The Great Fair. ITS SUCCESS NOW ESTABLISHED THE GRRATEST IS THE HISTORY or F.X POSITIONS. The success of the World's fair is more than assured; it is established. The success promises now to be as magnificent as is the scope of the ex position itself. There is nothing in history with which the Chicago fair may be compared except the Taris ex position. The World's fair excels the universal exposition in the beauty and extent of its buildings and in the var iety and attractiveness of its exhibits. It remains only to be seen whether the attendance at Chicago will exceed that at Paris. It is probably going too far to pre dict or even to indulge the hope at this time that the attendance at the World's fair will be greater than at the French exposition. The total admis sions at Paris were, in round numbers, 28,000,000, and of these 25,000,000 were paid. The average paid atten dance was about 150,000 per clay. The daily average of paid admissions at Chicago lor the month of June was nearly 100,000. The indications are that it will reach 125,000 in July. If the increase reasonably expected for August, September and October is realized the number of visitors will be almost if not (piite sutlicient to bring the average daily attendance for the entire six months up to 150,000. If the total atttnt'ance at Chicago should equal that at Paris the triumph of the World's fair would be unparallel ed. It must be remembered that the charge for admission at Paris was only twenty cents, while at Chicago it is fifty cents. Again it must be remem bered that there are more than 200, 000,000 people living within a dis tance of 500 miles from the French capital, while the resident population within 500 miles of Chicago does not exceed ;o.ooo,ooo. Considering the difference in the price of admission and the tremendous difference in the figures of population showing the re sources from which the visitors were and are drawn, it would be marvelous indeed if the attendance at Chicago should equal that at Paris. Whether Chicago can equal Paris in the num ber of paid admissions is not, how ever, a question which materially af fects the success of the World's fair. It is already apparent, in any event, that the Columbian fair will be the most successful as it is already the greatest exposition in the history of world. Don'ts for Lovers. Don't forget that marriage is foundation of a new family, not union of two old ones. Don't marry one whose tastes the the and ideals in life are so different from your own that there could never be single ness of aim and purpose in the home. Don't marry anybody till satisfied that life together will be bearable and enjoyable, as long as both shall live. Don't expect marriage to make a great change in the habits and aims of young man or a young woman either. Don't take any stock whatever in the promises of post-marriage reform ation ; the young man who will not give up his dram or any other offen sive habit, for the girl whom he is ready to die for, will not be likely to give it up after he has broken her heart and ruined her life by his evil conduct. Don't try to win love by flattery. Don't allow yourself to be won in that way. Don't try to buy love by rich and numerous gifts ; love got in that way is not worth the having, for it is not love at all. Don't take anybody that comes along and offers himself, through fear that there may 'not be another chance. Infinitely better a single life than a married existence full of wretchedness and misery. Don't marry for physical beauty alone ; for unless mated with beauty of mind and spirit, it is truly an ap ple of ashes. Don't forget, wheu married, that mutual forbearance is the keynote of lifelong happiness. Good House keejnng. $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh, being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mu cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the di sease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of Testi monials. Address, F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O fir-Sold by Druggists, 75c. 1111. Whiskey will take out every kind of fruit stain. Pour it on the discolored places before sending it into the wash, and it will come out as good as new. Bread-Making in India. Indian yeast is made from the sap of the date palm. In April, before the Howers appear, a Hindoo climbs the naked trun --for the leaves, as in all palm., ars all n,-ne at the top. I'ne nun's feet are bound to geiher by a rope and about his hips are tastened two pots for the recep tion of the sap. - As he climbs he calls out : "Dar. por, darpor, ata hain," which being in tcrpreted, is: "The palm-tapper is coming." This is for the benefit of the Mohammedan women who might be sitting unveiled in the courtyards of the houses exposed to the view of the climber after he has arisen above the tops of the walls. A tapper who once fails to give this warning cry is thenceforth forbidden to ply his trade. A European who sees this performance for the first time, not knowing what the man is after, is very apt to take him for an ape, to which animal the brown and nearly naked Hindoo bears a striking resemblance. When the tapper has reached the crown of the tree he cuts two gashes in opposite sides of the trunk with an axe, which he" has carried up in his mouth. Then he fastens the pots un der the cashes and descends. The full pots are taken away and empty ones put in their places twice daily. The sap has a sweet taste, and con tains some alcohol even when fresh. After standing in the sun in great earthen pots for a few days it begins to ferment, after which it deposits a thick white substance. This, taken at the proper time, is used as yeast. The natives aluo make vinegar and a kind of distilled liquor from the palm sap. The Indian flour-mill is very primi tive, consisting of two great millstones, of which the lower is fast, and the up per is usually turned by two women who feed the wheat by handfuls into a hole which passes through the stone. The meal so obtained is simply mixed with the palm-yeast and baked in very hot ovens, which have been heated for several days. The small European householder finds it more convenient to patronize Mohammedan bakers, of whom, how ever, the bread must be ordered in advance. Sometimes two or three English lamiues combine and hire a baker, paying him a monthly salary and providing him with raw material The Hindoos eat unleavened bread by mixing flour and water and baking in thin loaves or cakes over a wood tire. Aver's Pills promptly remove the causes of sick and i.ervous headaches These Pills speedilv correct irregulari ties of the stomach, liver, and bowels. and are the mildest and most reliable cathartic in use. No one should be without them. Teeth of the Beaver. SHARP AS CHISELS THEY ARE CONS TANTLY NOURISHED. Piom Kt. Nicholas. As in every "gnawer the beaver s skull is armed with two long, chisel like teeth in each jaw. These teeth are exceedingly powerful, and are to a beaver what an axe is to a woodsman One such tooth taken from the lower jaw ot a meciium-sizea skuii (tney can be removed without rtimcuity, un like the most of ours) is tent into nearly a semi-circle, and measures five inches along its outer curve. Only one inch of this length projects from the skull. rhe corresponding one from the upper iaw is bent into more than a complete half circle, and meas tires from its outer face five inches, of which less than an inch protrudes from its bone casing. In width each tooth is five eights of an inch. Examination of one of them rereal- ed the secret of how a beaver can per form such feats as chopping down birch tree sixteen inches in diameter, not to speak of softer woods, like the basswood, of much greater size. The tooth is composed of two materials. Alone the outer face or front of the tooth is a thin plate of exceeding hard enamel : on the latter, forming the body of the tooth, is a substance call ed dentine. The dentine, being soft er, wears away with use 1 the thin en amel remains comparatively unworn, so that the tooth assumes the shape of a keen chisel that never grows dull. The tooth is hollow at the base for half its length, and is filled with nourishini! substance which keeps constantly growing. Thus, not only is the natural wearing away provided atrainst, but a certain amount of wear becomes an actual necessity. With such instruments the beaver is admir ably fitted for obtaining its natural food, the bark of shrubs and trees. It Should Be in Every Housa. J. B. Wilson, 371 Clay St., Sharps burg Pa., says he will not be without Dr. King's New Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs and Colds, thai it cured his wife who was threatened with Tneumonia after an attack of "La Grippe," when various other re medies and several physicians had done her no good. Robert Barber, of Cooksport, Pa., claims Dr. King's New Discovery has done him more good than anything he ever used for Lung Trouble. Nothing like it. Try it. Free Trial Bottles at C. A. Kleim's Drug Store. Large bottles, 50c. and f 1.00. Adrice fc Youn Women There is nothing so certain to make you disliked as to tell your trouble to a Iriend. Prosperity means friendship, but once you take it into yon.- hea l to retail your wos you will boon discover that your company is not wanted, and people who once bowed to you in pleasant recognition now walk on the other side of the way with a cold and stony glare that looks over your head or through your body, but never meets your eyes as of yore. Ihe people are not hard hearted that turn the cold shoulder to you. They are only averse to knowing of any more misery than they already have to hear. Wc every one of us have our little troubles. In some cases they grow to be very large ones, and it isn't pleasant to have trie dark side continually thrust before us just when we begin to feel a bit comforta ble in our minds over some unpleasant occurrence that has upset us for a time. Take a bit of valuable advice, and when you feel like telling some one of your spat with your intended or how low your finances are, just remember our warning and don't do it. Your mother, your husband are the truest sympathizers, and outside of them you are certain to be called a bore if you persist in harrowing confidences. The midsummer Cosmopolitan, the first at the new price of 12 J cents per copy, though unchanged in size, excels any other issue of that magazine in the number of its distinguished con tributors, in tue interest of its con tents and in its overflowing illustrations by famous artists. Francois Coppee, William Dean Howells, Camille l lam marion, Andrew Lang, Frank Demps ter Sherman, H. II. Boyesen, Charles I )e Kay, Thomas A. Janvier, Colonel Tillman, Agnes Repplier, and Gilbert Parker are a few of the names which are on its title page. Three frontispieces, all by famous artists, turnish an unusu al feature, and among the artists who contribute to the 119 illustrations adorning its pages, are Laurens, Rein hart, Fenn, Toussaint, Stevens, Saun ier, Fitler, Meaulle and Franzen. The midsummer number is intended to set the pace for the magazine at its new price of 12 J cents a copy, or 51.50 a year. 1 he magazine remains uncnang- ed in size and each issue will be an advance upon its predecessors. Liter ally, every known country is being ran sacked for material in the hope to bring the Cosmopolitan forward as the leading magazine in the world. A God send is Ely's Cream Balm. I had catarrh for three years. Two or three times a week my nose would bleed. I thought the sore would never heal. Your Balm has cured me." Mrs. M. A. Jackson, Ports mouth, N. H. I was so much troubled with catarrh it seriously affected my voice. One bottle of Ely's Cream Balm did the work. My voice is fully restored. B. F. Liepsner, A. M., Pastor of the Olivet Baptist Church, Philadelphia, Pa. Judge Dallas Empowers tho Receivers to . Issue Interest-Bearing Certificates. Judge Dallas, in the United States circuit court, issued a decree confirm ing the report ' of Master George L, Crawford, and empowering the recei vers of the Philadelphia and Reading railroad and coal and iron companies to issue certificates on behalf of the railroad to the amount of $3,545.5231 and on behalf of the coal and iron company to the extent of $197,526. The certificates will bear interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, and are made transferable by inJorse ment, but nothing is said as to their being a lien upon the property or its earnings. In the absence of any pro viso to the contrary, however, they be come practically a first . lien, having the same status as the floating indebt edness which they will replace. Judge Dallas also filed an opinion dismissing the petition of the bond holder, John Lornie, of Scotland, for leave to intervene as a party plaintirl in the Thomas C. Piatt receivership suit aeainst the Readme;. A rumor that the Vanderbilts are quietly buy ing a controlling interest in the Read ing road is not given credence. A Sheriff Eilled by Lepers. Advises from Honolulu say that while attempting to remove twenty eight lepers from Kalalaua valley, Kanui, Sheriff Stoltz, acting under orders from the board of health, was shot and killed by the lepers. His body was brought to Honolulu. The board of health determined to remove the lepers to the settlements of Mola kai for fear they would spread the dis ease beyond the limits of the valley. Stoltz was accompanied by only two policemen. The two native police men were not attacked. The lepers have sworn vengeanca against any white men who come to remove them ihe board has determined now to remove all the lepers at all hazards and will land officers on the beach by steamer, and by guarding the one trail leading into the valley will force the lepers to surrender or will shoot them down from the cliffs which hem the valley in. France has half as many people as the united states, but her national debt is twice as great as ours. L.l ...l 4.1. II .V 1 ' ' l . , $20, Sis and $8.50 for RNew York clothing maker was hard up for cash. We bought all his Men's Suits (made to sell for $20, $15 and $12) at a price that enables us to offer them at $8.50 per Suit. We are selling Boys' $5.00 Knee Pant Suits for $2.50. Hundreds to pick from. This was another clean-out. BROWNING, KING & CO. 910-912 Chestnut Street WARREN A. REED. An Editor's Mistake. From tho Uoston Traveller. The editor of a weekly journal late ly lost two of his subscribers through accidentally departing from the beaten track in his answers to correspondents. Two of his subscribers wrote to ask him his remedy for their respective troubles. No. 1, a happy father of twins, wrote to inquire the best way to gel them safely over their teething, and No. 2 wanted to know how to pro tect his orchard from the myriads of grasshoppers. The editor framed his orthodox lines, but unfortunately trans posed their two names, with the re sult that No. 1, who was blessed with twins, read, in reply to his query, "Cover them carefully with straw and set fire to them, and the little pests, after jumping about in the flames a few minutes, will speedily be settled." While No. 2, plagued with grasshop pers, was told to "Give a little castor oil, and rub their gums gently with a bone ring." Its concentrated curative power, make Ayer's Sarsaparilla the best blood purifier. Is He the Borden Murderer? Rome, N. Y., July 7 Dr. C. II. Lloyd, a dentist here, night before last picked up a letter on the street that was addressed to Lawrence Car penter, Albany, N. Y. It had been forwarded from Albany to Kome. It was postmarked Fa'l River, Mass., June 22, and the letter enclosed bore the same date. I he letter was evi dently written by a very illiterate per son and was in substance as follows : My Dear Husband: Lizzie has been acquitted and I don't think they can do anything with you now. I want you to come and spend the Fourth. The papers give a descrip tion of the man seen over the fence on the morning of the murder. Can you prove where you were on the morn ing of the murder. signedj Annie. Up to the present the correspon dent has not been able to secure the letter or an accurate copy, but the above contains the principal portions of the epistle. In the Northern Central railroad yard, at Sunbury last Thursday morn ing, a shifting engine ran over a mis placed switch into a train of tank cars on the next track. The cars were fill ed with oil and naphtha, and several of them exploded, scattering the burn ing oil in all directions. The other cars of the train were quickly detach ed and drawn away from the fire. Seven tank cars were consumed and also seven refrigerator cars which stood on an adjoining track. The shifting engine was also ruined, and the ag gregate loss to the railroad company is estimated at $25,000 to $30,000. Tissot says that talking is a healthy exercise, promoting the circulation of the blood without any risk of exertion. He attributed to their activity in this line the fact that women live longer than men. Bogus ! Bogus white lead would nave no sale did It not afford makers a larger profit than Strictly Pure White Lead. The wise man is never persuaded to buy paint that is said to be "just as good " or " better " than Strictly Pure White Lead The market is flooded with spurious white leads. The following analyses, made by eminent chemists, of two of these misleading brands show the exact proportion of genuine white lead tbey contain : Misleading Brand Standard Lead Co. Strictly Pure White Lead. St. Louii." Materiula lToportlona Analyzed bjr Uryte 611.30 per cent. Refill C'lmuvinot Oxide of Zinc W.1H por cunt. fc lro., Vi'liiUi Leud 0.46 per Cunt. Bt. Louis. Less than 7 per cent, white lead. Misleading Brand Pacific Warranted Pure A White Lead." Material Proportion! Auulyzcd by HnlpUatoof Lead 4.1S per cent. Ledoux & Co., Oxide of Zluc 45 .04 per cent. New York. Uurytca 50.68 per coin. No white lead in it. You can avoid bogus lead by pur chasing the John X. Lewis & Bros. brand. It is manufactured by the "Old Dutch" process, and is the standard. For aale by the moat reliable dealera in puinta everywhere. If you are going to paint, it will pay you toeeiid touafor a book containing Informa tion thut may save you many a dollar; it will only coat you poatal card to do ao. JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS. CO., Philadelphia. $12 Suits Opposite Fost Office, Philadelphia Fine PHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip Bros., Bloomsburg. The best are the cheapest. fTM CMkrtr' Knffltak IMnmd Ureal. rtNNYROYflLflLLS HSeTiV Htffl Only Oonaln. A wmww, BuwBtjn tiii. WDiie, mmn IntHt fcr Chietuattr' JrnoiU Pit , wumd Brand In KsmI ud Gold mrtallia1 IiioiM, awftlwj with iia rlhhou. Take nn utkas. Rtfiti tLMiavntiw ntbstttu- Hons ttnti imtlmtum. At llruMiMi, r ara44 In tnaraj for ptlculr, fcvtlwoaltlt tod "Kllf IWr 11, n foffsr, by rrtnrv If mtul I tl.lM'W i i'Iiiiuoduii, wane fipesr. flfclohMta Tfcamlakl (tav.Mndlann Hnuarfk HW by U Ui DnittW. Phil I'tV PILES ASAKISTSrlvwilntnnt relief and is un infallililo Cure for Film. I'rleeJ.1. Hy oniiririRtAormiul. Painpies fre. Aildrww" AS A K KKIS,' llox 2410, New York City. TIED TO ST4Y. That's the way with any animal fastened to Erath1 s Patent Hitching Post. This Tost ran't le pulled up, loos ened by force or heaved by frost, costs less than a sioao, wood or cast-iron rost. Made or wrougnt and mullenble Iron. Plenty of styles and Mixes. C .W. ERATH 03 S. Main. WllkesBarre, PA. ' ELY'S Catarrh CREAM BALM; Cleans the Nasal Passages, Allays Tain and Inflammation, Heals the Sores. Restores the Sense of Taste and smell. TBY THE CURE HAY-EEVER A particle Is applied Into enrh nostril, and Is agreeable. Price SO cents at DruirirlstH; by mall registered, 60 cts. ELY BKOTUKUS, M Warren St., a .1. CAVEATS. TRADK MARK. DiaiON PATINTS.I COPYRIGHT. attoJ For Information and free Handbook write to MUNN CO.. m Bhoadwat, Naw VoHST. OMeat bureau for securing patenta In Anioiioa. Every patent taken out by ne la brought before the pubUe by a uotloe gtTan tree of charge In Ui (icutific mencau tamat el nutation of any eclentlflc paper In the. world. Splendidly Illustrated. No Intelligent muii should be without it. Weekly, .'J.M a yt-urt l.ti(Jlx mo- the. en. AiinreMi uunn x Broadway, Mew York City. THOMAS GORREY Plans and Estimates on all kinds of buildings. Repairing and carpenter work promptly attendca lo. Dealer in Builder's Supplies. Inside Hardwood finishes specialty. i ersons 01 limited means vi o desire to build can pay part and secure balance by mortgage 01 W0RLD'SFA1R BEVERAGE. The most healthful and populur drluk of the Thc proper drluk for both table and tlrt'Htdti now wit Ida l lie reach of nil. Kvery tlirlfi y housewife uun provide ior ner home, grape., nr- anii, pear, clu rry, apple,;uamuiaand pineapple elders at Ihe small expense of llfteen vents pur KulUm. Keep your nusuHniis auu kiiiis at. huimi by preparing for them thoae delightful and haiiiili'ss ilnQks ; tncreby saving ihe numcy that luWlit iKMslbly Mini Us way lulo 1 1m ha. loons. Tl only lakes ten minutes to make uny one of these delightful drinks. Enclose 10 cents for one, or GO cents tor seven of the " Fruit Clclei Keelpcs". Address NIMS NOVELTY CO 3163 t'allmot Ave., Chluuuo, 111. ; i WFEVEr8 4r Solentiflo American JJr VC2 TOB MARKS, CsVJ OtaiOM PATINTS. BAD C0fMCTS REVOLT Many of Them Make a Bold Break For Liberty. KEEPERS MURDEROUSLY ATTACKED The Iona, Mich., Beformatory the Seen of at Hloody Buttle 1 hrea Conleta Killed anil Several of the I'rlaon Offlo lala liangereuely Wounded. Dktkoit, July .11. A special despatch from Ionia, Mich., says: Full 75 convicts at the House) of Cor rection made a break for liberty yesterday afternoon. They were at work In ths va rious shops. The first 10 or 15 left their work and started for the west wall. The ringleader was convict William Smith, known as 803, a five-year man sent up from Detroit. Smith has lost time be fore, having made an attempt to escape a year ago last September, and he is a tough character. Tinsmiths have been at work on shop No. 21 about 10 rods from the west wall repairing conductor pipes. Two long lad dors were used and were stnndlug against the building. Smith started out and was followed by the others who were In the scheme. He quickly clasped the ladder standing against the west wall. Warden Parcel! had dUcoverea that something was brewing over Sunday, and had doubled the guards yesterday morning;. Teacher Courier was watching arouna m the vlclnltv of this building and when he saw Smith and the gang come out be fired a shot from his revolver into the ground and ordered them back. Smith urged them on, paying no attention to the order. Tub mun on the wall ana uuout tue yam quickly uaiwjmbled at this point and were ordered by Warden Parceil to stop the break. A aeneral lussuacie commenceu and a hnnd to-hand fight followed. The lenders were knocked uovra but the con victs replaced them, nnd Oscar Miller, au eight-year man, gained the top of the wall. The guard shot at him ana me oau went clear through his body and he dropped to the ground dead. In the meantime a terrible buttle was going on below. Con vict Smith struck at Deputy Warden Row ley with a hammer, but the latter dodged and escaped death. Kowley struck con vict Charles Y. Jones ou the head and he dropped. He will doubtless die, as his head is terribly cut. William Eager, sent from Grand Rapids, was badly wounded and his recovery is doubtful. He is serv ing a 15 year sentence for manslaughter. Smith, another convict, brought into play a long billy made out of sheepskin, loaded with sand. This with three hammers, a large wrench and a round stone were after wards taken from the leaders in the break. How they got them is a mystery. teacher Ciourley was struck on the head with the stone which was hurled at him. It grazed his skull but did not seriously injure him. It was only by prompt action that the wholesale liberation of the convicts was averted. Hallmaster Parceil grabbed up the hot irons used by some local tinners and commenced prodding the convicts, who ran back. Four convicts were Injured. Jones has concussion ot the brain, and Smith, the leader, was found to have a bad cut ou the back of the beau. On seeing the first ten follow Smith oat of the shop the rest followed until th ey were driven back. Two Men Asphyxiated. Mahanov City, Pa., July 11. Harry and Jacob Klein, both bachelors of middle axe. living alone in a house In the central portion of town, were missed by their friends and neighbors since Saturday. Laat evening, on breaking open their house, which was securely fastened on the inside, both men were found asphyxiated by gas from a stove. Both men were pos sessors of considerable property. Ended file Llf With Bat Poleon. Chicaoo, July 11. Oswin Mayo vice president of the T. E. Wells Packing Co., suicided lost evening with rat poison. It is supposed that he was temporarily In sane. He was a member of the Board of Trade and his death was the third to occur In that body yesterday, a circumstance wholly unprecedented. Tried to End Her Tronbtes. Patersox, N. J., July 11. Miss Lizzie Blake, 18 years old, a domestic In the em ploy of the Rev. F. H. Stone, pastor of the Fourth Baptist Church, attempted suicide last evening by taking a dose of parts green. Family trouble was the cause of the attempt at self destruction. Thay Obtained aa Attachment. Nkw Yokk, July 11. E. Paladlni A Co., wholosale Bilk dealers have obtained an attachment in the Supreme Court against property In this city belonging to Theodore Tleltz, silk manufacturer of Hartford. Conn., in a suit to recover JJ9, 024.73 due on three notes. JUWVtK IIIIU V ( I'M , ll.T. San Francisco, July 11. The latest advices are to the effect that the steamer Bawnmore which struck a rock off Point Oardo and was about to sink has been towed into Caspar Bay on the Mendocino coast. She Is In a very much damaged condition. . Mra. KateOrlswold Iaad. ' Danbcry, Conn., July 11. Mrs. Kate A. Grlswold, corset manufacturer, with factories In New York city and Bethel, Conn., is dead at the latter place aged 60. She has been In the business some B0 yeurs and hud amassed a fortune. Failed for More Than 3,000,000. Den vcr, Ool, July 11. The Chamber lain Investment Company, 11. B. Cham berluiu president, the largest real estate ' concern in the West, has closed Its doors. The liabilities, direct and contingent, are $3,HG3,m, and aaeta $3,000,000. A riunlug Mill Company Aeslg-na. ' ' Cincinnati. July 11. The MadlsonviUa Planing Mill Company of Madisonville, O., has made an assignment. Assets and liabilities about $,'0,000. Stringency of the money market is the alleged cause of the failure. Will be Sent Hack to Italy. New York, July 11. Twenty-six Ital ian contract laborers ou their way to St. Louis were prohibited from landing laat evening at Fills Island. They will be sent back so Italy. In the Hands of nn AmIkiix. Cleveland, July 11. The Keuuard House, one of the leading hotels of tu i city, bus been placed In charge ot an u-signee.