—————— " sm ——— ———— Pa. ——— 5 The man who undertakes to accom plish too many things at the same | time generally pays a high toll in the | end. He may succeed for a while, but | he does so at fearful risks and with out properly reckoning the cost to | himself. He is the exception, though rather than the rule and often “makes good” at the expense of his physical and mental well being, says the Charleston News and Courier. Giants among men are rarities even in this day of surprising developments and record and rule the man who follows one line of work achievements, as a with close attention and conscientious regard will lay by for himself greater guccess and more enduring results than he who dabbles In any undertak ing that may come his way. It is not an easy thing to shut ourselves away from tempting condi tions that may ing once fitted tain work, and and energy in it only natural to suppose obtain more certain results by devel oping it to the of ability Bometimes the is long hours of application are but often when we least expect it the clouds begin to lift and the refilization of the promises for which we have labored. influences and appeal to us, but hav ourselves to do a cer having expended time its accomplishment, it that aa we can best our hard; necessary way we see What clever prankishness was that of the bors of West Lafayette college, Ohio, who put oil in the milk for the girls’ dormitory, causing of the co-eds to become so ill as re- quire the attendance of physicians! They were nearly as daring as the young men of the Pacific insti tution of learning who raided girls’ dormitories and frightened some of the occupants into hysterics by pulling them of Bed. The twentieth century young man does many things that would occurred in any earlier age. cause of the disappearance birch as an aid to education? twenty to coast the out hardly have Is it be of the An automobile in New York picked up a stone in its wheel and flung it into a window, almost striking some persons. The automoblie is perhaps the most striking instance of the In nate depravity of inanimate things. It hes been known to try to climb a tree or a lamppost and to turn somersaults in the open, to say nothing of its run ning down the general But now it has taken to throwing stones at people, something toward curbing its have to be done. public imperative impetuosity will We are accused of being the most wildly speculative nation in the world. But in the year London has run wild over the rubber craze, then went through a boom in ofl shares, and has finally turned to a bull gamble in British The United States has, on other hand, stopped speculation, perhaps for the sufficient reason that the lambs had no more fleece to shear. railroads. the practically The golden anklet with bangles has appeared in Chicago. This Is prob ably a decoration Intended to go with the harem skirt and shows again the inconsistency of the feminine mind While the inhabitants of the eastern harems are taking to Paris styles western women are looking for thelr fashions to the Orient People who live In New York com- plain that the place Is becoming toe noisy at night. The people who make the noise will find it difficult to under stand why men and women who long for peace and quiet Insist on living in New York. Members of a club in Atlanta say | they will go to jall before they will tell what they know of women drink | fng in the club. The poet was mis taken. The world's male chivalry has not perished out. It has joined’ the Atlanta club. It may be that a woman must put | her soul into her dress in order to jook well, but, at the same time, a | good deal of importance rests on the | sort of a physique she is able to put into it. | Far be it from us to arouse slum. | of the tight trousers and a few months ago? At Newark, N. J, a lawyer charged bis fair client 3500 for reading a bundle of love letters, and she is com- plaining. She should have hired a women lawyer and had them read for nothing. An English author was fined in New York the other day after he had re celved a wallop on the eye for trying to flirt with a pretty damsel. We have no doubt that he will write a book entitled “Seeing America.” BATTLES ENDED Saloon Smasher and Hatchet Wielder Dies in Kansas. WAS A FEARLESS WOMAN. First Achieved Fame by Hurling a Hatchec Through a Plate.g ass Mirror in Topexa Saloon. Leavenworth, Kan tion, the famous Kansas smasher, died here Paresis For Was CauUBe geveral months Mrs with nervous di guffered » on January 22 she tarium in whi Ihe informed ag0 that she sald nothing, Worry } " ILE Ww hnica she brought eau for faliure physician at Mrs Nation several days end was neat the against to pay for services i8 Bald have caused her Toe breakdown Lo § fy Ne jast five months of Mrs. Na ast 10, SAW | tion's life was in marked cont: her a ph i former Once she Ng a cigarette sie i 3 wo monsirance, merely sayil Li Bil adi- had done what she Cale the evil Woman of Unigu ing Aa Dal bar of vy throw OERANDY Topeka, Kan, egliass mirror, EFFECT OF TRUST DECISION Wilt Alter Form of Government, De clares Secretary of Com- merce Nagel eid Boni CHARLES | AGEL Secretary of Commerce and Labor. The iy from one other The trust scribed as a Secretary's speech ran the day prosecutions “clash” between ration- al regulation and irrational oly” and he added: “The successful termination of this struggle will result in a demand for a new form of government not pa- ternal and not socialistic, but direct ly controlled and watching the great business corporations in the interests of the public.” As to the recall, Secretary Nagel said that when it had been tried it had proven of no material benefit, legislation already has "about as much initiative as it can stand,” he rapid- igsue of to an- he de- monop- tion, and added that legislators the | country over "seem to have the cure- all mania.” Woman Leads Law Class. Albany, N. Y.- in the history o: the Albany Law Behool a woman carried off the high- est honors of commencement this year. Miss Hazel M. Cole, of S8pring- field, Mass, has been awarded the Josiah H. Benton prize for excelling in class standing. Bhe also won the White prize for the second best examination on corporation law. The class numbered 54. President XMe- Kinley was a graduate of the Albany institition. 1811) “ (Copyright, 1911 WHEAT CROP 10P ALL RECORDS Large Figures. ALL CROPS ARE DOING WELL. June Statement cof the Agricultural Deciares That the Greatest Harvest Ever Pro- duced Will Be Gathered. Department or 104 ¢ (18.778.000) compared average, 5s - fssat ig . i ON] * five-year aver Wheat Acreage 3.6 per cent. of Age 1910 acre 1.0601): condition compared the ten- per with vield yusghels mpared Year average 250,000, or 98.9 reage 28K - condition RH 15.5 , the five Oats— Ac per regege, 3H cent 1910 a« June 1 pared 88.4, the age. Indicated yield bushels, compared with 28.4, the five- year average Bariey Acreage, 7.038.000, or 8% per of 1510 acreage June 1 condition pared with 906.9, the age; Indicated yield bushels, compared five-year average Hay-«June 1 condition pared with 86.1 in 19810 Pastures-—-June 1 condition 81.8, compared with 90.7, the ten-year av “5 of 50, O60 7. com- ten-year aver- - acre 27.9 with per - op - cent (7.2567 ~ 0060: 80.2, come yoar aver acre 24.9 24.8, the ten per with 16.8, come Four Trains Collida. Fairfield, Conn.—Flive persons are dead and several others are serious ly Injured as the revult of a collision {of four freight trains at midnight on i'the New York, New Haven and Hart ' ford Railroad. It is believed one of ‘the two eastbound freights stopped ion account of a hot box and that an (extra following close behind crashed {into It. In a statement given out by the company the accident Is attribe uted to the failure of an engineer, probably one of those killed, to ob- serve a signal. URGES NEW LAWS FOR PROPERTY Defines the Issue. | WANTS A CONSTRUCTIVE LAW i 1 ! Law to Frotect Inter- ests and Peo- ple Alike, KISSES AT $600 EACH. Farmer's Osculations Cost Him $11,812 and Two Farms " Foulkes, Chicago Thomas Danbury, lowa, a has been prosecuting \ Miss Miller, and her Miller, $11,- CASE ree 1 . 4 ty against fiance fodavine brother. Attorney J of defrauding him farms, Marion harges of and the criminal turned a the woman and her brot! Foulkes told an what characterised az a *' He sald bought carcasses from Miss Miller £50 to $600, and had given her thousands of dollars and two farms Miss Miller had advised him to go to Califgornia, read the Bible constantly and marry a widow On « R12 two won his court A verdict of gu jury er story of inancial kisses unusual he wooing.” he and loans of with from that after he Bryan's Daughter Married. Lincoln, Neb.~-Migs Grace Dex. ter Bryan, youngest daughter of Wil- iam J. Bryan, and Richard Lewis Hargreaves, a young business man of Lincoln, were married Wednesday night at Fairview, the Bryan sub- urban home. The bride was attend. ed by Miss Lily Tyler, of Virginia, land Migs Helen Schwind, of Lincoln. Kills Mother of Seven. Hammonton, N. quarrel Fidelo Perone, 60 years old, ghot and killed his wife at their home home of a conatable and sald: "Come up to my house; 1 have shot my wife.” When the constable, accom. panied by Perone, reached the dwell- ing he found the woman dead and .around the body the seven children of the pair were weeping and pray- ing. The children range in age from 2 to 15 years. WENGO CITY HS SERIOUS QUAKE 'Sixty-Three Persons Are Killed and Many Injured. SOLDIERS CRUSHED TODEATH Roll of Dead Likely to Be Increased When All the Detalis Are Known ~~Most cf the Damage Done tc the Soldiers’ Barracks. \ ere killed, pro I ed Mexico City Sixty-three Ww wounded and $100,000 wreck- an earthquake BevYEnLY-1 perty wort Was Wednesday shook # note of tragedy into the Mexican capital f nnre rel OL pure d ‘8 GAS § { Fran for 14 minu : Many Soldiers Victims than half f 3 operty of Americans naged, and, the e with excep- hinese killed eigners racks 1 8 i were injured in ti bat killed They where the soldiers were women also lost their lives were the wives of artillerymen These women have the privil spending the night af the within the barracks unlike an old structure many of » older edifices alls were com were sleeg ing ® ere mately floor, the re. outes crash. y ha yn the 8 geverely Those who rescue at he alarm whose sold i dren ors’ dresses and the gruesome TROOPS LEAVING BORDER, Forces Being Gradually Withdrawn From Vicinity of Mexico. The withdrawal Washington gradual forces second step f the arm. United Sta yn Mexico was taken when President Taft approved a War Department which will return posts 4,000 soldiers at (Galveston, Tex., and the 1.500 at San Diego, Cal This movement, in a few days agrawal of the 2,000 marines Guantanamo, Cuba. The troops at Galveston are of the Const Artillery corps They will be gent back to their stations on army transports The action the ed of the tes fre the vicinity of order to their the which will begin the with from follows | dent by Secretary of War Stimson and Gen. Leonard Wood, {staff of the army. made the withdrawal possible, and it vessels assembled at Cuba and San Diego, Guantanamo eral units and Texas, to meet any emergency. i RO AA SINAN. TOO MUCH STARS AND STRIPES Winnepeg City Council Wants Less Display of American Flag. Winnepeg, Manitoba. 80 ostenta- tious has the display of the Stare | and Stripes become in the theatres ol | Winnepeg that the City Council is | sued orders to theatrical managers to ‘avoid In the future any unnecessary | use of the American flag on the stage (and to discontinue the custom of relegating the Union Jack to incon. splcuous places In performances, OE LA BARRA WILL SUPPORT MADERD Will Be His Minister of Foriegn Relations. GEN. REYES ALSO PROMISES. Agreement is Madre, in Case Madero SAhoudad Be President, That De La Barra and Reyes Willi His Cabinet, Elecies Enter G> sity must fatl pr uni grave snd delicate ¢ am that Is lec i ready to tio: ofNere the best interest of Madero's ark De 1 ren Barra rt A wouia recent post relations is Lies ¥ 3 tion that ti contain ments TAFT'S SILVER WEDDING Big Reception Panned on White House Lawn.--An Open- Air Fete Washi any # rece! 0 excel anniversa Preside In ng out frgm event literally bj and consequence the men, lawyers, painters, novelists has vod m4 capia wives are these inv {tations have been invited White never are Iw Presid 8 friends everys House before claded and membering hi is now the Reports about the heal Taft are encouraging, ar lHeved she will be fully able to in doing the honors and receiving congratulations the of the Presidential wedding Monday, 1% is spending of hey time in her room and is to exert here instructions not festivities the is now in Cincin- Mrs. Charles Mrs. Maria Taft's sisters, assist on oncasion giiver June She moet under self until before Miss Helen Taft nati, her aunt, Anderson, and she and Herron, one Mrs just visiting of The White House will be in gala garden flowers The Marine Band, under theg direction of will play a program of old favorites of the President and Mra, Taft The President and Mra Taft sarried in Cincinnati in 1886, were Carnegie’s Latest Hero Fung, he Hague — Andrew Carnegis, W was announced here, has donated 500.000 florins (about $205,000) for the establishment of a hero fund in Holland. Powers Objects to Manning. Washington, — Electrocutions may be substituted for hanging for capi tal offenses in the District of Colum- bia if a bill introduced by Represen- tative Caleb Powers, of Kentucky, becomes law. It further contem- plates commutation of the death sen- tence to life imprisonment in case of fomale offenders. The bill was in- epired by the case of Mattie Lomax, #8 negro woman now under sentence to be hanged for the murder of her husband. }
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers