a 5 b i i Fits the Lunch! Fits the Pocket! THE IDEAL FOLDING LUNCH BOX represents the end of possibility in a Lunch Box, for the reason that it possesses every desirable feature that a Lunch Box can pos- sess, and has more than one valuable advan- tage that no other lunch box ever had. It is strong and durable, and will give years of continued service. It is convenient to carry both in and out of use. Itis attractive in appearance, and because of its being used for more purposes than one, is a great relief to sensitive people who dislike the idea of being seen with a dinner basket. : : The Ideal Lunch Box is so low in price anyone can afford to buy it. Can be folded up in a moment to fit pocket, with no more inconvenience than an ordinary pocketbook. ROCHESTER LUNCH BOX MFG. CO. "Cox Building, ROCHESTER, N. Y. 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE SATE TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and geseription may ckly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica- tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for BOC patent. Pi funn & Co. e atents taken through special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American, A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cli culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3; Mi four months, $1. Soild byall newsdealerd UNN & Co,2e1erosswar. New York Branch Office. 025 F St.. Washington. D. C. Backache Any person having backache, kidney pains or bladder trouble who will take two or three Pine-ules upon retiring at night shall be relieved before morning. The medicinal virtues of the crude gums and resins ob- tained from the Native Pine have been recognized by the medical pro- fession for centuries. In Pine-ules we offer all of the virtues of the Native Pine that are of value in relieving all Kidney and Bladder Troubles Prepared by PINE-ULE MEDICINE CO., CHICAGO SOLD BY ELK LICK PHARMACY. REGISTERS NOTICE. Notice is hereby given to all persons con- cerned as legatees, creditors or otherwise, that the following accounts have passed Register, and that the same will be pre- sented for confirmation and allowance at an orphans’ court to be held at Somerset, Pa.,on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1906. IN ORDINANG Granting Certain Rights to the Pennsyl- vania & Maryland Street Railway Com- pany or Assigns, to Construct and Oper- ate an Electric Street Railway in the Borough of Salisbury, County of Som- erset andi State of Pennsylvania. Be it enacted and ordained by the Burgess and Town Council of the Borough of Salis- bury. Pa., and it is Lereby enacted and or- dained by authority of the same, to wit: — SEcTION 1. That the right of way is here- by granted to the Pennsy vania & Maryland Street Railway Company or assigns to erect one single track with necessary sid- ings and turnouts, poles, wire and other fixtures, and from time to time repair and maintain an electric railway over the fol- lowing route: SECTION 2. Beginning at the Borough line on Grant Street,on the North side of the Borough, thence along Grant Street, in the center thereof, to the intersection of Grant Street and Ord Street. SecTIoN 8. This is not an exclusive grant: but shall extend to,and be valid for a period of fifty (50) years from the date of its pas- sage, unless revoked by the failure of the said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Rail- way Company or assigns to comply with or carry out all or any of the provisions and conditions of this ordinance, and is given under the following conditions and restric- tions: All rails on Grant Street to be six- inch girder rails, sixty (60) feet lengths, and all rails to be placed in such manner that the tracks will not sink below the level of street on outside of rails, and all girder rails to have flange on inside, of sufficient width to accommodate wheels of wagons, buggies and ordinary vehicles (of standamgl 4-ft., 815-inch gauge used in said Borough) and rails to be approved by the Burgess and Council before they are laid, the poles to be neat, straight and painted, and set under the direction of the Burgess and Council as near the curb as possible. SECTION 4. The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, Or as- signs, shall lay their tracks to conform to the present and future grades of the streets which they pass over,as shall be given them by the Burgess and Town Council, at their own proper cost and expense. All cuts and fills desired by the said Street Railway Com- pany, and approved by Burgess and Town Council, shall be made by the said Street Railway Company, from curb to curb on opposite side of the street at their own ex- pense, and in such manner as will meet the approval of the Burgess and Town Council. They shall also at their own expense replace material and repair the street, and pave with suitable brick between the rails of track on Grant Street, and restore the street to as good condition as before the Company began their work. They shall also keep in repair and repave when necessary, all pave- ments between the rails and tracks on Grant street, and such repairing and re- paving shall be done within thirty (30) days from the date of notice from the Borough authorities. If at any time the Borough should pave any portion or all of said street, the said Street Railway Company shall pave the same distance e ghteen (18) inches outside of tracks, with same material as used by the Borough, or material approved of by the Borough authorities. SECTION 5. The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, or as- signs, agree to run not less than four (4) cars daily, each way, over their line covered by this grant, and continue to run, barring accidents and delays, storms, blockades or like aceidents and delays, at regular inter- vals, and to repair or remove cause of all delays within the shortest time practicacle, and that the speed of cars shall not exceed eight (8) miles per hour within the Borough limits. SECTION 5. The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, or as- signs, shall be exempt from pole, wire and car tax by the Borough of Salisbury for a period of six (6) years from the date of this ordinance, and after that time the taxes shall not exceed that levied or that which may be hereafter levied upon the several Telephone and Electric Light Companies within the Borough. Poles used conjointly with the Electric Light Company will not be taxed to this company, but all poles planted by this Company, no matter for what purpose, will be taxed after the ex- piration of said six (6) years. And all ground or non-conducting wires shall be boxed for a distance of eight (8) feet from the ground up, subject to the approval of the Burgess and Town Council. The Town Council reserves all rights to regulate the paving, repaving and repairing, curb-set- ting, laying pipes for water, gas or other purposes across said Company’s right of way in said Borough. SECTION 7. The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, or &s- signs, are to begin work at some point on the proposed line within thirty (30) days from the date of this ordinance, and are to complete said work within the Borough limits within twelve (12) months from the date of this ordinance, otherwise all rights under this ordinance shall become void. The account of Mary Buckman, Executrix of Samuel Buckman, deceased. | First and final account of Edward A. Top- per and Rose Topper, Executors of Am- rose Topper, deceased. First and final account of Samuel R. Green, | the Burgess and Town Council, and shall at Administrator of David Green, deceased. First and final account of H. F. Yost, Ad- ministrator of Amanda Kane, deceased. First and final account of Bernard A. Mur- ray, Administrator of Mary Jane Hepp, deceased. First and final account of Jacob Marker, Trustee for the sale of the real estate of Amanda Swarner,deceased. First and final account of J. First and final account of E. S. Brant, Ad- ministrator of Carrie McIntyre, deceased. First and final account of C. W. Walker, Executor of Amos Schrock, deceased. First and final account of W. I. Powell and Newton J. Lohr, Executors of Joseph G. Lohr, deceased. First and final account of Samuel Lowry, Administrator and Trustee of Tyranus Eichnor, deceased. First and final account of Samuel Miller, Executor of Catharine Miller, deceased. First and final account of James IL. Pugh, Attorney of John H. Fox, deceased, who was the Administrator of E. A.and Emma Geisler, deceased. Seventh and partial account of Robert E. Ross, Surviving Executor of Moses A. Ross, deceased. First and final account of Albert Hffleey, Executor of Mary E. Lease, deceased. First and final account of A. J. Sembower and Melissa Meyers, Administrators and Trustees of U. Grant Meyers, deceased. First and final account of Eli Stanton and Harvey H. Maust, Administrators of Howard M. Stanton, deceased. The account of Peter G. Weimer, Adminis- trator of Araminta Weimer, deceased. First and final account of Annie E. Speich- er, Administratrix of Henry 8. Speicher, deceased. Second and flnal account of Edward L. Simpson and Frank W. Simpson, Admin- istrators,and the first and final account as Trustees, for the sale of the real estate of Isaac Simpson, deceased. First and final account of J. A. Berkey, Ad- ministrator of Mary M. McClellan, de- ceased. CHARS. F. COOK, Register. Register’s Office, August 11, 1906. 9-6 KILL = COUCH avo CURE THe LUNGS “= Dr, King’s New Discovery ONSUMPTION Price FOR | oucHsand 5oc &$1.00 OLDS Free Trial. f Burest and Quickest Cure for all THROAT and LUNG TROUB- LES, or MONEY BACK. IT IS BAD BUSINESS to allow peo- ple to look in vain through the col- umns of Tee StAr for an advertise- ment of your business. tf sire Eaply Risers The famous little pills. | to hinder or delay traffic on the streets of W. Ling, Ad- | v ministrator of Elizabeth Ling, deceased. | Dollars, indemnifying the said Borough of They shall also perform their work as not said Borough unnecessarily, and shall not open up more than three hundred (300) feet | of a street at a time without the consent of all times during the construction of their work through the Borough, leave the road- way on one side of their track open to travel. SECTION 8 The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railwaw Company, or as- signs, or their contractors, shall, before | commencing work, file with the Clerk their bond of some reliable trust or surety com- pany, in the sum of Five Thousand )$5,000.00) Salisbury against all damage done by the | Railway Company in digging up the street aforesaid, or any part thereof, or any dam- | age that may arise from the planting of poles and the stringing of wires, and failing to restore the street to as good condition as it was when the said Company began its operations,and for any damage that the said Borough might be found liable, for the | reason of the acts or negligence of the said | Company in the prosecution of its work. SECTION 9. The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, or as- signs, shall also pay the cost of publication or this ordinance. SECTION 10. The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, or as- signs, agree that they wlll charge only one fare within the Borough limits, and that not to exceed five (5) cents, one way. MWSECTION 11. The said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, or as- signs, shall, in addition to the provisions of this ordinance, be subject to all restrictions assed in the general that may hereafter be ilways within the regulation of Street Borough. SECTION 12. If the said Pennsylvania & Maryland Street Railway Company, or as- signs, fail to comply with or carry out all or any part of the provisions and conditions of this ordinance, the ordinance to be null and void. SECTION 13. That any ordinance or part of ordinance conflicting with the provisions of this ordinance, be, and the same is here- by repealed so far as the same affects this ordinance. Ordained and enacted into a law this 29th day of August, 1906. ROBT. H. JOHNSTON, President of Town Council. Attest: —GEORGE C. HAY, lerk cof Council. Approved this 29th day of August, A. D. 1906. 8. R. MCKINLEY, Burgess. THE BLANKS WE KEEP, The following blanks canbe obtained at all times at TE STAR office: Leases, Mortgages, Deeds, Judgment Bonds, Common Bonds, Judgment Notes, Re- ceipt Books, Landlord s Notice to Ten- ants, Constable Sale Blanks, Summons Execution for Debt, Notice of Claims for Collection, Commitments, Subpoe- nas, Criminal Warrants, ete. tf HAVE YOU A WANT?—If so, try a small “ad” in Tae STAR, Many wants can and are promptly supplied if ad- vertised in this paper. tf IF YOUR BUSINESS will not stand advertising, advertise it for sale. You cannot afford to follow a business that THAT PLEDGE 0 BRYAN] Emery Campaign Orator Guaran- tees Defeat of Republican Congressmen. DEMOCRATIC GAME IN FUSION Gubernatorial Contest a Side Issue to Elect Members of Congress to Support Bryanite Program. [Special Correspondence.] Philadelphia, September 4. Manufacturers and business men of this city have been sitting up and taking notice since that demonstra- tion in New York over the home-com- ing of William Jennings Bryan. That pledge to Bryan that Pennsyl- vania will show a gain of at least eight Democratic congressmen in the returns of the November election, made by one of the campaign orators in the Emery gubernatorial outfit, has opened the eyes of Pennsylvania Re- publicans to the dangers that lurk in the fusion movement in this state. The loss of one Republican congress- man in the Keystone state, the Gibral- tar of Republicanism, with the uncer- tainty that exists in so many congres- sional districts in doubtful or debata- ble states, means much more in the total result than is generally under- stood. One vote may decide the elec- tion of the speaker of the next na- tional house of representatives, and the Democrats may get that vote from Pennsylvania through the game that is being worked in the deal between the Democrats and the Lincolnites. President Roosevelt, in his recent utterances in letters to members of congress and others, has sounded the alarm, and has warned Republicans everywhere to be on their guard in every congressional district so as. to insure the election of members of con- gress, who will co-operate with his ad- ministration in carrying out the great policies which he has inaugurated— the building of the transcontinental canal, the control of the trusts, aboli- tion of freight discriminations, restric- tion of immigration and the other great problems which he has under- taken to solve with the aid of a friendly congress. Aim of the Bryanites. When several hundred Pennsylva- nia Democrats journeyed to New York last week to greet Bryan they had but one thought uppermost in their minds. It was the election of Bryan to the presidency to succeed Roosevelt. Ev- ery effort that they can put forth be- tween now and the next presidential campaign will be directed toward that end. Their activity in the state cam- paign in Pennsylvania this year is but part of a general scheme, with the election of the next president as its ultimate object. Carried away with the enthusiasm with which their surroundings filled them, the Pennsylvania Democratic contingent at the Bryan reception in- discreetly revealed the cloven foot in the fusion campaign for Emery for governor. John M. Garman, a former chairman of the Democratic state committee of Pennsylvania, who is booked to stump the state for Emery and fusion from now until election day in the Victoria hotel, New York, away from the en- vironment of his Emery Lincolnite fe! low campaigners, threw off the cloak of the fusion conspiracy and revealed to Bryan and to the world, unwitting- ly, the fact that the real aim of the Democracy in Pennsylvania this fall is the election of Democratic members of congress. Garman was spokesman for the dele- gation of Pennsylvanians who present- ed Bryan with a solid-silver shield. suitably inscribed and mounted upon a heavy old-oak escutcheon, and gaily decorated with flowers. A Significant Testimonial. Engraved in large script letters was the following inscription: “The more than half a million Demo- crats of Pennsylvania join with pride in the national greeting To “WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, “The most eminent private citizen of America, upon his return from a tour of foreign lands. “THEY HAIL HIM AS THE NEXT PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. “As an indication of the attitude of the organized Democracy cof the Key- stone state upon this issue, they point with gratification to the unanimous adoption by the Democratic state con- vention, held in Harrisburg June 27, 1906, of a platform, the most note worthy plank of which reads as fol- lows: : “We congratulate the country upon the fact that the only prominence which the present Republican national administration has attained has been achieved by feeble and pretended ap- plication of the principles enunciated by the “HON. WM. JENNINGS BRYAN, “The Great Democratic Commoner, “Who is now regarded as the certain successor of Theodore Roosevelt to the presidency.” platform adopted by the Democratic for governor should in itself be an admonition to Republicans of the Key atone state of the great danger to the future success of Republicanism in the nation that would foliow a defeat The above reproduction from the convention which nominated Emery of the Republican ticket In this state this fall. They should recall bow, af ter the two Democratic victories iu gubernatorial campaigns in this state in the last 20 years the Democracy triumphed in the nation with the elec tion of Grover Cleveland to the presi dency upon each occasion. Pledge to Their Leader. But, added to the warning that should be contained in that plank from the state platform, comes a speech by Garman {in presenting this token of esteem to Bryan. Said Garman to the Nebraskan leader: “We bring greetings from a unitc? Democracy, who recognize in the dem onstration of popular good will toward you an inspiration for every Demo crat to look with confidence to the fu ture. “We at the same time are not un mindful of the importance of the elec: tion of Democrats to congress, and there is every reason to believe that we shall gain from six to eight pepre sentatives to the lower house, wha will co-operate with their fellow Dem: ocrats of other states to advance the policies which you have so consist ently and ably championed.” There is evidence that there has been an awakening among Republicans throughout the commonwealth to the fact that nothing must be left undone to thwart the Democrats and their Lin. colnite allies in the state campaign. OMBRY UNDER HT FI Castle and Swallow Turn Batteries On Fusion Nominee, DAMAGING CHARGES ARE MADE Sensational Allegations That Call For Emphatic Refutation From the Aspirant For Governor. [Special Correspondence.] Harrisburg, September 4. At the very outset of his campaign Lewis Emery, Jr. the Democratic-Lin- ecolnite candidate for governor, has been put upon the defensive. He has been subjected to a fierce fire from the batteries of the Prohibition. ists, who twice turned him down when he sought the nominiation of thei: party for governor. Homer L. Castle, who was ultimately named for governor by the Prohibition. ists, and Dr. Silas C. Swallow, the Pro- hibition state leader, have each mad¢ damaging and serious charges againsi Emery, to which he must make reply. In his speech of acceptance in Pitts: burg, Mr. Castle, in referring to Emery, among other things said: “It was utterly impossible for us t¢ support Senator Emery for at least the following reasons: “He is merely the representative of one discredited Republican machine which is seeking to dethrone another Republican machine, and so far as | can see the one machine is as bad as the other, either way you take fit. “In the courts of Philadelphia coun- ty, confirmed by the supreme court Lewis Emery, Jr., trading as the Lewis Emery Oil company, has been found guilty of practicing such frauds in the stamping of oils, both on state officer: and the public, as would shatter any man's faith in his business integrity. “He has never in all his life, until now, exhibited any antagonism tc trusts and combines, except as a busi. ness rival, and upon the contrary, by his own admission, he is a member ol the Brewery trust, which is worse than the Beef or Oil trust, and he is the head of an oil trust which, if possible, is worse in character, which lacks only opportunity to be as bad in practice as the Standard _Oil company. “He {is affiliated in a business way with Durham-McNichol & Mack, whom he assumes to fight, and we have never yet been shown where these men paid one dollar for their stock or been told what was the consideration which passed then, in 1901, these political manipulators, then in the height of power, became interested in the Pure Oil company. And we want to be told what relation this stock had to the New Jersey pipe line bill and the with. drawal of Standard Oil opposition. ‘““He has insulted the church. He has shown that he has no higher regard for her than he has for a brewery.” Called a Fake Reformer. In addressing the Grangers at their Williams Grove picnic last week, Dr. Swallow gawve a review of the proceed- ings before the common pleas and su- preme courts in the case against the Emery Oil company, and made these declarations: “The contention of the Prohibition- ists in this campaign is that having fought the Republican Machine for many years, and being still in the fight against it we are unwilling that there should be foisted onto the people of Pennsylvania as governor a fake re- former; a counterfeit; one whose re- form is only to the furtherance of his own business interests; one who em- ploys in his oil business the very meth- ods he is condemning in the Standard Oil company; one who, if the testimony of nearly a dozen responsible men and the decision of two courts is accepted as evidence, is president of a company bearing his name, which has been guil- ty of forgery, fraud and perjury. “The election of such a reformer would be a step backward and would retard for a decade the movements in- augurated by the Prohibition party, and by it partially carried to a success- ful consummation. We are unwilling as a party to have our work for re- form thus sidetracked and despoiled Crude A Column Thoughts | Home Dedicated As They | : | to Tired Fall | @ircle | Mothers From the | | @s They Editorial | | Join the Pen:— 'Depart- | Home Pleasant { Sircie at vening | Eveni Reveries. ment. bo | Tide. THE LIGHT AT HOME. The light at home ! how bright it beams When evening shades around us fall, And from the lattice far it gleams, To love, and rest and comfort call! When wearied with the toils of day— The strife for glory, gold or fame, How sweet to seek the quiet way, Where loving lips will lisp our name, Around the light at home. The light at home ! how still and sweet It peeps from yonder cottage door— The weary laborer to greet— When the rough toils of day are o’er! Sad is the soul that does not know The blessings that its beams impart— The cheerful hopes and joys that flow, And lighten up the heaviest heart, Around the light at home. Girls, don’t marry the young man who leaves his mother to find her way home as best she can on a dark night, while without a thought or word of apology to the old lady he looks after you. One of these days, when’ the novelty is off, he will leave you to go alone as best you can, while he seeks his selfish enjoyment at the club. Be polite to your children. Do you expect them to be mindful of your wel- fare, to grow glad at your approach, to bound away to do your pleasure be- fore your request is half spoken? Then, with all your dignity and authority, mingle politeness. Giye it a niche in your household temples. Only then will you have the true secret of send- ing out into the world really finished gentlemen and ladies. The prodigal son is generally wel- comed warmly ; the light gleams in the window for him, the bells are rung and anthems of joy float upward on the wings of air. But the light dies out, and the doors are locked, should the prodigal daughter struggle homeward through the snow, and on her way fal- ter on the road, and if she falls and dies she may lay where she has drop- ped by the roadside to be pointed to as a horrible example. Is this as it should be? Courtesy to women, young and old, should be a part of every boy’s home training. Without it he is likely to be boorish and selfish, and a rude, over- bearing brother and son is in danger of developing into an exacting, dis- courteous husband. He will be a sort of despot that feels his personal com- fort should be the chief aim of his wife's life. A delayed dinner is an un- forgivable offense, and a missing but- ton brings on an acute attack of that disagreeable mental disorder known as “the sulks.” There is nothing in the world more pathetic than the meek, timorous, shrinking ways of certain old people— we have all seen them—who have given up their homes into younger hands, and subsided into some out-of-the-way cor- ner of it, to sit by the fireside and table henceforth as if afraid of “making trou- ble,” afraid of being “in the way,” afraid of accepting half what is their due, and going down to their graves with a pitiful, depreciating air as if constantly apologizing for staying so long. There is no scorn too deep nor sharp for the sons and daughters who will accept this attitude on the part of those to whom they owe so much. LIFE’S CROSSES. Life's crosses take a great many forms. They march along day by day, just as fast as you can bear them; and you can rail at them, if you like, but you cannot get rid of them. All the money in the world will not save you from the troubles which living entails. If you are born into this state of existence, and you cannot very well help it, if it be so decreed, you must suffer its inconveniences. Toa EESy You must deal with flies, and mos- quitos, and March winds, and house- cleaning, and fires that won’t burn, and the pump frozen up, and your wife’s “I told you 80,” and your husband’s “That’s just like a woman!” You must meet and couquer, or die in the attempt, difficulties innumerable. You will have to bear with your neigh- bor’s hens in your flower garden; with dogs that bark in the next yard to keep away burglars; with the musical efforts of itinerary tom cats; with children which come a visiting with people who know your business best; with long- winded sermons ; with—but why go on? Somebody else draws the prize in the fair where we have a ticket—somebody else gets the “beautiful moss-rose tea set valued at $50,” which is given away to purchasers of “our superior teas and coffees ;” and the stocks we purchased in that wonderful silver mine go down to nothing after we get the certificates. We have oft been there,and we know just how it is. We know that very little of the machinery of this world runs to suit our own taste. It rains when we want to have a picnic; it will 1st stand advertising. by a pretender and henee our protest.” to and cabbage plants; it thaws and spoils the sleighing when that genteel Mr Jones has invited us to ride; it freezes when the fire goes out in the furnace, and all our plants are ruined, and it rains, pouring, the first time we wear our new summer silk, and that silk is reduced to the condition of a mere dishrag. We have aches and pains, and “olo- gies,” and “minies,” and disorganiza- tion generally, and we get out of pa- tience, and wish we had never been born, but we can’t help it, and, after all, the most afflicted and heaviest cross-bearing man in the world had rather bear on a little longer, in the hope that something better may turn up. THE BREATH*OF LIFE. It’s a significant fact that the strong- est animal of its size, the gorilla, also has the largest lungs. Powerful lungs means powerful creatures. How to keep the breathing organs right should be man’s chiefest study. Like thou- sands of others, Mrs. Ora A. Stephens, of Port Williams, O., has learned how to do this. She writes: “Three bot- tles of Dr. King’s New Discovery stop- ped my cough of two years and cured me of what my friends thought con- sumption. O, it’s grand for throat and lung troubles.” Guaranteed by E. H. Miller, druggist. Price 50c. and $1.00. Trial bottle free. 10-1 lpn - Marie Corelli. The first authentic portrait of Marie Corelli, the noted novelist, appeared recently as frontispiece of her latest novel, “The Treasures of Heaven.” Although one of the most popular writers of England, Miss Co- relli had always refused to pose for a picture and the result was that the various pictures purporting to be portraits of the author did not bear the slightest resemblance to her. Even now Miss Corelli has refused all offers of the news itt for copies of her photograph to be used for reproduction. Edward Fitzmaurice Inglefield, R. N, Captain Edward Fitzmaurice In- glefleld, R. N., has been appointed for the important position of Secre- tary of Lloyd’s Shipping Register and Insurance Association. He is the son of the late Admiral Sir Ed- ward Inglefield, and is just 45 years old. He entered the Navy in 1874 and has seen much service. He took part in the Nile Expedition, the Greek coast blockade and several smaller affairs of the British Navy. M. Duray, one of the most daring automobilists of Europe, driving a De Dietrich ma- chine, recently won the Circuit des Ardennes trophy after one of the most brilifant runs in the annals of automobile racing. He covered the 695 kilometres of the circuit at an average speed of about 6614 miles shines when we have set out our toma- an hour. Duray is a Bélglan. Hs A Ee GWA es Capit | Fore Fine Sup; best Hite fren v ey = rm = @® o factory TRIAS OM OL2 mm £