{ title: 'Nassau County review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1898-1921, October 20, 1899, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-10-20/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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T - r Cauntn J^lnctu ' ;i i '• •■I n e e .™ .«*>*»m w . j r iv a s A F A M IL Y SK W S V A V E R O F LO C A L A N D G E N E R A L IN T E L L IG E N C R . T l l B I : SLIO TEA B I T IB ABTABCB FREEPORT, N. Y,. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 181)9. • Greater New York W. *. STIKLE, *■. D.. ~tCIAX a*d SUJtOHOJy F e u rlors, lORGUEMCR 1 SKIDMORE. OOB. FULTON : AND GOLD 8T3., Brooklyn. N. Y. j f K I ^ W T P IL OWo», M ewem Arann. I a U . M b h M * GWB iMMvkM M. la a i k R ANOKA A. tochllleCentrc - ' * > '' »■ VWag* .iummo, CBKTRB, L.L k r . raiLUFs. i e . e o t o h t , FwMwt K T) i AKS h I1 lib A M O A IttO r D t R f c r o m i : I*. M e f T * t x . (M 4 Crown*, OoM FlUHirS OtWr rillhBg. FULTON AND GOi,D STBEXT3, Opp. L» 3 »cr’<i, BROOKLYN, N. V, «. GLCRGE A. MOTT, LAWYER, M Cenrt S i^noroogh o f Drookl jn.N. Y. C lfj BeeldLenee, Lynbrook, Queens Co., N. Y, Telephone, **5I Lynbrook,” “3U0CA Brooklyn.” IhU o iSpeeU I DepoetB i'm * m m ' W-- tmd th e O S P .M .; S e a - T w n j e end Fri- t ■< EEPORTBAHK - • AL, ikwOL ; rwoit , l i . t f . BAlniALU AmMne I * . iFBAOCX. Y W F r o U w L SnfcUA* B. BALL. OMhi*. 1^ SOABO o r M IHM IOM M ^ ummmmdjf T . * P1 ■ . WBUMI0. Milter, n . W w H I l e o . I. — BA. O M wM tll. — ------ g S # « y y |g jg * iiria« iM a B f M M a tB w w A E. A. DORLON, ....BONDED AUCTIONEER. .. Odd Fellows* Block, Felton Street, nenr Chnrrh. FREEPORT. JOHN P . W RIG H T , GENERAL AUCTIONEER, FREEPORT, L. I. Advertising ' 1 ' w w e e — » — T h i s P a p e r IS SURE TO BRING RESULTS. The o nly way to a ttract trade is to mnko know'll what you have to offer. The Liberal Advertiser Seceettfel Merehant. ’M that peeteted - that I can’t put mj hand to a th in g , on’ I dunno when I ’ll got settled in | my mind. Jason U o b b t's dogs 1 ohickens? No, sir, Ian’ I ’d jnst like to see them do it. I tend 1 didn't sleep of much account on Sun day night becanse of a oriok in my knee—runs in my family to have rhenmatiz—an' so long 'bout daylight Monday morning, I got up an’ set at my front window o-looking up an' down the street. Monday's washtime day, yon know, and on account of Aunt Kate's being with as onr’n was largeB’n usual, so I called our hired girl eo’e she could get a good batch of it out of the way before the moa folks turned up for breakfast. \Miss Jones, across tho way from ns, is awfully shiftless about her washin’. Don't remember as I over t till late in the afternoon. n«#n„it oui Well, ft ain't none of my business, youiknow, an’ my motto’s always tend to your own business an' don't meddle with others. But then some people are always mixing up in other people’s business. Oh, ye*, about Monday morning. Well, you'd neser guess so. As I sot there at my front win dow about 5 o’clock I see Miss Haw kins, she that was Miss Smith, you a-oomiug outout off herer house four doors down the to myself, 'What is i-doin' up at this hour? o h house street. Now, says I Mias Hawkins Perhaps she's a-doin' her own work.' Then I re membered that I’d seen her Jane wash ing down the steps on Saturday, an’ I didn’t believe she'd leave her on Sun day. Miss Hawkins was all dressed deliberately like, an' I know from that on’ from her way of walkin' that she wasn't on no doctor's errand. Be sides, she ain't got no family except Mr. Hawkins, an' he’s healthy as a horse an’ always was from a child. Being as I was in the front window I conldn't help taking notice of Miss i Hawkins. Sho jus’ walked over across tho street, with something on her arm, to the Forgusofis, »u’ she knocked door. Miss Fnrgusou stri Job Printing At This Office. IP' 0\TEAS the front i her head out of tho second story win- 1 OeM onty In Mlr-tight P a c k a g e s , I lb., i - a lb., 1-4 io. |f i I KO*MI—Qrasa ft Black PliBsd B l a c k n i x e d HI K O - id k r i b P r i c e p e r lb. 6 0 C e n ts. KO-WELLA—Ceylon & India KO-JBB—Basket Fired Ja pan >YO—Pan Fired Japan | Ot, TEA— Extra Choicest M e f l M . M e a t S c e e w k a L , Price per Ik 75 CesU. HAI-TOh—Extra Choicest J [ 3 E n g liih B r e a k fast. < I Price per lb. f 100 . . < | M M a n a a n d r ack e d by THE O. ft O. TEA COMPANY, *1,34,35 Burling Slip. F . ■, -------------------- It N e w Y o r k . <[ •OLD MSB RSCOMMKNDKD BY NebenB-Smth, Freeport,N.Y . !! eight without hoiefulso front on—an’ she said something to Miss Hawkins, which I couldn’t hoar, though I opened Iho window. Miss Hawkins, sho just nodded an' went around to the side door. 'Probably Miss Hawkins has run oat of coffee or baking powder,' thought I, 'an' sho wants some for breakfast. But why should she wake her neighbors np at that hour? Sho must a kuowed it last night, an’ she i might have sent her Jane.’ \Miss Hawkins stayed at Miss Ferguson's moro’n half an hour, gossiping about her neighbors like as not, an’ when sho camo out sho still j had eomothiug hanging on her arm , which I couldn't mako out. I never saw such things iu this neighborhood au' I’ve lived hero ten years. Miss Hawkins, she just walked home, i Well, 'long ’bout teu o’clock I thought 1 I'd mako some doughnuts like Miss Hawkins makes, an’ I wont over to her hoaso to llnd how she made them. 'Most any woman would bo tickled to death to havo au old cook like mo askin' 'em how they mako things. Miss Hawkins didn’t let ou that sho was pleased, if she, was. She's kinder stuokupish any way. After she told ..................mg ___ . iug au' I sa'iar - _ •' 'Seen MissFerguSWfc--latoJjj? I heard sho wasn’t feeling well. \ “ 'Seen her this inoruin',' sho said, 'an' sho was all right. You must ex cuse mo now.’ \That was all the satisfaction I got, an' I made up my mind I'd never ask Miss Hawkins to help me keep a secret so long as I live, never! I took a fancy to git up early Tuesday morning, and just as I got to the win dow I see Mies Hawkins a-oomin* out of her house with something on her arm. She went down to Meeker's this lime an' rapped on the side door. Miss Meeker mast have been asleep, for the hired girl let her in, an' a floppy-looking creature that Swede girl is. I dunno bow some people mo about tho doughnuts I thought I'd \ttitil up to sceiug her this morning, nuieviwi IN A U LONS ISLAND TOWNS. stand such:u girlsl around. iii stayed oat at the Meekers’ g of my bnsiaeiiss. Hawkins anyway! 'Taint none Well, Miss more’u half au hour. She ain’t never been friendly with Miss Meeker since they disagreed at mission mastin', an’ I know she wouldn’t borrow a pinch of salt from her, let alone coffee. Moreover, Miss Hawkins never was much of a hand to exemplify the good Samaritan, an’ I was clean stamped \venting around the neighb to know whet took her rhood illive Not that it made any differ ence to me, yon j -K _j a fkrmer koetted near Stony Brook, one of the most mabrious ibt IM s State, and was bothered with malaria for years, at times [could.Bot work, and was aKvays very constipated as well. For * I bad malaria so W in the spring, when, engaged in plowing, (ICOuM do nothing but shake. I must have taken about a barrel 1 pills besides dozens of other remedies. but» never obtained «*i»anent benefit Last fall, in peach tint '. I h.id a most serious l o f ditto and then commenced to take Ripans Tabule* upon a fs advice^ and the first box made me all right and I have never 1 without them since. I take one Tabule each morning and night | sometimes when I feel more than usually exhausted I take three in They have kept mv stomach sweet, mv bowels regular end I It had thdwst touch of malaria nor splitting headache since I 1 using them. I know abo^h u I sleep fetter and wake up Ned Ulan formerly. I don't know im w many com plaints 1 Tabules will help, but I do know they will cure any one in the H | was anft I would not be without them at any price. I r consider them the cheapest-priced medicine in the worki, as aba the most beneficial and the most convenient to take, seven yesis of age and have worked hard all my lifes the i as moat formats, both tarty and late and in all kinds of weather, ror cinoyod auch good health as I have since last t 4 ; In 1 nave a* remarked itoy Improved condition and have t are you doing » look so healthy ? \ g a s s s i s m s •ny yon know, but she might come to my bonse some morning at that hoar, an’ I like to know what who might be coming after. Mies Hawkins had something on her arm whee she went home. She ain’t on the committee to collect clothing for the African Miseion, 'cause she wouldn't serve, an' I know she wasn't doing anything of that sort at that boar. Didn't seem likely that sho would he borrowing coffee two morn ings running, ’cause she is proud, and ! Hawkins is well fixed anyway. I jnst couldn't Agger U out, and when I made a sociable call on Miss Meeker ! that afternoon and asked If ehe had seen Mies Hawkins lately, saying that I heard she was 111, Miss Meeker said ehe saw her that morning an’ she was I well as could be. Nyw, I couldn't ask Miss Meeker why Miee Hawkins bed called, 'eease I believe in 'tending to my owa business \This moroin' bein’ Wednesday I got n p about five o'clock to do eome sewin', nn' ns I looked out of my win dow along eeme Miee Howkine again with something ox bet arm, an' she walked right peel my house to the John sons'. She iteyed there twenty minutes, end when I see her earning beck I went oat to meet hgr neighbor- i lj like. ‘“ Good mornin'. Slier Hawkins,’ said I, when ehe reached onr house, j ‘yes are cat early, aren't your\ | \ 'An' so e r e you,' said sh e , a-try- ; «ng lo hide vhst sh e h a d on h e r arm. j \That got my spunk np, though of ; Course I d lli't care w h a t Miss Haw- 1 kins was e car.-yia’, but I thought I'd see for the fan of it. So I said: \ ‘Miss Hawkins, I've been that troubled with, a tooth ell night, I couldn't sleep. Would yon please see if there ii e hole in it?' •Certainly,’ e d V vhet was on pointed when I said Miss Hawkins, an’ then I felt pleased. She had to eome np close. SABBATH SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL U S S O N COMMENTS FOR OCTOBER 22. SOUND STEAMER BOBNED a n ' sh e eouldn't hide whet was on her arm , I was so disappe d id see it that I could have cried, I n e v e r d id like Mies Hawkins anywsy. I d i d n 't believe in interfering will? o t h e r people’s affairs in the least. Not mol But I do like neighborly people, an* I ain’t been able to do a stroke oi w o rk to-day thinking of it. You'd guess whet Miee Hawkins wee rrylng, an’ yon would still be guess in' if you’d seen it. That's xvhal bothers me. I like to be sure ol things. Wliat’d she have? Well, of all things! She was carryin’ a two qrtart pail-with-a-cover-on-it. There, I knew I'd surprise you. I'm that weak to-day that I must go home au get a little tea. People In this neigh- t a ml borhood then they a two-quart pa-with-tho-cover-oe 1 New York Sun. THE QUIET SALESMAN. IIow He Made III* Customer Think auf Ilia Good* Ttkllt. The following article is taken from the Dry Goods Economist: Wo re call watching the movements of a sue cessful silk salesman in order to loam the secret of his success. He was the quietest man in the stock, apparently as dumb as au oyster, but his book at the close of tho day's business was al iebjecl: Ksra1. Journey Is Ju rm e lrm , E ire vlll., 81-31—Golden Teal: Kirn Till.. 13—Comm entary on the liny's 21. “ I proclaimed a fast there.” Ezra rn tired upon Ills work with lasting m il prayer. The Journey was a dangerous onr, especially with all tb s treasure lie carried. Ezra realized tho dinger, but he went for ward In faith. The elite! reform ol Ezra was tb r abolishment ol mixed marriages with the surrounding heathen. The course ol the Israelites was ruining and degrad ing the nation. Nearly their whole history previous to the exile showed how they yielded to the surrounding Idolatry, be cause they refused to drive out the Idol- aters In Joshsu's tim e—n Utsto./ ending in exile on that account, nud the history of soty years slueo the rolurn was a ;ary on the practice which Ezra ways sutifaotory. Oth study of his method i generalship, tact and ability, ami fact that he nearly always stood in sales was good proof that tuck Other salesmen in the stock called him the lucky man, hut a careful \ of selling showed and the No. 1 proof that luck did not out any figure iu his sucoess. When a woman came to the counter end inquired for silk he did not ssk what kind of silk she wanted, but went to the fixture, brought out a piece of silk, laid it upon the oonnter, opened it up and displayed tho goods to advantage. Without saying a word the sales men returned _ to tho fixture und brought another piece of silk nud opened it np ou the counter. \Very pretty,\ remarked the oustomer view ing tho fancies before her, \hut [ wanted something plain.\ With velvet tact the salesman had learned his customer's wants without the interrogation that is eonsidcred bad form in polite society. Having partially learned the customer's wishes he silently began to show plain eilki First'Iret hoo broughtrought a pieceece off gray link. h b o pi o and opened it up. Then came a pli o ti followed by green, and then camo tan, and alongside of the tau was shown another black, and then a scarlet was shown. The salesman was making an inpression on his customer by show ing her that he had mastered colei combinations. During all this time he was study ing the face of his easterner. He noticed an iuclinatinn to favor black and thit his customer could wear blue to advantage, end straightway he showed a combination of blue and In doing so he qnietly removed the otter shades, so they would not at tract the attention of the customer. He then went to tho trimming connter and brought a piece of black jet trim ming and a piece of blue ribbon, and they were shown together and away from other materials. Not until tho customer inquired the price of the materiale did he break the eilence. During all this time, however, ho worked with his face and hands, for ho was evidently admiring the combination as much' as his cus tomer, while puffing the silks to re eomblo parts of a costume. This quiet salesman soon had his customer lauded. He gave tho cue- tamer a chnuce to think and kept the goods talking. SAMPLE OF MIDDLE-ACE BARBARISM The Cruel S'every lu W hich the Vsu* qulihctl OUellere Were H e ld. In 1080 Godfrey of Bouillon, prior to his departure for the Holy Laud, sold his ancestral castle to Omhert, Prince-Bishop of Liege, France, wire thus acquired for himself and his fam ily a very important stronghold on the Trnntenrri-tiieir lAr 68 estates. The castle remaineiT over seven! commentary on th e practice which Ezra rebuked. Tho mixed race of Jews nud - 8a!nnritnns, with their half-hoatheuish cus* soy I u n u k too m u c h tea, but toms, was a living warning of tho results r are too ca r i o u s . Yos, i t was ' of their course. Ezra's work occupied but art n a .w ith .t h o .c o v e r - « l ! ,,~ e|8bt m onths, though It is probable he •pent most of the remainder of bis lifo at Jerusalem. Thirteen years of silenco in tervene nud then Nehemiah camo up to Jerusalem. \To seek of Him a right way for u s.\ That is. to commit themselves to tho g u idance and protection of divine Prov idence and Implore Him to give them a prosperous journey. Their journey lay chiefly through tho desert, nud tho Arab ians and tiam aritaus were likely to attack 22. \I was ashamed to require — a baud 1 so ldiers.\ Ezra had preached trust In •fore the heathen rulers find before th e heathen rulers an d hi Id not dishonor God by asking the Rented Df so uod would not dishonor God usual military escort. He had repi God, the object of his worship, ns supreme ly powerful, and as having tho strongest Affection for His true followers. Thus wo me that this good man had more anxiety for the glory of God than for his own nor* jonal safety. Their faith was rewarded by :ho enjoyment of perfect safety during the whole way. 23. \And Ho was entreated of u s.\ Ezra and the assurance that his prayer had been aenrd. 24. \ I separated twelve.” Appointed to the special duty of being custodians of the iacred vessels. \Vo h ave hero the p articular ’are Ezra took of the treasure of God's sanctuary. Having committed the keep ing of It to God, ho committed the care of It to proper men, though without God they would have watched lu vain. O i r prayers should always be seconded with our en deavors. Do wo expect God should, by Ills providence keep that which belongs to us? Then ought we by His grace to care for that which belongs to Him; let God's honor and interest be our care. The prophet In foretelling the return of God's people and ministers out of Babylon gave the solemn charge (Isa. 52:11). \Bo ye clean that boar the vessels of the Lord.\ Li Zor- nbbabel's time the vessels wore delivered by number; here, by weight, that It might asllyaslly appearppear if anyny wereere missing.s? Thlsr The Nutmeg State Raced For With a Raging Fire. Lite HEROIC WORK OF RESCUERS. th e Steamer re c o v e r e d on Fire in the Karly M orning—She W as Headed Foi Shore at Once and Beached Near Sand* Point—'iver One II und red Per* •one Were In Danger. N ew Y ork C ity (Special).—A llthat Is left of the steam er Nutmeg State of the Bridge port Line, which caught lire on her way from Bridgeport to tills city is a blackened hulk on the sands just above Pros pect Point, 1 about * two miles below ;‘ie village of Glen Cove. Arn^ong the lead are: Samuel Jayne, of Bridgeport, oaggage master; Patrick Coffey, m ate of Sutmeg State; Thomas Murphy, a member hf the crew; John Connors, one of tho crew; in unknown woman, passenger, drowned; au unknown child, passenger, drowned, and an unknown man, passenger, drowned- The catastrophe was one of peculiar hor ror because it happened so near to help, so slose to shore. Tae lack of trained hands to handle lifeboats appears to have been one of the causes of fatalities, though, Ivid the passengers themselves been entirely tractable nil of them at least might have escaped. Captain C. M. Brooks, the commander, is toon as he saw the futility of trying to extinguish the flames, decided to run his vessel ashore. Boats were lowered, and all irruugeuieuts were made to save the live* >f passengers and crew, numbering over one hundred persons. After nil who could jo seen bad been provided for in the small ooats Captain Brooks ordered that full iteam be turned on, and the Nutmeg dtnte was headed for the bench. She was sent ashore near Sands Point, the flames and smoke a ttracting many craft that wa> for hours after the disaster. It Is believed t i n t nearly all of those who lost their lives were c lught in the burning vessel. So prompt and energetic was the work of rescue that, in the judgm ent of leveral witnesses, nearly every person who managed to escape from the doomed ves sel was picked up by some one of the res cuing boats. Several members of the crew, however, weru caught lu the lower part of :he boat, and were unable to get to the deck. These men mot death as If In a lire i h e first two boats lowered from the Durnlug steamboat capsized, and there was Intense excitement am o n g the pas sengers aboard the Nutmeg State. All bad been routed from their berths a t half-past five o’clock, and men and women, not wait ing to dress or gather their clothes, a a If a w mi w , intimates th a t such as are intrusted with j lug to dress or gath e r the ir clothes holy things are concerned to remember, scrambled Into the cabins and on the both In receiving their trust nud In dls* docks. Flames already were eating their charging It, that they must shortly give a J way toward the bow and the stern, and very particular account of it, th a t tffey | great clouds of smoke were rolling up the may be faithful to it and so give up theli ' stairways. Tho crackling of the flames account with joy. Tho silver and gold Added to the terror of the passengers, were a present to the house of God that ' In the wild confusion from ttm time the the king nud h h counselors had set apart, lire was discovered to the time the last man Ib is gift am ounted to about $ ‘2,075,000. 1 same off the blazing bulk it seemed to be 25. \And weighed unto them tho silver,'• a case of selfish consideration for tbelr own etc. Wo may gather from thlft th a t the personal welfare only with e verybody ou silver and gold were In bars or Ingots, and board. The crew, according to the passeu- not In coined money. The Persians had g*rs, used brute force In getting the first coined money at this time, but the irons- opportunity to escape. The passengers ury kept the bulk of Its stores in bur? trampled over each ether In their efforts to (Herod., III., 9G). jrowd into tho life boats, and it was ex- 26. \Six hundred and fifty talents of sll* trcraely difficult to lower the boats or to ver.” A talent of silver was about tlGOO. , take any sane measures to save the pasaen- Of gold a hundred talents. Gold Is usually gers. worth about sixteen times as much a s sll- Alter the two lifeboats were capsized and ver. The whole treasure was w o r h ii,- tho passengers and crew left floundering 000.000 or $5,000,009. in the water, the crews and passengers lu 27. \Vessels of line copper.” Probably the other boats refused to listen to the eu- some factitious . metal made there that trea les of those In the water, and dozens took the polish and assumed the bright- ; of the women anil children and half d ressej ness of gold, and because of its hardness men had to cling toJ^ie upturned craft ufl- was more durable. There Is still a fact!* til boats from the City of Lawrence picked tious metal of this kind made among tho them up. Asiatics. It requires much art lu making, ! The body of a woman and of a child about but thethe constituentonstituent m aterialsaterials arere of smallmall fourour yearsears old,ld, evidentlyvidently mother and The Mayor and Councilman of Mayaguez, capital of the province of that name. Porto ftlco, have resigned owing to political dif ferences. u' The taking of the census throughout the island of Cuba ha* begun. The people re- ;elve the enum erators well and give all tho doatr )d Information readily. No dlf- (Iculty Is expected In the cities. The six artillery batteries stationed at Honolulu, Hawaii, have lost between twenty and thirty men In the last few lays by desertion. All the soldiers there Are anxious to be sent to Manila. Tbay ire willing to stand thirty days in the guardhouse for the chance of getting to the seat of war. The Mayor of Guannjny, Cuba,, was handed a list ot thirty people whom lie was requested by the inhabitants to expel from the town, lie Immediately issued a proc lamation or itrlu g the people to keep the peace. The general belief in Honolulu, Hawaii, Is that when the facts are known President McKinley will revise Ills order nullifying all snles of public lands, and directing that mles be discontinue l. The m atter will be taken to the United States Supreme Court by several wealthy planters. Dmneetic.y, William Leggett, of Rochester, N. Y., In the employ of (laskMl's Midway Company, was fatally Injured by an elephant at Knoxville, Tenn., because he struck the animal on tho head with a hammer several weeks ago at Battle Creek, Mloh. Rear-Admiral flampson, who has been de tailed to the Charleston Navy Yard, arrived in Boston n few days ago and assumed com mand a t the Yuri. Rear-Admiral Norman H. Farquhar a r rived at Old Point Comfort, Va„ from Washington, nud Is uow In command of tho North Atlantic Squadron, succeeding Roar- Admiral W. T. Sampson. Under the spell of the preaching of the Rev. Dr. A. B. Simpson, the sum of 168,300 In pledges was raised on Sunday, for the j Christian and Missionary Alliance at Car- ! negio Music Hall, In New York City. | Leo Catena, seventeen years old, who I lived witli his parents In New York City, ! was taken to Bellevue Hospital violently ! Insane from smoking cigarettes. boiler explosion at Rrownsburg. . „ 111 ___ , _ ree men were Instantly killed and jwed uniulst.jk ioio signs of contact with nve others were seriously Injured. The .he lire. Ih e child wore only y n cotton slip, 1(l||il Rre L bu W usbou , engineer; Nate evidently u night dress.^^The uposiUion o n j Cook hen<1 hawyert an(i Milton Roberts. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. W eehlneten Items. Commander Taussig, of the Bennington, sent a report to the Nary Departm ent has sent a repo rt to th e Nary Departm en t praising the work of officers and crew In nn engagement a t Malabon. Many trust officials and attorneys arrived In Washington In answer to the subpoenas of the Industrial Commission. They a p p a r ently fear that there may be legislation re garding the appointm ent of a commission to control the trusts. N Major Woodhull, Chief Surgeon at Manila, has cabled Surgeon Bternberg, re questing th a t the potns of female nurses nt Manila be Increased to correspond with the Increase of troops under General Otis's command. The task of recruiting the volunteer army for the Philippines Is practically completed. It was announced at the War Departm ent that all the regiments have been tilled except one of the additional colored regim ents, the Forty-ninth, which needs less than five hundred men. Dr. Srnner, former Commissioner of Im m igration, told the Industrial Commission he was opposed to further restrictions on immigration. Australian federation Is considered an accomplished fact, according to Consul- General Bruy-, nt Melbourne. S. R. Callaway, president of the New York Central Railroad, testified before the In dustrial Commission that be favored pool ing among railways. Former Speaker Reed was among coun sel who appeared n few days ago before tho United States Supreme Court. He moved the admission of three attorneys and entered a motion for a writ of certi orari In a steam ship damage case from California. Ourur Adopteddopted Island*.slands. O A I The Boers showed everv courtesy to Mr. onvnhnmonynhnm Greene,reene, thehe Britishritish Agent,gent, oun ^ is Journey “ C G t B A o Ids jo from Pretoria to Cape Town, 3 uth Africa. Six of President Kruger’s body g u ard escorted him to the Trausva border. Tho burghers of tho Orange Fn State were equally courteous. c m a of s f y o e i value. Vessels of this metal, because of daughter, were washed ashore about half their lustre and durability for ornamental a mile above the place where the Nutmeg and domestic uses, are In many rospoeti Stale was forced ashore. The woman was | j tl f| j more valuable than gold Itself. Drams, pnrtmily clothed and parts of h er dress j rQl| t |ir Durlcs, worth about au English sovereign, showed unmlstak iblo signs of contact with | uve olhe or $5. die tire. The child wore on u cotton slip, , Rri 23. \A freewill offering unto the Lord evidently u night dress. The supposit nook he B S B E E H B K s g u f r iB a s lE t i f e s i s t i s s s t ................... 1 * ---------- irlliing nnd exhausting experience, which President McKinley attended the wel- uda u hero of him. He supported his j come home from Manila of the Thirteenth redged motherother andnd a womanoman ho didid notot l Minnesotainnesota Regimentegiment In Mininneapolis, > nt Jerusalem as v way of Ezra to tho needed roforix 29. \The chambers of the .house of tho either side fatx. JL XI*3 C 111 Lord\ are tho» roomsooms placedlaced r p on building (see I Bishop of Liego until 1134, w b e n R ^ ry^?'r j|!)J TheueieM imud, Count of Bar, n 1 1 ‘ 4 tone we the old counts of Bonill A m a a w ho d n M R In M and Kings 6:5), kuow, Mrs. Henry T. Purcell, of this city, I made a speech broadly favoring expansion partly as chambers for the priests, partly ,u the water for an hour, and they were ami retention of the Philippines, us storerooms (see Neb. 13:5;. ill dually rescued. Several times bo feared j, r . Drumond, of Boston, a member of 31. \We d eparted ou the twelfth d a y .” no would have to give up the struggle and j the M assachusetts Legislature, was killed The company began to form and arrange irown with his mother and \Mrs. Purcell, by his guide, who mistook him for a deer for tho Journey upon the tirst day of the Wilt’s health Is not robust. and shot him while they were hunting In mouth. Upon a review of lira company Samuel Jayne, baggage master, who lost ............. Ezra observed the lack of Levltes, and the bis life, Is described as the hero of the tire, time used In securing tbelr union with the | | 0 discovered the outbreak and gave the returning exiles, and in weighing the alarm. Ho ran about awakening nil he treasures, etc., took up the time until the could, nud the flames were raging fiercely twelfth day. Ahuva Is the name both of a when at last ho tried to escapp. He was town and small stream , not far from tho then ou the upper deck, and in Jumping river Euphrates. This would be a natural (truck his forehead against the guard- course to pursue from Shusbau. This ho - mil. stunned, ho fell Into the water, und count of Ezra’s preparation and journey when a launch went to his assistance he Is a beautiful example of method and thor» was almost dead. He died soon after ougbness which Is ot great value iu the aboard a yacht. If ho had not sooour work of God. Ezra sought tirst tho on sly made his way through the am prosperity of God’s cause, but he did not alarm the passengers tho loss of life count It lost tim e to spend twelve days iu bavo been much greater, preparation for tho Journey. Time used Tb© work of taking passengi for prayer Is never lost time. Time con- , loomed vessel was done none suiued In perfecting plans for God’s work ; she carried * Isspent time. Always take time to the Maine woods. Mrs. M attie Asklns, of Thompson, Mloh., hA made a confession that she killed her fourteen-year-old daughter with morphine. The mother then adm inistered the drug to her son nnd also to herself, but the polaon did not kill. Pearl Hart, tho female bandit n few days A/o broke jail at Tucson, Arlz. She es caped by cutting through n wall ten feet from the floor, tihe must have had an ac complice. Bishop Henry C. P o tter jn fore the Protest! FIGHTING ONTHB BORDER Boers and British Clash at Makking M l 0.\*. £!, i n . Hons ol A»U eg, STATE NEW * rtstiee* R ace F e r t i l e Stale. Twelve en Fish Coimmlaelcn Twelve em ployee of the New T e a t Mete l»h Co have located tbeeeelvee various points around Lake teperter. and Other Points. ARMORED TRAINS ATTACKED. Repeated AeeeeUe bv lloere Repuleed With e Reported Lose of Three Bevi- dred Killed—A Sklrieleh Hear Spyta- fonteln—Coast Towns Crowded W ith Refugees—Cecil Rhodes at Kimberley. C ave T ows , South Africa (By Cable).— Colonel Baden-Powell, who commands the small British force holding Mafeklng, is m aking a successful resistance to the a t tem p ts of the Boers to take that plaoe. Advices have been received to th e effect that he h ad mad«.n.*ortle against theenem y and Inflicted severe loss upon them. The re port says th a t 333 Boers and eighteen Brit ish were killed. The town will be relieved as soon as reinforcements can be forward ed to it. It is feared, however, by those having friends and relatives there th a t the Doer force will be strengthened and the British defenders overcome by mere weight of numbers before aid can reach them. There Is a strong force of Rough Riders, headed by Cecil Rhodes, at Kimberley ~9lu» Boers are extremely anxious to capture Mr. Rhodes, they believing that with him a prisoner they would hold a s trong card to play against the British. An armored train reconnoitred Bpyts- fouteln from Kimberley and engaged the OBXXBAL JOOBEBT. (Commander ot the Transvaal forces.) Doers a t that point. Five Boers were killed and seven wounded. The British suffered Dispatches confirm the capture by the Boers of Newcastle and a num b er of minor points on the Natal border. The coast towns a re crowded«with refu gees from the Rand. The authorities are making every effort to relleve the distress that Is prevalent among them. Some ot these refugees were compelled to leave tho Transvaal with nothing but the d o t bee they wore. A resident o t Johannesburg, who left that city a few days ago has arrived here. He says th a t four thousand British subjects remain In Johannesburg. The Boer Gov ernment has made excellent arrangem ents for safeguarding property there. A s trong force of special police, chiefly Germans and Frenchmen, armed with revolvers, patrol the streets. The Boers seized the telephone at Mod- der River and attem p ted to speak with Kim berley, hoping to learn the disposition of l he British forces. The manoeuvre was discovered and frustrated. According to advices received here the British have blown up the Hopetown bridge over the Orange River, with a view of checking the Boer advance southward, Later advices say that the bridge w Late r advices say th a t tl is been blown up by tho 1 railway structure, but ot west of the railway, over loachlng road passes. bridge which tlsh Is not the twelve miles blob the old I'ARI.1 A HRNT FOR WAR. English ren t e s Unite In Plans fer Trans vaal Campaign. L ondon (By Cable).—For the third tim e during the Queen’s reign Parliam ent meets In tho autum n for the definite purpoee of providing supplies for a m ilitary cam paign. The emergency was quietly described Tuesday In the Queen’s Speech as a plain requirem ent of law th a t P a r liament should be summoned when the reserves were called out for service lu Africa. Both houses were In a serious mood nud settled down to business with less formality than usual. Lord Salis bury lost no time In providing tbe^eue that civilize and Improve the raoee In Souths at various points arotte d Lake Be parlor. trout, which e r r lobe .hipped to No* to r t b .ich .r l* . e e d l i te r p i..ted la the w a le* of the State. Troet . r e bewloelh*lohpeW lokpewe, of th e Stele. Tro o t ereb ewloale* e, and will contleoe to rpaw a aatll late fa December, thor.eh t h e e o m i a M a a * a p a r t ’ ttoas will c e n e November I, th e el oped rea son beginning thee. The egg* « r t gath ered from flab caught for the arnrhef. The m»thoX of g athering Is simple. Whoa ire b rought *ard - - - Th e metho d of g u therin g Is simple. ___ _ the female flxh e re b roug h t ab o by the n e t. they are turned over to the . r e n te of the com mission, who theaL ' - •qn coning the belly i f th e lab till the eggs Bow IMo a rail o r ta b . . They a n . then IBUPcdlately fertlUaed fro * th e mW J of male neben obtained la tb s ns a r t wav r end thoroughly mined with th e eggs by a broom handle or o ther Im p twaaeV ha the egg* spoil whee exposed to thoateaafhp- tinned for three or foer mlantea, l b s * operation* m a rt be eoedeeted gulebfy. After the d ay's catch the eggs are neehed la little trnrn with bottom* o l eettea fiat- nel. through which water t i permitted to drip, keeplsg them motet a a d co o t It eaefn lly handled they will haaa a lea# time. T h .v are hept, how e v er, a * leegw than to aeeneaary to transport them l a the batchariaa where they are to bo reto r t, i l l • to be caught ee Lake Pupor* •ate hateherin* la tb* E a a t.aadth* W e e * ota a a d U a lted Htata* ageata are a mo at 100,1 a and United m e t * eg eats are I _____ rk. The erop of pike for th e West a n leherie* baa b e * gathered, had ,000,000 agga were thlx Bummer thkw m waters o l Northern Minnesota. Childroa toalpad bv the M e * The State Charltl* Aid AaaeeUtlon at • ' Albany has moelvada report from a apodal committee declaring that the aamhorof -•hltdren placed lo private le-tttattone at public expense baa lecreated at mot* the* a normal ratio. This to laid to M d a s to nxporienee of the Depart meat of ObarfU* In oommlttlag destitute ehfldreei foliate on the part of the Oommteoloaer Of Oharf- tie. to eomnly strictly with the rail* o f the State Board governing Ih* reeeptlea a r t retMtloa of Inmate* In ehatltable teetttn- tlonc, a id Ignoranae oa the part of the managers of some ol the ItiMtetleoo re garding their powers of pUelag eat chil dren. The report reeommead* that the rules be so changed a* to require a rata- reatlgatlon to be Mad* wtlbfu eae year from the period that a child to placed la a* Institution, that thaee relnvartlgatloasho reduced to writing a id kept aa a record end that a record be kepi ol the e a r n * aad addresses of ell penoas vtoltleg In m a t* It Is alio reeomroeudad that. las pent ore of Ilia lloird should examine some ot the , selecting thorn at madam. ihlMren. selecting thorn at lest of llie thoroughuem ol .-ommUtlng agencies. Table* compiled Henry N. Leohtreoker, Inspector e l l__ State Board, show that la the lataat*' la* itltutlona there was a s d o e r . ass of thirty Inmates during MM, Ml In MI7 and eighty- six la MM. In children's laatttattoas th e n was a deoroaiedn MW, MM aad MOT, b at a wry material Incraas* ol 111 la the year ism . The normal Inerwae for that yaaf Leontis PaaHarlaie toereed. The idiulnlstrgllon building of tM . Loomis Hanltnrlum, a abort dtotaart oat- side of Liberty, was destroyed by fire. TIM lire was caused by th o e ip loele* of aa a t co hoi lamp la the weal era aad o f the ball* lag. The loss toptaead al lieM W l ' anoe, 1 90,000. Thera warn ao fat All of the inmates, who namharad loo, were taken put without Injury, aratloai will be eommeaert at rtei build the burned strutter*. The building, which was e l aloes, was the | W of J. Plsrpont Morgan, of Now Tort. MM sanitarium, endowed by the 1st* Dr Loomis, wan opened la the summer Of IMS There have been 004 pet lea la lu tb* IrtW tutlon during Ih* past year. Burroendlag the burned building were twelve edUegei need by tb* sanitarium, all gifts of Nee York people. There are the Hlpeae eotlago, Irving cottage, Wloford cottage, aad Uto Dr. m u bbert oottags. Dr. Xtubbert to ehW physician of t b . sanitarium, and to now la Europe. Of theee, the o ily building In jured was the Sloane cottage. Few Deer P e r t b . * p o rt— a. Reports from the Adirondack* show that tb* deer season this yapr hue beau any* thing lint satisfactory, nolwllhnthadlag -he jeer ------ ----------- \ ------- uMuada without warning i , mil*ile oll thehe hunter.unter. Oa*ne a m o t h O sportsm an I t hat t be woods seemed u n asunlly full of twigs and boughs, and oooe a toot to these a oraokllajf so u s e , s a d th e I to helple s to compete with the quick end laat-neelog deer. Until now the t baa been ao thick th a t th* hunter baa imperatively amall chance for grpttoo irtrldge. Oa* feature of door ‘ ns far this Barton has been t h e < • the animals of the m o n aUtaa ud». They all frequented th* vlna* Bear bodies ot water. Wormwood M . O a i-ooad. d e s o e u d a u t ol , took it into h is h e a d to deny t h e leg a lity of t h e pur- tae, nud fort! r th w ith luid aioge to the fo r tr e s a . 11 p roved im p regnabli ever, And lliau u id ' wav oblige h e u s t m r who tra i let him iu. ehna c, nu d fo It proved impregnable, bow- lliauuid' wav obliged to se duce the gaullw r who traitorously let him iu. Tho reigniug bishop, Alexander 1., died of grief, but his successor, the cruel end licentious Alberon II., with the assistance of the Count of Namur, blockaded the castle, aud in 1141 was successful in retaking it, as tho in mates fell short of water. Alberon, after having ordered the whole garri- sou to bo well beaten, graciously granted them their lives, but trans ported them all to a farm called Ferme dea Oise'iera, where they were stabled aud treated exactly like cattle. Scarce ly kept alive, forced to do all themoit degrading work, their coudition of filth aud the privations to which they were exposed caused them to contract a peculiar kind of leprosy, and they suck into indescribable abjection. Their names and those of their chil dren were carefully registered, in or der that none might escape; and fifty years after the memory of tho coun try people had,,so confused facts that the Oiselcrs, is never done w o n .. * ______ Is tho careful m l u i s r ^ m n tho mission which callod Ei that he coul-i bot afford to mnxlnu bl. compauy complete and a! lug for the safe-keeping of the treasul for the house ot the Lord. When he bad douo all his part ho could eoulldnntly be seech Hod lo give thorn a sale Joaruoy. 31 “ Wo came to Jerusalem .” The dan- i aeqiiuieu luem seive. w .n, gcrous journey was completed with safety agree that Captain Ilrooks, who Is a selfi at the end of lour mouths. “ Aliodo three nisn of long experience, was one of tbo lust days.\ That is, the? rested that long. Oa 1 to leave the burning vessel, tbo fourth day the treasures were weighed j The Nutmeg s tate, a wood selcrs, as those poor wretches were called, wore supposed to bo de scendants of Jewish slaves, brought buck from Palestinrf by Godfrey of Bouillon, although neither Godfrey nor his brothers had ever returned to Eu- So long as these eminently Chris tian bishops remained dakeaof Bouil lon, they kept the Oiseliera in the moat rigorous slavery, the greater part of them always inhabiting the Ferme des Oiselcrs. Later ou under the Prince of Auvergne, the Oiseliera be came practically free, but the infe- ■nous record still existed, end was only destroyed in 1840,'since when the fatrtiiee of these unfortunates have be- c'-Se more or leas identified with the rest of the population. —CornhiU Magazine. To Core Car Slekaeee. Sufferers from car sickness have not the secret of telexing the body, end so they unconsciously resist th* mo tion ot the cars. It is another proof of the advantages of letting things go. Belat the body, keep the feet from the floor either on another seat or ou e beg and there will not be nearly aa much strain. Lifting the feet from the floor prevent* one from feeling tb^ vibrations of the moving car. A beacon light is to be erected off Duert Point on the Isl. of Mali, as e memorial to William' Black, the nova* list. Da art Point is th# scene of the •t*y of “ Macleod of Dare, \j Roily Picked Up by • Yat tit. S tamford , Conn. (Special).—A Boston yacht ou its way from New York City ran through a lot of burned wieekuge, sup* and bunded over to the custody of the i polled boat, which wa* built seven years officiating priests of tho temple. Tho re- ■ ugo and was a first-class craft of her kind, turned exiles offered burnt-offerings, nud ; belonged to tho Bridgeport Steamboat Ezra delivered Ihe royal commission to tho j Company. Hhe was 190.7 feet long, 34.2 m agistrates, while the J.ovitlcal portion ol ; (0et wide and ha i a depth of 13 feet. Her the company assisted in performing tho : Det tonuugo was 732. She was double aidltlonal work which the arrival! ot so leaked, manv now worshipers occasioned. PENNSYLVANIA’S FORESTS O t t v e r e o r S t o n e to A id A c t i v e l y In S e c u r * I n c R e s e r v e s F e r th e S t a l e . Dr. J. T. Holbrook, the State Forestry Commissioner of renasylvania, will have ‘be . substantial support of Governor Stone In the movement to protest the 'o r ^ t s of the Commonwealth und to establish great forest reservations. Com- •nlssloner Rotlirock has been all over :he Slate, and he has secured options on leveral tracts of land aggregating about 100,000 acres. This laud can be purchased for a dollar or thereabouts an acre, and it ;s the policy ot the State to purchase wher ever it Is to the advantage of the Common- The tnort serious obstacle In the way is : lie depleted condition of ahe State’s Trens- jry. Ooyernor Stone nays lie will gladly io what he can to help along the forestry movement, but he cannot see bis way Hear to the approval of an expenditure lu- voivlng •100.000 with the State Treasury 13,000,000 behind. There is no doubt, however, that he will stretch a point to enable Commissioner Rot brock to accom plish wbst he has set about to do. Theee State reservations are not to bs in any sense mere private preserves as this notice wbloh the couimleelooer has caused to be posted on all the tree s will show: ‘This land belongs to the State of Penn sylvania. Destruction or removal of tim ber or other property Is forblW en. Law- allowed oa a r c h l r ^ S n to bis and then be assign George L. Griswold, formerly Tax Col lector of Norwich, Conn., lias been sen tenced to tho Connecticut State Prison for two years. There are three complaints against Griswold, one alleging the mlssp- I proprluUon of 115,000, another the misap propriation of 15400, and a third the role I use of SHOO. ^Alexandria. V*., lias • Celebrat Ion. The founding of the city of Alexandria Va., 150 years ago was celebrated h few days ago with a a elaborate outdoor dis play. Crowd* of visitors from Washington and the surrounding country thronged the streets, Hunting and tho national flag adorned all tho bull ness houses and p rivate re-ldenees. A. 8. Marker Heroine* a Rear-Adm iral, The retirem ent of llunr-Admlral Henry L. Howisoa has resulted in Hie promotion • f Captain A. H. Darker, commaudunt of the Norfolk Navy Yard, nt Norfolk, Va., rear-adm iral. or oth er property Is I ful h in tin g and Ashing State lands, but the tin cs must not be BLIND CHILD MADE TO SEE. X-Ray Revealed a T a m e r om the Bi • f • Paralytic. Harriet Hellbulb. five years old and foi two years blind and a paralytic, has had her sight and the use of her limbs stored through the agency of the X-rays. The operation woe successfully performed The operation was susceae fully performed In » Chicago hospital. Two years ago the child fell from a porch to the eldjewalk, a dletaaoe of sixteen feet, striking on her bead. The fall left her totally blind nnd with her eight side parolylsed. A few days ago the X-rays were applied aad reveeled e tumor the else of an egg preeelng on the brain. The shell wee trephined directly over the ejet ee shown In the skiagraph and the tumor wee removed. The child wee able to move her limbs on recovering nnd Is now gradually recov ering her sight. Semde My— Ward* aa Roar. Eighty thonennd words nn hour can he sent on one wire by e new system of aelett telegraphing, the Invention of two Mas- C y c ln e N o t e s , Sunday bicycle races la^k Rapport In Chicago. The bicycle is said to be losing some of iu popularity lu Pittsburg The fr»»e-wheel device will be applied to the fcltalulegs iu this country on next year's ■del. A little attention now and then will keep the wheel looking much more attractive than if neglected. Although it hs* thousands of wheelwom- en, Melbourne, Australia, docs not possess one women’s cycling club. The latest bicycle attachm ent Is a sheep •hearing machine made at Birmingham, England, for use io Australia. The King of Siam has ordered a new bi cycle lit fed with a free wheel. A Denver (Col.) m in bos Invente 1 a sub stitute for rubber called oxalloe, which, be $»ay>, will reduce tho price of tires by oue- As an Indication that the demand for wheels Is expected to be very great next year, the big m anufacturers are planning 4o Increase their outputs. A bicycle thief recently arrested In Paris adm itted that he bad stolen more than two hundred wheels, e friend in London dis posing of them /or him. \Perhups the buyer of e cheap machine gads comfort In the reflection that the money which be saves on his purchase will be useful for kit funeral expenses,’\ eeys a and made his escape. The Socialistic Convoutlou In Hanover, Germany, has resolved to move in the ItelchstHg for tlie abolition of the less ma- jsste paragraph of the Penal Code. Hiram Maxim is preparing to send from London two batteries of Maiim-Nordcn- feldt guns to the Philippines for the use of the American troops. The Queen has seat a personal contribu tion of •2000 to the family of the French tailor recently shot by the British gunboat Leds while fishing in English waters. Formal notification that a state of war exists bot ween the Houth African Republic aud Great Britlen was made to the French Government by the secretary of the Boer agency iu The Hague. A circular has l>een sent to the Inspec tors of the Royal IiisU Constabulary asking for volunteers for the new Houth African police which it Is proposed to organize. Telegrams received a t Vienna from Linz, capital of Upper Austria, on the Danube, report that the inhabitants of that district are in a s tate of terror owing to S series of \ J a c k the Ripper\ murders. Five worn en have been murdered. Arthur Kherburse Hardy, the newly ap- jfOiQted United States Minister to Greece, with Mis. Hardy, bos arrived a t Athens. An Imperial irftde Lae been Issued Is Constantinople, Turkey, ordering the re building of Armenian churches and schools Continent In Sympathy W illi Los don (By Cable).—Continental ) fur as it can bo ascertained, l ion, so fur as It can b< largely anti-British. Gome* Offer* to Ret one II erase. General Gomez, in a letter published Iff ere of Havana, Cuba, says be has tbo papers of Havana, Cuba, eeyi three horse* which he acquired during the war, and which therefore do not belong to him. Now that the war Is over, end, Iboffgh he has a great love for the horeoe, he does not feel justified in rotalolog th possession. If anv one can pro- ship, the horses will be returned. leeergente Driven From Perse. Major Bell’s regiment, moving from n position northwest of Bteolor, e few days ago, drove the enemy oat of Poroe. One American was killed end one wounded. The Flilplnoe loet a number o l killed nnd ided. The Amerli wounded. The bollock carte of •optsrod two Armenians. T b . British <fov.rnm .nt to arranging for th . .nrollm .nl of 500 Newfoundland flshrt* men In t b . naval raMrva. In ter* ! In t h . movement to lietng quickened by t b . Tree*- veal war orl.to. The French High Court nt Perl., tins dls- minted t b . r . . . ageluat M. firosjaea. ne vus*! of trva»o* In cemicetfon with lb* Deroded* trial. T b . |iro««cutieg o f l i e r , of tb* Freeek O o v .r n e .n t beve been ordered to prof* a cbsrgs of m o e slsegbtcr egeleet the or- gactisrs of tb* r e a l buWight et Deoil where on. m a . we. tram p led lo deetb by tb . Mceplug ball nnd severe! others wets sever.1/ injured. A are al Hakodate, J a p a n , weollli to lb . d e tr a c tio n of eeerly M l boot a boot c o .- earth el the town. Oeldtovo -M n e e d r t” lo flee F rocrtncc Word Isos been rcertred lo Clcreleod. Ohio, the! the » 0 Glevelaed soldiers to Fomrteeell the Phlli renetoec, their pay, WM _____ a M enll., Laving been spent. 1 has been raised to uriag t h e e u s e s . bam la Moatla, - Mew Ss^to.srt XctSrt. to Xerttoeo. The large n.mbee of torteptoM p di rected lottos* wbloh her# been w irtrtdM Tbo O o w n e r tt of M M Ii aeiOltoc No sfttosos to eelpwto to Oohflj ee* I M hero toortrt Herart r t MU rtrt Miff beat o e f l M i Eeongbga* h e e l ell well o e tb* •■III to brat r Tillage. Work oo Akron’s • M g nOMfO for lb* village's protto p o r t boo I eroded eelll eurleg. It Will the* I to com p ieties. Blebbetg, Allsgeey Oooofp, s o d XIploy C b eeleeqee Oeeoly, report lyphoM fetret Duektrb boo boeght • hose v regee e e d h orgeotolog the f l a t sompeoy of a peU i * deporttoeet. Willie, the foerteoe-yser-oM see of Aeg hat Wtooteki, of Xosheetor. white pfeytog with a e a e wee *«*tdentally shot. B* died of Mi flefnigo. e low boon later. Governor Xcoeovelt hoe oshrt Ih* Boeic if Monegsrt of the Albion s te le Howe w i. te eet eelll who iwelgnrt her heard be assert. ■fhsBid, e ralotto, of D .e k l r t wee eoeldr t bp bis w e e bsMeoe he draaX ■oee after be beogrt < • after heheoght e raaor, want I* lbs A of Lets M e, aad stashed the ertertai the left am . A dshemeo le n d bh beak ef r hod: 1 Oh den Kaatpse see l oetoo Shier. i, s laodtog Leaden kerrMsr. weal te tb* rttoroeHoeel r t t o O h O M ^ M e r o r t Des won ro e - i l e the Oo.no* — i *neer«ellna. vebjeS we* B riR srunffSiS