1 V . Cr l TJ IGTli 7 n jTV HVTT TITS STTTS a tt- By 4. T-r DvCAPT.f LUS D. MORSON p iuu naa ut-eu u" eyo witnuHS of the great naval battle which was fought off the port of Province incetown, Masts., In the Atlantic ocean, you would say without hes itation that "Uncle Sam can lick the world." It was a nilinlc en counter, the feature of this summer's maneu vers of the Atlantic battleship fleet, which were held oft the rug ged Massachusetts coast between July 7 nnd August 5, the exercises there having Just come to an end. It was a great sgrap, bloodless of course, but filled with enough mimic gore to make an American of the coldest temperament throw his hat Into the air and yell for Old 'Glory, the stars and stripes, President Taft and all the rest. Drawn up in battlp alignment were 50 war craft of every size and shape. They ranged all the way front P-"r Admiral Seaton Sthroeder'a 16,000 u. flagship, V. S. S. Connecticut, to tht tiny submarine torpedo boat Tnran tula. Divided into two squadrons, oppos ing each other, these two divisions ot "our friends, the enemy," broke the mornlns mist on opposite horizons and at the flagship's signals quickly fell into circular battle formation, opening fire at a distance of several miles. On paper it was a gory struggle. A dozen of tho terrors of the sea were "disabled" by Hear Admiral Schroe der's edict and several submarines fig uratively carried their crews to Davy jones locKcr, never to return. Tno battleship Connecticut led the ships of one division. From out of the cover of each opponent's guns darted the tiny torpedo boats and almost as often their courses were blocked and in soino cases tho torpedoes nnd torpedo boats "destroyed." Hy nightfall tho battle being called a "drnw," the searchlights of the two sets of enemies followed eneli other out of Bight and that Saturday evening foes became friends upon reaching headquarters at Provincetown. Every known modern naval device was giv en its inning during the fight. Torpedoes were dispatched by wireless telegraph, this being an experiment tried in an actual en gagement for the first time by tho United States. The newly adopted fire control mast, which has been called the "inverted waste basket," proved a success, the oilieers said. The summer's maneuvers afforded the first op opportunity for a crucial test of this invention. A dozen torpedo boats made attacks on the big battleships and olllcers nnd men wero re quired to exert extreme vigilance to also guard against the little submarine torpedo boats, four of which with the parent ship, the gunboat Castine, made things lively for the monster war vessels. Time and again tho flagship Connecticut was compelled to dip her nets to ward off the destructive torpedoes which shot little swirls of foam to the sur face of tho ocean as they sped on their mis sion of mimic death. Tnc- gilm reaper, -burlesqued, stalked every where during the encounter and time and again ships were declared "sunk," "de stroyed" or "scuttled" to prevent capture by the enemy, while admirals, captains, petty of ficers and men were notified they had been "killed" by a well-directed shell. The battle of the fleet was the play of tho maneuvers. To the nlilc-bodlcii seamen the work consisted of fleet drills and exercises In Yoking tactical problems and battle evolu tions. With their work oft Provincetown fin ished the fleet, was scheduled to depart for the southern drill grounds, south of Virginia caper., for record and battle target practice, the remits of which were ordered secretly tabulated lor the war department, This shooting will ocupy about two weeks beginning August 19. At its close the vessels will return to Hampton Roads and go to their home yaids for repairs which may hnve been necessitated by the vigorous summer cam paign. The winter maneuvers will take placo in West Indian waters. Hampton Roads presented h great sight when tho big war craft departed from there would declare, and then fiuclpa roulj talk (i liJfl eoiaevhut after tho fallowing manner: "My friend, you feel wral;-nnd why? tflirit'ty frfJtf.W ft Lt present moment yoi.r body, la the process tf liwraJAwr,, fjs it' pelling from its various tk i iirtiuciits a bad f upetti'UiAiae aff toxic matters and diseased or worthies tissue wblt1i vltl jt wero overfeeding your yst in w i re unablo to be thror ( owing to the calls you !n:ul upon your digtla &t4 k induct organs. Not only do f starve you now, my pi.-or frtenJ, but morrow I will give you n purgatie. You think i i:A cruel, d you? Not at all. All thnc noxious matters will be carried away from your tysteia; but nccrlliclcss I shall 'continue, to starve you, cam aiuico. When your temperature, has gone be low the nc nun I- that Is to tay. when in a couple of days the cm ess of toxic matter lias been eliminated, then you shall have sunu thinJo cat. No, not till then." Iloftcwr, the doctor carried his Investigations somewhat further. It occurred to him that even In the healthy state," or in the normal body which is supposed to L- enjoying good health, this used-up or worthless tissue and effete matter must require oc casional expulsion from the body. It is obvious that w hen the regulation amount of food Is consumed the body's digestive and kindred or gans have their allotted tasks to perform. Conse quently, the ref use or worth less matter ro ninlns in tho system, thus forming an ob ject of attack in the case of disease, a source of debil ity and a happy hunting ground for those nox ious phagocytes that prey upon the healthy body, frst In trenching them selves In a cen ter of the body which is predis posed to tin healthiness and attacking from TIHilfr Wilbur D Nfsbit. US. BATTLESHIP lliDJAiA for New England ports, where they spent July 4, preparatory to . repairing to Provincetown for tho maneuvers and sham naval struggle. In tho northern ports the sailors and offl- . cers wero granted shore leave in relays from July 2 to July 6. Four ships visited Boston Independence day. two were at Penobscot bay, two at Portland, Me., and one each at Marble head, Mass., Portsmouth, N. II., Eastport, Me., Prockport, Mass., Gloucester, Mass., and Booth Bay, Me. With the reassembling of the fleet at Brock port, Mass., three days after the fourth began the summer's work, which was more pictur esque than that of any previous year, it was' said. From Provincetown the fleet proceeded to sea each week, returning Saturday nights. On these trips of a week each occurred the fleet drills, the evolutions and other exercises. One feature of the maneuvers was the pres ence of the naval militias of several eastern states. The members of these militia bodies are citizen sailors. Each body of militia was taken out for a week's instruction on the big Fhips. Permission to take the reserves on the voyages was granted through the courtesy ot the navy department. Tho Provincetown maneuvers presented the spectacle of battleships at practice firing at sea under every weather condition for the first time in the history of American naval art. Night firing under the same conditions was one of the Important parts of the program which was carried out to the letter. President Taft nud Secretary of the Navy Meyer were witnesses of several of the maneu vers of the lleet at sea and both officials ex pressed themselves as delighted with the progress which the sailors have made at marksmanship since their world tour. Two old torpedo boats, Nicholson and O'Brien, were dismantled, filled with cork to keep them afloat and used as targets for the gigantic projectiles. Time and again they were riddled and finally, the cork having been so thoroughly perforated that they wero longer-unable to keep afloat, they sank to the bottom of tho ocean. They were towed at different speeds by tho cruisers and thus the gunners of tho men-of-war given an opportunity to gauge distance nnd motion at the same time, one of the most illincult feats at which tho American tar is an adept. The scout cruisers Chester, Salem and Bir mingham and tho armored cruisers North Car olina, Montana nnd New York Joined the fleet at Provincetown nrd, took part lu the eUbo- ARM0RZD QRUtSER COLORADO rate program. The cruiser Montgomery, which had been fitted up its a torpedo experimental ship, was also with the fleet andvtook n promi nent part in the struggle at sea, its experi ments proving of gre;it future value. The great Atlantic torpedo lleet also de serves mention in connection with the sum mer's play at war. The flotilla of 12 boats with tho cruiser Dixie as parent ship and four brand new submarine boats with the gunboat Castine as their parent ship played spectacu lar parts alongside of the monster battleships of fifteen and sixteen thousand tons. Only 12 of the hi battleships which went around the world were with the fleet of tho Atlantic ocean off Provincetown, the other four in Rear Admiral Schroeder's command being new vessels, receiving their first experi ence at firing In this practice. STOP EATING AND GET WELL "In the course of my long experience I have noted," says Dr. Cuelpa, one of Italy's best known consulting physicians, according to the New York World, "that the beginning of a cure of a sick person always declares itself when the bodily weight shows a decrease Whenever, on tho contrary, tho weight re mained stationary 1 never failed on any occa sion to And that the temperature had In creased and that the particular illness of the moment had the upper hand." And so it. was that Guelpa, much to the cha grin nnd temporary discomfort, of his many pa tientsand be had one of the largest clien teles in Italy was wont to ruthlessly pre scribe a "diet of starvation." The patient would naturally protest. Ho felt weak, he that position. Now, the eliminating, hut o all, of these diseased areas Is the first dut. of man, woman and child to themselves. Say Dr. duelpa to his recalcitrant pntient:- "Wlten you are attacked by an Illness, d you not find, my dear friend, that nature ro moves from you most of your ordinary deslir to eat and drink? You, however, think tha you know better than nature. You say t yourself that you must prepare for your sick ncss by putting in a stock of food -and per haps drink. Foolish man! Does not occui to you that nature Is trying to teach you how to act and you won't learn. Far from wnltlnr till you are stricken with Illness, try an occa sional day's starvation and Illness may neve come. You will, by doing this, rid your syt tein of its effete tissues nud ita noxious toxh matters or poisons. When you feel that occr. sional headache; when you feel that "all-ovei ishness" that sometimes attacks you; whoi. ytnj are depressed you call It bilious well try n bout of starvation and then watch foi results. How long should we starve, then, according, to our (luclpa? lie says himself that there are few persons who cannot do three dayi without lood, and that, too, with constant pur galivcs. At first a general gastric nnd mus cular weakness is felt. That Is simply the b ginning of the pro ess of, elimination. Soon u sciiso of comfort begins to be enjoyed. (' course the body in this period Is more prom to catch cold, a matter that must be provided for by an increase of clothing and a hot drinl now ami then. The Chamber of Commerce of Port uu Prince oilers to place nt the disposal of chain beis of commerce, producers and manufactur er!? of the '.'lilted States and Its colonies t. uaco in lt rooms for the exhibition of tuU pnincU. 1 (SS-i i a k 1 v Jff ykrowsM BOAT M MY DOCK Ji; K"y?''''' ' .- ft Irh fM lJ ; """ ' , ' vNCICNT CtOKiy i A .ioc J' : V.. ' -. Tlinuuli stive ilpi Jciki'H are now n. K-y Yel stove iiies Mllll causn wrmh to-ilay : Tlic s:un- Ai mMpent swims Hit noa TImivikIi Joken alioiit It cli not pay; Tin' seir-miiili-miiii Jest Is piisstiB Hut Hi-ir-inuili- nun Ht III rise to fjimw; Tlif oll-lniill Joke. Is hent anil Kriiy The Joke Is ilcad, tlio fact's the same. The gout Unit once oliiinncd you and tm Hy eiitltiK iioHtiTH Just llkn liny llss Jotneil the nioomi-r tilrl, nnd sho In (lull oblivion has to stay; The ina-ln-liiw Jest had Its day, The miile'H-lier-l Joke Ion since went In me; The I'ock-llu'-linut quip's lost Its sway Tlie joke Is dind; tho fact's the same. No more In print maty uny see t'liiircli-soclul-oysler Jesting gay, Nor rend how many men there be Who chuichly dues with button pay; The dldn't-know-'lwas loaded Jay In print no longer takes his aim; Piiiait children seldom hnvo their say The Joka I dead; the fact's the same. h'KNVOI: Prince, though you moodily Inveigh Against tho Jester's ancient game, To this you cannot answer nay: The Joku Is deud; the fact' the same. The Affable Man. The affable man is an individual who runs to silky side-whiskers and a set smile. He is so careful not to hurt your feelings that he earns your anger every time you meet him. . In his anxiety to say something nice he Invariably dwells upon the good qualities of your second cousin once removed. This Is the only rela tive of yours he can think of; also it Is tho only relative you have who ever let you In on the ground floor of a deal and then dropped the roof in on you. The affable man Is fond of having the verses about, "Have you a kind ness shown? Pass It on," framed and hung In every room In his house. Some day he will ask you to bis home and you will be in the right mood and set fire to tho place. At church picnics everybody else makes a mark of tho affablo man. He has to carry all the baskets, put up the swings, mix tho lemonade, shoo the mosquitoes, pick up the dishes and square things with the farmer whoso 40 acres of corn have been trampled down by the Joyous children. Once there was an affablo man who got tired of it, shaved oft his silken whiskers, detached his smile and mixed things up generally with any one who dared to affront him. But this only made matters worse. This teaches us that the world doesn't want us to laugh for it. She Boiled Over. "Mrs. Swellernever certainly made a spectacle of herself yesterday when she Jumped from her carriage and thrashed a photographer when he was trying to mnke a snapshot of her. They say she even Jumped up nnd down on his camera and com pletely wrecked It." "There were extenuating circum stances," says the person who can al ways make excuses for others. "She wouldn't have minded his making the snapshot if she hadn't been suffering with a boil on her nose." A Big One. I would not be h hunter No! And slay the elephants For fear thnt through my life I'd go pursued hy frightful ha'nts. Of all the nwful ghosts and thlnro Hy which one is nccursed I'm sure that though It Ims no wing The clephnntom's worst! Asking Too Much. "Yes, sir," says the proud Inventor, standing by his nparatus. "With my new system of wireless telegraphy I can transmit the human voice, to Mars. To night 1 thall send a messnge over the millions of mlk'B of space to that planet." "Well," suggests tho visitor, "before you do that can't you put me In com tnunlcatlon with my home town a hundred miles from here?" Knveloplng his reply lu a ivaze of technical terms, the proud Inventot explains why such a thing cannot be dono.