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~ Time Card. aofxa oneOntfl....-. scessgens West Oneonta. Laurens......... ' Chase.................—. Hope Factory...... Cooperstown GOING SOUTH Cooperstown... Hopé Factory.... Chasé....... Took Summ Hartwick ....;.... South Hartwick as ~. Viston.... Laurens... .... ....... West 0neonta.............. > Oneonta... .... ae ae seen s oue ee se ' And every hour thereafter. Last car| leaves Ofieonta at 10:30 p. m., and only; runs Cto. Hartwick. Last car leaves] Cooperstown at H :20. p- ta., and only runs: 'to Hal twick R seascessrese o-ouo-oo-oa ® ‘8Mam A June. 16,502. | {45am 8:80 a m- p ayPresque Isle:. 0 0 ~ . -__ {Babette until they saw her one morn- } ing Anttering along 'behind - Rete, - her [red calico. dress the one bright spot of . - By iZOLA L.. Fonnssren ‘10 hopelessness?- Home f ad: come: fromm. «Even:before the:gov- | hung out his lantern on the end of & pole so that the boats rounding the 'point a mile or two below would seeits bar that ran out like an nose «R. Everybody along the strait knew the (| quaint old figure, but no one knew of -[ color among the grays and browns of [ Presque. isle. The day before Pete had | ' ébeen Been rowing 'over to the Mackinac - . shore. but no one knew of his return\ rave except Mere M'rie, and she was so old gout, the boat seemed to strike a new x -and. deaf that dll she could do was | T cook Pete's fish and git out in the sun- m lshine'all day smoking in the kitchen . and she bent over the oars with set, | 9px; | doorway. FOR THE wesp. No. 15 Binghamtonihocai sieie No. 1 P; i. 10.00 am. 10.00 No. 7 Chicago Expres ; 12.80 pro. 12.40 Nv, 17 Milk... ...« l 20 pm. 1.20 pm Trams §.18, 6, 1T and 5 run on Sunday. - Time tables showing local snd through train service between: stations on all divisions Pot D. & f Hmsystem may be eabiained at. all D. & H.« ticket; offices. coornnm\ C 0. T. R. ll. ‘ In Effect June 16, 1902. TRAINS SOUTH. 'No.:l No.5 No.T No.9 'No.l1 AM. AM. AM. PM. PJH. Ly Cocperstown .....6 O0p S:551 IL 35J 3 25) & © Phofix Mills 1.6 lz 9 00| 11 41]. 3;31) : s +0 04 *I1 45)*3 38 9-10] 11 53) 3 44 9 21} 12 04] 3 mel ' | 9 35) 12 15} 4 18) s 10} 9 58] 12 17 a8 W D ¥. (U& DJ..T ill O5) 12 27] «* West D ‘lo 15} 12 3! Ar Davenport Ctr.... 10 21 - TRAINS NORTH. -_ No.4 No.6 No. 8110.10 -_ AKM. PM.PX. Ar Cooperstown ...- «10 35 <6 Ph nix Mills \10 29) . No.1! 12 20]. 1. 40 4.1 it: T 20 12 DJ 1 346} €43)| 7 14 +12 01/*1 : 15| 11 83) 1 2+] £81] 70 11 24} 1 10] 4.21] 6 5a ss) at To) 1 03] £02) 6.42. 82] 10 45]12 F4 10 4512 44}. { 10 30/12 40 ,1027 no d Ey l‘nnc‘tvon. Ar Junotion}. .. # W. Dav. (U & D). 7 3 «* West Davenp’t\ his Davenport Ctr. * Stop low aignal. Praina leave C oopcrstown £.» Phrenix Mills st6:4i al m. and 546 p. m. Returning, lesve Phoenix) Mills:at 7 :07 a. m. and 6:7 p. m Trailing 1, 7. 4 and 8 connect at West Daven— port with U. & D. trams. | _‘ % | lore and shipcraft, and before long she : \When Landry Dubois from Algonac -.. | island asked the' question direct, Pete | 05 ”‘Qsmiled and shook his head, his dark ; eyes, deep set in the sinall brown face, Babette stopped playing long enough I to flash a merry glance at him under | the: shelter of her thick brown hair:. . || \Petes Babette,\ she Ifughed. And so, all through the isles of the I strait, as far ag St. Ignace and -even down to Mackmaw, she was known i% { Pete's Babette. , 'I manner of wonderful things in fish knew all, the boats that passed by | Presque [tie from the great fron kings: and grain boats bound for; Buffalo to. ;} the gay little yachts that fluttered like- : white butterflies here and there. / :] best of all, she loved the schooners, the fold monarchs of the lake, when they - smiling up the strait on a. still [ 5 | summer's eve, like wondrous phantom | \| ships, with the glory of the sunset be- But, hind, and she called them Babette’ biras. . | mee, with hair and eyes 'browh as dry FROM BMGHAMTON WEST, || é Bl A. fi:, Dally—Buffalo and Chicago slenpers. a. NGay soo E was Daily 8:00 a. m., Dai oolfix' aeolian) 11'15 a. m is except Sunday—Local stations to 8 25 p. Dali -Ohservation parlor car,.-diner, - 6111320 an 12 p Daily—Thrall éarch and aleepers, for Buffalo, Cleveland and Chic go. > , RAST. --Fast mail, arrives At Buffilo Shicago sleeper, (also Tthaca con- 1-253. m Daily—Sleepers for New York, also: 425 a. , Daily—Sleepers for New York, also ri 55 &.. m +» Daily—flotsam“, New York, Philadel phisiand south diner,. vestibule! drawing, service and regular coaches: . 11 :0+'a. ir, except Sunday-Vestibuled coaches. f and parlor cars for New York, Philadelph a . and the south. 11 :50:.a. m.. Daily-Local passenger, 2:08 p. m., Daily-Limited, diner, observation ror car and vestibuled. conches.: Scran ~ pa , New Y-rk and Philadelphia. | > 5:5*%p. m., exceptSunday -Local passenger. '11 M5 .p.. m . Daily -Coaches and sleepers tor New York. Trains for Ufica and intermediate: stations. . 4:50 3.2; , and 4:00 p.m. daity-8:05 a. m., and 8:55 p. except Sunday. | Kor: Syracuse, wego: an nd intermediate sta‘ tions, 5 10 a. m and: 3:25p. m. daily-S8:15' a. m., gut6 : For information tes, routes, reser -[ vations, etc., apply to J. Smith, «Lackawanna Ticketagent, mghamton. , 'T. W. LEE, Gen'l Pass. A « E.J. QUAKBNBUSR, D P. A. GET ESTIMATES FOR YOUR Book Sunday. - , : - ( l A - . [CY, * » The latest style of New Type, exper- ienced workmen, good stock, the . | lowest prices consistent with . good work, and the job completed on time. and labor, work must be poi. for when taken. - will be required to make deposit when leaving order. :| ogk leaves. 1 winter of \04 when boat after boat ally—Limited, arrives at Buffalo } Strangers _| ase l Then came the- terrible One night he came home half frozen and with a dreadful cough Babette < sent him to bed and said he should go | [ ao more.\ They must make what food |. they had last until warmer weather. But instead of sunshine gand fair seas I the clouds swopt Sow. and gray Mke before a storm, and the waves *-] same rolling in, with a deep,; heavy } swell that sent a dull,. } roar as they broke, up to the | house. And ere and- theré in the dark -green waters could be seen something . < olse, a clumsy, swaying mass 'that - light glinted blue white. : trimmed the lamp, and there was a but she did not tell Pete. It was three days later when Mere Do you ' have mbacco seriously | y heart, hit the heart, and in the left b vlndlidc' h e the: pal nation ould awaken me. from. my taking Dr. Miles' | found' pcmancnt relief.” fous. Babette stood in the old kitchen, ¥ 'HMooking from the flushed, wrinkled face | e! There had always 'been-Pete. At least‘i M l.so thepeople down at St. Michel sald |. \50 a m- > 14 ask where he | . ' when a- atranger wou ask w 2 : the wind blowing the ends of her scart | C L T {ernment had built the lighthouse on- backward over her shoulders like red. | ' Presque Isle Pete's fishing hut had [ 'been there, and every night he had | fiicker and steer clear of the long sand | chel. . 'Ffore her the jagged, cruél Hine 'or tne Ace: flee, -and 'the nest moment. the | threatening | lil’iie showed. her the empty meal bag. © Shegrmiled: There were still bacon and | | rice and dried fish. They were rich. At I the end of the week there was no ba- | son, and they had siuved the last of the- { sliee for Pete, who lay on the old . | :ounge near the stovecoughing, cough- L | ng alt the time. -F | The following day Pete was deliri- A ~- beforé the masterful stroke of ten | pairs of St. Michel's strongest arms as | . | they: manned the. boat that bore Ba- \ {bette and provisions ~and medicine - | back to Presque Isle. | said Landry, when. they stood in the | | kItcher where Mere M'rie still prayed.; . | But Babette only smiled and nodded. Ther head, and she went on to the light- [ | house. K s A P. tans, sweeping, T- Inc Cure: [ - bland} $1.00. . Lune Bs on the pillow to where: Mere M'rie I provisions were. gone. There was no | medicine. 40k, ' Babette took the fur jacket from its © \ | nail. Before she went out of the kitch- | ' |-en. she Tfeaned 'over the. old halfbreed . k.; lwoman s bent form: - f'] she said slowly, pointing eastward an? I. L then at the empty meal sick and flou ' bag thrown in a corner. understood find stopped her |. long enough to watch the strong, erect | \\To St. Michel, ; young figure pass down to the shore, wings - Her hands worked quickly aver th lines of the boat, and, taking advan-a ] tage of a momentary lull, she pushed I | away. from: the small, tumbled down L. pier and struck out bravely for St. Mi- . She 'had often beer out with 7 [| Pete when the waves were as high as from the northern corner orfnow and she loved the excitement of - IR all> Thelow.flltlhouofl’resquc 1 Isle vanished entirely behind the wall { of: waters, but\ she .qlimpse of the dear old lighthouse and | it@ -rannd tad above the tallest wave, {Land the sight strengthened and nerved; | her for the five mile Journey to St. 4 . Mich el. 'current. Babette caught her breath | shurply as: shefelt the strong, resist- | less power sweep her from her course, {elose lips and tense muscles, but it was- 'useless. The deep, swelling tush of waters carried her northward, straight | Lof the governor, was asked if he h .on to the middle channel of the strait. f The d. had - | watching Babette build houses with |4 Wm ad_ come up. again and - w the reg bark chips around the light-A im-; house steps. ‘ * \%he has no one but me,\ he- said} with a dubious shrug of 'his 'thin, - stooped shoulders. “Babette, .who art: ' 1 thou,petite?\ ”raged over the Jake like a wild beast, Then. without warning. there Fose he- (waves had thrown the boat as if it had -- [been leaf full upon it. Instinctively | : [Babette had. risen at that last, awful Hnstant. As the boat crashed into the. dee with a shock thit made it leap and ,' tremble she.. . sprang. forward and\ \Igained a footing on the ice floe, a, {slight, perilous one, to be sure, but one ,; that meant safety for the moment at , . Jeast. Pete 'taught. her all | Already 'the little boat had disap- gpeared in the whirlpool of dashing wa- | ters,, and Babette's heart beat fast as | looked about her on her new craft. , 'It was large; it seemed gs large as\ Presque Isle itself, and fit first it ap-; peared stationary. But when she hadi reached- Its center she could feel the‘ slow, steady motion as it swept on to- ward Lake Huron. And now came the division of the: thought of what would happen if the: Tfloe Urifted 'north of Algonac island < And the years passed by. ten of 'them, slow and sure and steady; one 'by one, as the wild geese fly to the- southland, and each one loft Pete] . browner; and more wrinkled and- small er, while Babette grew up tal and“ slender and strong as A. youngl pine 'and out on the great pitiless waters of - {the lake. ; \With hushed breath she wa‘ited. The floe. was heaving so that she could : retain her place, but at: last” | the pine crests of Algonac showed on ' Fher left, and she: knew she would pass ¢ 1. jt. Michel 1 he cold she untied the red scarf from I bout her head and let the wind blow - went out on the lakes sand no more was | | heard from fhein until spring waves | | brought ¥ the wreckage. It was cold -at the IHfttle, low house back of the | ; lighthouse on Presque Fsle, colder than | even Pete could remember, and every | St. Louis sleepers, also IhAC® E woot if was harder for him to row | frlown to St. Michel for provistons; .t like a danger signal above her as\» the caught a glimpse of the lighthouse | m the west pler. . So near, it seemed, )| 'he placed her hand to her mouth and; houtéd, but her voleé sounded like a \ sgedbird's pipe in the. nolse-of the rush- ing wators. She was opposite the 'townnow. She| | could see the waves break on the plier, - and yet there was no sign d help. With a feariessncss born of .déespora- \ : waved the gearf wildly, and suddenly, 'n figtre appeared on the lighthouse, 1 Again she waved and- tried to: all, The figure signaled back and ran ' . long the pier toward town. _. It was Landry ‘Dubois. He burst into - | the warm back room at old Mme. Por- I teau's 'breathless and hatless. cued \ \Tt is Pete's Babette,\ he cried to the érowd. of fishermen and sailors . hud-; | Med about the big wood stove. \Bhe is!. ~\*Thé ico has come,\ Babette thought | when she saw -it from the lightHouse | window, one morning after she - had } | mm the drifting qut to the 'la'ke.\> _+ In five minutes the news had spread, | in the place was! mannéd, with Landry at the rudder,; nd stout arms pulled away to the res: : cue of Pete's Babette. And when they I brought her back half frozen and half , dead and gave her into Mims. Por- teau's care she told her errand in the : warm 'back room-told how Pete lay | I dying without food or medicine and. how unless help was sent there would -be no: light shining from Presque Isle that night. . \The - light shall shine,\ promised 3Landry,.. and the waves that had laughed at Babette's little boat bowed ~ «Thouhast saved his: life, little one,\. | The winter was falling {swiftly, and the wind had gone down . 'like: one tired with its mad play. - Far | to the west she could see a boat strug- | | gling slowly 'up the strait. its lights - {gleaming now and then like jewels. ;} [She Ht the 'Jlamp with fingers that { trembled, find the broad path -of light streamed out over the point: Babette's ,;fbirds 'could fly in safety tonight, and _L. below Landry Dubois held aloft a red {__ I | searf and told its story, even fis it is [told today around the islands of the 'I strait-the story of Pete's Babette. All Canada Cricketers Defeated. ~ [; the Germantown Cricket club grounds; 'I C -by an inning and 104 rung. _ Ind., Like mar- g troubles. Harthck and all drugglsts. TnEWT € | knelt over by the-stove' praying: The . filo satisfactory Results From Receni Mere M'rie 1 jtworn out after 'his flying trip she could: catch a/ 'Suddenly, when scarcely half a mile: » 'A President Mitchell at the execu | mansion. The governor said the co ' [ tiong were such that he did not fee Justified in making a statement ex ] what cceurred at the' {only one of the strike leaders who. re | who fare present and would say not | & proposition. tion she struggled to Her feet and | t and. the shore was crowded, while the, . ; | strongest boat E queer ache in her heart as she looked | Wf down the strait and thought of how | “her \birds would have to- battle with it, .| Philadelphia, Sept. 14. -The United | ' | States defeated All Ganada in the two [ | days'. international cricket match At | poor wnore, Sept. 14, 1763, occurred the | pl massacre of a large body of British | soldiers by the Seneca Indians. | - A BOy’s Wild Ride For Life. [|- With family around expecting him to | , | die, and a son riding for life, 18 miles, to | | {get Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- | 1 fsumption, Coughs and Colds, Ww. H. -A {Brown, of . Leesville, RHCP » I-|death's agonies from asthma, but this: m‘bove’ i [wonderful medicine gave instant relief | I suffered severe F endured land soon cured him. He writes:; \I now | | {sleep soundly every night,\ | cures of Consumption, Pneumonia Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds and Grip prove | is merit for all Throat and | Guaranteed bottles 50c ) 1 bottles free at R. P. | ait dr * | John w. Gates. A M «-. Conference. |AOTIVITY m THE “Graham, & \'tchell Goes to Scranton—all“ No ...nnrunicutive Attitude., Is Not Liked 'by. Many -- Governor ' . May Confer Again. ~ 'delphia and Harrisburg, I Mitchell returned: to Wilkesb to leave again in a few gall its phases, 'but the some : Maiden to mate faiths of the strike. 'ernor would call an extra #ession o did not know.' A dispatch from Harrisburg says: -- \Governor Stone déclined again 't di vulge the result of his conferénce to repeat that the strike was discuss with: the best of feeling. Poe No Statement From Flinn Either. \Senator 'William Flinn, an advis any statement to make pertaining t the conference. He replied that he h; not. [(* \M. K. MeMullin of Pittsburg,, W came here with Mr. Flinn to attend” conference, went east, and it is p sumed that he has gone to New \Yo to meet J. P. Morgan and tell} onférence. |. -_ \District President Nicholls is the ‘maiued in Har risburg after the con C ence. He is as reticent as the othe ,; [44g when asked, if he thought the mee! strike. All the persons who were preg! ent, evidently. have determined to make : . no str, sment for . fear that they might; say something that would interfere\ with their plans . for settling th : «trike.\ : ~ The reticence of the chief officer . o the miners' union weighs heavily on- '] the business and industrial interests of- 'the strike region, who were hopeful\ . that the meeting between the govern-f. |atopped its frightened beating as she or and President Mitchell would : sult In some plan for a settlement of the strike. The silence of Mr. Mltche 'is interpreted to mean that the Harris burg: conference was barren of results. Activity In the. ColHleries. © | ~ There is more or less activity at all}; che collieries in this region; and it said that some of the companies will make desperate efforts to resume work | without delay at maumy of the collierle - Fifty men were sent to the Conyng gham mine of the Delaware and Had | son company. The company expects, C | start work with a good force 'of: mii ers in a few hours. The coal doperato ( say the conference 'between Governo m IIStone and President Mitchell was | merely: a friendly talk and that net 1 ther party to the: conference submitted 'The operators think the (] crisis: wil} come within three or fou days and that a break in the ranks -the strikers is among the possibilities,: At strike' headquarters President: © Mitchell's subordinates claim the com- ; panies are in no 'better position tostart: - Asked whether he thought the gov- | 'the legislature, Mr. Mitchell \said he: their collieries now than they were} three months ago and that there will I be no. bréak. In the ranks of the strik- ' ers. * vvstrike leaders was productive «of \no { other result than to lead the governor _;to decide to continue his éfforts to set tle the trouble in the anthracite fields, Just what the governor can do no one hseems to know | Edward's Health Restored. - Of London, Sept, 14 -With the arrival! at Balmoral his majesty's convales- \Leenee is officially declared to .be com: 1 ready indulged in deer stalking and £ now busy with grouse drivifig, _ con | pled with the coming departure of the: queen for Copenhagen, . indickites the : confidence of those in attendance: Of | bis majesty that his health is fully ré | stored. Negroes War on Negroes. - has been a small riot here between @ gang of southern negroes and. gome 1 eal colored residents. The police fing . ly succéecded in quelling the nflistur, | ance, landing eight of the southern f . groes in the city jail. The southerners |: | were recently brought here by a-New tracking the New York, Ontario and: | Western railroad A Three Million Dollar Contract. . Loulis- Kansas City line of the Rock If I land. 'The contracts involve the boring. : of three big tunnels, and all the bridg . I . \ . In Memory of British Massacre. + ..the Devil's Boer Lenders still at The flaxue. from Holland of the Boer genergls Bo-, tha, De Wet and Delarey hak been postponed. According to & rumor in Boer circles, the generals expéi Gates\ Company Buys Coal hands. : Jupiter coal mine and 1,000 acres of ' fine coal land northwest of Duquo! have been purchased by the Weaver Coal and Coke company of Chicago, the leading stockholder of which wmwmsmm-.. as cucina ao Ave dotmn iy cape mane #o , \The governor's conference with thefl { of King EAward and Queen Alexandra 1 'plete. The fact that the king bas-al>| ~>C Middletown, N. Y., Sept. 14.-There | : York contractor engaged\ in Chicago, Sept. 14.-The Rock Island | shop and Pacific Railway company . has . | pI awarded contracts for the con#truction }: . of its new line between Versailles, Mo., ' *. lan ? 1 and Kansas' City, completing the Sti | ing, concrete and masonry construction. r .on the entire line. ' The cost Will be Annuth ' about $3,000, 000 | p Niagara Falls, N., Y., Sept 14.-At hole in the Niagara gorge & |. tablet hag been unvelled to miark thef 'The Hague, Bept. 14. -The departure f received by Queen 'Wilhelming, who | 1 opens the Dutch parliament Sept 16. Carbondale, IIL, Sept. Mfr-The New.) T ke the opening ad- fnembers of the faculty here he wilt study the so- conditions of the people ,Sept 14. —The report of hich investigated the - inju- |. 1€ Brooklyn during the war i on g has been received at the ent. The following state- Outer bottom plat- | er rent, and it is an \to keep the damaged free from water. Ex- -~ | tion of the delegates not yet elected . New York Republicans Will Declare ' convention For Him, - __ A Political Question of ureat Impor-| tunnel Undecided For Some Time Definitely Settled-The Plat- ferm and the Trusts. New York, Sept. 14.-PresidentRoose- | Velt is-to be indorsed .by the Republic- | t an. state convention. This was decided | ] upon at the conference of Republican | | leaders held in this city. This approval I| will be couched in the plainest and .| most unequivocal English at the com- .| mand of the writers of the state plat- t ho |a second term in the White ~The decision to dothis was reached after due deliberation and when the | subject had been discussed from every | 1 in this state, and they had their repre- | | gentatives in the conference, who be-. I leve it would be unwise to pledge the | | state delegation in the national con- 1 vention of 1904. They say there is no precedent in this state for such a | : course. The state p.atform will not at- [ tempt to say how the national conven- | tion delegates to be elected two years ' hence shall vote. In view, however, of the action of many western states and 'of Pennsylvania it is felt by Senator: Platt and his advisers in the party.| | that the Republicans of President : Roosevelt's home-state can :ost do less | : than: to make plain to the country that | . their sentiments are those-of admira-. tion for the presrdent and his policies ~~_ Convention. Cannot Bind.\ , The state convention, to be held. in Saratogr wept. 23, cannot bind the ac- -. ¢ who will vote -for the next Republican e that 50 percent of the the outer bottom plating ing would result in a settlement of the: may rd also estimated that the re- ' damage would cost $42,500 Chicago, Sept. 14. —~Corners in grain. are fo ver rendered practically im- 1 for an injunction asked by alts Thorburn & Co aoainst prom- | Dr: R \Masujima of Tokyo, a distin- ember of the bar of Japan, \vent borbett-McGovcrn Bout ille, Ky sp Sept \14 -A commit- assfmeeting of citizens has +/ Dav1d JF. ,yor,’Grainger assured his R t 'e would adhere to his so iTa‘xHIEndic'tments. ‘t 14 -—-The special grand \stun Edward Williams, foy. and - Litike: Wheeler. it]! qulniotl. - fin the arrival of | amen Oliver Dead. Bend, Ind., Sept. 14. - , wife of the well known | vited. HStates of Colombia has : R over the steamer Jessie] Mrs i I: Cured Hemorrhages of Lungs [ I - \Several years since my lungs were so: . | badly affécted that I had many hemor- rhages,\ writes A. M. Ake of Wood, Ind \L took treatment. with several physl | of inventions for which patents are | [as sought intended to be used for the] ' presidential candidets, and it will not | try to do so. It can and will decmref demonstrated that the last eruption | was due to a new crater in the lateral itself in favor of President Roosevelt's. . renomination. ' There also will be contained in the | | state platform Aa straightforward dec- | 'laration on the trust question which: will be in complete harmony with | . President Roosevelt's attitude, which 'is: also Governor Odell's attitude to- | | ward the trusts, Some of the Repub- lican leaders do not go 'so far as: | the sentiment of the Republicans of: the country in the indorsement . of: President Roosevelt's and Governor . Odell's views on the regulation o | trusts,; All agree, though, that as Gov- | ernor Odell has the most at stake in| : the elec.ion b's wishes should govern in the framing of the tzist plank, than which, it is 'beli¢éved, there will be. 'none other so important in the wholej platform. -The state convention,; there-] | fore, will place itself in line on the| | trust question with the president and | { the governor. er Throat. Wealthy Girl Cuts Erie, Pa., Sept. 14 ~With a carving | knife for a- weapon Miss Edith, the only daughter of T; M. Nagle, the mil- { lionaire, has cut her throat almost 'from: ear to ear. She bad been suffer-z ing of late from a filld form of hyste- | ria, and a nurse had been instructed to | watch her day and night 'While the purse was Absent for a few minutes. Miss Nagle cut herself. The trachea | | was severed, but the prompt summon. ' ing of a may save her life. H Jurisprudence” and the sub-A; © ~His© paper. \Japanese Law In | o the Status of Foreigners.” I has received from the German em- bassy at Washington a memorandum [ of inquiry made by Secretary Hay as | to whether it would be agreeable -to 'réceive as. embassador, in succession. As to White’s “gasses“... ' Beérlin, Sept. 14.-The foreign office to Mr. White, Charlemagne \Tower | the present United States ambassador; | at St. Petersburg, Bellamy Storer, now | United States minister at Madrid,} ' or: Hill, | state. ea e The Hudson Valley Strike. Saratoga, N. Y., Sept. 14.-A confer- | ence has been held at Sandy FHI rela- | tive to furnishing proper protection to | | the Hudson \Valley railroad, which is again tied up by the motormen's strike, . The lines run-through the counties .of [. on and Warren,|, Saratoga, Washing the sheriffs of which counties ara find- clent number of deputies to meet the: demands of the: Qmpany Georgians ln Fatal Quart-cl. - Fnirburnp, Ga., Sept. 14 - William . Whaley, a prominent young man of. | Fayette county, was shot and instantly | _| killed by Beauregard Russell at Rus-] { mell's homme: A feud had existed be-] tween the two young ien for \some | time. Whaley is said to have drawn | u nf . his gun and threatened Russe lwhe | tation of atuminture tablets for paper | [: E bank bills. © the latter killed him | - t -- m : Horse Show. After the President. Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 14.-President Roosevelt Will be invited to Nashville . for the horse show, which takes place | October T to 12, This date immediately ' follows that of 'the Louisville horse | show, to which the president Also is in-. [as Lays Cornerstone. City of Mexico, Sept. 14.-President : Diaz has laf the cornerstone of the -new general postoffice building. The: 1 building is in the new business center ' of the city, several blocks from the palace, and will be of steel and stone. Murdered to Rob. found her husband shot through the ~| head and saw two men escaping from | . the house. The motive was evidently | as. several valuables were} robbery, lissing Coal cians without any benéfit. Tthen started to take Foley's Honey and . Tar and my | lungs are now as sound as a bullet. I recommend it in advanced stages of lung | trouble.\ For sale by all dealers and at Rufus P. Eice's, Hartwick. \fws om Bagh waxes. - | their pumping plants and have wired Assistant secretary: of | Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 14.-Thomas | -H. Womack, a prominent farmer -of | | Gibson county, has been murdéred at. | his home, near Medina. Mrs: Womack ] . . expected that there will be many ap- | | plicants for the land around the Al- [ gerian villages named after famous; Frenchmen. 'The French agriculturists | fl - Ont—m Beaumont Conflucration Attended by - Fatality-Aimount df Damage. the large oil gushers in the burned oil - 'field area is still in flames. The efforts> | made were not succegsful in extin- | OPENS AT THE Spa SEPT-93.| gnishing 14t, brit more boflers lia .s been sent for, and the plan of smothering it | with steath will again. be tried. ATI | very soon. Many of the companies lost for new machinery, and these will be | installed as soon as possible. An examination leads to the belief {[that none of the wells has been perma- pently injured.© There is a new prob- lem to be confronted as #soon as the been melted off, andwhile it is proba- ble that this can 'be replaced 'by work- men in diving suits it is a problem hat may be a hard one,. Estimates of general acceptance of abdist as he figure that will: cover the loss.: . - The first fatality of the fire eccurred when B. L, May, a laborer, was killed derriek. _ p REPORT ON MONT PELEE R Should Be Abandoned. tific expedition which was sent to the island of Martinique to study the situ- ation caused by the eruption of Mont: ,Pelee has drawn up a second report, | in which, spéaking: 'of the second erup-* quieting eruption of that day renders | -continuoifs study of the phenomenon necessary. commissioners Say, tion of the entire Mont Pelee region, {which we did not consider indispensa- 'ble a month ago, should now be-ear-- ried out. ances have ceased the southern Hmits . of 'the mountain ought to be most actively watched, -especially if it is 'fissure.\ The report concludes by dwelling on the danger of tidal waves mandating Fort de France . Dark Outlook For St. lion!!! Boodlers.’ .BSt., Louls, Sept 14.--In order to 'pré-| vent the possible release of the boodlé City by Attorney Chester H. Krum [Cireuit Attorney Folk has determined. to issue information against each of . ] the eighteen men for whom bunch warrants were made out. The last state legislature gave state attorneys: this power. Any information making a direct charge of bribery will be as strong practically as an indictment, it is stated. __ Oda Fellows Meet In Des Moines. { one-half of thedelegates to the sover-. | eign grand lodge, Independent Order | -of. Odd Fellows, which will convene here, have arrived. Two cities are in | the field for the next sovereign lodge : méeting, St. Louis fand Atlantic City,: N. J. The présent candidates for depu- | ty grand sire, the one office in which. any considerable, \interest is being . Wright of Allentown, Pa Revolution!“ Leader accused. ~ Caracas, Venezuela, Sept. 14.-The . .ammesty in which guarantees are giv- | | en to all revolutionists who within for-. ty days lay down their arms. The gov- 'ernment explaing the decree by saying, ''Now that General Matos, leader of: the revolution against President Gas-z tro, is known to be the accomplice of foreigners by 'his promising control of Venezuelan finances to a foreign syndi- follow him.\ McCoy Challenges Fitzsimmons. . _ New York, Sept. \Kid\ McCoy: has posted in New York a forfelt of. mong and offered to let the amount | stand as a side bet in the event of the match being arranged. .of the forfeit .H. C.; Egan Western Gplt Champion._ «Chicago, Sept. 14. -H. 1Chandler Egar go Golf club's links by defeating his nova. cates on sanitary grounds the substh New French Villages In Algeria. with & view to inducing people to go . respondent of the London Telegraph. | The hamlets have received such names | .as Hanotaux, Voltaire, Rochambeau, | : : Prevost-Paradol, Corneille and Canto-| ~ - bert, and there will} no doubt in time be ( 'a Victor Hugo and a Carnot. £200 ($1,000) and who have had agri- cultural experience, The land- will be- Tent, free from all taxation, for a min imum period of ten years. It is no 'I prefer, as a rule, to remain at home. 7 Patent Devices For Using Oil as Fuel‘ inquiries and looking into, the merits: ' production of both heat and power, says the New York Times. Up to date there have been granted. 1,280 patents . Beaumont, Tex., Sept. 14.-One of 'of the hunting lodge at Corbin park early in the morning, Président Roose- 'gusher is extinguished, and that is the | {control of the well. The gate valve has | a“ it $150,006 | : wail xkept ap the chase, and suddenly LoC {fapotted him. | point of view. There are Republicans | by a block ”mag from the top of a | - ing aliead. . French Scientists Say the Region? iv‘Morrison, \It's 'a deer for gure.' 1 -P e _ knew better and blazed away. It aris, Sept. 14.-The French scien { looked Hike a miss for a minute. 'a frightened rabbit the big boar {plunged straight 'abead, going faster tion of Aug. 30, they say that the dis- | Until the volcanic disturb- | fprisoners through the Shabeas corpus | proceedings instituted at Jefferson | Des (Moines, Ia., Sept. 14.-About | shown, are E. S. Conway of Chicago; : 1 W. G, Neye of Minneapolis and R. E | ' colors. tary patrol established, and grouped $5,000 for a match with Bob Fitzstm- | Fitzsimmons | A8 supposed to be in the vicinity of Se- | attle, Wash., but no reply has yet | been recelved to dispatches sent to i \'I'him by McCoy announcing the postin | ing great difficulty in securing -a saffi- Y P & cousin, Walter B. Egan of Lake Ge: 1. A writer in the Medical Tunes advo- > out to them fas colonists from the - mother country and to cultivate the | | 1 land around them, writes the Paris cor- * The | colonial office offers concessions of land ~ I around the new villages to candidates | | who are of French nationality, fathers : : of families, possessors of a 'eapital of | \' Uhealth and strength, by enabling For some time past, land especially |. | 1 rf | since the anthracite éoal strike, the | patent offive at Washington has been | doing a lively business in progecuting |- THE PRESIDENT’S BOAR. - lloo-evelt Describes the Killing of . Hits Game In Corbin Reserve. Standing hatless on the broad porch velt told the story of how hé killed the | wild boar the other day, says a special dispatch from Burlington, Vt., to the { New . York World. - small tank has burned itself out, ”New fork World. and the 'big one will probably die out | \I fired but once,\ he said. \The bullet plerced both lungs and the heart. {I had not intended to do any hunting, {but Senator Proctor lured me into it. You should have seen me. {Proctor logned me his old shooting coat, gome -one else donated a pair of | blue overalls, and Bill Morrison con: Senator tr{buted shoes and socks. Bill, the senator and myself made up the party. \We had no luck at first, but just about dusk a wild boar bolted out of the brush fifty yards ahead of us. Bill. saw him first the senator next and I- [last of all.\ The bogr took a slanflng - oqurse a)! the right through the: thi .\ 'There he isi’ I shouted. bid ‘Wrong\ yelled the senator, squint~ - \That's a deer ' ~*\ 'It's the boar, I tell you,' said I, 1 bringing my rifle to my shoulder. chimed in Bill But I \ Senator's right,’ Tgike than before theshot.. But just as I took Sight for a second try he pitched forward and rolled over dead. \Now that's the story of the hunt, | gentlemen, and as to that shot of mine, lall that I have to say is that it was a mighty 1 » \There is no longer any doubt,\ the | \_ ~- ucky one. \that the evacua- |- FINE FEED FOR NEWSBOYS ‘Novel Way of Celebrating Savable's Victory In the Futurity. Colonel Bill Thonipsgon of §t. Paul, Minn., after winning heavily on Sava- ble, the winner of the Futurity at the Sheepshead Bay Tace track, carly the other morning rounded up a dozen or more newsboys in front of the Imperial hotel in New York city and led them to {a restaurant in Sixth avenue between \Thirty-first and Thirty-second streets. The colonel ranged the boys at. the. counter and told them to pitch in, that anything in the restaurant was theirs for. the asking, says the New York - :' Tribune. - - Johnny MeCarthy took a sardine | sandwich, and most of the others took - bam and egg sandwiches. Then John- - ny ordered a sirloin steak. The others . 'took courage. Everybody took a steak. ; After many other things had been or-. dered. the manager of the restaurant conferred with the chef and returned to suggest that the boys ought not to impose on the colonel's generosrty The colonel laughed the suggestion away, j and legs of lamb, cantaloupe and wa- | termelon were ordered. When the first crowd of boys was. through, the colonél wanted to call in others, but the manager of the restau- rant said he had his regular customers, ' for whom he would have to save some- thing. Policemen had to keep the boys away from the door for some time. The bill for what the boys ate amount- ed to g25. . o, rents For G. A. R. Men. _The national encampment of the Grand Arny of the Republic will be | held in a monster tent at Camp Roose- : velt, im Washington, 'which will be lo- | cated in the grounds south of the : C f 18 | White House. It is proposed to have a | government has published a decree of big ctreus tent capable of seating 2,000 veterans. It will be fioored and sup- . pHed with chairs and a large platform and will be draped with the national There will be a regular-mili- f1bouf. the big tent 'will be a dozen ' smaller tents, which will be used for committes meetings of the encamp- . : - fment officers cate no. Venezuelan patriot can longér | The Capture of De Wet {General De Wet is now engaged in writing a book on the Boer war.] The pen is mightier than the sword, I * show By proof that will no contradiction brook; Fall Mall must yield to Paternoster row, Whose penmanship ,has brought De Wet ~ to book' . 1. Not a Joke. Mr Crimsonbeak-Here's an article in the paper about your new tight I shoes, dear, Mr. Crimsonbeak—Yon te jokmg' “Well I thought it was. It's head- ead ‘Much In Little.’ ie Yonkers States. | of the Exmoor Country club won the[ man. -~ __ . title of, amateur golf champion of the | -----=- \Western Golf association on the Chica=] New villages have been founded in'} ~ Algeria by the French government, | Why éan't we come: . over to your house . and ] la zemore? t» T ets so mag. whupfvgaxgake I lit” bit of noise. _ (| What makes him that | wea . - fistulas says it's-dys- | f pepsin makes him act | That's about the way? | strikes the small j k> ‘1ttle things are [ ified and seem to [ jusfigy his quick anger. \There's r the I dyspeptican ~for the f: Tt cures diseases of the stom [ nd other oj gens of digestion 'f utrition, 'and restores perfect | digestion. and assimfla~' . #1 Sood. . ~ | en on: Golden D 1 d liver $ l v0\ 'bottle of Dr. Pierce's 1 very for: indigestion laint,\ writes Mr. C. M d allege. Davidsop Co.. d no bad spells since I~ your medicine-in [ ot ltéoothe same man. Bel kathst l‘dnen Medi fighnigcov- . M 6 ything out aw. a a! ¥ can 45 fah without having for using oll as fuel and for the use. of |- gas and vapors 2,100. | me- Lois : Br Home's Pleasant Poll ts 1 cleanse and regulate