while- ggs thi in ns were atlll e :k kiln-.:, and WI.M ira iiicr n,,t out (be jams, jcllii-s preeervea, i attacked everything na i did when a bay, and Just "Bvenlnna, after our suppe-r. motnvr 1 al on the front porch ami 'ail ed over the bappi nings of tl,,. pMg I fitly years and vae-n time cam- p, n i in- I waa put in my L?d bed. in the same room thai when a boy ' We make it easy for you to buy your piano now. Sale ends this week buy now, pay later at GRINNELL BROS. BIG PIANO SALE, opposite town hall, Laurium. IRELAND'S NATIONAL AIR. T. D. Sullivan, M. P., Was Dean of the Dead at Dublin, Nationalists. ,., hi of lrih T. 1. BU 111 Van, the N'utieuialisls, lot Iweiitv bet of Parhaaaent, poet , an i' tiu m ud writer of the stirring lUlllonnl son :. fJOd Sive lie-land.'' and one of the gMMM doL-ged lighters tor home rule-, has just du d in Dublia at the age of M Mis was an eventful and thrilling Oaroer during which he came- into contae-t with the f inioiis at iotia list s of the last century. Horn In nanny In 18:16, lie- was as a young man OM of the little group nlcknainid cutil.inpi- aoMaly 'The nanny Boys." with bin were T. If, Healy (his son-in-law) and htaurice Heahjr, both of whom man destined to tigute piornincutlv in Un tight tor Irish freedeaa. Be ami WatkmaUeta m. P, fag Waatnath from l.ssu-."., for Hublin city iss.- and for West Donegal ltft I tod, In t ho 'it)s, when lord mayor of Iul lln, he was imprisoned for two monihs for ;i press offenae under th'' eti ion Act the puMlegtloa of re ports ..I "auppnaaed branches oi the land league'. Mr. I la I four's geive-tn-ment was In power, gad us Air. Sulli van was bud mayor, he stood in Hil lock in his robes, accompanied bv a ma.i' bearer. He previously was prose, ni. d. wilii .Mr. Parneil and ightee-n others in connection with the land league, but the jurv dis- igreed. In lSSit he was one of the witnesses before the I'arnell commla- aion. When in TulUunon Oaol he wrote his "Prison PocBttia," which wen fol lowed by tin' works, "He-collections of rruubled Times in Irish I'olitles," publications in the .Nation, (Ibiblin). f which he- Waa the editor and pro prietor, and a lite of tils brother, the The Best at Any Price No other baking powder wiil raise nicer, lighter bis cuits, cakes and pastry, none is more pure and wholesome Why A Then Millinery Bargains Extraordinary For your Choice of Any Trimmed Hat In the Store. Every ll.it in the "tore entera ini this MUe Notliififf Reserved. ALL BEAUTIFULLY TRIMMED. The Beaton's most accepted styles ns wHl s most desirable colors and white and btack Imts. DON'T DELAY-GET HERE EARLY FOR THE BEST VALUES WE HAVE EVER OFFERED. i ti-uqr eeeeeieene(ee $1.25 per week and up will deliver a piano at your home at Grin nell Bros. Big Piano Snip T.aiiriiim IWfinii hit, A. at the found) Sullivan, M. P., who was .I t he home rifle- mov e - tin 1 1 1 . He w ill be long re me inhered bu bm wis..' tb.d Save- Ireland," written When In was mov e-el to fury over tho execution of Allen l.arkln un ' I li it'll, Ihe "Manchester Martyrs," In 1 MIT. The verses were- sung to an Ajnerlcaa air. but in spite of this Irishmen have made il a national song. Othet songs wlih h are associat ed with the histoiy of the ceiiliirv an "hturt) llviu-s' ami "A Song i-'rom the BtaakWOOda." The latter was the talon of reaaatrharMa imident m the American Civil war. when Meagh tra brlRude. on th - Northern lines He gan to sing It in camp, and the Irish men of the- Confederate army a short ili-tame away Joined In lustily to the' e -horns of "We'll Toast old Ireland! He n-cid Ireland 1 Inland Boye, Hur rah!" The London chronicle. A $10,000 DISCOVERY. hi the August Woinat.V Home Com panion appears I de-pa it men t OA' led 'Tin- Kxoiiatige-, ' in which leaden CCntribUta various household sugg. s 1 1 . iis. e ine COdtrlbtttO s,, nels In the following simple- recipe for cleaning etc li, ale fahri -s without iupi y to 0k or or goods, and savs that the I'aris Art fnetltuta offered laN prize for tin- hesi pre-pai :il ion of thin kind and the following re-, ipe won ihe mon ey : "Crate law potatoes to a pulp ami Bdd a pint of Water to a pint of pulp; piiss this liquid through a sieve ami BlIOW U tO se ttle-. l'oilt off the cleat liquid, which is to he used for clean UtCf. Hip a sponge in Hie liellid .11. d apply to tin- fabric till spois are re moved. BtnOfl in tepid water and pr. ss with a warm item on the wrong side-." Pay M ore veeeeeeeoaeeeeeej Saturday, July 18th ends that Big Piano Sale at Grinnell Bros. opposite town hall, Laurium. 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