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veins at Pies mak manta Yok alba ® In is . Mt. Vision... rm, \4G mel t‘ ael*, - \Nel s Jim} A ”I!\ h 0. 0. & R. S. R. R. Time Card. GoInG NORTH. Oneonta.... sev ces sees s a West 0neonta.... ..... TLHAAHKONSLs c v4 a +a eves ces cee sess sea sen aes ME. VISIOM . a aa sev see cee ss cseccceces South Hartwick............ ...... Hartwick............. ......... Cook Summit... CRASE, rs cea csc}... Hope. Factory.. © Cooperstown.......... aoixa soutH. Geoperstown...... av ie Hq 3 Factory......... see sensescusses 7:00 a in: 7:15 a m | .8:00-a m. 8:10 a m- 8:15 a mf 8:30 a m ssee ce ne se oe susses sarsa csa a 6.:50:a m: ._ 7:00 a m | 7:10 am | 7:20 2 mt M fiicks +62 adn . te too cov +00 canone Bout Hartwrck ..................... . 7:30 a m [45sm L NPONS.... . ... .. s we ne ee ne sears Ang - every hour thereafter, leaves Oneonta at 10:30 p. m., and only runs -to. Hartwick Last car leaves Cooperstown at 11:20 p. m., and-only runs f to Hartwick *\ . Delaware asd Audion Kailrond | can-um June 16; '02., oaton: N . No. 19 Hilk No. 8 Passenger «% No. 14 Passenger as No. 13 Bussmger.... «se .6: No. Behiesgo Explosion...“ 6: 530m. 408 No. . 2 Chicago. 2.01 am. _ 206 0 19 Pasi'gr,, Sundays only 11.00. any. 1 ® \'Prains 8, 18,6, 1T and 5 run on Sunday Time: tables ahowing local and -through train gervice between stations: on all divisions of Hfisystem may be obtained at. all D. & H. ticket offices. - «bur-1519“? I“: O. V R KR. In area June, to 1902.. TRAINS soOUTH. No.1 No. 5 No 7 No.9 NoAlL f Ly Cocpersto an: .....8 00 8.55): 11; «* Phoanix Mills. 9 00| Lt 6:30 a m | 7:30 &a m | 740am, 7:50 4. m- | 6:30 a m |- 6 :45 a m } Last. oar . s Appeal to Public. ROOT TALKS wite morean.| Hui-riled Conference In New York on Lntter's ¥acht-Roosevelt Still Takes an Active Interest In. the Situation,. Washington, Oct. 12.-The American; Federation of Labor, through its exec- | utive council, has issued an addréss to| {the public appealing for financial and | 'moral aid for the striking anthracite. miners and denouncing the attitude of | 7the inline owners, on whom, the appeal . says, must rest the responsibility for | ' the hardships resulting from the coal famine. 'The address has been under discus- sion in secret sessions of the councit for several; days and is as follows: \The strike of the. miners is now in | T occurred\ was entirely the fault of the | presidents ,of ,the-coal companies and | [that the std rgday is; entirel E continued to this may endure © “Miner. Always Willing.” * A] ~ \What. more, could the miners do and .maintain theirlseli' respect and not for-: felt. the respect of their fellow . men. than j eir willingness to ' submit all ':}matters in dispute to a commission \ ‘zzappolnted by President Roosevelt and. when . thit was- refused to leave the: intfirée lcontrovéersy to Mr. J. Pierponi: Morgan, one of the meni’largely inter- ,ested with ithe operators? There has. i never been.a time, ither. before the' - atrike {or ~since 4ts: lnauguratiom that [ { the miners have not been entirely will . ing to have the questions involved in | the. miners\ claims investigated and. ad-. | justed : bv,any disinterested persons A J \These circumstances 'in 'eonnection | { with the strike gre recounted. so. that J \I the people of jour .country ;migy place; Lv Junction,... \ p ** w.. Dav. (lit D) -7 20 [0 05 12 Pyi 1+ Weat Davenport.. 110-15] 12: 31 Ar Davenport Ctr.... i0>2i N 1 where it properly belongs the respon- ' | sibility. for all the sufféring which the 1, people may have-to bear by- reason oft: | the impending coal famine. The cold +1 blasts of winter confront us, the chat- Ar Gooperatown “..10 Bi 20 * Phoenix Hills .lo 294 + 1Bha. nr . Daily—Bud's] an 8:00. a. .. Daily—4am! TA &: 00 &. iii., nail z--Fast moi, ca- mango eager nevi $: p. m.. Dai for Bulalo. C s a «m . Daily—Sleepers to: New York. Also. |- coaches im ,Daily—Sleepers for New York, also' : | ‘_ aily-Séranton,.New ] York Philadel-L pli a south difer, vest-halel drawing. room service and re; ularcosches estibiiled, injunction l. \York Philadelphia. | . ,j denoiminations make-a special plea | “to their respective congregations each | th adv—Local passenger. -Limited,. diner, observation . tcringiteeth of young and innocent hildreii the. shivering of the weak, : elad and underfed men;, and ‘f the stoppage of the wheels of pea . to: all people to contribute #I; mptl an continue R Q -“Second.——The hour between 10 and J tributed to the-strike. ‘Thindf—Jfldisters Gf the gospel of lor 3m veallbuied .engches. . Séran. iSubbsth morning inbehalfiot itiiewmin- ‘gonpliew YC.-rk and Philadelphia, 5:5\ p. im. except. Sunday -L. ocsl passenger. New York Trains for Utica and intermediate stations. . ‘Oa m., and 4:00 p. m. daily—81h a. m;, and' 3:55 p, M., exceptSnmiay, | For Syracuse. Owexo a a nt., and 6 10: p.m except Sunday. gaiikonsrefiraa iplaybio J. Smith, Lackswsnna cket agen n ~a T. WiLEE, Gantt Pace. Act - Wi QU FOR YOUR The latest style of New Type, exper- ienced workmen, good stock, the lowest prices consistent With good work, and the JQb completed on time. d.. intermediate 'sta-|. tions, 5:00 2.m., 2:20 and 3:25. p. m. daily—B :15 f.. : - their readers. For miormation resin-rig“: rates. routes,. reser : J ors, their wives and children and that 11:45 p.'m., Datly-Coaches and sleepers 1607} they. constitute themselves into. relief} ' : committees among their respective par-: [ ishioners. *\*Fourth.-The daily, weekly and: la- bor press solicit contributions from | \Fifth. —Entertainments be arranged : “Come to the gid of: the miners :In ' their heroic contest and administer A well mérited rebuke to the mine opera- :|. © tors. in their arrogant, oppressive and' unjustifiable attitude toward the min- org -the operators who would trample ' underfoot and crush the hearts and |-spirite of the- men -whom -they employ |} with equally callous indifference as : they outrage the dignity. the manhood \ son, secretary United Mine Workers J| of America, Stevenson building, In-, | dianapolis, Ind.\ Theappeai is signed by Samuel Gom- J : pers, president; James Duncan, first- American Federation of Labor Makes ; | vice president; James O'Connell, third t vice president gand Max Morris, fourth | gan have held a five hour conference] on board the financier's yacht, the «Cor- |. suiting at Thirty-fifth sweet. -F From the: Fortysecond -atreet terry, f the latter remained, - al > 'l ous pace to the West Twenty-third | Ammediate steps to Settle the coal ‘lcoal strike, he said: fering In the eoal strike. T cannot dis- =\ | close anything: that took place in that | - 'F cong genes Of 'Friday.\ tfltfié -#atton,\ ' not saysnything for the future. 'There Roosevelt is seekinf' erery method 'by Awhich there may 'be federal action. in. A1, o'clock of each; Monday mornings: during ithe continuance of the strike ig] | designated as 'miners' hour: and the : wagesrearned during that hour by the. rworlringapeopleflot our country be con-] |. mutual ground of: arbitration may Bbe [ and:. contributions from. unions and | .> 'f other organized: bodies be solicited. ** 7‘3NBUSH.D- P.A. 7'1 Fien are trying to ascertain \1s ewhether a . cess, 'Is the only one in Bight at preb-. tparties in . the intergst .of the, puble | ”pond Penrose are reticent concerning- 1 their efforts to settle the | and Senators Platt, Quay -and Rénrosg £ Tioug to see the strike settled. The sit- | 1 | uation is not one that will be 1m- | proved by talking.\ ~_Ton & hill close to the Sixteenth regi-c | ment encampment began. hurlfiig roc i . | leta fell into camp Lieutenant . Colonel - | Richards and forty line and staff offi- -L ceis, who had been apprised that an ch attach was to be made on the camp, -| tion the firing came: from. The-officers i were found / idle, and - a son riding for life 18 miles, to also get Dr. Kings New., Discovery. for Cofi- } death’s agonies from asthma, 'but this: vice president; John Mitchell, second . vice president ROOT AND MORGAN CONFER, Important Meeting on Financiers Yacht at New York,. ; New York, Oct, 12. —Secretary, of |. War Elihu Root and J. Pierporit Mor- | salir, anchored in the North river off | West Thirty-fifth street, It is be | : that Secretary Root gave Mr. Morgan 'a message from President Roostvelt,- | which was in efféct that the presiGent | was extremely anxious that the caal | 'strike be ended at once and that le~ looked to Mr. Morgan to end. it. | e SEBS noosrmr. Son of sun’s King Pleared With: Amorica. Washington, Oct,. | 12.-KHis royal| special train. they will be the guests of the nation. their court dress and, escorted by a squadron of the Second cavalry, were Roosevelt & Payne, together with Becretary Cort you and Colonel Bingham, the pres were present to assist\in th reception. The greetings 'between\ thfipr Mr. Root's carriage remained «on t AWest Thirty-fifth street pi : time, and when the Mr; Morgan and the secretary ot wa . were taken to the foot- -of West . second street,; with the object appal- | ently of.evading the group of reporters however, Mr. Root, and Mr. Morgan weredriven to the Union | club where Mr. Root. was then driven at a- furi— © {street ferry, where-he sent three tele- ;grams.and checked his grip. telegrams he. sent went to Washing- ton, but what the messages were could - not be learned. An importafi/ conference was then [ begun at the Union club, It is known 'that Bacon 'of the Tennéssee' Coal and Iron company and Chairman | Thomas of the Erie railroad were | there. J. Pierpont Morgan was ap- | parently waiting to-know the regult. of . 'the conference, \but denied 'himgelf to . 'all visitors. It is still impossible to learn thé exact nature of the confer-, : ence. 'The length of time Mr. Root rer mained on board the yacht and the fact that Mr. Morgan: came ashore | with 'his visitor led to the belief that: some: - important .dévelopments were likely at once; In fact the. report was- current that Mr. Mor fn, acting on: \ suggestion; - would take :| strike, Governor Odell vas interviewed at- the Fifth Avenue hotel 'When asked . 'about his intentions for formulating | Some: idea for the speedy end of the ~ \I have no individual plans for inter- Gidell‘swas askédxwhat his ' ans: vere'in regard to the #it» ifd h‘e’saTd \I can-: are no other. cofdl conferences 8&0 far | is T am concerned” tto\ ROOSEVELT AGTIVB YETu Washington, Oct 19 -¥—“President settling the: coal strike. His eabinget advisers nave been requested to look aiefullv into the laws which may - have a bearing on the subject and see if these is any statiite under which he : can proceed.: So far nothing has, been found * There is 'one ray .of hope but _it, is iather faint in view of the tattitude of - ; the coal operators This is that some- found. The miners are willing to. con-} \sent to arbitration of all- questions The opgrators admitted the, , principle. of 'arbittation.to.a liniifted extent in of 1 \fering to submit individual cases of lisputes 'between employers and. em- played to the courts of common pleas | | in, the districts. where the disputes oes . cur. . middle ground of «arbitration. may not: © be agreed upon. This plan, éven though | At doeg-not now give.much : hope-of sug- . ent. .Those who shave, discussed the | . matter with the president think that' as the situation grows moreacute both , Avelfare miy be. Induced to accept itas . something of. n: siipila nature; hike i yip j Quay and Penn-ole Retleenituis . Philadelphia, Oct, 12.-Senators Qui y - At no time 'would Mr. Root have any- | thing 'to It is believed: that the | miners' strike, (When-shown the state- :l. ment of Chairman Thomas of the Erie Hroad: that there would be no fur; er conference between the operators Tuesday, Mr. Quay said, “There neve @| wis any intention of holding such A. | | conference,\ When pressed for a state- ,ment Senator Quay said: \I am anx- “u Soldiers' Camp Assniled. . R IE Mount. Car mel, Pa., Oct. 12. LPler’son‘s and discharging revolversiat\ thxem : éerk' quarters. After a half dozen bul- _ left their quarters and ran in the direc- . shot several times ahead of them, but | no signs .of . the soldiers assailants . A Bays Wild Ride For Life. | sumption, Coiughs arid Colds,- w. H‘ Brown, -of Leesville, Ind., endured wonderful medicine gave instant relief, and soon cured him. He writes: \I now | ~ Like mar- {resident Roosevelt responded pl g. | R. antly. . ' He asked the, prince about his pro- posed itinerary and expressed the hope that he would. visit the military and naval academies and also spend semi\ time ekaminlng the industries of which: tu, the country was so proud.-~ Thé con- férence lasted not more than five min- | utes. so lk, Damaged Cable Repaired. St. Thomas, Danish West Indies, Oct: I 12. -Repairs to <the St. Lucia-Grenada | cable have been completed. The cable -| was lifted from about 2,000 fathoms Of | we; water, and owing to the fact that it: ' was: buried in volcanic mud the strain | whe was very great, The cable used in the | repair work is valued at between $25,- '000 and ©$30,000. The lord mayor of]; London, Sir Marcus Samuel, has do- nated $8,750 from the Mansion House relief fund- crew of the cable repair steamer Grap- ; pler, irhich was lost, with all on- board, } /, : last May as a result of the erup ion of \ hag Mont Pelee. Unvells Statue of Gladstone. Glasgow, ' Oct. 12.-Lord. Rosebery : unveiled Aa statue of Mr. Gladstone in | George square, representing the states-. ' man as attired in the robes of lord: rector of Glasgow university. avoided commenting upon Mr. Glad-z . stone's political career for the reason that men of all creeds had contributed to the memorial. He, however, eulo= | gized Mr. Gladstone 's: character, talent, - industry and labors along the lines orl religion and literature « ' Labor Organizer Goes to Sail, . ~Bristol, Tenn., Oct, 12.-The case of R the United Stites against : Edward] _- ' Guerrant~ was in -the federal court at Abingdon, Va., when Guer- [rant was sentenced to eight, months in] \_\ 'The prisoner was a union labor-| =_ | organizer, with- headquarters in In- | danapolis, umd as such violated an or-| | der by Judge Henry C McDowell of | i_ :| the federal court by entering the prem-]|. °\ © f ises of <the Virginia Iron, Coal and: jail, : Coke company to organize labor when <the affairs of the company were in the‘\ if; hands of receivers Scliooltcaclier lulled by a Siour.. Washinvton, Oct. 12.-Indian Agent McChesnev, at Rosebud, S. D., has tel- | egraphed Commissioner of Indian Afr blo ee © fairs Jones that Bdwin C. Tayloe, teacher at the Milks Créek Indian day schook:on .the Rosehud reservation. and , in respo formerly of this city, had been shot - JOnJ and killed by & Sioux Indian belonging . ¥ M04 'in the Porica \Creek country, 'The mur- ie t derer has been arrested The French Cont Strike. : Marseilles, Oct. 12.-The secretary are of the Dockers' union here has notified] 48: 'the miners' committee that he is send- | WJ jng circulars to all ports in France [4 and Algeri@ urging the dock laborers | to refuse to unload any cargo of for- T efgn coal -and calling for a referendum, fist with a view to the céssation of all work upon the docks Strike Crisis In Switzerlpnd. Berne, Switzerland, Oct. 12.-Parlia.] from -t ment Has. authorized \the mobflization. | 14 of 2,000 federal troops, and the: bundes- C Y rath ordered. a regiment of federal in- | fantry, a: 'battation. of sharpshooters, a regiment. of cavalry and two comps-“7 nleg.of engineers to be held in readl~ . ; ness for eventualities ° * Webb Gires Wood to- seedy. - Utica, N. ¥.,.0ct. 12.-Dr. W. Seward t etcalf ¢ Webb has ordered that ten earloads of ; dry hardwood which -\is- piled at. chil |\ piaceat Nehisane, in the Adirondacks, f be sent. to this city and: distributed | among the families of .employe@k of the | $41; 907 072 'in amount t. a\ Zdaily sale oi! money orders during the Mohawk 'and Malone railroad who are: in need of fuel , Ballropil Wase Dispute Settled. 210 . tion regarding wages betiveen: employ . ces of the National Railroad: of co and thatcorporation nas; beep: tis © factorily adjusted The wage#®.{ *1 gineers and . conductors hav 1 Faiged an average of 15 per cent‘ Mayor Would Hang Operafiorl. IC, Carey, . of the striking mine workers. Mayor-] | Hurley created somewhat of. a senga; tion when 'he said that if he had dis | way he would hang President Baer). .. and the other operators on the nearest | .;, tree. Dynamite In the Strike, of Albert Dry, a Philadelphia and,~ Reading. Coal and Iron deputy,. near Minersville, has been Aynamited, and hig daughter was injured. A neighbor . named Ditzel and two others are held... under suspicion. H. M. Jenkins m1. to His Death. ' Stroudsburg, Pa., Oct. 12.-Howard {aleep anundly every night.\ ¢ Arus cnres of Consumption, Pneumonia 'in matchless merit for all Throat and | | Lung troubles. Guaraziteed bottles 50c 'and Q1 00. * Trial \bottles. free at R i ners, [Hermie]: and all druggists M. Jenkins of Philadelphia; one: of. the Falls, near Cresco, this county, fell , the falls and met instant death. The deceased was a writer and one of the °} \| promoters of the Buckhi Seitlement highnoss Chowfa Maha Vajiravudh, crown prince of Slam, accompanied by his suit, reached Washington on a| During their stay herej After breakfasting in their private] 380 WITH $50,” IN GOLD | apartments at the Arlington hotel thel tok crown prince and 'his party donned, . driven to the temporary White House: to 'pay their respects «to President» . All the members of the cabinet now j“ in the city, *Secretaries Hay, Wilson |\» and Hitchcock and Postmaster 'General |P\ dent's military aid, in full- uniform, | W- ef sident aid the families of the | py An im- | ___ mense crowd was present. Lord Rose-r I bery made san eloquent address, but | \ Clty 'of México,\ Oct. 12.=-THe; gues~ : Lynn, Mass., Oct. 12.-Amid plaudits. ® ~of a great crowd Representative James { robD socialist, of Haverhill and | Mayor John F. Hurley of Salem vigor- | ously assailed the coal operators, the | occasion being an opon air mase. meet-| __ ing of Lynn citizens und meinbers. 9 | m organized labor in ald of the families f Pottsville, Pa., Oct. 12.-The house | J .- Hold lip Exprm Near Lincoln and Blow Open. Safe. Fe hooter- Were Experts In Business: and- Neglected Fassengers For ' Git-fetus 61 Strong Box. loolho-nd- on Trail. n\ mun: corllie c. nore ¥. M. C. A. IN MANHA- *j Major llqllorl Want & ~ f Building For the Philpptnes. the conditions of the islands and their needs, asks American philanthr tian association for Manila and says the city in a? roper way and have &A {. greater influeiite on those Islands than | 'any one single: thing, | The building; he says, should occupy n entire blow y suitable to & tropical \V”dynamite then tore ieces, and the robbers ionally fo. keep inguisiti quiet. 'A brakeman who 'ound a revolver pushed in | ' gw _th a warning to go back: ls had learned of it and ard on: the train be'made to hold up the - formation was the affair nithe belief thit the \tip-. Emistaken. 'The express mes: ay ver. did not relax his cau- | & 1 the doors were locked | f $1000 has 'been. offered, bers have a goodstart and | i _clever enough to cover Féigns Insanity. ., Oct. 12.-Paul Wood- | s‘confessed that he alone {1d Jolin Coffin, the boys § were found near Haddon Y\\ his jailers say Annie F, a woman lawyer, had ed to defend him, but he ct p12 The annual re-. Superintendent J. T. oney order bureau of | TheK verage | f. LL, Oct, 12 -Jewels. fOOO and a pocketbook near Brompton, twenty J t of here, and it rolled down | on the Southern railwiy track in a . deep cut. An: eastbound freight -collid-'| ed with the 'bowlder, and the locomo- | tive-and - ix ceark were wrecked. Fire: | i”; |Esonchitis, Coughs, Colds and Crip: prove | propri¢tors of the inn at Buckhill: | should be. propelled by electricity,\ _said Tieutenant Commander John R. tingitaflre” sound law, have a farrpacking effect; b against the Bos‘ young men there, A . away from'home. #ind surrounded with the fiercest enviro im \oI Sare ent, need the con- | self the doctor has purchased anything | that seems to have any value what- | ever, and in his collection are many pictures which he bas gathered at & . 'nominal cost without knowing the gerving and helfiful influence of &A Young Men's Christian . association as. ' well as the increasing body of ehgihle Filipinos, who need to be trained in p American clvillza on and the Protes':> ] tant faith and practice \A million 42mm given now would do-moré for: e country and Christianity In Manila : I than $5000000 anywhere else five. Fears hence.\ The international - committée - of . 'Young Men's Christian associations | bas been for four years conducting a F large work for soldiers in Manila and has many English speaking young men in evening classes . preparing for gov-} [ernment , and civil positions, and it makes the temporary rooms popular ] headquarters for English speaking young men in the islands SU BMARINE MOTlVE POWER American Naval Expert Believes: Electricity Should Be Used. \The submarine boat of the future Edwards, United States navy, the oth-\ T| or day. Commander Edwards, who is | known as dn. expert student of marine upropulsion is making a special study , of submarine torpedo boats, says a | Washington special to the New York | Times. \It is impossible to utilize steam for submarine sailing,\ continued Com- + mander Edwards \as: the heat would - | be, too 'great. Inventors, . therefore, - turned to gasoline motors for surface. [ work and the electric storage batteries - when submerged. 'On the qué stion of .m0tive power opinions of- na¥x | differ>~ I-belléve gasoline mo ora Bhe ould Z‘be abandoned altogether, while others | the aid of a process he had so patched - up the remnants of the canvas that he: hold that they arevaluable for surface work. These give their boats a radius, of action they could not secure by the [ I | line of the figure -of Washington The | ' picture had been retouched, thus con-i' cealing many 'of the original lines. By- ] patience Mr. Volkmer erased what he: use of storage 'batteriés exclusively. The French boats, I understand, use: gelectricity alone, but this: limits their: . range to some forty miles and makes for harbor defense. \I believe it would be possible to. cientiy large 'to accommodate batteries . . which would give a radius of fetion of . several hundred miles, The boats now : being constructed for the navy are: about 120 tons, and I See no reasons operation of submarine\ boats by stor- \Fage batteries exclusively would be a very expensive matter, ag the batter : at least.$25;000, and larger ones would . be proportionately expensive. \Gasoline as a finid does not appear | | to be very dangerous. 'We have found fthat liquid, gasoline can be handled || with comparative safety. You can al: { most plunge a torch into it without set- . Recovering Damages For Noise. In the superior court of Boston a de- - | which is of more than ordinary inter- { est and will, if genérally recognized as - In the sult of: one Rdward F. Baker relaimed and decid- - ed that-50 per gent 'of the award, or $1000 was for damage caused by . noise As th immediate outcome of f road: aggregating about f -the.de€isi on is aflirmed by the our preme court, to which it has been ap- | péaled by the defendant company, the railroad people will | | Boston elévate 'have to pay nd inconsiderable dam- property, as shown by the decrease in has been largely decreased in value. cause it lays down the new principle fible for half the damage and hence should involve increased compensation. Cured Home! rhages of Lungs «Several years since my lungs were so badly affected that I had many hemor-. . | rhages,\ writes A. M. Ake of Wood, Ind took treatment with several physi- E cians without any benefit. I then started | to take Foley's Honey and Tar and my lungs are now as sound as a bullet. I 1 recommend it in advanced stages of lung I \ trouble.\ @ at Rufus P. Luce's, Hartwick. For sale by all dealers and + # a # - ro Renin a Major Elijah W. Halford, U. S. A., who has lived in Manila two years | and was formerly secretary to dent Harrison and is conversant with | for $200,000 for a Young lion’s [GM * that it wouldio more to Ameéricanize | large central court and | R | Washington brings to light a most cu- _ { rious story of how another Stuart por- to securing antique objects and deco rating his home with them. ever the opportunity has presented it- { subsequently proved to 'be very valu- f able. His luckiest find, probably, was that of the original Stuart, {the Equitable building and was one of- : the most famous hostelries of the south.. : increased so rapidly that the hotel was | gpurchased and dismantled in order to' .ern ofiice building During the process yof dismantling Dr. Crim was among {of curios and antique furniture. In the: ggarret he found a large gilt frame,. dis- - colored 'by age and disfigured by rough usage. | nants of an oil painting. Thinking that | the gilt frame would be of some value, | 'be purchased the frame and its tat- | have the frame polished and restored | to some of his paintings, which were. with &a request that he examine the picture and see whether it possessed | any value. A few days later Mr. Volk-: man,. rushed into Dr. Crim's house al-. . most breathless; |-~ \You - have 'A. ®nal “tum-L!\ Ae ex-~ them comparatively valii¢less except J forth the magnificent portrait of Wash- ington in continental uniform. | build submarine torpedo boats suffi- | '-way of Dr. Crim's home. For the work : which originally cost him $2 he has subsequently been offered $1,000, which | he refused. He considers the portrait fi'worth much more than this sum. { why they should not be built of 200 or | more tons displacement. (f course the | ' found its way to Barnum's hotel. . 'Alearned that Zenas Barnum, the found- | 1 er 'Of Barnum's hotel, bad conducted a Ales are the most expensive feature of | § the boats Those in the Holland 'cost | ;and that he was given to life in pubHec | tops. when he cameto Baltimore he brought - f the picture with him, Barnum's first place of business was at the corner of cisio'n hag just been handed down iiMr Volkmer ascertained that the por- : traced it to Barnum's hotel, where for : many years: it occupied & conspicuous Elevated - Railroad | j company ~for damages the presiding ~ judge awarded the plaintiff $2,000, T half the amount - on m chair, which tore the canvas into ' shreds. the garret, where it remained, with | --- { brought to light when the old hotel ' . . was torn down. ; | this decision \sults have 'been filed | | three sittings, ages. The suits a e brought by proper- | ty owners who have had to reduce | Arents. to keep their tenants by hotel | keepers who declare that rooms front- - | ing on the tracks are uninhabitable | j and by numerous individuals whose valuation allowed by the assessors, | 'has been accomplished since the appa- Lratus was installed here several months - 'The case now goes to the supreme court, and the decision of that tribunal ; will be looked for with much interest, - 'not because It will- cost the Boston: 'road an immense sum if the decision . 'of the lower court is affirmed, but 'be: | | wires strung to the pole, offefing, it is ther: | which may be extended even furthe claimed, a greater Hkelihood of inter- | _ in its operation, that in cases of friter- ference with individual rights by cor- 'porations of this class noise is respon- | :~ Curious Stem! smart»: Forgotten Picture. To\. nun-ans and Dust covered. and Was Finally Discovered and Adentifed as One of Gilkert Stuart's - . Original Paintings. A Baltimore dispatch to the Wash- Post says that the recent pub- lication in that paper of the purchase \by Mr. Henry Walters, the well known [ pitron of arts, of one of Gilbert Stu- . original portraits of George trait of Washington was secured by. imothep-Baitimprean.. ‘ Dr. William H. Crim, 41g West Fay- } ette, a surgeon and major in the Fifth reglment Maryland nationgl guard, for '] many years devoted time and money' Whenf identity of the artist and which have |. More than twelve yéars ago old Bar- num's hotel stood on the present site of ; The value of the surrounding property ' the hundréds of daily visitors in quest In the frame there hung in tatters what appeared to be the rem-. tered canvas for $2. It was his idea to to its high luster so as to add splendor. at that time resting in simpler frames,. | The bedraggled frame and its shreds fof canvas were sent to Mr. Volkmer, an artist friend, on Frederick street,. mer,. who was an aged and portly: Ger- } claimed. Mr. Volkmer then explained that by had. succeeded\ in securing a. fair out, called \daubs'\ and at length brought The picture now hangs in the hall- 'Mr. Volkmer then set himself to work to ascertain how the full gized portrait. He' public inn or coffée house in Boston, the home of GMIbéft Stuart, before he | came to Baltimore. He also ascer: . tained that Stuart was improvident The inference naturally was} 'that Mr. Barnum had accepted the | picture in payment of a debt and that Baltimore and Hanover streets and ' was known as the Indian Queen hotel. the hostelry 8 chief ornament. He also place on the wall of the sitting room. One day it tumbled down, falling up- ; 'The wreck was removed to- its identity forgotten, until it was- Dr. Grim also. discovered that the pic- \Ts-m in Pheonix park, || firm a. evhond by fair minded men BAIL! NIT“?! Ol' numeral - It My For ll.’ Years In a Garret | 'been in- the neighborhood of 8,400,000, was cut to 6.514,4%3 in 1851. ' that they were a Dutch invention and I uncommon as to be mentioned as a { ; special feature of bouses that were advertised as \To let.\ In the Tatler, well walngcoted, and sash'd with 80- flash Lights, a very pleasant and con- | venient-Office below Stairs,\ etc. . was Marshal de Lorge at lis new , house at Montmartre. . : this, Lister in 1699 writes in his \Jour- | tune here to find the marshal himself. ' He showed us his great sash windows, down and stood at any height, which before.\—London Standard. to the state department from Frank < Mason, { the great Pennsylvania coal strike and 'the consequent scarcity of anthracite, I ture of this substitute fuel. ; nine manufacturers of this fuel in Ger- ; many, many of them producing more than 100,000 tons annually. north African desert from Tunis to Lake Tchad and lay a cable in it, both | drawn by an engine and moving a mile 'an hour, will open a furrow thirty | bottom. _ _ e > - [on otitis -| mm af caveman in The recent protent of 20,000 Erisht [againat the prociamation of the mi? Musician: placing that olty under what is knows as the \crimes act,\ «tattoos, Fi -. “o\mmwx? Dublin, aw \; :: as other sections of} | Ireland, see ia, -y as needicss as it is] |barsh, puts . «ew wenpon into the! . Eands of th. :~«tiionalist loaders snd | solidifies the uypositlioun to Great Brit] ain's Irish policy into a compact party, | supported by the sentiment of all their countrymen 'and by the sympathy of thousands of Englishmen of the Lib-| eral party who give no indorsement to such exhibitions of obsolete Tory tyr- anny that encourage and invite dis-| loyalty to the British empire. ‘ By an ominous coincidence the proc-{ lamation of the extension of the crimes act and the revised returns of Ireland's! population for 1901 come simultaneous- population of Ireland in that year was! | 4459,775, which fncludes 'also the sol-| - ~diers and sailors doing duty. there at| {the time the count was made: This t shows a décrease of, 245,975 in the ten-| sears between 1891 and 1901, or 52h 1 v cént. The population in 1841, at 'thri last census previous to the grea: | farine, was 8,199,858. It had been increasing steadily along to that time | Jand kept on growing to the famine of | 1846-47, when the population must have | but under the stress of that calamity, through starvation and emigration, it It bas | been going down stegdily since then. | Ireland's popalation today is but little | more than 'half of what It was in 1846. | These figures tell a pathetic tale of physical calamity and misgovernment. |The former was sporadic, but the lat- | 'ter has been constant. Doubtless it was the famine which caused Ireland's down start in ; op ulntion but it is the misgovernmert trat has made the de- cline continuor :. ~~ __ sAsH winbows. Probably a Dutch Invention of the | Seventeenth Century. | 'The history of sash wirdows is some- what obscure, but the. probability is ' that they were introduced into Eng- | land soon after-the revolution of 1688. - The defivation of the word.sash\ in | this sense is the Dutch \sas a sluice- old English “sasse \ In Queen Anne's reign they were yet so comparatively for instance,. No, 178, May 27-30, 1710, | theres this advertisement: f \ \To be lett, in Devonshire Square | | near Bishopsgate, a very good Brick | Hoan»: 01° 8 Reoms of, a Floor,\ nifd, trp. > [good Hall, with very good light and } dark Closets, the whole House being . -From England -they passed into. | France, where the first to put them up Speaking of ney.to' Paris:\ \We had the good for- - 'how easily they might be lifted up and contrlvance, he, said, .he 'had out of England by a final] model brought on | purpose from thence, there \being noth- Ing of this polsd in windows in France As to Briqtiette Fuel. Washington, Oct. 12.-A report upon the manufacture of briquettes comes consul general at Berlin, who féels that the time is ripe, in view of for Americans to take up the manufac- Mr. Ma- son says there are no less than eighty Long Enrroyv For a Cable. The French government is to plow a furrow 1,500 miles long across the to be done at one aperation. The plow, Inches deép and lay the cable in the ture was a lost treasure It was known 'that Washington had given Stuart Two of these portrait were traced. . One 'is in the Connecticut . statchouse at Hartford. | Another is in'}? the private collection of an Englis nobleman, The third was lost 'from view. This is the one now in the pog- session of Dr. Grim Wireless Telegraph on Land. Letters and words have been success- . fully transmitted by wireless telegra- phy between the Naval academy and Washington, says an Annapolis dis- patch. 'This is the first time that this ago. 'The system which was. successfully . used was the Slaby-Arco, that of & the purpose. The distinctive feature 'of the system is the large number of eepting the electrical waves. Joyner Buys Blues. .the races at Morris park. Blués, the. erratic handicap performer, was the: star of the sale and brought $7,000. A. J. Joyner was the buyer. Classified, Isabel-I think that editor man is simply horrid. Judith-Why ? Isabel-Heé placed the «engagement. German firm, which was installed by | [representatives sent to this 'country for New York, Oct. 12.-A sale of horses: JJ in training, the property of Frank Far- |; rell,. took place in the paddock before { \I was a total wreck—could not sleep or eat,\ . writes Mr. i; eers, of Berryman, Crawford Co., Mo. or- two ears! tried medicine from . doctors but receive ; very little benefit. I lost , flesh and strength, was not able to do a good day's work. ] mine iced taking Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discover: and when I had taken one bottle I gould gand my appetite was wonderfully improved have taken five ' bottles and am still improving.\ The sole motive for substitution is to permit the dealer to make the little more , profit paid by the sale of less meritori- announcement of myself to young Sloppington under the head of \Busi- ous medicines. ® He gains; you lose. | : Therefore, accept no substitute fer \Golden Medical Discovery » (Wein: anni inin mon, an ane . ang, | Ay: ~According to the final figures, thef -- {i221