NON § GERERRL IN FLIPNO HRW RENEGADE REWARDED. David Fagan, a Deserter of the Twenty-fourth Infantry, Now Leads a Band of Guerrillas. David Fagin, a deserter from the Twenty-fourth United States infantry, who has been rewarded for his treason by the post of general in the Filipino army, at the head of 150 rebels, attack- ed and captured a civilian launch near Arayat. American soldiers, hearing the firing, turned and recaptured the launch and the barge loaded with merchandise which it had been towing before they could be looted. Fagin has sworn especial enmity to- wards his former comrades. Of the 20 men he captured a month ago seven have returned. One was killed in a fight, his body being horribly mutilated. agin sends messages to his former comrades, threatening them with ven- geance if they become his prisoners. It was Fagin's men who captured Lieut. Frederick L. Alstaetter, who is still a prisoner. While scouting near Looc a detach- ment-of the Twentieth and Twenty- eighth regiments under Capt. Beigler were attacked by 400 insurgents armed with rifles under the command of a white man whose nationality is not known to t! Americans. The insur- gents for the most part were intrenched After an heroic fight Capt. Beigler drove off the enemy, killing more than 75. The fight lasted for two hours Capt. Beigler and three privates were slightly wounded, and two of the Amer- icans were killed. A BRUTAL INSURGENT. Rebel Captain Sentenced to Death for Fiend- ish Treatment of Prisoners. The rebel Captain Novicio has been tried by a military commission at Baler, Northern Luzon, charged with burying alive a seaman named McDonald, of Lieutenant Gilmore's Yorktown party. Novicio was found guilty and sentenced to death. The commission’s sentence is now in the hands of General MacArthur for approval. ; Testimony was produced at the trial showing that Novicio also caused the death of Van Ville, another member of Lieutenant Gilmore's party, by deliver- ing him into the hands of the native tribesmen known as Igorrotes, who, un- der the pretext of going fishing, lured Van Ville into the woods and murdered him and two Spaniards, who were Van Ville’s fellow-captives. The tribesmen bound Van Ville, opened his veins and sucked his blood until he was dead. EXPLOSION TOO HEAVY. Daring Attempt to Loot Bedford Counly Treasurer’s Safe. A daring attempt to rob the county treasurer's office in the court house at Bedford, Pa... was frustrated Friday morning by the force of the explosion, when the vault doors were blown off, breaking the windows in the building. The noise of the falling glass put the thieves to flight. The entire town, al- most, was awakened by the explosion, but the robbers made good their escape. The treasurer had just collected sev- eral thousand dollars, but had fortunate- ly deposited it in bank, and had the burglars gained an entrance to the in- ner vault they would only have secured about $200. The commissioners have offered a reward of $200 for the capture of the guilty parties. MUST FACE SERIOUS CHARGES. Capt. Hall, Who Commanded Marines at Pekin Accused of Cowardice. Gen. Heywood, commandant of the marine corps, has ordered an investiga- tion of charges against Capt. Newt Hall, of Texas, who commanded the American marines within the beleag- ured legation at Pekin. Minister Con- ger preferred the case which practically amounts to charging Hall with coward- ice. Minister Conger claims that Hall re- fused an important strategic point in the legation compound, and afterwards re- fused to perform some routine defensi duty on the ground that it was impossi- ble to do so. A number of Russian sol- diers performed the service successfully, proving that Hall was wrong. Transvaal is Annexed. At Pretoria Friday the Transvaal was proclaimed a part of the British em- pire, with impressive ceremonies. The royal standard was hoisted in the main square of the city, the Grenadiers pre- sented arms, massed bands played the National anthem, Sir Alfred Milner read the proclamation and 6,200 troops, rep- resenting Great Britain and her colo- nies, marched past. Two hundred Boers unsuccessfully at- tacked the garrison at Jacobsdal.” It was defended by a detachment of the Cape Town Highlanders, who had 14 killed and 20 wounded. 5 Will Open Negotiations. Minister Conger has been authorized to begin negotiations at once with the Chinese envoys on the basis of the points in the German and French notes, upon which all the powers are agreed. Upon these points where divergence of views exist the governments will ne- gotiate to reach a further understand- ing. It has been decided that the min- isters in Pekin shall conduct any ne- gotiations that may be necessary with the Chinese government in. place of confiding these to commissions to be sent out from each country to Pekin. — Do Not Wish to Be Sold. Intense adverse feeling has been ex- cited at St. Thomas by the renewal of the report that Denmark intends to sell the Danish Antilles to the United States. A meeting of the Colonial council has been convoked at St. Croix for the purpose of making a formal pro- test. The newspaper discuss the question, declaring in bold type, “We do not wish to be sold.” There is no desire, much less enthusiasm, among the popu- lation to belong to the United States. Aiter An Immense Estate. The Von Sitler German society, the members of which claim they are heirs to $60,000,000 supposed to be held up L'y the German government, is holding its annual convention in Harrisburg, Pa., to devise a plan by which they may secure possession cf this immense for- tune. The convention opened with 2c0 descendents of Baron von Sitler of Alsace-Loraiie, from Pennsylvania, Illi- nois, Missouri and Maryland, present. The society meets once a vear to talk over its claim. American Troops Leave Pekin. The United States in- fantry has departed from Pekin. The date of the meeting of the foreign min- isters with Prince Ching and Li Hung Chang has not been definitely fixed. Some of the ininisters have not yet re- ceived instructions from their govern- ments; two are absent from the capital and one is ill Fourteenth Fought Sheriff's Posse. A sheriff's posse in pursuit of five prisoners who escaped from Doniphan jail overtook the men near Dalton, Ar A battle was fought and two members of the posse were dangerously wounded. Three of the prisoners were wounded and one recaptured. @ LATEST NEWS NOTES. Typhoid fever is epidemic at Titus- ville, Pa prevailed in A severe snow storm Spain Wednesday. Several Indian skeletons have been unearthed near Sharon, Pa. Joseph Chessor, a lumber _merchant, was assassinated at Norton, Va. Austria-Hungary has given her as- sent to the Anglo-German agreement. The total catch of seals in Bering sea during the season just closed was 32,- 24/7. The flooded mines at Hecla No. 2, Westmoreland county, are again in op- eration. The total of contributions for relief f Galveston flood sufferers to date is $1,140,368. : Fire destroyed the business portion of Dunavant, Kan. The losses are $50,000, partially insured. Two thousand recruits will be sent to the army in the Philippines within the next three weeks. At St. Paul, Minn., fifty-two horses, 41 vehicles and a large livery barn were destroyed by fire. Frank Williams, a civil engineer, was drowned while attempting to cross a iver in Puerto Rico. Carry Caldwell, a negress, killed her three children and then committed sui- cide at Charlotte, N. The Shenango tin plate plant, of New Castle, Pa., will resume operations in full Tuesday morning. The New Castle and Sharon (Pa.) Street Railway Company, capital $150,- 000, has been chartered. Johnnie Leach, a s5-year-old boy at Franklin, Pa., fell into a tub of hot wat- er and was scalded to death. Gov. Beckham, of Kentucky, has ap- proved the election bill passed at the extra session of the Legislature. A trustee of Beloit, Ill, college has promised to give the institution $200,- 000 if another $150,000 is raised. Seeds Brothers’ bank at Bridgeport, Ind., was robbed of over $1,000 in cash and a considerable sum in notes. #Alexander McKenzie, a North Da- kota absconder. has been captured with $250,000 in gold in his possession. William Killy, a tool dresser, was killed by the explosion of a boiler at the Wilson farm, near Washington, Pa. Four persons were killed and three injured in a Great Northern freight wreck on the coast line near Seattle. The Columbia Zinc and Lead Com- pany, of Wilkesbarre, Pa., has been in- corporated with a capital of $100,000. The Hebrews of Palestine have pro- jected a great university of Jewish learning, to be located at Jerusalem. Mrs. T. E. Carber, of Maytown, Pa, died from lockjaw. Physicians were unable to find any wound or scratch. Patrick Rice, formerly one of the greatest of Americanrace horse trainers, committed suicide by taking laudanum. The Republic Iron and Steel Com- pany will erect an 18-inch finishing mill at their Bessemer plant at Youngstown, Ohio. A big power plant is being established at Massena, N. Y., which bids fair to rival the famous Niagara Falls Supply center. At Falls Village, Conn. fire wiped out the National bank, the postoffice, the Methodist church and a store. Loss, $30,000. The Cariboo gold mine, of British Columbia, has shipped to New York an ingot weighing 753 pounds and valued at $154,765. Fourteen strikers at the Shenango furnace, Sharpsville, Pa., have been en- joined from trespassing and intimidat- ing employes. Consul McCook estimates that the Klondike will yield from $15,000,000 to $20,000,000 of gold annually for many vears to come. Owing to the ravages of a mad dog, cattle are being killed at Madison, Westmoreland county, Pa., to prevent an epidemic of rabies. The State of Alabama claims a tract of land a mile wide on the western bor- der of Florida, and 100 miles of the southern end of Florida. The La Belle Company has just com- pleted at Steubenville, O., the erection of a continuous mill, which will be put in operation in a few days. Frank Rockefeller, of Cleveland, O., paid $5,050 for Columbus XVII, vearling Hesiod bull, owned by Benton Gabbert, of Dearborn, Mo. The United States transport lawton has arrived at Seattle with 500 stranded miners brought from Cape Nome at the expense of the Government. It is rumored that ex-President Cleve- land will be offered the presidency of Washington and Lee university, vacat- ed by William L. Wilson's death. C. D. Snapp, confidential agent for Caldwell & Smith, cotton brokers, of Memphis, Tenn., has been arrested on the charge of embezzling $32,000. The miners employed by the Penn Gas Coal Company at Irwin, Pa., will erect a fountain as a memorial to their late superintendent, John F. Wolf. ~ Chicago postoffice clerks have affil- iated themselves with the Federation of Labor, with the avowed purpose of striving for an eight-hour workday. It is reported the Laughlin Nail Com- pany’s mill, at Martins Ferry, O., is to Le remodeled into a wire nail plant to be operated in opposition to the trust. At Brushy Mountain, Tenn., Differ- ences which led to a strike of 300 miners employed. by the Crooked Fork Coal & Coke Company have been adjusted. The government has chartered the British steamship Royalist, which it is intended to operate as a United States transport between Seattle and the Phil- ippines. James B. Dill, the eminent corpora- tion lawyer, says adequate trust legis- lation is possible only in Congress. State laws cannot deal successfully with the question. With a laugh of scorn at a friend who had questioned her bravery to commit suicide, Miss Gertrude De Wade, of Chicago, shot and probably fatally wounded herself. The will of Thomas Keating, the horseman, has been filed in Oakland, Cal., and disposes of an estate of about $50,000. Keating leaves $50 for “any widows that may turn up.” . F. Redding, a prominent planter of Madison county, Florida, was shot » and fatally wounded on his plantation Tuesday night by a negro. A large posse is pursuing the negro. A total of $20,166,687 in gold dust and bullion has been received at the assay office at Seattle, Wash., during the year, of which $3.173.320 came from Alaska and $16.374,488 from the Klondike. A mysterious epidemic has afflicted the Indians along the Yukon river in Alaska, 60 in 150 dying in two months. Owing to inability to fish and hunt they are now threatened with famine. Four engineering corps have begun laying out a railroad between Oren- burg and Taschkend, Russia, for which American locomotives have been order- ed. The engineers will probably finish the survey in IQ0O. The sultan of Turkey has become alarmed over the reported intention of the powers to proclaim the complete independence of Crete and intends to send a fleet of decrepit cruisers into Cretan waters as a hint that he will re- sist such action. Another feud has broken out in Clay county, Ky., between the Philpots and the deputy sheriffs under Sheriff Ben White, headed by the friends of Felix Davidson on the other side. In a fight David Davidson and David Philpot were killed. Several men were wound- ed on both sides. 2 = SOUTHERN CHINA NOW THREATENED BOXERS GROW BOLD. Chinese Authorities Indifferent to ihe Progress of Rebeis—Two Thousand Villagers Slainand the Town Burned. Rebellion is.spreading along East river and North river, in the province of Kwang-Si, China. It is supposed to te aimed at the overthrow of the Man- chu dynasty, but the reports are so con- tradictory that it is next to impossible to form a lucid impression. In Canton the Chinese officials are taking the in- surrection so lightly that foreigners be- lieve it will be very difficult to sup- press. The governor of Hongkong has been informed that 4,000 villagers in the Samtochuok-Kwaishin district were at- tacked by rebels at Pengkok. The vil- lagers were defeated and 2,000 of them killed. The rebels, who lost 400 killed, burned two villages containing 3,000 houses. A force of 2,000 troops went to the assistance of the villagers and en- gaged the rebels on October 22. No details of the result have been receiv- ed, Gen. Ho, with 2,000 troops, has re- turned to Hongkong, having burned the villages of Shanchautin and Malantad. Chinese officials have placarded the Shetom district, offering several hun- dred dollars’ reward for the heads of four foreigners who are supposed to de leading the rebels. The rice crop has failed in Kwang-Si province and rob- bers are pillaging. Rebellion and fam- ine there are certain. BAYONET FOR STRIKERS. Canadian Militia Charge Upon a Mob—Eight Soldiers and Fifteen People Wounded. Over a score wounded, one fatally, is the result of a conflict between the mi- Iitia and the striking mill hands at Val- leyfield, province of Quebec. A couple of hundred men employed by the Mon- treal Cotton Company on the founda- tions of a new mill went out on strike, demanding an increase of 25 cents a day in their pay. The company refus- ed to deal with the union. The strikers prevented the company from shipping goods, and held up the company’s coal pile. The local police were powerless. Consequently a message was sent to Montreal asking for military assistance. Thursday evening the mob gathered rear the Empire mill and began throw- ing stones through the windows and otherwise destroying property. The troops charged the mob with fixed bay- onets. They were driven back. Eight of their number were wounded, two of them seriously. The strikers had 15 men injured, one fatally. FIRE BOSSES IN DEATH TRAP. One Man Killed and Another Severely Burnt by a Mine Gas Explosion. By an explosion of gas in No. 3 Bar- num shaft of the ennsylvania Coal Company at Pittston Saturday one man was killed and another fatally hurt. John B. Clark and Matthew Edwards, fire bosses, entered the mine to make an inspection preparatory to the col- liery resuming operations. They had not been in the mine long until a heavy explosion of gas occurred. Rescuers went down the mine and found Edwards trying to make his way out. He was badly burned and will die. The search continued for Clark, but he could not be found until several hours after the explosion. When the rescuers reached him he was dead, his body being badly mangled by the force of the explosion. The mine was also damaged considerably by the explosion. REBEL CHIEFS ACTIVE. They Are Carrying Everything Before Them in Southern China. Refugees from Hui-Chow say the rebels are welcomed everywhere. They take nothing without payment and are treated as guests instead of as enemies. Their leaders are supposed to number ten, each commanding a separate band. The leader operating in the Kow- Lung hinterland is a mere stripling, but is everywhere successful, e is report- ed to have defeated a large body of imperial troops, killing 100 of the Chi- nese soldiers. The surnames of four of the rebel chiefs are Fong, Ho, Ching and Chan. Will Revise the Tariff. The Philippine commission has de- cided to compile the revised Philippines customs tariff from its own investiga- tions, assisted by the report of the army board. The result will be forwarded to the United States for publication and discussion among those interested in foreign commerce. The details appear to be satisfactory and the draft has been approved by the secretary of war. The commission will promulgate it here as a law. The measure has taken on a new and international commercial interest and the course of the commission is heartily commended here. Max Muller Dies at Oxford. Friedrich Maximilian Muller, com- monly known as Max Muller, corpus professor of comparative philology at xford University, Sunday, aged 77 years. For half a century he had been celebrated as a philologist, orientalist, scholar and author. It was intended from his birth, in 1823, that he should be a scholar. Friedrich Max Muller's title to rank as one of the most distinguished phil- ologists of the century is secured by a long lifetime’s output of industrial re- searches into the origin of languages. Fortune in One Nugget. The biggest nugget of gold ever re- at the assay office has arrived mining company in British Co- lumbia, consigned to the New York agents of the Bank of Montreal. It contained a fraction over 753 pounds of the yellow metal and is valued at $154,- 000. It came in a solid cone and stood about two feet high. This cone was wrapped in canvas and fitted into an oblong box made of two-inch planks and heavily beund with iron. It re- quired four men to handle it. ceived from a Chicago Church Wrecked. An explosion of acetylene gas which was to be used for a stereoptican enter- tainment wrecked the interior of the First Presbyterian Church at Austin, a suburb of Chicago, Sunday night. The operator, recently returned from mis- sion work in India, lost his right hand and sustained other injuries. One of the tanks sprung a leak and the escaping gas was exploded by the light of the lantern. Epidemic of Diptheria. The epidemic of diphtheria which has been raging in the village of Pavia, Bedford county, Pa., for the past six weeks is still on the increase, despite the efforts of the citizens to stamp it cut. Many children have died, and the one physician of the town is overwork- ed and cannot attend to all the sick. Confederate Money for the Germans. A band of American confidence men has been successfully doing Berlin and other German cities, passing off Con- federate $10 bills, which have been read- ily accepted at 40 marks each. The police have received reports of scores of victims. i Mrs. Calvin S. Brice, the widow of Senator Brice, of Chio, is ill in her New York home. Her condition is such as to cause grave fears as to her recovery. - GOLD M NERS STRIKE. Object to Recent Orders and Three Hundred Walk Out. At Victor, Col., all miners employed at the Independence gold mine, about 300 in number, have quit work. The cause for their action is the personal search plan that was begun at the mine in order to stop the alleged pilfering of ore. A meeting of miners was held at which it was unanimously resolved that: “After this date all men employed at the Independence mine shall leave the mine in the digging clothes.” Several weeks ago, when the man- agers of various mines in the district announced that the miners must strip to the skin in the presence of guards before leaving the mines, the men at the In- dependence, where the order was first put in force, reached an agreement with the management resulting in a modi- fication of the rule to the extent that all miners working under ground should wear their underclothes and pass before a detective when going off shift. The resolution now adopted takes no cog- nizance of the former agreement. Claims are made by the men that other grievances must be settled before they will return to work. STUDENTS’ WILD CAPERS. College Boys Take a Cow to Third Slory of Girls’ Hall. One hundred students from Mount Union college at Alliance, O., robed in white and closely masked, obtained en- trance to the girls’ hall by breaking in a window sash. President Riker's fam- ily cow was then taken into the build- ing, carried up to the third story aad securely tethered. Then amid cheers and songs the students made their way to the college. They overpowered the watchman and proceeded to upset the stoves, overturn the college piano and throw all movable furniture out the win- dows. The faculty were serenaded, after which the white-robed figures made their way down town and ended the de- monstration with a war dance on the public square. It is expected that any action from the faculty as a result of the demonstration will meet with concerted resistance. MONEY SCARCE IN SWEDEN. Balance of Foreign Trade Against the Coun- try—Crisis Threatened. The extraordinary scarcity of money which has been growing more acute for a month is so seriously affecting com- mercial circles as to threaten a crisis. The balance of foreign trade continues against Sweden, and the repeated con- traction of gold loans abroad fails to palliate the situation. Industries are daily launched, but adequate capital is not available and the newspapers are filled with appeals from manufacturers in desperate straits for money. Rural people, attracted by the indus- trial activity, are flocking to the towns and, consequently, the demand for houses is so great that rents have ad- vanced 20 to 30 per cent. The civil ser- vants have already been granted 20 per cent. increase to meet the hard times and it is expected the employers gen- crally will have to follow suit. SUICIDE WITH GOLD LEAF. Two High Chinese Officials Dodge Punish- ment for Inciting Boxer Outrages. Two high Chinese officials, Kang Yi and Yu Shien, whose punishment was demanded by the powers for inciting the Boxer outrages, have solved that part of the Chinese question by com- mitting suicide. This information has een communicated to the state depart- ment by Minister Wu. Governor Yu, who enticed missionaries into his yamen to be butchered, killed himself by the aristocratic Chinese method of eating gold leaf. Prince Tuan was driven from the imperial court and was severely censured. Emperor Kwang-Hsu has commis- sioned Prince Ching and Li ung Chang to fix the penalties of those of- fenders whom the powers have desig- nated for punishment. The latest Chi- nese decree announces that several princes have already been punished, EXPLOSION AT INDIAN HEAD. Shock Felt Twenty Miles—Powder Magazine Supposed to be Destroyed. An explosion occurred at the Indian Head proving grounds about 11 o'clock Wednesday night. A flash of light visi- ble some distance accompanied the ex- plosion, which was followed by a fire. The explosion shook the windows of houses in Alexandria, 19 miles away. There is no direct gommunication with the proving grounds and details cannot be had. The grounds are 25 miles down the Potomac river from Washing- ton, and the big guns and armor for the battleships are tested there. It is believed the powder magazines and other buildings were destroyed. A number of explosions followed at in- tervals, illuminating the surrounding country and the opposite bank of the river. GIVING AWAY HIS FORTUNE. Rich Alaskan Chieftain Making Braves Happy. Will Impoverish Himself. The greatest potlatch given for many years in Alaska, is now in progress at Kulckwan, near Pyramid harbor. George Klarfish, the richest Alaskan chieftain, who made his money in trad- ing, is giving away the savings of 20 years that his name may be handed down as a generous chieftain. Two thousand Indians are present. Feast- ing, dancing and gaming make up the program, which will last for a month. Ten thousand dollars’ worth of blank- ets, flour, tents, guns and hymn books will be distributed. By the time the feast is ended Chief Klarfish will be penniless. Will Send Christmas Presents Free. Secretary of War Elihu Root has sent out orders relative to the sending of Christmas presents to American soldiers in the Philippines. The name of the command of each soldier must be plain- ly marked on each box, and the box sent to Columbia storage, Pier 22, Brooklyn, so as to reach Brooklyn not later than November 15, when the transports leave New York for the Philippines. Provid- ed the transportation charges are paid to Brooklyn, the government will take the packages from there free. Tortured by Robbers. Two burglars stabbed and slashed A. G. Rubey, of Chicago, with a physi- cian’s lancet, in an attempt to make him tell where he had concealed his money. For nearly half an hour the robbers tor- tured the man. Failing to make him tell the hiding place of his money, they cut his tongue a number of times, until Rubey cried out for mercy and revealed the hiding place of $480 in paper, $80 in gold and $300 in Illinois Steel checks. The robbers then made their escape. Boys’ Body Riddled. While hunting near Concord, Pa, Walker Symerman, aged 10 years, saw a squirrel and called to his brother to hand him the gun. While walkipg backward with the weapon the lad fell. The gun was discharged, the load of shot riddling the entire upper portion of Walker's body and killing him in- stantly. Both eyes were torn out Drops Dead While Speaking. George W. Blake, of Ottawa, III, Democratic candidate for member of the Legislature from La Salle county, dropped dead at Dana while making a campaign speech. Heart disease is said fo Be the cause. THE BOERS ARE STIL BATTLING RENEWED ACTIVITY. They Now Have Fifteen Thousand Men in the Field and Are G.ving the British Much Trouble. According to a dispatch from Cape Town, a force of Boers attacked and surrcunded a patrol of Cape police with a convoy near Hoopstad, Orange river colony, and a sharp fight ensued. The police were compelled to abandon two Maxims. Ultimately reinforced by the Yeomanry, they succeeded in getting away with the convoy; but they lost sev- en killed, 11 wounded and 15 captured. The colonials were outnumbered 10 :0 one, and the engagement lasted two ours. The Boers have 15000 men in the field, nearly half of whom are in Orange river colony. These are divided into commandoes of some 300 each, but are capable of combination for large opera- tions. Lord Roberts cables from Pretoria that in the fight between Gen. Barton and Gen. De Wet “the British losses were heavier than at first reported. An additional officer and 12 men were killed and three officers and 25 men were wounded. The Boers left 24 dead and 19 wounded on the field and 26° Boers were taken prisoners. Three Boers who held up their hands in token of sur- render and then fired on the British were court-martialed, convicted and sentenced to death. I have confirmed the sentence.” Barton afterwards scattered De Wet's Boers near Frederickstaad, but 30 cavalrymen were ambushed by Boers between Phillipolis and Springfontein and only seven escaped. FREETRADE ESSENTIAL. Greater Organization for England Advocated by Sir Hick-Beach. The chancellor of the exchequer, Sir Michael Hicks-Beach, in the course of an address before the Liverpool cham- ber of commerce advocated closer com- rmercial union between the different countries of the empire and greater or- ganization for the empire’s common in- terests. He said, with regard to the former, that it was impossible for Great Britain to be other than a free-trade country, and that he sympathized with Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the Dominion pre- mier, in his opinion that an imperial zollverein was unobtainable without free trade within the empire. o far as imperial organization was concerned he said he did not think there was any immediate danger of war, and he expressed a hope that the principles of the Anglo-German agreement would be universally accepted. COLOR LINE IN CUBA. It Is Being Drawn Very Closely, Bilter Feeling. Causing Telegrams from Santiago de Cuba say: The departure of provincial deie- gates to participate in the progress of the forthcoming constitutional conven- tion at Havana caused an immense demonstration. It is estimated that they were escorted to the wharf by upwards of 12,000 persons of whom nine-tenths were colored people. The political parties are drawing the color line very closely and this is caus- ing bitter feeling between the races. The whites predict that the convention will last a year, alleging that most oi the delegates will prefer $300 a month to the establishment of a Cuban republic. All the local papers dramatically ex- hort the delegates to fulfill their duty and quietly expel the Americans from the island. BANK TELLER ABSCONDS. New York First National Bank Robbed o $700,000 by Trusted Official. Charles L. Alvord, Jr., note teller of the First National bank, New York, is a fugitive and a defaulter to the extent of $700,000. The announcement of the defalcation, made Tuesday afternoon, created the utmost excitement in the financial district, but the well-known stability of the First National and a statement issued by the bank had a quieting effect. An official connected with the bank said: “A proof that the bank is not likely to suffer by the defalcation is that its profits for the year ending Septem- ber 1 were $1,350,600. The surplus is ‘ncreasing fast. The par value of the stock is $100 a share, but it has brought as high as $1,923 at auction. The boo value of its stock is $3,105 per share, and as high as $3,600 has been bid. The percentage of increase to capital ac- cording to its last year’s earnings is 270.12 per cent. It has for several years paid annual dividends of 100 per cent.” Negro Killed by His Own People. Gloster Barnes, colored, was lynched by a mob of his own people in Miss- issippi Tuesday night. In a drunken fury Barnes murdered his wife, stabbed and badly wounded a negro who inter- fered, and engaged in a rifle duel with a white man who attempted to arrest him. He was caught by a posse after a desperate fight, in which he was shot through the thigh. In charge of two colored deputies Barnes was started for the county jail at Vicksburg. On the road his escort was put to flight by a big crowd of negroes who took the raurderer into a thicket and shot him to death. Falls fo a Fearful Death. Headless and stripped of every parti- cle of clothing, the body of John Guer- ro, an Italian miner, was picked up at the bottom of the shaft of the Kennedy mine at Suter Creek, Cal., killed by a fall. Guerro was on the day shift and two hours earlier in the evening he jumped on the “skip” at the seventh lev- el, in company with 10 other miners. Guerro lost his balance and fell down the shaft, a distance of 1,600 feet. Refused to Quit Piece Work. At Quebec, thirty shoe factories, em- ploying 1,000 men, have shut down as the result of difficulties between the union and the manufacturers. The trouble grew out of the refusal of a union man to work for weekly wages instead of piece work. He was dis- charged and a non-union man engaged. As a result all the men in the factory went out. The manufacturers’ commit- tee thereupon decided to shut down. Oil Gusher on a Poor Farm. A good well was brought in on the Beaver county poor farm south of the Ohio river at the mouth of Raccoon creek three miles from Beaver, Pa. W. C. Kelly, of Shannopin, put down the well. The fact that he is leasing many farms in the neighborhood would indi- cate that he has a good paying well. It is only a few miles from the famous Morrow well, which in its time pro- duced 5,000 barrels a day. John Addison Porter Doomed. John Addison Porter, formerly secre- tary to President McKinley, lies dan- gerously ill at his residence in Pomfret, Conn., suffering from a disease which must result in death. Recently a very dangerous operation was performed. Mr. Porter rallied from the shock and is resting comfortable, but while his death is not expected immediately, no hopes are held out for his recovery. The postoffices on wheels which the postoffice authorities are to try in Washington county, Pa., have arrived, and are expected to be in operation soon. = — WILL END STRIKE. President Mitchell Predicts That Monday Wii Witness a Resumption—More Com- panies Agree to the Increase. At the national headquarters of the United Mine Workers Tuesday the be- lief was unanimous that the end of the strike will come in a very short time. As soon as all the operators signify their willingness to pay the advance un- til April, the national executive board will be called in séssion to vote on end- ing the contest. President Mitchell’s statement in a speech at Pottsville Tuesday that he believed that the strike would be ended hy next Monday if all the operators posted notices guaranteeing the ad- vance until April 1, was received here with much pleasure by both sides. It is believed that nothing will now inter- yene to delay the ending of the con- test. The mineworkers’ strike has been de- clared off by the United Mine Workers’ officials, so far as it affects all com- panies which have complied with the strikers’ demands. The strike will be continued against the companies which have not granted the terms offered by the Scranton convention. The strikers will return to work on Monday at the Plses where the strike embargo is lift- cd. BOERS RELEASE PRIONERS, Made a Successful Raid on Jagersfontein. Aided by Townspeople. Lord Roberts reports from Pretoria, under date of Sunday, that the Boers who attacked Jagersfontein succeeded in releasing the Boer prisoners ifi the town before they were repulsed. Their loss was 20, including Commandant Visser. The Boer sympathizers inside the town assisted the Boers. Roberts Sed er they will be heavily punished or i, Lord Methuen has arrived at Zee- rust, in the western Transvaal, and re- ports the loss of 6 men killed and 10 wounded. Gen. Knox reports that the mounted infantry attacked 100 Boers near Kroonstadt, driving them off and inflicting considerable loss. A determined attack was made by the Boers on Fauresmith, west of Jag- ersfontein. The Boers were repulsed. The British lost two killed and six wounded. Last week Gen. Barton fought the Boers at Frederickstad, cap- turing several positions. He lost two killed and four wounded. Lord Roberts reports that President Kruger sailed for Europe Sunday. Roberts adds: ‘He is to disembark at Darspites and go thence direct to Hol- and. BEATEN BACK BY REBELS. American Detachment Struck an Overwhelm. ing Force of Filipinos. Gen. MacArthur Friday cabled as fol- lows from Manila: First Lieut. Febig- er, with 40 men, Company H, Thirty- third regiment, and Second Lieut. Gray- son V. Heidt, with 60 men, Troop L, Third cavalry, attacked insurgents 14 niiles east of Larvican, Ilocos province, Luzon, and developed a strong position cecupied by about 400 riflemen and 1,- 000 bolomen under command of Juan Villamor, subordinate of Timos. A desperate fight ensued, which was most creditable to the force engaged. Under heavy pressure of overwhelming num- bers, our troops were compelled to re- turn to Larvican, whicly was accom- plished in a tactical, orderly manner. Assistant Surgeon Bath and a civilian teamster, captured early in the fight, were released by Villamor. According to their accounts, the insurgents were much stronger than reported and their loss by moderate estimate was over 150. Our loss was five killed, nine wounded and four missing. Umbrellas For Savages. Nearly 20 Englishmen are now at work on seven umbrellas for an Ashanti chief and his faithful staff. There is nothing under the sun a chief can wear, not even excepting the cast-off silk hat or a red-lined cavalry coat, so calculat- ed to strike awe into the minds of re- fractory natives and so imbue them with a spirit of obedience as a “gingham.” raders, when they want to obtain free access to the country of one of the hos- tile tribes, make presents of worn-out clothing to the natives, or even a “gamp” to a particularly obstinate and pugnacious chief. A London syndicate of Gold Coast traders has given the or- der, and is paying for the umbrellas in question, which will be given to bribe the vain, dusky warriors. When finished the umbrellas will be gorgeous beyond the dream of the most imaginative negro. For the chief the present will be nearly 15 feet across, quite a decent-sized tent. In fact, on state occasions it will be so used. The handle will then be stuck in the ground and six slaves will act as tent-pegs. The material from which it is being made is silk, and the colors are to be “red, white and blue!” Round the edge will be a deep, rich fringe, and on the top an elaborately-chased cap surmounted by a British lion, rampant. For the staff the umbrellas will be somewhat smaller and less majestic.—London Ex- press. CABLE FLASHES. Lord Wolseley on retiring from the post of commander-in-chief, will take an extended tour in Canada. Influenza is epidemic at Hamburg, One hundred and nine cases are report- ed, many of which have proved fatal. The Bavarian government has order- ed the rebuilding of the tombs of the ancient German emperors in the cathe- dral of spires. The French steamer Faidherhe was sunk in collision with the steamer Mi- tidja off the Spanish coast and 24 peo- ple were drowned. At Lima, Peru, there is a strong movement on foot to establish, with Peruvian capital, a line of steamships to ply along the coast. Baron von Richthofen, under secre- tary of the foreign office, has been ap- cointed to succeed Count von Buelow as minister of foreign affairs. A dispatch from Guayaquil says the Ecuadoran congress has made arrange- ments by which the country will pay its entire foreign debt. . Fifty persons were killed and many others terribly scalded by a boiler ex- plosion on board the steamer Eugenia, running between Tomsk and Barnaul, ussia. Hon. Wm. P. Schreiner, the former premier of Cape Colony, has resigned his seat in parliament, owing to the per- sistent opposition of the Extremists of the Afrikanders. The mutiny in Turkey among the Al- banians is growing stronger. The in- surgents announce that they desire full autonomy under foreign princes, and will be satisfied with nothing less, Clara Barton is reported to be dan- gerously ill from nervous prostration. Five children near Cumberland, Md.,, were poisoned by eating jimson weeds, and one is dead. A vessel having on board 100 passen- gers was boarded by pirates 10 miles below Canton, China. Several thou- sand pounds in specie were taken. D. O. Prisor, a wealthy cattle deal- er, was held up at the point of a re- volver in Millvale, Pa., Tuesday night, by two highwaymen and robbed of $2,- 600. Dawson advices say the smallpox epidemic there is not of a serious na- ture. When the steamer City of Seat tle left the north there were only 30 cases in the Klondike metropolis, and the hospital arrangements were excel- lent. I. THLHIGES SUNDAY SRAOL AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE. Subject: The Golden Calf of Modern Idol- atry — The Spirit of Greed Destroys Those Who Are in Its Grasp — Money Got Wrongfully Is a Carse. [Copyright 1%0u.1 WasaixgToN, D. C.—In this discourse Dr. Talmage shows how the spirit of greed destroys when it takes possession of a man and that money got in wrong ways is a curse; text, Exodus xxxii, 20, “And he took the calf which they had made and burnt i¢ in the fire and ground it to powder and strewed it upon the water and made the children of Israel drink of it.” ; People will have a god of some kind, and they prefer one of their own making. ere co ~ the Israelites, breaking off their goldea earrings. the men as well as the women, for in those times there was masculine #s well as feminine decoration. Where 1 they get these beautiful gold earrings, coming up, as they did, from the desert? Oh, they borrowed them of the Egyntians when they left Egypt. These earrings are piled up into a pyramid o glittering beauty. ‘Any more earrings to bring?’ says Aaron. None. Fire is kindled, the earrings are melted and pour- ed into a mold not of an eagle or a war charger, but of a silly calf; the gold cools down, the mold is taken away, and the idol is set up on its four legs. Aun altar is built in front of the shining calf. Then the people throw up their arms and gy- rate and shriek and dance vigerously and worship Moses has been six weeks on Mount Sinai, and he comes back and hears the howling and sees the lancing of these golden calf fanatics, and he loses hi tience, and he takes thc two plates of stone on which were written the Ten Com- mandments and flings them so hard against a rock that they split all to pieces, When a man gets angry, he is «pt to break all the Ten Commandments. Moses rushes in, and he takes this calf god and throws it into a hot fire until it is melted all out of shape and then pulverizes it— not by the modern appliance of nitro mu- riatic ac'd, but by the ancient appliance of niter or by the old fashioned file. He stirs for the people a most nauseating draft. He takes this pulverized golden calf and throws it in the only brook which is ac- cessible, and the people are compelled to drink of that brook or not drink at all. But they did not drink all the glittering stuff thrown on the surface. Some of i flows on down the surfae: »f the brook to the river and then flow= : fown the river to the sea. and the akes it up’ and bears it to the moutn v.% 1 the rivers, and when the tides set back the remains ot this golden calf are carried up into the Potomac and the Hudson and the Thames and the Clyde and the Tiber. And men go out and they skim the glittering sur- face, and they bring it ashore and they make unother golden calf. and California and Australia break off their golden car rings to augment the pile, and m the fires of financial excitement and stinggle all these things are together. and while we stand looking and wondering what will come of it, lo, we find that the golden calf of TIsraelitish worship has be- come the golden cali of Iuropean and American worship. Pull aside this curtain, and you see the golden calf of modern idolatry. It is not, like other idols, made out of stocks or stone, but it has an ear so sensitive that it can hear the whispers on Wall street and Third street and State street, and the footfalls in the Bank of Iingland and the flutter of a Frenchman's heart on the bourse. It has an eye so keen that it can see the rust on the farm of Michiga wheat and the insect in the Maryland peach orchard and the trampled grain un der the hoof of the Russian war charger It is so mighty that it swings any way ii will the world’s shipping. It has its foot on all the merchantmen and the steam: ers. It started the American Civil Wa and under God stopped it, and it decided the Turko-Russian contest. One broke: in September, 1869, in New York, shouted, “One hundred and sixty for a million?” and the whole continent shivered. The golden calf of the text has. as far as Amer- ica is concerned, its right front foot in New York, its left front foot in Chicago, its right back foot in Charleston, its left back foot in New Orleans, and when it shakes itself it shakes the world. Oh, this is a mighty god—the golden calf of the world’s worship! But every god must have its temple, and this golden calf of the text is no excep- tion. Its temple is vaster than St. Pauls Cathedral in England, and St. Peter's i Italy, and the Alhambra of the Spaniards and the Parthenon of the Greeks, and the Taj Mahal of the Hindoos, and all cathedrals put together. Its pillars arc grooved and fluted with gold, and its ribbed arches are hovering gold, and its chandeliers are descending gold, and its floors are tessellated gold, and its vaults are crowded heaps of gold and its spires and domes are soaring gold, and its organ pines are resounding gold, and its pedals are tramping gold, and its stops pulled out are flashing gold, while, standing at the head of the temple, as the presiding diety, are the hoofs and shoulders and eyes and ears and nostrils of the calf of gold. Further, every god must have not only its temple, but its altar of sacrifice, and this golden calf of the text is no exception Its altar is not maae out of stone as other altars, but out of counting room desks and fireproof safes, and i+ 1s a broad, a long, a high altar. The viclims sacrificed on it are the Swartouts and the Ketchams and the Fisks and ten thousand other people who are slain before this golden alf. What does this god care about the groans and struggles of the victims before it? With cold, metallic eye, it looks on and yet lets them suffer. What an altar! What a sacrifice of mind, body and soul! The physical nealth of a great multitude is flung on to this smcrificial altar. They cannot sleep, and they take chloral and morphine and intoxicants. Some of them struggle in a nightmare of stocks, and at o'clock in the morning suddenly rise up shouting: “A thousand shares of New York Central—one hun- dred and eight and a half, take it!”—until the whole family is affrighted, and the speculators fall back on their pillows and steep until they are awakened again by a “corner” in Pacific Mail, or a sudden “rise” of Rock Island. Their nerves gone, their digestion gone. their brain gone, they die. The gowned ecclesiastic comes in and reads the funer- al service, “Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord!” Mistake. They did not “die in the Lord;” the golden calt kicked them. The trouble is, when the men sacrifice themselves on this altar suggested in the text they not only sacrifice themselves, but they sacrifice their families. If a man by a wroag course is determ- ined to go to perdition, 1 suppos: you wilt have to let him go. But he puts his wife and children in an equipage that is the amazement of the avenues, and the driver lashes the horses into two whirl winds, and the spokes flash in the sun and the golden headgear of tae harness gleams until black calamity takes the hits of the horses and stops them and shouts to the luxuriant occupants of the equipage, “Get out!” They get out. “they get down. That husband and father flung his family so hard they never got up. There was the mark on them for life—the mark of a split hoof—the death dealing hoot of the golden calf. Solomon offered in one sacrifice on one occasion 22,000 oxen and 120,000 sheep. But that was a tame sacrifice compared with the multitude of men who are sae- rificing themselves on this altar of the golden calf and sacrificing their families with them. The soldiers of General Have- lock in India walked literally ankle deep in the blood of “the house of massacre,” where 200 white women and children had been slain by the sepoys. But the blood about this altar of the golden calf flows up to the knec. flows up to the girdle. flows to the shoulder, flows to the lip. Great God of heaven and earth, have mercy on those who immolate themselves on this altar! The golden calf has none. Still the degrading worship goes on, and the devotees kneel and kiss the dust and count their golden beads and cross them- selves with the blood of their own sacri- fice. The music rolls on nnder the arches. t is made of clinking silver and clinking gold and the rattling specie of the banks and brokers’ shons and the voices of al the exchanges. The soprano ot the wor- ship is carried by the timid voices of men who have just begun to speculate, while the deep bass rolls out from those who for ten years have been steeped in the seeth- ing cauldron. Chorus of voices rejoicing over what they have made; chorus of voices wailing over what they have lost. This temple of which I speak stands open day and night. and there is the glittering god with his four feet on broken hearts, and there is the smoking altar of sacrifice. new victims every moment on it. and there are the kneeling devotees, and the doxology of the worship rolls on, while death stands with moldy an leton arm beating time for the chorus—‘More, more, more!” Some le are very much surprised at the pe people in the Stock Ex- change, New York. Indeed it is a scene sometimes that paralyzes description and is beyond the imagination of any one who has never looked in. What snapping of finger and thumb and wild gesticulation and raving like hyenas, and stamping like buffaloes, and swaying to and fro, and jostling and running one upon another. and deafening uproar. until the president of the exchange strikes with his mallet four or five times. cryihg, “Order, order! and the astonished spectator goes out into the fresh air feeling that he has escaped from pandemoninm. What does it all mean? I will tell you what it means. The devotees of every heathen temple cut themselves to pie s and yell and gyrate. his vociferation ond gyration of the Stock Exchange is ali appropriate. This is the worship of the golden calf. - But my text suggests that this worship has to be broken up, as the behavior of Moses on this oceasion indicated There are those who say that this golden cali spoken of in the text was hollow and merely plated with gold. Otherwise Moses could not have carried it. 1 do not know ° t. But somehow, perhaps by the assistance of his friends, he takes up this golden calf, which is an infernal in- sult to God and man, and throws it into the fire, and it is melted. And then it comes out and is cooled off, and by some chemical appliance or by an old-fashioned file it is pulverized, and it is thrown into the brook, and as a punishment the people are compelled to drink the nauseating stuff. So you may depend upon it that God will burn and ile will grind to pieces the golden calf of modern idolatry, and lle will compel the people in their agony to drink it. If not before, it will be on the last day. I know not where the. fire will begin, whether at the Battery or Lom- bard street, whether at Shoreditch or West End, but it will be a very hot blaze. All the Government securities of the Unit- ed States and Great Britain will curl up ia the first blast. All the money safes and deposit vaults will melt under the #Arst touch. The sea will burn like tinder, and the shipping will be abandoned forever. The melting gold in the hroker’s window will burst througn the melted window glass into the street. But the flying popu- lace will not stop to scoop it up. The ery of “Fire!” from the mountain will be answered by the cry of “Fire!” in the plain. The conflagration wiil burn out from the continent toward the seca and then burn in from the sea toward the land. ew York and London, with one cut of the red scythe of destruction, will go down. Twenty-five thousand miles of conflagration! The earth will wrap itself round and round in shroud of flame and lie down to perish. What then will become of your golden calf? Who then so poor as to worship it? Melted or between the upper and nether millstones of falling mountains ground to powder. Dagon down, Moloch down, Juggernaut down, golden calf down! The judgments of God, like Moses in the text, will rush in and break up this worship, and I cay let the work go on until every man shall learn to speak truth with his neighbor, and those who make engagements shall fell themselves bound to keep them, and when a man who will not repent of his business iniquity, but goes on wishing to satiate his cannibal ap- petite by devouring widows’ houses, shall, by the law of the land, be compelled to exchange the brownstone front for the penitentiary. Let the golden calf perish! ut if we have made this world our god when we come to die we shall sell our idol demolished. How much of this world are you going to take with you into the next? Will you have two pockets—one in each side of your shroud?’ Will you cushion your casket with bonds and mort- ages and certificates of stock? Ah, no! The ferryboat that crosses this Jordan takes no baggage—mothing heavier than an immaterial spirit. "here are the men who tried War- ren Hastings in Westminster hall? Where are the pilgrim fathers who put out for America? Where are the veterans who on the Fourth of July, 1794, marched from New York park to the Battery and fired a salute and then marched back again? And the Society of the Cincinnati, who dined that afternoon at Tontine Coffee House, on Wall street, and Grant Thor- burn, who that afternoon waited fifteen minutes at the foot of Maiden lane for the Brooklyn ferryboat, then got in and was rowed across by two men with oars, the tide so strong that it was an hour and ten minutes before they landed? Where are the veterans that fired the salute, and the men of the Cincinnati Society who that afternoon drank to the patriotic toast, and the oarsmen that rowed the boat, and the people who were trans. ported? Gone! Ob, this is a fleeting world. 1t is a dying world. A man who had wor 'iped it all his days in his dy- ing moment describea himself when he said, “Xool, fool, fool!” When your parents have breathed their last and the old, wrinkled and tremblin hands can no more be put upon your hea for a blessing, God will be to you a father and mother both, giving you the defense of the one and the comfort of the other. For have we not Paul’s blessed hope that as Jesus died and rose again, “Even so them also which sleep in Jesus shall God bring with Him?” And when your chil- dren go away from you, the sweet darl- ings, you will not kiss them and say good- by forever, He only wants to hold them for you a little while. He will give them back to you again, and He will have them all waiting for you at the gates of eternal welcome. Oh, what a God He is! He will allow you to come so close that you can put your :.ms around His neck, while He in response will put lis arms around your neck, and all the windows of heaven will be hoisted to let the redeemed look out and see the spect -'- of a rejoicing Father and a returned prodigal locked in that glorious embrace. Quit worshiping the olden calf, and tov: this day before Him in whose presence we must all appear when the world has turned to ashes. When shriveling like a parched scroll, I'he flaming heavens together roll, When _ouder yet and yet more drea Swell the high trump that wakes the dead. PROMINENT PEOPLE. The death is announced of Zdenke Fibich, the celebrated Bohemian com- poser. Lord Roberts has decided not to ye a book on the war in South Alrica. Lord Salisbury is said to have taken to ride Hatfield. Bret Harte is to winter in Italy, near Naples. Sir Andrew Lusk, the oldest former lord mayor of London, has just cele- brated his ninetieth birthday. Goveronr Rollins, of New Hamp- a tricycle in the grounds of spend the coming and has rented a villa shi ¢, 1s to be the guest of California during his present trip through that State. A successful surgical operation has been pe ormied upon Senator Cush- { man K. Davis, of Minnesota, for blood cle on retiring from the comms r-i f i-chief of the make an extend:d vyune Vanderbilt has leased , the mast beautiful of New- + from Lorillard Spencer : mmer of ror. Henry James. the author, denies the report that he intends to leave Eng- anc estabiish his permanent resi- ir: the United States. 2S or Platt. during the first month in which he was a member of the Sen- ate. received and answered 16,000 let- ters. and even now he frequently gets Af many as 25¢c a day. t 1s announced that Lord Roseberry Is about tc publish a volume entitled Napoleon: The Last Phase,” a study of the emperor during the closing years of his life at St. Helena. 3 _ The Natal subscribers to a testimon- tal to Major General Baden-Powell, in recognition of his gallant defense | of Mafeking, have decided to present him with a-shield made of Transvaal sover- cigns, port's for the s en — The annual drink bill of Britain is £ 30,000,000 more than the total sum in the Postoffice Savings Bank. Roughly speaking, one-fourth of the amount cf the national debt is spent every year by the people in buying intoxicating liquors. The highest inhabited hut in the Swiss Alps is at an altitude of 2,665 meters, on the Alpe de Lona, in Wallis. Grain grows up to an altitude of 2,075 meters. In the Himalayas and in Thib- to almost 5000 meters, ei there are inhabitants at altitudes up awe It wa “ Pec freed by ment ev affable, , from th more gi the mou stipated. Such to the v. ’ J Practical Ch £3 - Ayer's Sarsap Ayer’s Pills Ayers Ague nually fros country. We offer C any case of Hall's Catar We, the ur ney for the] fectl and tion made b WEST & TRi Price, 75¢. p He Fo Some pe a remedy should be eminent pl acid in the Bi No matte eancer, you bowels ar feunins, pt et has C.0 imitations. Autumn army will first time French ary Each pac! colors eithe at one hoili Japanese body once twice. Pu ery street. Carter's I is the best There a Berlins, 21 the name | To Take LAXAT druggists re E. Ww Grovi Coal bri Africa and Has been ct 25 cents. A The cen shows mor 4I'hrow un want the do tion chew E : The En pei to-day 121 Piso’s Cui as a cough Ave, N., Mi The prof amounts te Mrs. Wins teething, so: tion, allays. Californi States as a Pa A colleg is not eno Something something cannot thi of educati 1f the Stat ucate then interests. patriotism a good on ever, that be taught. not come consists s to repel i that it cor interests o Saturday New Yo ical plantat its of the Riverside vated durir of cotton, To Mo In this are so pl is not co in their « Mrs. Pi to mothe work is whom su intelligen To wor r, Mrs its h Oh, wome sacrificed Pinkham, - ! M > weakness with heal not able fered terr Several d nothing { ham'’s ad well, and the famil, os Pinkham’ mothers