Freeland Tribune Established 13S8. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY, BY THE fRIBONE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OIYICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. FREELAND, PA. SUBSCRIPTION liATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months 75 Four Months .. .50 Two Months .25 The date which the subscription is paid to Is on tne address label of each paper, the shange of which to a subsequent date be- Somes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Re port promptly to this office whenever paper h" not received. Arrearages must be puiii when subscription is discontinued. Make all monry orders, checks, etc % , payable to (he Tribune Printing Company, Limited. It is a groat step forward for Russia to abolish oitile without judicial in quiry, but what of tho 150,000 penal prisoners in Siberia now who never had a trial of public record? The Rev, Dr. Ilillis's sontiment, •'Young mailt daro to be poor," will be accepted more easily now that a high authority has said that iu these times of great fortunes to own a mil lion only is respectable poverty. China's foreign commerce is increas ing, and so, it is agreeable to observe, is America's proportion of it. It looks now as though Great Britain, Japan and the United States may soon have almost a monopoly of tho Chinese trade. Nine times out of ten a man with a tired brain and an exhausted body begins his vacation in an environment entirely alien to all the usual habits of his life, observes a writer in the New York Post; takes violent exorcise to which he is unused, exposes him self to the Sun, passes hours in or on tli9 water, eats ill-chosen and ill prepared food, and stay 3 just long enough iu trying these experiments to have nature rebel vehemently, and rarely reachos the time when he is again in harmony with his surround" ings before he returns to home and work, quite decided that "next year" he will try another climate, for he can plainly see that wherever his choice led him this time was not a good place for him. Oklahoma wants Statehood for the following reasons: Tho Torritory covers 38,715 square miles. It has 700 miles of railroad and 450 miles of under construction. Last year Okla homa produced more than 25,000,000 bushels of wheat and more than 150,- 000 bales of cotton. The corn, oats and fruit crop, together with the cattle and hogs raised, were of far greater value than the combined wheat and cotton crop. The enrolment of the school children in 1890 was 101,471 in 1936 school districts, n larger num ber than has either'of fifteen other States in the Union. The Torritory maintains a university, two normal schools and an agricultural college. All have good buildings, and are amply endowed. Free education is provided for overy child in the Territory, and tho methods of education are most modern. The Canny Scot. In the differences that would some times arise between mouibers of his tenantry the Duke of Argyll was often invited to arbitrate upon tho matter in dispute, and he used to tell a charac teristically Scottish story of one of tho occasions. Two tenants having waited upon him and asked him to decide the question at issue, tho duke put what he always regarded as a very necessary preliminary question: "Well, your Grace," was the reply of one of tho Lardheaded old disputants, "I'd like to ken first what it is."—London Chronicle. Gen. Grant Wins a Victory. Gen. Grant, who led reinforcements, with artillery, against the insurgents in the mountains cast of Saniiegut. reports the capture of the rebel stronghold, af ter four hours' fighting. The rebels were scattered, and the Americans arc pursuing them. Gen. Grant's column |had no ca-ualties. ftk r leader of guerrillas These to Manila and three mem? • at West Ncvv were Monday house TTkyhich they lived by the '-timlcrers, whose presumably -JMjbcrv. ol all f°ur w rjk recovered ruins of the house f . • had evidently Wn by from some blunt instfUnevh rests upon a farm* j ■^ C( i Champion, who had been in tt^ e HKghborhood. r ♦ / At a funeral of a girl of 16 in York Citv recently eight young misse her schoolmates, dressed in white an j carrying bunches of lilies of the valley acted as pall-bearers. ' yi*VW<>WdVWU'X I M'WVU^iV>iH|H|iWWVU>WmiMi<WW><V>ftW>'MVWUVI^Wi. "hj 15 ALICIA'S EXPERIMENT. | Alicia Wellington was 2G years old and she had never received an offer of marriage nor had a lover. Her two younger sisters were both happily ; married—Gertrude to a young man i who had adored her from childhood, I and Lottie to an elderly widower who had fallen in love with her at her coming-out party. Gertrude had re fused three offers before marrying John Nelson; Lottie, who was born a coquette, had received homage from almost every man she knew from the time she could talk. Alicia was serious and rather haughty. Her friends called her "in tellectual," and this same intellect uality made her unpopular with men, ! who were generally her inferiors in her choser. style of conversation if not in depth of thought. Until now Alicia had affected to despise the other sex. Lottie's flirtations and Gertrude's con quests had seemed frivolous to her. But she wished to be a well-rounded woman, and it suddenly occurred to her that she knew nothing of love, al though it was one of the chief things ;of life. The fact that she was differ ent from other girls and their in ferior in one respect was brought home to her by a meditation on love and matrimony which followed the ! receipt of a letter announcing the en gagement of the only unmarried one of her classmates. To be sure, Alicia I was younger than the other girls, but | she had come out the same year. "It is all very well not to marry," i she said to herself in conclusion, "but ; it is odd not to attract a single suitor, i There must be something lacking in i me. I have always known that I didn't ' like men, but it is strange that men ' don't like me. I can accomplish al- I most anything if I make up my mind i to it. I will have a lover. I need not marry him, of course, but I will have him desperately in love with me, so ; that I shall have an impassioned offer; j then I will refuse him." I Alicia cast about her list of male ac j quaintances with a view to selecting m&Mm 1 ' suitable man for her experimej xpc. „nt. Finally she chose Reggy De Greve. Rcggy was a year younger than Alicia. He was as frivolous as any girl, and decidedly effeminate in his looks and ways. He had been one of Lottie's numerous admirers, in an impassive way, but he had never gotten up cour age to proposo to her. He had not been sure that he wanted to do so. Mow he came to the house rather be cause he was used to coming to see "the ladies," once in so often. Alicia's mother was fond of him, for she had known him since he was in dresses, and she regarded him as a boy. Of Alicia he stood somewhat in awe. "Reggy will be a good one to begin with," thought the young woman. "He will be easy to influence. After I have refused him I can try some one more difficult." Thus Miss Wellington began her career as a flirt. That evening Reggy came to the house. He found Alicia wonderfully interesting. She talked about cotillon figures, pretty girls, fudges and golf. Reginald was in de mand as a cotillon leader, he was a chevalier des dames, an expert chafing dish cook, and an inspiring golf player. "Gwacious, I never thought she knew so much," he said to himself, as he left the house. But this was only because Alicia had displayed knowl edge of the subjects with which Reggy was conversant, for he had always known that she was "intellectual," It was scarcely a week before Reggy again presented himself at the Wel lingtons. He asked for Miss Welling ton, instead of for "the ladies." He was unconscious of the neglect of Mr 3. Wellington, but wary Alicia smiled when she, alone, was summoned to the drawing-room. "O, Mr. De Greve," she said —hereto- fore she had called him Reggy—"l know you can help me solve something that has been worrying my poor brain." She took a seat beside the young man and submitted her "something" that had been worrying her. it was only a charade, an intricate one, how ever, to which Alicia knew the answer. Reggy did not suspect that he was good at puzzles. He solved this one easily, and explained the elaborate process to Miss Wellington. "Thank you, Mr. De Greve, you are so clever," said Alicia, exactly as she had heard Lottie say the same words to different men at least a hundred times. That evening as Reggy went awry his predominant thought was, "Sle thinks me clever." In thfe course of time Alicia con vinced Reggy that she was uncommon ly pretty, agreeable, not too wise, and altogether charming—Just the woman to preside over his house and blip him spend his rather large patrimony. Sh9 also convinced him that he was clever, witty and manly. Indeed, under the sun of her approval he grow wonder fully until he was quite a different Reggy. At last the sehemed-for proposal took place. Satisfied with himself, and much more than satisfied with the ac complished Alicia, Reggy asked her to be his wife. Alicia foresaw the coming offer, of course. Sho made ready to refuse it. She even chose her next victim, William Giles, a lawyer of skill and renown. He would be diffi cult to enthrall, but a foeman worthy of her steel. But she did not think of William when Reggy proposed. She watched "the boy," as she called him In her heart, with a curious pride. "How weil he does it," she thought. "Love has made a man of him. He is desperately in earnest; ho is charming—he is adorable." "Why, Reggy," she said aloud, to her own astonishment, "I believe I do love you. Yes, I will marry you, after all—yes, j-es I will." The happy Reggy did not notice the peculiar wording of Alicia's acceptance of his heart and fortune. He had won her, and his joy seemed complete. No one but his wife ever knew that he had been the subject of an experiment. —Chicago Tribune. A VORACIOUS CAPRA. Goat Fined on tlie llorne'H Tall An Amusing Incident. Henry Travers and Otto Koop, who lives a few doors away, have long been the closest of friends. But now they never speak as they pass by, and 'tis all owing to Travers' goat and Koop's long-tailed bay mare. The bay mare had a tail that reached the ground and tho goat an appetite that was indis criminating and only limited by his ambulatory and reaching powers. But the horse's tail Instead of sweeping the floor as of yore, is now but a Jagged bunch of hair, fully a foot and a half away from the ground. The facts in the case are somewhat hazy, but Mr. Koop says: "My heart is almost brok en. Why, the tail of that horse was the best part of it. I wouldn't have taken SSOO for that mare, hut now look at it! That confounded goat of Trav ers' had to come in here and chew oft its tail and disfigure the finest looking horse in Toledo. Why in heaven's name didn't Travers feed his old billy goat, so that ho would stay at home instead of trespassing around chewing up horses' tails. It's a blamed shame, and I'm going down town to see a law yer friend of mine and see if I can't get damages. No, the mare ain't much of a runner or trotter, but you just ought to have seen that tail. I'll kick a lung out of that goat if I get a chance." "Kick a lung out of my goat, will he?" indignantly snorted Mr. Travers when told what Koop had said. "Just let him try it. Damages? Fiddlesticks! How is he to sue me? I didn't eat the tall. Why doesn't he keep his stable door shut if he is so particular?"— Toledo News. Not SnperHtltlmifl. Even ancient superstitions are not respected by the modern woman of fashion. She has herself photographed in her wedding dress before she is mar ried, has her trousseau marked with her new initials instead of her maiden name, and otherwise flies in the face of traditions which, to her grandmoth er, were sacred because of their very antiquity, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. At the present moment the most fa vored gem for mounting as a charm is the opal, the stone banned for years as an omen of bad fortune to the wear er. Now you find opals in the rough, as well as polished, being mounted in almost every style for wear on neck chains or on bangles. There is only one other stone which can rival them in popularity, and that is the pale green jade. UtHh'H Capital. Salt Lake City still presents one of the most absorbingly interesting fields for the sociologist to be found on this continent. The conditions most vital to a people's life are there far beneath the surface and cannot be comprehended in a day, nor by a sojourner who looks exclusively through either Mormon or Gentile eyes. Two generations have been horn into the Mormon religion, and the traditions of the church are as binding to them as those of century old creeds to their followers. The man who you are told has "broken away" from the faith you find upon acquaint ance to be half a Mormon still. Tho "good Mormon" who is pointed out to you will be found to be, in nine cases out of ten, half Gentile. —New Lippin cott. No Twin Microbes for ll'm. A clergyman walking on the out skirts of his parish on day found one of his parishioners whitewashing his cottage. Pleased at this novel mani festation of the virtue that is next to godliness he complimented the man on his desire for neatness. With a mysterious air the workman descend ed from the ladder and approaching the fence said: "That's not exactly tho reason why I'm doin' of this ere Job, your worship. The last two cou ples as lived here had twins, so I ses to my missus, 'l'll take and white wash the place so's there mayn't he no infection.' You see, sir, as how we've got 10 of 'em already."—Phono graphic Record. HIS DECLARATION OF LOVE. It Went Into Vnrloua Collections and Brought Iliin Interesting Negatives. The young man came nearer. "Buenavista," ho said, iu a premon itory cough, 4 'may I say what 1 came to say this evening?" "I—l think you may, Mr, Yip porly," came softly from liar lips. "Then, "he proceeded, 4 T may ven ture to hope that it will not wholly surprise you. Mayhap, dear girl, your own heart has told you already what it is." He placed his arm along the back of her chair, and, observing that she did not appear to shrink from it, he went ahead. "Not with the boldness of one who feels that he may presume upon a favorable auswer with absolute cer tainty do I venture to ask the momen tous question now trembling on my lips, but rather with the dread of a reply that may forever blast all my hopes and drive me forth a wanderer und a vagabond upon the face of the earth! The issue at stake is so tre mendous, the consequences so lasting and far reaching, that one may well hesitate before staking one's all, if it may be so expressed, upon the cast of a die." Slightly leaning forward she list ened with purted lips and clasped hamls. "Therefore, beloved of my soul, I may have seemed as one who " ' either fears his fate too much, Or his desert is small,' inasmuch as I have not been entirely free from the suspicion of being one, furthermore " "Who will not put it to the touch, To wiu or lose it all,' but while endeavoring on the one hand to avoid the imputation of unmanly cowardice and 011 the other the equally reprehensible and more offensive charge of overweening confidence and self-conceit, I am impelled by a feel ing stronger than my own will to lay bare my heart before you, once for nli, and eud the suspense that is weighing upon me." "How beautifully you express your self!" she murmured. "Listen, Buenavista McCorkle! Im pressed with my own unworthiness as I am, deeply sensible, as I must be, of the inestimable value of the prize to which I aspire, I yet dare in my folly to rush iu where an angel might fear to tread. Gentle girl, your im age possesses my heart absolutely. Love like mine would melt the heart of a marble statue. For weeks I have seemed to movo in a dream. I could see your face in the moon. Your eyes twinkled iu the stars. The winds, as they blew softly through the trees, seemed to murmur, 'Buenavista! Bue navista!' The birds that sang beneath my window twittered 'buenavista! Buenavista!' and their music echoed in the chambers of my soul. The clouds, as they moved majestically across the heavens " "O, how beautiful!" 4< -took your form and seemed to beckon mo, and yet mock me as with a vision of the unattainable. In my dreams, when sleep has ended my vigils, I have seen you as a Greek goddess and worshiped you afar otf with despairing, deathless devotion 1" "Have the conductors on the ele vated roads, as they mumbled out the names of the streets, seemed to say, 'Buenavista! Buenavista' too?" "What mean you, Miss McCorkle?" "Have the frogs iu the marshes, offering their evening orisous, breathed into the raptured ear of night the smoothly flowing name of 'McCorkle! McCorkle!' " "Why, let me ask, Miss McCorkle, have you let me make such a bloom ing idiot of myself if you intended to give me the clammy hand in this stylo? Did yon think I was practic ing for a high school exhibition?" "O, no, Mr. Yipperly, I have en joyed it greatly. I think, taking it altogether, yours is one of the most gorgeous and spectacular declarations of love I ever listened to. Why did I let you run on so loug? Because, Mr. Yipperly, 1 am making a collec tion of proposals of marriage, and I thought jours would bo a valuable 1 addition. Itis. It is absolutly unique. : You dou't know how grateful I am for it, as a work of art." The young man removed his arm from the back of her chair, thrust his hand into an inner pocket, and brought forth a foldod manuscript. "For fear you might not remember it in all its majesty and beauty, Miss McCorkle," he said, tossiug it into her lap, "allow me to give it to you in lull, in typewritten form. You will seo that you missed the really eloquont, spell-binding part of it. The perora tiou would have made your hair curl." "I hope, Mr. Yipperly, you will not allow this to " "I shan't lose an ounce of flesh or j a wink of sleep over it. I hired a lit erary chap who was hard up to write that thing for 1110, Miss McCorklo. No, you can keep it. I've got an other copy somewhere. I have tried that production on five or six other girls, and it's had the same effect on all of them. I'm getting au interest ing collection of negatives. 1 guess I was pretty badly swindled. Well, I must be going."—Chicago Tribune. Boer Itelationalilp. A list of a portion of the prisoners of General Crouje's army has just been issued at Cape Town, says the London Daily Mail. A perusal of it proves the close relationship existing among nearly all the Boers. For instance, there are no fewer than 27 of the Coetzee family, mostly hailing rrom Potchfstroom,' the De Beers number 1(5, the Bothas 22, the Ivrugers 20, tho Cronjes only five, the Pretorius 21, the Van Wyks IG. Very few English names occur in the list, but the following are notice able: Avres, Clarke, Dunn, Forter, Berry, Green, Holmes, Hunter, foul O'Kellys, Page and Wheeler. | CHINA'S GINSENG ROifT. ' LARGE QUANTITIES DUG IN THE F ES7S OF OHIO. Root of tllo TTerb la ttcfantml :m Allli.'* 1 Sucrocl by the Celestial* feupponeil to Add to tho I.eiigth of Life and llrl|flt t,a Mental I'oworn Bring* a Good Prlr e It is not a well known fact tb nt a large percentage of tlio ship ments of ginseng, which go ann 1 " ally to China, is contributed by t> e forests of northern Ohio, neve' theless it is true. Large distric e there wore sud still ore conij amative.F j well stocked with the herb; and raaiT residents have made hundreds of do' lnrs by gathering the roots in yea ! j gouo by. The tirst sign of sprit: 1 I calls the ginseng diggers-from tlieiiij homes, and many of them [are already afield, seeking probably the mostji j precious plant that grows. A spade'* and a bag over his shoulder identities the man who seeks ginseng from I other men. He goes to rich wood lands and then singles out the butter nut trees, under wnioh the herb is most commonly found. Tho roots of the plant, sometimes fleshy tubers the size of a forefinger, are of that shape and easily go to make up a pound of the matter de sired. When dried they bring from S3 to 310 a pound, according to their size; the older and larger, the higher their price. Although gathering the roots is a profitable business, that of , selling direct to the consumer is much the more profitable. In China it is ; sold by the ounce and oftentimes I brings as high as S2OO an ounce; that ' weight in all cases bringing more than the pound upon the American mar- j ket. With the celestials it is a prize, and upon perfect specimens as high as $2300 has been lavished. With them it is supposed to possess a su- j pernatural power to streugtheu and invigorate the weakeuing tissues, so i that the eater will live to be 100 j years old. And not only is the power j thus ascribed, but to the poor men- j tally, it imparts knowledge, and, | above all, prepares the olive-eyed prince for a long and luxurious so- j journ on earth. In fact, the ginseng root is almost sacred to the Chiuatnan of the upper j class, and to presont it to one's friend I is an homage difficult of appreciation by the sous of the West, who gather it in the woods. The entire growth of the herb is protected by the gov ernment in the Chinese empire. At one time the emperor detailed 10,000 ! Tartars to gather all that could be ! found in his domain. Each man was obliged to give two pounds to his ma- j jesty, and for what he succeeded in gathering afterward he was repaid by its weight in silver. This, however, was no more than one-eighth of its ] value and soon it was exchanged even- J ly for its weight in gold, as is often tho case at the present time. The American crop does not com pare at all favorably with thnt of Korea. In that country, however, it is found practicable to raise it in gardens, and here it is impossible to j produce good roots by so doing. It i is a crime punishable by death for a Korean to sell ginseng outside of his own country without imperial per mission. Thus protected, it' forms one of tho staple products of Korea, j and is much appreciated by the Chi nese owing to its superior flavor, j There is naturally a prejudice on the ' part of the Chinese to receive from : the West anything so highly regarded by them. Up to the dawn of the nine- i teonth century it was exported from America in small quantities, but as early as 1830 theshipmonts amounted 1 to nearly 3100,000 in one year. There seems to be an idea preva- ■ lent in this country thnt the Chinese powder the roots and smoke them. This is an error. It is never used as a quietus. Tho commoner clusses eat it much as we do the common j liquorice root, but those who employ it most are the graudoos and even the ! royal households. A truly Oriental aud luxurious manner of administer ing the powdered root obtnius among tho higher classes. By the highest caste the treatment is taken during a period of 4U days once in two years. The patient is taken to a beautiful garden where flowers are blooming, birds singing, water sparkling from a fountain, and usually where music is to be heard through the hours of the day. In this retreat ho is told noth ing of the outsido world and allowed to receive no letters from friends for fear they might contain nnpleasant news. Hero ho is fed tho ginseng powder, a soft, yellow stuff, with a slightly aromatic flavor. As a natural consequence of his rest from trouble and worry, tho patient comes forth in brighter spirit, nud in this way it is sounded abroad that it was the gin seng treatment which made him so. It is n singular fact that the name given the plant by the Chinese aud the North American Indian is strongly similar. Both names sug gest the fancied resemblance of n root to the form of the humnu body, the tuber being ofttimes split iutotwo divisions resembling the limbs of a man. On account of this similarity to a man's form the supernatural powers were ascribed to it, and therb is much evidence to show that it was in high favor with the Indians on the same account.—Chicago l eeord. ' Trouble Over Wells In Imlln. The qnestiou of wells in India In complicated by the co-existeuce ifii each community of two castes—tljio purer Hiudua aud Gouds ou the cue baud, the weavers ou the other. >'c weaver may draw from the well of the I Hindus lost it bo defiled, nor will tl ie Hindu drink from the hands or tie well of a weaver. Thus it becom us i necessary either to dig two wells or Is ' depute a certain number of the Him lu element to give water to their less e x- j fdted fellow-villagerj.—The Corahi U. |W"" * r 'f"ATMENT, f Pbrsiel e , .us Agreed as td lt Efficacy, Thej fery of the serum treat ment filjlise was the outcome of Ifmplplve the mystory of im nhityfthe well-known fao l that one utta 1 an infectious disease, sueh as fever or measles, al ffi ist alxrjpnders a person secure against auhaequsut oxposure. is so oibappenn, in the pursuit of knowie- the subject sought was no founds the hue cause of im m- iity islto be discovered; but Soi ethinptore practical vi.lue was lighted uo namely, a means by 1 win b thiiJunity can be artificially pr teed, J It was i/,that during tho course of e (i E j[ s the patient's blood ! on,ictgo' |> change, or aoquires some uejjioi' tv, by virtue of whioh ' the linlgiy t t ke that disease is ' *4j&t'oyd Xl n it was discovered i thjitu'il) of ie blood of a person wbo hat ill w ' be, ome immune, iu; jcteatu ti ' Ins o auothor per so'i wbjis ui ' 1 had tho disease, will relt hi t tune tlao. But n 'li for tiie injection of thieo person who has just Wi ' > tvith the disease seems hasfeu * cure. It is liko a Weapon tlie h ' of amau attaoked, jor abt to tie icked, by robbers. If he 1 the j ]>on beforehand he ; can W off ths m'k, or if It is put into i'aml ju, '• he is being ut , tnek f a <'au u tto drive the us i eajZ<£'wnv. i . T(/Sidlsaf '(waver,the remedy i mtist'iisou ear j for a weapon is ■ Useies 1 fl man t'phns nlready lieeu beataito Uit copiousness. As i mani/es (impossible to use huinoP°d for tft| purpose named, rei'Otu 1 " 8 beprt ji tto animals. In jectiodi the vint are made l'epeat- JUy in horse, n til his blood has juirehtgh degeo of immunizing >Wer, 'ten he igbletl and the red : Aid wLoorpuse ei are removed, for j the m e proptr e reside iu the fluid rpf tho jIWL that is to say, the est 'This il'Ut up lu sualud flasks,! is reudAr use. Theuu lnostH use is tho well* knownhthoria Iftexin, although (etauu'ltoxiu ulothar Boruuts ore i also envd 0.-ciflhalty. I'hynf ifrtrv JH" moans agroetl afi to lime of th al 'Utn treatment of tllseiimuy o',#'lng that diph theria bxiu, for ■"ample, has no j ouratlveperties ■ atuvcr, others, Again, apially eßphatlo iu their eonteutiiat dlphlßu'la is a mnuh loos neriilUcnsU ■>ro the serum | troutmoL it has cJla into gonornl beo, and/ go so I* as to believe that the will ootqwhon, through this Her troatmetl 1 astour'a say ing will lallzud, "it is in tho j bower off to maltill parasitic (or infoctlou.hoasiis dili Spear from the world."• ,th'a CoijJmion. ft'gT AND tfIOUS. A petrn forest itißindstone fov matiou bacon disoowd in Boutt county, Coruia. ■ A Booth- (Me.) flsllnan, Ab Ak, says he b t,bo shorft name on record. 'lre U said tibe no abbre viation abt it, either. j An emuogg omelette as tho treat | provided u Loudon muralist for j his friend, }flie contoutof the egg, whioh wa'ojnnd in A* ilia some time ago, igliod two pouts. Croco i dilos' eggdMe also sorvet Tennysp lekes and B*ou Brown are two wrtl Jcitizens a Georgia settlemen' (ceutly. on k wager, Tennysoide-ured to halted 'pos sums at Isi tag. iyron iu distin guished J iyi lvvmrconsnmal seven boxes of ,ai?tnesu as many minutes. JohuKvtq giant policeuan, has \ beeu engager the summer for the Oleutangy P® at Colnmbus, Ohio. Wood fc'i'j'°jthe city from the min ing distiictsJ a l , l J 'ied to the street railway conqjl i"" position, but, as ho is aISiJ d " a 11 Clir nu d weiths 31IJ ilinb it wn9 decided nut to j) ace hinA 16 position of run ning a motcj .\iV)dia years of ago and I aji) 1 " eot h inches talL To tiopliii* new-uirn infant's skull is an >xpdouce that has fallen to tho lot cf fevurgeohs. >, surgeon of Ottuuiwi, It". performed\the op oration ion one twins horn to Mrs. Douglas Motuhy. The result -vas bevondiall ejjetation. Wbeu n pieOv, of skull in tlf outre of the depresse V area hull beif rcphined out the skui ■ at Oil, a re.pied its uortyal shape. ■ Since tken iipatient has gained if I strength an! H symptoms ot iniauit; ■ havo dijappif ed. I A threc-lggcd horse, born tw years ago oJ a Boer farm, arrived . Aewtfork cly the other day fot exl* bitogat Bufilo Bill's Wild WestShoj On tie roufli voyage of 30 days fro Capd Tow 3to Loudon the hoi show ! thai Ml of 'its legs were t legs, J t ah.. behaved like a vete ocen loss ion her tumultuous ' , oflilaysfi hi London. It is clah that the h > so cau "trot, walk gall. ■" as veil as a four-legged hp aud iiat it csu also perform sey trick . D third leg is perfect, gi ing nm e centre of its chest. A Itesutarly Salary. 11 - voung congressman ran his agai iver the pages of the speeel ex) ' dto deliver ou the morl I He ii "do a trilling alteration or t pnu-ed liis hand across his b folbc ; his arms, and gazed liar the type written pages before ( I ; And all i gut for this kind of w ; he i imiuotod, with a tinge of I I ness in hisjtoue, "is S|booo a yl* I [ Chicago Tijibune. ,/|h I
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