University of South Carolina Libraries
4- "dam' *4 THE IC KENS SENT PUBLISHED WEEKLY Entered April 23, 19y03 aPicktee, . m. aecond cgelass unil matter, under act of onugrems of Iarelsa3179s SUBSCRIPTION blished 1871-V-olume 43 -"PICKENS, S. C., NOVEMBER 27, 1913 PLAN It PROPOSED TO PURCHASE SEE[ DEMONSTRATION WORKERS OF THREE STATES ARE ENCOUR AGING COVER CROPS. TO HOLD CONFERENCE SOO State Agents May Send Representa tive to Europe to Purchase Vetcl and Clover in Order to Get Gooc Seed at Low Price. Columbia.-Conforence of the state 1emonstration agents of North Caro 1n - Georgia and South Carolina, will be held d C kmson at an early date for the purposey f working out a plan for the farmerf of the three states to secure vetch f.nd crimson clover seed for next year, according to W. W. Long, stato agent for the United States farm demonstration work and Cemson College. In a recent Interview Mr. Long said: "Another great interest has been taken in conection wi-th this live stock in South Carolina in cover crops. Last .spring when we began tc agitate the question of cover crops I thought if the demonstration agents in South Carolina succeeded in getting 20,000 acres of vetch and clover that they would be doing well. Reports that are now coming in indicate that the acreage of these two crops will be largely over 100,000 acres. A con ference will' be held at Clemson Col lege with the state agent of the dem, onstr-Alion work of Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina with Clarence Poe of The Progressive Farmer for the purpose of working out a plan by which vetch seed and crimson clover seed can be secured next year for the farmers of North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. The plan we have in mind is to let the demonstration agents begin to take orders' at once for clover and vetch seed the money to be deposited with Clarence Poe and Mr. Poe to select a man to go to Germany and Russia and buy our clover and vetch seed in shipload lots. In this way we will save a considerable sum anr be able to purchase seed of greater purity. One of the troubles we have had th-is year -is that hairy votch seed have been mixed with Oregon seed, which of course is nothing like as good as hairy vetcl seed. It is not our purpose to interfere with the seeds men, but we believe this action a necessity in order that the showing of vetch and clover may become a regular part of our agricultural sys tem." South Carolina Has Good Report. Report on file show that the insur ance department of the sinking funo commission of South Carolina has been unusually successful this year. The department has steadily grown for the past toen years and the mem bers of the commission have great faith in the efficiency of the system, which was established as the result of a bill passed 13 years ago, of which M. P. DeBruhl then a member of the house was the author. Reports show that at the end of last year there was over $1,400,000 worth of insurance in force on state and charitable institutions. Of this amount $989,204.91 was on county buildings and the state penitentiary. None of this amount is carried on personal property and furnishings. S. A. L. May Buy N. & S. C. Stock. That the Seaboard Air Line Railway has an option on- the stock of thle Northl & South Carolina Railway run ning from Hamlet to Mullins and thence to Andrews is the statement contained in a letter fromn President W. J. Harahan of tile Seaboard to Chairman Richards of tihe railroad commission and made public recently. A link is now being built from Char ,leston to Andrews connecting with ther North & South Carolina thus putting the Seaboard direct in to Charleston. The Seaboard denies ownership of the Georgetown & Western Railway. Joins Tri-State Dobates. The University of South Caroline .recdntly through .its debating counciJ formoaIy accepted the invitation 01 the universities of Virginia and Geor. gla to. eter a trianguilar debate, eact university to have two debates ever) year, one at home and one elsewhere 'lihe universities or Georgia and Vir ginia agreed upon ,the debate ani w'hen dt came to picking the third eel l ege. With the entire South befort t)h, 'they preferred the University o~ ASouth Carolina to any other univer ity or .colleg 'In the South. To Enter Greenvill'e Underground. IIlngineers of the Greenville, Spar tanbnrg & Anderson Rtailway compan: .hiave been engaged for ie Jast fev -days in making dfurveys ~or a serie: et..nDtramun!d traecks. whtch will bi Ulbie&UCtECt under the warelouses the.company on West Washlingt street. The combinied length of thel tracks will -be several hundred fei and they will materially facilitate tl handling of frieght at the warehouse Trains carrying freight will be run c the tracks under the warehouses a freight transferred to elevators. LAY OUT CANVAS: STATE TICK ERADICATION CON MITTEE IN SESSION MAKE PLANS FOR CANVASS. HERBERT ELECTED CHAIRMAl Columbian Is Made Leader of Can paign for Appropriation by Leglel ture of Forty Thousand Dollars. Holcombe is Secretary. Columbia.-With a view of organi; fng and perfecting plans the executiv comimttee appointed to direct th campaign begun by the Columbi chamber of commerce against the ca tle tick in this state met here recenti i tale office of the secretary of th chamber. R. H. Herbert was electe chairman, R. W. liolcombe secretari The members of the committee wer guests of the commercial body at a informal luncheon at the Jefferson h( tel. The following statement was give out a, the omice of the chamber: "The executive committee appoin ed by B. H. Rawl, chairman of th meeting held for the purpose of a: sisting in the eradication of the cattl tick in South Carolina, was held I the offices of the chamber of con merce. Those present were: R. IN Cooper, Wisacky; S. G. Stoney, Cha leston; J. I.. McIntosh, Dovesville; I F. Efird, Lexington, and R. B. Herber Columbia, who are all members of th executive committee. "R. 13. Herbert of Columbia we elected chairman of the committe and R. W. Holcombe was made se retary. "The netter then of securing ti co-operation of the state of South Ca olina in the work of tick eradicatic wts taken up and discussed and ti woiAt of the committes was outline4 subordinate committees being al pointed in all the counties of Sout Carolina. "The committee expressed itself a very much pleased that the press ha given. the matter such publicity an that the matter of securing an al propriation had ben so favorabl commented on in general. "The matter of legislation lookin towards assisting the farmers in si curing a rate on lime for covE erops was a phase which also receive attention. Spartanburg Gains Financially. Spartanburg.-The city of Sparta burg closed the fiscal year ended 0 tober 20 with a net profit of $11C57.E according to the Southern Audit Con pany, which has just completed a audit of the city's books. In view < the fact that the city's operating e: pensese were higher than in forme years this is considered a gratifyin report. The expense of running th~ city was $14,695.46 more than in th: preceding year and the income fro: ordinary sourcs of revenue was $i 724.24 more. Refuses Requisition. Columbia.-Governor Blease recen ly turned down a requisition from Go ernor Slaton of Georgia for the retur to that state of D. 0. Drummond wh is now rural policeman in Darlingtc county. Drummond is charged wit forgery inl Georgia, it being allege that he forged the name of his ei ployer, E. G. M. Fletcher, to a chec Ifor wages Drumnmond claimed was di him. A dispute had arisen botwee t'he men awt Entvilie, Ga. Q. S. & A. Stockholders Meet. Greenville.-At a meeting here r cently of the directors of the 0. 3. an A. interurban electric railway a res lution was adopted increasing the ca ital stock from $5,000,000 to $15,00( .000. 13. N. Duke was present at ti meeting and he went on an inspectic trip over the line to Greer. W. S. Lt was elected presidont, Z. V. Tayl< vice presidlent, N. A. Cooke secretar and treasurer. Congressman Lever Makes Address, Greenville.-Congressman A. F. Li ver made an address before the set tional bankers' meeting recently the chamber of commerce rooms, an was a guest of the chamber at a ba] quet. Also Mr. Laever addressed th farmers on possibilities of live stoc growing in this section. Resigns After 26 Years. Greenvile-After having been a employe of the United States gover mnnit for more than 26 years, the la 16 of which this city has been h: headquar-ters, E. A. Aikon recent severed his conneotion with the int ne~l revenue departnient as deputy c< hector. Notice of the appointment his successor -has not as yet been eived here. Mr. Aiken is a native afarth. Garlina. a-nd was atansjq4 DI oil KING e 1 e 0 a ni N ormh Caro!!ra mn oni or tino mt ,9 ternal. revenue depar'm cnt, but haf. 0 been stationed at Greerville. Big Lo:m' Secured. 0 '3 partanbu.-A Tust dood for g r-$700,000 tranF:iem.on he-~tm een thle Caro Jlina Puiblic 'SQerv.'c~a Co:e inane the Atlanta Trirst. Ilman a,; heer received at thle ofico o-f eits-ter Tr R. Trimmier, to be ent(-r 1 I ponI the 4 record. . The deed, uhointhe tip A ulations of payme t, the ' ral of. red as security and the me.hod ol retiring the loan through theu "sIlanvc nof first mortgae CeNin $nm e denonilation: flill;s '07 p a of leg:l rocoaver, a1 th rfcc' -'.!fee will am'. T. icr abo b$4t5. d pn h NEED MORE MEN TEitCHER State Inspector W. H. H ar d Says High Schools are Rapidly Becom Ing Over-Effeminized. . Columbia.-The high tschools 0o otf1 Catina' gae rapin becomim oer-effi ivtinizedI lisa thep'"~o stte et SaeIeorW. H. Handsaehihsho inspe Highn techos aedRcoidludesoha . e'oubah ehigh schoolouls "w1 "Sohrorn yare radl booumea - otechershasreaied tsatlmet sti -. tionry, utis ithnal report dc s I cFon the same qeion the nmer : awomen teachers hand incleas t0hai givt.Ie~ie thoe te iteiaers.mpo Mrti anddneot saytatth 1ihr fcoous yar thn nud of mme t- teachers hof reait.eI alstssi a questiohe same pehiod itishr ntoe con o won epactooerly anreasndng. Le a uent dielthe subjet of Isent-himtlt tandurseleous btane sand thatroniz dtih rehls eIiey of me andw a- teaes ofeahiritis usull dichdin andh ourongelneoblr andisud fron D" the wrong viewpoint. The discussio P is not to try to prove that mon toach era are in any way superior to womoi Le teachers, but to show that each hau ,a place, a very necessary place. e The characteristics of tho two sexes rare distinctly unlike, but they are harmonious, they are complomentar; and supplementary. God wisely mad< them so. The child's existence is du( to the existence of the twvo sexes, and Shis future welfare and devolopmieal depend on what can be supplied b) Lt both sexes. 'The well-balanced train dilg of the child is dependent on ths ' retention of this harmony of dua e characteristics; the joint traininf k given by the father and the mothei makes it a symmetrical training, anc the absence of the training of oithei Iparent is a distinct loss to the chila 1l In this joint parental training thu ii- child at different stages of his physi it cal, mental and muoral growth Is mnorc -s dependent upon, mere responsive to ly and more In need or, the pcouliai r- influences furnished by the one parenl .i. or the ether. of "What is true in the home is tru< a*. in the school. In his education he I! ofentitled to the influence of both sexci a a teachers. F'or the first five veari FURKEY - 6i h child's sCnooi ie Wne average man as its teacher is all but a failure as compared with the average wo man. Tihe woman is more patient and gentle and sympathetic and is in every way bcttor fitted to furnish .vhat the child neods. About the time the boy entors his thirteenth year lie begins to manifest radical changes in his disposition in his tastes and in his ideals. le still noods patience, gentleness and sympathy but he needs something even more import ant than mere control-lie is yearning for that conscious tuition which Is involved in association with a manly man. "The time has come for nim to imi tate and to whom should ho turn with more confidence than to his teacher? What mother of judgment would have her boy imitate the most perfect woman of her acquaintance, any more than she would have her girl imitate the most perfect man of her acquaintance. The silent power of imitation must never be lost sight of, and the boy's craving the com panionship of a manly man must not be ignored. Mere control is among the least of tihe adolescent boy's needs. Many a woman teacher is able to shake Sixteen Years of Young Amert can until his teeth rattle, in thme Ian guage of Dr'. Thomas Arnold, he needs a man of common senise who understands hoys." Two Charters Issued. The Farmers Gank of Chesterfield has been chartered by the secretary of state wvith a capital of $15000. The officers are: S. hi. Sireater President; TP. A. lluntley vlece president and D. H-. Douglas, cashier. Goolsby & Co., of D~enmnark have beeni :omisiioneCa with a capital of $2,000. Petitioners aro: L. A. Gools;by and G. C. Turner. Three Destroyers Discarded. Three torp~edo dostroyers, tihe Cra i-en, Stockton and Wilkes, have been placed out ot commission at the Cha leston navy yard and stricken fromn the navy register. The vessels were lately ont dutty with the Atlantic re serve fleet. Pcople's Forum Meets. TIhmo "poople's forumn," or oitizen's meeting, was called promptly to order in the Ilichland county court house a few days ago by WV. Anderson Clark sonm, wvho outlined the purposes of the movement. Mr. Ciarkson was nomi natod and elected asa chairman of the meeting for the ovening. John E. Swonrringen, .sta-te Supleritendet of edu caio, was introducod as the speaker of the evening and umado an adldress on the sutbject of "E-ducation and Tax ation and Their lloalti to Each Oth er." Pharmaccutical Board Meets. The South Carolina Pharmacentl. catl exainintg board hold :ts meeting in Oram'gchurg rc'2ontly. The monm boers of this board are: Dr. James M. Oliver, thuis ecity, chairman; Dr. C. M Milford, Abbeville; D~r. L. P. Fouche, Anderson; Dr. TP. 1D. JIley, Plorence; Dr-,. J. 0. DoLormo, Sumter; Dr. F. M. -Smith, Charleston. The examinations were held at the court house Enter tainment was provided for the board o~f examiners while in this city. A mtmbor of applicants took the exami. nation for nlm-rnaehcts' liensen. EWS OF SOUTH CAROLINI 1hort Paragraphs of State News Tha Has Been Condensed For Busy People of State. Sumter.-Tie home of Mrs. S. E lentry, w-hielt she conducted as , Warding -house, was so badly burntv 'ocently that it bad to be vacated. Ohester.-The Pleasant Grove com uunity fair was hold in the Lewis (11e township at the school hous ecently. A ilarge crowd was present 1rowd was present. Columbia.-Threo score prisoners lormerly employed In the hosiery inil xt the state penitentiary, have beet 'ent to the county chaingangs in th' raTious counties during the past fov Pveeks. Leesvilio.--The Rev. A. W. Linder he- oldest preaclier in the Luthorat iynod of South Carolina, is now ver It at his home in the Delmar coni :nunity. Ittle hope is had for hIh recovery. ie is 88 years old. Spartanburg.--On learning that (le: cad not been re-eletod to tiho force four polIcemen recently left theii beats, turned in their badges and re fused to work longer. ColiPmbia.-The Farmers Bank o Cheraw was charterotd recently -witi 0'pital stock of $15,000. The oflicer, elected are S. B. Streater, president T. A. Huntley, vice president; D. H Douglas, cashier. Columbia. -- The coroner's jur' reached a verdict in 10 minutes tha afflcers bad killed Edward Winbus1i the negro desperado, In the discharg Af their duty, and no one was ordet d held for the shooting. Whitmire.-Lewhi Woodall, a 12 rear-old boy, was captured recentl, in the act of breaking into the post Affice here. The boy was arrested b. Deputy Marshall James Davidson an taken to Newberry on a warrant fron P. L. Bynum, United States commil 3ioner. Florence.--lhe Scabuard Air Lin ia sestablished an oMice in Florenc with C. J. Nalle as soliciting agen Mr. Nalie will cover the eastern Car, olinas for the Seaboard and its ale lines, the South Carolina Western an North & -South Carolina. Belnnettsville.-'i'lhe Baptist Stat monvention will hold its annual meel ing in Bennettsville December 9, 1 a.d 11. There will be about 350 visil Sirs, preachers and delegates li attent %nce upon the convention. The Baf List denomination is very -strong I: lis town and county, but in the mal ter of entertainment they will hav the unanimous support and help o the entire community. Yorkvillo.-There is -loss cotton I1 the fields in -this section at presen than there has beon at the same se so in a number of years, and ther is also less in the hands of the prc ducers, as the large majority of then' have been selling as fast as the; could get it ginned. It is estimate that the total yield in the coun-ty thi year will be less than two-hirds o hat of Iatst year. Charlestonm. - Preparatory to th construction of the new docks an< eeawall at the Charleston navy yard the contractors for the job, which rer resents an outlay of some $300,00( are unloading their machinery 4n th yard and clearing away cerstain ol structlons at the point where eport tions will begin. Snare & Triost C New York city -were awarded te cor tract for the construction of the deck and sea wall. Spartanburg.-Dr. Phil-Ip 10. Garr son, 'passed assistant surgeon, Unlite States Navy, a member of the Thomj son-2McFadden Pellagra Commnissi who has been stationed -here for eli months, 'has left' with his family fc Brooline, Mass., where lie -will resid during the Winter. He will lectur on pellagra and tropical diseases .1 the biological department of Har-var University. . Anderson.--Mrs. 3. R. Vandiver< the H. E. [Lee chapter of the Unite Daughters of thre Confederacy in thm Piedmont district, Anderson, won Vih loving cup 'that was offered by Mr. Rose of West Point, Miss., for -havin writtten the best essay on "Women< the Confederacy." Lancastor.-Saul Vaughn, a we known and prosperous old negro fa m-er of this place, sustained a hoes< abiout $400 recently in the oomnplot destruction by fire of his barn an cntonis. lls grand-child, a boy 1 or 12 years old wishing to see a blazi itt is said, doliberately set fire to th biding. Glaffnoy.-Jn connection with the rt port of Dr. JF. D. Rodgers of the stat board of health, in regard to the heol worm campaign in Cherokee count:s It Ia scen that Cherokee's rate of it feetlon, whleni compared with that c rithoar countie:u, is low. Char~leston.-At an early date th promoters of the Charleston Norther; railway will submit to Maj. (Georg P. Howell, United States engineer in chango of the Charleston districi their Dplans for crossing thnree streamn in thris district qver whinh tua gav. ien-t ha' juri'sdiction, the antee riv. or, the west branch of Cooper river and Goose Creek. Orangeburg.-The Orangeburg dia. pensary board, A. S. Dukes, Edgar L, Culler and Henry S..Holman, met here for the purpose of transaoting 'busi. na3 relative to opening the couity dispenrsary. aWS STORIES IN MINIATURE Minor Mention of a Week's Important Events. A HISTORY OF SEVEN DAYS Paragraphs Which Briefly Chronicl< the Events of Interest as Bulle tined by Wire, Wireless and Cable-Forelan News. ''in11tlnni ini imihninm 11,,iniIItI gIIII~Iininnnim Iinme u IlU Washingiton Representatives of large banking houses conferred with Treasury ofll cials on the income tax regulations governing the American security hold ings of aliens living abroad. Senator Poniereno, of Ohio, intro duced a bill appropriating $500,000 to combat hog cholera. t Representative Murdock, of Kansas, Progressive loader of the House, in troduced three anti-trust bills. Tho Postofilce Department an nlounced it would be compelled to ig nore the iederal eight-hour law dur ing the Christmas run of mail matter. Personal = Iletty Green, th ' .:''' thiest woman, colebrated her ,va birthday anniversary in New York. It Is officially admitted that ar a rangements for the divorce of Prince t William, of Sweden, and the Princess, who is a sousin of the Czar, have been made. The details were ar ranged with tho consont of King Gus tav and the Russian Emperor. The will of C'has. G. Gates filed for a prob.te at Beaumont, TexaLA, provides for bte use of the $3,000,000 fund left 3 by his father for the Gates' Od Peo PIle hcie at, West Chicago. Formter President Taft was a visitor at the White House. It is said ho has lost 100 pounds. General Allen P1. Tupper, principal keeper i at Aulbuttna, N. V., prison, is dead. IHe I was a prison guard 35 years. Tho \Var Department has accepted a new doeigt for the arrangement of the stats on the A inerican flag. Tho Indianapolis, Columbus and Sotuhet-ri Traction Company signed a I 12-year contract with its employes. Matilda Brooks, an artist, 60 years Sold, was struck and killed by atn au tomtobile in Ne. York. Wta:dorf Millet-, the broken-niecked youth of New Rochelle, N. Y., died of indigestion. -Chas. Southwick, tht'ee years old, was killed by the accidental dischtarge of a shotgun at his home in Poabcdy, Mass. 'The Rev. Drt. Joseph Silvetsman, in Lil in adress in Temple Emanu-EI, New I Yot'k, said that wvoman suffrage wa:'. a farce. The Ui~ated States cruiser' Galvesqton has been ordered to Guam to assist the niaval collier A jax, which wvas fot ced aground in the recent typhoon. I Mrs:. Mary Hopper', 82 years old, 'and totally blind, was burned ti 0 death whemn her clothing caught fire .1 in lher home at Ossining, N. Y. I Princeton reports that 169 studenit 0 working; their way through that col Q logo earned morn than $20,000 during nl the year ending last Junme. di .1 oseph Devorshtack, a milk dealer of l'assaic, N. J., was fined $50 on a ~charge of having lilt his wife in the face with a hot mInce pie. TIhe shoe leather dressing plant of 0. LeJvor & Co., at (Gloversville, N. Y., was totally "estroyed by fire. 'The loss is $200,000. Misas IEdith W. Tfhomas, a IBarntard dsenior, died in New Yoi'k after a Ce lunmbia student had given hei' a pint iof his blood in the vaini effort to save r hot' life. d Miss Gertrude N. Gart'it, of Suffleld, 0 Conun., was awarded $50,000 damages di ini the Superior' Court in her suit 0 against the Connecticut Light & Pow. i, or Company for the loss of both o* a her arms. John R. Lannom, a member of the .sophomore class at Yale, was found e on the walk at D~urfee Hall, New .llaven., with hIs neck broken, evi dently htaving fallen from his room onl tho accond floor. More bhan 1003 college students and their friends were arrested and fluted a $10 each for being intoxicated while colabrating the footb~all victory ofI G (eorgetowtn University over the Utni versity of Virginia. Everett P. F'owler was indicted In New York on the charge of extortion following testimony before the Grand 'Zmurv hy 9. 1%. Juil- a contraf.tor. tlwt XA had been forced,. to the Democratic 'fund in 1911. Joseph F. Johnso andria, Va., aged 88. In the same tanner A delegation of s number, from New , the White House to Wilson to 'advocate th passage of a constitutiona ment enfranchising women. Mayor Harrison appola. t4 c4l Dunne, of Illinois, as a 46egat e ti Chicago to the Natio '1ve Harbors Congress at lot cenber 8 to 6 and the At Mayor Harrison as a t t from Illinois. ' I'a!ton, Pa., decided conmission government b 4 877 to 852. The tug Louise, with a board, completed her voyage th the entire Panama canal. The National Association o ment Makers, in session at Chiesgo. protested against convict labor.. The Atlantic Deeper WaterwaysAS sociation held its sixth anntial' C'-1" vention at Jacksonville, Fla. Harry K. Thaw was arrested at Oo cord. N. I-i., on the extradition wa "V rant approved by Governor F4l'br. George W. Paxon, 60 years old, wasw severely scalded when the boiler of his locomotive exploded and threw him from the cab at Philadelphia., The Board of Deacons of Cavalry Baptist Church at Austin, Tex., have ordered their pastor, Dr. J. R. Ram soy, to leave the city immediately and refuse to make their reasons public. Under the will of Mrs. Helen D,' Winans, who died at The Hague, Hol land, the Blde-A-Wee Home for dogs and cats in New York receives a be quest of $50,000. The Rev. James Ross, aged 70, pas tor of a church in London, Ontario, was run down by an automobile in New York and died later in Bellevue Hospital. The New York, New Ilaven and Hartford Railroad arranged for a loan of $45,000,000, represented by six per cent. notes payable in six months, to meet pressing obligations. The striking taxicab chauffeurs of Philadelphia agreed to return to work for $2.25 a day for ten months of the year and $1.75 a day for July and Aug Miss A:tiy Snith of Glenspoy, Sul livan county, Now York, has the dis tinction of beirng the first woman to kill a bear in Sullivan county in half a century. Lena Hewitt, seven years old, is dead at her home in Atlantic City, N. J., 'from burns received while playing "Indian" with her flve year. old brother. Supreme Court Justice Seabury up set the contention of the New York Board of Education and decided that a married woman teacher cannot be dismissed for absenting herself from her duties to become a mother. The election of Bartlett as Chief Judge of the New York Court of Ap peals is assured. Returns from a dis trict in Kings made 7,000 look like 4,000 through a clerk's carelessness. Werner is defeated by 2,500. A committee's minority report, laid before the National Conservation Con gress, declared that "ton great groups of power control 65 per cent, of all the developed water powver in the United States." Wives of members of the House, WVashington, were surprised to learn that they had been omitted from the calling lish of the women of the Cab inet, Supreme Court and Senate cir cles. William C. Brown, who rose from a section hand to the head of the New York Central lInes, presented his res ignation to the directors, to take of feet January 1. Alfred H. Smith, senior vice president since last March, it is Maid, will be his successor. WVilbert Robinson, John J. Mc Graw's first lieutenant and pitchIng coach of the Giants for three years, has beent named to succeed 13111 Dah Ion as manager of the Brooklyn Na tionals. Alfred J. Lili, of Boston, was elect ed president of the Amateur Athletic Union at its annual meeting in New York. 1Lill was opposed by George F. Pawling, of Philadelphia. Pr'inceton wound up the foothba! season with a teamn which, was jurs shor-t of being cast in champions-bip mould. Defeat by Dartmouth and Harvard and a tio with Yale afforded nothing to arouse much enthusiasm, but apart from mere results the team and the players wore worthy of the best traditions at Princeton. There wore new developments indi cating further that Gov. John K. Tener of Pennsylvania will be elected president of the National League of Baseball Clubs when the annual meet inig is held in Newv York City on December 9. Fin~d-Onet pig. Owuer~ can eot same(. by describing pig :and aying for this notico. Niisha Gilstrap. Pickens, route 1L