‘ w ~-'--.-‘ --â€" _ Spencer W. thziï¬st secretary of location at “tumble. has mdo :- «narcotic ’ ,In the matter. Ho 1;.- wrma hh authormu de- mudta‘ Dim} of the men- [i â€-9 '9 5 Joel Gunm- was shot twice. the im an mums: his mouth and the E second went through his heart. wm ted to nab loan. but he jump- ! tad Ihot him. the ball entering bran about In Inch over the m knocking him down. Moore $3 8 I’ll. fit.“ trait; In ch: of Conduc- Groen all Wt eury Oliver, hr V had much“ mmwo. when Olin. train on the main track his to an m. The null! was frosty} : do". Suddenly I headlight of the no the depot and my tow seconds lute:- no collision deem-m. Delarla and Gil- 3none, who ml on Conductor Moran’u tub, were deadheuung their my m Green Bay to spend Sun- :hy with ï¬le†names and were r out a benches. They were F when the crash came and were Llnfld In. eternity. thaps. without é(musinxjjuh- nwml me. Barney. the hu- balm m also In the aboboo It the this. but be Bully camped from the burning wreck. Eight cars were Oslo-coped and soon burned. A wreck- lng tnln was mt tram Escnnaba. W Doc. 21.â€""Sem1-ofllcial new has from Constantino- 'thc Reno correspondent of the «bl-.3 'm that Madam. I. 69.4! ad am In. Stome will *i â€93' ' One- hy. W11. Dec. 23.â€"-â€"1‘vo non maul and-mother (rightfully bun. ed about no lower port of his body um the m of )ocomovvea and can III the mm. at n _mr~end collision of “to southbound special freight train on the Northwestern railroad ..-.- Inn-mk- n Little Sumlco. The .lll'l. ‘ Nan)..- Dnhrh; Louis Gilmem, man and lave. ma 1 with? .31 night, children. Gimme, via w:- 1! yuan d we, “Jed with his tubul- hen. mutConuuctor A. J. m or Death, bn‘zemn. and n- W m are now he: at the “on! W m good chance- 0: ' ‘ '- - 7AA .1... g Constantinople. Doc. n-The au- W n Ben-on. Sm hue nou- ld muted American citizens that M m renounce their naturalina Ion within 15 itâ€. otherwise they '11! unveiled†Tutkgyi ‘_ J 'T'Fho Incident may become serious ow- h; w the absence of n nihyalbfllon M. ‘ ‘5 ‘3“ '33 '33“: Son-ln-lnw. “Mm. Doc. 23â€"10111: W. M6011. n Ind soldier, Sunday shot and killed 1n- min-kw. henna Mawblnney. at me Inter'l home In Bone-me. MP9. “imam. it [I said. had mmptained '0 Bar lament)! abuse on the part at â€or “ï¬nd. AM the )1â€an Mm" mun-limp" nu. saving that Maan- â€V “I drivel it ï¬rst ï¬fe to suicide “at in «mm In: mt No offense as we ï¬nd Witt. . Hot Spring. Ark" Dpc. 23,â€"Charles Moore. a hotel-keeper of this city. on mm W shot and killed I'm.“ A. Gun" 3nd mortally woundâ€" ed ln: Monm- Will. ,nlter they termed to take a drink wlth Mm. After the Quoting Moon returned to his house ad. wearing 2 Winchester. came down low: and nve himself up to the norm. Am American acumen. ' Won, Dec. 21:411.. Elena Grace m o! Itch“! P. Once Jenner- â€on!" York. married tom! Wm. u 8!. Kicker 3 church. M mm. they m ‘bodlél of Dahria and Gilmotto was mad beyond recognition. and but in ï¬e day we brought to the m in One]: 8.3. Barney suflerod m was In his element, and m then was not a man on earth who could do him up, that his equal m not yet hon born. and that he would take mm In knocking‘ out any in»: hoh‘ with the temerity/to stand “that him. Concluding. he at! he would pay any one $1,000 who would hdueo Bob Flu-humans to sign uncla- to 3;» him. “hm l- boel considerable talt." to aid. “about my being “mid to .09: ml. but 1 want to my right now I will "he or limitations any to meet me. t looks I. though Sun-key would} be m next I: the only one unions ad I will uke him on w FATAL RAILROAD- WRECK. Say. No Nova- Had in E9 valâ€"Offers 31,000 to act Fight with Flu. Donver. Col. Dec. 21. â€"Two thou- md poo.“ were turned any from cm bull last evening when I‘m cm and Jem'ies appeared has. ring in An exhibition bout. rep- nunun the lightest and heaviest new em. T0 EXPEL THE AMERICANS. JIFFRIIS GROWS. BOASTFUL. ram mg» u lot spring. “ ALL, what do yer think uv the Jack Bunsby decision on the ‘Schley’ trial?†asked Uncle Bill, as he brought his boot heel; down on the editor’s desk 30 hard that it turned the ‘Don't Loaf Around Here' Sign' with its face towards the wall. , ' "It does not matter, what decision that court of inquiry rendered," replied the editor. “the American people will give Admiral Schiey a place among the gregt heroes of the nation." 7â€"; .._. (ï¬nk, u. ullv‘v v- -_.v ,m. "me, "That decision is like one uv ‘Zehil Bowens, when one asks him ’hout eny- thing he gineroiiy' start: 01! by sayin‘r. “Wail, I tell yer, ’tis an’ then ’tain’t, an' that jest about covers the hull ground. A hnii lot of our navy tellers act like a lot uv schooi ya; they don't want ter play oniess t ey kin be ‘lt.’ an' there ain't no use uv the navy depart- ment tryin' ter make heroes out. uv their pets. 'canse heroes ain't made that way in this col'ntry. Uv course, they roh Schiey out nv his prize money by this decision. but they can't rob him uv admiration uv the American people.†"Well. Uncie Bill. I am glad to see you,_m warm 3 friend or Adrpirni Schiey." remarked the editor. UNï¬LE BELL "Every one is a warm friend uv a' commander what wins battles. like? Schley won. an' than when he sent in his report uv it. ht: said. "There’s glory‘ enough fnr us all! an' now ter have m 10!. av honor swkers. what was miles away at the time nv bamo talk ’bout him disobeyln' orders, he went; In an'; got what the people wanted an' that? was Victory. while Sampson was. of! on‘. a little spin teachin' sum uv hie men' how ter act in society. an' how ter make ’ p ‘ioop‘ with a fork an' a. piece uv pie.‘ ‘stead uv usiu' a knife like they'd ought - let.†but after the battle was over he cum back with smoke in his whiskers' an' sent in his report uv it. takin‘ all. the credit jest the same as though he‘d. hin mixed up in the real smoke uv bat- ; tie 'stead uv cummin' out and givin'j Schley credit like most all uv the“ American people did. he begun ter raise l his eyelids in his best society style an’ , than begun ter scratch himself on the; heck and'say ter himself, ‘Guess I’ll dig': tip a little hero Worship for myself, but; the harder he’d dig the more the people ' would shout fur Schley." ‘ "Admiral Sampson established one of the greatest blockade: that the World has ever known," said the editor, "And deserves a lot of credit too, and while it may' be true that he in a certain sense, desired the credit of the battle, I do not think that he wished to rob Ad- miral Schiey of any credit due him, as an omcer commanding the battle taught.†.v- “There yer go! jest like the rest," ex- claimed Uncle Blll. “If he didn't want the glory what he never kin git‘ what In the name uv the ‘Old Harry,’ ls all this fuss about? ’Stead uv beginnin’ ter an: ï¬bout Schley not obeyln' orders, what he that by tellers, a_s wasn't ex- ter délfv'el; V'em, 'why didn’t he concede the honor where it was due? an’ then everyone would have been happy? _ _ .. - __.. .L nâ€"yr,. "It is remarked by spme," said the editor, “that all this fuss has been rais- ed. by politicians who are 'anxlous: to have Admiral Schley run for presi- dent." ‘5‘-.. "Yer can't make me believe that,†re- plied Uncle Bill. “Dewey had sum presidential bees a buzzln’ 'round In his mind fur. awhile, but he soon got 'em hived, an' jest fancy Admiral Schley out with an ole tin pan -a uyin’ ter drum down a swarm uv presidential been. Enoch Woodbridgv said that Adâ€" miral Schley ought t'er uv said nuthin' but 'saw wood. " ,, L»L "! believe that would have been bet‘ ter," responded the editor: ' “Yer do, eh? snapped’ Uncle Bill. “Say. forty years azo when I was livin’ l in York state, Seth Markham wag ev boy that evprybody liked. ‘cause they used ter say that he ‘said nuthin‘ but sawed wood.‘ Wail,! was back there last summer an’ there was Seth. hump- : ed up oVer a pile uv wocd. an’ I} said, ‘Seth, how are yer?’ nn’ he said I'm party tolerable well. Bill. only my saw is a leetle mite dull. He ain't sayln? much ï¬t. but he's still doin' a heap uv wood sawin. Now Schlvy has got sand enough. so’st when a historian chlls l l him I coward, he quits ‘sawin’ wood'_ long‘enough ter say. f‘Prove it. gosh: darn yer.’ He didn’t ' care enything ’bont the honor in winnin‘ the battle ‘cause President McKinley made him a Rear Admiral fur that. but ter hayei the national historian dub him, a cow-; 3rd, then he jumped inter the harness 112' said. ‘investigate.’ an' sum uv them admirais what's bin rusticatln' in navy yards all‘their lives ï¬nd that he is gull- ty uv everything but petty larceny, but they commended him fur hein' brave, ti least Dewey did, i'ur he knows what If ï¬ght is, an’ he knows how ter make a ‘Loop.’ Icause he pulled away fur breakfast an' pnrty soon he had another attack nv, ‘Git there Eli, cum on.’ an’ the!) he give the Spanish an upper cut that made’om duck inter the water an’ nu hang out their washin. "Yes. that ms 3 great victory. an’ so was Schley‘s," said the editor, “but Sampson oi lheprize money.†â€that nght ter uv satisï¬ed him." an- swered Uncle Bill, â€butthe hull ca- EB‘JQ‘ _.<']ï¬'fl FIND been hot- Doodle uv 'em can’t rob Schley 9"? the honor, not/with the masses at ’-‘ Fate: this is a party good country t look after it's Heroes, an' a man wh tfleo ter rob one is only robbln' melt. Wall,- by ding. I must make a ‘ steer fur home, or I’ll have a hand with Helen, where he cut eny ï¬gure." ‘ ’ “And ‘he went down the str lowlng’ “Put her hard ter port.‘ Perkins, Me., Is probably the on} cop- munlty in the world in whlc 'voter ls an ofï¬ce holder. In _;e ans nual shake-up the prizes are; tinned to the satistactlon of £51 and consequently there are no rival â€go dis- pute over the spoils. It may ' a se- lectman‘s berth 01’ it may he V , fence viewer, but there is an 1, mclal plum for everybody, and thus ï¬ts lit- tle republic of 72 souls and 1G favoterq has solved the eternal problemE‘? pop- ular government. - EE“ ' . .L,_ we h..- Chicago Chrorxlcle: The {gm ‘9: ear-um..-" Aside from the fact that tiflre are $only 16 voters in Perkins, within pop- miation of 72, the town has rHer at- tractions, which. combined wit {its po- litical perfection, nuke it a. ’ritabie Lbeauty spot in the American ; pmon- iï¬vealth. . i Perkins as a town 1; cont“: within :the shore line of Swan island washed on all sides by the water-sot "t Ken~ ‘nebeck, whose channels on eig. yr side are navigable to steemers b : appre- ciable draft. About four mast long ’and one mile in width, it ii like a .bower, its inhabitants at pe c with themselves, for every voter ;- ~an ot- Zflce. and at peace with the gcause there is no discontent .. ,abroad. _ Z" Town in Maine Where The to No Disappointed Pollticia. HUI unu. l This‘ summer many Bosto fl ueople‘ ,héve visited the town, which i Efeached 3))" an old-favshioned‘chaln fer 1‘ across fthe Kennehec channel. It w ’ a Perâ€" 1kins that Miss Dumaresq. wh g‘became' ‘the wife of Colonel Perkins! o ,g‘enklns' Deaf and Dumb Institute-t ï¬fe, was born, and here she used to m {gen pH- 33 recent _1 fami- to the ‘lies, from the Boudoins iHolmeses. have family donns awhich cluster about the‘ isle . town. iHistdrv says that Aaron Burr met a. :beautiful Indian girl withg :French -blood 'in her veins .on one â€visit to Maine and had by her a daug‘i‘,“ r. who was the one soul on earth tog; faith- . . u :__.'x__ ml to him at the time of hiV'z‘demise. when, the worid knew him hr. The town is rich in Indian iegen “and lore and some terrible tragedies ‘nve oc- curred on its verdant slopes ‘ Captain James Whidden, of the.Ma miiitia. and his family ofrlï¬, story’ goes, were wiped out oxg‘ia single night by some of the Non: : gewock if .,. t tom- es captives to Canada T great sachem Abb'agadassett is sai to have had his Wigwam on the isian 11 years of his power. and when Ar d made his trin up the Kennebec in s in". sion of the northern country e rested M- n... nlvhf in the now 1) dc town EACH VOTER HOLDS OFI u... r-“ 'hls trio up the Kennebec In sion of the northern country for themght in the now p5; of Perkins. U: 1 r n nl-l'za - What has conducod to 1. present}: ideal nomical state the rosid,’ ts knowi not. Whether out of the blo' I annalsl of the past has come the bra rly love andperfect governmcnt of oday no, one will say. but Perkins sta‘ms before i the would politricanv and stscfally the; modern Garden of Eden. ‘i , ‘ l _Phnadeiphi? Enquirer: " estimate prepe.ed recently b ; ish goVemment with refer-e ‘, gevitv among men in the angiyff said_ a. gentleman recently who 5‘ (0nd of; mathematics, “and I,do no»; much. men may ï¬gure on th : in; of life's averageâ€"they fellow doesn’t live so lon:_:. Lite is very ishort when - " think oHt. Itis, indeed, a ï¬ui fever. to borrow the slmile of the imoet, and the tomb is the span of wife's hand. ( How much of a. man’s life; devoted; to the actual work of accé“ pushing} .whatever his highesytiln m5 be? Did i 7 A_ ALIâ€" ThreeE ighths of One’ 3 E .. ‘Itence is Practically Los must «~â€"â€"_ tera upon the serious dutl “Before this time he is pass paratory stages of life. an any, 19 equipping himself ous battles: Fifty years i the average man, ammug era! average ï¬gures down much below this. , .: “luv“ ...... , “Give the averageima'n 3 yond the period whgn ‘he‘ mph: LOST m LIY‘L‘I. .. 3441., 3 '0! life. , the pre~ theoretic- ‘ Its seriâ€" 1he life of *H’e’s- gen- ) a point years be- :comes of axe- ! guess it would be are no a. nume, even in this rushlnx use. that the average man will spend one hour and 30' minutes ont of every 2‘ in other minor waysâ€"in exchanging pleasantriee with his triendn and chatting on tapics 1111. related to his bunlness. in winding his watch ad-ln other indulgence: of an in- nocent and harmless kind. This would ‘make a total of nine hours out of every ‘24 that a mnn spend: in doing things ‘that, are unrelated, in a strict sense. to his business. _fljhie_nmounta to three- ,A I- L-n___ LI... w an. â€"~â€"-m. eighth: o! the life that is before him, He would devote 11 yeerl end three months to sleep and to other thinâ€. as indicated. and would have 19 years and nlne month! In Which to do little things. , “Twenty yum looks like 0. good bit of time. but when we come to this tearful thing of living for n purpo‘e, expecting to endear ouncivos to our countrymen and to accumulate a little money besides, the time does not seem long. The time is really much shorter than this when we nilow for Sunday- nnd social gatherings and prayer meet- ings and thing: 0! that sort. but as these functions do 'not ï¬gure in every man's life I have left them but." . New York Evening Post: "It Hark Hanna doesn't go to heaven, I'm honelt enough to say that I don't want to so there," said the Rev. June. Gray, pu- tor of the First Methodist Epucopnl 'church at Ashley. 0. GMTEFUL TO um HANNA. A Clergymun’s Devotion to the publlcnn Leader. \uunu-J u. --â€"...- In explanation of his faith in the Re- publican leader, the Rev. Mr. Gray tell. this story. He cnme to Americn from England when he was a boy and ne- cured work as a. farm hand in whnt is now Lakewood. a suburb 0t Cleveinnd. He was ambitions to study in the Cleveland schools and made the start with little money end no friends. He entered a. grammar gredo in the win- ter of ’77 and managed to get along by carrying the Cleveland Lender and net- ing as janitor of a church. One of his jsubscribers was Mark Henna. and (re- lquentiy when the nowshoy come with the paper Mr. Hanna had n friendly greeting for him. ,_‘.1 AI.-A --_A a.«-..._° -V. W The boy soon discovered that some cne had spoken favorably about him to the Cleveland Herald people. and he was asked to take charge of the circu- lation of that paper on the west side. This he accepted. retaining likewise hi- Leader route. He succeeded in occur; ing such an increase in the circulation or both papers that he could not tur- nisn the money to pay for them daily. as the newspaper oincea required.'tor many of his customers did not pay)!!- til the amount reached 81 or more. Before long the newshoy found him- self in debt at the oilicea considerably over $100. and as he had no bank ac- ‘count, and knew no one to‘go his bond. Lulu", any: n... u _ v__ n- _ it was decided by the business man- agersthnt he must surrender hla posiâ€" tions. He says that he could blame no one for this,†he was compantgveiy unknown. u u... 0n the ï¬nal afternoon when be ex- pected to wind up his career A: a news carrier he left a paper as usual at the home of Mr. Hanna, at that time on Franklin avenue. The eminent ï¬nan- cier was in his garden and had a pleu- ant word for the youngster. .g , n-_i. “I want to say goodby," uld the lad; this is my last day." “What's that?" demanded Mr. “Inna. The‘ newsboy told him the cucum- sta noes. "nu-n “This Incident." remarks the Rev. Mr. Gray, “may seem like a small mt- ter to many. but to me It In: of vital importance. ‘ and nothing gives me greater leasure than to recite It when I hear 1‘. Hanna maligned, as all such men are apt to be In the heat of a. poll- tical campaign." . .n , ,___‘|_ E Mr. Hanna. says the clergyman. would not listen to any words of ‘thanks. “I found." he continues. "that ;Mr. Hanna: in the same quiet way. had [watched the course of many young !men and had assisted themgalways 'taklng care [hut the (callus: of those befriended should not be hurt." uutu nannyâ€".3... Some time afterward. when the youth had given up his news work and was devoting all his time to his studies in t..e West High school in Cleveland. the clerk of the school one day invited him into his cities: _and informed him that he owed a considerable sum for tuition. The student replied that he had no money and that he had not known that hewas expected to pay. Tuition, how- ever, was required. the lad being a resi- dent of a suburb, and as he could not proceed further without payment. he packed his books and went home. That night a knock came on his door and a young man in Mr. Hanna's em- ploy handed him a receipt for the tui- Qtion for the term. V - .u , ,,#A a--.â€" *Iva- Iv- -..- -v At the beginning of the next term the boy. having worked hard and earn- ed enough at odd jobs out of school to pay his way, tendered the money} ,u-_n_ u ..... u-fll Luv. pay Ill! "a1, t‘uux-vu -_- .__,_ "No.†said the clerk, "yo; will have nothing more to pay at thfla school; everything has been argued." Returns of ï¬ve months from the the state employment agendas entagllshed by the last Connecticut legislature show that places were found for 2,009 fu- male and 1,075 male apniicantn. At the Bridgeport ‘azency 641 places were found. at Hartford. 1.568. ot Waterbur- 330. at Néw Haven 879, and at Norwich 157. Fan-n laborers wore found me hardest to seen". Stricken While et rreyer. Stricken with heel-t dieeeee while ie the ect of purine. lire. Mel-tin Roche ! of South Elsie tell Into the erme of her huebend end expired before nedieel '1 ettentlon could be summoned. in com- ! peny with her huebend ehe retired to iherroomendthetvoaehubeentheir custom for yeere. knelt down beeide i put her bend to hz-r heed end seeped l for breeth. She eweyed end (ell iew lthe erme of her huebend. where she ; expired bctore ehe could be leid on the NEWS OF ILLINOIS. Mt Ten Thousand tor lawman. Genenl A. C. Fuller. who died at Belvidere recently. In III: will bequeath- ed to the bond of education of school district No. 6 of the sum of $5,000 to el- numb and munuln u klndernrten school In the city of Belvldere. The prlnclpel is to be preserved laviolete. and the Income In to be used to carry “AA A“__ .1 in“ I'llv law's-â€" uâ€" w â€". __~_ on the school under the dinctlon of the school bond. The tenors! slso l'ett 85.000 in trust with the First Presby- terisn church at Belvidero tor omn- isiu, weanling to the lows of the m. s corporstion or society whose duty it shall be to prevent cruelty to children sud snimsis. The principsi sum is to be preserved inviolsts. but the entire income is to be used in pros- ecuting thewbjecu sud purposes for which it is donsted. By the will prop- art: so the mount of shout $500,000 isdlsposedof." hat week. The unno- originated ln‘tho ten. sud spice store of W. A. Wuldort. 3nd sprout! so npldly that the Mt ten- uu In the tyo notion shove bud to . ‘ A.-- -LI- Illu- lu was bwv â€".~v.-_ ,, lleo for their llvu, 'lthout being able to an their ell'ecu. Junu Shot-on. who wu dyln; from consumption, wu car- rled out on 3 cat. The loss will be In tho ndzhborllood 0! 850.000. pmlxlly insured. The loss 0n building In 825.- 000. W or! stock 810.000, Robert Moro rlnon'l k or plumbing suppllos $10,- 000 And Ron Ayer, pump dealers and luppllol. 85.000. Illinois In 13:16:. The truck of the Chicago and North- western is now wuhln slx mllos of Peo- flo. but further work is mapped on ac- count otjoven weather. 'l‘rllns wm not enter hetero Februry. The Whukcnn “bury board has selected I site (or the proposed Cornb- gie library there. It In at Washington street. ond Sheridan road. on the city land. Plan: for the bulldlng wm be considered at onoo. Mr. Carnegle's ott- er was 826.000. The Chluunqunn movement is ex- tending throughout Illinois. Next yet: there will be 20 gathering: of thin n» ture in that state, twice as nuny a; this your. Lincoln. Des-star. Hoopenton. Jacksonville wd_ DoKtlb are preparing A; A_.‘__ -0 sh- kl nd. Gottfried Wahl. while temporarily Insane from poverty mu! cold. commit- ted suicide on the mu 0! his wife In the Peru cQty cemgtery by subbing him- _n‘|. _ -m-II self In the pockgtknlte. R. C. St!» snd Chsrlee l". Bummsn. commission merchants st 197 South . 'eter street. Chiesso were arrested by postal suthorities on I charge of using the msils to derrsud country shippers. Both men denie: that they intended to defraud the shippers. ‘ The treasurer of Cook county hss‘ made ï¬nal settlement with the stste auditor for the 1900 stste tsxes. by- the payment of $225,095.. asking s to- ul of $1,496,498 of state taxes psid by Cook county for the yeer 1900. Accidental death was the verdict of the cororner's jury in the case of Hiram Bigelow, the Chicago sttorney who was found dead in his apartments in the Vincennes building. Evident-o tended to show that chlorotorm hsd been self- administered to overcome insomnia. Thomas W. Itout. 7o yesrs old, s for- mer Chicago Alderman, he been ed- Judged inane snd committed to the Jefferson ssylum. He was e'ected to the council ‘in 1870 uni served two terms. Durinshis service in the coun- cil he wss well known in ion] polities. His wiie combined thst he was no longer sble to are for her sed hsd used violence towsrd her. At Rockford. the coroner's jury torn- ed to inquire lnmrthe denth of the [lil- noie Central wreck victims reported clinging with responsibility for the or tnstrophe the crew ot freight trsin No. 51 because 01 tsilure to obey orders. Frank Ridout of Paxton. ilL, who bosrd- ed the trsin st Froeport. hes not been ‘ seen since the wreck and is believed to ‘ be among therdoafi. A s...“ ._.s--.. Thomas W. Stout. 70 ! mor Chic-.30 udcmnn. judged inane and cor! Jeflerson mlum. He Uuwu :1 mm .--- tor the Chicago. Xilwwkeo a St. Paul rain-dud oomptny. was ï¬nally injured as he was ï¬nishing his run lrom )m- waukoe to Chicago. White was main train No. 4. The train was only a few broch from the Union nationwhen Waite put his head out of the ab win- dow. striking: brick pier at Peori- Streeti #†L ‘ L ' Duane for the 1 5ll WI.- The Peoria as case. which has Inca In progress at Kama: City. has been adjournw to Chicago. 80 (It "More. has been taken In Chicago. Poo-“1. 15'. Paul Minnenpout. Duluth and Raw soars or 11mm czwom mom was wan. muvnuv .0.“ "â€"'7. _,, hold their ï¬rst “menu's 62 use 3nd [in u! momma- Thousand for lolvidcrc. x v..- _, wme. loconqtlve_ 0.3311100! uw-~-., _. ,Vp - tbdomen with a was“ while tempos-M11! War EVENTS. ] The coal ambu- ot uni-loll to at Bungle un- vu â€80.0“. 1 ï¬nd i.- 818.189 were tree, up latter being le’u by the employs and t1. ecu-IO!- a rel. * - The Chum: common: bu W a tender lrom . New York ï¬rm at printing 39,000,000 post-u m. The mounttobepudhrthmun- 1 A Germn authority ma that (N. the month to the source an m 725 casual. tormerlyth hone- ot Int- llke chlau, In to be band on“ In; in uteri. ' John uwrenoq, on at tho most not» ed fox hunters In England. w M dled at the age of M. Until tell ’0â€! ago be us out twice I went with an hounds I." through the noon. Brindier Gemini Boll. common of northern Luzon. has Issued n or“ making the pumlnu or drinking 0! 'vino.‘ a Filipino henna. by â€idler“: nud civilitn emphyu I. sunny 9!- tense Mr. John I". Feeâ€, the new menu! or conga-cu from as Second much Hubert F. Bishop. of South Nanak. CL, hu mouse-d ant he will an the town a. lot valued at 310.0†for I‘ llbrl- 1'] site. Andrew Carnegie “read. .0 erect a hudsome library I! g sun was procured. Alenndre Parcel. “on My. "Rome Vulncue.†mud as much on- thunlun In [I10 n W'- pun have of hue. died in Pull recently IQ themeotflyuu. Hammad Smyrna of mun pron". Prof. Robert Crux. who has been onl- nected with the Icon! university. lol- trenl. for over nu a century, II than mreuln I: don «the Matty 01nd- Idneudmlwoflmmd governors. . The dining car he! node in entry Into Jun-n. For at then an. Inn exactly on the [lace or the familiar America pattern, hue been turned out In the local government shone. end at now running between Toxic and Kobe. Yr. Putnun. the “hum of col- greos. In his “and report~ mun nu recommendation for keeplu the “bar ry open on Su 30 an that It Sunde one want not be trivial, and that the cost would be lea than 81’.- 000a numeric-nuimeâ€"totm pn-sent nnnul cost of autumn-non. ~ Trials are being rude at Krona“ with A military km by the edema! aeronnui, Colonel Panama. The flu which ll to be used for W (I I. onnoitering. tenable: a com“ ta wlth two man: at! M tad u lwlow. Three such kite- m «pale o! lifting a man to I. eonsldenhle height Daniel C. French. tho‘ Now York sculptor. I: “may at work on the statue of General Lawton. which h. been ordered of hill: by the mm It moflal association, ud ï¬ll an: it subject very much II tho mm 5. brought Into play ln his mm of Goa- onl Le'ls Can. not ln the run“: a the capitol It thlumn. The New York Tribune ssys: Proto- sionnl beggar: o! the worst sort In." been so numerous and indstent in tbs shopping district of late that the on“ made in the last few dsys were sorely needed. and cannot all to bring nbout_s better condition 0 sflsirs. New York should never be sulmd to sink to tho level or Nsples in street medicine]. A bill to W! tbs-elective mil. to women is to be introduced into the Ohio legislsture during its coming su- siou. it will be belted by s non“ petition, to which over 50,000 m- tures hsvo slrosdy boa would. Msny oi tho signal-s us who. M Johnson. of Cleveland. tsvors tho movement. Then in one country in the world where it ll coniderod 0 crime to amokoâ€"Abyuinia. The law forbidding tobacco dou- iron the you 1641 it on at that merely Intended to prev-t priests from smoking in the dutch, but it was token too "th1â€, and now- adays even foreigners have to he uro- tui not to be noel: smoking. ) Moxico bu momma! navy in tho warid in proportion toihot population. Tweive miliion poopio are protected by a fleet of two (ll-vac}: vouch. two “- armored “about. and! calving m tour-ton manic-W m and {on small breech laden. and an â€cond- class torpedo boots. : This M b manned by 90 ofleen Ind 80 Inca. - The tabulation by th comm hum of the statistics a! domestic n!- mal- in the United an n fur a completed. show: “123mm vote In this country on JIM 1.31900. mm“; those on and or ï¬rms. 69,512.?“ Int cum-.nmszso bones. .4958! Imus. 119.392 use. alé bu. , 81.6.5.8“ «born, “.6153“: ,Mneg Illa 1.898.â€! «been F‘â€" Au eM-flr comic. the m their golden Wac‘ Milo. Kn last Tuesday. found the 31m from theIr friends a h comb-mo from n «mm In than. M the am shock had passed th were pic-used with the cm, and my _ we_ :11an u- gékomena137hi'é linked, am an- tnswribod, In Manny lot in th- cemelcry. ‘ . A phyflchn. mum m London Times. says: "Everything In an :3. drink 3nd wear runs the “MM pf gems to w‘ exam whit-J: nervous people had better not conmhte. hr «on much fuss is made c! thvm. If we "stoned to all these more: there would no nothing Ion to do but (a into a ‘mh of cnrlmllc and 1m! stay am. until starvaudn iron! as from the dunâ€" let. 0! nu." ‘ ‘