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Show J GERMAN SUNK CRUISER BATTLE TY7E are receiving some RUSSIANS BY beautiful new things, all along now. Wonderful things for the September Weddings. Let us show you, BQYDPARK Hand of Labor MAILERS OF JEWELRY FOUNDtD IM) SALT LA1B CUT By LILBURN H. TOWNSEND. Hand of labor, hand of niltht, . In thlnx of rlifht. Ha thou strori Master thou of craft them lo heat and rold. Working high and working low That the world mar brighter grow. Press, the loom, and truffle great. Know the drive behind thy weight. untold-Hrlvlni- y T' Kodak Finishing Reduced i c T !! Hand of lahbrSVude and fine. Thing of earth are rnoetly thine Mlm-of gold and fields of wheat, Huthora deep where pennant greet, Hhlpa of war, oannl and liwks. Road of steel and bridge, dork, Strain thy lnew day and night. Re thou strong In thing of right. 4' a thllHtlf. EmIuI, It Staads Ik Taat 1 work Tin. s vj-t- rlang and roar, Foundry Area and molten ore, Sullen mlnea and heaving sens, I.and of rock and timber trees; . Cotton fields as white as snow. Forges him k 'mid flu mew aglow. Strain thv sinews dav and night. Re thou strong In things of right. Mills and shop j , cjhbi. In .I ; ,X ' -- , - " , y - v Ley- - V A 'r, r Wv ' rf w- - W- - - g This is the great German battle iruiser Moltke which was sunk by the Russians In the. Gulf of Riga. The Moltke, which displaced 22,fi32 tons, was built in 1910 and at that time was the finest vessel of lt type afloat. It s was the Moltke that served as Rear Admiral' von flagship when a squadron of German warships visited New York harbor In 1912. Hand of labor, great thou art, Re thml fair and bear thy part I Ike big aouls, alpiere. Intense; Stoop not low to base offense. Nor. In heat, forget that men,, .arge nd small, all kind and ken. Have .their plaea and must remain 'Neath the sway of guiding brain. Reuber-Pascbwitz- HORSE RAILWAY USED BY THE AUSTRIANS Wo Par Ik Hetara Poatat. Thousands of pleaaea customers in the in; mountain states praise the high quality of our work. KaSok Sorrloo. Write lor booklet describing our new modem finishing plant Explains how to get the best' results with your kodak. It's Free Address Salt Lake Photo Supply Company qpmm Expert Kodak finisher Salt Lake City. Utah IM Main Street NOT ALWAYS AN OBSTRUCTION. ! Would Have His Joke, But Wife Came Back. He was fond of playing jokes on his wife. j "My dear, he said, as they sat at supper, just bear'd 'a sad story of a young girl today They thought she was going blind, and so a surgeon operated on her and found Yes, gasped his wife, breathlessly. That she's got a young man in her eye! ended the husband wiih a chuckle. For a moment there was silence. Then the lady remaiked slowly: .Well, it would all depend on what sort of a man It was. Some of them she could have seen through easily enough!" SL Louis Husband LABORTROUBIEOLD BUSY DAYS COMING Disturbances Go Far Back Into Period of. Stress Ahead , of the' History. American Worker. Apostle Paul la on Record aa Having Created Dissension Among the People of Epheaua by Hie Preaching of Chrietianlty. Labor Day an Excellent Time to Think of the Future That Must Be the Result of the War While the matter of Labor day is under consideration, the question Webster arises: . What la labor? Toll or give aa hla first definition: exertion, physical or mental." William B. Wilson, secretary of the department of labor, gavo the following aa bis conception of the Idea: "Labor la any mental or physical activity other than that engaged in sole' ly for pleasure" a definition showing a brain at once practical and analytic. Mr. Powderly would narrow this somewhat by defining labor as any exertion, mental or physical, not .Indulged In for pleasure an.d for the benefit of mankind." Doctor Coulter of the census bureau, an expert on such matters, would give an even broader scope to the word. He defines labor as; "All effort, whether mental or physical. The question of Labor day naturally rings to mind the collateral labor questions of labor union protests and strikes. There is a tendency among latter-daphilosophers to prophesy all manner of evil to come to mankind by the way of labor unions and their troubles, both among themselves and with others, and to hold forth these troubles as a proof of human decadence, peculiar only to this degenerate Every American, whether he works with his hands or with his' head, will take full advantage of Labor day, the lust of the summer holidays; everyone will appreciate the fact that there in a long period of work ahead of him. This fall and winter Is sure to be a time of readjustment In many lines of American commerce and labor, due the European war, which not only shuts off tome of the things we buy, but la filling our warehouses with many of the things we sell. How to manage without the particular things wo have always Imported and how to get a market for the things Europe 'Cannot buy must engage our serious attention for months, perhaps for years. There may be some failures in the effort to readjust, but there will be more successes, and great ones. No doubt about the future need be in the I in Europe. Because the retreating Russians destroyed 'the steam railways; the Austrians In their invasion of Poland were compelled to build light horse railways for the transportation of supplies to their swiftly advancing front. CZAR AND CZAREVITCH excuse for making It. According to Mike Hogan, Casey and OBrien were having an argument of their own. It had progressed to the extent that each had forgotten what It was about originally and they were wholly oblivious of the gathering crowd until an nrbane and genteel person in i frock coat put in. Come, come, my man, he said, gently plucking Casey oy the sleeve. You dont want to fight. 1 can tell it by your looks. Your face is too be' olgn Two be nine! Two oe nine, is ut, Me face ye scut? bellowed Casey. is two be nine is ut? And there was where the real trouble began. Louisville Times. y heart of anyone. The best thing about the whole situation 'Is the stout heart of the business world and the people in general. They enter upon a combat with uncertainties with the old Yankee confidence, backed by the knowledge that In the fundamental Items of physical life we are safe. We can feed ourselves, clothe ourselves, warm The rest is only a matter of tlrrt and adjustment. There will be age. no hard times If the hard work is Paul, together wltfi other apostles, well tackled. went up in the Ephesus country, seekBusiuess must not wait until the ing eouverts to the Christian faith. war Is over. for nobody knows when Now, Ephesus was the favorite city that blessed day will be. If we are of Diana, or Artemis, as she was also for a long war, so much the called. Here was her famous temple: prepared If the war is brief. more prosperity here was her famous statue, said by1 a It splendid time .for -- every the priests to have fallen from heaven. from the housewife to the American, Thither every year came pilgrims by fJ study American econothe tens of thousands to worship at capitalist. a better knowledge of and mies get the shrine of the tutelary deity and values. here a goodly number of silversmiths found their calling a most lucrative one. For, there being no photographs DEMAND FOR SERVICE IS aor postal cards, these pilgrims took away with them smalt silver fac- Public Ideas Havs Had a Significant New photograph of the czar of Russia and his heir, the czarevitch, garbed simile statuettes of the great goddess In uniform of officers of the Russian army. The young man seems to the a in Comparatively Change the s souvenirs. have outgrown his Invalidism. Few Years. chapter of Acts Now a silversmith named Demet When the French aristocrat before rtua, who made silver models of the the great revolution was asked as to MAKING PITFALL FOR FRENCHMEN shrine of Artemis (Diana), and so hts chief service to society, he replied, gave a greaLdealDt.work.to the artl To have been born." He felt .that his sans, got these men together, as well mere presence in the world conferred as the workmen engaged in similar an houor on his couutry occupations, and said: Men, you know That has been the attitude of priviChat our prosperity depends upon this classes of all lime. But a new leged not work, and you see and hear that, come Into men's minds the Ideal has only in Ephesus, but in almost the ideal of labor, of service to the comwhole of Homan Abis. this Paul has Today the public is constant'onvmced' and won over great man munity men to justify their income. ly asking bers of people by his assertion that have "What you done to deserve it?" Is thoee gods which are, made b. hands ' By what service to sothe question. is are not gods at all. so that not only earned your money?" have you ciety this business of ours likely to fall be It to considered perfectly used Into discredit but there is the further stock of great pubto proper vyaterthe of the the great temple danger that But now peolic servloe corporations. be goddess, Artemis (Diana), will have come td see this means tj ple hershe and of. that thought nothing for It. self will be deprived of tier splendor, get an income without isworking off sentiment and shutting public whole and the Asia Homan all though the practice. world worship her. Melon cutting in connection with "When they heard this the men franchise shoutgrabswas once popular. But were greatly enraged and began became apparent that this was mereit of the Ephe is Artemis Great ing: sians! The commotion spread through ly one way af getting something for the whole city, and the people rushed nothing, and the day of melon cutting . wltli one accord into the t beat er.ti rag l&.doae all and down the line the deof So, up the them companions King with mand has come for service In return Paul. Certainly there cannot bo found in for income. Society Is willing to write This photograph, taken In the forest of Argonne. shows a German soldier any modern newspaper a more perfect its note for pretty nearly any amount account of a sympathetic strike and a to the euergetic man. but if insists that nutting the finishing touches to a pit he has prepared In the line of an two thousand the payment shall be for value re labor riot. And that ntlcipated attack. These pits are covered with shrubbery and earth. and. ceived. w ith electricity . - wirr-r-L.tri- ;i T fears ago y I . vs . heRope. 01 - Resting. that poor cripple with hit arm in a sliqg and his head ail banW!ho is daged up? Hes . a moving picture . Is-- ulne-'eent- h Now-obser- Skipping Faddist Dont you think skippini the rope is a highly dangerous prao tice? Lawyer Not always. Im trying ti have it put in practice for a dipt mine now. Baltimore American. our-selv- e. - Hunting Trouble. a man just naturally wants trouble it Is mighty easy to find an When CHIP OF THE OLD BLOCK UNIFORM IN Post-Dispatc- comedian on his vacation. This photograph shows General Gail-lo- t of the FYeuch army at what was probably the happiest moment of his life. He Is decorating for valor In thp field his own son. Sergeant Galliot, with the new French war cross. Wireless Spark Now Suspected. British papers are, at this late date, devoting, considerable space to a of whether the Princess Iren, and the Bulwark were not both blown n up by some kind of wireless -hands will detonator-in-the- of the Germans it. be remembered that both battle- ships were victims of mysterious explosions w hile lying in harbor. Distinguished inventors sqch as Tesla, Marconi, Edison and the younger Hammond have worked on a that could be transmitted thron0 spark air to blow up the magazines of a foe, but the fact that the Germans have not employed such means .more frequently , or against ships of greater class than the Bulwark or the Princesa Irene practically discounts their possession of any such' device. Anger. estab-lishe- temper-qualitie- and-expto- red psychoanalyzed r-every the footprints L had made on carpet, and said: The next time come to propose to me I want to wipe your shoes clean!' Guckkasten. the yon you D One Penalty f Fame. Victim. Ptomaine poisooing-ehWell, I surely was a blame fool to eat the stuff. The Doctor. BuW my dear sir, you can't establish yourself as a recof nized epicure without a touch ptomaine now and then- - Clei eland Plain Dealer. . The ? One, Not the Other. Googan in there-pUfb- inl for the home team? inquired the be lated fan who arrived just after th visitors had made seven runs Intone Inning. Thats Googan in the pitc ers boy admitted his neighbor, but 1 havent noticed that he's been ing any pitching. Chicago Herald. ,sthat d. In the Future. day well be telephontol through the air without wires. R Maybe ; but wont It be queer have an operator call back to T0 and say: .The air Is busy now." - Hiram Stanley rather absurdly described the dawn of human history as an epoch when primitive, man first became angry, and fought, overcoming the great quaternary carnivora and made, himself the lord of creation. Plato said anger was the basis of- the. state Ribot.made it .the r of Justice in the world, and Bergson thinks society rests on nt vice and crime, while Stekel anger thinks s that should henceforth be treated In every biography - Hope Springs Eternal. Yes, she rtjected me,, but sue did it in a most encouraging way. How was that? As I went away, she pointed to euVThx" Some Washington Star. Sympathetic. daughter has the chauffeur. Now I suppose Ill have to tbe poor fellow's- - wages. Hed o the money if hes going to iupp mjda ughier. Your , s- - |