© furniehed. [was or ginally intended of Joimson comity, that state, of a ha- than one farmer has been warned to been obeyed promptly, as to meglect of * agent of the sypdicite states that the | Arom Japan wi'l be soflicient #o employ | a a ODD PLACE FUR A CHURCH. Regular ITouse of Worship In & Big Of- : fice Building. ; Although New York has many huge office buildings, it is eafe to say that the number of them containing a chapel or place of worship is extremely small. 'm all probability the Methodist build- ng, at Twentieth streot and Fifth ave- | me, is the only office building in the sity which has such a place se! apart _ sxelosively for religious worship and 4n which services are held every Sun- day. Looking at the building, with its pumerous business signs. staring down at the street frora the windows, one ‘would little hnagine that on the third floor is one of the prertiest chapels in New York. Bot such is the fact. The office of the secretary of the Methodist Episcopal Missionary society is on the third floor cn the Fifth ave- nne side of the building. Ome afternoon reccrtiy a reporter cailed there and ask- ad the secretary if he could take a look at the chapel. Receiving a courteous reply in (ko affirmative, he stepped into the che-el, which lies directly in the rear of tue secrotary’s office. - The vocin is large »nd high, wall Yighted, aud tastefully and appropriately for a boardroom for the members of the ‘missionary bourd, but has since come to be used as a cha ©}, or, more properly, it is St. Paul's Methodist Episcopal eharel. Services urd conducted here every Sunday morning by the pastor, the Rev. Dr. A. J. Paimer.—New York Tribmue. THEIR TRADE TO KILL. Discovery of a Rendezvous of “Range Ros- : tier# In Wyoming. : Advices received ‘at Cheyenne, Wy., indicate the existence in the mountains range rostlere. It is near the headwaters of Powder river, and is known ae “The Hole in the Wall,” heing a deep mountain can- yon, or basin, the approaches to which are inaccessible to any ons not holding the clew tosthe labyrinth, : bitual rendezvous and headquarters of The range thieves are said to number 40 or £0, and ure uader the most thor- ongh organization and effective as well as daring leadership. : hed This discovery is likely to solve the question that has served to keep alive the fire of political dissension in the state for three years and led to the kill- ing of at least 15 men at intervals on the range. rs : {he small farmers have been gener- . 7 acoused of killing the stock of the ge companies, and the corporaticns re taken the most drastic measures to gtect themselves from the ravages of ae supposed small farmers. Within the last two months three as- sassinations have octorred, and more leave the state, and the warning has similar notices are ascribed the deaths ‘of others. — cw York Jomrnal. Japanes: ’. Ktart a Steamship Line. A Japanese syndicate is soon to put a steamship line beivern Jopan and rome point on the north Pacific coast, and Seattle ir making a strong effort to have the American terminus of the line Jo- | cated there. In a letter to the pecretary WOMAN'S PROGELSS. WHAT HAS BEEN DONE 8Y HER TH: NIRLD OVER ‘MN 1155. Au (nteresting Pook Hy Miss Willard ao! Mrs. Porington Their Religions Prog sn fn Japan. A compilation entitled “The Progisss of Wonien In 1393" has been mule by Mrs. Louise C. Purington, MD. of Dorchaster, in to-cperaticn with Miss Frances E. Willard. Miss. Willard will incorporate the results in her annnal address to the national convention of the Women's. Christian Temperance anion in Baltimore on Oct 13. . Under thé heading '‘Religions” it is noted that half of the board of deacons in a pew church in New York ars women, that the Episcopal diocesan convention of southern California gave women the right to vote for vestrymen snl trustees, that Dr. Jennie M Taylor has gone to Africa as the first dental missionary among women, and that Dr. Hee King Eng is the first Chinese woman gradn ate of an American college to practice in China and the recond woman grado ate of her race. to take an cccidental medicine degrea, Tile Iu tie political field it is noted, for the first time in the history of Ger- F many, a woman, Dr. Granck-Kahne of Berlin, took part by invitation ina pud lie discussion at the evangelical social congress ; that the Belgian parliiment consider a bill for woman's municipal enfranchisement; that various women have taken prominent official positions in publio life, and that nearly 400 Eng- lish women were elected on the poor law boards and 40 women on the parish councils. In literature itis pointed out that women have accomplished much work, especially in the higher branches of science, and in art that an English painter has been asked. to send her por- trait painted by herself to the Ufzzi gallery at Florence, that a New York painter has received honorable mention year, and that a Cincinnati woman has established the Rockford Pottery works in that city. : ~. Women are rapidly coming to the front in all kinds of indastry. Aang new departures may be noted a sopor- intendent of weddings; the first ander taker at Chicago; an aactioneer in Lon- don; a room clerk at a large hotel i» Colorado Springs; many census eno- morators, ten in Boston alone; a stable foreman; a professional marketer; a blacksmith and two sheriffs. In New York city 18 women make a living by designing new styles of hata. In Japa: many women achieve fimancial independ- ence by amusing other women. In Chi- cago a woman has opened a shoe dress- ing and boot blacking parlor. One han- dred or more women are in barber shops in Chicago alone. They ars sought for their steady nerves and light touch, an- impaired by nicotine or liguor. In Ph?’ adelphia women are running the elova- tors in large public buildings — Boston Trauoscript. £4 Singular Loss of Memory. A notable Joss of memory case, in- of the Seattle charter of commerce an outward transportation and tonnage | all the ships and stéumers the company | will put oo tke line, and igquiry is | made as fo what tonnage from the! United States may he dl | A The Japan dist will in November next consider a subsidy bill, which has for its object the extension of navigation | i to foreign countries, and in the case of | 1 volving a confusion of personality, is engaging the attention of scicutists. A lady, who was sitting on the promenade at Brighton, fonnd herself unable to tell her name, address or anything con- nected with her life. She said that she had feit something break inside of her ress — The Political Field ~The New Wou: had for the first time been asked to for her pictnre in tlie Paris salon this} In Advertising. . te next fo ‘pure reading matter.”’ “ad rH" i pure reading matter?’ asked 177." “(Great Scott!’ was the 1 matter "—New York Tribune, Deafened by an Electric Shock. A very peculiar accident in Sacra- mento is puzzling the physicians. Al wagon, was nnhitching bis horse when | trolley wire broke and fall to the ground | of the left ear, knocking him insepsible | The next morning he recovered: con- ! sciousness, but his hearing is gone, dud be is completely blind in his left eye mentioned no evil consequences are ap parent. =San Francisco Chronicle. siMake your petticoats short, That a hoop eight yards wide Muy decently show : How your girtors are tied “There is a single black silk garter, once the property of Taglioni. A card ; attached says an Italian nobleman fe'l | in love with her and sent her a adte, which, after making a proposal, ssid, ‘If you accept, give tbe bearer one of your garters.’ The proposal was accepted. The dashing nobleman received the sin- gle garter now on exhibition. “*A pafr of garters of light blue silk, with no clasps, once the property of La Goulne, the dancer, has this inscription : “Around the silken knees of ladies fair A fairy band is placed to keep the stock: Laing tere, ci Lest transient glimpses of ivory skin Should let bold thoughts of Cupid in." ; —=New York Sun. A Banuer Town. Prohibition has just won a notable victory in Salem, Va.. the seat of Roan. oke college. The vote against licensing saloons in the town is 622 against 262 for. a majority against license of 380 in a total vote of 884. It is thought that this makes Salem the banner pro- hibition town of the United States, But at any rate it shows that the citizens are satisfied with the working of prohibi- tion in the town during the last two years. — New York Tribune. Great Discussion Settled. A violent discussion is going on as to whether the fiancee of the Duke of Marl borough spells her name Consuelo or Consuela. The former is correct. She was named bead: The authorities, not being able | to find ont anything about her, had her | sent t5 the workhouse. There was pot! a single mark on her clothing, letters or anything else that would assist in the for her godmother, Consuelo Yzpaza, duchess of Manchester, who has alwass | been a warm personal friend of Alva New York Recorder. : a A HE KNOWS A GOOD THING. | A Bueyrus (O.) clergyman with an Frank Timind, the Petaluma pot eye to business publishes a weekly pro- | hunter, had. the floor, and the crowd gramme of the church services inter- | breathlessly awaited a thrilling stery of jof him as he walked, entered the office spersed ‘with advertisements. A para- | the chase. eh | graph exhorting the people to praise the ‘“You want a story of the chase, eh?” Lord is followed by a rattling ‘‘ad.”’ of | repeated Timina “Well, FIl tell yon a hardware honse. An ‘‘ad.’’ beginning, | about the greatest bit of chasin I ever “‘Good butter a specialty,” follows a| did in my life. I wuz out huntin one paragraph beginning, ‘‘ What owest thou | day fer quail with my ole muzzle loadiu pnto the Lord?’ After an exhortation | shotgun, when three qnail jumped up that ends, ‘‘In the next world no offer- | out of a bush right ahead of me. One ings are needed,’ comes an ‘‘ad.’’ be- | flew to the right, one to the left and ginning, “Trade with Meyer & Hirsch.” | the other straight ahead, but I go ‘er And after a paragraph referring to the | all three.’ ; world to come there is an ‘‘ad.’’ abont| ‘‘Killed three quail going in different ‘Frosh and smoked rieate.'’ The adver- | directions with » rouzzle loading shot- tisers probably pay extra for a position | gun: Talking of pure reading matter sug- | *“Yep; that’s ‘what I done.” gests an incident that occurred not long ‘Your gun must have had three bar since in New Yori. Ap advertiser was | rels then. ’’ an : in the publication officé of a sensational | ‘Nop; only tivo.” : journal which makes a specialty of “Bow did yeu do it?” ; printing scandals to get rates for an “Well, I killed the one that went to | “Why. not have yoor ‘ad.’ next to| quick as a flasl, I killed the one that ‘1 then I took afer the one that went didn't know yon had any pure reading | straight ahead : ud knocked the siuffin len L. Clare, who drives a delivery | six gnail with oie barrel once, and they one of the guy wires of the strect ear “Run ‘em all down?” In its descent it touched Clare on the tip | When they all started out ¢ the same “There is no sign of a born where the | yi can sling witer outen a pan, and & wire touched him, and apart from those | ithe of the shot ketehed ev'ry ond’ = Vanderbilt. —Cholly Knickerkoeker in| OUTHIMEODS OLD NIM. | An Up to Dste Clergyman Who Believes | The Petalums Pot Wunser Tells ¢ Story of a Wondrous Chase. 9v repeated one of his listeners in- eredulonsly. : the right with the right barrel; then, went to the left with ‘the other biarel; out of it with tle ramrod. ”’ “I wenldn't selicve thet if I tld 1 mysslf,”’ derhued one of the amen: blag, “Huh! That ain't nothin. I killed wuz all flyin in different directions. ”’ “Nop; never moved ont o' my tracks. bunch of grass, I held the gun away over to the right, and as it went off I swep’ it aroun to the lift. The result was that I sjung shot in «very direction, sane as * sun (Francisco Post. Mrs. Elizabéth E. Hutter, Mrs. Elizabets BE. Hutter, who ment. ly died in Fhiladelphia, was widely own as the jionedr in many philan- gpic movoments in Percisy Ivunis i» was the wicow of the Rov. Ir E Hutter, anee editor of the Lancaster lligencer and afterward private sec ry, of President Brehanan and as- ft secretary of state. Daring the = Mrs. Hutter frequently went 10 the fr 4 rendering valuable gervies to the ‘w anlded and suffering. She took :« con- 87 ‘uous part in the great sanitary fair he 1in Philadelphia in 1861, acting as pr ident of the conamittee of labor, in- co: 1e and revence. She is credited with he: ing raised $250,000 for the fair. She was the first woman to cross the line ,after the despersae three days’ battle of Gettysburg. She went in a car provided railroad and by special permission of President Lincola. ~-New York Tribune. ————— . : Wonderful Strength of the Beetle. A noted entoinologist who has been writing on the ‘wonderful feats of strength as exhibited in (ae beetle fam- ily tells the following: ‘I selected a common black witer beetle weighing 4.2 grains and found that he was able to, sarry a load of shot in a small bag, the whole weighing 81{ ounces, or exactly £38 times the weight of the bug. If a man weighing 1:0 could carry as much accordingly he could shoulder a 45 ton locomotive and then chain nn train of cars together and take the whole lot across the country at a five mile an how gait. ”’ : FUETRITI vm Sma WIT _ It may not be generally known that » telegraphist always travels by ‘royal by President Soctt of the Pennsylvanial ggimed “Did be tell you that?" verify it.” A Loudoun Citizen Makes a Personal Refs- ation of Suake 8 : A man, with a bristling wad of Lou- doun. county whiskers wagging: in front of The 3tar the other morning and ask- ‘ed to see the rnnke editor. That useful and at all times ornamental adjunct of was pointed out to the visitor, and he came over and eat on the corner of the desk. The snake editor smiled and bow- od. . .**Are you the man that writes them snake articles about Loudoun county?” inquired the stranger. ci : ‘*Wall,”’ hedged the editor, ‘I put in- to readnble form the truthful narrations of well known citizens of that rich, re- fined, raligious, redundant and robust county, if that’s what you mean.” : “Do you mean to tell me,”’ exclaimed the visitor, getting down off of the desk in his excitement, ‘‘that Loudoun coun- ty has got liars into it like that?" “ Arem’t those stories truthful?'’ asked the editor innocently. “‘Cotirse they ain't. They're a passle of lies from start to finish. Of oourse we've got snakes in Loudoun county, but no such dern fool snakes as them you've been printing about. T'de lived there for going on 40 years, and I've nev- er seen anything remarkable about our snakes. That's what I come in here for. I want to refute the statements I have been reading.’’ : “Why do you wang to do that?’ “Because it is injuring the good name of the county. People won't come to no such county as that is if they read them. stories,’ : ; “Well, if you will give me your name I'll print a card fromm you in refutation of all these tales.” ‘*That’s what I'm after. My name is Wilhmio Henry Harrisou Higgins, “Yea” And the visitor showed that he was surprised by the inquiry. come ia three or four times a week at this season. ”’ ; : “And weren't you talking toa police- | man down at the B. & P. station that day?"”’ a ““Yon mean the depot?” “Yes hl : ““Yos, I was talking to him. I've knowed him since he was a boy.” “*Well, he told me that you had teld “srm that was 18 feet long, and it had PB chickens and a katful of hen eggs im- jde of it.’ Por horny handed fist. oe : “Well, I'll be doggoned!” he en “He did and sold me that you would “Well, I wou’s donothing of the sort. He’s a bigger Har than the vost of 'em.”’ © “Didn't you tell him th @ tory’ “Na, sir, I dido’t.”” And the »isitor was very indignant. ‘‘1 told him that the spake was 19 feet long, and I newer ‘every well regulated newspaper office weren't you in town four days ago:”’ : him that yon had killed 4 atialcs ou you | The visitor banged the desk with his | STORIES OF THE DAY. TO PREVENT BURIAL ALIVE. | A Company In Paris Which Will Take | Corpees Into Its Waiting Booms. i | The unpleasantness of waking up and | finding one’s self lapped in lead, and | six feet below the habitable earth, has | bean borne in so strongly upon certain: | company promoters thas the result has been the projection of the very latest thing in co-operative undertaking. This is the Mortuary Waiting Room comps- ny, which is on the point of being float- ed in the French capital, with every of success. The amount for subscription is stated to be $100,000, and dividends at the rate of at least 100 per cent may, it is ciaiined, be ocnfi- dently looked for. a . The company undertakes to provide separate waiting rooras, of two classes, in a large mortuary building. The al- ; ; a 3 ited there upon a conch, i Jooked after till the fact that it isa corpse shall have been established be-: yond question. The waiting rooms will | be tastefully decorated, with everything ; about them to welcome the revived ten- i ant agreeably back to iife, But at the same time will have a cachet of some- what ‘‘severe elegance,”’ as fV were, to remind him bow nearly, but for the | company, he hed been dead in the most | terrible of waysof dying. Shareholders | will be entitled tothe nse of a first class waiting room free of charge, und i no ehareholder's heirs will be allowed to visit him. The thing has evidently i been thoroughly thought out. —Philadel- | phia Telegraph. ee it i iri eee nA A MRS. BEDELL’S PEARL. For Months It Lodged In. Her Tooth With- out Her Knowledge. : is having a pear] mounted at Tiffany's 0% | Por several months Mra. Bedell had “Excuse me, Mr. Higgins,” inter- been carrying the gem in her mouth rupted the man at the desk, - | without knowing it, or, at Jeast, with- ‘out knowing that it was valuable : Early in the summer Mrs. Badell was + | eating clams at the seashore, when she felt something give way in one of her upper molar teeth. She noticed after- ward that there was a cavity in the tooth, but as it seemed to be shallow she paid no attention to it. After her return to the city recently the tooth be- gan to ache, and she visited her dentist. He examined the tooth and discover- ad a pretty pink pear] imbedded im the cavity. It was a delicate task to remove the gem, but he’ was successful, and banded it to Mrs. Bedell, with the re- mark that a pear} in the hand isworth two in the teoth. "'—New York World The Origin of Tramps. ‘There can be no doubt that the tramp fs, in a certain sense, the makor amd chooser of his ewn career. The writer's experience with these vagrants bas con- vinced him #iat, though they are al- most always the vietims of liquor and | laziness, fully four-fifths of America’s voluntary beggars have begun their wide and restless ways while still in - their teens and huve been furthered im mentioned chickens. They was turkeys, » plumb bushel of eggs don't see! what un man wants to lie like that’ about = thing thas comes as straight as what I told him. You just wait till 1| go out and settle with him, and ¥'ll come back and write that card. Dern a liar, anyhow. ’’ Ard the man from Lou- doun harried away to sea the policeman. — Washington Star. Struck. Vein of Warm Water. | trains.’’ In ecse of any mishap a ladder | is placed against the nearest telegraph, | post and a wire tied or connected with! an instrument which the telegraph clerk works while sitting on the bank. By this means word can be at onoe | While driving a well on the farm of John Middling, near the village of White Pigeon, Mich., F. W. Northrop's men struck, at a depth of 35 feet, a : wee | stratum of coarse gravel and warm ment of law is its nursing mother, and less wandere;s with criminals. ment applied te them when young. full grown torkeys, sir, and there was| quo orn cine - alk of. e, as I understand them may ba briefly recapitulated: ~~. First. —The Jove of liquor. Second. —Wanderlust—ahs Jove of wandering. Siu Third. —The ecunty jail, owing to the promsiscunons herding of beys and bome- Fourth. —The tough and rough ele | ment in villages and towns Fifth. —The comparatively innocent but misguided pupils of the refomm Though not, properly speaking. » causa of vagabondage, the nonenfopee- water of 98 degrees. Nothing of the! misgnided and misapplied ‘charity its Mrs. D. M. Bedel: of New York city ~ s A A i 3 ki se na i | discovery of her identity. She conversad : t a 1 : Je raaie ation ts th egies 12 28 ab wduceted womwan on things arvand The ar itt sent to, 7°0E 10 the nearest ra; Iway station, giv- | kind was been before found in that sec- base of operations. The: tramp evil - : pany will immediately send af agent to | Ler and wrote in a similar manner 10 § 1 od of Trinidad te apathey wotice. ing instructions that assistanos most be, tion of cunntry. Many speculations are not so much a disease asa symptom g -. "this country to detertaine which is the | tho doctors who examined ber, but her 13 39 any Eazland that: tive Mont ce doe. | sent at once 5 sach and such a spit. i rife as tor the cause of this phenomenon. public iil health, —Josiah Flynt in best port on the north Pacific: for this | Mind was an absolute blank as far as ser ed - ro 1 co hd cout eter When a train with the sovereim on Geologists hold that underlying this Century: : trine is m a perfectly vigorous condition] poo io traveling, all the men in re { sheet of warm water at no great depth ond of the line The the past was concerned The woman ng : . veling, a : , pth: the fa0ilities for ie reniy wee 0 jo was described widely, and her case was and bristling with bayonets for Earopean sponsible positicns allalong the lie are! is a large quantity of soft coal, which, | . As Age of ; . ; . | meddlers. Trinidad is a louely, barren] 4 ed. Ore he ®vrighton line! anderym eramorphosis enerates to tho means of trans 3 | discussed at length by the newspapers. | Hi hi | forewarned. Orce on the Brighton h undergoing me amorphosis, generates San Fraueisco pan lana, Her husband. who is a ciyil engineer in rock, but Brazil has the manhood 10} Joo) wag made The royal train was| sufficioni heat to warm the water. It is TC a naa mi A STAN" att Ans ames London, turned up last night and was | fight for it just the same ad if It were aj oo opped, and the telegraphist sent word, possible shat gus as well as coal may be, : 8 : ~~. , - Dost Want a Pope. reccanized by her. She unaccountably | Be™ of the weas. wit 1osisGliobe Dem in the way just described. The result’ foand —Clucago Times- Herald. | Tosant at the a ry or 4 Dr. Joseph Parker, the well known | left her home a week ago She has go ocrat. a was most satisfactory, und the royal] : PE | architects he Sp ic English divine, has written a latter to iden ot How she 'weny 9 Brighten: e Making Fan of His Nibs. pefscuage wa Weil isa) . i, ENGLAND AND VENEZUELA. A Ee le both priv : in ‘answer to the pastoral let- ore vay that while she was strug- ivy castie § se so complete. | Promptitude with which a relief party] nme : | magn : ; Be in a reanhon of Christen- | 81ing to remember her name she often |, Be roe Po, out | arrived from a place some miles d stant. England has sent an uitimatom fo, and SRL Toes shat dom, in which be enys: said it was Trilby. Then she said that. > the way to describe it as the house —Pearson's Weekly. | Venzrela, and as it is substantially the harp wil DS a **Were this a perzonal matter I could it conld* not be that, She signed hor that Vanderbilt —Chi cago Tribune. ; = BS reek. second demand of the kind 1 many be, Jes on will be ve upon hardly forgive myself for gpeking to ap- | letters ‘Mrs. Anybody. '’—~-New York =~ : : leg Dyspe Ss | taken to mean business. This is Eng- Bisa. a (ach a presence so angust and venera- “Tribune. : | A Lucky Newspaper Man. | A writer a Modern . Medicine nsserts. land's busy month in the ultimatom of ] B Snjeris : Pua but inasmuch as you have appealed 0 — EE William Freeman Burbank, editor ef that ‘mouth dyspepsia is coming to be| line. She has helped to bring Turkey vp. should it not be so : w © to all sections on the questions which THE STRANGERAT OURGATE the Los Angeles Evening Record, will] ® Very commen disorder. It has for-| with a short turn, and on the 31st inst. | Can a man display his . Ru : g : ther,” he says, ‘‘been repeatedly dem-' her ultimaum in the Ashanti affair: ability to have and do hat’ be 1 a A A SA i 1 & Jarabe pla 2 AE ish eh J ¥ Ht gis in a yap—" Wn wr oH ow ¢ . i § + 4 affect the standing of the sonl before God, I have emboldened myself to boar witness to the headship of the blessed Christ, and de¢line communion with any man or church that would officially Cuba is entitled to the sympathy of the people of this comptry-—not a mere passive sympathy, but active, helpful sympathy. —(hicago Dispatch. nés need henceforth to bow himself to the everlasting grind of the ‘‘cops’’ mill, as his wife has secured a suprema court decision which gives her the entire’ estate of her late husband, valued at] onstrated that a decayed tooth is fxe- quently the starting point of a py=mio process, and it 1as also been shown thas | tubercular and other disease germs may find entranee to the body through cavi- will take effect. —Philadelphia Record There is no story of British aggres-| 80 ostentaticusly and so incustrovertibly as by rearing a palace? For the same reasons as applied to business, the great wo sion inore characteristic or more illes-' corporations will vie with one another trative of its disregard of the rights of | in architectural display until once again ‘or prescriptively come between me and| Jt is quite within the limits of possi- | $750,000. : ties in decaying teeth. It must mot be| weaker powers than the manner in which| the world may see a realisation of the ‘my Saviour, ''—Pittsburg Dispatch. bility that the next congress may have Why the Band Didn't Play On. forgotten also that these cavities ure the | it has pushed its occupation and pre-| ambition of a Neroin a palace of gol. "* . | ‘One Prospect vor the Future. | to deal with the ; Varig of the ane On the ground of Sabbath desecragion | favorite habitat of many pathogenio | tended ownership of V evezuelan terri-| New York Sun. i : : : : ¢ this tion of Cuba, At the present rate Of | the members of the City band of Toronto | microbes, which, feeding upon porticles | tary from une acknow ledged boundary : ———— Tas @tmand for wives om d progress the success of the revolution is | have been fined in the police court for | of retained food, speedily develop and | to another during the last 6G years. —St. | Frightemsed to teath by Her ese, " antry makes it probable that the ie only a question of a few months, and | playing “Nearer, My (oul, to Thes"' on| through incresse in namber acquire the | Puul Pioneer Press. : | It was the fate of pretty 18-year-old w ch rocks the cradle will yet ue! y the moment (Cuba becomes free the ques | o) island Op site the city on Sunday. ability to overcciie the resistance of the | Se 3 | Lizzie Goddard of Burnside; Ky., to be ” completely AmericaniziDg Grea¥| gion of its annexation to the United | The reason is that theyplayed it $0 | hade : | tis to behoped that Venezuela, Back-| pightened to death by the first ride she (tin. — Washington Star. : States will become a leading one in this | poorly. — Rochester Herald ng The Wondezful Phonograph. ed by our government, will demand the had ever taken on the cars. - Five mins freuen ye: > country as well as in the island itself. | * °° “0 ; Some curions studies In the phone arbitration of England's entire claim, | peog after she had arrived at Chattaneos Ry The Liberty Bell. jotoe! —~Indianapuhis Jounal. : : { graph bave recently been raade by sci- and will pot allow it to be limited to! ga on her first railway trip she was dead. Faris on Bu sige ld caitin'd div fm ishing reasin to | One of the interesting things to be] entists in Evrope. As the Sparks PRES | recut a If i rin Miss Goddard had been in constant fear Turse OE ke with liberty’s own voice, it i le y ST pag pe her | seen at Atlanta, outside of the exhibi- | OFF the wax tyiinder the 1aF0S gaa men; does noe » 2 : oy! stand, 11 Wi of railroads all her life and boarded the This bell of bulls! oe be called the Chica 9 t e west. All I€T | ion. is a house said to be constructed have traced the vibrations photographic- | admit the right of any: Earopean pover] train only after much persuasion. The : : pledges of reform #hd Jstice ja can, gutirely of paper from foandation to | ally on glass plates, thus obtain: ng the to dismember or $50 Polina of ‘ANY train made a iunge a few miles from Jepeatery pe, fo BE | chimney. Georgians say this is the only | S8FVves of the tcnes peculiar Iv each | of cur sister republics in this bemi- the city, and she jumped from her seat Je caylee ory to She 55% ig Ee phi i ._. B house of the kind in the country. yoloek i » pt . = an Spiiere —Alanmm LonsiINte . and screamed in a frantic mammal Sie Makes patricia u} BIE ; in I toe rc S0URG, And. lhe OX e | te MEY | "at once became unconscious and died as. And in its presence, swift from strand to strand | pline will notbe wanting if her oleina : dake Tt Exiy: showing it in diagrams. The possibili- It is litle See LIAR 50 Jy ot nl she was being removed from the train. Restyud 8 busy Journeyings through the 2 Sng! her A There ain't po use o' sorrowin ties of the phonograph am vague, but stronger that John 2pD le | Physicians agree that she died of fright. O'er its trium bay : 1es- kerala, i land ; > meant : . I+h trouble ‘at we're borrowm ‘they are plainly in the region of the plants himself on disputed territory, | — Philadelphia Record : The flag of glory floats! : ' The almest unanimous expression of And | wonderful. —3t. Louis Gilobe-Democrat. | calls for maxim guns to protect himself rd ; And all thet | | —_— ’ there, and then declares that he wi'l -— glo wild rivets, Sasbing 1» the Goh sympathy for Cuba iu this country will A Great Wheat Market. | only put to arbitration the question : a Indi TE es 3 = = a A RR ; Hi : Lh altel lar. Whether he can go farther.— New York W. 8. Stratton, the ndiana carpenter mma ede belligerent rights to the Cuban I eral Eureka, 8. D., claims to be the lar-| WReLLEr he g ar, — fOr% | who went to Cripple Creek and is now Ro . ne : : en : ; When that. is dese, it will I YY Jerr | gest primary wioeat market in thy world.” Sun. | fast becoming a millionaire, was at _oné . 2 £ y i ? os 1s YY} ail. | Jods : : od or or ao be yniawfal to faeieh them with There's ng SYI0HE fo} Worry The town is the terminus of rhe Mil | In the estimated value of farm prod- | time after he reached there in the ; ny har wo arms and ammunition which they aL a» -waukee railroad, in the center ol BETeal! @ a iinet cha. veiuris of the | est destitution, and is said to have : Till tyrant flags are t pled in the strife the arms and is to be hoped that Wo ain't gut very fur to tu wheat growing region, anc there are 30 ucts, accorning 10. te returns of the | (4 qorasor Wo Jyuid % of i“ - And all the world is free. ; peed so much. It te wo ope Ties 4x tis is weil jest take Ino warehouses and elevators there. It is eleventh census, Illinois is first, with mine for ings on ; yn “ i Sa ig BE A an a 2 2 OO : 84,759,013; Ne ‘ork is second, | : ratton i A et, of oqmizing them that aid of this An "joy ourselves, foo os Lay, expected that about 8,000,000 bushels $1! WRB a FOR Joond: | democratic a man as he was before be¥ etd i en hands, BH racogin : : Cleveland There's Do © Xe fF worryin, of wheat will be bhapdled there this With $161.533 009; lowa 18 third, With | «gen nok it rich.” " The sword of freedom in her holy sort will come too late. —Llev There ain’t no uso in hurryin. os v th fron su i The tyrant at her feet! ta Constitution. World. 2 = Nixon Waterman in [- A. W, Bulletin. : | | . «Frank L. Stanton in Atlan A Paper House. jts tongue rade heroes in ths days of old, Ant still, as Gear as then, Distress is mighty sare to eling To them "at court that sort o'thing. But if we will drive care away i We can, an that's jest why I say of i i ————————————— he —— A—— SER ABC pS