T It uT"t u i vif-Viv uit i i - it j of wor d Events ictores for Mews Readers n Tin l a Department Our Readers In Fulton County and! Cloewh Around the NAorld NAlth trie O a mora on tho Trail of History IXlalclne Happenlncs IVlay Journey FINDS NOVEL USE FOR HIS MOTORCYCLE INTRENCHED IN STEEL BARGES SERBIANS RAKE AUSTRIAN'S TRENCHES ism 'mim-z -ft i ; -jf 4. ' ' ' i 4' - U v. i -it. : r ,''5,w --U-iz-L: ijIter- &2 tliasiaMiaisii''tuisiMaiaaiiaBsiaisasiaaaBaiaiaaajaiiaisiaiisasisiiassiaiaaiaaiiiiaaiaisBssaatl F. A. Cole of Stamford, Conn., la an enthusiastic motorcyclist. Ingenious New Englander that be Is, be has dticovered a new use to which bis cycle may be put For Instance, wben be decided to mako an overland trip with bis family to the San Francisco exposition, be planned a prairie schooner to be drawn by his motorcycle. The result Is shown In the picture. LEMBERG FALLS BEFORE AUSTRO-GERMAN ASSAULT scv . . Tf'1 , L I LI r" " 1 aaaaaaaaaal - v -,.v r v. r a h 1 r L:rt yT---r- '1 i:s Saplccha street, one of the main thoroughfares of Le inhere, whero the ftuaalnng made their lnat stand In Oallcla On the loft Is the diet, or house of parlinment, and In the background Is tho cathedral- The kuiser per nnallv illrpcffld tho Gnrnmn nRsault which rrsultPd in the rout of the RuBxInn army. THE NEWEST WHITE HOUSE BABY . wits V ' - I J C-v-. ' . J; I .-1 . I '"'M A i..rrrrTTT"i rJUtmJI Little Miss Ellen Wilson McAdoo, aged about two months, has just u&mttted to the camera, and this la her first picture, In company with her r. - "" uemuui kiiouu, uer miliar, aucreisr; ui iuo l n'ttuur 'CAaoo, and her grandfather, the president of the United States. GONE TO FIND DONALD B. M'MILLAN IT n In : hi Cjr-; Mi PIS T' r. I ,S m V M &&ifa&WMMv. ,.IW0-.rl- . Clut wm!?1' C' plcke,1B' commander ot the aa.viliary schooner Utorge 'nil bri I Balled ro(enty for Etah. Greenland, with the purpose of find ""nging home Donald McMillan and his rarty of arctic ev'nrera FROM WORM TO GOWN mmim I i A new exhibit showing the silk In dustry literally from the worm to the finished gown Is one of the at tractions at the National museum In Washington. Tbe picture shows Miss Helen Stuart of the curator's office holding one of the frames In which tbe silkworms have fastened themselves and are engaged In weaving the filmy threads of Bilk in preparation for their metamorphoses later Into silk moths. INCENDIARY BOMBS r f5 1 The picture shows a man . holding two of the Incendiary bombs which are being used In aerial ralda on the enemy's country. Let Tota Pick Own Booka. Librarians In charge of children's departments were advised to go slow In their enthusiasm to render service by Mrs. Edna Lyman Scott of Seattle at a meeting of the section on library work with children of the American Library association at Berkeley. She said the librarian was likely to overdo her work In selecting books i'or children, says the Oakland Trib une. Let the children select their own books so tbey may develop their brains and find Inspiration In tbe dis covery of books they like, Mrs. Scott advised. Mounted on platforms within the barges the Serbian marksmen pour a deadly fira Into the enemy's position, as they float down the Danube. ITALIAN SOLDIERS AT MESS IN THEIR BARRACKS MISBtlX: I n wMimasigs jr.. -Yi hi ft 'n-JT;: CtVPT Tyv s?" TP'-'Jv , i vVjiin : t affl!kil:jajM;rfi u -x m The photograph shows an Italian company In tbe barracks in Koine lined up before their mess pots for dinner. Juit before starting for the front. EARL BRASSEY ON DUTY SUMMER HOME OF GERMAN EMBASSY Earl Brussey, a British authority on naval matters, has been ordered to tbe Dardanelles. The earl la seventy nine years old, but hale and hearty. Inspired Command Not Accepted. Law Notes says that the rase of Huvely vs. Oolnlck, 123 Minn. 498, may well serve as a warning to per sona who profess to be called of Ood on particular occasions, generally when they want to do something wrong. Whatever may be tbe law in the heavenly courts, advice from above la no defense In an earthen tribunal. In tbe case cited the defendant was sued tor breach of promise of mar riage. With respect to one of his grounds of defense the court said: Defendant dwells sadly on hla own precarious mental and physical state and bis troubles, but says not a word to explain or excuse his attitude. He seems to have prayed for light and to have received advices that It was Qod's will that they should part. Such a command may serve to solve the con science of the breaker, but It may not serve as an excuse in law for the breach." Reform. The chief concern of every Ameri can la the reformation of somebody else. Wit the exception of certain corporations, organized baseball and a tew otner mercenary concerns, every organization In America Is de voting most of Its time to the sins that beset people in some other level life. We have already, reached that semlheaven where nobody has to pay any attaatlon to hla own business- least of all to hla own shortcomings. Perhaps, after we have had a rich ex perience In being our brothers' keep er, we may acquire sense enough to take care of ourselves. Judge mm ii irnMinni nil, umii iwtMaBtaattwtaaMaaaM This mansion, to be occupied during the summer months by the mem bers ot the German embassy, is located at Cedarburst, L. I. "CHICAGO AMBULANCE" OFF TO THE WAR i - h The picture shows Dr. George S. Davis, in charae of the ntivmciaus and Superintendent Isabel Patton ot tbe nurses of the Chicago hospital xpeditton which sailed recently for service on tba battlefield. (Condii''t'd by Die National Woman's C'lirlDtlau Temperance Union.) THE FULL DINNER PAIL. Everybody's Magazine, in its new department, "Keep Posted," narrates and comments in a recent number as follows: "Wlne woman and song has gone vp against dollarsand cents in Lanalng, Mich., and the result is one of tbe most notable so far achieved in Amer lea. Tho most prominent leader of tbe drys is not an evangelist, nor any other sort of custodian of the soul. He Is simply a commercial person IL H. Scott. "In the year 1910, In tbe factory of which Mr. Scott Is manager, In a pe riod of ten successive weeks, the em ployees lost a total of 323 working days and the wages of those days because of not being able to recover promptly from pay nights spent in sa loons. "In tho dry-versus-wet campaign In 1910 in Lansing Mr. Scott fought for morals and economics. Nevertheless the campaign did not please all of Lansing's business men. Tbey thought that a dry town would lose business to wet towns near by. So, two years later, Lansing went wet again. "This gave everybody a wonderful chance to compare a dry Lansing with a wet Lansing, commercially. "First, as for tbe cost of running tbe government, it was soon found that a wet Lansing had to spend a good deal of money supporting its wet citizens. One of many proofs was this: the cost of feeding the prisoners In the county Jail during the two years while Lan sing was dry hnd been J5.C00, while during the two ensuing years of wet ncss tbe cost of feeding them (at tbe same rato per person) was $11,300. Quite a difference for a town of 40,000. "Second, as for business Itself, scores of merchants were converted to the proportion that the competition of saloons in nearby wet towns would not be half so Injurious to them as the competition of saloons on Lan sing's own streets. Their experiences may be summarized into the statement of a butcher who remarked merely that when the town was dry he could collect his back bills, and when it was wet he couldn't. "In the last dry-versus-wet campaign in Lansing the merchants did not rally to the support of the flowing bowl at all. They turned to the overflowing pay envelope and the paid-up ac counts. The Issue discussed was pros perity, and the majority for going to it sober was 1,200. "The efficiency of the factory Is at leaRt 10 per cent higher dry than wet, according to Mr. Scott "And a similar result Is shown in the cost figures furnished to Everybody's Magazine by Mr. C. E. Dement, gen eral manager of another company. In a dry Lansing and for no reason ex cept dryness and greater sobriety and energy tho cost of making engines by this concern has gone down 70 cents per horse power." PERTINENT QUESTIONS. (Asked by the Temperance Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church.) Let us look these questions square ly In the eyo. Does the liquor traffic pay tho United States? Does it pay financially? Does it pay commercially?. Does It pay Industrially? Docs it pay physically? Does It pay mentally? Does it pay morolly? What single good thing can be said for the trade in liquors or the habit ' of drinking alcohol? Nothing? Then why not kill the traffic with out further delay? If we cannot kill it let us hang our heads In bitter humiliation, for It Is greater than we. If we can kill it, then in God's name let us do it! FOOD FOR TAXPAYER. Census bureau statistics show that for the year 1913 the liquor revenue received by state, county and munici pal governments amounted to only $79,516,959, or a per capita of 82 cents. This includes all incorporated places of 2,500 people and over. This liquor revenue constituted only 4.3 per cent of the total state, county and munici pal revenues, $1,845,901,128. To put It simply, the states, counties and cities got a total revenue of $19 per capita and a liquor revenue of only $0.82. Inasmuch as the per capita drink bill ot tbe American people Is In ex cess of $23, it Is apparent that we spend about $1 for every three and one halt cents returned to the states, counties and cities by the liquor traffic. A JUST DECISION. All social clubs of Atlanta, Ga, have been prohibited from dispensing liquor in any form. Claims of excluslveness or aristocracy will cause no distinc tion in Chief of Police Beaver's ulti matum. Rigid democracy will govern all enforcement measures; the rich will not be permitted violations for which the poorer people are held ac countable. This decision has been won by the perslBtent work of Messrs. Eagan and Jackson, the "Men and Religion" ad vertising men ot Atlanta. REAPER AT WORK. A great German teacher of physi ology. Professor Ffck, said shortly be fore his death: "The Inexorable reap er is at work with his scythe mow ing down families attached to alco hol, and sparing those that are aroused with a natural or acquired dislike for the poison." THEN GOOD-BY. The Goodfellow, a Milwaukee liquor Journal, says. "It's good by to liquor licenses when the press of the country unite against the liquor Interests.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers