Newspaper Page Text
30 Tl
Gbtcora
Greenville, S. C.
THE
SOUTH
CAROLINA
PRESBYTERIAN
COLLEGE
FOR
j WOMEN
.
1 1
A Christian Home School.
A High Standard College.
(A.) Tuition. Board. Room and Fees $183.00.
(B.) All included in proposition [A] and Tuition
in Music. Art or Expression $203 to $213.
S. C. BYRD. D.D.. President.
Princeton Theological
Seminary
PRINCETON, N. J.
Francis L. Pattern, D. D., LL. D.,
President.
Opening of the 98th Session, September
16th, 1909.
College Graduates of all denomina
trans are welcome.
Privilege of taking courses in
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY.
Address all correspondence to
REV. PAUL MARTIN,
Registrar and Secretary,
Princeton, N. J.
If you want to secure a $60 Life Scholarship,
by coping a chapter in the Bible,
*rite to HARRIS BUSINESS UNIVERSITY,
Jackson, Miss.
Via Bristol
?ANR TUP?
Norfolk 6 Western
Railway
The Short Lino Botwoon
MIW ORLEANS, BIRMINGHAM, MEMPHIS,
CHATTANOOGA, KNOXVILLE
?AND?
WASHINGTON, PHILADELPHIA, NEW
YORK.
Solid Train Sorvleo Dining Car.
All Information cheerfully furnished.
WARREN L. ROHR,
Western Passenger Agent.
Chattanooga, Tann.
W. B. BEVILL,
Oonoral Paaoaagor Agont,
Roanoko, Va.
r r
IE PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOUT
Secular News
Deaths from Automobile Races: Four
persons are dead as a result of the automobile
race3 at the Speedway motor
track at Indianapolis, Ind. William A.
Bourque, one of the contestants in last
year's Vanderbilt cup race, and his mechanician,
Henry Holcomb, were almost
instantly killed, when their car, going at
a furious pace, crushed into' a fence.
Cliff Litterall, of Dayton, Ohio, who jumped
from a big racing machine on the way
to the track and was run over by the
car behind hitn, died in the Methodist
hospital from his injuries. Elmer Compton,
aged six, was run over and instantly
killed by an automobile returning from
the race.
A Submarine Race: It has been learn
ed that the first race of submarine boats
under the surface of the water was held
in Narragansett Bay a few days ago.
The navy department is guarding the details,
which have been embodied in an
official report. It is learned, however,
that the boats made a speed of between
eight and nine knots and that each showed
strength and powers of endurance.
The courses were plotted with care so
that the boats would be sure to keep
apart and the race was for a distance of
two miles. As fast as the boats reached
the finish line they made it known by
coming to the surface. During the race
they were lost to view for the entire
course, as they were rubmerged beneath
the tops of their periscopes.
Western Lands Taken Up: Harriet
Post, daughter of Frank T. Post, a Spokane
lawyer, last week selected 250
names from the scattered thousands of
applications about her for homesteads in
the Spokane Indian reservation, the last
of the three opened in the West this year,
and probably the last to be opened for
years to come. Smaller than all the
rest, yet containing about 100 choice
claims, the Spokane reservation has been
chosen by more people according to its
size than either of the two larger reservations,
99,860 land seekers placing applications.
An Enormous Stadium for Yale: Five
hundreit thrniannH rinllora mill hn
on the new Yale University stadium,
which is to be constructed on the plot of
ground bounded by Derby and Central
avenues, and Chapel street. It will seat
60,000 persons and will be larger than the
Polo grounds In New York. It will far
surpass the Harvard stadium. The plans
so far have progressed secretly.
Leprosy Lessened: The American authorities
in the Philippines have reduced
- the number of cases of leprosy from 700
annually, wh t the United States took
over the islands, to 300 per year now,
accordlnsr tft a rnnnrt moda nnhllf K?
public health and marine hospital service.
Seven Cadets Expelled for Hazing:
By the order of President Taft the military
career of seven young West Point
cadets came abruptly to an end last week,
due to their implication in the recent
H. August 25, 1909.
hazing of Cadet Redondo Sutton, brother
of Lieutenant J. N. Sutton, the slain marine
officer. The report and recommendation
of the board had been taken before
Secretary of War Dickinson, who after
carefully considering all points in the
case, concurred in the recommendation
of the board. Cadet Sutton was more seriously
injured than at first was sup,
posed and he has been in the hospital.
Punishment for Defrauding Indians:
The Department of Justice is preparing
to bring Governor Haskell, of Oklahoma,
to trial on the indictments charging him
with fraud in procuring titles to certain
Indian town lots in Oklahoma. The trial
probably will be called in October and
the officials of the Department of Justice
are hopeful of success. After the
first set-back for the government in
quashing the indictments, Attorney General
Wickersham, who had come to the
head of the Department after the suits
had been commenced, went over all the
evidence carefully and decided to press
the case vigorously.
Exploring in a Balloon: After four
years of preparation, Walter Wellman,
of Chicago, is now on his way to the
North Pole in his dirigible balloon. A
dispatch from Trieste says that a telegram
received from the captain of the
Italian steamship Thalia, now at Hammerfest,
Norway, gives the news that
Wellman left Spitzbergen on August 16.
The wind was favorable when he started,
according to this message.
SURE TO ASK
The Kind of Coffee When Postum is Well
Made.
"Three great coffee drinkers were my
old school friend and her two daughters.
"They were always complaining ar.d %
taking medicine. I aetermined to give
them Postum instead of coffee when they
visited me, so without saying anything
to them about it, I made a big pot of
Pnsftim (hp first mnrnlnp nsintr four
heaping teaspoonfuls to the pint of water
and let it boil twenty minutes, stirring
down occasionally.
"Before the meal was half over, each
one passed up her cup to be refilled, remarking
how fine the coffee was. The
mother asked for a third cup and inquived
as to the brand of coffee I used. I didn't
answer her question just then, for I bad
heard her say a while before that she
didn't like Postum unless it was more
than half old-fashioned coffee.
"After breakfast I told her that the
coffee she liked so well at breakfast was
pure Postum and the reason she liked it
was because it was properly made, that
is, it was boiled long enough to bring out
the flavor.
"I have been brought up from a nervous.
wretched invalid, to a fine condition
of physical health by leaving off coffee
and using Postum.
"I am doing all I can to help the world
out of coffee slavery to Postum freedom,
and have earned the gratitude of many,
many inenu?r neaa "ine noaa 10 weii-%
vllle," in pkgs. "There's a Reason."
Ever read the above letter? A new.
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true and full of human Interest.
?