-â€"â€"eo--â€"â€"â€"‘ has i ll ii. Interesting Items About Our Own Country. Great Britain. the United States. and All F’tm of the Globe. Condensed and Assorted for Easy Readlng. CANADA. . The montreal‘ drug clerks are agitatâ€" ing for shorter hours on Sunday. lift: citizens have subscribed $5.- 000 for the Windsor. N. 5.. fire suf- ferers. The Quebec Legislature is summoned! war (orresponden‘. for the London DaiLy Telegraph in India. The British engineers claim to have won the fight for an eightâ€"hour day. and therefore decline to allow that point to be arbitrated upon. Archbishop Maclirav. of Rupert's Land. who attended the Lambeth Con- ference. is seriously ill in England. and his recovery is very doubtful. It is announced that the marriage has been arranged and is shortly to take place between Lord )IountSteph- an and Miss Glan. daughter of the late Rol'ert George Tuftnell. The Pall Mall Gazette laments the competition of the l'nited States. and says that everything points to that country remaining the cheapest steel- producing country in the world. The statement that Mr. Langtfbb the husband of the actress. was pennLless at to meet for the desmtch of business 3 the time 0‘ his death is 110‘ true, as on the 23rd. prox. 3 ’Rev._ Genoa) Racicot has authorized: bligprxcets of the Archdiocese of Mont-I rea. to pray for rain. The water of the Ottawa river isvery 10W. and there are many cases of ty-- photd fever at Ottawa: 1 The amount of property exempt from i municipal taxation at Ottawa is est‘-' mated at over $15,000,000. Jubilee stamps will soon be at apre- mium as the Postoffice Department: supply has been exhausted. I The bye-elections in Temiscouala. Ri- mouski._and Drummond and Arthabasâ€" ka are fixed for November 13. I The Canadian Thanksgiving day wilil commde with the United States festival and. be held on November 25. t It is learned t'hat nearly one half of the Canadian loan of ten million dollars will come from Canadian banks. The Dominion Government wi‘Jl this‘ thlel‘ im rave the Ridcau. canal. with l a. View 0 lessening the liability of] floods at Ottawa. Mr. A. Pepler. agent of the Dominion * Bank at Gusl h, will be transferred to Na nee. r. Stanton of Toronto succce ing him. Thereis aproposition before the Gov- ernment from the Rathbun Lumber Company for the manufacture of wood I alcohol in Canada. _Mr. )V. H. H. Ponton. recently bank te-ler in the Dominion Bank branch at! bzipanee. will enter suit against the bank for 850,000 damages. counter Forget. president of the Richelieu and .ntario Navigation Com-I pillly. states that the company's new] boats will be constructed in Toronto. It is re rted from Halifax that Sir Elibbert Tupper has decided not to re- sign his seat in the Commons when he removes to British Ooliumbia. Mrs. Kitson, wife of the commander of the Royal Military College at Kings- ton. injured in a. runaway accident a month ago. is siilll dangerously ill. M‘r. Tarts proposes next session to ask Parliament for. a large vote for extending the Government telegraph lines in the North-West and British Columbia. A bulletin will soon be published by the Inland Revenue Deparhment em- bodying the resulllts of an analysis of drinking waters from various parts of Canada. Thoservices of Mr. Thomas Gisborne. i superintendent of Government truce! l graph lines in the North-\Vest and Bri- tish Columbia. have been dispensed with on tlhe ground of economy. The Minister of Agriculture has apâ€" pmnted Mr. J. E. Starr. 8. Nova Scotia fruit-grower to go to England to in- vestigate and report on the extent of the market offered there for Canadian fruit. Dairymen throughout Canada. have begun to take advantage of the Dairy! Act passed at the last session of the Dominion Parliament. which provides for the registration of cheese factories and creameries. Thomas Laivierre and his wife. ofil Sherbrooke. Que. found guilty of an' at'tem t to cause the death of the forms er's lttle daughter by means of ill-.l treatment. were Sentenced on Sat-J urday to five years earlhi in the peni-’ tenliary. i The Russell County fire fund now: amounts to nearly 822,000. ltis saidi that about $50,000 will be required if the Central Committee is to be enabl- ed to carry out its plan’ of giving the ' sufferers money or lumber with which to rebuild. Mr. w. w. Ogilvie. who returned tol Montreal recently. expressed himselfas ' greatly impressed with what he saw in the North-\Vest. He says the far- mers in Manitoba and the Territories have this season had the greatest good. fortune in a magnificent wheat crop. A cablegram has been received by the Dominion Government. saying ’ 1.1111 on llord llansdowne's instructions a medal will be issued for all who par- iii‘ipnled in the repulsa ofthe Fenian raid on Canada in '66, and in the North- “ West expedition of '70. ' ’l‘hc. lilwrnlity of Canada's subsrripâ€" tions in the India famine fund was officially acknowledged on Friday. when Mr. Courtney. Deputy Minister of l~‘in:uice rcceivml a letter from the Chief Justice of l’engul. who says that with the cxrepiion of the United. King- dom. the largmt contribution has come from Canada. GREAT llRl'l‘AlN. Lord Salisbury emphatically denics that he has any intention of resigning his portfolio. Sir l-ldwin Arnold. author of Light of Asia." married a lady in London on Saturday. . Mrs. Lily Lanirtry lenefiis to the extent of three hundred pounds yearly? by the death of her husband. l in connection with the increase of the strength of the British army. the colonies will be asked to augment their forces. The Queen has conferrel the Right Hon. Sir Nathaniel Hadley. LordJus- tine of Appeal since 1881. as Master of the Rolls. l 1 I Then) was a sudden influx into Lon-l "The ' Japanese don during the past. meek. and most of the lax :-‘ residences are now open for the \xlzier sewn. Liaut. \l'uiinon (‘hun‘hil son of Lid: Paladin!) Churchill. is. acting as gong-bins i j Florence on Monday. Mrs. Langtry made him a regular al- lowance through her solicitor. . The general disposition to increase naval armament can be gauged by the fact that eighty-seven warships are be- . " in Great Britain alone. 0 which thirty-four go to foreign Govern- ments. ' It is understood that Lord Strathgqna and. Sir Edwin Dawes. of the British Input. Steam Navigation CompaDY. have Jomed the Board of Directors of the Petersen Fast Atlantic Company Wl h the Marquis of Lorne as chairman- It Is a in asserted that Lord Salis- bury wil shortly resign, and that the Struggle for the Premiership .Wlll be between the Duke of Devonshire an Mr. Arthur Balfour. and that the lat-4 1501‘ will have all Mr. Chamberlain's in- finance. UNITED STATES. Yellow fever has appeared at Mont- gomery, Ala. ‘ Women occupied twenty pulpits in Baltimore on Sunday. New Orleans has had 'over 100 deaths from yellow fever since the outbreak. A monument to Robert Louis Steven- son. the novelist, was unveiled on Sun- day in' San Francisco. Err-Tax Collector Wm. Millard. of Peoria. 111., has beenl arrested. His deâ€" falcations amount to $20,000. Three Cuban patriots have been in St. Louis the last fourteen days proâ€" curing and shipping ammunition for their compatriots. Mir. Justice \V'Lnsor, .LLJ), librarian of Harvard. and president of the Aim- erican (Library Association, died _ at Chmbridge. Mass. on Friday morning. The steamship Alameda. due at Saul Francisco from Australia, has.$2.000.‘ 000 worth of English sovereigns. on board for London, Paris and American ' banks. During a revival meeting in Richâ€" mond Va.. the Rev. ’1‘. H‘. Leavitt pray- ed tihat two women who laughed dur-i ing the service might die immediately and go to hell. - Zeb Rudolph the father of Mrs. James A. Garfield. the widow of the late President, died on \Vednesday‘ ev- ening at Lawnfield, the Garfield home. He was 94 years of age. The jury in the case of Luetgert. the Chicago sausage manufacturer who was charged with the murder of his Wife, has disagreed. standing nine for con- viction and three for acquittal. The one hundred and fiftyâ€"first an- niversary of Princeton University was celebrated on Friday. Among1r the speakers were ex-President ‘rover Cleveland and the Governorâ€"Generalof Danada. * ~ A short time ago. in a. fit of displea- sure at his twin‘ sons, George M. Pull- man made a will disinheriting them, little thinking at the time that death was so soon to give permancy to the legal document. According to commercial from New York, the business situation is fairly satisfactory, though not as good as wasexpeoted in many lines. Business is irregular, and there is a falling off in demand that has not been made up by speculative activxty. Warm weather has interfered consid- advices erably with the movements of season- arble goods. Cotton goods are dull.a.nd rain in Kansas, Oklahoma. and Nebras- ka has somewhat improved the agricul- tural pruspecls. Collections are re- ported as " weak " in several diâ€" rections. There is an advance in hides, window glass. and lard. Pros- pects are generally encouraging. G ENE RAIL. Yellow fever has broken out in Jam- aica with unusual virulence. iLi Hung Chang. the Chinese states- man, is about to retire from public life owing to illness. ' ’l'he Abyssinians are _ Somalilztnd and committing atrocities upon the prisoners. The peace commissioners have adopt- ed eight urticles of the permanent trea- ty of peace between Greece and Tur- key. 'l‘he German. Government. it is understood. has decided to re-arm the entire infantry with new six-millime- tre rifles. The Japanese .in Seoul, the capital of Cored. are ushng money quite free- ly in order to Foster :in ’nnii-Rusâ€" sum. spirit. Chimi has a gold excitement. too, the precious metal being reported to have been discovered in the Chang Mountains. One man was killed and a number wounded in a riot onlhe occasion of the funeral of a. leading socialist in devastaiin horrible The cruiser Kostroma, belonging to the Russianvolunteer fleet is aground off the Fle reef. according to reports from Suzikim. Egypt. The British sieiimerClun Gordon has been wrecked off Umlazi, between Natal and. Delagoa Bay. The crew and passengers were saved. Recent despntches report a devasto ntingcyclone in the Philippine Islands which. in addition to the destruction of much. property. killed four hundred persons. The commission appointed to enquire into the disaster of the Hodynsky plain. in Moscow. in May. 1896. report that on that occasion fourteen hundâ€" red and twenty-nine lives were lost. An Italian magazine ariicle. which is supposed to voice the views of lead- ing statesmen, advocates the With- drawal of Italy from Dreibund. and! the forming of an alliance with Great Britain. It is understood tint the Spanish Government will protest against fil- ibustering expeditions from the Unit- ed States, and will hold that Govern- breach of in- IMPORTANT POSITION TAKEN BY THE TRIBESMEN. nuâ€" .l Dcsprnte Battle [issued â€" Gallant Charge of Ghoorkns and Gordon [ugli- loaders-Whey Climb the steep )lonutaiu Side and Dlslodze the Enemy. merit rwponsible for a tern'itional law. The. Madrid lmparcial. protesting against iiliirustering parties for Cuba from the United States, mys it is impossible for Spain. to submit. to such A despatch from Simla says:â€"-Offi- I The Government humiliation. must _ , . cial advices from Fort Lockhart say 4 t. - l - \\ . .‘l - ‘ :3“. “‘ " “"9? ‘°““““3 “""g that after the fighting on Monday last A patrol of dewbh horsemen on between the British troops under Gen- Saturday attacked a village near oral Sir Yeatman Biggs and the in- killing eleven men. captur- women and children, and A detachment _ cavalry overtook 1‘81de With great Berber. ing many carrying off cattle. of Anglo-Egyptian and routed the surgent tribesmen from Chagru. on the Samaria range, the British force return- ed to Shinwari. and. the tribesmen, greatly reinforced. reoccupied in force the heights west of Chagru. , The third brigade of the British punitive expedition. which advanced to Kharappa. expects to have a lively time in clearing the heights. According to advices from Fort Lock- hart. the tribesmen having occupied Dargal ridge. which commanded Cha- l loss. ___â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" FATAL BOILER EXPLOSION, .â€" One Man Kllledâ€"Severnl Men Seriously ii:- jured â€" A Four Storey Bulldlug \l rock- ed. A despatch from Detroit sayszâ€"The boiler in the Detroit Cabinet Comp- any's factory at Hancock avenue and Riopelle street. in the north-eastern part of the city exploded at 7.30 on Friday morning with fatal and disastr- ous effects. At least two men were fatally injured. one of whom has since died. and ten men were more or less seriously hurt. ' .Ileadâ€"Lamentq Tunney, foreman in finishing-room; died in Harper hospital. Dyingâ€"Moses Peltier. engineer. skull fragfured; unconscious. at Harper hos~ pi . Seriously injuredâ€"\Villiam H. Beck- er._ cuts in head, neck. scalded badly; Wilbur Kraus. ribs broken, body bruis- §d. may be injgired internally; John bfei‘s‘lnï¬ï¬i.’ biad13:;I;n%Â¥:dhd'leï¬:r£:g ‘anders- The“ ‘°“°“'ed “ “‘“g‘ï¬â€˜m‘ Kreinberg, packer,- badly briiised all'rmâ€h across the open space in the ova; body, rainy die, Carl May, cabinetâ€" teeth of a murderous fusillade. The :13" £16 aï¬rï¬fï¬Trombley. baud enemy stood their ground till the The cause of the explosion is not yet £35,118!) wï¬igï¬hegh tn: ib r3335 bgdhl‘d ascertained. Both the front; and rear not; 5 f’ e (fill? the fled ends of the fourstorey building were ell mill 9rhelri°cis§e§ of (the Gogrl'has blown out entirely. and the brick walls 'ï¬nd th ' Gordo Hi 1)] d rs ‘ arelinruinsfh No fire resulted from the seven, 8 n 3 an 8 exp osmn. e. concussion started t ' ' ' whole northâ€"eastern portion of the out}? B'ACOPrg'm‘g to ladter addwcisa Glenex‘larl and many windows were broken. The biggs lï¬bgin a vfainiel a ge'u ' damaged building is a brick structure Gy wayi 0K again: (La- '. (in 1‘ (1mg.- 150 feet square. our storeys high. The ' Renew .wiipst rs “$31â€. 8 1 ea floors were practically uninjured. was new y en 0° 00 w‘len " e enemy began a long range fire. lhe three mountain batteries. massed on Chagru-Kotal. replied, while the Gorâ€" don Highlanders pushed through to support the’ first line, firing volleys at long range. - The tribesmen reserved their fire till the Goorkhas reached the zigzag path under the perpendicular cliff. lwhere Major Jennings Bromley was killed on Monday in the fighting be- tween the Biggs’ brigade and the in- surgent tribesmen from Chagru. on the Samana range. . Three British companies crossed the zone of fire at a. rush. sustaining heavy losses, while the remainder de- ployed to the left to intercept a flank attack threatened b some seven thou- lsand of the enemy romi lhatdirection. gru .on the Samana range. General Sir Yeatman Biggs sent the second divi- sion to dislodge them. The position was a very strong one. on the sum- mit of 'a precipitous hill, reached only by a single path, along which the atâ€" tacking force. consisting of the Gocrk- ha Regiment and the Dorsetshire Regi- ment. was obliged to climb in Indian file, three batteries meanwhile shelling the Sangers. The British a. temporary check when! they reachâ€" ed the open space. and posed to an accurate fire. After a pro- longed artillery fire the Goorkhas were reinforced by the Gordon High- suffered \V8 1‘8 8!- were AN IMPENDING FAMINE. Divergent Views Regarding Ireland's (londlllon. A despatch from Dublin says :â€"There are two sides to the question of the famine in Ireland. One side is that of the Government which claims the fa.- mine is exploited by politicians as an argument against the administration of Ireland. The other side, held by many of the clergy. politicians; and peo- ple. is that it is certain there will be great distress through large sections of the country- The Dorsetshire Re ‘ t 'tt t d . I . gimen a emp e A meetmg of the Roman Gabon" to support three companies of Goor- prelates was held at; Maynvooth last khas’ but. was kept back by the em week. and those present adopted reso- lutions that the archbishops and bish- ops of Ireland deem it their duty to masent to the Government a statement of their conviction. formed on the per- sonal knowledge of seven members of that body. that the failure of the po- tato and cereal crops in many districts, particularly on the southern and westâ€" ern coasts, must lead to great distress. and unless speedy measures of relief are adopted, to disastrous conse- quences. Meetings are being held. the parish priests presiding. urging the Government to start relief works be- fore the people are actually suffering. The Government officials insist; on keeping themselves fully informed re- garding the conditions prevailing. and will be able to cope with the distress, but they say they are unable to an- nounce at this time what districts or how many people will be affected. emy, who remained cool. and reserved their fire until the British were well exposed. At 12.30 p.m.. matters looked scrimis as the British gun fire, though aided- by. a mountain battery from Fort Giulisvtan. had failed to dislodge the enemy. General. Kempister thereupon went forward in (person. moving up the Gordon Highlanders and the 3rd Sikh Regiment into the fighting line. A systematic assault was organized. and 2,000 men. with fixed bayonets. stood waiting for the order to ad- vance. ' Three minutes before the word of command Was given General Kemp~ ster hejographed back instructions to the batteries to concentrate their fire. The eighteen pieces of artillery reâ€" BDOnded..and umder cover of this fire, the leading company of the High- hinders. amid perfect silence. rushed into the fire zone. Half the men drop- ped. but the remainder pushed gal- liantly on till they reached the cover where the Ghoorkas Pay. The rest of the force streamed after them; and the trilmsmen. seeing that most of the trooiis had passed the fire zone, fled up the hill. and collected under cover of. the cliffs. The Highlanders and mixed regiments. after pausing a moâ€" ment to take breath. again advanced to the assault, and twenty minutes later the position was won. .General Sir Yeatman Biggs will con~ tinue lhe advance, so as to hold the frontal. hills. and {rush on to Khara- posa. where he wil be joined by Sir William Leckhart. , LON DON ALARMED. The staunch ~resistance of the insurg- ent tribesmcn when the British forces stormed and eventually carried the Dargai ridge of the Samanu range on Monday afternoon. and the apparently heavy losscs of the Brit- AFTER OSMAN DIGNA. A Column or Troops Starla llndcr General l'un‘cr -- Dlrrhliefl Revenge. on line Juana Trllic. A despatrvh from Cairo sayszâ€"A col- umn of troops commanded by Gen. Hunter. it is announced in a despatch from Berber, on the Nib. has started to drive Osman lligna. the great der- vish General. from the Album River; but. the des‘putch adds. it is feared Os- man Digna will 1101: u ail. for the An- g‘liyEgyprtian troops to atth him. Details just obtained of the revenge of the dervisihes urpon theJaaiifin tribe, caused by their refusal! to join the forces of the Khalfifa against the Britâ€" ish, show it tohave beeniterrilil‘e in the extreme. The left lxunk of the river be- tween Berber and hfe'temmeh was , . _ ‘ pmMp-axy depolumted. The dervishes ish. are facts'which are Viewed with lumber.†every mane member of [be serious misgivmgs in London. The in- surgents were evidently in great force for in addition to being able to make a stubborn stand against the British advance. they had a contingunt of 7,- 000 men to spare for a flanking movc- ment. Not any of the stories of this fierce engagement suggest any de- moralization of the enemy. who re- offending tribe. and look the pretty women to their harems. after sending 150 selected virgins no the Khalifu.~'l‘he dervis‘hes, in addition. threw many: wo- men and children into the river. NOT EXAGGEdATED. The Food Supply In the Yukon Dlslrlcl Is Not Ilnlf' Sufï¬x-lent. A'despatch from \‘l’ashington says:â€" Captain Hooper. commander of the Beâ€" hring Sea patrol fleet. who has arrived in “'ashington to attend the seal con- ference. says that the reports con- cerning the Scarcity of food in the ,construct fresh defensive. works on the Klondyke region are not. in his ' g- wson Cit-y there are. be adjacent hills. showing that Afridiland will probabl have to be conquered yard by yar . The news of the massing of the Afridis in the. Sampagha pass. and the report that they are erecting strong fortifications there. is also most «lia- quieting. COULD NOT HOLD THE RIDGE. The newspapers here criticize the plan of campaign. which apparently necessitates capturing the same ground. twice as the [larger ridge was car- ried on Monday. only to be left for the tribesmen to reoccupy on Tues- day. But it appears that! the British force which first captured the ridge was not provided with ccmmiasariat supplies. and the difficulties of for- warding them from the base were in- aurmountable. Six officers and one hundred meat. or emled. In the neigh hood of said. about 5,000 more whose supply of provisions for the coming winter is nogreater than would barer suffice for half the number. Great suffering will be the inevitable result of this marcity of food. Although some of the more vigorous among the miners might attempt to get away on the ice to the Yukon. the chances were. he thought. that a ctmsiderabie number of them would perish from hunger and exposure. men a tired in good order and prooeeded to. _ _...-_ . were killed or wounded in the spa-nu ing of the Dargai ridga . L The advance of the British who in Monday’s battle was rendered e:~ tremer difficult. b the precipitous na- ture of the hill. t e men. having .to stole from rock to rock. there being almost no paths lo facilitate their The loss sustained by. the natives cannot be estimated. but the slaughter was great. Many of the .tribesuien were shot as they were flee- ing to (he heighis above. their aban- done‘l Position. There was aware hand- to-hand fighting when the attacking forces rushed the position of the tribes- men. movements. THEE- LOSSES. .According to a special despalchnfrom Sunlu. the casualties during though“ Inc on Monda '. which msultml in the stormin of the Darg-si ridge by the mood ivision of the Briush trocps. under General Sir Youtumn Biugs. were as fciiowszâ€"T‘he officers klllf‘d were Ca 1min Charles Judge. of the Second oorkh‘as; Lioiht. Aiexandcr Lamont. of ‘tho Gordon H‘igl‘il‘dnde'rs. and Captain Smith. of the l .rbyshim regiment. The wounded officers are Lieu-t. Robinson. of the Swond Goork- has. who is dangerously hurt: M930? Forbes MacBean. of the Gordon High- tandem. and three others. Of the rank and file. 156 were killed or wounded. the Gordon Highlanders having ‘20 casualties. the Dorsetshire Regiment 3‘2. and the remainder helix equally dl. vided between the Goork as and the Derbyshire regiments. THE STRIKING ENGINEERS. INTERVENTION OF THE BRITISH BOARD OF TRADE. ldcullcnl Letter to the Masters and Strikers-Au Appeal to the linlicd Slnlci for l-‘lnnnclnl Aid. 'Adespatch from London saysâ€"Tho Executive Committee of the Amalga- mated Socioty of Engineers is about to send to the leading newspapers and labour organizations in the United States a statement, giving the details of the strike of engineers now in pro- gross. and declaring that the sum of $100,000 is required weekly to pay the men on strike and meet other expenses. This amount. the statement says. can only be raised by subscriptions. and the committee appeals to the liberal- ity of the American friends of labour to assist the engineers to defeat the employers' attempt to crush their or- ganization. A new and most important element has been introduced into the great en- gineering dispute by the official in- tervention of the Board of Trade. . The Right Hon. 0. '1‘. Ritchie. Pre- sident of the Board. proposes. in an idenvical letter addressed to the inasâ€" ters and the men. a conference based upon the following suggestive arrange- ment:â€"-- _ First. the federated employers. while disavowing all intention of interfering with the legitimate action of trades unions. will admit no right of inter- fe‘rence in the management of their business. The trades unions. on their part. while maintaining-the right of combination. will disavow any tion of interfering with the nianagep ment of the business of the employers. Second. the demand for a. 48-hours week made by the men's jointcommit- tee upon the Federated Employers of London. without a. previous request. for conference with the employers. is withdrawn. Third, a conference between the re- presentatives of the Federated Em- ployers and Engineering Unions.simll be held forthwith to discuss and settle the hours of labor. Fourth. the constitution of the con- ference shall be arrau‘gcdbyits chair- man or other selected representatives of both parties. The Times, in an editorial on the engineering dispute. swigâ€""ll. would be a very paying busian for German or American artisans to supply funds An to prolong n. struggle which will drive the engineering busmass from Great Britain to foreign compet- itors" Members of the Employers’ Feder- ation in Glasgow. say that there in no prospect that the mediation of the Board of Trade in the engineering dis- pute on the lines suggested by the identical letter of the board will be accepted. ' â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"o- WAR IN THE NEAR FUTURE. Japan and nil-um I’m-paring for a (ton- ' flirt. ’l‘he steamship Empress of Japan brings the following advices from the Orient:â€" A correspondent in i'orea. writing to a Shanghai paper. takes rather an ominous view of the slate of affairs in that country. stating that there is no doubt that. Japan and Russia are both preparing for war in the near fuâ€" ture. The Japanese are surveying the southern coast of Cores. while the Rimsians have obtained asmall island off Fusan as a naval cooling ulalion. The Japanese also are building barâ€" racks in Cancun that. wixl hold 5,000 men. The Japanese in Seoul are using money quite freely in order to foster an anti-Russian spirit. The Japanese Government will forced to ) abroad to float a ublio industrial can. Out of ($7,000.00! you. only 3.000.000 was sulmribod in Japan. It is rumoured in Hons; Kong that 16,000 rifles have been shipped to the Philippine rebels. M .w- LOOKING BACK \V.\ lil). You must feel very h'ippv lovely cottage you call your own, How can I when I.- thiul: of my family that owned an wil/LU: of thou- sands of acres. with a «rolls and a whole regiment of servants? \Vhy. when did they low in During the eleventh century. in thin inten-~