J J .. . W ' 6 MORNING ENTERPRISE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 23,-1913 USGH rejoin rejoin FRANK City. O V- ai S , -n I, linn IIIIMI 1B-1j tyLr-l LJ What Will We do For Our Customers ? Take yoa pencil and mark it down we will give you fee of charge with evey"50 cent purchase One Large Pictore Free Bat only one pictutz to one person. So bring along aM ths.-oawcs and harvest the beautiful pict yoti wish to decorate your rooms. Low Priced and Dependable Eange Fully reinforced and strongly erected. Nothing on the market can compare with it at the price. We willl sell our celebrated well known Adrian fence 40 inchs high for 33c per rod i There will be on sale 50 beveled edge mir rors, fancy frames, size 22 x 32 inches in cluding frame, the regular price is $5.50 but during Booster Day they will go for $2.95 Hand painted pictures in rich gilt frame, regular $10.00 will go for Beautiful framed pictures value will go for - - - We will give Trading Stamps on all your purchases. - - $4.95 regular $2.00 - - - 95c 5: Best cold -rolled polished sheet steel: riveted with cone h - I in rivets. ."fCea at every part Ihain top covers and centers of selected pig iron; covers have Boston rim rings, preventing cracking; 'fire box is sectional and heavy to withstand all rea sonable uses, duplex grates burn wcod or coal; high closet with balance door, nickel plate drop stand, nickel brackets, edges, panel, draft check, etc.; reser olr of heavy cast i ron, tank en ameled white, oven door nickel trimmed and provided with bal ance spring; asbestos lined throughout, oven braced with heavy guage angle irons: Oven 16x18 6 lids 26-50 Oven 14x18 6 lids cast reservoir, price $27-50 Above prices are cash only; but we will take your old stove as part GRANITE WARE 10c Will pay for one good sized, handl ed Aetna Granite Sauce Pans. WHITE HOPES ARE NOW PLENTIFUL Heavyweight Division Filled Willi Likely Material. GUNBOAT SMITH LOOKS GOOD Former Sailor Has Been Showing Up Well In Recent Bouts McCarty Claims White Heavyweight Honors'. Jess Willard Is Tallest of the Lot. By TOMMY CLARK. Last year it was a couiujoii thing to hear fistic funs say. "There's Hot a white lien vy vv-ii;ht In the country or Pjojob umo u Krtuy.if r wrttuof aouS epuSuq )q3dAA'.iMi dm n uam jsaq eq ajB A'aqj jnq Aitpoi iMuaray O 6ABq 3A juq sjq3w.vvA'ARrfi Jseq aqj ino jon aj nam osaqj, jaauaq jaanuq aqj atnooaq auo oijj nj jo no jnq "stq op j.uo.u aajqj aqj as.inoo JO 'PI-lOM dttt jo clnisiiotcltniap iqtfroM -A'Attaq eq aiA pun uap.iiKi s.uisui ejtqAv eq dn JiOjd 0 loedxa sunj aqj tnoqA sjqSjaMiABaq aqj a.iu qi.uus PUB PJBIIIM 'MDor nam jo oi.ij stqj, sptinoj jo jaqcnuu emus aq ui jutq.rt uiqpuuBQ aqj'Bgoiv atjnqo a'b.uk mil jajrci puB spnnoj OAij uj uoidtnBq.) tsi3u; aqj 'BI8A japjnqraoa no pajj.mnsi filling juoquno Pub 'a'ijbodiv; jjo poojs sq PJBI1IA SSar tAVOJ 1! UI M7.X!, V PUB nniu m;r su.ioiv l.n:; urn pa?i.ouj ssq i;jB03v wqju'j . s.ii rs.u i: jo nop -tpuoo siqj ui aliutrq.i luijajmu h uaaq SBq ajaqj aauiuiits jsm: a.iuis inn a"ii jsnb iiaqi Aioqs oj paiiuj puq put! pado -jaAapan ajs.vi ..sadoq,. aqj asnu.iaq 'os paraaas jj jsi:a jb jo 'aiinj aqj ib anx sba qoiqAi jo B pm.-q rtiio qj.u pad -diqAi 3Auq ion pitio.) iX!r.uappira b aq.ija a'-vmius aiiM -ii lisqj piio.iqs gave up the title From the day that Jeffries laid down the title we have had a lot of third raters such as Marvin Hart and Tom my Burns, neither of whom could as similate punishment nor put over the wallop like McCarty. Willard or Smith. It was from Burns that Johnson won the title and afterward clinched it with a bout that was no battle, but a slaushter.-jyith Jeffries. Luther McCarty is Just twenty-one years old.- He is a true son of St Pat rick, because he was born in Lincoln, Neb., on March 17. 1892 His national ity is Irish-Indian, his father being an Irishman and his mother a squaw. In heiffht he is sis feet three inches. In perfect physical condition he weighs about 210 pounds Jess Willard. like McCarty. is a stur dy son of the west He was born in Kansas City twenty-three years ago. Like McCarty. he was formerly a cow puncher Willard is slightly taller than McCarty, but not as robust He is well built and. like a sturdy oak sapling, tough and fibrous He has been boxing only a few months. Gunboat Smith was christened Ed ward when he was born in Philadel phia on May 8. 1SS8 His nationality is Irish-American He joined the navy and began to Bght in 1908. His first bout was with Charley Horn, whom he knocked out in six rounds. His only real defeat since that time was at the hands of Jim Barry, who won over him in nine rounds during the season of 1910. The majority of Smith's battles were of short duration, for his heavy punches soon made his adversaries helpless. LIVE UP TO THEIR NAMES. Ball Players Show the Right Handles Are Applied,.. Most baseball players blessed with names referring to the great national game have succeeded in living up to their monakers. For instance. Fielder Jones i3 conceded to have been some fielder, while Neal Ball knew what to do when the bases were filled with none out and he caught a line drive. Even Harry Kanwell. once a Nap 5v AUTO CONTEST BOOSTER DAY SPECIAL 500 BONUS VOTES WITH EVERY 25c STATIONERY PURCHASE Friday and Saturday we will give 500 Bonus Votes with every 25c purchase in our Stationery Department. We cannot promise more than 200 25c boxes, which we know will not last the two days, so it is a case of first come, first served. Double votes with every purchase Friday and Saturday, make your purchases t the aEaaLL STORE and get double votes. : : : : : i Pav Yr.::r rrr,,inf witK Books. 5000 Votes with each Coupon Book. : : : ; i ii pit inr. Uiiew in living up ii liis UMIae tie liil'licil ilie trick gracefully Hint carried oil. :l)e linniiy liMtting aver ae ill t'le league one se;isun. Fninl; Chance was always willing In take one. while Leon Amestif the 3i ants is noted for his control Ualph Works, late of the Tigers, had one fault. At least Hughey Jennings al ways said. "He works too hard." There have been several players named Kapp and Kapps. tut not one ot them was a slugger, while Pitcher Hitt was anything but a hitter. LAST CURVE INVENTED. So Says George Mullin, but Adds That Pitchers Will Improve on Twists. George Mullin. the Detroit pitcher, declares that the last curve has been invented "Pitchers may develop new ways of throwing curves, but the ball will never break different from what It does now." says George. "The pitchers of today have com mand of all the curves, and from now on it seems to me that baseball will be developed from hitting and base run ning angles. "Pitchers of today can make the ball curve in almost any direction, so what chance is there for a 'new curve being brought out?" The Williams Investigation By DONALD CHAMBERLAIN Heart to Heart T Brighten Up -Bonus Votes With Paint This is Brighten Up week and we have a big special on every article in oUr paint store. Bonus votes with every purchase. This sale includes every gallon of House, Barn and Buggy Paint, Shingle Stain, Varnish, Enamel, Alabastine, Dekorato, Castor Machine, Separator, Red Engine and Capital Cylinder Oils. Arsenate of Lead, Lime and Sulphur Spray, Bordeaux Mixture, Kreso Dip. No bonus votes on bulk Linseed or White Lead. 1000 Bonus Votes With Every 50c. Purchase in Our Paint Store HUNTLEY BROS. CO. We Give Votes V. Harris, Quality Grocerer The Star Theatre, Moving Pictures, Vaudeville THE REXALL STORE The Enterprise is the offical Auto Contest paper and has all the announce ments regarding the new features which come up from time to time. Read the Enterprise and know what is what. "Store Notes" No. 4 now ready. We Give Votes Huntley . Bros. Co., The Rexall Store The Morning Enterprise; All the News, All the Time By JAMES A. EDGERTON 11 ONE TOUCH OF NATURE. The world U growing In kindliness. Brotherhood is becoming more than a preacher's phrase. . The late floods in Ohio and Indiana and the disasters by wind and storm In other states have once more revealed the universal sympathy of man for man. From the president of the United States down the response of the nation was quick and substantial. - Messages of. sympathy poured in from the whole world. Every agency the Red Cross, the army, the churches, national, state and city governments Joined in the work of mercy. It Is so in every catastrophe. The San Francisco earthquake, the sinking of the Titanic, the Messina horror, each contributed its chapter to the book of human brotherhood. The wealth of affection revealed com pensates. If that were possible, for the sickening loss of life and property. With the passage of the years we are growing more human, which means that we are Approximating more near ly to the divine standard. We are approaching that bappy era when the whole human race shall be one family. After nineteen hundred years we are beginning to be Christian, to reflect the Sermon on the Mount In onr everyday lives. Beginning, mind you! We still have a long way to-go on that road. We are also learning that complete Individuality is only possible in com plete brotherhood: that we can live our own lives best only when we are In full sympathy with the lives of others. . This Is a wealthy age, but It is not richer In outer than in inner treasnres. It sometimes requires the destruction of the outward wealth to reveal that In the spirit of man. "And now abideth faith, hope and charity, these three, but the greatest of these is charity." Perhaps a better translation would make It "faith, hope aqd loving kind ness." ' The floods of the central west brought forth eqnal floods of loving kindness from the hearts of the people The physical waters of destruction have receded, but the life giving waters of love will flow on forever. Ben Williams was queer, but Ben 'Viis a genius, and geniuses are usually queer. He lived a roving life till he was past sixty years old. then bought an acre of ground commanding a beau tiful view for $10 and built a log cabin on it. How he lived that Is, bow be bought clothing and food, for be raised uoth in no one knew. He had been some thing of an artist, a newspaper man, a poet aud an author generally. Whether he had made enough money to enable him to supply his limited wants no one knew. He occasionally walked to the store, six miles distant from his cabin, to buy provisions or anything else he needed and always had the cash with which to pay. No one could Solve the riddle, so it proved an endless source of gossip for the countryside. But one day a possible clew to how Williams obtained the necessary funds presented itself. A robbery was com mitted in the region, and the fact at once suggested itself to the community that Williams was the robber. Every one wondered why that solution of the problem had not been thought of be fore. A report was started that th robbery had bw" .-r-- . .uuimitted by a masked man just the height and bnild of Williams. For a week this report circulated, growing more definite as it spread: then it occurred to some one to mount a horse and ride over to the man who had been robbed and ask him about it. He said that his store had been entered In the middle of the night and he knew nothing about the rob bery till the next morning. Neither he fior anybody else had seen the robber. But Williams having been suspected of the robbery notwithstanding the correction of this report, the talk went on. and the more talk the more the certainty not only that he made his living my robbery, but that he was guilty in the case under discussion. Oy Adams, a man who had the repu tai::u of being the principal talker thereabout, said that Williams "ought er be investigated." It wasn't to the credit of the community that a man could live in it without any visible means of support and robberies gin 115 on without giving some account of himself. A committee should go to his cabin, ask him to explain how he lived and see if the building contained stolen goods. No onff had ever been there, and for all any one knew Williams might have the place full of plunder. He talked the matter up; but though he got a number of persons to agree with him. somehow he couldn't get anything done Then he called for volunteers to serve on the committee. No one volnutereuV so at last he said that if be were appointed a deputy sheriff he would do the job alone. There was no objection to bis appoint ment or his going to interrogate Mr. Williams. The only objection in the case was by individuals who were not minded to go with him. He concluded to go armed only with the sheriff's badge. His mission was to be a peaceful one, .therefore he wouldn't need a weapon. He set out one morning on horseback for Wil liams' cabin and on reaching it dis mounted, tied bis horse to a sapling and appeared in the doorway. Wil liam? was sitting at a table writing. He looked up. saw the man standing before him and asked what he could do for him. "Mr. Villianis.',said Cy, "I'm com missioned by the people of this county to come to you and ask your business." "My business not being the business of the county, I decline to answer." , "In that event I am commissioned by the people to explain to you that the people make it their business to And out your business, and with that end In view l am directed to search your house. You understand that this Is simply a legal process, not a forcible one." Cy threw open his coat and showed his badge. "Proceed." said Williams and resum ed his writing. There was one room and a loft In the cabin. No search was needed for the room, for there was nothing but a bunk and washstand and a cooking stove in it The sheriff saw it all and looked aloft. "Any way to get np there?" he asked. "Yes, but I'm too busy to get it for yon." "Tell me where it Is and I'll go for It myself." "1 keep it hidden. I'll go for it." Laying down his pen. he went out and returned with a ladder, which he placed in position. Cy climbed . up and, finding it" dark up there, asked for a light. Williams handed up a candle. Having satisfied himself that there was no stolen goods in the loft Adams was about to come down when he saw that the ladder had been re moved. Williams was driving a pen at the table The sheriff asked for the ladder. "Not till you settle." was the reply. "Settle for what?" "For the ladder and the candle." "How much?" ' . "Ten dollars each." There was a gun on the table ready for use. and Adams thought he wouldn't jump. Not having the moii wiMi him. he aero" - " tn- - . srive an order ie amount in goods at the store. Williaii'-.- ! " no the ladder: the sheriff wrote the order and passed out William-, i hough he lived twenty years longer, in his cabin till- his death, was never again investigated. BE HONEST. . Being honest is the greater part of achievement. When you know that you're doing the best within you, you can't be downed. Self respect is an eternal life preserver. No matter how often circumstance wrecks you, you're bound to float back to solid ground again. When men strive for posts of trust they must be somewhat postlike them selves and stand steady. Herbert Kaufman. I-I"I"I"I"I-I"I"1"I"I"I"I"I"I"I"I"I"I"I"I"S"I"I"I";. RECORD SEASON FOR ROWING REGATTAS Club and college oarsmen will be unusually active this season, and the list of regattas scheduled Indicates the most successful season in the history I of the sport. The list of club and col- lege races for the year follows: April 19, California, Stanford and Uni versity of Washington (Seattle), varsity, three miles: also California and Stanford , freshmen, two miies. -on Oakland estuary, California. May 10. triangular varsity race. Har vard, Pennsylvania and Princeton, on Charles river, Boston; May 17, Princeton versus Annapolis, at Princeton; May 24, Cornell versus Harvard, at Lake Cayuga, fthara; May M. Pennsylvania versus An napolis, at Annapolis: May 24, American regatta on Schuylkill river. Philadelphia: May 30. Harlem River. New York City. June 20. Harvard versus Tale, at New London. Conn., varsity and freshmen eights and fours; June 21, intercollegiate regatta at Poughkeepsie, varsity eights, freshmen eights and fours between Cor nell, Pennsylvania, Columbia. Syracuse and Wisconsin: Schuylkill navy regatta, July 2 to 6, Royal English Henley re gatta. Thames river, London: Independ ence day (July 4). people's regatta, Phil adelphia; New England Rowing associa tion. Boston; Connecticut Valley Rowing association regatta: Rosedale (N. J.) club, Hackensack river; July 16 and 17, Central States Rowing association regatta, also July IS and 19. Southwestern Rowing as sociation regatta, both at Peoria, 111.; July 19. Long Island Rowing association: July 26. Hudson river regatta. New York. . Aug. 1 and 2. Canadian Henley, at St Catharines; national regatta, at Boston, Aug. 8 and 9; week of Aug. 2S, Perry cen tennial regatta. Put-In-Bay, Lake Erie, Detroit Boat club auspices. Sept. 1 (Labor day), middle states re gatta, (probably Baltimore): New Ens-" land Rowing association, at Boston. Oct. 12 (Columbus day). New -England Rowing- association regatta, Boston.