West Point. dinal Bonzano, 3— academy at Car- NEWS REVIEW OF Revealed to the Senate Committee of Inquiry. by EDWARD W. PICKARD ¥yrocosy rather than astonish- ment was the emotion generally of political the senate recent Though expended in the Republican ! other of aroused by the revelation corruption made before committee Investigating the Pennsylvania primary contest. the total of campaign for torial nominatior extraordinary—in round figu 000,000—the fact that pol tions the systone state ten money the Hices was in was not . William defeatad ! Senator Pepper Pinchot for the n "he rem in the interest Belidleman for Heutenant governor, Wie tary of in ; affairs of con state stat precinct men « J tion, the aint governo gressmen, onstit and a of 5,000 candid in DOCes|ary that I ter-writing newspap against backed ivi MITDOse ir purpose in the ght Ia leaders anizatic Treasury gaid In ti © penditure tial in were paid in great these the Pent the very Inquire an committee were "ny nu In wi ing they pred tren the report the unt scribed fr Kline some o Harry Mac Philadelphia and cl Vare campaign committee, and ghtened the his frank testimony, that any of the contenders in the mary had spent a penny to buy or that there was any debauchery of the ballot box in Pennsylvania. He asserted that Vare's candidacy was a mere incident in the whole campaign and that every cent af $506,000 or more that was spent for the ticket would have been spent If the senator. ship had not been at stake at all Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel of the Anti-Saloon having etated publicly that liquor dealers and wets generally had made large tributions to the Vare eampalgn fund, was promptly subpoenaed by the com. mittee. Reed then had a chance to examine Wheeler concerning the league's pay roll in political activities names of many senators and repre sentatives who are pald for dry speeches were revealed, nit ously but of the speech was tran Aeee gtenographic reports have uted to him said might things attri} s i ’ key, city treasurer of the entertained committee with but he enli pri- Yotes league, con. congress and generally. | Joust CARDINAL BONZANO was | glven an extraordinary welcome on { his arrival in New York, Gov. Al demonstration of the pope. Monsignor jonzano | then, with nine other cardinals other high churchmen, was carried In | a specially designed and decorated train to Chicago for the | Congress. There the party hy cheering thousands and through the handsomely bedecked city in an impressive parade to the Holy Name cathedral, where a te was sung and the legate was forn welcomed by Cardinal Mundelein, Sunday the Eucharistic Congress was pened by the of was met escorted deum celebration thedral, which was la orated. President Coolld able t r *hicago, the ca ge Was but was of Labor Day Woe Et om Mini wily South and C A DOPTING for "existir g Chiles government cabled bas the iplomatic tlement of Thus pose that lapsed, and ft ton that the blow the states its hreak for set with Peru. whole effort dispute has feared In Washing will be a prestige of the throughout the western The Chileans are enrag ton to negotintions quarrel the old the seemingly con col ia allure United hemi- ged, and fo sphere. and cheered leading members who Lassiter and attacked doctrine, General Monroe and the chief alde to Marshal Pilsudskl, in Cracow, the the bullet The count then adversary’'s head and wenpon without firing, fired, the count's scalp. aimed at his dropped his | saying: "1 i and I don't want to kill. I refrained | from firing. Whoever In Poland, In general grazing his honor or th me him he that conscience, inks and I represent, let shoot. won't shoot back.” The referee the honor of all parties had been vindicated, The affalr grew out of the general's re fusal to accept the ex-premier's prof. fered hand after a political dispute. decided TINDER the terms of the debt-fund. / ing agreements, ten nations pald into the United States treasury week a total of $77,783,127 Great iritain and Jtaly pald in securitie Belgium, Czechoslovak Esth in Hungary, Poland, Rumania and Finland pald Inst Lithonia. in cash “OL. CARMI A. THOMPSON of Mrs RETARY MELLON S an he corn th blow st of Reg inson Republi the Det dvantage After Re situation, conference Senator of the of leaders, his party stand, corn-bhelt bill, measure providing loans to prox of American farm products favor of tariff revisi for the of the farmer. Senator Rob inson called upon his fellow Demo. crates and the dissatisfied western Re- publicans to join now and keep con. gress in until the tariff is re. vised and arm relief legislation passed, . defined is the avor of the Carl for gov- ign hinson against note fore buying mn session WELVE senators, mostly from the lake states, have made an agree- i rivers and harbors bill because it ear ries the authorization for the lllinois link of the lakesto-the-gnlf waterway, The filibusters are led by Willis of Ohto and they planned to delay the measure as long as possible in com- mittee and to talk it to death on the penate floor. Senator Deneen of IH. nols sald the bill could not be killed by such tactics, and house leaders declared congress would not adjourn until the bill was passed. REVEAL ORIGIN OF WILLARDS “The Do it is? Ask the ay ‘rage of you know Spirit 6°17 how these questions of and head pletun American he He enough i he of Perhaps shake his Knows the has fores 1 pt of that would tive of his ndertook quently of: fi pros At 1 Suge Willard “" 1H restion one «day u wthin cheerful, somet This undertaking popular picture the attention of I wer, and labor duce “son comic resul his first work t brought to Cleveland's freed him of wtograpl the leading p forever making. “Pluck Number One” wag the title given to this creation, and it suc ceeded with the public largely because it realistically portrayed childish eag- erness and action. Willard's three chil their soap-box cart, and their dog, gave the artist his idea It showed vividly the | wild ride, trying their | from wagon. family Payne’s Immortal Words | “These are the times that try men's The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, de- | man | is not this he that stands it now love and thanks of Tyranny, like hell, yet we have try; but gerves the easily conquered ; the conflict the more glorious the tri umph. What we obtain too cheap. we NEWS Now Spirit per for { of iG, the opening sition redth anni of the Declara tion of Independence, the terprisi Ryder was looking appropriate for such an oe- something that would be casion. Finally it. cs he explained it Doodle— just put something, the more ter, the big show opens.” to to him. It Willard Yankee ori ime Wag, as “Yankee Doodle into ginal the bet. esteem too lightly ; that gives everything its value, Heav- its goods; and it would be strange indeed If go celestial an article freedom should not be Thomas Payne, Why British Were Spared Some historians state that British, bardmwent were mada Unofficially and The pictur nd ten feet 1875 in the studi Euclid high. It was o of Willis Adams Cleveland It was unveiled at the centennial year. Its first name, “Yankee wae changed while the work exhibition in Boston to its “The Spirit of "78." avenue, ¥ the next Doodle,” Was on port of between informally a into agreement was the opposing embarkation they wonld town substantially as It was, There was no formal communication bétween Washington and Howe, but this was an understanding. Washing algo, from want of ammunition, wag obliged to use his artillery spar- ingly. on The silky marmoset is a white mon. key with orange ears \