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Show BRITISH BATTLESHIP SUNK" IN DARDANELLES SUBMARINES OF THE ATLANTIC Five of the BUbniunnoa of the Atlantic .licet in Tho THAT CRUISER British UtUeship Goli&th which 11 ATLANTIC torpedoed FLEET sunk iu the Ikirdciuelles, sevorul hundred lives find BATTLESHIPSAT CUT 1 1 lulson ..river THE I) Ing- - FLEET alongside the monitor Tonopah TURKISH; CABLES lost. bcinfc NEWY0RK v- - . . , A . 't , I' ... V' ' f. v; 7 i r J-n- ; ;E ' 3 4 ' -- V; grrf v,fS; - s S . ' .inr,1T" S' Mi ,:&p -- TVi- w- Some of the battleships of the Atlantic fleet photographed as they entered New York harbor tor the annual review. by tho president SCHOOLSHIP STARTS ON ILLINOIS WOMAN MAYOR CRUISE LONG I XriigH pi' fjM, ,- v.V: 'S-v'- One of brilliant feats; of the riilied fleet in tlie Dardanelles was the cutting of the cables between the forts, on this European and Aslatiesldes. This was accomplish id by tho British light cruiser. Amethyst, though she was subjected Jo a terrific fire and was struck by s number of shells. SALLY PARNESS, BUTCHER VINCENT ASTOR GETS A HYDROPLANE ZZ . -. tT ;W 1 mi A$r ; ' , 1 'V ,i . Z : e ' V i-- .O' V " ': : :' ; -- t i i te When New York city recently opened its great cosmopolitan market there waa an innovation that was pleasing to the woman shoppers especially. This was the placing of Sally Psrness, a skilled butcher, (Vone of the big meat booths to seeThat the housewives got Just . what they , . ' . ' I..., ' v p-r- jft ' 5?. J r wanted! w... Mrs. a. D. Canfield, mayor of Warren, 111., is the first woman to oe mhu2Sx. stTakhMSMMMM elected to that position in any Illinois Atw.iau.Mfcer.uukHiMK J yWH VT city; She is aiTKwi"sevenlFTouF the for ew York stats nautical school ship St Thomas as she started old and conducts a millinery years voyage. island of St Thomas on the first lap of her 15.000-mll-e shop. She has promised to put an end to poo! rooms, gambling and the In Warreit liquor traffic TOKYO IN ELECTION SCENE ' J . Faith In the Seed Catalogue. never lose my faith In the annual AeMmytloguein spite of divers and sundry disappointments. With new seat every year 1 read of those worn Vincent Astor (right) about to try out a new f 14,000 hydroplane built for derful strawberries, one of which him at Marblehead, Mass. The flying boat has a speed of from 43 to 70 r would AH n tumbler, and the miles an hour, and Is equipped with a roomy cabin for three persons. ing raspberries that are in fruit from June to December, and of the ARGENTINE MAGNATE .AND FAMILY HERE squashes which only a Hercules can lift And 1 am ..very sure to try some of them, and get any amount of fun out of my anticipations of similar results. No matter if the realization falls far short of the picture in the gorgeous catalogue: I lay the results to my poorer soil, or lack of skill in cultivation, and have just as much confidence in the novelties which n?xt springs catalogue exploits as the "very largest, richest, juciest, most melting (always a favorite word) fruit in the world. I would not lose my faith in the seed and fruit catalogues for all the squashes and raspberries that grow. Francis E. Clark, in Countryside I ever-bea- V. - - n nj.r Are There Private Armies? It is illegal to have an army of your own, but the law winks at private armies in one or two cases. The duke of Atholl had for" they have now gone To the great war a private army of 200 men, and has often provided guardi of honor for King George from their ranks. . In fact. Queen Victoria once reviewed this private army. The duke of Atboll's private army ia for its size the finest body 6f soldiers In the world, all over six ST , feet In height, stnrdy Scotsmen picked from the fittest of the fit The duke of Fife also kept a priT' ) vate army which numbered a hundred men, bo were armed with huge pikes exactly ..as the soldiers were armed M' centuries ago. 1 Misplaced Pity. The Stuart Archers and theFarqu-narso- n Mrs. Anna Steinauer, Bostons poClansmen are two other private I armies of which Scotland can boast. licewoman, said, the other day: My duties afford me shocking reveThe marquises of Donegal, too, have I am astonished at the numlations. a of hundreds for years kept private , ber of Boston women who smoke. And army. Pearsons. as for the men of Boston well! The fair policewoman smiled grim- ....... &cver;T raining, What I admire about Blithers is ily and added: ! "How many, many a Boston wife hla quiet setj possession. "He acquired that In the last few brashes in the morning the billiard chalk from her husband's years. Samuel Hale Pearson of Buenos Aires, one of the most important finan"In what way?" , and thinks, with tears in her eyes, of iMUCi r"r In the cial men In the world and the greatest capitalist of South America, with his poor boy puts "By sitting in the audience while the overtime rartous tryt-- tataners put up hr the wife (above at left) and two of his daughters. Mr. Pearson came to represent his on made woman at. wife dreary hla evening speeches nearly every fcr the' rtctalty of the polling ' the Argentine Republic at the financial congress In Washington. desk by the whitewashed wall! suffrage. n ; -- mam-mot- : J , .r -- 0M 7 - ; ..j coat-sleeve- r-:- V ' 1 ::U 7 . 1 w. JL- -J - j ni fci : JrrJ f J - |