{ title: 'Nassau County review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1898-1921, November 03, 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/sn95071433/1899-11-03/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-11-03/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-11-03/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-11-03/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Long Island Library Resources Council
fmmto |t0bieto» A FAMILY NEW 8FAVER OF LOCAL AND GENERAL INTELLIGENCE. FREEPORT, N. Y,. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 189$). T S l S i i $LM iX A E lT M A l V A M NO. 1, N E W S E P I T O M I Z E D . W a s h l n r t o * I t e m s . «org# Bertie, the oMertT clerk In the le Department and \Keeper of the al Seal,\ le dead. ii'bnrlal of Oenersl Gnjr T. Henry took • at Arlington. The President and iral members of the Cabiaet were prea- Doreen of Nerel Intelligence has inblle a document containing the of the Spanish court In the pro- > relating to the capitulation of al Shelter ban reported to the War sent that stories that men of the :y-elsth Regiment were compelled to for food on their Journey to San Fran- ileeo were false. Professor Worcester, of the Philippine Commission, calls stories of American soldiers' inhumanity Incredible falsehoods, is State Department has boon Informed Minister Bridgman at La Pas that lo was sleeted President of Bollrla. Charles D. Slgsbee, of the battleship Tesas, which has been ordered out of com mission, has been unsigned to duty a» Chief of the Oflloo of Nasal Intelligence. Mr. Sewell has Informed the State De partment that H. E. Cooper, at present Attorney-Oeaeral of Hawaii, has been ap- polaled Minister of Finance ad Interim. The Petty-eighth Volunteer Infantry, now O A d l t y at Fort Thomas, Ky., has been ordered te proceed to flan Francisco pre- paratory to embarking for the Philippine Brigadier-General Funston \telegraphed to the Wjr Department Ills formal accept ance of tie President’s offer to retain him In Volunteer serrlee as a Brigadier-Gen O u t A d o p t e d I s l a n d s . The object of General Otis’s next cam paign wotid be, It la said, to gain posses sion of thi entire line of the railroad. OenernlOtls has Informed the Insurgents hat no nwotlatlonn arc necessary over the release of Spanish prisoners who are III. They wtl he gladly welcomed at the Amerl. linefeed cared for. t Villa** A v e r in ; ROCKVILLE CENIH L I . ' ------ I d.tllUKL r . PHILLIPS, Pro THOMAS Q. KNIGHT, VI HIRAM R. - BOARD o r dir : $5 Robert A. Dnvleon, John Vincent, Gloalworlh 11. Combes, ite the Board « BY WBLTON COOLEY. O W E mysterious Influence eaneed the boy- in sailor enitto opposi of Trade Building end glance up at the large bronze lion that stands upon a pedestal, twenty above the pave ment, one of its fore feet resting upon the very edge of the cornice, the slightly rnised. At first he gnzod in idle enrioaity, then suddenly he shaded hie eyes with his hands and stared with A moment later he intense interest. and grew r. The stooped squinted along the finger ns glancing nlbng the barrel of i We do a General Deposit nad Discount. Inherent Paid on Drafts brand on Continent. Your Patronage Bolioil BaaUnff Hours—0 A. Bntudny, t A.1I. t o l t Dtoeoeut Days—' toys,» A. M. THBFRBEPO M i l STREET, Fll JOHN J. BANDA CBAVNC1Y T. WILLIAM 8. U John J. Randall* Smith Cox. WUItam B. Golder. Wallace H. Cornwell. Phoraae D. Smith, August l a m i a . OhartsnU Wallace, WUItam MaaMcwt will Drafta lasoed Usum^'leUcM Entire aathfai lagutrm will he cheerful ly ai harried across the street and looked upward at the motionless flgnro. G easrt: Darts, Ml.ltary-Oorernor otk ?tePa e,Xoitedl' Porto ^eo, reports that the natives will \ \ Da never Ixoapable of self-government. strn Slaver In the Philippines Is to be abol ished aeoon as the military situation will justify U rem issio n will be sent to Rome by the InsargedPlllpIno Oongross to complain of tbe frla*|n the Philippines. Malahdaod other towns have requested mior-Oesral Otis i t Manila to garrlsoa the towmbeoauso the Insurgents are liv- lag off tbbeople. OeaeralHanco's four hundred Mac- abebes od returning to Manila from the Ladrooee.lt Is believed they are deslroui of entcrlnlhe Arr.erlcnn army and com pleting a klment of Mncabebes. Amedlciegal department has been opened lifeanjla to the public under the direction t Senor Jose Padilla. It re ceives thdpoor free of charge and Is » godsend tthese people. R. B. Jeflngs, Treasurer of the Broad way cablCllne of Bt. Louis. Mo., whs robbed whl on n car In that city of tl043 In cnsh^nnd48,730 In ebooks. The thieves Former flinty Treasurer F-ank F. Par ker, of Neda, Mo., found guilty of em- betsleinttoaf SSS.OOO of county funds, has been sent oed to throe yoars and six aonths inie penitentiary. In a flglmt Provldonoe, R. I., Wlllla H. Walls kod Edward Patterson, a rel live whom# was visiting. v Pattomon wi choked tolentb. Both men had been drinking. Ottmir Irgenthalor, the Inventor of the llnbtyy tjtisettlug machine, died of con- sumptaln Biltlmoro. He was born In Oermw on May 10, 1854. An erator at the Lowell bleaohery In Liwalllass., fell a few days ago, killing John Grfen and seriously Injuring R. J. Qargamd Edward MoGloughry. A squ of 100 sailors and marines left Boston and for New York City, their ul- tlmate dtleattoo being the Philippine Isl ands. % marines, flfty-six In number, will be t e n to Cavite on tbe United gtatee el Buffalo. The sailors will go di rect ovend to Ban Francisco. Ell Hbone of the founders of the Gree ley cololdled at Greeley, Col. He went aeroes ttblalns with Horace Greeley In 1870. Bias born In Erie County, N. Y., In 1838. Gharlevdson, Richard Stone, and Al vin Forsteou were killed by an explosion of dynam In the Cundy Mine at Iron Mountalillch. Tl^ncoldent was caused by carelaess. Huooesl tests of Mnrcool'a Wireless telegraphavo been made between the warships w York and Massachusetts. Walter Farnsworth, who has several aliases, cessed at Chicago, III., to hav ing been rrled to forty-two women. Ho was arrea as a bigamist. Bishop mry C. Potter, of New City, satKrom Ran Francisco for stood and gazed, stra n g e ly cold and pale. A short, stout man, with a L a tin face and a French accent, wearing a Prince A lbert and a silk hat, noticed the hoy’s a g itation and spoke to him. The hoy pointed upward with stubby and not very clean finger, man came closer to his side, a trifle and, closing one of his eyes, though i 8 'in . W hat he saw caused him to turn his head from aide to aide, getting views from different angles, and finally, be coming greatly excited, to make a serious cl vehement gestures. Attracted by the m an’s peonliar actious, a crowd began to gather and to stare. As each individual dis covered the cause of the agitition he was at ouce visibly affected, becoming either feverish and demonstrative, or ale and dumb. One man, doubting vision, hastened to an optician for a powerful field gloss, which ho pro ceeded nervously to adjust to his eyes. A moment's inspection threw him into a condition bordering upon collapse. A woman, pansing out of curiosity, fainted when she saw the sight, and her removal to a near-by drug store added to the exeitemeut. Kvery window and doorway from which a view of the lion on the Board of Trade Building could be obtained was rapidly filled with pale and frightened faces. Scores of observers clambered to the roofs of adjacent buildings to get a closer view. The arm y of sky-gazers quickly blockaded the thoroughfare. The street cars could not pass. Traffic came to a pause. Many of the faces were blanched and expressionless, others were flushed and excited; all were turned upward. D u ring all this confusion a man iotly at work upon the roof of aratod from the Board a narrow alley. Ho was quietly the building sopn of Trade by only i stood upon a sliding platform —sus pended by means of ropes and pulleys from two largo iron books fasteued over the ridge of the guide above him. The roofs of the two buildings were the same distance from the ground, the cornice of each being some twdhty extended to balance himself, the man stepped from rung to rung, confi dently but carefully—eo carefully! Below him, for four hundred feet, wae nothing but thin air and then n presaed-briek pavement. But the man did not see the pavement, nor yet the white fecea gazing np at him in awful alienee; he eaw only the end of the ladder, but a few feet distant, and hs walked steadily forward. And those below, with h u shed b reath, made never* a sound, but watched, with straining nerves, that wee black speok move slowly across that treach erous bridge and safely stand at last on the roof of the Board of Trade Building. Then the tension relaxed, and a faint and far off to the ng and nnded DISASTER TO THE BRITISH. Two Regiments and a Mounted Battery Snrronnded and Forced to Surrender to the Boers. WEEE LED INTO A TRAP. Casua'tie*, But Hat Capitulate. which son: man on the roof, who quietly dragged [ _________ the ladder after him, allowing it to ; ti'ihe^eached 0 a^poiut^immTdiattdy Fought Bravely and Sustained Many above the pedestal upon which the 1 lion stood. Then be lowered one end i and, quickly descending, stood beside the gigantic metal figure. He paused and removed his shoes, f for there was tiu beneath his feet and I be dare not make the least noise for G v n . r s i W h i t e i t e p o r t . . h e i.n e e a n d S a v e l i e A l o n e Is to l$lnm e«—S e n t th e M e n to a n U n t e n a b l e P o e l l I o n —I r i s h Fuel\ le e r s . T e n t h M o u n t a i n B a t t e r y a m l ( G l o u c e s t e r s h i r e I l e c l i n e i i l C n |i t n r e t l b y I t o c r s —lio w th e N e w * W a s R e c e i v e d in L o n d o n — M o r e T r o o p s O r d e r e d to S o u t h A f r i c a —G e n e r a l B u l l e r ’e A r r i v a l a t t h e C a p e —C a n a d i a n F o r c e S a i l s . At this instant a woman appeared a* s square window on the tw entieth the sill of which was scarcely a ry, foot above the pedestal. Her face was a little marked with the lines of heart-break ing anxiety. The crowd held its breath, and scarcely a m urm ur arose from the up turned faces as the man crept stealth ily along the pedestal, close to the body of the animal, until he reached its massive head, while the woman at the window stood motionless and dumb, watching him with pallid face. Then for an instant—an age it seemed to those below—he stood very still, casting his eyes upward, as though in prayer. Silently, slowly, he lowered himself to his knees, to his elbows, to his face, until he lay prone the narrow then, with upon his breast on th e narrow edge of the pedestal; then , with his rmly clasping the uplifted his left baud fin paw of the lion, 1 fall with a sttdde upon something white n, g tl he let his right band n and powerful grip white and motionless which lay, like a thing that is dead, at the feet of the anim al—something which gave a sudden, convulsive gasp, but could not move, so tightly did he hold it. In a moment more he stood erect, the little white bundle clasped close to bis breast. Then the man waved bis hat to the cheering thousands, who grew wild with joyous excitement, for against his rough, brown face was pressed the soft, pink cheek of a little girl—a little girl in a white dress, who, wandering in her play, had passed through the open window, out upon the dizzy pedestal, and, at length at the lion’s feet, had fallen open window, o u t u th e dizzy pedestal, an d , stretching ,t th e lion ’s feet, asleep and had slum b ered peacefully far above the dust and the noise of the city, unm indful alike of the staring, excited crowd, and the silent River of Death, which glided so near —so very near. yetet a momentoment longeronger lingered And y a m l the crowd—lingered until they saw through the little girl tbe mau pi the window and lay her in the arms of her mother, the wife of the janitor of the building, whoso apartm e n ts con tained the square window which opened out upon the pedestal. But to this day the janitor’s little daughter has never learned the name of the boy in the sailor anit.—Phila delphia Saturday Evening Post. lufu'a^d <r^ljinp^iireTDonS'tUe0Bb'i'i)aier feet higher than the pedestal upon Gaelic, krone In tils offlolsl capacity In which the bronze bon rested, behalf ot I Protestaut Episcopal Church j jg0 high was the mau above the of Aroerlc street that not the slightest sound M a rah M Y X .Y tefu T ^ ^ .T w S h ^ l i' 1 fr01\ !U b W™’ BU'1 Y Mioolere h saloon at El Reno, Okln- kept induatriouelj at work, uumiuil- houaa, wltke result that both were killed. Fox bed atoptsd to arrest Hopkins, wbo w a s d r u n k The deeaatad body of a fourteen-year- old »ctrl nat Baago was found on 8h*ep Island, nat)akland, Cal. Her mother, who bad trated from her husband, Is missing. 1 said that the m o r r r Is In- The Polrh Paris reports nn attack on the Freooh ipi ly Chinese roxulurs at Qnau-CUau-u, Southern China. The Coluwu Government has dis patched an qr corps against the l isur- gonts In thepartmeuts of Bolivia am.1 Santander. The Biots* Telegraph Company, ol London, has dispatch from Allnhnha l saying that 9 famine expenditure liai compelled thidlan Government to sus pend tetegrtj transfers and restrict Council bills, Another rail Ion broke out In Vene rueta, with Oral Hernandez at Its head General Cas has the support of ke p t imluHtriouslj ful of the ooufusion below until he suildeuly caught sight of the sea of faces staring upward, and apparently At first tti 3 gaze of these countless eyes caused an unpleasant chill to 3ep over him, but latei ho rather enjoyed the sensation—enjoyed what he thought was their amazement at his cool daring and absolute hek of fear. Presently a window on the uino- teeuth floor of the Board of Trade Building was raised, and two men thrust out their heads ami shoulders and stared upward at the |edestal aud the lion. To the crowd in the street the; seemed to be engaged in an came almost an FRESH TRADE DEVELOPMENTS. Graphite is found m a num ber of villages in Japan, and finds its market nt Osaka. The amount is small, but if the proper effort were r le the in dustry m ight possibly * developed. As yet, it is not kuov j\v extensive the deposits. The United States Consul at Chem nitz, calling attention to a trolley road that is a b out to bo built from that city through a lino of villages extending over a ronte thirty miles long, says that a large number of suoh roads are now being projected, and Americans could get much of the business if they only sent competent agents over tc Germany. .Japan impoi ports her cotton m achinery from L ondon (By Cable).—A disaster which it is Impossible to disguise or minimize lias at length befallen the British arms in South Africa. Tbe capture of two regiments and a battery has appalled England and de m o n strated what has been clear to dispas sionate observers since active operations began—that the burghers are good s trate gists as well splendid fighters. Three times in succession they have deceived the British officers by retreating and have turned what ranked la this country as Brit ish victories into practical reverses. C.EORon WHITE, ’ sponslblllty for the my at Ladysmith.) General White’s dispatch telling of the disaster says: “ I have to report disaster to the column sent by mo to take position on a hill and guard our loft flank. The troops in these operations to-day—the Royal Irish Fusi liers, No. 10 Mountain Battery aud the Gloucestershire Regiment—had to enpiti late. The casualties have not yet been a certalned. “ A man belonging to the Irish Ftflllie and employod as a hospital orderly can In u n d er a flag of truce with a letter from the survivors, who asked assistance to bury their dead. I fear there Is no doubt of the responsible bo attached sinter occurred and am for that plan. No blame can 1 to tbe troops, as the position was untenable. The list Included forty- two officers, one newspaper man and two battalions of troops.” The prisoners captured include StalT- Majos; Adyo, one lloutonapt-colonel, six majors, five captains, twenty-nine lieu tenants, a chaplain and a newspaper corre spondent named Hyde. Five of these are wounded. The number of m« n captured Is esti mated nt 2000. From the scanty advices received, It erubly certain that the disaster tolerably certain th at was a simple repetition of the battle ot Mnjubn Hill, though on a larger scale. The two regiments were allowed to march into a trap set for thorn by the Roers. It Is simply a case of the Boor spider and the guileless British fly. In fact, the whole engagement of Monday seems to have been landaut General Jpu- tpan irn hinery fr woolen machinery from France aud Germany. The woolen industry is still iu a prim itive condition in Japan, not more than twenty thousand sp in dles being in service there. It is usual iu Japan to pay o n o-third of the amount down on confirming the order for such machinery, and the rest on delivery. engagement of Monda brought on by Commandant Gem bert, who skillfully ooaoelved a gigantic dispatch The U n ited States Consul General in Calcutta seems to regard the fact icy that India is a part of the British Ern st, pire, and that it gry, argument. They itures, frequently poi but those belov could not many gestures, frequently po in ting upw a rd; hi catch their words. Aftei a few mo- tch m eats they d o led the window aud withdrew from sight. iu an emergency cicall, By this time one of tie policemen u g expectedcted Uappiap the roof had diacovered tlat the crowd w a s interested, not in bin, but in the^ bronze lion. hurryin g to a patrol box to send a h wrjcn—the un- eucdI Thi workman on His curiosity was arotred. Slowly lowering himself to the toruioe of the building on which he w e at work, he made his way carefully *ong the nar row edge to the corner. When he reached it hs glance fell upon the lion. He shggered and trem b led like one strucl by a bullet. look again, m bled like one atrn cl He had not the courage to look again hut closed his eyes andtried to drive ] from his mind the pictire of what he had seen—there at the Ion’s feet. When he found his nerves had own steady again hi retraced his eps to the ladder. Thii he hurriedly ufastened from its ladle and raised until it stood on end npm the narrow edge qf the great Uuildiig. As the crowd below, iitently watch ing him now, divined hs intention, a hty cheer arose—then silence l a m * j districts in i so I could i years f h a d O u t I could o f q u inine f any p e n n i attack o f < friend's i been w ith an d so m d j a day. have n o t I comn eigued. Heedless of this demmstration. the man lowered the la.ldei u ntil one end the corniceox the Board between the L e t wide, la rested upon th e corniceo itO U ^ ^ i ^ T r a d e . The alley l xm J b u ^ f c g s was bnl twet never and a^lN U a U d e t was eg ■seated near Stony Brook, one oc most malarious ate and was bothered w'th malafor years, at times ark’ and was always very consult as well. For ia so bad in the spring, when eged in plowing, luthing but shake. I must have tn about a barrel r sides dozens of other remedies, never obtain^ netit- Last fall, in peach lime. I 1 a most seiious ^ ^ t o T b o ^ r n id e 0 me* all*nghid I*havener »nd sT^ U Har »»■ egfatean feet m „ kept m y Stomach sweet, mv bc|s regular and I ■e least touch of malaria nor splittmeadache since I In* them. I know also that l sleep b» and wake up more refrrfth3n toitneriy. I don't know how ty complaints Rioansim uHii h e l i but I do know they will cuny one m the ...... _ .. , condition^ 'to t I would not be without them any price. I e.o w d who had gla.ae. .an o u n c e d thg U ^ \ ^ P r i c e d medicine ,he world. „ f.c , to t h e o t h e r . , who bfidthcirbrea* the W t beneficial and the most cohient to take. W, . IS of age and have worked hurg mv lue. the - both gSriy and late and in all ku 0| weather, • enioved such good health as I have » last fall; In >r» have ail remarked my improved coivn and ha agonaib an angle as to make tha poles of the ladder rest unsteadily. Then the eager and exieetant watch e r . .aw the man test tiv iirmneea of this improvised bridge sith hie t<*>t. It wobbled frightfully, aid thoae in a ,. they are i lam f same asl e n d l t u j fact i Mid. For a moment the nan hesi aud then. Thawing bimadf to hit rted reaalutely :0. I height, he \der. ter, Iike from bail .In l i s t e d . the la t l a tiny spider walking tiding ..........._ thread of its web. Tloe* with the . ............. io skillfully eoa- er cot ton sp in n in g trap, out of which, as the official England, and Lev .“hows. Sir Georgo White only uscu - * difficulty. General White conceived ttio idea of driving the Boets from Tlntwainyonl Hill, . “even ml led out, which General Joubert made an ostentatious show of fortifying on Sunday. The Boer commander left a force sufficient to draw General White on, while the mass of the Boers ho moved stealthily round the British right, to deliver a flank attack and to endeavor to cut off General White from Ladysmith. The British com mander succeeded In beating off the attack, but only with great difficulty, and during the turning movement his troops suffered from a flanking Are. Harsharsh thing!ilings of theiie Britishritish 810i and th a t it is nearer to England than to America, no serious barrier to a considerable commerce between In dia and the United States The im- tstions at Calcutta amount to about i0,000,000 a year, and fully one- half, iu value, are cotton goods. A good deal of sugar and salt is also im ported. The recent great develop m eat of coal mining in the Province of Bengal gives rise to a demand for m ining m achinery and related ma Cottonwood is used largely in the W est-for packing boxes, owing to its lightness, freedom from odor and the ease with which it takes m arking ink. It is also much used for the basis of veneered doors the outside of which is ash or oak. Such doors are not only cheaper than solid ash or oak. hut much lighter and more convenient in other respects. The supply of c o tton wood is said to be giving out, how ever, and tha gum is coming to be used instead of it for veneered work. The gum tree was not deemed good lum her for a long time, but a special of handling it has removed ubjectit and iX seems to have a great future from the Ladysmith garrison weakens It about a fifth of Its total strength, and alters the whole situation very materially In favor of tbe Beers, wbo, once again, have shown they mffitanr strategists of supeirior • disasterisaster cofctoet thebe Brit!ritish, ere, who, once aga mselves stern fighters a f sup e c r order. fbe d c t B besides the n lost, six seven-pound screw guns, and as the Boer artillery Is already stronger than Imagined, the capture of these guns will he a great help to the Boers. The d isaster has caused a feeling nkln to consternation, and In Gloucestershire aad tbe North of Ireland where the captured regiments were recruited, the blackest gloom prevails, families awaiting with beating hearts the names of the slain and wounded,which are fully expected to reach a high figure. Many homes are already In | mourning in consequence of lossi tam ed by these regiments In previc gagoments. Pitiful scenes were witnessed in the streets of London. Men stood stock still Iu the crowded streets scanning the pages of the extras. Having read of a reverse, such ns does not exist In the memory cl living British subjects, the men set thelt teetli and walked on with hardened troubled faces, while women wept and sev eral who feared themselves to be personnllv bereaved by the disaster fell hopeless and helpless Into the arms of friends. At the Government offices i<o effort was made to conceal the feeling of dismay pre vailing. One official said: ‘‘It Is inexplicable, and I am sorry to sn> that Its moral effect Is inestimable. We have lost heavily in mnpy wars, and have had regiments almost wiped out, but tc have regiments captured, and by the Boers each other. The rush of the animals It Is terrible!” such that the iron gates at one end of The manliness of Genornl White’s nvown) boat were broken out, and several bo th a t it was Ms fault lias awakened the and wngous toppled over luto the ri S U N K BY A S T E A M S H I P . Ferry beat Cut Down in Hudson River With Loss of Life. A b o u t a H u n d r e d P e r s o n a W e r e o n B o a r d — * >ne P a e s e n g e r a S w a m A s h o r e a u d T o g s P i c k e d U p M a n y M o r e . more likely due to the craze of o younger officers to distinguish themselves \t obtain mention iu the dispatches, and enrr the Victoria Cross than to the fault of that . •< splendid Indian veteran General White, ir spite of Ills pitiful avowal.'' A dispatch from Simons Town says tin prison ship Penelope Is being fitted for tlx reception of Boer prisoners, and that the m iser Powerful Is N ew Y ob * C m (Special).—The ferryboat Chicago, of tbe Pennsylvania Railroad, was sunk In a collision In m idstream In the North River with about one hundred pas sengers on board, at about 1 o’clock Tucs day morning. Many persons lost thelt lives. The feryyboat wns struck Vy the City of Augusta, of the Savannah Line. As the crash came and the Mg ferryboat slowly began to sink from the weight 01 w a te r that rushed In through the wound made by the steamship the passengers,whe were in the lower cabins, rushed to the up per deck. From th 's point some o j the more venturesome sprang Into the water to the shore, where men on the hem from the water, was added to confusion by tbe fact that there were seven trucks on board, many with two horses each. Tim horses neighed and plunged, and were thrown down by the shock of collision. Thej niggled wildly, and fought to b reak ovei ch other. The ru sh of th e animals wae one end of the several I wngous toppled over even before the bout sank. In the midst of this Indescribable con fusion, the passengers, each for himself, i making every They swam t< piers drew th infusion 5 th a t thei first-class leave Durban shortly, presum a voy the prisoners to Simons To Colonel Murdo<! tills messoi of the D.ritgoons expected tc ably to con us Town, the First Roy a Murdoch, is, of which regiment Emperoi Is honorary Colonel, received o of the departure tilth Africa: “ I bid lay you all ro li . iam I. R.” for farewell to the regiment, turn unscathed and well. The message Is commented upon pollti eally as showing the Kaiser’s friendlines.4 for England. C A N A D I A N T R O O P S E M B A R K . S c e n e s o f E n l h u s l w i n n M a r k T h e i r D o p a r t m e F o r S o u t h A f r i c a . making e effort to escape what eemed certain death. There were cries of ‘Everybody take a life preserver!” and the frightened passengers did the best they could. It seems almost a miracle that all on board wore not drowned, so unexpected was the collision and so quick the sinking •f the ferryboat. Many were saved by clambering to the storm deck, where they remained until taken off by the Pennsylvania Railroad tug Cbauhcey M. Depow. with another tug and several small boats that soon gathered about. Men In these boats worked hard and bravely, and everything that could be done to save life was done. John Enfield, nn engineer, wns one of the heroes of the occasion. Ho stuck to his post until the water was u p to his arms aud till the fires were out and the dynamos stopped. When the shock came, he real. Iced that many lives might depend on his “lat the boat would pito of Its frightful that moment of that nn engineer ily to send Q uebec (Special).—The Canadian con tlngeut for South Africa, 1000 strong sailed amid scenes of enthusiasm . Shortlj after noon the men were called together ol the review ground, aud were addressed bj the Governor-General, Premier Laurlei and others. Lord Miuto, in the course of his address said: “ The people of Canada witness tb« departure of the contingent with ful! I could be done, earls, but they want to s e e ihe Maple Lea! I Captain Durham, of the Chicago, who re)I to the front, and they will all be read) i was rescued, says that there were about tbe men with open arms when one hundred persons on board, and that when the crash came they all grabbed life ed th a t many lives tnlg iciness. He hoped th properly right Itself In sj: careening, and even In deadly peril ho know should remain nt the onglm the boat where It should go. The water came rushing In, but he gave no heed to It, listening only for the sounds of signals from the captain. It swirled about him, rose above his waist, and not till then did he mnkenuy effort for his own safety, when he saw that nothing more mid be d< well to tl to welcoi they return. Kir Wilfrid Laurler said that it was not a war of oppression In which they were going to take part, but n war to establish an equal standard of justice and libertyiberty and that If they did their duty, they would, they would fully dl obligations of Canada to the E l le know G E N E R A L D U L L E R A T C A F E T O W N L ondon (Ry Cable).—One announcement was received by tbe British with unfeigned satisfaction, namely, the arrival of General Bailer at Cape Town. General Butler’s reception there was most enthusiastic. He wns welcomed by General Sir Frederick Forestler-Walker, after which they both entered a carriage and drove to the Government House, es corted by mounted police and mounted volunteers. There were wildly cheered by the throngs of people lining the route. There were cries of “ Avenge Majuba!' and wild cheers for the General. General Buller’s face wnfc Impassive as he returned m ilitary salutes for the cheers. C A L L I N G O U T M O R E R E S E R V E * . B r i t i s h W a r O ffice t o F i l l th e P l a c e s o f th e K i l l e d , W o u n d e d e n d C a p t u r e d . L ondon (By Cable).—The War Office has wired General Bailer that three e x tra bat tailous and one mountain battery, with reserve men, will s tart for the Cape within a few days. Those men will fill the places of those who have been killed, wounded or iptured. Tho War Office has decided to call out for permanent service tho first-class re- lervo'men of the Suffolk, Essex and Derby- ihire regiments and the Sherwood For esters. The first bnttullon of those com mands will be Immediately mobilize 1 f j r service In South Africa. P e o p l e A c c e p t B o e r A n n e x a t i o n . L ondon (By Gable).—The Colonial Of fice has received a d ispatch from Sir Alfred Milner, Governor of Cape Colony, saying that, so far as he enu discover, the people north of the Vaal River accept the alleged nnuexntion of p art Boers as a fact. hey all grabbev preservers. He says th a t more than i dozen tugs and boats wore on tho scene o the disaster In an Incredibly short time and that their work of rescue was practi cally Immediate. Captain D u rham says th a t ho gave two whistles, signalling that he would go ahead,so that tho steam er might go astern. There was no response, and the steumoi crashed Into the ferryboat. C. E. Damon, who was on tho Jersey Central ferryboat, corroborates tho cap tain ond says that ho was standing for ward and saw the accident. He hoard the two whistles, but says the Chicago was late and did not have tho right of way. One man, with his wife clinging to his shoulders, was picked up on tho verge of exhaustion. Another moment and both would have been drowned. The Chicago is one of the oldest boats of the Pennsylvania Railroad line; she usedto be a single-dock side wheeler and when tho railroad company changed to double-deck boats she was one of the first. 8he has the record for accidents on tho Pennsylvania Railroad line, having had more than all of the other ferryboats of tho Cortlandt street branch put together. She was commanded by Captain Durham . AFRICAN CANNIBALS ROUTED. B e l g i a n S o l d i e r s U n d e r a n A m e r i c a n C a p t a i n K i l l 3 0 0 . L ondon (By Cable).—Mail advice i from tho Congo announce that Captain Mobun, formerly United States Consul a t Zanzibar, who Is commanding tho Belgian Tangany- Ika-Cougo telegraph expedition, has Congo telegrap h expeditio n , 1 shed tho Congo Freo State, aud \ engaged, at tho end of July, In a fierce battle at Haugull, where the force consisted of tun Europeans, with Captain Mohun commanding, Shortly after tho attack commenced Baron D hands, tho Belgian commander, dispatched three companies of soldiers to wist Mohun, and the enemy, consisting S T A T E N E W S . T h e C r a ig C o lo n y F o r K p lle p t le e . Large Improvements and additions hare been made at Crntg Colony for Epileptics, situated at Bonyea. during the past spring and summer, and the place Is fast assnm- mg the appearance ot a Droaperous aid growing village. The raeif valuable erec tions, among the several which have just 1>oen completed, are those of the group of buildings put up for the use of female patients, which are already known, from the color of their exterior, as the White City. Eleven large buildings comprise this group, and when the work Is finished there will be accommodations for 850 patients who are now waiting Its completion. In addition to the White City there ere four large dormitories In coarse of erection. Th* colony has had a remarkable growth for the three years past and indications are th a t further and larger additions will be necessary, as fast as provision can be made tor them. Applications for admission to tho Institution are on file by the hundreds, many from foreign countries. The plans of the eolony authprttlee are along the lines of Improvements and addition, until there will be accommodations for at least a thousand patients. One of the recent conveniences granted the Institution la the location of a governmental post office at Ronvea and the appointment of A, C. M cFetridge as postmaster. Go T h a n k s g l v l a g P r o c l a m a t i o n , ivernor Roosevelt has Issued the fol* wing Thanksgiving Day proclamation: State of New York. Executive Chamber. During the past year this State has been blessed with prosperity and with order. Under Providence each man hae been per mitted to live his life and do his work as seemed best to him, provided only that ha iu no wise interfered with the liberty and well-being of his follows. Moreover, the veople of this State are not merely New Yorkers; they are Americans, and as such they have shared tn the bleeelngs that have come upon America during the year that has gone by. It Is right that i THE SABBATH SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LESSON FOR NOVEMSSR 9. BaltfMti H e t e w u n i Prarar. Bate. L . 1 - lt — T rail K«b. to I I V w w , e - i e — O w e XHj’. I . . . l CozwBcnee L n rra n t a t w th ra B in . ra A n r a n M A t a l- ‘i f e word* ot Retoelth.\ f e u * i.hT \ • o * \Bra otHrafe. lUb.\ Probobly ol U e Wbo ot JetoA w * of th. royal family ot Derld. \Howwrae. k w w t o fee# Artetertw et e tw ira , U e oopltei. Thh tltlo lapiM Uatfeteoralek refereed to Jweselee rad dSeeUd w e e reform, tiers. After NUeeleh *e rood et w m mtexs/ss: TWtoeeel Uet wee WlaU i eel book ol tbe Old TeeUee wrlltea.\ \Month OhWee.’’ I - \Hei rz& to1;or mt , Jen ______ | ___ H __ ___ give thanks f |he prosperity t b a t u a r vome to the Nation and for the way la which this great people, In the first flush of Its m ighty manhood, Is moving forward to meet Its destiny, and to do without flinching every duty with which that des tiny brings It face to face. Therefore I, Theodore Roosevelt, Governor of the State _ __ _ ___ of New York, do hereby set apart Thure- nfllletloB amdWtimah.*4 T h S a u M a S S day. the 50th day of November, 1889, as a to Persia forced Ifttlf oa thi Jiw a M g s a o day of thaaksglving and prayer. Done at turn. The tribute lenowd on tho Capitol In Albany this 80th day of Go- v ------ *-— * --------- ■ tober, iu the year of our Lord 1899. T h e o d o r e R o o s e v e l t . By the Governor: William J. Youngs, Secretary to the Governor. L a u d a n u m K i l l s a M in is t e r . The Rev. Dr. Francis Lobdell died sud denly in Trinity Church rectory In Buffalo a few day* a^o, as a result, It Is believed, of laudanum taken for Insomnia. He went to Trinity from Bt. Andrew’s Church, New York City, twstve years ago. He was very prominent In church work, and had a large circle of friends. He was In hie sixty- fourth year. Dr. Lobdell was born March 26, 1835, In Danbury, Conn. He was grad uated from Phillips Academy, Andover, In 1854, and afterward at Amherst College in 1858. During the civil war he was in the ftervloo of the United States Chrlstlsn Com mission. and was p resent at the final bat tle of Petersburg, Va., and had charge of the commission’s work in that city from the day of the surrender to the close of the war. He was ordained to the prleethood on November 19, 1865, a n d for four years w is rector of tho Church of the Advent, Walnut Hills, Clnolnattl. Ia 1869 he be came rector of Bt. Paul's Church, New Haven, where he remained until 1879. when he accepted a call to St. Andrew’s Gnutoh, New York °Uy, where he remained eight T h e D e a t h o f S t u d e n t B e r k e l e y . A mass meeting of Cornell undergradu ates was held In Barnes Hall at Ithaca to take appropriate action upon the death of Edward Fairfax Berkeley at Geneva. The mooting was well attended, and after a discussion of the m a tter In nil Its relation to student life In the university, a com mittee of seven was appointed to frame resolutions which should express the heartfelt sympathy of tho students for tho family of the deceased student, and for tlie Kappa Alpha fraternity, and to embody the idea that practices suoh as In any way would lead fo the Injury of the students of the university were discountenanced by tho students, that they did not believe >ueh customs existed, and that they be lieved the death of Mr. Berkeley to be wholly accidental. It Is g enerally thought that the unfortunate affair will have the effect of forever putting a stop to such customs, If any have really existed Iu the past, which tho students deny. T w o A t t e m p t s to W r e c k a T r a in . Two separate attfllhpts R-eck the Delhi mid Western, near Bingham ton, and It was mlv by good luck th a t a terrible lose of were made to in the Ontario na averted. A spike was found by a Inspector fastened to the rails on a near the village In suoh a manner cannllu wounded, were finally routed. Captain Mohun did great exe< in, and th e enem y, consl who horribly to rtu r Mint the train would c e rtainly have been lorn I led and plunged down an embank ment. The obstruction was removed. On the next trip just before train time another ng of | «plke was found placed In the same manner their | and wax barelv gotten out of the way be* • fore the train dashed by. Detectives were placed at work, and It was thought to be M'KINLEY.E Y A T en n d * th e un did great execution with I placed at work, an d It was thought iver accept th e alleged a Winchester repeater. It Is estimated the work of tram p s, but the crln__ __ . of Cape Colony by the i that tho enemy numbered 1000 in on and i I rought homo to three small boys who oon- | lost 300 killed and GOO wounded. The j fussed placing the obstruction tnere for tha Belgian force lost 9 men killed and 47 purnoso of “ having some fun.” They da- RICHMOND. wounded. Tho enemy fled to Tanganyika, j uled having the train, but said they the train jum p tho true P r e s i d e n t A t t e d * t h e U h r l s t e n l n x o f th e T o r p e d o B o a t S h u b r l c k . R ichmond , Ya. (Special).—The torpedo boat Sbubrlck was launched in tho pres ence of President McKinley, many mem bers of Ids Cabinet, Governor Tyler, of Vir ginia, and nn immense number of pen The dem o n stration wns marred In sou n r.,l.iont . word, on lb* union ol Slate.- ltock| hi. entile are wll.l nu.l vicious, Ills uperltY 111 the country. I horses, although they are well led, remain , . ,, . I on time, ua .,l>or Hs cro^r(1 ' hundred, unci this reduction lea#* j The nelehborr are oonnlvinir Inzelher to I »»«•»«. wllbout counting hospital ‘ci ACCUSED OF WITCHCRAFT. G r a n d H a v e n , Mich. (Special),—Belief in witchcraft has a firm hold on a com munity of German settlors a few miles from aere. A young Gorman farm er Is accused avlng soino fun.” They da- lug any intention of plundering , hut said they “jiist wanted to see i ju m p th e tra c k .” F r o m S i n g S i n g l o A u b u r n . draft of fifty-one convicts wns taken ii Sing Sing Prison to Auburn Prison, exception the men are what are class “ B” men, or prism » t r a s s s t i ._ .. Persian e ralw . The eoeelry i on the road, ‘The wall of Jararata* hnd’beaa deatekyed*?? ■ S e S S r a * E r a j E B S lS S iE w Ing back to their home# ell the wtrae «f non-Jewish raeee found Is J e te w k e rad Judea, and attached Jeraaelea, < fierce etrugglee had broken down Ijr-bullt walla and burned the gnti 4. \I rat down and wept, for the a m time a deep, hi people’s woes oame e __ _ __ '•Mourned.\ Over the condition el Me people, the desolation ot th# BolpOttp, the reproach open the name ol Ood, a t e the •In. whloh had brought thorn to this low m a t e , whloh had not yet been p el away, \Certain days.\ From Ohlslra to n i a a . *etw. *•53: Perhapenow sop, keen aenee o* Me — ever Ma e r a l nIly pardon. offering ly formed of neking the royal perwlemoa to jo to Jeruealeo. No eueh permit hedwvnr yet been grant ed elnoe Ite destruction by Nebeohadnoa- Mr. The proclamation ot Cyme r a t h e r * ad only the rebntiding ot the temi 6. \Covenant and many.\ I fere to floi................ fere to Hli more than 6. \Bar Thli fuMj and night lucron.ed a existed In eplte drow from hie _ time In retirement In moat alieeie abrro#. tile prayer was oft repeated In the eoarae of these days of separation and m oaning, nt hours of the night as well aa nt the uiual hours ol dally prayer. \1 aad my father'! house.\ Nehemleh had e clear rente of his Identlfleatlona with Me people In tin ns In misery. 7. \Have dealt corruptly.” Borne ol these tins are menf'Tned In Rah. 8:1-7, IB. 11; 18; 18; Bara k:l, 1 Ohron. 88:14-1* \Thy oommandmenti,\ The moral pre cept. by which our live# ibduld be regu- Inted. ’’Stataleo.” Whnt refers lo the rltne and oeramonlaa of thy religion. \Judgments.’’ The precepts of Jiattee relative to onr eooduot to cash other. 8. “If ya traosgreae.\ Thla la hot a i s o lation, but n reference to the geeeral tense of various passages, rush at Lev. 18:17-80; Dent. 88:45-8*. The fast that lo d had fainiled His word of Ibirealeeteg fulfilled Hie word of Ih tof that He would fulfill Hie word \ When we dtKlpllaei whee He terns 'oS 8f promise. a. \But If ye turn unto turn to sin Ood t o n s to re torn to rlghteonansoa, oioroy. \Tot will I gather thorn.\ bad a place devoted to Hie people, rad when they were content to dwell la ere He gave them liberty and rights there. 10. \These are Thy eervaala.’- Who will Jevuta themeelvae to do Thy Will. \Aad Thy people.\ With whom Then haft made rovenant. They those whom Th incarcerated In King Bing In twenty years. For the past ton years there has been as high as fifteen hundred and sixteen bun- are the of h u t delivered (rod H t are said in military circles t B tactics, which have made possible the ambush of the Kigbteenth Hussars at Glencoe, and now the loss of two fine regiments. It Is feared that Kir George White Is no match for the Boers in that cunning by which Boer tactics are cou- eelved, and it is pointed out that if the British commanders continue to lead their men Into obvious traps, further disasters must be looked for. Wlille minor reverses were not wholly | At the end of the President's speech Englishman ever dreamed i retnry of the Navy Long was Introd like the staggering blow by tbe Mayor, aud spoke briefly. m S H r S r E ! 1 S S r » m S B r i and as It started through the 1 1 —\ ---------- - — * e*— w \ tlie city the howitzer battery 111 At Ell'ft station, In the West End, the President debarked and took ) for tho Jefferson Hotel, ho 1 »dd form:ormally briefly. rrlag e for tno Jefferson ilcome f by Mayor Taylor, an 1 inng him. Hearing he consulted Judge Pagelson, and be says be will make It warm for ills neighbors. When the party was driven to the ship- j yArd tho President was cheered warmly along the route. At the yard un Immense j crowd had assembled. Tbe President, hav- ! mg been Introduced from the stand by ! Mayor Taylor, delivered an addr At th e end of the Presiden t's si The launching v att beingeing chrlstehristened a great success, the boa b c by little Miss Currie Shubrlck, of Rocky Mount, C., great grandniece of Commodore Shubrlck, with unexpected, tbut anything like tb e staggerin g blow General Joubert delivered threatened tbe Rritlsb arms in South Africa. The loss iu effective men must ho an- 1 Shubrlck, of Rocky Mot palling to a General who is practically I grandniece of CommoJon surrounded. Two of the finest British the usual formalities. It 1 regiments aud a mule battery deducted | lag. W o m a u ’ii E s e c u t l o n e r D ie s S u d d e n l y , | Thomas Sheppard, who died suddenly at New Brunswick. N. J ., in Uls sixty-ninth year, from a stroke ot raralysG, sprang the drop when Bridget Durgau was hanged in 186.1. Hlie was executed for the murder of her mistress, the wife of Dr. Cvrlell, of New M arket. was a side launch- llo e r - B r i t i s h W a r N o te* . Boers have captured 1509 mulej. The British arc not using the dum-dum British officers nt Ladysmith make obser vations from a war balloon. S e v e r e F i g h t i n g a t L a d y n i n I t h . The Boers began shelling the British cam at Ladysmith, Natal, at long range, yond the reach of General White’s cannon. The British engaged the Boers, and after several hours of fighting withdrew with a loss of about one hundred men. A L y n c h i n g In G e o r g i a . John Ooosby, a negro, was lynched al Reagan’s Mill, about six miles from Macon Oa., by b mob from Twiggs County. Ooosby. a few days ago. stabbed his employer, John Robinson. Robinson will recover. K le in b y * N o t e d M o o n s h i n e r . II. Greer, United Htates Deputy largo num b er of prisoners were many cells shared by two prist The Industries at Auburn require more men than those at King King Prison, and ‘.his is the reason given for the draft. A H o j ' h M a r v e l o u s K e c a p e . Pedro Domedo, a ten-year-old Pollsl boy, of Poughkeepsie, was riding on tbe bumper of a Now York Central locomotive In the freight yard a few days ago. Tbe engine, which was running slowly back ward. gave a lurch and Pedro was thrown off. Fortunately he fell between the rails, but within the track. He lay sprawled out on hts face and stomach while tbe tender and locomotive passed over his body. Tbe fire-box just grazed bis back. Tbe lad es caped without a scratch. A D e s e r t e r C o m m its S u le ld e Charles Winfield, aged twenty-three, who recently enlisted In tbe Forty-second B.V.OU. o n w / . wa. .bo, a « „ day. 'ag e I “ by BUI Hunnlcutt, a noted moon*lilner, I Winfield deserted from his and died near Elk Park, N. C. Deputy Fort Niagara because of bom< D ie d In K o l l l n g S o r g h u m . Wiille James M. McCullough and his family were making sorghum near P o rteau j at Du ndee. twowo smallmall .•hildrenhildren of j Lord Rosebery has the vat of land will suffer <! ck > Tbe Boers havq been thanked officially r their kindness to the British wounded B h e r,fiW ,«e prhlf i ! ; . , '» . k.' fM a li, .KoTb'? | Hunnlcutt when an attem p t at arresf was made. Hunnlcutt has killed live b e ’ linn Territory, t s ,• h family accidentally fell into the vat 1 filing molasses and were scalded 1 ; to buildiqg on a single rla.-ae- saw witb • ahuM er that tho ladiUi careened from aide to aide, like a ship in a storm. B a t with hie a m a A m arket (er irou bed.(saila exists all through \the Orient, in the judg m ent of the American Consul in F o r mosa. He says that the abundance of insects which eat wood, and the moist climate of the Asiatic coast and isl ands, make wood unsuitable for bed steads in that part of the world. E u ropean m anufacturers are already fur nishing iron bedsteads, but the cost is so great that the American Consul feels confident t)iat this country can easily undersell them at a profit. It is pointed ont, though, that the bed steads should have the posts carried up seven feet, in order to provide for mosquito nets, and that the body of the bed should be kept at least two feet above the floor. The European bed, if double, sells for between $20 aud S25. D o w b U e e e K e a e e a .b a r e d . The Advocate of India tells of a enriona way of rejoieiig. The Xawab Ram pore being blessed with a hter. rejoicings were taking place « Stale, and a week's pay wae de- frotn every State official ia of the event. L y n r h iM l » N e g r o In K a n s a s . “ Gus\ McArdie, a white bartender, was shot killed, aud iu less than two hours his supposed murderer, George Wells, a negro miner from Bcummou, was swinging to a telephone pole, tbe victim of a mob, which liad forcibly taken him from the jail at Weir City. Kau. Before the rope was placed about his neck Wells adm itted he was with the man who shot McArdie, but led that be had done the shooting. predlcte- many loss before »U General Symons her sword. The War Office ot London bn* ordered a second army corps to be in reudlnew to bo called out. Krokodllepoort Ur.s bee Boers and the railway been destroyed. islatire buildimg An Accidental Shot Kills a Boy. Herbert Gray, twelve years of age, was shot and Instantly killed by tho accidental fourteen t Eug- discharge of a gun In the hands of a I that of log companion, Frank Smith, aged fou aeuthe year*, at Wheaton's Btatlon, Gunn. The Legl atal, lias b >r the Boer a be treated allli j There can be no doubt ihat either have studied the th 1 with remarkable success or n j by skilful European officers. * u occuple 1 by the bridge there has buildin at Dwrbnn, nsfornie i into a hospital ih wounded,who will T h e I j a b o r W o r l d , ave organized a is located, have been nodded by th' Departm ent at Washington that the will be abandoned. T h r e e P e r s o n * D i e In n F i r e . Mre In the Webstor House at M o n treal, Qaebe«\ caused the death of three ; ersons, onble fatal injury of a fourth, while er* sustained ralno juries. The dead are Joseph £. Wilson, bailiff, Sherbrooke. Quebec; John D -uU u w . Ottnw:i, and Jane M-'Uoon, an employe the hotel. There were at»ou: forty guests In tbe hotel at the time, and most of them escaped In their night clothes. W o m a n Dl#e Aged N e a rly 1 0 3 . Mrs. Phoebe Williams died at New Bed f>r<l. Mas*., aged 162 years and eleven mouth*. Her lathe- live 1 to the age of IK# Pressmen bat Columbia. 8. C. The girls employed in London shops number some 60,000. Miners and brickmakers tn Kansas City, Mo., have organized. The eight-hour dachas been inaugurated In tbe Government post age-stam p factory In France. Boilermakers and Iron and steel workers In Birmingham, Ala., have been granted an Increase In wages. rneelclneee. He bot h strychnine and arsenic the night before, but failed to end bis life. Rchoole Closed by D i p h t h e r i a , An epidemic of diphtheria has broken out In the town of Constable. Three smell cnUdxf,u I _ ______ _ ddad attd-severai otherther facalleer are afflicted.lotto* The cases are now quarantined and nil the schools In tbe town are closed. A l l A r o u a d th a 8 l a t a . Angelica reports many oases of scarlet Forest fires are again raging In the Tonawanda swamp. savings bank system wae put in opera- in in the Geneva public schools In 1891. > to this time the children have deposited 110,219. amlly of o fa Frank Floi v p t Allie Ward, aged seventeen years, com mitted suicide at Arkpoit by shooting him self through the head. He was bomeieM and despondent. A. Sweet and William L. 8iwest, County, have filed Waterloo, Seneca County, have filed • elelm •gainst the Hi ate for 98851 for lees of water to the Waterloo mill*, which wee diverted t tb« Boers eory of tactic* C r o p W ill H. Abaa-lonto, 1 ------- ------------- --- ---------- are eommamled T h . belre of the Young estale, on whose . froro botll Harohurg .n,l ~ \ - ------- , farm near Middletown, Penn., Camp Meade ' >ietz that British recruiting .fli *er» are California s law requiring corpora he W a n busy engaging German under-.,PVer. fur ‘° W wages at least monthly has been to the Waterloo mills, whl i bouth Africa, offering *100 pet declared constitutional. by tbe tftato for canal purposes, Knights ol Labor clgarmaknrs In Pitts I The mine* are rtUl working at Klmber- f Uorg.Penn., have adopted a label, ley, where there are ,-ruvlslom enough to Loelefllle printers have adoptc<i a la»t nine month*. rber shore. of month. 1 l ° liU o n ^ p laeln g * a ‘ f t n * .\o r i'n h j T o l 1 t i ^ r 1 T r ~ ’l‘ T * * k * fo r E e # I e e e . r,bb « r « ,j ! ^ b o ^ e,,d ‘•*,roau'a‘ 0,e-Mtit| !i p r ^ ; r^ r u l by which loeoeo- take water wltb- aai; venal oa the l s ’ S • - ssm as JK 7 .? a stwafig 1 sb B -H sssmss 1 he feeling of the Freni •aid to be so strong again.*! less than J00 of them are t< '•ontlngent of 1000 men which has -ailed tolls on two of dor South Africa. Juba, have carried — . r - — — — i r „ . d hAa . Bl.mhAr 8 ^ . - ™ Colonel Yule, wbo was made a local gen- t0 work. fcnij phlladalubla aad leteada to #qal» the •a I in command of General Kymons's Quite an Industry U carried on In New * entire main fine la tbe future. lith e five oops at Glencoe after the latter wo* fork City by men wbo collect oyster and »tops on each train can be elimlestdd he- ,'r,,m0l6', 10 ,6e 6red* i'o V V r a .V to .y ’e n u '.to ^ < ^ - ^ . • • 4 - d BelUmra. . k n . > rale. The Be road ba. a earn her beta and Philadelphia aad late Two new trail J.r fartirl*. at Fair oust, lad., BOW a»e blowloj maehloe. s i . t e ( o r W a r , h a . g r . u i t o l b . r v q u r . t of x o u o t , l a d . , a Ur. L e y d . , Che F .u r .{ . .a u a g e u l of lb # F o r t y - f i v e m o o o u th e tw o le i T r a u a v a a i O o v . r a r o - o r . th a t b e b e e l i o w . l ’ b e w o r k o t I w l eturia a.aiej bat be be eUowe I (be work S for delefla ai to ^ bead blowers. BOW a n blowlnz m a « a io«. in. now do »e that a a a h e t ol m u with iralne ere the thicket, the eevte* wilt be quite large. It the ex perl meet prove, eee- reutol, track tasks will bo Metalled oa •rerjr dlrf .loo hetweew Baltimore aad OM- cayo. Aa a atarter the l i t / eew Tee d e le L -om p o u e d raslaee rwcehUJ^ce fiend wtU be flltedwtt^ met ......... . All their hlitory her given them. II. \Wbo desire to tear Thy I ieclrec are: I. Ooeetaot, not Heerty. e trohj aad growing. , the fevor of Ood nod spfrttnal £ fegerd the mean, of Miration. ~ Thy earvant thU day.\ He had la inisalam^a •eked defialtely lor eaaetiy i \Mercy In the eight of thla maa”—tho Mag. ftehemlah had decided that to tomovotSo reproaeb of JereMlem ho meet go there to person. Thet to doeo he m a* ehtali tha king’. permlMloa. To got hie permfelra be meet be la epeetal fevor with him. \I wei tbe king's capbeerer.\ An Impectaat iflteer, bavfag eherge of tho wlaee of the royal hoacebold, etaadlag by the ktag^ tide et meets, and teettag tbe wine, 8# era that It was not polio aad. \Teenblags.\ Love for Ood’e m a w Shoe Id prompt as lo laqelre alter Me la- lereatr. WbeaOod’c peoplereSerweM*m with them. The wisest coatee to Mho to times of sorrow * to eeok a mom of peeyefc We choald aevar blame Ood lor eelammem WOMEN MAY CO TO MANILA. havr Pewactaceae P aetdM M AMaw Wleee « -f 04fe.ee te J a la Thetr Meeheade. A inert cae women e l the highest etaadlag rat to M a a f e r a l . ol the Hie la ' new AmerlMe poeeeeetoae, Jaet M English sletars go M t to India and roelally will soon go r a t ti Oaam to become1 part ol Ih# enay Iraacporte that WMI eat le Haelle la the early part ef tbe nUotao tefirrirtlra carried the wlvee end ethee Uamhere M ih. femlllee of cth.cie aad ■edm e m efir.\ •loeed oUeere. bat Oeaaral Otk aht^B “ -------- oBears, hat fflraeral Otk Iboroafler raked the War to let any m en i set vssssls sgffl ____ forbid la* them from laedlag e a t ______ This wee dee# as a maaeaei el safety, eaoM aa eelhreah ra the rail ef the tlVM le Manila wee feared. Tbe Mavy Depart meet hae ehaadewedltl objoetlo# to thewtVM ef oMaori f their herhaede w lorotga etodra prepartog to eemd e e l to Needs I. ee maey womee ee want te we a who aro eaUtled le go hyraeerai haebaade or fethets ee ehlae er aeherw » thoae aarta of tha world. Ordore hav. been toe nod by the department te feat-Admiral Philip Hie fa bore, Chief OigetTOiem of th# Havy.tohave the eexlllary mwtom f e f e lg fitted with eeeommnileWggilerwemeepra eoagero. hheto every ifelmtaM iiblpead will be able te aarvy a g n a t m—y Warned. Tbete has heea qalM a Mmli as »sl ecSeat at Kegarahl. Japan, whew tha Vetted Htetee Ooverameat maletalae a naval hew pltal. end Mleprehehlithei earn# ef the women who aro getog ewt ee the Hafele It to believed that qeteo a her ef weeraa who have heeUade » las martae g e rr tue al Oaam, will aa* ee the f e t o l a r _____ WeVTwTO.