The him “flees are that «he Greek m are ndnndng to rmupy their m :1 Milan: and at Britten". Io mm of which. I! In alleged, was abandoned owing to a miwndersnnd- m by (In general In mmmand, wha narrated u an order of retreat what The new. of um mm at Bevan! and of the Imminent {all of Prensa In eulged the dismay miner] It Athâ€" III by the man of Imouna Into (hp wildest running. , Athena In wildly which: ovor I. in“! no" 1mm the Turkâ€" hh (must. 0... Smolelml. n- hllhln of in. k in mun-Ind o! M.‘ M (Inch at Rove-I, not far from Tynan. Imh'c‘ of Lari-n M (It; toll! mom MI. (-1me prPslâ€" d, m nearly when winner. HI: plan In! to tom the pn- ot Renal. b at" the villa of [Am m cm ol the run-t o! no Omit army with M- an!" and an. uh [AH-n with- out nuisance. But um plan wu de- hted. Gen. Demopoulon, I! the head d ole Greek dlvman, forced the Turk- “ line It Boughtâ€, close to Tymnros and Gen. Ilavromochde broke through ‘ It loulsioc. The two gum-ah unltal It" troop. nut Danni. We mm, mm» npwoprtno mm. (imam In mam-«Hon with tho Inn-st ‘0'. mind from "I. am 0! int. no ram II" he that when mm In onl- M. (Manny and Pam: will â€um u» Ipollu. lndln, Turk" and AIM muor will {all to tho- lol of “In. rum-w will an Egypt um! all of norflunn Africa. Gamma)- wln not NW In loll. Thu unplug of rmplrv Ml] haw van-rd [mm Raul-ml {mow-r. ï¬nd-mun um It I" coming and “and. II clu- brink of (he prvrlplm mum tho rump of Man- ol um many". but cum- Hull-hon. m. an 3mm too a! "as mun nation, will not the "mum. England In drunk with Ion!†commern‘. Greece and Turkey are now at war. Dix guns are thundering in the moun- tain passes of Thessaly and Macedonia. The impregnabie forts of the Dardnn- ollu are belching forth shot and shell at every attempt of the Greek fleet to pale up into Constantinople. Once more the pans of Thermopylne is deâ€" 1endod by the soldiers oi the Cross. Blood and carnage is everywhere. Eu- rope ioolta on impatiently. Every Christian statesman knows what this 'war menus. knows that it is the lie-- ¢inning oi the greatest general war or history, knows that it will be a light‘ to the death between the Cross and the Crescent. Every European naâ€" tion. with the exception oi England, made ready to assist the Greek notion. England does not want to go into this in. Her vault ootntnercial interests in India and Egypt have added the Crescent, the insignia oi Mahomcdnn- in. to the British standard. England h today in no condition to take sides min“. the Mnhomednna. indict and my would at once revolt. British commerce would be driven from north- «n Africa Ind the richest part at Asia. Inch an the people of England love Chriatian civilization. they are louder III] at the commerce that makes Eng- “ rim aa a nation. it that wealth on lahotnodan trade England Mil stand by that trade. England’s Mio- ia eaaily explained. in her «I. an. ia without an ally in Eu‘ hr. Christendom la appalled at her W. Germany, at am inclined to wand with England. haa rovolted. Tn.- ronn; emperor has teamed the cm- .Ire‘o fortune with thou: oi fluuin and Prince. ‘ WHERE THE BATTLES WERE FOUGHT. jun dot on the mthwm coast Indicates the location of Preven. " ‘ Turkish {animations were shunted which sunk the Greek steamer I“ men were duhuequently destroyed by the Grecian vu- “'III nan-xx â€AFN I'm.- Dch-u Tho“ I THEODORE Dan/ANNE"?! PRIME MINISYER OF GREELE, l p. the line of the northern frontier between Bum mm month he“! mm. it than Pun. none 0' the turtle! cm-: from flu! M“ 0' Fur. War has broken out between Greece and Turkey. Fierce bat- tles have been fought at Karyn. at Imouna pass and u Prevent an the Gulf o! Acts. The most desperate bat- Ue was taught at lllonn: pn- when The M lncxpllablo furl ln mace- llon wlu a. whole mun-ml la ll. eo-pamlvcly small Ian-bur or llllcd. All the warm corrupt-dent- am to } this. The Turn wt to have and in wlldly will their rifle. u Mllounn ‘pul :- they dld It Am. when thq lighting comm at u "(may duel between the rlul batterie- on each slde of (he ï¬ver. lull-g about four hours In the afternoon. There they Mal only one out of flu not: with any er. tent and the" bakeries were soon I" lenced by the Omen. whose marl:- manshlp was very much superior. Tho. Turklsh losses at Art: Ire belleved to have been very heavy. 0n the Greek slde more was not a man killed, As detail» come In it broom†more nnd more upparent that the flghtlng In Milouna mm was 0! the most umbhorn and savage character. The Turks {ought like dmnomu and the Greeks re- amed in the nolrh 0! their mentors. on. It In probable that only half the fleet of lorelgn warships would be withdrawn (or Buvh a purpose. the oth- er halt remaining to continue the Cre- mn blockade. A VIEW OF MODERN ATHENS. The Donna! or am and Bolt 0! Ounuona Against the Molina-«Inns. lt ls reportsd that among the other matters considered Is the expediency of ordering the international fleets to laave Cretan waters and to go in the direction of Salonlca and the Burdenâ€" alias, to watch the ï¬ghting, with n View to localizing it it net-canary, by naval intervention. Should this suggestion. which Is understood to emannte from the Italian torolgn ofï¬ce. he acted up- was really intended as an order of ad- vance. The Greeks report that the Turks lust 7,000 killed and Wounded at Reveal, but this estimate is probably excessive. The Greek engineers con- structed a bridge at Pachyskuloa to en- able their troops to cross the river. It is stated that the Turkish forces at- tucking Reveal numbered more than 10,000 men. \' ~ ' '4 ' ‘ autism PASHA. TURKISH COMMANDER-lN-(HIEF- THE FIBRT BATTLE «KW! Togotll" at Short non“. Washington Specisl: Up to thl time ihere has been, so in as could b4â€" learnsd, no consultation with regard in re-eniorcing the fleet of the United States in Mediterranean vstsrn. Should the presence of ship- oi var oi for-tun nstions be required in Turkish or Gre~' cinn water: to protect our citizen: in. a result of the impending conflicts. th: United States couid assemble a for- , midnhie fleet. it necessary. In the Med- iitsrrsnean squadron at this time the navy department has four nhipn~ihe cruiser San Francisco, the flagship on the station, the triple~scrow cruiser Minneapolis and the cruiser Cincinna- ti. all modern vessel: oi high inâ€. and the small gnnboat Bancroft. The De- troit is now on her way to the Mild"- errnnenn from the China station. nnd now probably is somewhere near tho Red sea. Another addition to the fleet will soon he made by the presence u’ l the Raleigh, which in getting rendydo 1‘ join the European station. Other ves- sels that might be used (or senic'e in Euro 9, if necessary. are the Montgomâ€" ery. nrhlehead, Maine and Tom, all of which are now on the Atlantic coast. The opinion exists. however. that the presence oi any number at war vessels wiilnotbsmry. y†won-mum. Fleet Could Be Gathered Another question of dominating in» finance is whether the Greeks can engi- neer an uprising in Macedonia and thr- Sporades islands. Russia and Ger- my m meanwhile content to so: Greece and Turkey crippling each oth- er for many years to come, so long as the other Balkan states tre kept quiet. The meat ndrlm (tom Arm show that the rains have been followed by three days of hot. line wmlher. and the rlver, Arakphos. which alone sep- arates the opposing armln, ls rapid!) shrinking. The hill rOtds In lmprov~ lug ln mdltlon. It In at um palm that the severest and deadllext light- In; may he expected. It In reported (but the powers. so [At from blocks-ï¬ns Greek ports, um even allow Col. Vanco- and N! am? to Mum ‘0 Grace: I! he adde- to do Io. In my use "it Greek fleet would be able to human Turkey nt many palms. besides In Iddltlon keeping open the supply of provisions and .unmons (or the Greek army. ellâ€. where n I. likely to remain as long I: the Greek- mllnue M'NYG. AMERICAN wnnsmn ABROAD. The correspondent of the Assoclnted press understands that Turkey has no Idea of territorial conquest. bu-auae she ls aware that the powers would not snnetlon an advance to Athens. The Idea Is that she wlll ï¬rst attempt to capture Larlssa, and thou march on 'l'rlr-hula and Phararl. l! these also are captured Turkey would be In a poaltlon lo compel Groove to comply with the demands of the powers. The ’rurklsh fleet. however, ls mm In the Durdan- "The latest news recelved here ls that the Greeks have captured and hold all the pusltlons except Ana and Ml- louna along the Thessallnn line. I have had access to an important docu- ment from a European capllnl showlng that the powers have done nothlng {or several weeks. because they have hoped that Greece would be elther llnanclal- ly ruined or soundly beaten by Turkey. l! Turkey gets Larissa she wlll remaln there unlll Greece evacuates Crete. It was Germany that urged Turkey to de- c-lare war." A dispatch to the Daily Chronicle from Athens, dated midnight, says the Greeks have captured Mennxa alter se- vere ï¬ghting. The Turkish losses were very heavy; the Greek compara- tively light. The correspondent add}: “The Greek fleet has destroyed half the fortresses at Prevent: and silenced thelr guns. I am assured that the homhanh ment wlll be continued to-murrow (Monday) morning. Greek subjects in Constantinople wln probably remain under the protection of Mr. Terrell, the American mlnlqter. Unless some of the great powers in- tercede there is certain to be great less or human life before the quarrel In settled. Diplomatic relations betsveen the two nations have been severed. Tur- key insists that Greece has provoked the conflict by her aggrissive attitude on the fmntier of Macedonia, 0n the other hand Greece insists that Turkey has been the aggressor. Crete. which was the origlnul cause of the conflict. seems now to be overlooked. 20,000 men {ought more than thirty hours without food or sleep. DOWNERS GROVE REPORTER. Already have bills been Introduced In both houses to repeal the civil ser- vice lawâ€"4n the house by a Dancer“ And In m Senate by a Republic". 1 ' mm hill just nnl’rml Mum" to make the notwh 0! his "in in favor of his whstltuto who-n Lunulin t'Ili. him oi! by moving to tahln it. It “.15 n um" Iliu- nppointmu-nt to all oi nu rim; Sidney "a not. permitted to gut in hi» work on that sntmituto. chic-[u Trim-o Reporter "Rm-00¢." lotion" came to tho help oi our into friend lmndin and trial to stern the tide that was setting min-t hin hnntiinx. lie lat-i thst God holed n cow-rd nnd so did he and was proceedâ€" ing to pour out the vista of his right- eous wrath against those who were.‘ Ho slid cownrds wore “tempting to‘ dole-t this manure by temporizinx notions and substitutes, when the inn- nr side oi this co-operatire partnership between Balloon and the Father oi Monies struck the Senate. and a broad laugh run through the lull in spite oi the frown oi the chaplain. When the partnership got thrmrgh «lenmmcing the opponents of the bill. it was nhom ready to he skinned. Mulroney went on to advice Senators not to be niraid of the newspaper reporters. one of whom Was dancing round the room. making his nppenrnnre here and there, hovering over Senators as it he was about to embme them. (He was un- derstood to refer to John Con-in. oi the Tribune. I‘hO was making himself tonnpicuona.) To PM“ Country I‘nhllahrn. Mr. Dunlap insisted that the act of ‘95 might be 90 amended that it would protect honest newspaper publishers, and that was the extent ot what the Senator had called cowardice. He did not care a ï¬g for the piper: which made a practice of attacking ptrhiic men without any regard to the Justice M such attacks. Berry said this bill ought to go to committee and it would i not man unless it did. He was not in lravor of sharing legislation through here in thirty-six hours. He was not all-aid at newspapers or reporters. Senators Warrior and Bogardus hath aid that. this bill could not pass, but that its friends ought to let it go to conmittes so that certain provisions which are "I the 3C! M '95 Ill! be amended. it was understood that the objection to thé act of '95 in that its provisions were only made to apply to newspapers when they should have been general in their application. Ai- tor various tanks and mum. amid mo- tiona to postpone, refers commit and what not, a motion was made to send it to the committee on judicial depart- ment. which is only a subdivision of the judiciary, or rather a second. amt carried by 27 to 18. These votes Mr. Lundin can rely on to vote for repeat, and no more. There is no possibility of 3 reveal passing this Senate and by the time another one meets the law will have, had such a trial that there will be no wish to repeal it. Motive for Reliant. ~‘4-‘m Sec. 2. Thin an aim" IIM nm-ly lo m» tensed pc-ruma nur ho npt'rulh‘l' nxnlnul tune") "tutor. nor wrnc-ru u! uhlluary oath-n. Section 1. Birth out all nflor the en- actlng wordy and Insert an follow-z Any newspaper found guilty or unduly euloglxln‘ Iny wan». tlms Inlacly building up (or such perwn a reputa- llon wllhonl ï¬ler", thereby nil-lending And decch'lng the publlc, nhlll. we: «on dayl' notlca unwed on [he publish- er of aid "PWII'HIPQ‘I', make I runw- llon or rorrwtluu of mm u-ulozy In manner and pun-o an l‘onnplnumn u was It: orlulnnl unduly vuluglrlh- unl- rlo, [or lhrn- mu-u-uh-o Imam-u of mild nownpaprr, or Iur muwzsu'd lu punltho (Iowan-II. wants to sue anyone he cannot begin his notion und ï¬le his preclpe a min- ute too soon. for the act at '95 is not going to be repealed this year. Lnndln Wu: Anxious. So anxious was he to get this repeal hill passed when he Introduced it he asked to have it read a ï¬rst tlme and ordered to second reading without going to committee. Nobody objected. and 'he 5m it. set for Tuesday morning immediately after the reading of the] journal. Everything was in swimming order with the gentleman. but. he struck a snug as soon :13 he had got it read a socond time. Senator Dunlap 3moved to postpone the consldemtlou {or one week. lie said this bill was not of m much importance as to re- quire it to be rallrouded through with- out the ordinary legislative precaution against hasty legislation. Mr. Baxter mmlv a wrong and ohm-tire plea against this bill. Mr. Mrifloml offered u mtbstltute whit-h reads as follows: Tho "rel-put! Nil-uncle. A bill for an act to compel the newsâ€" papern to publish the truth only about WMDB: I is repealed. All the same, it Lundin Libel mu nobme. The light in the Senate ovor Lundin's bill to nepeal the libel not of 1895 was a lively and Interesting one. Statesâ€" man Lundin was the late Republican candidate for city clerk at Chicago and went down with the rest or the ma- chine in one gram! collapse. it seems he does not yet know what struck him, but as soon as he got back 'here he introduced a bill to repeal the libel act. I do not know whether anybody has libeied him or not. but it i‘undin has got sense enough to he a State Senator and run for City Clerk, he ought to know that repealing the libel act will not save him. He also ought to know ‘ that with that act on the statute books ‘ he is in a. much better condition to see a wealthy newzpoper mulcted in puni- tive damages than he would it that law uuunaauumunmi imnfliflï¬iflflifliifliï¬ nun nnnmnrlrl n Irv-rrn __ BUR SPRINGFIELD lETTEB. An apparatus to operate (omedocs for (be blowing up of ships recently patented consists of a trolley line run- ning on the river or ocean bed. on whlch a torpedo In fastened, sliding along on tho wire until It strikes m bottom of the vowel. A current water whee! recently pn- tented is composed of We floats fast- ened together 1nd hold I; a horizontal shaft, to which V-shnped buckets are attached In spiral liner. a portion of the bucket: being always in position to receive the water. A new medlcine timer consists of a metal frame to clasp a tumbler or neck of a bottle and an upright portion, holding a number of dials. which can be set at any desired time, also muâ€" cating the size of dose and lapse of time between doses. The combination 0! a curtain pot. and bracket recently pntented by n no" to which two rods are fastened an. right angles. the shorter rod ending In A In“ bracket and up longer one run- ning to the outer side of the window to hold the curtain. The latest in a antics of nxpcrlmmts wllh the neronhlle was very sum-Psa- fully made a rm»- days 880. The mn- chlne arose with great moldlty to a height of 101300 mMers. Highest tem- peratnre recorded was 60 deans. The balloon remained In the air t'o hours. and traveled a distance of 102 illoâ€" motws. All the recordlng apparatus worked successfully. T» Otanh‘n Alan-nylon. And not sumv- s- («mints nrr l‘nJH‘M‘o min: to praw- that out ntnumutwrv. hy mingling with tha wntor ami rnrku, ia mnttmmity dimtntnhlnx. and that tho inrmtrial lint» will not: be as lndiy oi! as the moon in thin mport. A series or oxporimenta have he": mn- alm-tnl in Frnnm with a balloon called the aorophile. it in conical in nhape. A donhie platform hangs below tho rcr prmtr. in front of thin in an Instru- ment which register: the apeed the mn- chlno in making. Behind is a meteoro- Sraph. 'Mrh register: change. in tho atmosphorv. A dial shows highest point nttainod and another mpchnnim records intorlnndiato altitudes. At the rear of the platinum in an automatic ‘t'amcra. which take- aocnrata pinata- grapha of atmospheric gram at diner. ent heights from the earth. There are reservoirs which are airtight and ex‘ haunted when the apronhlie learns the ‘ varth. When these are opened at a denim! Might a specimen 0! rarifled air rushes in. Thin part of the am- ratua la the idea 0! M. (‘IilieteL It has worimi charmingly. and results in an- aiysos of air natured from time to time «in inï¬ll-ate change; that have takon plan! in the ntmowhoro. The "follow lion-It" Hub The tight in on in the hours on the "fvilon' servant bill." This in : subject that for years has been very math in evidence in moi! of the western states. it amounts to an attempt to hold a rail- rond corporation liable tor injurlra and deaths which may come to the-iv mn- ployea tor accident. resulting from the not of another amnion. It. has oitn Mn before tho Int-lulu". and an often ‘lIoen tiffl'lllt‘ll. And by general public untimont ltl den-It l- attributed to strong “rorporuliun Influence." The ntliroudl untumil; do not want such Initiation. Tho-y urxno. with It “not! «how of hours! intmtt. that Jurln nre willlnu vnmmh to ï¬nd tor tho nlalutlfl in any unit nht-ro n railmuti in "11- dr- trnclmt without uurh Imzlnlattnn A.- ll t'tmlt'nlphilt'ti in thin hill. Tliry rm" my int-my )miunwntu. Flimt' 0t Mulch un- tmjuut mill whit-ll Itliilll m»: ho minim-«d in man ln-tnvon man and man. The). n! c-otmw. do nut t‘xpt't‘l to nsrnpo tram ponnttlr- :mcl )me-nmut when arms nruiixvnm la slum". Imt thr)‘ think "I!" sunlria-m. asked Senator Campbell what his idea was in repealing the law. He said they had determined to break it down and could do so in large measure. "The adoption of this law by the Relmbiic- one had added very largely to the vote Harrison got. Every man who L‘Ollld not pass the examination believes he Gould have got a place Ihy alum-manic pull, and all his brothers, his cousins, and his chums voted against us. As long as we let the law stand it will he held up as an excuse for Harrhon‘a heeiers getting no omce. Repeal it. and nineteen out of twenty of the appli- cants for places under him will get left. and they will know why, and will i not have the law for an excuse," Cam 0! Menu-Me'- Defeat. ln Springï¬eld they did the thing a. little diaerent. They had no intention of letting McBride put the whole city into the condition the state house was while he ran it as chief of janitor-s, â€extra" and otherwise. A man who has been at work on the force since the new ofï¬cers went in said that he never saw rooms in such condition as those in the state house were. They were mouldy with rubbish. In one room, where Fred Wines had stored all his records and books, when openml for him, since his reappointment. ho inund only remnants of part or the rounds, and they were torn up, out to pieces. and ruined. Only twenty-four of the high bat-lied chairs with which every committee room was supplied two years ago, aggregating over 200. could he found at all; tables, typewriters and «leaks were gone_ the state houao lulu: the victim oi‘ wholesale robbery, which could not have taken place but through )icilride‘g knowledge or conâ€" nivanre. lit- St‘t‘mtt to have been the will inane lu-ro. PRODUCT OF GENIUS. m DWI": in: quiet allot-M env- Infl-nhln nod 10 I: non-ruin. M ‘n’ _ a' I†“__r__ lâ€"ATh "‘Ill: you III ’1' Hill! In “I'll 0 I m. '9 ' mg! on I‘m 5 I‘ll. "mm. - Lumen...†one cw Afrit'lll oh Plum Compound. It in RI- tnre'l I." Ion-Io (“In for An mm. It nu eh (I! IM Danna, nnd nun- Mlo. a canon! mm m rnmn "MIMI-II fl hu mom“! Cum II I "My": mad 1: lg m Iu‘odlclion, and u "I ! euro Alanna fl. IOIA lingo-nun... - - sags... . . Horn bcck I‘ll mmï¬lnn’r‘r I. C., P. nu, R. R. (ed M hanger, Pan Arum Townunu r‘o. [Anus uni. no. ASTHMA m "m lap-M yin 7“! If". I III- v 6‘ bum u M Arthur. mum “mfg? on; I», m an“. method-admin MAM" below and: In Inn-mm: umplloh. mun-em nml lawn fer-min, h the hut pm; In “United sums loamy Io lnvcn or M In Into 3““: m nun“ will be comm new by {bummed Clo hum my. rm»- . «nu-r unmanrlm flo- Kauu on, a: Pod Arr “LI-l m nmm In Wm lino-2| an Aria-m. and vim-n. ! I mm In art-cud Alum-Initial and In" (to-h. “gnu-y; - . haul mm arm.- an! den mm: ' you ca'nï¬rt GI! door- " march-1M on. P9RT,ARTHUR. New loves! new mmlflkflâ€"ufl of Snail. all "uniâ€"Mm ell-ate. Fertile Soil. at Ciao Luau HERE'S A IEW coumn CONSTANT WIARERO. '.340,000 BEST IN “IE WORLD. I "My siste: was afflicted with eruptions mound her cars which kept getting 'worse and siireading until they became ‘very painfu We made up our minds Ewe must do something for her and we 'procured a. bottle of Hood' sSarsaparifla. She continucf taking it until she was entiml cured " NADM DUN‘HNG. Con- cord. \ isconsin. I H90d_’_s __Sarsapan_'i_lla fl’ainfuljgupï¬ons Hood’s Pills :3}??? Is the bestâ€"4n lacttheOnn rm'nmx Puma. WILL KEEP YOU DRY. ï¬n'ubmam.mnmw or mzrm. I! 27.17;???" M rm 9! u . at M?“ PM In“ ‘wmsztzzazz ’°" ‘ a A. 1‘ Tm. m. Man 2'18}: FM“ 95v, 3.1mm swim! .9“ mun