.,' yj-iA tearf: )ME FAMOUS CONTESTS. Cm CONFUCT KTWECN STATU NEWSPAPERS. ' MEN AND r ateHy la the Bitterr Mm Vales j Matet OmnaiM Mm atomaei af th mate Began te ietemeUets Prloted M BncW OntTaiaWeMawWw6efcj ! WjuantaitHr, March 1& There mi be an irreconcilable conflict between i and newspaper. These nea rim mission Ktete deanMie (htaM. lad these ether men want office It i Had all about tteee things, -are geed ilew together, bare many strong per nal f rieadehliM one witnjUMtlMr. and anally well knew hew te Make nee of ch ether' service and influencs But (tteniuch brethren m thee cannot al- raya Urn together la peace and harmony, tf here all hand am. independent and spirited, proud and pugnacious, there 1 raw te ne a row sooner or later, and iuet W we have en hand a peculiar state of lair in the wg and beautiful Capitel this nation, tjd In the press srallcrr i daily joke among the correspondents (and Ident consider it a very geed lOkeV "Excuse nie a moment while I ea lawn stairs and kill a congressman." ! On the flew of the houie theraaHi plenty of men who said when Oorreepend juv Biunw man ex-uongrcsemen Taul me, "The Infernal newspaper chap ought be takoneut and strung up," or, "I am Ji favor of driving the whole pack of bem out of the gallery. " There u a teod deal of this sort of talk When the xsheea of Kincald's pistol Were still ring- jig m me morale nam, and for a lew tours there was no little feeling both en -.he fleer and In the press left All true aa crave men are "clannish, and there- TBI PISTOL INSTEAD OF THE FEN. f ero the statesmen were inclined te stand by Taulbee, while the newspaper writers were for Kincald te a man. But the lit tle flurrj in this end of the Capitel seen blew ever. It was discovered that the cengreaevaen who made the ugly re marks r.oeut newspaper men as a class were the chaps who had felt the sting of la tew tmall pieces of steel dipped in I wiving fluid, mere poisonous, sometimes, llh.-'M-.nm compounds of the Borgies; and it was flier Jgj at the same time that while n&jfcLi men were disposed te de all AS their power, in a legitimate way, te help their fellow out of his trouble, they did net inderse his meth ods, nor themselves go about with leaded guns seeking the bleed of the representa tives of the people. As a rule the house and the profession get along pretty well together. At the ether end of the Capitel the feeling isydeeper. There the trouble is of ancient origin. History is repeating itself innm hostility which is new lead ing the Hereto tethreaten the wholesale arrest of newspaper men for printing se called secret session proceedings and te cloee up the gallery heretofore devoted te the use of correspondents. It is a cu rious fact that the very sedition law un der which the Benate proposes te prose cute correspondents, or one very much like it, was passed early in the history of the republic as a means of regulating and intimidating the press. During the time of Washington and Jehn Adams the Anti-Federalist press was very bitter in its criticisms of the administration. The Aurera, an opposition paper of Phil adelphia, enraged the administration and the senate by printing, before the government get held of them, Talley rand's dispatches complaining of the partiality of the American government. This led te deep jealousy of the press in adininhttratieiLcircles, where newspaper men were denounced as dangerous mal contents and usurpers of governmental authority. In 1798 the Administration , passed the sedition law, and the first vic tim of it was Matthew Lyen, of Phila delphia, who was tried for sedition, con victed and sentenced te four months' imprisonment and te pay a flne of $1,000 for printing a letter in which he stated that with the president "overy consider ation of the public welfare was swal lowed up in a continual grasp for power, an unbounded thirst for ridiculous pomp, foolish adulation and selfish avarice." While in prison Lyen was elected te congress and took hie seat en getting out of jail. Then an effort was made te ex pel him as "a malicious and seditious person, of a depraved mind and wicked and diabolical disposition, guilty of pub lishing libels against the president of the Suited States with design te bring the government into contempt." This reso lution was defeated, and Lyen kept bis seat. He must have been a very pugna cious sort of a journalist, however, for seen afterward he became involved in a personal quarrel with a fellow member, Qrisweld, of Connecticut, and they came te blows en the fleer, and one of them seized the poker from the fireplace and beat Ids antagonist ever the head with it. Anether resolution te expel was offered, but again Lyen was victorious, and he held his seat te the end of hislcrm. The sedition law was aimed particu larly at The Aurera newspaper, and in a short time the administration was in a quarrel with the editors of that journal All the newspapers steed together, just as tbey are likely te de at the present tinie if the senate carries its spite tee far. Half a dozen prosecutions were started at once, federal militia officers assaulted thiane, editor of The Aurera, and his lawyer, Cooper, was hounded te jail by Implacable federal etlice holders. In 1612 the editor of The Alexandria (Vs.) nerald, just across the river from Washington, was arretted for printing secret session news about the proposed embargo act, thrust into prison and kept there for several months. He refused te give the name of his informant, and was finally liberated. In 1613 two of the greatest senators, Clay and Calhoun, united in a move ment te expel members of the press from the fleer of the old senate chamber, where they had been accommodated for many years, and send them te the gal lery. The movement was successful. Later, in Andrew Jacksen's time, Reu ben Whitney, who wrete articles for Frank Blair's Glebe, was threatened with death in a committee room by Con gressmen Baillie Peyton and Henry A. Wise. These statesmen put offensive questions te Whitney, who retorted in kind, and bloodshed was imminent. Afterward Wise and Peyton confessed at the bar of the house that they carried weapons with an intention te use them n Whitney II occasion arose, and tutu axm r i Tt. ifs ""JBLCa pin BSr?- Jit. aflaaBiafl3r ' tnml mBlWfmm TOT LAJffOAWm BAIL Y tNTTBLLIGBKOgH, SA?PIjPAY, MABCH H R4a tsi ataxttAeawmxt ohsatajtteamta s)ABMai naa fMstaai journalist a the Arai offender in the natter of carrying gun wttk hostile hv 4tyaaA jaait m faflMMM Citley-Gravet duel m IMA the outgrowth of a quarrel betwaaa men and Journalist. CUley, a iter from Maine, chanted Jam Water Webb, then a Washington am tiaaaataat, bat afterward editor of The Maw Yerk tfeaatrar, with having re re erivainhrttwef JM,000 from the Bank of the Varied Mats, Webb cUUengeJ eyer, aenams km am! by tb band f OeaajMtitaaa Orates, of Kentucky. CUV? declined te noegalaa Webb aa a gentleman, and In that Wty manner which some latter day emtemnen Imitate, refamd te "get Inte a diOcutty with a CbHe jeHtaatiet" Of course Grata d te take te the fight ea his own ao ae Mnt, and feMtaptly challenged Cfley. Tnla challenge was accepted, and tan prelunkiarke were arranged by Henry A. Wins and Geerge W. Jenes, the latter afterward a senator from Iowa, and stiU living. Warn were the weapons and en the fourth BreCUley fell dead. He left a wife and three young children, and, bating been a very popular man, hi death in Una manner caused a great deal of excitement all ever the country. It worth while hen te pua and re mark that It Wat tone of these quarrel between American statesmen and jour nalists that gave te the world the modern system of reporting legislative debates. In waging their persecutions of the press of Philadelphia, the federalists of Jehn Adams' day found It convenient te drive an editor named Cobbett out of the coun try. Cobbett retired te England and there began the first complete reports of the parliamentary debates ever published, while he also conducted a great political journal Thus parliamentary reporting the world ever may be said te have been born out of the persecution of the press in free America. One of the foremost of American jour nalists had a serious personal difficulty with a statesman. Mere than a third of a century age, when N. P. Banks (whose white head is en the fleer below me a I write) was speaker, Herace Oreeley we ' a newspaper correspondent in Washing ten. As a correspondent no was as pug nacious as he afterward proved te be as an editor, and he succeeded in reusing the ire of a big, six-footer congressman from Arkansas of the name of liust. Tills fine specimen of the statesman met Greeley en the steps of the old Capi Capi eol and struck him with his fist, and was following this up with his cane when by standers interfered. In the letters of Mr. Greeley recently published by Mr. Dana, of The New Yerk Bun, this assault is often spoken of, and it is made plain that while net subdued the young cor respondent lived In no little fear and trembling of the personal violence with which he was se often threatened. At any rate, he armed himself with a re volver, and allowed it te become known that he would net stand any mere pum mellng. After this he was net molested. These were fighting days. It was at the same session of congress that Mr. Wallach, editor of The Washington Evening Star, then a struggling sheet, new earning an annual profit of $200,000, was attacked en the street by "Extra Billy" Smith, an ex-cen-gressuian, who was getting rich out of some mail contracts. Smith knocked the editor down, but the latter get HOBACE OREELEY ASSAULTED. his assailant's thumb between his teeth, and it was never known who had the best of it. An amusing incident of the year 1858 was the wrath of a member of congress from Wisconsin, William Sawyer, net related te the preent seuater from that state. Sawyer was written up in The New Yerk Tribune as a "critter," who ate sausages behind the speaker's chair and wiped his bands en his bald head. "Then," said the article, "he picks hi Weth with a jackknlfe, and gees en the fleer te abuse the Whigs as the British party." Sawyer mode a great fuss about this, succeeded in winning for himself the nickname of "Sausage Sawyer," and in having Richelieu Robinson, the writer of the article, expelled the privileges of the fleer. Robinson afterward became n member himself, and famous as the twister of the British lien's tail. In 1848 Jehn Nugent, a bright reporter en The New Yerk Herald, obtained pos session of an advance copy of Polk' Mexican treaty, a "confidential commu nication" te the senate. Of course he printed it, and for his enterprise was ar rested and, brought before the bar of the senate. There he refused te tell who had given him the document, and he was put in jail till the end of the session. There have been a number of such cases as this. In 1873 two newspaper men, White and Rainsdell, obtained a copy et a treaty in advance of its censid- A PRISONER OT THE SENATE. oration in the senate and printed it in The New Yerk Tribune. The senate ar raigned them for contempt en their re fusal te tell whence they had procured the copy, and confined them for several weeks in ene of the committee rooms, where they were fed en oysters, terrapin and champagne. . A few years age Senater Salisbury, of Delaware, who never liked newspa pers, organized an investigation into the manner in which executive session se crets are obtained, and threatened nil sorts of vengeance upon the offending scribes. The senate marched up the hill with tbe old seuater, did its best te scare seme one, and then marched down again. Hannibal Hamlin nice old statesman he was, tee became enraged at a tie wspaper writer ence upon a time and endeavored te bave rcvenge upon the whele class by introducing a resolution te deprive the craft of the supplies of stationery which that bad been crettinsr for tiae in their SamPISkvaK 9fc ' QsVSvjB? j 'BCamF7 my. t VajjCin ! a jaar i afl y.rjtstt-- il -. I SSiV'.'i IrvA "3l!llliKHf 2IUiMim ffiWlm jJmk. awlu HfjaW rl lMtfJjtinaaaaal Wl da if f e i n jmUerie from the public stationery room. The correspondents proved that the talue of the stationery used by them did het asBeaat te mere than k fetf hundred dot det atra a year, and Invited the senate te cut off the supply. They did mores iKey at once began a merciless arraignment of asnater for the manner in which they need up their stationery allowance in the purchase of opera glasses and simitar articles for ladies who were het always members of their familica The last conspicuous victim of a burn ing desire te regulate the press la ex Speaker Keifer, who, at the close of the Forty-seventh congress, la revenge for aeme criticisms passed upon aim lathe newspapers, ordered the public admitted te the press gallery of the heUM. At the first opportunity the correspondent took possession of the gallery and barricaded ita deer. Gen. Boynton, dean of the corps, and Mr. Barrett, new editor of a Bosten Advertiser, Steed guard be d that deer all night, and when mern: lag cam and the public, armed with the speaker' passes, presented itself for ad mission, the deer was hermetically sealed te all but representatives of the press. Keifer was beaten, and from that day te this the press has been anything but generous toward him. The lessen of history would seem te be that the newspaper burs saw is net a safe thing te feel with. Walter Wklxjux. MURDERED IN A SWAMP. Tbe Terrible Crime for Which fleglaaM tllrchcll Is Held te Annwcr. The murder of Frederick Benwell near Princeton, Ont., is en a par, e far as sur roundings and sensationalism go, with the trunk tragedy of St. Leuis, in which Preller lest his life and for which Max- MIU NP KHS.OB1RCUEIX. well was hanged. The man whose neck is in danger this time is Reginald Birch ell, and if the story told at the coroner's inquest is correct, he lured his victim from England te Cunada en the pretense of forming a partnership as gentlemen farmers, and then murdered him in cold bleed te secure hie cash and valuables. The' accused person is young in years, of geed address and well connected. His wife is the daughter of a well known citizen of Londen. The spot where Benwell was done te death is an uncanny thicket set in the midst of swamps, and is desolate and fearful in its isolation. The body when found was lying astride a rotten stump. The legs wcre partly crossed, and the head bent backward against the spina The right arm and hand had been frozen into an attitude of defiance, while the left hung limp, and the flesh was blue from exposure te the cold. Many rumors are current re garding Birchell, and Benwell, it is feared, is net his only victim. " c. desweix. The man has "lived high" at various places in Canada, ancflias never had -any visible means of support. All In all, the case is sensational and of international interest. A QUEER MISSOURI JAIL. Bew Frlteners Fnra Wlitm Incarcerated at Galuevllle. At Gaincsville, the capital of Ozark county, Me., there is a jail of unique con struction. It is n two story leg building eight by ten feet, and twenty feet high. There is neither deer nor window te the lower story, and the upper story is reached by a ladder from the ground te a small platform at the heavy deer, which is always double locked and barred. OZARK COUNTY JAIL. There are six grated windows te the upper story, and when the jailer is inside and the ladder drawn up the plnce is al most as impregnable as n fortress. The top fleer is used for detaining ordinary criminals, but despernte characters are placed in the dungeon beneath, the en trance being through a trap deer and down a ladder. The place has no light save that furnished by a smnll kcrosene lamp. Feed is supplied the inmates in a bucket lowered by u rope into the hele. Eight men are new confined in the dun geon, and, despite its dismalness, the jailer thinks they are lucky te be there, as "they uns are boss thieves." Mnnutuent te Henry V. Qrailjr. The Grady Monument committee, at n meeting recently, held in Atlanta, ac cepted the design ellered for their con sideration by Mr. Alexander Deyle, of New Yerk city. The modeling of tbe side figures, nnd nlw of the body of Mr. Grady's statue, will lie dene in New Yerk. When the time comes te make the head Mr. Deylo will remove his studio te Atlanta, where he can obtain the best suggestions te secure u perfect likeness. S"? THE ORAPY MONUMENT. The figures will be cast in bronze, and either Georgia nntrble or Georgia granite will be used in constructing the shaft. According te the bcale of prices charged by artists of tiote the uerk which Mr. Deyle proposes te de would be worth ever 10,000. He has consented, how ever, te undertake the task for a less amount, partly Ixcause of his friendship for the noted editor whuse memory the htiitue is di-bigncd te km K'tuatc, It t ill takotue years te couiplcie the monu ment i Hi urTv Vs.-&.V. '; --.eyfl, . "I RAPID SPRINTING, Makelm W. feral Write ! fchert bistaate fcunnld. f Mk IMPORTANCE f TUB TAf Msiheaa FiaeUma br Schools AtMvtM Tne reelUaa begs aa4 Anas Hew Champien MmttHI Bees 11 "Heattaa le Motet" SprltiUng or short dtetanca rtiantag is prob ably tks flrtt (mihM by the atsrsge man who vbiU an athlotie acid te MS what M is geed for. The tdet of running ratt attract meet men, and at the only way te detmntae tow speedy one may te is te try and tee, It Is quite natural that this Reme sbehM be mucfl mere than usually popular. Sprint races w w elude distances from 900 te 49 yafdn. The flnt distance U generally considered the limit, although some claim that a 410 yard run Is a sprint quite as much as a an yard run la. A distance which I a sprint for en nun may net be e for another, for the term denne a distance where full speed Is ought for from the beginning te tb end of a race. As men vary at distances In which full spstd position ren "sarrnre. Frem an Instantaneous photograph. ean be maintained, there can be no tpeclfle distance mentioned as being the lint It of a sprint The large majority consider the ex treme point te be anywhere from 200 te 350 yards. In running distances et 400 yards and ever an athlete will bold himself In during the Ortt part of the race, and the longer tb race is the mere Importance thi holding in gains. In all races where full speed Is maintained from start te finish one enentlal point I te be able te start and get Inte ene1 stride with at little less of time as possible. Tb therter tbe race, the mere important this point is, and many ceutcats have been wen by gain ing an advantage of two or three feet In the first five yards and holding, without being able te increase the advantage te the end. An athlete winning a race of that kind shows, net that be is mere speedy than bis oppo nent, but that be It able te get into his strld sooner and thereby get going quicker. When feet racing was young and tbe dif ferent contests were net governed as well a they are new, the habit of "beating the pis pis ter' used te Ira te prevalent that an athleta was censidei ed quite a nevice it he could net steal a yard or two en the pistol flrer. Best ing the pistol means that after a runner has been told te get ready, be start en hit jour ney before tbe pistol hat bean fired, but after the starter has begun te pull the trigger. In this way an advantage (unfair, of course) of a fifth te two-fifths of a second can some times be gained ever competitors wbe wait, honestly, for the signal. It can readily be imagined what a peculiar tight it was when four or flve sprinters in a race anticipated the firing of a pistol and ran off. Six or eight years age such a scene at amateur sports was quite common, but new It would lie considered a curiosity, se much bat the management in this line Improved during the lest half dozen year Even new In lo calities where athletics are net well estab lished, beating tbe pistol In the sprint races is practiced, but-the important games nearly always have a pistol flrer of known ability who Is paid for bis services, and as bis repu tation depends upon hit getting the men off evenly in a race, there is a natural incentive en his part te de the work properly. The method employed by teveral pistol flrers of knewu reputation at the present time te dispatch contestant in a sprint race is, after the clerk of the courte hat put them en their marks, te tell them te "set" Most of them will then assume a position similar te that t.le wn in the Illustration "1'osltlen, for Setting," and they will wait there for some seconds, or until the pistol flrer is con vinced that all are steady, when be will pull the trigger. The.advantage of holding one's self In the attitude thewu by this illustration is that with the arms extended and tba posi tion which the feet are In one can get under way very quickly. It will be noticed that one root It about twenty inches back of the ether. The front feet which in tblt case Is the left one, It supposed te be en tb line with tbe tee of the biud feet retting In a little bole dug in the track te get a push OTiiin methods or araanNa. (Frem an Instantaneous photograph, from. An athlete in this position when be hears the pistol brings bit left arm back and his right arm forward until both are about parallel with the body, when the motion bs het made with his feet in the meantime will necessitate his extending tbem again in about the same positions, only te bring them back in exactly the reverse poeltlon which Is the commencement of the arm kwing used by all sprinters. There are two ways of using tbe feet in this style of starting; one is te step out with the hack feet when tbe arms are drawn half way heck, and the ether it te leave the back feet where it is and teke a short stride with the front feet, the arms in tblt case going through the very same motion as when tbe 111 st movement of the feet U made with tba beck one. The lenjth of stride when tbe back feet is utd first would bring tbe first step about three feet in front of tbe scratch mark which is where the front feet it retting. If the front feet is nut forward first, it will strike the ground any where from nine te fif teen Indies hi front of tbe scratch line, and the movement U followed by a regular stride inr.il.. hy tha back toot The two styles, as can be teen, are quite different, and each method has many advetatet. Berne claim that tbe short stride wltb the front feet when the legs are already some distance njiart, makes them sag tee low by further spreading tbe legs, and that an ath lete cannot recover be well te take another stride, simply en account of the sagging when the body in net enough In motion te stand it. The advocates of this style say that tbe'wsl tbe'wsl tien of "setting" necessitates their bearing nearly all the weight of tbe body en te the front leg, and that a short stride et about a feet with the front leg puts them better in mo tion than if thny struck out directly wltb the liack feet, which necessitates, before a stride can be taken with it, the putting of a certain amount of weiRht en it te that it can be pushed from, h'early a!! the weight being en tbe front feet linns' about a ls of time af ter the pistol is fired in transferring some of it te the Iwrk feet liofere the latter can be um1 in shoving. Anether way of holding tbe ariiH when tha luck feet is used te spring from Is shown in tbe Illustration, "Other Methods of Starting." The athlete in this picture lint his left feet at tha scratch line, as In the first Illustration, but his right arm is forward and his left arm Is ieinting back. He will usu no halt swing with lili nrun, but will, when he heart the pistol, tiey out with his back feet, bring his right arm luck and left arm forward all the wav, and 1:0 vu with bis arm twlijtr. which is n (IflUaW !i ramtu ur it neinc originally com mtneed m accord with the stride of theles. The style t net used very much, although It has been proved by some sprinters te bs aoed enough te be worthy of a trlsl. After an athlete t at home with a certain style of itartMR H would bs rather foetMi for him te chsngs his style unkM he It convinced that some ether method ta better than the en he wet. If he continually practices different style contusion will tbewltestf (a tbsraee, and as m much depend upon the start of a print race an athlete should feel thoroughly at heaW when On his mark and be able td mete from It err! amamtle that he bat been long accustomed te. Anether style of getting ready te start Is shown In the illustration, "Other Method of BtartiM." by thsathlete, who has both baa and right feet at the srrateh mark, steeping down with his left kites just ahev the grertad. It was med tucetmrdUy by O. H. 5fam I 111, the 100 yard champion of America of 1WT and tnttr-eelleclate ehamplen 180 yard manor of 1888 and 188B. ta hi later races be baa net umd it, but stand ea the mart, m shown In the ulortratieo, "Position for Bettleg.f The steeping Hart I net popu lar, and IMierrlll mid he adupted It te prevent f aWag ever the mark, which he atemed an able te avoid when he used the regular pool peol poel tjou for setting. Benle sprinter hat ad the steep! trt te geed adtaatags, bat oat eat oat akWetltsmakltig Bnatrllt held his mark, it was of no advsutags te him id getting into hit stride. At the time he used It he was running very fast sad wen hi races, although It was the mvlverml opinion that he invariably loot a little distance at the start. The principle of Uit style et starting U te rise quickly en the lea- tlaced at lbs scratch mark, which In BfaerrlU cam U the right one, and step out with the otter. A Utile push can be given with the arm, but It mutt necessarily be very slight If the shoulders ar ttoepod far enough te enable the arm te be bent, it brinp the athlete tee clone te the ground.. Bfaerrill was taught this style of itarttngat Yale college, but latterly he becam recon ciled te the ordinary style. thi rtasT STRIPE. (Frem an Instantaneous photograph. Th Illustration called "Tbe First Stride". ahewi two athletes In a race just after the j pistol had been fired. It will be noticed that the one en tbe left band side has brought hi arm back and I giving th half swing a described before. It was a handicap race and the one en the left side had one yard al lowance. The runner en tbe right Is nearly at the extreme point of the arm swing. Beth are en the left leg, but tbe one te the right I further advanced into hi stride, for his right leg Is being put forward and the angle of his body shows that when the stride is taken he would be almost level with his opponent even though be started a yard back. The position of the athlete en the left lido leeks at though hit legt bad a tendency te ttraddle, and there it net tbe direct front motion which it noticeable with the ether. Te be able te start welt in a sprint race re quires a great amount of practice. The best way for an athlete te learn It is te have some en tell him te set, and start hhn either with th .word "go" or with a pistol just as though he were In a race. Hi friend should bold him en hit mark different periods of time and if any motion Is made which resembles the ath lete's premeditating the pistol he should be held until quiet reigns again. At the pistol he should run off, using rather short stride until he gain some momentum, when bis regular running stride can bs used. Any where from thirty te sixty yards Is a geed distance te run at each trial. Half a dexen or even a dexen of these starts whenever be practices will in time make him feel at borne wliil standing en bis mark and getting Inte his stride. It makes no difference whether one is prac ticing for 100 or .100 yards, the starts should, always be tried, and running the full dis tance occasionally should be done according, te tbe athlete'a feelings. lu practicing for 800 yards, for instance, it the athlete wished te test his finishing powers he should try a stiff 300 yards aud only a moderately hard U00 yard run occasionally. Practicing starts net only teaches the ath lete a quick way of getting iute hit running, but the action of tbe running itself is devel oped. Net se much attention te tbe finish of the race concerning probable staying powers, etc., is necessary as might be luppetwdbya novice. The IlnUU et a race generally shows tba strength of a man's staying powers, and this is develud mere by starting than by finish ing. TO TREAT HYDROPHOBIA. A Pnpll of ratteur Founds aa Institute In New Yerk City. Dr Paul Gibier, n long time pupil and asseciate of Pasteur, has founded an In stitute in New Yerk city where tbe vic tims of rabies can be treated en the same principles and with the same virus as in Pasteur's own laboratory. M. Gibiur has dark eyes, cord black hair and beard, and teeth of un usual purity and whiteness. He is a short, dark complexloned DB- PAUI' a,B,EK man, with a head net unllke that of Pasteur himself, but he is much younger, being probably net ever 30 years of age. Regarding his mclhethi the doctor .re cently said: "When a patient comes here, after being bitten by a rabid animal, I wait two days after the day of the bite, and then, if the case is an ordinary ene and lias no specially eevcre features, I Inocu Inecu Inocu late him fifteen times during fifteen successive days. In the event of the wounds being sere, I inoculate eighteen days with stronger virus. I always begin with the weaker virus." Kxecntlent In France. Executions in France are still sur rounded with lugubrious mystery. The condemned de net knew when they are te die, and almost any morning after conviction may be rudely awakened at daybreak and conducted te the guillo tine. This was Uie case recently with two lads who were under sentence for murder at Paris. They went te sleep one night, confident of n commutation of sentence. At dawn they wcre told te prepare for the. end, and ten minutes later their heads dropped in the execu tioner's basket. The l-'rench are nothing) if net sensational, even in the manner of punishing criminals. The Death of the Cblmpaexee, at I It la. The death of Kiltie, the last of the chiinp.inrcfa in Central park, New Yerk, preliably decides the question of securing these interesting and intelligent animals for exhibition. They cannot stand the climate, and it bceina almost like murder te expert them from their native wilds. They inhabit a limited area of the Conge country, and can only be secured alive when infants, and then by the slaughter of the jKirt'iita. The "babies" are nursed by African women until old enough te cat, and then sold te traders. Dut cxile tncana death, and they nre a costly and unpiofltable investment. -mKB&ZS- flUTlCURA REMKD1EB. 8GALY SKIN DISEASES Psoriasis S Years, Coveting Face Head and Kntlre Bedy With Whlte scabs. Hkln Red, Itchy and Weeding-. Hair All Oene Rient Hundreds of JHilUm. lroneuaced Incurable. Cured by Cn tlcura Itcmedles. Ourd by Cuticura . My dlttate (penrlaslt) nrst broke ent en my left cheek, tpreidlnB acrnw my new.snd amett oeverln my awe. It ran Inte .my eye. nd the physician was afraid I would leas my eyealtht ii"j?'M,.lm.. zzizsriri"-.: :r.iV vl: va ,ir IMI ITII UUI HHtU ww v.ifiit.. '- II men Drene m im inr nwm mm unUlmrrmwerojntteiiewje. It era belnx the worst. The while seaU fell WJMaj1fcja ;heuMerjnd.rai.t fSThy'VndJeaia cracnnTSldUteh. Afler twndlns many hundred of dollars, I was pronounced incurable. I nearu et uietu ticuha HRMRiilfn, and arter ulg two bottles of Cuticiiua MweLvrirr, I cenld sc a rlmeie: and aner I had take n four BotHes.J.wa alnietl cured and when I had used six brtUm of Ctm Hnu Hnspi.tiT and one box of CtmtCfA. ertd ens i Of COTl wA Boap, 1 wm euredet nen l naa nm ix wns"' -tswT and one box of Ctltircn. ofCtrriccaABeAr, 1 wMcuTjdeJ ilseaae from which I had uBered . 1 thought the dleraae would iwp scar, but the CvticvaA Rait- UieareMiuiai far flve voert. Imye a verv deftD Mas cured It without any rar. 1 rannetex- Keea CI and! hai. Ii eyesight. I knew of ethers who have received great benent from tneir use. Mlta. HOSAKEUjY, Keckwell City, Iowa. CalkmralatOiTMt The new Bleed andBklll Purlner and purestand beat of Humer Bemedles.lnUrnall', and Ccti- cuna. the great . Bkln cure, ana juticuha grt niira BeAf, an exqultlie Hkln Beaullfler, externally, have cured thousands of eaten ding of scales mratured a quart dally, the akin cracked, bleeding, burning and Itching almett DM WUVIV MIU ssn- beyond human endi.ranrt. hair lllelea ertill gene, MUfterlng terrible. What ether remedies nave mad such cures? Beld everywhere. t'rlce.CuTiconA.fOc.iSeAr, c; UaaeLVKNT, 11.00. I'rennred by Uie Pet- TSKlJKUO ANOCllEllICAI. OOHfOnATIOM, Bes- airBend for " Hew te Cine Bkln Diseases," 04 page. CO Illustrations, nnd 100 testimonials. i DIHrl.KH, Black Heads, ClispnwJ rll Bkln, prevented by UUT1CU1 and Ollv UltA BOAP. IT STOPS TIIK l'AIN. Backache, klndey paint, weaknett, rheuma tism, aud musculnr point relieved In tme min ute by the CuUcura Antl-Haln I'latter. The nrtt and only Instantaneous paln-kllllng plat ter. Sanferd's Radical Cure for Catarrh. Complete External and Internal Treat ment for One Dellar. Te be freed from the dangers of suffocation nhlle lying down j te breathe freely, tleep teundly and undltturbed i te rlte rerreahed. teundly and undlsiuruen j te nte reireanra, head clear, brain actlve and free from pain or ache j te knew that no poisonous, putrid mat- ler denies the breath and reU away tha dell- cate machinery of smell, taste, am hearing ie system does net, through IU nr Htnftii. iamp. nnii iiBuruiK I te reel mat ui veins and arteries, suck up the poison that is turn te undermlne and destroy. Is Indeed a blessing beyond most human enjoyment , Te purcham humanity from such a.fate theuld be the object of nil articled. But theae who have tried many remedies and physicians despair of relief or cure. . HAwrone'a UAntcALCunK meeU every phase of Catarrh, from a simple head cold te the meat loathteme and rtettructlve tV6- It l local and constitutional. Instant In relieving, per manent In curing, safe, economical aud rarely falling. Sanfbrd'a Itadleal Cure Consists of ene bottle of the HAOiCAt. Cen, onebexbfCATAiBieAi,Hoi.vxNT, and one in-1-kevbI) INHAI.KM, all wrapped In oiie package, with treatise and directions, and sold by oil itrinralsta for f 1.00. pettbr dhue a Bosten. CHBM1CAI. COHI-ORATION, marMmW.8Aw M CLAN KB LIVEItriLLB. THK GENUINE DB.C. McLANE'S -CELEBRATED- LIVER PILLS! FOR SICK HEADACHE 1 Mr. and Mrs. Williams, Ne. a7Bevcnth street, N. V., testify that they have both been sulTer. Ing with liver complaint for about Ave years, during which time they have spent a large amount of money and tried many remedies, but te no purpose. Klnnlly, hearing of Uie genuine Ur. C. McLune's Liter 1'llls, prepared by Klerak Ing HreH., Pittsburg, I'n., they purchased four boxes, which they took according te the direc tions accompanying each box, and new pro nounce themselycs iwrfcctly cured of that dls trewiliiR disease. ... . .... Thlss te certify that I have been subject at timet te severe headache j sometimes the pain would be se severe 1 could rest neither day or night, lleorlngef Uie genuine Dr. O. McLane a Liver Pills, prepared By Klein Ing Uros.,tMlta Ures.,tMlta burg, Pa., I sent and get a box, of whli-h I took two pills en going te bed, for two night. They " il a.. (-I....... tlm.t linn tinu rrilQVtxi nie eimrvij'e rtuiuu mhw """ elanwhd nnd I have Imd no inuru trouble from heHt JUHNHTON. 1IH 1-ewU trwl. N. Y. Tills I at in fAirfliV Hint. I IllaVfl lllld (llO llVCf complaint for nix 3 rum, a ml I never could Ret jrurs.Hiui I never ceuiu get help me until I commenced Dr. C. McLnne's Liver Pills, ling llre.., lltUburg, l'a. I any iiipuicjhe ,u iici using tha genuine Dr. .tm.wiri.fi 1v Klnmlnir ' ' ....... ..!..,. ...... .l.a..l.uLM imm. iilelcly cured me; and I de hereby recommend them te all person afflicted with adtseaned liver. Try them. They will cure, MAItf A KVANH, Ne. IM Lew s street, N.Y. Insist upon having the genuine llr. C. Mc- I jine's LU er Pills, propareo by Kleml ng llras., Plltsbiirir. l'a. Prk-e 25 cent a box. Held bynll uruggiRi. .--".." w UMt'IIItRYH' VETEIUNAHYHPEC1F1C8 Ker Horses, CalUe, JJ'STrPy00"' Ue" ANU 600 1'ags Boek en Treatmen't of Animals and Chart Men t Free. CORES I Fever. Congestions, InfltininaUen, A.AriHplnal Mcnrngltlt. Milk Fever. It.ll.-Htralns, limeneM, Hhciimatltin tj.U. insiemper, niwii .iuiw. D. K. I. llOlt orunies, norm. K.K Onigbt, Heave, pneumonia. F.F, i.e. Mlscurrlaae. llcmerrhuge. , :mu or uri)"i ijjtjh:im:. 11.11. Urinary nnd Kidney Diseases. LL Eruptive Diseases. Mange. J.K. DlsceM-s of Digestion. HTABLE CASE, with Hpeclncs, Manual, Witch Hazel Oil nnd Medlcnter 87.00 FRIC'K, Hlngle Bettle (ever W doses) .00 Held by Druggist S or Kent Prepaid any where and In any quantity en Itecclpt of Price. HUMl'HHEVH' MED. CO.. 100 Fulton BU, N. Y. HUMPHREYS' In use ae tears HOMEOPATHIC SPECIFIC no. at. The only successful remedy DEBILITY. VITAL WEAK for NERVOUS NESS, und Prostration, from Over-Werk or ether causes. II per vial, or & vlaltand large vial powder for la. Kemi 11V Dnuoenn-H, or sent prepaid en ro re ro cflptWer prlce.-lllJMFHHEYrJ' MEDICINE w", 1 Fulton Ht.. N. Y. lunrtCT.Th.H&w pt AltTER'B LITTLE LIVER PILJ. .CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS ui..v iiAAitaiiA nnd relieve all the troubles Inci dent te a hllleu slate of the system, such a m.in.M Nuiiuu. Iirfiwhlnesji. Distress after Eating, Fain In the Hide, dr. While their met remarkable success bat been shown In curing Headache, yet CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER VllAH are equally vnlunble In Constipation, curing and pre voting this uuneytng com plaint, while they also correct all dlsorderser the stomach, stimulate Uie liver and regulate tbe bowels. Eveu If they only cured Ache they would be almost priceless te these who BiillVr from thl distressing complaint; but fortunately their Koednes deea net end here, and these who ence try them will nnd Uiese little pills tuluable In se many way that they will net lie wllllug te de without them. But after all sick head I the bane of se many lives that Here is where we make our great boost. Our pills cure it while O,0ARTEil?H:LTTLK LIVER PILLS are very small and very easy te lake. Una or two pllta make a dose. They are strictly rgeUble and donetKrlpo or purge, but b- Uielr gentle ic ic tten please all who use them. I.t hit at Set i Ot e ler II. Sold everywhere or scut by mall. CARTER MEDICINE CO., NEW YORK. Small PilL Small Dese. "Small Priee. augia-lydeed rilO SAVE YOUR HACK AND GLADDEN X your Heart use " Purity Soup." Wltn a pen wnai 1 aunetra nenire rrtmnA Hkmeib. They saved ray ilfe feel It my duty te recommend them. My MnMjl.H mtA at ever, and an Is my "'T-mitW lysvjftv mvavlttm' (. 'Vni.' errWAevA,,,,C,lM, I!l,!!ycArTm aam leat taw n rlvsat Fbliaaelphtaas tMiewst tWlaTWARB. PfteMnQ SpfMsrf.M Hews JCxBrsat.... Way Paetenssrl..- Loavei Fhllodeiehla, Ma.m. fci5.mu TitO a. aa. MantralaviaMUeyt 8 iei i iTainT...... 'atara Btpreaa.... Hanover Aeeem...... Kast l.lnef....-....... Frederick Aeeem.... vtaOtnmnMe ssma. m. via OeiaatSla ll.-aj a. m. via Columbia ll:a.m. lakttJey. Iaeasur AeeemMMM via narrncmrgAoeem., MumbteAceem... mp.m. :p.m. Meb. m. am p. at. tot te 'jEenve" UaaanfleTtaj Mae JO a. m. t:f a.m. as a.m fcWa.m. fcUa.. UMaa. mi ttp,m. 4p,m. MS p. m. 128 p. m. narruears Hxm Western Bxprettt. Lancaster Ace.. PhlST. Kxpreet. fast MnuF. ..... Laaeaater Aneo bj rauat Harrltburg Kxpre,. MuicMier Aocera...... Oetttrabta aeeem.... Atlantic Rxpreatt...... lUert, Philadelphia Aeeem. Jundsy ". ... Day Kxpreaat ....... Harrltburg Aeeem... Mali TralnJ...... Frederick Aeeem fThe only train which run daily. On Bnnday the Mali train wttt ran by way OelnmblaT J. K. WOOD, Oenerai CRAB. K. I'UQH.Oeneral pwtl.artKi.PHtA a mtADWaBAtlJteiw HSADUtO a COLUMBIA DIVHUOlf. Oa and alter Buuday. Met JS, IB), Wnr KMdln anil Intennadlata rntnla. day, 7:80 a. m., 12J6,:Mp.m.; 8unday,Mee as., Kae p. m Fer I'filladetDhla. weak aars. 7J0 I -. r - ti. " i- z;- hi re p. ns., QunaaTi, sun p. in. Fer New Yerk via Fhlladelphia, weak nays, 7-JOa.m., 12:30, 8:48 p. m. .. Fer New Yerk via Auontewn, weak aaya. FotAllentown, week days, 7 JO a. m.,ltt m. i auaday, as p. m. Fer Fetuvill. week days, 7 JO a. m., fc p, an, Sunday, 8dS p. m. ForLebanon, weak days. 7:69 .m,lJ,fc r,.m.Buuany,fcOBs.in,ap.m. Fer Harrltbnrg. week days, 7:99 a.m.,tnJ, 5 pra.t Sunday, a. m. Fer Quarrytllle, week day, ,., M. .0Sp.m.iBunday,e:Wp.m. TRAINS FOR IAKCABTKB, Leave Reading, week days. 739, Usafa. Bs., :66p.m.iBundayl7aa.ra.j:10p.m. Leave rhlutdelphla, week days, 105, M mi!ea?elNew Yerk via Philadelphia, weak day, TUB a. in., l:su, p. m. ana nignu Leave new ter fork via Auontewn, week day K a. m., 1:00 p.m. A Leave Allen town, week days, SsM a-m.) AM Leav Petuvill. wetk day, p.m. Leav Lebanon, week da: Mn.ni.t Hnnrtnv. TM a. m. ,yt, 7:11 a. m., .. I:3 p. m. aya.ealla.Ba.f Leav Harrltburg, weak day, lw OJUIa m. Leav Uuarry vUte, weak days, ft), lb a. nb, ..OOlBunYOam. H Leav rnliaaeipnia, umusi isw, wtsssi, Allfl Beuui tueet wnan. ITnv AtlantJn (ltv. WOtk .days. asm m null t;An n. n.t Ai IM m, m. and 1:80 p. m. ; Sunday, tee a. m.. AoeemmoaasioB, eats a. i u.l..mlnBlTa AtlanUa OltT. depot AUanUe and Arkansas Avenues. Woekday--kxpreaa 7:80 a. m. and i p. m. Aeeem. moaaUen,l.-os a. m. and 4J0 jg. m. Bunday-. Rxitrest, 4 p. m. AoeommoaaUoa, TBI a.av ' DeuSS urn tablm ean b obtained at ttek. A?a!mcLBOD, 0. 0. HAHOOOK. . - Vic Prm. den'l M'gr. Oen'l Par Ast. W MANOH LANCAHTKK JOINT UBB ll RAILROAD. Arrangements of IitoeBger TralBten Bdkpat, November W, Max MORTHWARP. Iieave a. . King rarest, Lane- JiflO 1 .mnttmmiMf ........ 71BT Ifcts Ml ll3 S8 rnl...KI 12rM ManblmM .....-7: IM Cornwall. 7a liH Arrtveat Lebanon - wll BOiriUWAKD. mi am an MT Laav a.m. r.M, Lebanon .........-.- 7:il Uernwall. ............. T:w Manbelcat. ..... 7J Lancaater....... 137 Arrive at Columbia...... J-S King Street, Lane. I'M 94a aei MMi A. M. W IION, Hunt. R. C. Railroad. H.sJ.NKFK.Supt.aR.R. $att4tiu0. e PENH MONDAY. MARCH 10, 1MJ0. THF Lancaster Trust Company, 36 and 38 North Qnetn St. CAPITAL aaoe.ooo. Charter Perpetual. Mat wa mm, fa.m. Man am a- ea. .Ma. A Mia' liBa.ai as m f ,1 raw iiS Jm ii 'H S8S13 2 Rents Safes In IU Fire and Burglar Proof VaulU, . that cannot be opened only by the rooter, at S3, f 10 and t per annum. Receive deposit III turn of ene dollar and upwards, furnishing deposit books thereeor. Act a Administrator, Executer, Agent, eus., and Execute Trust of every descrip tion. Pays Interest en Depot"-4 per cent, per an- num. and at rate of 3 per cent, per aanem fords months. Solicit enrrent account, subject te check, of .Individuals, Arms and corporation. Invests money In Judgments and mortgage la Lancaster city and county. Lenn money en approved collaterals and mortgage. Receipt for wilt and attume their custody without charge. Securities, Jewelry, etc, received te J?"; Ing. Silverware and valuable iteredat moderate rates. Trust funds deposited and Invested separately from Uiose of Uie company, J. I. HARTMAN, PretidenL If. BAUMUARDNER, V. President. JNO. HERTZLER, Treasurer, BROWN HENBEL, Solicitors. DIBECTOBSl Jehn I. Hartman, Jehn Keller, Jehn D. Skllet, J.QustZoek, Henry Baumgardnc HamuelM. Myert, J. Hay Brown, mrt-tM gamp' OVTE W LAM PS AND ART OOOD8. Call and Se THE -AND RRT COODS ON SECOND FLOOR Jolinls.Ariield'sBuildiiig NORTH QUEEN STREET. (M-tM FINE If LIPS XLUMBINa,aAB FITTING, Ac. Jehn P. Sehaum fc Sep, PLUMBING, GAS FITTING AND ROOFING. 26 80UTH QUEEN ST., T4 ' 'J ?ia j J'l 1 w n 1 ii , it. Jwm ?. n yv i t.i Si'- mf JjS5 jm 38 .? Ml , ti.i m K- V. W v i.S'5i.'!.MW,,.. ' .t .J,. AT. r J'gK... t ki U V-rfffiyfA 4fal
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers