2 INDIAN CAVALRY FIGHTING FOR ENGLAND Photo by American Press Association. The Widow's Name. In addressing a letter to n widow— for Instance. "Mrs. John Jones"—you can write it Mrs. John Jones or Mrs. Hilda Jones, whichever you prefer. Either is proper, there being no hard and fast rules about the matter. If Mrs. Jones prefers being addressed as Mrs. Hilda Jones, then let it be that There is no law in the case one way or the other.—New York American. BELGIAN DOGS AS ARTILLERY HORSES m mil i>iiiiiiiiii|iiiij]j^^B3sa^g3B&uwim*waMßaMaßaßaßBawi>arc^mMiww^ Photo by American Press Association. CHINA POWERLESS Japanese Land Troops and She Can't Help It, Germany Is Told. Peking, Sept. 24. —The Chinese gov ernment has replied to the protest ol Germany against the landing of Jap anese troops in China disclaiming re sponsibility for the violation of her neutrality which, she says, she is un able to defend. In its reply the foreign office argues that the Russians exacted no compen sations from China for the conse quences of the Russo-Japanese war. Accordingly, China denies any liability for permitting Japan to violate her neutrality inasmuch as there is no way in which she could prevent it. The railway east of Weihsien, in Shantung, has been taken over by the Japanese, who made prisoners of the German railway officials and em ployees. The Japanese have also cap tured a number of Austrian marines, who were proceeding to Tsingtau. $400,000 Reaches Turkey. Constantinople, Sept. 24. —The Unit ed States dispatch boat Scorpion re turned here from Tenedes, near the Dardanelles entrance. She brought Captain Williams of the American army, who has a fund of $400,000 ad vanced by "he American government to American educational and benev olent institutions in Turkey. This gold is to be minted into Turkish pounds. Plant More Wheat In Pennsy. Harrisburg, Pa., Sept. 24. —More wheat will be put into the ground this autumn than for years past in Pennsyl vania, declare officials of the state de partment of agriculture who have been visiting various sections of the state and attending agricultural exhibitions. Eng'3nd Promircs I* c y Ports. Sept. 24.—An interview given tv \ : ston Churchill to a correspon dent oi the Giornale D'ltalia, promis ing Italy Trieste and Trentino, is con sidered most significant. It is very likely the prelude to a change of at titude on the part of Italy. Cumper Chestnut Crop This Year. Sharon, Pa., Sept. 24. —Reports from all sections of northwestern Pennsyl vania are to the effect that the chest nut trees are loaded down with nuts. With a few more warm days the nuts Will fully mature and the crop will be bne of the greatest in years. Our Funny Language. A man feels put out when he discov ers that he has been taken in.—Chicago News. Wonderful Sewers. The sewers of Paris are the mtet wonderful in the world and constitute one of the sights of the city. Visitors are allowed to inspect them on certain days each week, and it is certainly an experience to make a "personally con ducted" tour of the two main sewers The journey is made on electric cars and launches, which draw up occasion fy at brightly illuminated stations. A Comparison. "Why is a clock like a pretty and vain young lady?" "I fail to see any resemblance. Why?" "Because it is all face and Ogure. has no head to speak of. is hard to stop when once it is wound up and has a striking way of calling atten tion lo itself every hour of the day."— London Tit-Bits. "A Bound Box." Take an ordinary rubber band and stretch It between the thumb and fore finger of your left hand. If you pick it with the fingers of the right hand and let go suddenly It will make a sound which you can hear distinctly enough yourself, but which will not be audible to any one a few feet away. But if you were to fasten the elastic, with a pin at each end. to an empty wooden box, only not so as to touch the wood, and then twang it the sound would be much louder than before. That box Is the sound box, or sound board, and all stringed instruments have one in some shape or other.—St. Nicholas. Equine Evolution. Ages ago the horse was an animal no larger than a fox terrier. Today the species has gone so far ahead that the elephantine horses seen on the Liver pool docks are the wonder of every body who has seen them, and one of these horses Is able to do as much pull ing as three ordinary borses which have not been bred In a similar man ner.—London Answers. INDIAN TROOPS IN FRANCE JL X i i i n mmrrrriniifnnn'unmrn mum —i imi Photo copyright, 1914, by American Press Association. WOUNDED BELGIAN SOLDIER - r >, jg™ MMB *9w H I v I WwM Photo copyright, 1914, by American Press Association. He is being carried to hospital by comrades after battle of Malines. Strong Talker. "Mr. Smith, won't you please talk to me?" "Why, certainly, my little girl. But what do you want me to say?" "Won't you please talk like you did when you were talking to yourself In the library when the dog jumped at you? Mine's so straight, and mamma said the way you talked made her hrdr curl."—Baltimore American. New Hampshire. New Hampshire was first called La conia, or Lacedaemon. a scholar among the New Englanders remembering that the Peloponnesus, the home of the Spartans and Arglves, mountain ous; so was a portion of Mew Hamp shire, hence the propriety of the name. John Mason, however, who held a pat ent for the district, called it New Hampshire after his native country in England, and then the name Laconia was transferred to the hilly district near Lake Champlain. Our Language. "Hello. Kitty! Anything going on here now?" "Yes—a lot of things com ing off this week."—Boston Transcript Diet of the Bluebird. The bluebird, one of the most fa miliar tenants of the farm and barn yard, pays amply for its rent and board by destroying insects, and takes no toll from the farm crop. Its diet consists of 68 per cent of insects and 32 per cent of vegetable matter. The largest items of insect food are grasshoppers, beetles and caterpillars. THE PATRIOT The greater part of the straw em ployed for making summer hats comes from Italy. To obtain suitable straw for this purpose the wheat is sown as thickly as possible in order that the growth of the plant may be impover ished as well as to produce a thin stalk. The Italian wheat blooms at the be ginning of June and Is pulled up by the roots when the grain is half de veloped- Should It be allowed to re main in the ground a longer time the straw would become too brittle for its purpose. Uprooted straws to the number of about five dozen, the size of the com pass of the two hands, are firmly tied together in little sheaves and stowed away in barns. After that the straw Is again spread out to catch the heavy summer dews and to bleach in the sun. When the product has been sufficiently bleached it is put into small bundles and classified. The last step is to cut It close above the first Joint from the top. when it Is again tied up in small bundles contain ing sixty stalks each and is then ready for the market—Chicago Herald. Too Much of a Breakfast. Even Peacock's generous ideas of suitable provisions for a breakfast were surpassed by a London host who entertained J. L. Motley. Aug. 3,1867, Motley writes to his daughter: "I went to the last breakfast of the season of the Philobiblon society, given by Mr. Turner, a collector of rare books. Be ginning with coffee and tea, we ended with sherry, champagne and no; fish, cutlets, rotis, salads, game, puddings and ice going on meanwhile in regular order. If you asked me what I did I can only say I opened my ears to the animated and intellec tual conversation and my mouth, not to eat, but to gape and gasp and won der at the prodigious consumption of victuals at that hour of the day. When 1 reflected that all those people would lunch at 2 and dine at 8 I bowed my bead in humiliation, and the fork drop ped from my nerveless grasp."—Lon don Chronicle. Looking Down From High Places. Why do you feel giddy when you look down from the top of the house or even from the upstairs porch? Just because it's so high eh? That's true, but it's only half the answer You know, of course, that your power to keep your balance on your feet de pends largely on your vision or sight When you walk in the dark you stum ble and bump against things because you are not used to walking without seeing. It's the same when you are away up above the ground and cannot see familiar things in their familiar places. Your eyes play you tricks, you seem to lose your balance, and your head feels giddy and your steps are uncertain. If you practice long enough you can learn to walk without seeing, but until you have learned that lesson be careful when you climb to high places.—Wisconsin State Journal. Scott Liked Work Pressure. Scott, who was poet, novelist law yer, too, would have been greatest of all as journalist Listen to this from his Journal for Feb. 15, 1826: "Yester day I did not write a line of 'Wood stock.' Partly, I was a little out of spirits. • • • Partly, I wanted to wait for some new ideas. • * • Partly, I was a little too far beyond the press. I cannot pull well in long traces, when the draft is too far be hind me. I love to hate the press thumping, clattering and banging in my rear. It creates the necessity which almost makes me work best Needs must when the devil drives." • • * There is the very spirit of jour nalism, and that devil surely is the printer's devil I—London Standard. Most people are fond of good pus sies, and many are not entirely happy until they have solved them, but the man who resolves not to go to bed un til he has found a divisor without a remainder (other than 1 and Itself) for 1,111,111,111,111,111,111 will be able to earn a good living afterward as a sleep less wonder, for nobody in the world yet knows whether that number has a divisor or not Andrew Fletcher, a Scotch writer. who died in 171G, wrote to the Marquis of Montrose, the Earl of Rothes and others, "I once knew a very wise man that believed that if a u.au were per mitted to make all the ballads of a nation he need not care who should make the Jaws of a nation." Insurance Agent—lt was yon who set the boose on fire with your alcohol lamp. Tenant —Me? Not on your life! In the first place, I haven't got a lamp, and in the second place I'm a lifelong member of the Temperance league.— Journal Amusant A Nice, Polite Man. "There's some good things In town this week," said the girl who was hint ing for an invitation to the theater. "Well," responded Mr. Grouch, T ain't one of 'em." Breakfast Table Talk. Mrs. Hnscbe (to new boarder)— How did yon find your steak tbis morning, Mr Jobeon? Jobson—Oh, quite easily; L*.a a detective I—London Answers. Willla—Putting a pin In a person's chair Is an old Joke. Wallace—Yea, but it hasn't lost its point yet—London Telegraph. a no grace In a benefit that struts to the finger*.--Seneca. Btraw For Hats. Do You Know? Songs of • Nation. Impossible. Old, but Pointed. ONE WAY TO WRITE HISTORY. A Talk With Adam About Discreet Young Methuselah. I have a book published in the early didactic period of the nineteenth cen tury which illustrates a certain way of imparting historical information. It was written with the laudable inten tion of making history interesting to people who didn't want to venture into the unfamiliar. The author thought that if the patriarchs were conceived of as New Eugland selectmen their lives could be made as interesting as it tbey were New England selectmen. And 1 am not sure but that he suc ceeded. The book is divided into two parts, a conversation with Adam cov ering the space of U3O years and an in terview with Noah giving an account of the deluge and the other events with which he was familiar. They are represented as nice old gentlemen rath er formal in their language and strictly orthodox in their opinions. Adam speaks hopefully of Methuselah, who. he says, "must be now about fifty seven years old and is a discreet and well principled youth." He was very much disturbed over the radical views of the Tubal-Cains. There is nothing in the book that would indicate that either Adam or Noah had been out of Connecticut—S. M. Crotbers in Atlantic Monthly. ELECTRICITY IN RAIN. The Drops of Moisture, as a Rule, Con - tain Positive Charges. Rain drops are almost always charg ed with electricity. The charge Is of ten positive, rarely negative. Many observers have measured the charge approximately and made it from 0.000.000.000.000.000.01 to 0 000.000.000.- 000,001 amperes per square centimeter. Professor F. Heratb of Kiel describes In the Revue Electrique the experi ments by which he has measured them. He received the rain on a tine me tallic cloth twenty-five meters square, insulated and attached to a galvanom eter in a cellar. The galvanometer reg istered photographically. Among the facta he proves are these: Rains with a constantly positive charge are much more freqnent tii;n those that change to a negative. The passage from n positive to a negative charge corresponds to a momentary cessation of the shower. The quantity of positive electricity brought by the rnin is fifteen times greater than that of the negative. The positive currents In a steadv rainfall are about 0 000.- (XHM)oo.oi>n.i amperes |>er square centimeter. The negative currents never exceed 0.000.000.000.000.001 am peres per square centimeter. Sympathy With Sufferers. Probably nothing is more stimulating and genuinely tonic to sufferers, espe cially those with chronic ailments, than the feeling that in spite of their own helplessness they themselves can still be helpful to others. The Sbut-in so ciety In this country has made life more bearable for many persons who are confined to their rooms or their houses. Nothing disturbs a certatn class of patients so much as to be con stantly in contact with those who are in good health and strength and whom they can scarcely help but envy. To be brought into touch with those tor whom they themselves can feel is a precious source of consolation and up lift Pity is a luxury to be enjoyed, but no human being likes to be pitied or to feel that he is an object of pity. To be conscious of some advantage In one's situation over that of others Is of Itself an alleviation for many sick nesses.—Journal American Medical As sociation. An Ornithological Curiosity. Jane Ann had called, on her after noon out. to see her friend Matilda. The latter's mistress had Just pur chased a parrot, and Jane Ann was much Interested in the bird. "Birds Is very sensible," she said; "you kin learn thorn anything. 1 used to work for a lady tii.it had a bird In a clock, an' when it was time to tell de time of day it used to come out an' say 'Cuckoo' jest as raauy times as the time was!" "Go 'long! You don't say so!" said Matilda incredulously. "Yes!" replied Jane Ann. "And the most wonderful part was that it was only a wooden bird too!"— London Globe. A Unique Symbol of Freedom A curious custom is observed in ihe village of Great Bookman. England. When the wife of a trades man goe3 off for the nsual summer holiday to the seaside one or two ex pert climbers ascend at midnight to the roof of the house and Insert old brooms in the chimneys as a sign that the head of the bouse has the super vision of the domestic arrangements In addition to his ordinary work. Her Lack of Tact. "Miss Soulsbv has uot a particle of tact" "What has she done now?" "The other evening when Mr. Jag gles, who is notorious for not paying his debts, asked her to sing she went to the piano and 6ang Trust Him Notf Plttsbnrgb Dispatch. Source of Hie Talent "That big financier boasts that he can take every man's measure." "That's because be began life as a tailor's assistant"—Baltimore Amert can. Domestic Dialogue. Wife (icily I—You needn't speak to me for a month. Hnsband—Then you expect to have finished talking by that time? He that lives with cripplea learns to Ump.—George Herbert. GERMANS BLAME FRENCH Reasons Given For Firing on Cathe dral at Rheims. Berlin (Via London), Sept. 24. —The headquarters staff in further explana tion of the bombardment of the cathe dral of Rheims says: "Since Sept. 20, when a white flag was hoisted in the steeple, the cathe dral has been respected by our artil lery. We soon discovered that the French had used the steeple as a point of observation which sufficiently ex plained the good shooting of thi French artillery. "It became necessary to remove the observation post which removal was effected by shrapnel from the field guns." ITALIANS WANT TO ENLIST Thousands Apply to British Embassy In Rome. London, Sept. 24. —The Standard s Rome correspondent sends the follow ing dispatch: "As a sequel to the war demonstra tions 1,000 Italians have applied to the British embassy for permission to enroll in the British army. Business firms have made offers to the embassy to provide steamers and other facili ties for the transportation of the troops and supplies. "The Italians are boiling over with impatience at the government's hesi tation. The war fever is throbbing in the people's veins." FRENCH ARE WEAKENING So Official Dispatch to German Em bassy In Washington Saya. Washington, Sept. 24. —The French armies are weakening and their center is retreating, according to an official dispatch made public at the Germa embassy. The dispatch also contained the statement that Verdun had been "successfully bombarded." It says further: "The French offensive spirit weak ening. French losses are enormous. Their center retreating. Verdun suc cessfully bombarded. The effect of German mortars was terrible. Paris papers show spirit downcast." WEAR FRENCH UNIFORMS Germans Manage to Come Close to English Detachment. New YorK, Sept. 24. —Definite first hand news was received here that de tachments of German soldiers have keen using French uniforms for blinds, and under cover of these on at least one occasion managed to saunter close to a British detachment. Then, when the suspicion of the British officers had been stilled, the order to fire was given. On the oc casion referred to the British managed to beat them back and for five hours 4be battle was fought with only the kyeadth of the road separating the two forces. i •*•*•••••••••# • WEATHER EVERYWHERE. * Observations at United States * * weather bureau taken at Bp. m. • * yesterday follow: • Temp. Weather. Pittsburgh 80 Cloudy • New York 79 Clear • Boston 76 Clear • Buffalo 56 Rain ♦ Chicago 60 Clear * St. Louis 64 Clear * New Orleans.. 76 Rain • Washington.... 78 Clear * Philadelphia... 78 Clear • • The Weather. * • Cloudy tonight; Friday, fair; * • moderate winds. • • •**••••••£•*