nder sible: y an All rra- » GL hem steel een any rges , to fore ould nt— any con- dis- ting. ring: de- 1ces ade fac- can pur- pon It hat am- for for ells be* ing be ree im- the ells ed. the ich 0T- een )ro- vill we ak- ro vill hat nto nd at of at rT IMMIGRATION BILL GETS WILSONVETO Literacy Test Makes For His Disapproval a Second Tims BIG NAVAL WEASURE READY Tremendous Total of $351,000,000 Ap- | propriated by House Committee For | Construction of Warships. President Wilson vetoed the iggi- gration bill passed recently by con- gress, because of its literacy test pro- vision. | It was the second time that Presi- | dent Wilson had vetoed an immigra- {ion bill because of the literacy test, | and for the same reason similar meas- ures were given vetoes by Presidents Taft and Cleveland. The administration’s defense budget began to take final shape in congress when the house passed the fortifications bill, carrying ! a total of more than $51,000,000 for | coast defenses, and the house naval committee completed its 1916 naval | but when he came to the words ‘to appropriation bill with a total of more than $351,000,000. The army appropriation bill, in the house military committee, which is expected to complete it next | week. Estimates for the army reach a total of more than $600,000,000, ex clusive of numerous deficiency meas- ures resulting from the border mobili- zation and the rising cost of war ma- terials. The only other military legislation pending is the universal military train- ing bill before a senate subcommittee, which will conclude its hearings this week, when Major Generals Scott and Wood are to be recalled for cross-ex- amination by Senator Blair Lee of Maryland on their previous statements that federalization of the national guard has proved a failure. It is nou expected that congress will take any action on the universal training bill at this session. The navy bill carries a total of $351, 433,245, as against $313,000,000 last year. It provides for the construction of three 42,000-ton battleships at a total cost of $28,178,592 each; one bat- tle cruiser at a cost of $26,694,496; three scout eruisers at $6,746,145 each; fifteen destroyers at $1,748,612 each; one destroyer tender at $2,199: 400, and eighteen 800-ton type subma- rines at $1,434,093 each. °° Taking up the problem of getting under construction the four battle cruisers authorized last year, the com- mittee raised the limi® of cost for the hull and machinery to $19,000,000 from $16,500,000. Department officials be- lieve all four vessels can be placed with private bidders at that figure. For the three scout cruisers still awaiting satisfactory bids, the commit- tee raised the cost for hull and ma- chinery to $6,000,000 from $5,000,600. The new battleships will be the most powerful war vessels ever built. They will have a speed of twenty- three knots an hour and carry main batteries of twelve 16-inch guns each instead of eight 16-inch guns on the game was enjoyed by Charlestonians. | four authorized last year. CO-OPERATION KEYNOTE OF INDUSTRY CAPTAINS Warning of Keen Business Menace After War Is Over Heralded at Pittsburgh - Convention. Co-operation in all its phases, co- operation of the government with American business men for the ex- tension of foreign trade, co-operation of America with European countries by the extension of credits after the war, was the keynote of speeches by captains of industry at the. confer- ences in Pittsburgh which marked the crystallization of the best thought of American leaders on the extension of the overseas commerce of the Unit- ed States. : With 6500 of the country’s leading bankers and industrial corporation heads as their auditors, James A. Far- | rell, president of the United States Steel corporation and the world’s fore- most authority on foreign trade, Ed- ward N. Hurley, chairman of the fed- eral i4rade commission, and John D. Ryan, president of the Anaconda Cop- per company, made impassioned pleas for such preparedness as will enable the United States to cope with un- precedented economic conditions which they predicted will develop at the ending of the European war. Ruler of Costa Rica Deposed. Alfredo Gonzales, deposted president 9f Costa Rica, has sent an appeal to fhe United States for interven- tion. He is a refugee now in the American legation at San Jose, where fis former minister of war, Federico Tinoco, has installed himself as pro- visional president after a revolution that was, brought to a triumphal con- clusion ten hours after it was be- gun without bloodshed. Incendiaries Blamed For Blast. Officials of .the Aetna Chemical company, testifying in Pittsburgh be- fore a coroner's jury during the in- vestigation into the death of three em- ploye: vho were blown to death in an oxi 1 of their ple nt Fort Pitt Dec. 10, ‘insisted tha $800,000,000 fall at Poona, his horse tumbling down | hear of your fall from your horse,’ the the ameer instantly corrected him, saying: third element of the program, still is |! ' CAPRI, A TWIN HUMPED CAMEL An Ameer's Nice Choice of Words In HIS LEAP TO REAR ADMIRAL HAS CAUSED A RUMPUS Speaking of a Fall A good horseman may be thrown from his horse, under some circum- | stances, with little or no reflection | upon his skill. The accident may have | been excusable, even inevitable, when all the details are known; but as cas- ually related the excuses frequently | disappear, and the fall, with its ig- | nominious suggestion of incompetency, alone remains. Lady St. Helier, in admiration and re- ined the Ameer of Af- of the oriental’s instant lance of the pos- . ating implication Lord Ki 1er had suffered a severe wecident that resulted in a leg so bad- ‘okel to necessitate several | weeks’ con Jater, two m land, and a resetting of the bone. O1 of Kitchener's staff gave the news of his misfortune to the ameer during a great tiger hunt at Gwalior. “I told him,” the officer wrote Lady St. Helier, “that the chief had a nasty | an embankment. He immediately ask- ed for a piece of paper and wrote a telegram of sympathy in Persian. He ¢ handed it to Sir Henry McMahon and asked him to send it off immediately. Sir Henry wwote it down in English, “No, no! Not from your horse— with your horse; in Afghanistan—big difference!” ” ' Island Richly Dowered For Artist, His- torian and Geologist." Capri, a great twin humped camel of an island, kneels in the blue just off the Sorrentine peninsula. From the sway backed huddle of white, pink, blue, cream and drab houses along the large harbor up the breakneck road to the fascinating town nestling among the hills, white roofed and Moorish, and on, still higher, by the winding road or up the nearly perpendicular flights of rock stairs which furrow the frowning crag with their sharp, zigzag | outlines to Anacapri, 500 feet or 50 | above, every step of the way breathes | { 1 | Photo by American Press Association. DR. CARY T. GRAYSON. ANTI-AMERICAN RIOTS BRE.K OUT IN JUAREZ General Pershing’s Force Evacuates Colonia Dubklan In Withdrawal Move- ment From Northern Mexico. ! Anti-American, riots broke out in Juarez, Mexico, across the Rio Grande river from El Paso, Tex, Mobs stormed street cars on which | | the pride and splendor and degradation [ Americans were riding and drove the of the island's greater days. Here a cyclopean mass of shattered masonry in the warm emerald water tells of a Roman emperor's bath, yon- der on a chimney-like cliff the sinister ruing of a stout castle keep whispers of ancient garrisons and pirates not armed with automatic rifles or high powered artillery, and here, overlook ing the sea, the vast ruins of a villa re- | } ; call “that hairy old goat” Tiberius and his wastral voluptuousness that turned fair Capri into satyrdom. Capri today is richly dowered for sightseer, artist, historian, antiquary and geologist. On every hand are shad- ed walks and sequestered bowers in the thick groves of orange and lemon, laurel and myrtle, wild backgrounds of tumbled rock, titanic rifts in the coast into which the sea has thrust long, in- gidious blue fingers.—National graphic Magazine. An American Golf Club of 1794. It may come as a surprise to golf players to know how long ago, almost a century and a quarter, the royal In making research through the files of the South Carolina Gazette recently I came upon the following notice, which I send as a contribution to our golfing records: City Gazette and Daily Advertiser. Saturday, November 15, 1794. Golf Club. : This being the anniversary of the South : Carolina Golf Club, the members are re- quested to attend at Williams's Coffee House, in lieu of Harleston’s Green, on ac- count of the bad weather. Dinner on table at 8 o'clock. By order of the president. DWIN GAIRDNER, Secretary. —Charleston News and Courier. Her Fame! The Duchess of Westminster has tiz reputation of being the wittiest woman in society. The duchess tells an excel- | lent story about an ex-shah of Perxia who was very fond of paying compli- ments to English ladies. When the Duchess of Westminster was presented he greeted her heartily. “] have heard much about you,” he | sald. “Your worthy name is well known | even in my country.” The duchess was surprised at first,. ! then a light dawned upon her. “Gra- gious me, I do believe he mistakes me for Westminster abbey!” she said. What was more, she was right. Something In the Filling. “Do you know you cdn tell a man’s disposition by his teeth?” asked the girl who believes in signs, bumps and palm reading. “How interesting!” said her compan- fon, who did not believe in anything. “Then Jack must have a golden dispo- sition.” ‘ Discretion, “What did yo’ do, syh, when big Brudder Tump called yo’ a lah?” “Uh—well, suh,” replied small Broth- er Slink, “as de gen’leman am six feet high an’ weighs mighty nigh a ton, what could I do but move dat we { make it noonuuimons ?”’—Exchange. | Asking the Impossible. . Bob—Perhaps we had better forget one another? Bess—Oh, I couldn’ 1 that: I e so few th things to laug she gives.—Emile Souvesire. {Americans from the town. Geo- | i ee | Pershing on Way Home. Orders for the withdrawal of Amer- | ican troops from Mexico were officially announced by the war deparunent ¥ OE OW A OE OE ROKR xX * x THOUSANDS OF SETTLERS * FLEEING FROM MoXICO. Sevca thousand American set- tlers are fleeing in the wake of General Pershing’s army, ac- cording to reports brought to El Paso, Tex. Americans and other foreign- ers who have tried to establish |* homes in Mexico, believe that * Pancho Villa will order the mas- | * gsacre of any Americans found in |* Mexico as soon as General, * Pershing’s troops are across the * United States border. Arrange- * ments are being made along the 12 border to care for the stream | * of refugees. ! [# *% % # % = 22 + & 4% 28 | with the statement that the northward | movement of General Pershing’s men | pegan Sunday morning with the evacu- | ation of Colonia Dublan. As soon as the regulars reach the border a large proportion of the na- tional guardsmen still at the border and possibly all of them will be re- lieved and sent home for muster out. Many army officers high in the serv- ‘ice believe that the withdrawal of | General Pershing will mean early oc- ‘cupation of the territory about Col- _onia Dublan by Villa and his follow- eds. & BRITAIN BALKS AT . U. S. SHELL ORDER Hadfields Not Allowed to Undertake Work For American Government : While War Lasts. The British government has refused permission to the Hadfields, Limited, to proceed with work on the contract for shells for the American navy “sO long as the exigencies of war con- .tinues.” : The announcement is made in the form of an official notice by Dr. Christopher Addison, the minister of munitions, in which attention is called to the fact that the entire steel out- put is under his control. : “] will wait until I get official an- nouncement,” he said when asked what alternative presented itself. The secretary pointed out that the department now has available $1, 500,000 for a government projectile factory. Plans are being completed and it has already been determined to locate the factory with the armor plant for which a site is still to be selected. : Blair County Wheat Sold to Allies. Wheat buyers for the entente allies have been forced to pay $1.80 to $1.85 a bushel for all the wheat purchased from Blair county farmers, the high- est price there since the Civil war. | Some farmers are holding their wheat | for $2. * OR B® O® % OK ou * FX x Escaped Prisoner Wore Stripes. James Elliott, thirty-eight, who 1 from county | to which metallic piers | could be safely pushed. i | | i EB RRR RRR ERR BERR wg Suffrage In Norway. ‘Among the most important laws en- acted by Norway since women have had the vote are the two maternity insur- | ance laws of 1909 and 1915 and the di- | vorce law of 1910. | “Since the women in Norway have got | the vote,” says Illa Anker in Jus Suf- | fragii, “they have turned their chief attention to their rights and duties as | wives and mothers. Education and eco- lence are the basis of wo- but her greatest work be as wife and moth- act that in all o prepare us for ies of our home life.” | egian women have also given lar strens o the work for tic ee ' by the establish- | ment of a state hich school for the ed- ucation of teachers for the elementary housekeeping schools, to a campaign against consumption and to the support of the peace movement. . Eiffel’s Tower. + The most famous tower since that of Babel i$ the Eiffel tower in Paris, “a monuinent to the engineering genius of Gustave Eiffel. The tower of Babel was reared in the hope that it might afford a passage to heayen, but the builders, we are told in Genesis, were | foiled by their language being con- founded. Gustave Eiffel had no such ambition in rearing the highest edifice the world has ever seen. It is a tower dedicated to science. Its rearing was one of the | greatest engineering feats of modern | times and was a result of experiments undertaken to prove the greatest linfit in viaducts It is now the world’s must celebrated wireless tele- graph station. Eiffel tower is 1,000 feet in height and is constructed of iron lattice work, 7,300 tons of iron being used in its con- struction. A system of elevators car- ries visitors to the top. Uncle Sam’s Uniforms. An act of ‘congress, approved March 1, 1911, entitled “An act to protect the dignity and honor of the uniform of the United States,” provides “that hereafter no proprietor, manager or employee of a theater or other public place of entertainment or amusement Sunday. | i, the District of Columbia or in any | uncle, Jacob Harshman, forty-four, of territory, the district of Alaska or in- : vox | ~ sular possessions of the United States | | shall make or cause to be made any | Were riding crashed into a Baltimore discrimination against any person law- fully wearing the uniform of the army, navy, revenue cutter service or marine corps of the United States because of that uniform. and any person making or causing to be made such discrimina- | tion shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, * s 3 3 : punishable by a fine not exceeding | A Curiosity of Sound. \ If when riding in a balloon at a | height, say, of 2,000,feet a charge of ' guncottff be fired electrically 100 feet below the car, the report, though really { as loud as a cannon, sounds No More wag stabbed to death in her home. : than a pistel shot, possibly partly owing to the greater rarity of the air, but . chiefly because the sound, having nc background to reflect it, simply spends | itself in the air. Then, always and un- der all conditions of atmosphere, there ensues absolute silence until the time for the echo back from earth has fully elapsed, when a deafening outburst of thunder rises from below, rolling on often for more than half a minute. ’ mere ere She Meant Well. The late Sir Wilfrid Lawson, the rigid apostle of temperance, while on a week end visit made the acquaint- ance of a sharp young lady of seven, ‘to whom on leaving he said: “Now, my dear, we have been talking some time. Iam.” “Oh, yes, I have,” the little missy replied. “You are . the drunkard.””—London Graphic. Father's Opinion, “What is political economy, dad?” can’t tell you. there ln phia Duiletiu. Iiaking a Distinction. Lawyer—But you didn't. 9% ¥ PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT. Know Your Condition. Careful investigations have shown that the physically per- fect man is almost impossible to find. Almost every one who has reached the age of thirty has some impairment or defect of his body. It may be only a defective tooth or a single digestive dis- with the kidneys that will de- ! velop into Bright's disease if it Out of 2,000 men and women examined 70 per gent were found to have impairments of a more or less serious nature, while all the remaining 30 per cent had WE IR IR 0 OR IR UR OR OE UR OR RR RRR RR RR RR we i" ly perf 0 for a care’ul Little de- fF neole 2 ter arrang 1] examinati * impai - yo se Hen s fis Ns po { houses in 1] e men have taught | is in the bome, | 1 am sure you have no idea who celebrated “To Le perfectly candid, my son, I Sometimes 1 think «ny such thing.”-—Pliladel- . Banker—I stole but $10,000, and I had the opportunity to steal a million. | at New And $10,000 is a state prison offense.—Town Topics. BE U2 2 YZ PZ M2 2 U2 U2 UE NE DE DE DE IE BE YE Ne 28 WR IR IR TR WR TR OR OR ROR %. at Point Marion caused the body to turbance, or it may be trouble %¢' Ww is not attended to promptly. | Because her cows drank some paint ¥ | jeft stan # | thereby came to an untimely death, rs | Katie Myal of near Greensburg asks some defects of a minor charac- ter. ve Are you sure you are physical- #2 ? If you are not, you % * “ws 0 hE MRR W KEYSTONE PARAGRAPHS A baby was burned to death, its | mother, attempting to fight her way through a raging furnace to rescue It after she had rescued three of her children, was seriously, burned, and a fireman was badly injured in a fire which destroyed the residence of George . S¢ two. adjoining onongahela, Pa. George | Sekus, Jr., aged five months, was | burned to a crisp in his crib. us and The Pennsylvania workmen's com- pensation board ‘decided that Susanna ! | Mikulsko of Chicago is entitled to | compensation from the Carnegie Steel | company because her husband was killed thére, even though he ‘had de- serted her and was not supporting Ler at the time of his death. Mrs. Mikulsko is an epileptic and has been ! cared for by the United Charities of { Chieago. Eight explosions in the Noblestown | t plant of the Aetna Chemical company, | | followed by fire, threatened to de-| | stroy the village, on the Panhandle | | division of the Pennsylvania railroad, | | seventeen miles west of Pittsburgh. | No person was killed, although 100 | | men were employed in the plant ati the time. The explosions shattered windows in houses for miles around. Three coaches of the Buffalo EX- press on the Pennsylvania railroad were derailed at Landisville. Spread- ing rails wag the cause. Hight passon- gers were slightly inju-ed, but con- tinued on to their destination, and two women | ngers, slightly hurt, re-| turned to Harrisburg and eleven din- ing car employees were cut ands bruised. Fire swept the business section of | Clarion, causing a loss of $100,000. The fire started in the fruit and | grocery store of Thomas Parry & Co, | and on account of the fire plugs being frozen, little water could be secured. With the mercury‘at six below zero the firemen battled against great odds | and finally got the flames under con- trol. Roy Harshman, aged seventeen, of Uniontown, was killed, and his step- | father, Walter Wellig, fifty-three, and | Vandergrift, suffered cuts and bruises when an automobile in which they | and Ohio railroad passenger train at | | the Bridge street crossing in Dawson. ——————— i | Wleven men were injured, three | seriously and one probably fatally, | when a twenty;five-foot brick wall on | the o'd Madison Academy Theater building, on East Main street, Union- | town, which is being razed, collapsed and buried nine of the fworkers be- | | neath the debris. A general alarm was sounded for pelice and firemen: | | Police arrested four persons in con- nection with the murder in Erie last Thursday of Mrs. John Turrano, who Thomas Mundean, a boarder, was probably fatally stabbed at the same time. As he was being taken to the hospital Mundean murmured that a former boarder “did it.” Daniel B. Zimmerman, aged eighty- six, one of the first telegraphers in western Pennsylvania, for many years a vehicle painter in Pittsburgh, ap- pointed by Governor Curtin as second lieutenant of Company G, Ninety-third regiment, Pennsylvania volunteer in- fantry in tke Civil war, is dead ‘at Kenter, near Somerset. Ivan Salotek, was killed instantly at the Duquesne Steel company’s plant, Duquesne, when he was crushed be- tween a magnet and a car, Edward M. Foreman died as the result of having been crushed between cars in the yards at - the Duquesne Steel works. Fifty-two thousand dollars is to be divided this week among employees of United States Steel corporation mills in McKeesport. The money is in stock and “accident” bonuses. About 1,300 men will benefit, recefVing from $30 to several hundred dollars each. Paul Bartiak, aged \ forty-five, of Glassmere, was shot obably fatally Kensington, when a bullet, meant for another person, penetrated his right temple. The shooting fol- lowed an argument in a hotel. The man who did the shooting escaped. During the past week the wholesale price of fresh eggs in Pittsburgh have declined about 12 cemts a dozen. The market weakened the latter part of the week and since then lower prices have been quoted by wholesale and commission dealers almost daily. Suspicious circumstances surround- ing the death of John F. -Mueller, whose body was found April 1, 1916, : be examined at the request of the dead * man’s father, C. E. Mueller, for a { post mortem examination. ding in cans in a pasture and ! rarely makes a speech. | cured, and the ¢ | was horror st | take the examination. HIS CHEERFUL RECEPTION. The Compliment Came After He Made . His Little Talk, A Washingtcn newspaper man was once a member of congress from an Ohio district. He is not an orator and When he was running for congress he got word that he must come to a small town on the edge of his district to attend a meeting. A famous “s] inder” had been se- lidate was expected ke hands and show to be there, to sh himself, When he arrived at the village he lel 1 the speaker of the occ train and would not be there. “Come rizht uj 11,” said the chairman ¢ delegation that met him. “Ti a'big crowd there, and they are anxious to hear some talking.” The cand te went in fear aud {rem bling. He: was introduced and talked for fifteen minutes. He started to sit down, but the chairman motioned him to continue. He. went on for another quarter of an hour and by that time | had told all he knew or ever expected to know that was of interest to his au- dience. Then he dropped into his chair. The man who was presiding came cheerful- ly forward and said: “We have heard our candidate. Now, if there is any one present who can make a speech we shall be glad ito hear hiin.”—Youth’s Companion. TEETH MERDING IN CHILE. Not an Easy Matter For Foreign Dens, tists to Practice There. Not every foreigner who comes along with the cialin of being a dentist can practice that profession in Chile. The governmeut ¢ it that any one who is to look after the health and preservation of the teeth of its people must first demonstrate his qualifica- tions. ? The law provides that before a li- cense may Lé granted a foreigner to practice dentistry in the country the applicant must secure permission from the rector of the University of Chile to His foreign di- ploma, duly certified and authenticat- sees to ! ed, must be attached to the permit, and a fee of 500 pesos (about $75 in United States money) must. be deposited for the license in the office of the secre- tary of the university. If the applicant passes the examination successfully the license is issued, and he is authorized to open his office for business. Any applicant who holds a dental diploma from .a school not known or recognized by the Chilean authorities is required to complete the third year’s work of the dental department of. the University of Chile and must also pass a satisfactory examination before he can obtain a license to practice.—Pan- American Bulletin. 7 Warning Before Command. In bringing up my children I found that at night when they were tired they were spared many tears by being warned before 1 gave them a strict command. Instead of saying “Now it is time to go to bed. Put away your blocks at once,” I would say: “It is pearly time to go to bed. Finish your house first and then put away your blocks.” In this way the children were fully prepared to go, and there was consequently no begging and no temp- tation for me to show my lack of firm- ness by being persuaded to allow them to build “just one more house.” Imagine a mother in the midst of an absorbing chapter being told by one in higher authority to put down her book at once and go to bed. Would it not save a frown of impatience to be told to finish the chapter first?—Harper’s Bazar. A Mummy's Doll. Among the ancient objects exhibited in the British museum is a doll mors, than .3,000 years old. When some ar- haeologists were exploring an ancient tian royal tomb they came upon @ sarcophagus containing the mummy o€ a little princess seven years old. She was dressed and interred in a manner befitting her rank, and in her arms was found little wooden doll. The inscription gave the name, rank and age of the littie girl and the date of her death, but it said nothing about the quaint little wooden Egyptian doll. This, however, told its own story. It was so tightly clasped in the arms of the mummy that it was evident that the child had died with her beloved doll in her arms. Remarkable. “One of the astronomers claims that he has charted 60,000 new worlds.” “By George, it’s remarkable!” - “Not so very when you consider the fact that he has the use of the largest telescope in the world.” * “I wasn’t thinking of that. What IX consider strange is that with so many other worlds in existence the lady who is acting as stepmother’ for my chil- dren had to light on this one.”—Chi- cago Herald. Weeding Out Process. “How are you getting along with your new efficiency expert?’ “Remarkably well,” ‘answered the head of a large business firm. “In fact, . | $5600 damages. Clifford BE. Miller and | Irwin Miller are named as plaintiffs All the packer collieries at Shen- andoah were compelled to suspend work last week for want of railroad cars, making several thousand men and boys idle. :.a¥ lidland yard, which destroyed the + S of two horses. we are still quite friendly, although he | has discharged several members of my . ! family.” —Birmingham Age-Herald.. ! Quarrelsome. | . Polly—I never knew such a quarrel- some girl as Molly. Dolly—That’s right. { Half the time she isn't on speaking terms with her own conscience.—Phil- adelphia Ledger Neither should i ly on one 11 ancl 3 on a | single hope.— Epictetus.