Savannah Tribune

Saturday, December 31, 1904

Savannah, Georgia

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Pe ee em Ne FERS Spee RSE SES a OP EE Re End og con 2 ree Se eee aeiae ge Ee HES coal RS OL ae gage te” Be SEE ly A? PBS ey eee. vig a ON. oe tote EA Pe ak oie iis cat ON a eal PA ee. ‘Cawss Rah: Co TrIHAMIIC Ce BSols Oe Behe 8 a : Ze eG Sea ee ILS ata | See ES eehg es ee (eas SO SOO SY S99 F9GF FB: , = IG SO we = a Es sy <3 2° 3 pe . a j oT fey = om, wt F : oA RR oe eg si ae : ‘ & . Mg ee = ee = - > Dan BNR 7a VOL. XX, SAVANNAH. GA. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31. 1904. . < NOM SS See 5 ; : rm To 7 7 Dette OFFICIAL CANVASS) B8!7IsH-RussiaN case. |T¢GQ ENDS WORK|IN-BLIZZARD'S GRIP| 7 FINANCE coTTON. | GROWERS“COMB % — Commission to, Pace Upon the Matter — eel Proeident Jordan fesues Call for Inter € es Hee sa: yy Organizes st Paris—Torped . a tan ts Sto Bo Held :~ Ts 2 4 A OF Votes Cast in Election for| ° ‘peste sten with Fienermen | Withdfaws Nearly Whole of Whole Country Is Given a} “““*ta'New orleans, -| Steps Taken. to. Organiz _ President Last'November. | no mtofaationt sommissign ap| ‘Fleet From Polt‘Arthur, | "Touch of Genuine Winter, Prestdent Harris Jordan, ot the Planters-of this Sout} ‘ ——_- polnted to inquire into the ‘North sea et ‘ . — Southern Cotton Growers’ Protective EN j Incident met at the foreign office in “t & inc. |, Assoctath call: f a ntee Ne ANALYSIS - OF* FIGURES | reru tourtay moring at seoce|1S .NO LONGER NEEDED. [SNOW AND: ICE-IN.NORTH | eerste convention to boned at| FOR MUTUAL PROTEC] ——— . | Rear Admiral Davis, U. S. N., repro ro % naam New Ori 24 to 26, 1905. Ae Satake President Roosevelt's Majority over | °° tho Unies States, WAS Dred-| y45 admiral Payk High Tribute t8 | Temperatures Drop Swiftly Below Atoag th ttre for, conatraton Executive Committes mnie Farker la 2.547.578 and Over the | ett THe ‘ommission unanimously |" "'yesseia and Men. Whd Havé Zoro and Tramic in Mariy Sectiong | £0 te artes mbes tre the following, Se) """ ton, Asscelation Megtetin Fe Candidates Combined-at To- elected the Admiral Baron von Spaun, Served so°Faithfully Under) _ fe ‘Brought to Standstill’ and Financing the entirg spot cotton Worth, Texas, and Outlines tal of 1.748,768. of the Austro-Hungarian. navy, to be His Gommand. Communication Stopped. * business of the south; creating a bi- x" w Program. aay a ee =A Chfcago- dispatch saya: The of elal canvas of the votes cast Novem- ber 8 for presidential “electors was completed Thursday when the result ‘Was announced in Minnesota, North Dakota and Washington. . The following figures show the oficial vote of all the forty-five states. ‘The total ts 13,508,496 against 13,968, 574 In 1900—a decrease of 460,078. ‘The ballots were divided as follows: Roosevelt, republican... ...7,627,632 Parker, democrat... .........5,080,054 Debs, socialist.. ..... ...... 391,687 Swallow, prohibiton.. 1.2... 260,303 Watson, people’s.. ...... .. 114,637 Corregan, socialistlabor .... 33,453 Holcomb, continental labor.... 830 ‘Roosevelt recetved a majority over all of 1,746,768, and a plurality over Parker of 2,547,578. In 1900 McKin- Jey had 467,046 more than all the oth- er candjdates and 859,984 more than Bryan, . “The vote for Roosevelt was 409,822 tmore than for McKinley, while that of . Parker was 1,277,772 less than for Brass McKinley polled more votes than Roosevelt in Alabama, Georgia, Ken- tacky, Louisiana, Maine , Maryland, Missssippl, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina Tennesse, Texas and Virginla. Roosevelt got more than McKinley in the other thin ty-two states. Parker received more votes than Bryan in Delaware, Georgia, Mississtp- pl, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, South Carolina and West Vir ginia, while Bryan got mors than Parker in the ramaining thirty-seven states. |The republicans made xatas over théir vote of 1900 in 32 states and ‘the official Sgures show losses in thir teen. The totat gains of the republicans 732,048, and the total losses" %12,249, net gain 429,799, ‘The democrats polled more votes in eight states than in 00 but less in thirty-seven. Their total galns were 30,792, and the total losses 1,291,491; net losg 1,260,699. Roosevelt carried thirty-two states, against twenty-elght by McKinley, and has 336 electoral votes under the ap: portionment of 1900. McKinley had 292 under the apportionment of 1880, there having been an addition of twen ty-nine by the last apportionment Parker carried thirteen s:ates against seventeen by Bryan, and nas 140 electora! votes. Bryan had 155 un der the apportionment In force in 1900. 8 ‘Watson received his largest vote in Georgia, the total of that state, 2, 1634, with 20,508 in Nebraska being nearly onethird of his aggregate 114, 667. Barker polled 60,218 in 1900. ‘The prohibtion vote in 1900 was £08, 7917 in November 260,303; a gala cf 51,512. Four years ago the socialists had an electoral , ticket In thirty-two states and polled 87,769 votes. This year they had a ticket in the forty-fixe states and the Debs vote was 491,587. In 1900.aver 5,000 votes were: polled in only Calo“ornia, Illinois, Masssachu- setts, Missouri and New York. In No- vember Debs got over 5,000 in Califor. nia, WMinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kaaxas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minaesote, Missourl, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, New York, Ohlo, Oreson, Penn- seylrania, Uiah, Washington avd Wis- consin, the largest number 69,425 In is, Tho vote of the socialist Jabor par ty in 1900 was 39,944, This year it was 33,453, a loss of 6,491. Horde of Immigrants from Rusala. Horde of Immigrants from Rusala. The Hamburg American Line steamer Patrica, which arrived ‘at New*York Sunday from Hamburg, brought 131 cabin and 2,435 stecrage passengers. The greater number -of those In stcerage were from ‘Russia -and came over to ezeape conseription. : Negroes Cremate itallan, - Christmas night, Baroni, an Italian, was murdered at Dorsoyville, La., and his body cremated by a gang of ne- groes. The affalr occurred about 11 O'clock, when Baron! was closing his “ghoa. BRITISH-RUSSIAN CASE, Commission to, Paes Upon the Matter Organizes at Paris—Torpedo ° Boata Seen With Fishermen Tho internation! gommissign ap- pointed to inquire into the ‘North sea incldent met at the foreign office in Parls Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. Rear Admiral Davis, U. S. N. repre senting the United States, was prea- ent. The ‘commission unanimously elected the Admiral Baron von Spaun, of tho Austro-Hungarian. navy, to be thé fifth member, completed the pre- Mminary organization and adjourned until January 9. The other members of the commission are: Admiral Kas- nakoff, for Russia; Admiral Fournier, France; Rear Admiral Lewis A, Beau- mont, England. A London dispatch tays: The pub- Yeation‘in St. Petersburg of the state- ment that Hull fishermen have volun- tarlly deposed that foreign torpedo boats were among the trawlers off Dogger bank when the latter were fired upon by ships of the Russian Baltfe squadron is probably nothing more than a repetition of similar statements emanating from Hull and appearing in London papers the last few days. ‘These are circumstantial anu It would certainly appear to be true that some men of the Gamecock fieet have made statements before the Russian consul. The name of only one of these has beon revealed. He Is the boatswain of the trawler Ava, and he sald Thursday that he was induced to make the .statement while he was Intoxicated. He admits that he re- celved a certain smount of money, but now says the statement he made ig untrue. The exact tenor of his statement or any others has not been revealed. All published reports from Hult say positively that these atate- ments Were secured by two agents of the Russian government; but the Russian embassy in London repeated tho denfal made on December 21, which was to the effest that there 1s absolutely no truth in the statement that the Russian goyernment or any one jn any offictal capacity, or any one delegated by Russia has been en- deavoring to secure statements from the Gamecock fishermen in support of Russia's position before the Parls commission, ‘The sensational press of England rectly charges the Russlan govern- ment with using underhand means, by bribery and intoxicants, to secure falso statements from men of the Gamecock fishing fleet. The Russian consul at Hall sald the boatswain of the Ava was brought to his office, ‘but that he sent him to the commlesion- er of boats, where the cotsul says the Dostswain swore he saw & Japanese torpedo boat with the trawlers, The consul says he knows other trawlers who are ready to make similar state- ments, but that they are afraid of the consequences. The consul indignant- ly denies that he has.made any at- tempt to induce fishermen to make statements. MANY FRAUDS ARE BARRED, Objectionable Mai] Matter Weeded ‘Out During the Past Year, A: Washington special says: , R. P. Goodwin, assistant attorney general for tho postofice department, in his annual report to Postmaster Generzi ‘Wynne, says that the number of fraudulent concerns has been grently reduced in consequence of the vigor- ous enforcement of the postal laws‘ There were 144 fracd orders Ssened uring the year and twenty-three or- ders were tesued against foreign lot- tery ‘companies and their agents. Much has been done in the direction of ‘excluding from the malls publica- tions containing obscene and sug: gestive flfustrations advertisements ‘and other matter considered unfit for elreulation, Four Die in Mine Exploston, Four men were instantly killed and many others were nearly suffocated Thursday as the result of an explos- fon in Reece Hammond & Co.'s coul mine at Bolivar, Pa. a a EARLIER ELECTIONS WANTED. Representative Livingston Introduces Bih to Change Natlonal Voting Date! ‘Representative Livingston, of Geor- gle, introduced a joint resolution In the ‘house Wednesday ‘providing that hereafter: electors for president and vice president and representatives in congress shali be voted for in each state on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in September, and that tho fifty-ninth congress shall asSemible and hold its first regular “session on the first Monday jn Qctober, 1905. ° TEGO ENDS WORK Withdraws Nearly Whole of - Fleet From Pott‘Arthur, IS NO LONGER NEEDED, wap admiral Aaa Hild Tribute td Vebstia@. and Men, Who Have Served so °Faithfully Under: < His Command, A Tokio dispatch, under date of Do comber 24, @Gmounced -that Admital Togd hid Withdrawn thé thajotity of the fleet frm Pott AFthtir. Adkutral. Togo, telegraphing undef date of December 22, says: | “After 203-Meter hill was occupied as the result of a’ gallant and desper- atS attack by the besieging army, tne bombardment, of the enemy's squad- yon, by siege and other. heavy guns, became effective. In consequence thé battleships Poltava and Retvizan werd sunk, and subsequently the battld ships Pobieda and Peresvlet, the pro- tecter cruiser Bayan were sunk. “The battle ship Sevastopol escap- ed the land bombardment, left the harbor and anchored near Chentia mountain. She was attacked there continuously by our torpedo boats and heavily damaged, The main strength of the enemy is completely crushed. Only a weak gun boat, the Osvashnt, and several torpedo boat destroyers remain afloat. Under the circum: stances out combined fleet has beer removed a& unnecessaty from the blockade of Port Arthur, which had been maintained stoce May 14. “t have arranged for a closer wate for ships attempting to run the block- ads and to watch the remnant of the enemy's squadron. We suffered from the enemy's mines, both Iald and float- ing on the high seas, and from dense fogs. The crulsers Miyako, Salyen and Yoshino, Hatsuse, battle ship-Kal- mon, gunboat and Helyen, cossi de fense vessel, were svnk, and many gallant and loyal officers and men were killed, but we succeeded in maintaining the blockade. When the enemy emerged from the barbor: our fleet successfully engaged him, and finally, with the valuable support of the besleging army, succeeded in crushing’ nearly all the enemy's squad- Ton. Our second squadron so heavily damaged the Vladivostok squadron that It has since been unable to leave port, = “All this success is gratefully -at- tributed to the ig ant virtue of our emperor. “During the blockade all the ships under my command splendidly accom- plished the work and duty assigned to them. Especially to be noted are some of those who are engaged in the dificult and risky task of block- ading, or who firelessly accomplished the work of laying mines in the pres- ence of the enemy ,others who, brav- ing ‘all dangers, were engaged in the work of clearing mines away, and others still who were posted to watch the enemy and guard against tho ene- my's dhlps. THolr combined work Strongly contributed to the accom- plishment of thé blockade. I deem. it my duty to ospecially mention ‘my recognition of the valuable service rendered by tho officers and men.¥ CZAR NICHOLAS ISSUES? UKASE. Fearing Rebellion AGtocrat of Rus- sla Promises Some Réforme. A St. Petersburg dispatch says: Emperor Nicholas’ long expected re- form ukase, was issued Monday night The document weals, under eight special heads, with practically all the subjects brought to the emperor's at- tention by the memorial of tha can- gress of zemstvos presidents held In St. Petersburg last month, and, while not specifically pledging the govern- ment to carry out the various reforms In thelr entirety, as demande¢ by the memorial, promises thrt each shall be referred to the council of ministers, with orders to report promptly on the follest., measures of railet which ean be accorded on,the various subjects. LIFE TERM FOR’ EX-PRLSIDENT. + Desertsfor Wrong Boing. The court at, Portau-Prince, Haltt, has rendered a judgment tn-default, condemning former ,Presfdent Sam td sepeeonnent for life at hard Isbor, for the dllegéd Issve of fraudytent bonds. Mme. Sam fs sentenced ‘to fifteen years’ imprisonment, and several members of Sam’s ‘ministry and_other high officials have ‘been condemned to termis ranging from five to’ of teen yénrs, ee ae IN BLIZZARD'S GRIP Whole ‘Country Is Given a "Touch, of Genuine Winters ‘SNOW AND, ICE-IN, NORTH ‘Temperatures Brop Swiftly Bélow Zero and Teamic in Many Sections Ie ‘Brought to Standstlil’ and Communication Stopped, ‘ Reports recelved at the weather bu- reat i Wabhington Tuesday night show that Misgoutl, Iowa and filinols afa 18 the throes of a BUazerd. The temperatures fell fast and soon pass: ed the zero point in eastern Nebtad ks. Illinois and Iowa are expected to experience zero weather, and, in Min- nesota it will be even colder. Tho Mississlppt valley storm, of tal, sOw and sleet advanced north- wafd durlig the diy to Lake Micht- gnii.nfid iheteased gfeatly in enérsy. At & G'cloék Tuesday wight a 73 miles an hour gale was blowing at Ohicago, while tho barometer at Milwauked reached 28.86 inches, an unprecedent- edly low reading. All along the <Atlagtic seaboard, from Virginia to southern New Eng- land, there, was a dense pail of fog with unusually high temperatures. All Tratfie Paralyzed: A Chicago dispatch says: One of the most severo storms of recent yeats has raged throughout the terri- tory lying between the Rocky Moun- tains and the great lakes since early ‘Tueddiy moraing, and caused muck trouble to street car compazles, rail- toad and telegraph companies, ‘The iattet- were the greater sutfter ers, for the blizzard which swept through the west and northwest dur- Ing tho last twenty-four hours was preceded by a heavy fog and drizzling rain, which made the wires almost un- workable. The intense cold and ter- rific galg that followed <lose upon the fog coated the wires with, ice. and later In, the. day threw’ poles to the ground, crippling the companies bad- iy. Raflroad trains were badly delayed all through the west, some of them belny twenty-four hours’ Jate. Street car traffic in ult the cities of the west and northwest was practically at a standstill at Some tine during the ay. Reports from Kansas City early In the day were that the storm ex- tended from the middle of Missouri as far south ag Indlan Territory, and was accompanied throughout its en- tire extent by high’ winds and snow, which, on the Jevel, would have been abont one foot in depth. It was drift- ed so badly by the gale, however, that In nearly all the cities of Nebraska, Kansas and western Missouri street car. traffic was at a standstill by noon ‘Tuesday. The telegraph wires were down in all directions, and it was with ex- treme difficulty that communication with the west end northwest was kept up. All trains through that part of the country were hopelessly behind thelr schedule. The storm had reach- ed eastern Missouri by noon; and the temperature jn St. Louis went down |/20 degrees in two hours, while the wind. blowing at 40 miles an hour piled snow up in the streets in great drifts. -At Omaha and Des Moines conditions stmilar to those in Kansas City were reported. All throughout western Iowa the fury of the storm raged. All trains in at section ‘were reported from one to six hours late.- In tho northwest the storm was even more violent than throughout Missouri and Iowa, The storm reached westward from St. Paul until {t covered almost_the entire north- west, and from the Dakotas, eastern Montana, Wyoming, northern Micht- gan ahd Wisconsin, the stg@y was the same from all polnis. ‘The Wires were down. in all directions, the snow was falling in dense volumes and driven by’ x high northwest. gale was filling then abvebie? and waticoad cute: A QUARTER. MILLION BLAZE, Columbus, Ohio, samecs tosvl Busl- * ‘neas Property Loss By Fire! Fire in Columbus, Ob!o, early Wed- nésday destroyed $225,000 worth of property and stocks in tho center of the business Wistrict and In an explo- ‘sion during the fire Aye freien were more or less injured. The fire, start- eduin the Mithoff’building. ‘The sec- ond; ‘thidjnnd fourth floors were oceu- pled ag flatg and comething like Stteen ‘Samilles, reside,there, but all were ‘res- cued. The ‘ftames itlen gpread to nd- foining. stores, - TO FINANCE COTTON. Prosidént Jordan fesues Call for Inter. state Convéntlon' to ‘Be Héld <> tw New. Orléans. 7 President Hatvis Jordan, of the Southern Cotton Growers’ Protective .Association, has issued a call: for an interstate conyention to be held at New Orleans January 24 to 26, 1905. Among tho matters for considration to be atted upon are the following, ac- cording £6 the éallf Financing the entirg spot cotton business of tho south; creating 4 bu rean of statlsties*for benefit of the pro- ducers; establishment of,.2 cotton ex- change in each state through which our cotton can be sold direct.to the manufacturers; organization quickly of all the cotton producers in each cotton growing county; reduction af Cotton atreagé and usé of commercial fertilizers for 1905, of not feas' than 25 per cent, adoption of a local ware- house system to meet the practical demand of both farmers and bankers throughout the south; to make New Orleans the l¢ading cotton exchange in the United States; the formation ot a close alliance between all the southern agricultural organizations, how {n existence for mutual co-opera- tfon and protection. ‘Yhesé ate among tho leading matters for consideration, They are momen tous end some of theni {nvolve tre- mendous propositions. But none are incapable of quick so- Jutfon and practical realization. The south possesses the brains, the man, hood and the motiey ® solve any great question which threatens Her future prosperity. ~ OLD SCANDAL REVIVED. Bad Charges Brought Against Pro- tant Eplscopal Blahop. A Philadelphia dispatch says: ‘Through the personal efforts of J. Pierpotit Morgan und several other leading church men, the mystery which has for two years surrounded the action of the Right Rev. Ethelbert Talbot, Protestant Episcopal bishop of the diocese of Central Pennsylvania, tn unfrocking the Rev, Ingram N. W. Irvine, appears Iikely to be dispelled It 1s believed that @ scandal of se- rious proportions will be reveajed, In- volving the name of the blehop and of a promineat socfety woman, A new preseritment against Bishop Talbot has just been drawn up in by Henry Budd, chancellor of the dlo- eese, and has been placed in the hands of Francis Lynde Stetson, per sonal counsel for J. Plerpont. Morgan. It charges Bishop Talbot with con- splracy with Mrs, Emma D. Elliott, a owoman sald to have had four hus bands, to ruin the Rev. Mr, Irvine, and accuses him of the dishonorable and unauthorized use of the names of fellow bishops in a letter tending to injure, the former rector. MIDDIES WERE DISAPPOINTED. Boys at Annapclla Had Made Plans tor a, Big Spree... ‘The naval academy authorities at Annapolis have discovered that prep- arations for the drinking of a large amount of intoxicants during the hol- idays had been made by some of the midshipmen, the liquor to be obtained through academy attendants. Watch- men were placed: at tne gates to In- spect persons comirs in‘and were suc- cessful in finding considerable quanti- tles of liquor, which was confiscated. -A quantity of It was smuggled In, however, and several banquets were Interrupted in different quarters. As result, the prison shops at Santee 4s full of midsbipmen, amd three have been recommended for dismissal bp Commandant Badger. TAMPA’ INVITES ROOSEVELT, Florida City Wants Preldent to Call While on His Southern Trip, The city council of Tampa, Fla, by unanimous vote, passed a resots- tfon cordially inviting President Roosevelt to visit, Tampa on his south. ern trip, reminding him of his pleag- ant - associations when he was officer of the Roush Riders in Shatter’s army prior to the campalen in Cuba. es. A QUARTER MILLION BLAZE, Columbus; Ohio, Suffers Heavy’ Busl- nesg.Property Loss By,Fire. Fire in Columbus, Ohio, early Wed- nesday destroyed $225,000 worth” of Property and stocks in the center of the business wistrictyapd in an explo- sion during the fire,five firemen ‘wero more ‘or fees injured, The fire start- ed in the Mithofr billding. The sec- ond, third nnd fourth floors Were occu- ‘pled as flats and something like fifteen tamiliga yealde there, but-all were ‘res- cued: * The flames then spread to, ad- joining stores, ie ’ GROWERS “COMBINE: 1 ee BENE 2 Sys Past Se Steps Taken. to. Organi By Planters of the Sow ee EIN FOR MUTUAL PROTECTIONS as Jt eles 3 Worth, esd, and Guiness = aw Program,” © 77 "pees At & meoting of the execufive \ommpes mittee of the National Cotten“As: ton at” Forth Worth, Texas, Wed day; plans -were adopted for thejair/ ganization of the Natfonal Cotton ‘ax sociation under the resolutions adoplgs ed by the convention at, Shreveport December 16. Oswald ‘Wilson, Yat; Forth Worth, Tex, was “unanlmously-j elected secretary of the executive. committee; J. W. Spencer, ‘president of the Farmers and MeShanics“Nation**" al bank, Fort Worth, natfonal treasar ° er, and Gcorge N,, Aldridge, of Daasn, was added to the executive.commit” tee. Si a ae ‘The work-of the association waS di. vided umong five different commit? tees,"as follows: ‘ wa 1, For national] legislaton, 'E. H. Pe- vers, Calvert, Tex, chairman,“ 4. 2. Press and railroads,, Stanley" H-~ Watson, of Houston, Tex, chalrman. 3, Cooperation, 0, H., Pyle, Mine-", ola, Tex, chairman.» + 4. Organization, Oswald Wieon,/ Fort Werth, Tex, chairman, + 3 5. State legislation, J. H. Connell, for Texas, Dallas; P. M. Polts, for’. Louisiana, Natehitochee, La, . |S Each, chairman ts to, name his’ coi wmittee at the earliest moment. | ty | ‘The- secretary was, instructed. to. /send to the state chairman the plan of organization of the exceutiye com; mittee, so each state may be: organ” ized on the same lines. t & The objects of this organizattom: are: <= ‘L. To urge upon every’ farmer}in’ the southern states) the absolnterng-s cessity of diversification, Totation andy tha cultural system of rowing cotténg 2.,To secure legislation in all, ofithe. cotton states for the protection of 'im:} sectivorous birds and to, destroy 87%) tematically the cotton stalls .ns, south a the cotton ts picked. Ee To secure these results, steps‘ wifi be taken to systematically organte? the entire cotton country, =< Ey ‘Vice presidents have already dé named for each cotton state, who wits: act as chairman of the .state »exeche,' tlre commites of thelr own respectivé. states and will name thelr own etecr: uttve committee. oF Bach state chafrman will callaz meeting at once of his executive: com ‘mittee, and will organize for the pure pose of carrying out the objects’ ‘of? the national association as defined ‘by’ the national executive committee.” 7 ‘The plan of organization by“statog " for the state executive commitea? to name a chairman for each’ cottém county, who will, in turn, select«hisi own executive committes from tho-vaey rious precincts ‘in his.county. +783) ‘The necessity of imediate ‘action: has bevn urged, upon all fersons’ inh , terested, and it is anticipated ‘by thie national executive comittee that thes organtzation—will be perfect within:-2% very short .time. 5 BY NOTED CLUB HOUSE BURNED. “3 st ee ‘The Metropolitan’ at svaakinania Gutted By Disastrous Fire. - & ‘The Metropolitan club housé, ihe; home*of the most.fashlonable club Ja, Washington City, was gutted by fire. Wednesday involving an estimated Toss of from $60,000 to $100,000, par®. tially covered by insurance. ‘Tho fife’ was caused by a spark from an ¢lec:} tric wire near the elevator shaft. ‘The club, has a Jarge mbrotierstiip, ‘embracing some! of the best knowm: men in public life, Manuger Knight,’ of the club, estimates the loss on tha building at $100,000, with insurance‘ot $45,000, and on the contents S35 900, ith inguranes of $16,000. a eae ay | BOILERS ‘BLOWN TO ATOMS. = Lighting Plant at Covington, Gaz. ‘Wrecked and: Engineer Killed.-> 4 The hollers at. the electric’ ‘tight plant at Covington, Ga, explodes’ ‘Tuesday morning, killtg J. L, MeCil< longh, the engineer, The explosion, was: terrife and the shock.was folt ah over the city. . ‘The building Is 2 completo, wreck,” only one wall being left-standing. — ‘One boller was blown more than 100 feet and parts of machinery near- ly 100 yards, breaking. town a big. telegraph, pole. Many" people wera near by, but no one else.was burt, The Savannah Tribune. PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. BY THE TRIBUNE PUBLISHING CO. 119 W. 8. Julian Street. In the coming year let us all resolve to save more, and encourage each enterprise of the race. Our young men should save their earnings. There is no reason why they can not save one fourth of their weekly wages. SAVANNAH is dotted all over with churches, and yet but little Christian activity is being shown along practicle lines. During this season of the year, how many of these churches have contributed to charity and thought of the poor in the community; How many of them have extended that influence which benefits the young people of the community and cause them to celebrate Christmas days in a becoming manner? How many of them are trying to reach the great mass of people who never attend church? These are practical things that should cause churchmen to think and act. In our community there are several ministers who are as inconsistent as they can possibly be. Some of these preachers are in charge of flourishing churches and get their support only from our people. They generally get up in their pulpits and elsewhere and preach about race pride and what should be done to build up the race. Do they practice what preach? Do they patronize race enterprises; thereby helping our boys and girls? Do they patronize the Wage Earners Saving Department or the Metropolitan Company? Do they encourage the several insurance companies conducted by members of the race? Do they have their printing done at colored printing offices. This can be answered in the regulations by simply looking at the imprint on any job of printing that they have done. Such preachers are drawbacks to the race and the people should know who they are and treat them as they deserve to be treated. THE TRIBUNE is proud to say that all of the preachers are not in the above category, and are shining lights for race progress. This class of preachers we are proud to know and sing their praises, but the good Lord deliver us from others. THE need of our young men for a place of recreation has never been more apparent than at present. They have no place to go except hanging around the bar or other questionable places. Many would say that the churches are open several nights during the week and they could find recreation and profit there, but that does not meet the crayings of the average young men as has been seen by the perfecting of institutions elsewhere for his benefit. The average young man likes convival associates but this should be curtailed by that which will give them the greatest benefit. The one institution that will be of the greatest benefit to our young men in the Young Men Christian Association. Other cities with less population than Savannah boast successful institutions of this kind. There is no reason why one cannot flourish here. There is a number of young men who are willing to assist in this work if the proper encouragement is given by the leading citizens especially the preachers. These young men must be reached and must be saved, and one of the best ways is by the organization of an institution of the above kind. A few weeks ago a representative number of our people witnessed a game of foot, ball between the local team and one from Orangeburg. Among the attendants were a large number of young men in the prime of life. They were robust and dressed in the latest style. The observant ones present inquired as to the standing of the young men as citizens. From one who knew them very well it was ascertained that they have lived in the city for years, the majority from birth yet not one of them were boni-fide citizens. Not one of them are tax-payers and naturally not voters. From the stylish manner of these young men, they would be taken for young millionaries or else fully abreast of the times so far as citizenship goes. It is these young men upon who we are dependent for the future well being of the race, but alas! unless they mend their ways we will be doomed to disappointment and much of the hope of the race shattered. This class of young men can be seen always in a conspicuous place and making themselves ridiculous in the sight of good thinking people. These young men must be reached and taught the lesson of good citizenship. Collector Rucker and Bad Editor. We have noticed with indignation the results which the Atlantic Independent, an Afro-American weekly, has been making upon Hon. H. A. Rucker, our Collector of Internal Revenue at Atlanta. Because Mr. Rucker wrote during the campaign a political article in which he took sides with Roosevelt against the South, the Independent has attacked him with tooth and nail. What if Mr. Rucker did criticize the South? Is the South so virtuous and holy as to be above criticism? It is disgusting to see the Independent, which professes to be the organ of a people to which liberty is denied, denouncing one of that people for using his constitutional right of liberty of speech. We have watched the Independent for some time with distrust. Its weekly interchange of compliments with the Atlanta Constitution, which were obsequious on the one side and patronizing on the other, nauseated us. But we were silent, because the Independent, which should be named the Sycophant, was degrading only itself. We foreboded; however, its next inevitable step. Whenever a slave became a "favorite" at the "big house," it was a good sign that he was about to turn informer. In like manner the Independent first became the "favorite" of the Atlanta Constitution, and next, inebriated by the condescending pats of approval bestowed on its heads proceeded to denounce one of its own fellows. This is the usual rake'-progress of the "good Negre." If Mr. Rucker were notoriously inefficient and dishonest, the case would be different. But he is a first class, capable and upright gentleman. His office at Atlanta is as well conducted as any in the country, and reflects credit on the capacity of the whole race. But even if his qualifications were less eminent, the Independent should think twice before attempting to discredit him. If he should lose his office, it would surely revert to a white man. There are not so many offices open to Afro-Americans that we can afford to throw a single one away. Our attempt should be to lay hands, on more offices still. We are free to say that the Independent makes us very tired.—N. Y. Age. Has the Time Come? Has the time come for us to Americanize the S. C. of M. by having a Committee of Management in America? Let us reason this matter together. From the drift of what we see in The Independent of Atlanta, Ga., there is an effort to place a condition on the subordinate lodges that some wont stand, and some wont be able to meet, and others will fall by the wayside without even telling the outside world why it was that they had fallen. Now if the order has fallen into the hands of men from whom they can be no escape then is it not time to start out afresh in the world of Odd Fellows? Now it is no use to argue to me that it cannot be done, and it is no use to tell me that there can be but one B. M. C., on American soil, or that it cannot live. Here is my answer to all of that kind of talk, B. M. C., lives through the subordinate lodges, the S. C. of M. lives through the subordinate lodges, the Order lives through what the individual membership pays in the Secretary's desk. The only benefits that any member ever gets comes to him or her through what the individual member pays in. The S. C. of M.; the B. M. C.; the D. G. L.; all lives through what the subordinate lodges contribute for their support, and if it has come to the place where the sovereignty of the local lodges is to be overthrown, then is it not time to start out with a C. of M. of our own with modern improvements inculcated into its organic life. Let the 140 lodges come together and let us reason together, and see if we could not improve upon the future. 140 lodges is more than The Honorable Peter Ogden stated with, and do you mean to tell me that after all that has been accomplished the world of letters, license and Physics, that it is all accomplished, there remains nothing to be done, but submit to the heel of oppression. Only men fit for gally slaves argue that way. Freeman finds a way or make a way to the Highs of Liberty and Equality. When the Bureau of Endowment was first started by the Grand Lodge of Ga, it was the common accepted understanding that those Lodges that had already endowments of their membership would at least be allowed to have a chance to come involuntary, but with lodges that had no such burdens, or provisions for the protection of its members, they would be expected to take out their endowment at once, now since then, it seems that they have the endowment started, and find that it is such a good thing. They are trying to put the heel upon the Savannah lodges, or any other that may hold out for the Heaven given right to decide whether they should go in and assume a debt that they might be able to pay, or that they see no possibility to pay and keep up their present local expenses and because they hesitate the cudgel is held over their heads by the Grand Secretary, expulsion or submission. Now here is a condition that confronts some of the Savannah Lodges, they have gone before the Superior Court and had themselves chartered to carry into effect the provisions of their local endowment, and for them to fall now from any cause would lay them liable to be aued by the Court, but what does the Grand Secretary care for that, Submission, or Expulsion, those lodges can not go behind what they have done, in the way of charms, and would it be wise for them to do so even if they could. How does they know if the new endowment is going to be as well for the relief of the Wildows and Orphans as the local endowment has done. Would it be wise to turn loose the one for the other before experiences taught one that there was nothing to loose, but it would be a gain to those, for whom endowments is gotten up for. But what does the men care that is running The Independent with wounded pride the ering Lodge itself themselves published to the world as defaulters, without even the hope of redress from the mess that holds them up, to be criticised by the outside world that knows nothing about, the reasons whereof, and careless in the cities where some of these lodges are. Men and women never heard their names spoken of before only with reverence, with some is linked the memories of some loved one hurried by the said lodges, but with the Independent no name is sacred. I have thought the matter over from every stand point, and to none can I see a more clear outline of duty than to prepare to stand one by the other. There are hundreds of good Odd Fellows in every part of this country who in the getting of a home starts up the ladder in full flush of health and strength, and sickness overtakes them when they have got their homes two thirds paid for, and the inevitable happens, it reverts back to the white man, thereby helping to enrich another whom you had not intended, and it is so much energy and money lost to, the colored race, with that much given to enrich the white race that is already rich. Every effort thus to rise that is not successful discourages a heap more than if no effort had been made, and it is in the reach of the colored people to change this helplessness by putting a plank in the new constitution that will enable every Odd Fellow in like position as stated above who have the home partly paid for to be purchased by the order for him and thereby give him one more chance to redeem himself and acquire a home for himself in buys the said home, and resell it to the member, and when it becomes so he cannot pay for it and he must loose it, why it is not lost to the race, if to the individual, and it would be only a question of the few, and it would be only a question of the order would be a home-owner, and it would serve to keep the monies of the order safely invested, and not kept as a temptation to every incoming administration. We would never again have to witness the disgraceful squandering of the people's money as we did at the Valdosta Grand Lodge, or the question would never have to be asked as it was in the last B. M. C. what was they going to do with the tremendous surplus on hand, when it, or a part of it, was voted to buy a place for the order in the city of Philadelphia. The monies that will be spent for that one place could if spent in the way indicated for the Philadelphia Home affair, relieve more real human suffering than twenty times that much spent as proposed, and it would form the nucleus of a sinking fund from the returned monies to help every other Odd Fellow down the ages to come, and there relieve the living, as well as the sorrowing, and the dead: I am speaking on the present rate of taxation with the assessment for endowment as now constituted from the monthly payment of the Householders of the order there would always be enough on hard to meet any and all expenses of the order. Respectfully Yours, in F. L. and T. W. H. MATTHEWS. Brutally Tortured. Brutally Tortured. A case came to light that for president and unmereful torture has perhaps never been equaled. Joe Golobick of Coluso, Calif, writes. "For 15 years I endured insufferable pain from Rheumatism and nothing relieved me though I tried everything known. I came across Electric Bitters and it's the greatest medicine on earth for that trouble. A few bottles of it completely relieved and cured me" Just as good for Liver and Kidney troubles and general debility. Only 50c. Satisfaction guaranteed by all drudgists. The New-York Tri-Weekly Tribune. For those who want to get the New York news and news of things the world over and don't want to spend the money or time buying and reading a metropolitan paper seven days in the week The Tri-Weekly Tribune fills the bill: It is issued on Monday, Wednesday and Friday of every week, and contains the essence of of The Daily Tribune for the whole week. To those who are interested in the prices of flour, grain, wheat, cotton, livestock, butter, cheese, eggs and other farm products, its market report are invaluable, because of their correctness. Price, $1.50 a year. For a free sample copy send a postal card to The New-York Tribune, New York. Combination offer Harper's Bazar, with The Weekly Tribune, one year $1.65 The Metropolitan Magazine, with The Tri-Weekly Tribune. Atlantic Coast Line. Atlantic Coast Line. Atlantic Coast Line will sell round trip tickets for the holidays at rates one and one third fares between all stations on its own lines and connecting lines south of the Ohio and Potomac and East of the Mississippi Rivers, tickets to be sold December 23, 24, 25, 31, 1904 and January 1st 1905 return limit January 4th 1905. Tickets at same rates will be sold to teachers and students of schools and colleges upon presentation and surrender of certificates signed by Superintendents, Presidents, or Principals December 17-24 inclusive with final limit January 8th 1906. Ticket Agents will furnish any further information desired. H. M. Emerson, Traffic Manager. W. J. Craig, General Passenger Agent, Wilmington N, C. W. H. Leahy, Division Passenger Agent, Savannah, Ga. Cheap Rates Via Central of Georgia. Holiday Excursion Rates via. Central of Georgia Railway Company. During the Holidays, excursion tickets will be sold between all ticket station on G. of Ga. Ry. at rate of the fare and a third for the found trip, minimum rates, 50 cents. Whole tickets, 25 cents, halves. Excursion tickets will also be on sale from all coupon stations on C. of Ga. Ry. to points on connecting lines south of Ohio and Potomac and east of the Mississippi river, including St. Louis Mo. and points on L. & N. R. R. Ill. Cent. R. R. M. & O. R. R. and Southern Ry., between the Ohio River and St. Louis, and points on St. L. I. C. & S. and St. L. & S. F. between Memphis and St. Louis. Tickets will sold to the general public on Dec. 23, 24, 25 and 31, 1904 and Jan. 1, 1905, final limit Jan 3, 1905. Upon presentation and surrender of certificates, tickets will be sold to teachers and students of schools and colleges, on Dec. 17 to 24, inclusive, final limit Jan. 8, 1905. Any agent of the Company will cheerfully furnish additional information upon request. No Plty Shown. "For years fate was after me continuously" writes F. A. Gulledge, Verbena, Ala. "I had a terrible case of Piles causing 24 tumors. When all failed, Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured me. Equally good for Burns and all aches and pains. Only 25 cents at all Drug Stores." WINTER CLOTHING «FOR MEN AND BOYS» IS JUST COMING SPECIAL SUITS AND PANTS ...FOR BOYS.... FOR THE FOLLOWING WEEK Leopoto. Holler. BROUGHTON & BULL STS. The Largest Department Store in Georgia. --- CAPITAL STOCK, $500,000. Full Paid. Non-assessible. The strongest and most progressive Negro Company, offers to the investing public a block of $20,000 worth of its capital stock at $7 per share. This offer holds good for the next sixty days, after which it will go to $8 per share. It can be bought by paying seven dollars down on 5 shares and $3 per month until paid. If paid for cash a discount of 6 per cent will be allowed. Stock bought before January first will participate in the annual dividends in full. From January first and not later that April first half dividends will be paid. Have sold nearly $20,000 worth this in state alone in the last two years. It is backed by more than a hundred and fifty thousand dollars worth of real estate at appraised valuation. Thus insuring the investor against any possible loss. This is the last chance to acquire an iron-clad investment in this company for $7 that will go to $8 then $9 and shortly to $10. The actual value of which is now $7.25. As the profit increases your investment increase. No watered stock. We build in the ground. The Savings bank offers also to the public a durable investment seven per cent allowed, compounded quarterly. Call or address 222 W. Broughton St. Savannah Ga. Bell Phone 1144. L. C. COLLINS, Secretary. F. M. COHEN, Teller. J. W. ARMSTRONG, General Manager. Both Solid Vestibuled Traius, with Day Coaches of Newest Design, Pullman Drawing-Room Sleeping Cars and Elegant Dining Cars. A sick and death benefit organization that pays larger benefits than any other and pays them quicker. Has 150,000 members and paid out to its members more than a hundred thousand dollars in the last year. Gives employment to fifteen hundred intelligent men and women as agents, book keepers, typewriters, etc. Ark heretofore not open to colored women. The mother of this company is the Metropolitan Mercantile and Realty Co., 150 Nassau street, New York. Southern headquarters, 222 W. Broughton St., Savannah, Ga. J. W. Armstrong, Director General Southern States. Mrs. W. H. Burgess, Cor. Jefferson and Gaston Sts. is conducting a neat Dress Making and Millinery Store. She solicits the patronage of the public. Guaranteeing perfect fit and polite attention. Orders promptly filled. For a Good Shave or Hair-Cut Visit The FOREST CITYSHAVING PALACE Good work and polite attention is our Motto. Razors horned and set. FOREST CITY SHAVING PALACE, 308 Drayton Street, oppsite DeSoto Hotel. R T. WASHINGTON, PROP. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE, MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether as invention is probably patented. Communications is probably confidential on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Mann & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest citation of any scientific journal. Terms, $8 a year, four months. $4. Sold by all new dealers. MANN & Co. 301 Broadway, New York Broadway & Office, 611 F. St., Washington, D.C. Re EE, eS FARR aE EP ee ee OF RSS OTE PA OS HE Se ae ee ce “= NF Fhe” os ee . "Brora the Hreside of voor heart, nes t kB, Pesce was avéliing in‘your eyes, * Zarise Sheet blind with fears, Wes eae iran —George Roberts, in “New Songs.” ————_————— S686886 A LETTER AND ITS SEQUEL. - ——_———___ BOGSCeS po] the big, rose-lined sunhat was very white. Her lips quiverew a little, The hands that held the vagrant sheet trembled. “I thought,” sald the girl to herself, “I hadn't begun to care—in that way. I was only becoming—attracted. But the shock—the Qisillusion—" When ‘she had started out an hour go for het usual-brisk morning walk Jong the crisp, shelving sands, she ad been one of the most Indiderent, ight-hearted of girls. She was done with college, and the tio years of for- vign travel that bad succeeded school AS a sort of polishlug process. She had perfect health, and misty dreams of all the yelled future hela In its Keeping. She had esthetic tastes, and ‘er skill in athletle sports was the ad miration of her less vigorous girl friends. She bad been having a beau- fitml time down at this gay, unconven- tional resort on the Michigan coast. and now—well, temporarily it seeméd that her pleasure was spoiled. And in her heart she knefy that she must have been beginning to think too much of the man hose attentions to ‘der had been so marked, or else this liscovery would not so affect her. Sit- ‘ing to rest and watch the white-crest- ja waves come curling up to break on the border of the lake like threads of tarest Ince, her attention had been caught by a small, white, whirling ob- ject thet at first sight she had taken for a ‘bird. It has whisked lower and hearer. Then {t floated so close she ould put out her hand and grasp it, f@ she found it was a sheet of note ‘per covered with diminutive chirog- aphy, It was written orf the station- ‘y of the fashionable hotel looming 0 on the dunes bebind her. At first 3e had been about to crumple it up. ud cast it aside. But in the very act ging so a name—her own name— et her eye, 7 : | Even then she hesitated. But the ree words were so significant she ast know thelr writer's full meaning. pe page was the continuation of a ‘ter. “And the first. three words at ae top of the page were “lore ‘Ivy Lyle!” - Impulsively, giving herself 20 chance to weigh the niceties of honor in the balance, she scanned the page. “love Ivy Lyle. I've fought against At—for I can't afford to marry her, as You know. But she has rather swept me off my feet, old chap! At first I was taken with her innocent beauty. ‘There was no one at this big hosteiry to"compare with her for good- looks. So E let myself drift. I thought she ‘was just a dear little country girl, and ‘that it would be easy to say a senti- mental farewell when the summer was over. You know what these warm weather flirtations amount to. So I’ve been golng to see her steadily and tak- ing her everywhere. We've gone dane- ing and swimming and boating and all the rest of it, And—by Jovel for all "she's mighty quiet, I've came to find ont she's not the typical little country girl at all. She's well read and trav- eled, though she seemed rather aghast when she let that fact out. And she looks at a fellow in a cool, apprising sort of way that makes him feel pretty cheap—if his spoken thoughts are not quite up to Ker white standard. But she's not really in the social swim. She's a native, I take st. It's been hhard to pin her down to any conf- dence about herself. She lives with a very dragon of an aunt at a farm- house on the edge of town. She wears her cotton dresses and share bats in a way that takes the shine out of the ‘romon ap at (he hotel, bat Gve never seen her sport any of the swéll clothes they wearjto the hops here. Ob, con- found It! What's the use of my moon- ing away to you at this rate? I've got to go away and try to forget her Defore It’s too late. - “Damatis Chase and her father are to be here this week, they tell me. ‘And she's the girl the heads of both out houses expect me to marry! She may ave the good taste to refuse me and I almost hope she will. She's a great hefress, and the consolidation of the'business interests svould be a capl-_ tal thing; but, oh, hang me if I thought it would be so hard to get that little girl's sweet face out of my heart. I must do the sensible thing, and go in for the twenty thousand a year. Lord! hut I'm sorry for those poor devils of kings who have to wed for reasons of state. I feel disgustingly Ike one of them. I'm sleepy. Good night—I'l finish this fn the morning. ‘Ten to one I eream of Ivy Lyle.” | Tt needed no signature. The writer ‘was easily recognized. She crumpled the paper tightly in her hand and be-Bave known .the* shdet~ had ‘Deen Whisked,out~of His room? “Had, he Seeii it bigivxi down’ to the Beach?” $G0qa;"morning, Misa Lsley” “He flung himself ‘ddin beside ber, Hid handsome, boyish face tooked strained and Set, as “though Insomnia Lad Claimed him. “Yon're“out early, Wilt you, gp rowing with mé to-day up to Clear Springs?” “IZ win't!” she faltered. “And won't you come up Black River to-day?” entreatingly, almost tenderly. “It may be the last tlie!” He was plannitig—pléoniny. Ob, that crue}, cruel letter! But—the last time, he had raid. She flung up-her head and smiled at him. “Yes, I will go!” she sald. ‘They were very. gay that afternoon, almost recklessly so. ‘They had Iunch- eon at thé inn near thé springs, and Moated back between the wooded banks just as the day was closing. When they came to parting nt the clump of lilac bushes in the lane that led to the_farmhowse Jack Ardsley leaned forward and looked into her eyes. “Dear,” he said, “I love youl I love you, and I can’t let you go but of my Ufe—ever? You don’t know much of me, Ivy, but—will you be my wife?” “What,” she faltered, “what about Damaris Chase?” He took her shaking hands and held them fast. “Who in the world has been telling you of her? I've never seen her, but our fathers hye vast interests In com mon, and have been anslous to arrange a match, I don't say I didn’t think of being complaisant. Darling, some time I may get up courage to tell you ow near I came to belng a paltry coward—how desperately I tried to make myself think I could do without you. But I cannot, and thot’s all there is to ft. If yon can endure belng poot with me for a few years I'll work 50 hard at my profession to give you everything that I shall be sure to win.” She had not been. wistaken in let- ing herself Jove him, then. For she did love him—she Wid. And she had known it all the while. She lifted her shy, flushed face. . “I will be a good wife to you, dear,” she promised. And he kissed her on the lips. . ‘That night when he sought her at the dance at the inn he stood amazed. That lovely Indy in the snows, shim- mering gown bis demure little country lasste!. How superbly she carried her- self. And those dlamonds around her white throat were worth a fortune. She smiled up. at his amazed counten- ance: 7 “Aunt Agatha and I do not wish to be bothered with attentions,” she whispered, “‘so we've been living in- cognito. I expected my father to-night and dressed to do him, and you,” sweetly, “that honor I could. You will pardon me,” as she signed for @ boy who had brought her a telegram, and broke the seal of the message. “Detained,” she read. “Will be with you to-morrow.” She handed Ardsley the yellow slip. It was signed “Jasper E. Chase” and it was addressed to “Miss Damarig Chase!” “That” she sald, “Is my name.” “try!” he gasped. % “Damaris Ivy Lyle Chase!“You poor boy! Come out on the balcony; they are staring at us.” ‘ “Come—you base deceiver!"—Kato M. Cleary, in San Franelsco Call. It you will take out the ‘magazines that came last month, or perhaps the mozith before—it wouldn't do for me, to specify too closely—you will find in one of them an article signed by @ certain great statesman whom every- body in Washington knows. The edi- tor of that magazine wrote to the great man, asking him 4o contribute. The great man knew nothing what- ever about the subject suggested. He isn’t nearly so wise as he is famous, anyway, and he asked a newspaper man he knew to write it for hith. The newspaper man was busy, but he spoke to a member of bis familly, a fe- male member, and she—well, she just exactly sat down and wrote an article that bas already been quoted far and wide. ,The great man recelyed the credit, but I fancy the woman recelyed something more substantial. Anyway, she is wearing a” new fur collarette that fairly makes one’s mouth water.— Washington Post. . Xnepirations In Herring Fisherics, Many Boston artists have been spending thelr nights at Ipswich dur- ing the last week for the purpose of viewlng the picturesque work of her- ring fishing. This year there has been the largest run of herring ever known at Ipswich, and they have swarmed into Plum Isi- and Sound by millions. One night re- cently so solidly were the fish packed in the river that a person might almost have walked upon them without sink- ing. Herring catching makes a fascin- ating scene and well calculated to”tur- uish material for an artist. Nearly every night there: have been thirty or forty puff boats in the sound, their flaring torches, -of which some boats carry three, throwing a weird lignt upon the yellow ollskins cf the fist- ermen, thelr bronze faces and fhe dark water.—Boston Herald. Salvation With Food. Fourteen-year-old Emma, who had come home from her first day's echool- ing in elementary physiology, was questioried by her parents as to) what she had learned. i “Papa,” she complained, “I don't think I like physiology.” “Why not," my dear?” “Well, teacher was explaining diges- tion to-day, and she said we had to mix salvation with every mouthfp! of food,”"—Harper’s Weekly, . .. _ es - = eo . AMERICAN GIRVS FOOTWEAR. ‘here-are no women of any country that dress the feet as prettlly’as Amer- ican girls-do. In fact. no women who have such pretty feet to dress. Spanish women have tiny feet, hut they are too short and broad for real beanty. And French women; by some mysterlotis process, always wear small Bhoes, no matter what size foot they have, “But the foot of the Anierlcax girl, which {s 4s-famous as her wit and beauty; is always small enough to ex- actly sult her slender, thoroughbred build, is exquisitely modgted, rarely (nowadays) pinched, and dressed with the utmost taste, appropriately for every occasion. It was this side vf the Atlantic. that women started the tad for the stout indnnish cut of shod for street and country sports, and it took the Amer+ ican girl to first refuse to play tennis in french heels, ‘This does. not mean that English girls have not worn big calf skin shoes always 2 lot, and frequently Jnappro- priately. Every one knows the British girl's propensity—just the reverse of the French—for wearing, shoés that make her feet look large tven if they chance to be small, But their stout boots are coarse in texture and com- mon in cut; while though the Amer- jean girl uses for heavy wear heavy boots, they are of the smartest cut, the most'fiexible material, and while never tight always fitted to perfection, comfortable over the jolyt and snug up under the instep. For a while she did make it a Ilttle bit.of a fad to accentuate the man- nishness of her boots, her soles were uselessly wide and thick, but even then carefully fitted and_most swaz- ger in cut nnd finish. But this sea- son her street boots are just hears enough for protection, no useless welght, and as perfect in make as her dancing slipper. Her outdoor shoes, high and low, are of a calfskin, softly dressed, or of dongola Kid, or a dull-finish feather. For,nice street wear, shoes are a little more pointed at the toe and with Cu- ban heels, of patent or enameled leather. : For home wear, for afternoon re- ceptions, for ‘evening, shoes may this year match the costume, and for dancing they must. White and pink and yellow suede or dull kid for danc- ing slippers, or lace over satin, or painted satin are best form. With many varieties of brown cos- tumes, bronze shoes are extremely good style, and so are brown suede, al- Ways with stockings to exactly match, Of course yor can be very well dyessed by adhering to patent leather for all day-time dress occasions, but for evening a black or bronze slipper would be fnartistie dressing; and white, though {t can be worn with tinted frocks, is only best style swith white. © . But quite as Important as shoes to match gowns are the stockings to match shoes, and there has never been a season when such an infinite va- rietysof colored stockings were to be seen in the shops. Browns In every -possible shade of onion-skin, mahogany and. docque de roche tones; blues and purples; reds, Jight and dark and in all strawberry, ‘pond Iily and watermelon tints, and yellows, pale and oranges. ‘And newest of all, shaded stockings, white at the hem and deep-toned -at the toe, and eyery shade of one color in between; not a bit good taste, but nevertheless with some popularily. The open-work stocking that was entirely crowdea out by the gauze mesh stociting last year, is coming in again this winter, the open-work show- ing elaborate Ince designs and ee quently inset with Iace. “it is stilt smart, ‘though eccentzic, to Lave a monogram on the left in- step, And just at this season of out- door .sports college girls and school girls frequently embroider the lag of their brother's college on the instep of a silk stocking. Or a sweetheart’s initials in his college colors adorn a silk-instep. And all this colored silk embroidery on stockings, and also the craze for colored hosiery, brings up the torment- ing question of laundering ~without losing color or lustre. “Che ordinary Process of boiling and rubbing means Tuined hoslery of the delicate sort. Indeed so heavy can the loss be from careless washing of fine stockings, that a great many girl- do up thelr own, just as they do thelr laces and table embroideries. Thelr plan is to use warm water made soft with borax Se ee eet ee rt me NO TITLE LIKE “VioTH ER.” There is no title more beautiful than “mother;” the good woman glories in it, and fits herself to be worthy the pamé in every sense, Jyillingly phe goes down into the valley of the shat” ‘aw of death that she may rise almost glorified in her new honor. . Unfortunately, there are many er- ring, selfish mothers, as well as good ones—many who should never have been mothers. The woman who ac- cepté the crown of,motherhood should dischargé her duties taithtally, evert though they involve sacrifice, Revers ence would be the natural possesstod of évery thiid if the parents werd worthy the respect of their children. ‘Parents.may feel that it does not mat- ter whether thelr children respect them or not; that the achievement is not worth the effort which it costs them; but it matters to the children. helt’ owH wellbelng demaids that they reveren¢e father and mother. As binding as thi duty should be considered by parents, equally so is the one of providing 1m early life for thelr pwn old age. Parents should nof; when the evening of life comes, be dependent on thelr children, thus Interfering with the responsibilities those children must naturally have as- sumed. A mother has no moral right to interfere with the marriage of her Anughter; {t-should be the duty and privilege of a mother to teach and fit her daughter for wife and motherhood. ‘A good mother caninot be forsaken in her old age, nowithstanding the nu- mefous duties 2 daughter may assume} that daughter will always find time to cheer and solace the parent stem; the golden quality of mother love will beget love untold. To the aged mother or father, for whom the sands of life have nearly run, every thought of daughter and grandebild will be a solace, Every triumph, every woe of the absent child will be sympathized with by the parents who have: proved themselves worthy, ‘Chere are sure to be days when, with aching Leart and tired brain, the child will give any- thing on earth to creep into the-humble home and’ feel the embrace of those loving, aged arms. What a comfort to the parent who has been 2 worthy one Will such actions-be only the mother heart, tried and true, can tell!’ No woman has the right to’deprive her child of its rightful inheritance. Parents owe it to themselves and their children to make easy the downward path of life; they should also fit them- selves to be companionable, sweet tempered and unselfish to those about them In the declining years of their lives. ‘The mother who has become selfish and irritable in her old age must surely have been amlss in her younger life, for trials and sorrow and suffering tend to make a good woman better; they are brothers to knowledge, be- gause they educate and refine. ‘The mother who has become an in- yalld or $s in poverty should not be deserted by son or daughter; yet some ofher means, rather than the sacrifice of a child's dearest hopes. should be devised for the maintenance’ and comfort of such @ parent. Herein comes the blessing of making one’s self sweet tempered and adaptable. A good mother fs blessing and a joy, one to be prized abore all things else; her name should be breathed with rev- erence. A bad mother is a lasting disgrace to children and the commun- ity. ‘Some mothers will not Ive alone and refuse to have a son or daughter in-law in the house, or to live in the house of a son or daughter-in-law, lest thelr little failings become known— selfish, selfish to the core!’ To the good mother every head should be bowed; earta and heaven will do homage to her. For the selfish mother there is only a lonely old age.—A. F. M., in the New York Tribune, IN WRITING A LETTER. Do not write Jong business fetters. Do not write brief letters of friend- ship. Avoid writing over the head of your correspondent. ‘Never use words with which you are not familiar. Always use uuroled paper of fine texture. Avold 2 pronounced color. ‘Under no circumstances send half a sheet of paper, even for the briefest note. Use only black ink, \Never write of another anything which you would not jvant him to see. Do not write of personal ‘or other ‘Important matters to strangers or or- dinary acquaintayees. 3 Do not fill your letters with lengthy excuses for your silence. Do not offer advice unless you are ‘asked for if, and should you have oceaston to admonish your friepd, let it be done gently and lovingly. Do not send an iniportant message on a postal card and never use thera for notes of invitation—The Inquirer. LONDON'S BATHING WOMEN. ‘ Who could guess that Léndon’s edu- cation committee employs bathing women among its numerous classes of workers? Yet such fs the case. ‘They are called in to superintend the ,washibg of children in the schools for ‘the mentally defictent. ‘They,are paid sixty cents for one and a halt .bours’ work., In addition, however, they are called upon to wash the towels and tidy up the bathrodm after use." Mrs. Leland Stanford. 1g now in the East in an endeavor to,fud a minister’ for Stanford University ‘to succeed the Rev, Heber Newton, tesigned. * ---.4 CRUEL<POVERTY 2 eset bial ge pice ees Bs ers ALY PRROUSES: HIS? PIETY Robert Hunter Declates That Our, Poor ‘Will Soon Be Worse “Off ~ Thanss’ *35 -~Aré the Poor of Europe. *-. - * , -FpTSs Bde ‘Genncn meh “wdhen and million mei, “women ahd children” who are ‘not ade auately fod, clothed ard housed, ‘Ten snillion of our 80,000,000, one-eighth of the population of the entire country, who ore the tietims of existing eco- nomieat conditions, which, instead of improving, ate ‘becoming worse, so that if the hecessary temedles are not ‘soon applied the condition of our poor will be infinitely worse thatt that of the poor of Europe.” Robert Hunter, the young worker in practical philanthropy, former head of the University Settlement, who a year ago matried Mis¢ Carolino Phelps Btokes, daughter of Millionafre Anson Phelps Stokes, and who, with his wife, has gbandoned a home of luxury in Madison avenue for a modest, unpre- tentious dwelling in Grove street, New York City, made these startling state- ments In the parlor of his new bome. Both Mr. and Mrs. Huater modestly deny that they have any purpose of teaching by example a lesson to the poor of the elty through the radical ac- tion which they haye taken, But they have at thelr disposal a fortune of $10,- 000,009 and might command a Fifth avenue mansion, a country estate, a private yacht and many automobiles. ‘They might fritter away their time at the opera and the Horse Show and be submerged in the world of fashion and frivolity into which they were porn, but instead they have elected to livea Ufe of simplicity and usefulness and continue together the philanthropte work in which they were separately engaged when blind Cupid entered a sordid tenement with them and con- jured up a romance. LIVING NEAR THE POOR. At No. 88 Grove street they have set up their household’ goods amid sur- roundings which, immediately adjoin- ing, are quiet and refined, but which, not many blocks away, comprise some of the/most hideous aspects of poverty in New York, ‘There Mr. and Mrs. Hunter have de- termined to labor together to do their mite toward alleviating the conditions Which Mr, Hunter so graphically de- scribed. “This {s not a slum district,” contin- ued Mr, Hunter, reverting to the causes which had led him and-his wife to move into Grove street. “We have de- cent and respectable people for our nelghbors, many of them owning thelr own homes. But there are near by sev- eral districts with which I am entirely familiar in which poverty 1s rife, and nelther Mrs. Hunter nor myself will evade any responsibilities Which may fall upon us. “ Slum’ fs a much ill-used word. No place 1s a slum where the residents ‘are decent, respectable and hard work- ing. My idea of a slik faa distriet where the people are whélly steeped fn poverty and filth and are making no effort whatever to help themselves.” Then, going back to his frst state- ment, Mr, Hunter sald: “Do you consider any country pros- perous that bas 10,000,000 of its popu- lation in poverty? When Charles Dickens visited America he sald that ‘A beggar in Boston would be like a flaming sword.’ Forty years later one- haif of the people of the United States are propertyless, and about 10,000,000 persons now living will die of tubercu- Josis if the present conditions are kept up. CONDITIONS GROWING WORSE. “When about 50,000 employes of the railroads, mostly young men just mar- rled, with wives and children depend- ing upon them, are killed every year, and thelr familles left helpless; when about 150,000 die every year from tu- bereulosis, resulting from mal-nutri- tion, and 1,700,000 little chitdren gre compelled to work in factories, sweat shops, mills and furnaces, I think we ‘can expect that conditions will con- tinue constantly to breed a crowing Poverty in this country, and If, thiese conditions are not remedied, we will have poverty in a very’ few years that will exceed that of Europe.” “What remedy would you suggest?” Mr, Hunter was asked, “Birst,” he replied, “we have got to come to the point where we shall bave Government insurance, such as Ger- many has, against sickness, old age and permanentinjury. ‘There industry 1s taxed to pay for all injuries recelved y the workers, who also pay a pro- rtionate share into the fund, “In addition we must glve greater attention to our.tenement house laws, BVILS OF RECENT GROWTH 5+, “Seventy-five years ago we had pracy’ tleally no poverty at all in this cou try, and there is no- reason why’ our condition to-day should be what it is.’ We ate not individually any’ ‘worse off: Economically, however, wa ate much worse off. * “Unquestionably there should be much higher wages paid to’ the works. ere, but that is only one of the reforms needed. = . “Fortunately, it is in the power of: the people to help themselves. I tur ‘n6t fu favor of alms giving. ‘That does no permanent good. And there Js an- other graying impression that ought to be corrBted. It fs that the rich.are always good and the roor always bad. There is no question that this {s falze. If you will take 1000 rich men and 1000" poor, you will find that they avcrsge’ ‘up about even.” : * Mr. Hunter then took-up his book’ on “Porerty,” which has just been published by the Mdemiflians, -and. quoted the, prediction of Charles Fou- rler, made 100 yeara ago, that “vast Joint stock companies, destined to mo- nopolize and contro] all branches of industry, commerce and Snance, would establish an industrial or commercial fendalism that would control society Dy the power of capital, as did the old barontal or military feudalism by the power of the sword,” “If we are going to have an econom- feal feudalism in this country?’ con- cluded Mr. Hunter, ‘'as strong as the old baronial feudalism, it will be be- cause the people do not -prevent it, ‘They possess the power and the votes.” A NUMERICAL MISTAK How 8 Folltical Candidate of Mississipp! Made = Grievous Error. * “private John Allen tells us of ar old time politician of Mississipp! who was making a personal canvass of his territory. “One day,” relates Mr. Allen, “the statesman was doing, the southern pore tion of the State. Suddenly he struck a ‘community that appeared fairly a-swarm with children. Never had he seen so many little ones in so small 2 place, Clustered about one doorway were some ‘fourteen tots of various ages. In their midst stood an extreme- Jy good looking young woman. ““sfadam,’ said the-politiclan, with a gallant bow, ‘you must permit me to Kiss those charming Ittle ones’ » “The woman merely’ smiled. “After he had affectionately saluted each of them, he asked, with a genial smile, ‘All yours?’ “The young woman blushed. “The statesman, with another bow, then said: ‘I trust, madam, that I may further trespass upon ‘your’ good pa- ture by asking that you will be so good as to inform “sour husband that Colonel —, candidute’ for Congress from this district, called upon him this afternoon? . “‘Pardon me,’ gasped: the, woman, ‘but I have no husband? “But these children, madam! ex- claimed the astonished statesman. ‘You Are nota widow? — “Oh, no, sit! was the-reply. “This is an orphan asylum? "~Woman’s Home Companion. Newspaper Women. ‘Women are constantly demonstrating more clearly thelr capacity for success in newspaper work, Thousands of women hold positions on newspapers fn this country. In fact the daily newspaper in the United States that has not a woman or women on its staff {s a very rare ‘exception. Many women are newspaper propric< tors and show ability for business management as well as editorial and reportoria work. There are woman's press clubs in nearlyzevery State and women news- paper workers are as enthusiastic de- Yotees to their profession as men. They have contributed largely and variousiy to the success and popularity of the newspapers of this country and-are now recognized as a great and crew- ing factor {n the-processiou. Women are not restricted to <n7 on0 department of newspaper worl. “Wo- men are employed not only as cocléty reporters and correspendents, but cs news reporters, news editors and cdf- torial writers. In fact, a bright wo- man van make herself tseful“In al- most every linc of rewspaper work and the retltement of ,womca- fiom journalism would be a great loss te the profession 2nd to the pudlic. ~ . ae, Feud Ube oc, The visitor to Loudon was seatec.at- a table 13 one of thecspensive restau rants in the West End, thinking of va- rious things as he read_over thebill.of fare and observed the prices... “Hello!” he exclaimed to the walter, “haven't you any conscience at all at this place?" : ‘ “Beg pardon?” returned the haughty: servitor. &. “Haven't you got_any conscience? Don't you understand?”_, ~ fo + The waiter picked up the'bu of fare and began. looking it over,» / “I don't know it we have ér.not,f he sald, “It we have, “it's on, the bill; it We alv't, {t's a extri; ~ Them's, the rules, sir.” . ‘ ‘The largest contliuous ‘stalrway in the world is that which Jea¢s to the’ tower &f the Philadelphia City. Hall, Yibas 50S steps =. 7 * ae Gia AE OR Ay caaens Coe ae Serta ae OM Ete Bk SEN veep ee Ne Ace NAS Sah cei aes Bn ee Ee, Cer SE ee en ee hae reaa sieearas U Ay | pela open eae TBO IBAYAWNATL ERI None a TORDAT momen i USO SY Sag ae ane eee ssp TOSPAYANN ize) Zi = a enh eae Se ae Ura fan pt aden <tr a alee Tae ela a Se Stak ack Madiccleslen for his purpose ERG Te. Gg Me SU? | Sia Nis feat, Unrate etme eee, | OO": SUS EOL DS 2 ts 3 BS Le Pe ee on he. plachratieds Hag altogetwers and®(@) |; k So i PU ere | wylin “is: teeth, tnraW RASS, PORE. as eae er reee, ee 11 Wed a Bi hie vs Iaco*stited; him 4 hs Cre ti ¥ Stocahow that he-wae. Of Seine, Oe RE a oo ay eee FDA CK?S-3HO US Ell Save. [sno ester nroctaed with te ex) hick ered” Oe) er ton element ri | | SG e oS AEEAIRS —_— Se ee eee eee eer eit oan el { ‘dd + | sack, "THe atser"Joot’ tts footing ad _ RNS PS 3 et es - -e one a that work was well dong, he © F ‘ , He Btees mplétely covers |‘ Bt) “6 ae - Tkese@ |] BY RACHEL .B. HAMILTON = Cee eee ee eee cias carpe [@® Fy Voreltire, |rted:vnon its back, complete ore) BS) a. 4 “+ from the small, neatly , fenced tot, and gradual assuming houselike pro * portions; but Content watched its dal Ay growth with a wonderful tight o - Sallstaction in her brown ees. Sh conld see it plainly trom Aunt Pelety’t ‘Uttle* shop ‘window, looking down th Quiet road and across 0 field Whit FUN “alsies; and she loved to wate ‘the'sea of bending blossoms, and whis. per softly to herself, “The path that vleads to It 1s all pure white” ' sy, “Growin’ thely aln’'t it?” sald Atis: “erissy, cheerlls, dusting and arrang. tng the bright’ silk hanakerchlets akelns of yarn, Boxes of needles, Jars ot candy and the rosy cheeked apples Nhat decorated the show window, even while she looked beyond them at tog ew building. “It’s goin? up slick a! anew pin.” "Yes, yes,” returned Unele Jnochim, “shaking his head; “4 there only don't ‘come a bard wind and blow {t over, or a heavy raln to food the <ellar, or somebody set It a-firc, mebby. - There's no tellin'<never no tellin’ in this un- certnin world!” “La, Jonchim,” sald Miss Prissy, ualmbly mounting the counter and pur sulng conversation and a spidérweb together, “we hain't had a drop of Fain this three weeks, and it's just ‘hat we're needin’> ‘As for winds, ‘twould take something more'n com: mon to blow such walls os them down." 1 “E+ don't know "bout that—don't now,” answered Gnele Joachim, un- wonvineed. “It blew a pretty smart breeze last night, and I could feel our house shake. ‘Thought very likely our root would be carried away afore morain’—more'n likely. I went up to the garret to-day and tled a rope td tbe rafters and then hitched thé oth- ‘er end fast to the old spinnin’ wheel; bat it’s doubttut ff thatll save it— doubtful.” + Content Ianghed softly, but Unele Moachtm heard it. ‘ “Don't make fun of solemn things, child; don’t nover do that,” he sald, re- provingly. “I knew a man once that Hldleuted the dee of any burglars ever breakin’ into Lis house, and the very next day bis brother had his pockets ‘leked. A good many folks have a ood many thicgs happen to ’em, and As best to be prepared.” “Well,” comibented Miss Prissy, briskly, “I mist say for't, Fur "bout as wrell prepared for plekpockets as. for anything I know of. ‘Nobody *d make auch out of my pockets, unless they sas sufferin’ for a pair of steel-bowed Spectacles and an old brass thimble. ‘There comes the mall,” she added, as & rusty, dusty, horseman stopped at the ‘door. “Content and me'll “tend to tt, Toachim, dear; you're feelin’ poorly today, I know, and you'd better sit stil.” = ‘He had no {dea of doing anything else; but it was a pleasant fiction of Miss Prissy’s that “brother Joachim” ‘Was.always just atout to do something useful and energetic~a belief that Lad never died out in cil the tient years that she had taken care of bim. Fath- =, mother, sister, all were gone but these two and the sister’s orphaned cbild, Content, a bonny, winsome mal- den, who had come like sunshine to the quaint, quiet old house. + Uncle Joachim sat in his easy chatr, with gaze that wandered afar of, mourning over the bills that were not leveléd, the valleys that never would be-filled up and the mountains that souldn't come to Mohammed. fe nd ho time nor strength to spare in help- ing to do the daily work and bear the Uttle daily trials, because he was hold- ing himself as a sort of reserve corps against the terrible calamities that never came. But Miss Prissy's ixeen und kindly eyes could, fortunately, see nearer home—vven to the fewing of butttons on brother Joachim’s coat, the mending of rents in his lien, and the necessity of providing for three meals a day. So she whisked about, always busy, worked and planned, turned and dared; made over her Gresses wrong side up and inside out, contrived neat. caps out of nothing, and collars out of what was left. She took care of the small store tliat was also the village ’postoffice, and: looked atter the diminutive garden besides, all the whole family grateful, and in: nocently pltying any “poor lane wo- men folks that hadn't any man to help or pertect “em.” "The arrival of the mall was always ‘ pleasant ttle ripple in the des's sull current, and Content and Aunt Prissy sorfed the“small bundle with some’ good natured guessing and neigh. borly sympathy—hoping this for 3frs. Dory sympathy—hoping this for Mrs. rage = eS Sev en | downkwith a fever, and senes then | |had such a shivers-shaky spéll as if -| might de goltt’ to have d stroke of pal [sxe Bithet ot ‘ent i¢ likely enough | might one or both ou ’eni carry me of {any time” concluded Uncle Joachim. | “Ob, E hope not,” replied Jack, con | solatory, but alarmed, as hie followed Content to the sunny portico. A trysting place that portico ha¢ been for many a day. ‘There the hous across the daisy field .had Just been Planned, and the promise given thal made it not “mine,” put “ours.” Room [by room, window by window, st bad been dreamed and talked of, Jarger and fatrer than it now could be in re ality, but that omly Jack and Content knew. Jack was skiliful and energet fe; he had Infd up gpme sive or six hundred dollars, qud-that was npt all. “You see, Céntent,” he had sald, gally, when they talked vt it In the spring time, with the old apple tree showering Its pink blossoms around them where they stood—“you see there ls that work fot Regay, if it suc- ceeds, and I think it will. It ts some sort of @ pumping apparatus, you know, He had got the idea in his head, but tvasn't workman enough to carry tt out, and so he came to me. I dug Into it until I fenced I knew what he wanted, and Smproved upon {t a Ilt- tle, maybe. I've spent all the time I could give, evenings and odd hours, on it for nearly five months now, some- timés doing and sometimes undolug; but Regan is to pay me $3000 if it works as he expects it to. He thinks T can do it” “I think 50, too,” sald Content. “It will be, something nice for us,” remarked Jack, thoughtfully. “But we won't say ‘anything to any one about ft yet a while, until we are sure. There is no need, for we hve enongh- for a little home, even without that.” Uncle Joachim ang Aunt Prissy were not very worldly wise. ‘They thought, or Aliss Prissy did, that love and even the smallest home promised consider- able material for happiness; and her eyes twinkled with tedrs and smiles behind her old spectacles while, in one breath, she wondered how she was “ever goln’ to do without Content,” and Jn the next if they “hadn't better be‘buntin® up rags to cut for a carpet for Content’s floor—againet sh bas duc.” Uncle Joachim was as neatly cou- gratulatory as he kuew how to be, but deprecatory also. “I don’t see Why you two shouldn't stand as good a chance for comfort ag anybody, s'posin’ there is any such thing, which 1s doubtful,” he said. “Avy way, ‘tis risky, very risky; like as not you won't enjoy yourselves. It'll be a great afiliction to have\Con- tent leave us, but it'll be a load off my mind to know she's safe out of ‘the house. It’s a dangerous place to live 4a, this 1s, Keepin’-a post office as we: do. *Counts of folks robbin’ the mails keep comla’ all the time, and I've Just a feelin’ that ours ‘ll be robbed, too, some night, and we all murdered in our beds.” “Dear me! I shouldn't think it would be worth while,” exclaimed Aunt Prissy, unselfishly, scanning the mat- ter in the light of a speculation. “Our mall! Why, I don't believe there's ever more'n ten dollars in the whole on’t at one time, and mostly there ain't anything.” “That don't make no difference, Prissy—no dffference,’persisted Uncle Jonchim, with, dolefut shake of the head. “You don't know’ the sight of Wiekedness there is in this world. I tell sou there's plenty of folks that would do "most anything for ten dol- lars. - “Well, well,” succumbing to, super- tor wisdom, “maybe it's s0; but It does seem dreadful low wages for any hu- man belng to do such work as that for. I s'pose there comes some time for most all of us, though, when the Evil One comes along our road and asks what we'll sell ourselves for. It we're willin’ to do it at all, I don't know as it,matters much about the price.” A As the days passed by, and Jack's “prize-work,” as he laughingly cailed it, bade more andsmore fair to prove successful, bé and Content conjured golden plans for the fair little home kingdom It should bring them-how they would add to this and beautity that—ta}king {it over, evening after ereiiing, in the soft twilight. “It's just about done,” safd Jack, one day, stopping for 2 ioment at the door, “Regan wants me to take St down to the old stone quarry and try It. Ita sort of. quiet place, and there's always water there, you know; Tal Sack eS iene oes that Sack Ral'eeiscted for fils purpose The-piace,“ecited;him altogether, and as he'ésfefully*procesded with his-ex. periment, and’ trial after trial’ assured him. that bis work wad well dont, he leaned back upon one of the rude: pil 1683 neat him, glad to. enfoy in that congenial solléude and silence the first delicfous moment of success. “Hallol Why, $s ‘that you, Tuck?" said & rather tineértat voice’ near him} and he bterted suddenly from his rev: erfe td find that Uncle Joachim had approached unobserved. “Didn't know but you was a bighwayman, or es- caped convict, or somethin’, ‘when I seen you down here all alone. What you got ‘there 7, Some new-tangled waterwheel or somethin’, I s'pose, Well, well; you young folks ahways think you can turnethe world upside down ‘with some grand new plan’ or ‘nother, but you never do it.” “Maybe not; I den’t think I'd care to try, for the side that is up now pleases me well enough. What brings you here, uncle?” “Well,” answered the old mau, tumbling his way over the rocky, un: even mass.about him; “! just thought Va come down here and look round for a good, big, Lefty stone. I tell you what 'tls Jack, I don’t feel @ nlite ‘safe about them mall robbers. You see we open the trap-door nights, and put the mail-bag right down into the celldr; tind I've been a-thinkin’ It we had one of these heavy stones bitched onto the under side of the door, 50's tw®or three men couldn't raise it, "twould be safer.” “But I don't see how you are going to, raise it yourself theny* objected Jack, “Well, I can't tell exactly,” said Uncle Joachim, somewhat discomit. ed, but persevering. “We'll have to think some way, for 1¢ anybody got down there to rob, and Just touched oft some powder down there, why, they could blow us al! to filnders—to finders, -Jack!” The young man watched with an amused smile for a moment or two, as he wandered about near by examining one stone after anotlier, thén forgot him in his .own occupation. A train went thundering by on the heights above, and the old man paused sn his search to watch It, “Dear! how these rocks crack now and then!” he exclaimed, as a sudden, sharp sound fell upon his ear. Jack started and looked up with a thriNl of horror as his quick eye de- tected the rapidiy widening Sssure that was separating a mass of overhanging rock from the main.wall. “Uncle Joachim!" he shouted. But before the warning cry bad lett his lips the old man, too, Lad seen, and turned to fly, but stumbled and fell. . Thought lives in a region above time, It was but an Instant that he paused irresolute in tho sharp, flerce strug gle; then he sprang to the old man’s side, raised hii up, and, halt drag- ging, halt carrying, bore him away with the speed and strength that only fuch an hour can kuow—hurrying up iho sloping bank until a deafening crash bebind {hem told that they were safe. fs ‘They paused then, exhausted, and sank down upon the ground to survey the scene. A great mass of broken stone covered all the place where they had stood, and Jack's model was crushed to atoms and buried beneath it. ' “Well, well,” murmyred Tnele Joa chim, tremulously breaking the solemn silence that bad succeeded the dsine echoes, “that was a narrow chance, | and Td never have got away but for | you, Jack. I'm 'biiged to you, I really | ami though, seta’ as somethla’ fs sure fo happen some time, I don't know as twould bave made much difference— only for, the women folks; *twould have been a great loss to the women folks. More'n Ukely I'll be sick for 1 Week or tro now. Jack"—as a sud- ten thought struck him—“why, Jack, you left that jimerack of yours down here, didn’t you? Kind of a pity to nave it smashed up, though I s'pose It wasn't of much use.” Jhek’ turned bis eres from the ruin ind looked at him with a strange smile n is pale face. How Iittie he knew yf all the hopes and plans that had Yeon, or could comprehend the value | nf that which he so carelessly called worthless! And yet, perhaps be bim- elf could as little understand this vork of the great Creator beside him, of comprehend His purpose in even is seemingly feeble avd useless life at he had saved. ‘There was nothing aT ee eenicae ee ae ge mer ease O14 fe a eee! Flick end? ee ‘2.0 F(dvenhure. * iISTORY REPEATS ITSELR. [TA Al iemauosrn: fot welden 46 romatcers, but seldont re coruea su lilstors. ‘He had been sentenced to five years’ Amprisonment, and was walting for the officers to take bm to prison: His mother came to say goodby to him, and the jailer left them alone for a few minutes. ‘Any mai would hste to watch a mother’s farewell to her son under such circumstances, co In thelr few moments of privacy mother and son thapged clothes. ‘When the the was up the jailer le out a grlef-stricken figure in skirt and bonnet, leaving a Ind weeping on the prison bed. ‘By and by he returned to say words of comfort to the boy, to bid him to “prace up.” ‘To his astonishment he found a laughing woman: + ‘Two hundred years ago} almost—{u Azig—the Countess of Nithsdale res- Fcued her husband from the Tower of London in much“the same manner: ‘The Earl of Nithsdale was td bé éxe- cuted for treason. His' wife had begsed in vain for his Ufe, and then had made up ber mind to reseue bim- With tyo Women she went to the Tower to see hin, carrying an extra skirt, hood and cloak, ‘Then she sent one of her friends away, then the oth- er; one of them returned and went away again. Finally, when she thought the guards would be confused as to the number of women who had gone in and out, she packed off her husband,. dressed Si the clothies she had brought. She herself stayed in bis room for half an hour, talking iu her own voice and replying in his, and at last, telling his servant and thé guards that the Earl was praying, and did not want to be disturbed, she went away herself. ‘The Earl escaped to the Low Coun- ‘trles, whero in time the Countess Joined him. “In 1815 the French Count de Lava- Jette was sentenced to death for hay- ‘ing alded Napoleon on his return to France earlier in the year. His wife took bis place in fhe cell and let him eseape. Tn the same way Maggie Jordan helped Sharkey, a convicted murderer, fo eseape from the Tombs thirty years ago. Tle was never recaptured. “Another bistorical-story, has been re- peated recently. ‘Adolph Beck, an Englishman, served .two terms of Simprisonment for obtaln- ing money under, false pretences. He swore that he was innocents but as “they all do that,” no one ‘delfeved him, Not so long ago he was again arrest- ed on a similar charge. About the same tIme William ‘Thomas was arrest- ed also,on a Jike charge. Then the police began to investigate matters, and Thomas confessed that he had committed the two crimes for which Beck was punishet. So the British Government gave Beck a “free pardon,” to restore him to citizenship, and offered him $10,- 000 to say nothing about the matter. He refused. * He lias not kept quiet, and he hopes to get more money as ‘compensatlou. “In 1y62 Jean Calas, a French mer- chaut, was the vietim of a similiar er yor. ‘He was accused of murder, found guilty and executed with the ccuclty of the tlme. His family, too, was rnlned by the confiscation of his property. ‘After, bis death the real murderer was found. _ Voltaire, the great French writer, led’ a successful popular de- mand.’ that his memory should be cleared. ‘The story of Jean Calas’ tragle fate ing been used as the basis for a play, “Le Courier de Lyon,” which {s known in this country as “The Lyons Mall.” —New York Journal. ‘COWBOYS FIGHT WITH A STEER ‘The great event at Cheyehne this season was the remarkable feat: of Will Pickett, s! negro hailing-from Tay- Jor, “Texas, ‘who gave his exbibition while 20,000 people watched with wonder and admiration a mere man, unarmed and without device or ap- pliance of ans kind, attack a flery, wWild-ered and powerful steer and throw it by lils teeth, With the ald of a helper, Pickett chased the steer until” he was In front of the grand stand. ‘Then he jumped fzom the sld- dle and landed on the back of the an- imal, grasped its horns, and brought it to'a stop within a dozen feet. By a--romarkablo display of strength he twisted the steer’s head until {ts nose pointed stealclit nto the att the ant. eS SIT © el oa Bde “gone Whe yiih ‘bis; teath, threw’: Segre. wI8e apart, to\ahow. ae nee “seine bis ‘bands tend. senk:siow!s= sped bix back. The steer*Jost’its footing ‘ead rolled’ upon its back, completely cover’ ing the negro’s body’ with ‘its own. The crowd was speechless with’ horror, many believing that the negro had beet! crushed; but a second later the steer rolled to its other side, and. Pick- ett rose uninjured, bowing and smil- ing-—Harper’s Weekly. EXAMPLE OF JAPANESE PLUCK. It was a matter of Jers than half an hour beford the Japanese held the main ridge to the left, or west, of the village of Suitean:za, and the great flanking movement over the hills was Tendy t0 besto,'froms the point gained, about 9 o'clock, write? William Din- ‘widdle, special correspondent for Far- pers Weekly. 1 It was broiling hot at this bour,gnd the motionless air and the glaring 502 promised to make the land a veritable furnace before nightfall. The dirty khakt uniforms of the stockily built soldiers were wringing with water, but they marched forward briskly, and with no display of exbaustion, ‘though they had been up all night and had already worked three Hours in 2 sweltér of heat, ‘The fourteen hours’ march made by that regiment of the Guards in the flatiking movement. wauld have killed off half thé nien of any European or America force long before the Jap- anese ind finished it, and were still Keen to fight, and, notwithstanding this, the offigial report says that the left wing division did not do so well as was expected. Only salamanders ‘could bave survived the heat and toll. “It was a marvelous performance, and one which, at first blush, seerts impossible, for It necessitated travel- Ang Deneath ithe crests of the moun- ‘talng, in order to be screened from the enemy. They moved ahead on moun- tain slopes whose angle was often six- ty degrees. ‘They tolled through thick underbrogh and around the bases of rocky pinnacles 500 to 800 feet above the valleys. One would have believed the feat impossible ‘for loaded mex, Jet alone heavily Jaden pack horses. ‘The Jett wing regiment marched six miles in this fashion and threatened Ye-sht-ref (Yanktsz'ling) in- the rear of the main position, at 5 o'clock in the afternoon: ‘A YANKEE CAPTAIN'S NERVE. In parallel fifty-seven degrees, in the dog wateh, 4 to Gp. m., when the chief officer came on deck to relieve the sec- ond officer, he awittly cast his eye to- ward the horizon in the direction of the wind, then at the struggling can- yas, and particularly at the main top- gallant sall, which threatened every minute to blow away. .As nautical etiquette forbids an officer in charge to alter canvas when the captain {s on deck without his command or consent, the eblef officer, after his hurried sur- yey, sald: “Captain Mather, that main topgallant sail $s laboring very hard.” “It {s drawing well—Iet it stand, Mr. Bartlett,” was the reply. At 6 o'clock, when the second officer in turn relleved the first, he also gave a rapid glance about, and said: “Cap- taln Mather, that main topgallant sail fs struggling very hard.” “It holds ¢ good full; Jet st stand,” afr. McFar- land,” was the reply. Even the old sea doga among the crew begged the petty officers to send them up to fake in sall, while 1t was held safe to do 50. As the helmsman turned his wheel, every turn of a spoke would make the ship Jump in the water like a fright- ened bird. Men were statfoned at every belaying pin, holding halyards and clew lines, by a single turn “un- der and over” ready to let go and clew up ata signal. We were making a record passage, and sail was to be car- ried to tha last minute, the utmost the ship could bear, while every exigence of storm was anticipated. Later in the evening the captain could not help asking if the crew still thought that he had married the owner's daughter. Captain Mather {Iustrated then, as al- ways, a quality of mind usually exhib- {ted by those who gueceed in most any Alrection—an extreme daring and‘ex- treme caution running parallel~At- lontic Monthly. =~ ‘TWO LIVES FOR A FRIEND. “Greater Jove hath no man than this, that'a man lay down bis Ufe for his friends.” These words of the Christ were exemplified when Herry Welsh, of Newport, and George Pletz, of Har- risburg, unhesitatingly faced almost certain death to save the life of George Smith, a compmion. ‘Thelr Sacrifice was successful, but Welgh and Pletz sustained injuries which will result in death. ‘The three men were railroad labor- ers and were crecting a block signal station on the Pennsylvania Railroad, twenty miles west of Newton Hamil: ton, Pa. Smith was crossing the tracks and stepped between a signal bell crank and the rail just at the mo- ment that a block operator around a curve was setting a signal for a fast passenger train that war due. Before Smith could ywithcraw his foot the érank was turped and he'was caught. Realizing that the tral-was bearing down upon him, he shouted for help, and Weish and Pletz rushed to bis res- que, carrying with them a palr of crow- bars. ‘The train ‘swept around the cnrveipt the moment trey reached. his side and Smith gave himself up for lost, but his comrades ai& not for a sipment Jose thelr courage. ‘Thrusting thelr crowbars under the crank they Ufted it from its fastenings and Smith fell back out of harm's way, It was foo late, however, for the rescuers to save. themselves. ‘The. engine hurled: then high ih the air ana thelr injuries are! so serious "that they, cannot re- SADE. eek spnaumronaet cuts amis cr ARO EE an a oe ee Saget EEOLD ee Re APEAIRS. “6 a > Sah esi A) “MEAT ROLL. ‘Two cupsof cold, chopped meat, ono egg, two cups of rolled crackers, ment broth to make enough dough soft enough to mold with the bands (more than two cups). Bake in a deep pan. AILE SOUP. ‘Use one quart of dew muk, one salt~ spoonful of salt, one saltspoonful of powdered clunamon, one ‘teaspoonful ‘of granulated sugar; scald all together for an hour in @ pitcher set in a kettle ‘of water; then add the well beaten yolks of two eggs. Good for delicate persons and children. BAKED SCALLOPS. sfrim the scallops well, after taking from the shells, thoroughly dky them ‘nd gy, each with the scallops, but in Father emt! pleces. Over each sprin- ee salt, ie n2eded, few dreps of lemon Sulce, some che:Ped parsley, and, last- iy, some fine bra @,crumbs, molstened with melted bontt The. scallops should bake for abem twenty minutey and be served on the shyls- INDIAN PUDDING: ~ ‘This pudding varies from th.’ Ot recipe by the addition of rice. Heat four cups of milk to the scalding po.'2t stir in one-half cup of corn mea! made smooth in one cup of cold milk. When this has boiled two minutes add one-half cup of uncooked rice, one-half cup of sugat one-quarter cup of mo- lasses, a level tablespoo of butter and a teaspoon of ginger or one-third of a grated nutmeg. Pour into a but~ tered baking dish and bake in a mod- erate oven three hours. Stir a few times from the under side. SPICE CAKE, Beat the yolks of two eggs, then add: one-half cup of soft or light brown su~ gar atid beat again. Add the Julce of half a lemon and part of the yellow vind grated. Cream haif a cup of but~ ter, add one-half cup more of sugar aud. mix with the beaten egg and sugar. Add one-half cup of molasses, one-balt cup of sour milk and two cups of tlour sifted with a plnch of salt, a level tea- spoon of soda, a level teaspoon of cin~ namo, three-quarters level teaspoon ‘cloves and a saltspoon of grated nut- meg. Beat well, then add one cup of seeded raisins, rolled in flour and a saltspoon of chopped citron. Bake in a Blow oven. ABOUT BATH ROOMS. It is amazing how the average arch- {tect avoids planning for more than one bathroom in the moderate sized house, says the Northwest, Horticul- turist. He might be a herald of health and comfort to many a family. He could so easily suggest omitting ‘the “parlor? and putting in three or four bath rooms instead. And every family who could ‘be persuaded to ‘this would sooner or Jater rise up and call him blessed. Of vital things In the house few arc so vital as sufficlent bath rooms.- But one or two bathrooms are thought suf- ficient for all but the rich, while many ‘very ordinary homes have two parlors and a living room or library. Surely, extra bath rooms might take the place of the former by substituting a very small reception room. ‘This is chiefly due to the frightful conventlonalism of womankind. “Whatever is must be,” now and fot- ever more, Js the ideal of the average home maker, and the-architect must live down tothe level of his client if he live at all. - (FRvSERGLDT IZA (aa a “HINTS Ah! a Never put fruit stained table finen into hot soapsuds, because it will set the stains. ° Fine table Unen should be changed frequently, so that {t will not require hard robbing, as that wears it out more quickly than anything else. Pumpkins and squashes will gener- ally keep better in a garret when the temperature is above freezing than in the’cellar, where it is very apt to be too damp. Always keep cheese well covered {2 a cheese dish or it will become dry and tasteless. If the cheese is wrapped. tn a cloth saturated with vinegar it will keep beantifally moist dnd;retaia Sts favor longer. oe If you wish to avoid streaks when washing nicely painted sloors, besin at the bottom and wash all the way to the top of the door. While the paint 4s all wet begin at the top, wash dows. ward and wipe dry at you go. Streaks are caused by soapy or dirty water running down over the dry paint. “willow and rattan furniture may be renewed in appearanee By washing ‘with a athff brush in warm water and white soap; then, when the article is still, wet, put st in a Box which can be closed tightly and place 2 small quan- tity of burning sulphur around the bot- tom of the box. Allow st to remain one-half or three-quarters of an hour. ‘Why not keep up writing desk sun- plies just ns consclentlousiy’ as those for the pantry? Few » households would get alopg a week’Wwithout su- ‘gar, salt or soap, yet how many letters are unanswered'for:the Jack of 2 ood pen, a stamp, oF, an ‘entelone, It is: not’ the expense, ‘but lack of thonght that keeps anvingufflelent of, meagre snppiy of fhe necessary articles on band . + TMT Eg OR oO RE Toe eas i wegen RY eis Mio 8 EERE g REAPS Maree Ue BST EE aa te ley cede, BOERS NS ae ee BA Nae SE Sal ® Oo TR er ie tabenn, Onler sees Ae ae Ses BOER ey HR PIR Ce Hee RS Yo a maa ame Fag Savanaak Tribune j|-<] emancipation Day. -| Wine Giveddnys | ae a ee EE ee eRe: a DaOAMDEN 31, 1904 < globin ean be: selebratel. 8), . Tuéidey. evening “December, 27th, oe ip i. . cee ae aoe 1 a ae Me Fy Beha’ eae : et: 1904; | Emancipation @ay. Atrangemerte| Mies EF, Evelyn. Hendrickson “and vote Siti, ape etiiiaet ae. | REM aes Cac are Nicely furnidhgd Seath room fo: rent to the * proper ‘geatleman. Apply to Mrs, Spring, 811-Whitaker St. 41 Miss Lula Battles is in the, city spending the holidays. She will re- turn to her schoul at Shirley, 8. 0, on next Tuesday. = Rey, Thos. B. Lillard returned on Wednesday from Thomasville. He left this morning for Knoxville, Tenn. Mr E. A. Overstreet spent the holidays in the city an a vist to his parents and friends, He is teach- ing at Orange Park, Fla. The Emancipation Diy exercises will be a grand event at Darien on Monday next. The program con- saints ofa aeeat number of prominent speakers, The Emancipation address will be delivered by Prof. I. M. Jackson of Savannah. . On Wednesday evening last Miss Florence A. Bields pleasantly enter- tained st seven o’clock tea Prof. Thes. Duckett of Newberry, 8.0; Mr. Alfred Graham of. New York; Miss Mamle Whitmire, Miss Nottie A. Houston, Misa Mamie V. Edwards, Mr. J.T. Myers and Prof. L. B. Thompson. It isa fact, that needs no ‘proof, Savannah should have # Colored Young Men Obristian Avsociation. It is the duty of every colored man to takes hand in {ts organization. Are you willing te do your psrt? Any suggestions or plans of ergani- zation will be most cheerfully raceiv- ed: Address communications to the Colored Y. M.O, A. 462 West Broad street, Elder J. M. Webb, the Evangelist, of Seattle, Wash., will lecture on his famoussensational biblical subject: That the blood of the Negro coastea through the veins of Jesus Obrist, Solomon and the Queen of Shebs. Elder Webb is to sppear at the three following churches: Monday night at First Bryan Beplist Oburen; Tuesday night at Union Baptist Ghurch, Obarles street, and Wednes- day night at St. James Tabernacle Perry and Arnold Sts, Elder Webb was invited seuth by Bishop Turner and lectured at all the Bishop’s con- ferences. The first entertainment of the season of the Married Women Plea- sure olub was given Friday evening Isst in honor of Mrs. H. G. Younge of Atlanta, Ga, at the home of Mrs. Eliza Williams of 521 Bolton street west. Those who assisted were; Mrs. A. 5. Fields, Mra, 3. Oarwford, Mrs. M. Inman, Mra. R. Byala; the guests were: Mrs. O. 8. Grant, Mrs. H. G, Younge of Atlanta, Ga, Mrs. I. Johnson, Mrs. E B. Hoberts, Mrs. G. Barnes, Misses. D. Quarter- man, BR. B, Armstrong, R. Collins. A pleasant time was had which was indulged in different games and selos, All members of theolub is requested to be present st the next ragular monthly meeting on the 2nd Monday evening of January 1905. By apecial requeat of the president, Mra. M, Saunders. At the residence of Miss Wilhe- mena Fields, 546 Nicoll street, on Weduesday evening last, a very plestant cotillion was given in which a number of guests were present. After spending the evening in various amusements; the guests participated in the best side of all, and that was refreshments: Those present were: Misses Anoram, Rena Ancrum, and Miss Hagler of Orange- purg,.S. 0., Misses C. Robinson, O. Strickland, Marie Taylor, Maud Middleton, Jennie Morten, Nancy Barnerd, Susie Dancan, Lilla Rob- erts, Ellen Shellman, Wilhemens Fields, and Messrs. Clarence Brown, Bmiles of New Jersey, Eddie Brown, Ragies Buvniar, O. Begnell, W. Hathaway, Raymond Hill, W. Faik, Madison Grant, Purcell Gaines, Joseph Grant, Eddie Armstrong, tr OF Warde. Farmers’ Conference. The Farmers’ Annual Oonferenct will be held at the Georgia State Industrial College, begining Thars- day February 16, 1905, continuing two days. Entertainment free to all farmers. All who intend to come are requested to communicate with the President, R. R. Wright, as soon aa possible Able speakers will address the conference. President Wright will be-pleased to accept in- vitations te meet the farmers of any section and organize farmers: instl- tutes. Every Saturday from now until the conference opens, will be given for this purpose. When pur- chasing tickets to attend the Uon- farense, secure a certificate #0 you will be able to retura at reduced rates. ——$ > * Wieht Was Her Terrors "1 would congh nearly all nigh! One rites Mra, Chas. Applegate of Alexan- Grla, Ind,, “and could bardly get aay sleep. {had consumption co bad that if I walked a etcck T wonld cough frightfally and spit blood, but, when allother medicines falled three $1.00 bottles of Dr: King’s, New, Dis. covery wholly cured me and I gained 5% pounds,’ It's absolutely guaranteed to Fore Coughs, Colds'La Grippe, Bronchitis aod ell Throat end Luag Troubles! Price ffocand $1.00, _ Trial bottles free at all druggist. ae : “Emancipation Day. vo Boptays Will be: ,eeleorated = Hmencipation day. Arrangements have béen made to hare the celébra. tion amémorableone, The military Will haye' the usual parade. The Battalion under command of Vol. Deveaux, will meet on Liberty street, with the right resting on Kast Broad at 10:30 o’olock- ‘The civic zocieties under direction of Chief Marshall B. IN. Ratledge, will rendezvous at Price and Liberty, The line will march through some.of the principle streote to the. park, and\ from thera. to the F,A_ 3B. church where the literary exercises will take place. The ad- ‘dress will be deliverd by Mr-Gev. 8. Williams. ‘These oxercises will be held under the auspices“ef the Emancipation Association of which Rev. Aloxander Harris is president, _ The following orders have been igsued to the military: Hxanquarnrees Isr. Batt. Inr G, 8. T. Cox, Savannah, Gs., Dec. 20, 1904, General Order No. 5. Companies A, D, and F, of this Battalion sre ordered to appear at rendezvous, Liberty street with the right reating on East Broad on Monday morning Jan. 2, 1905, at 10:30 o’clook fally uniformed armed and equipped for the purpose of taking part in the Emancipation Day celebration, Co. D. will be the color company and is ordered to report at headquar- ters.for tne Colors at 11:20 a, m. The Union Band will furnish music and will escort tho colors to and from headquarters. Thia ocossion being one of our regular parade days it behogves each officer to have the full” enlisted strength represented. By order Lt. Ool. J. H. Devzavzx, Sol. O, Johnson, 4at. Lt. and Adjt. A Brilliant Affair. ‘The wedding reception at Morse’s Hall of Mr. and Mrs. J. Olayton Williams on Wednesday evening was of unusual beauty and brilliancy,with an attendance of over one hundred guests. Profe, Burkeand Ward of the Oriental ocheatra furnished aweetatrains to the pleasure of the delighted guests. The decorations of the Hall being green, blended with the horse shoe. Table with napkins of American flags intermingling with brilliant gowns of rich beauty wasarare sight to thecity’s smart set. The favors were distributed by Mesara, R. A. Hernandez, 0. A. Lewis, 8S. A. Taylor, E M, Edwards, Willie O. H. Shefftsll_ sa master of ceremonies, The Bride wore a beautiful designed dress of whitesilk mull with asmall bouquet of fern and roses, that was very becoming. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. P. EB. Perry, Mr. and Mrs. E, E Desverney Mr. Geo. Johnson, Mr, and Mrs. 0. A. Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. M. 8. Branham, Mr. and Mra. J. L.Jacksdo, Mr. and Mra. i M. Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Rob- inson, Miss Maud 8. Wright of Milledgeville; Misa Shaw, Brunwick; Misses Mannie and Maria Sheifftall, Susie Ouyler, Celia Olark, Marin Quilyard, Mamie Robinson, Flor- ence Erwin, Dr. 8, P. Lloyd, J. Walter Willisms, Nathaniel Belcher, Messrs. L.8 and H. M. Reed, Jas. G. Geary, M.O. Johnson, A. Carey. Jas. King, F. Dilworths, D. é Moore, J. Motor Dowse, Captain R. L. West; Messrs, Harrison W. Mann, J. Scott, and others. There were many useful present donated among them was a pair of dismoad link onff buttons to the groom by Mr. H W, Mana. Election of Officers. Forest City Lodge 140, K. of P- was instituted in this city on Thura- day night, 22d instant by W. H. Burgess, D. D. G. O.-with the fol- lowing officers, E.M. Morse, M. of W.; E. W. Sherman, 0.0.; 0. P. Davis, V.0.; Rich.Furgerson, Pre- late; J.P. Sherman, K.of B. and 8.; 0 W. Swinton, M.of E.; John H. Holmes, M.of F. A. 8. Lloyd, MU. of A.; E.N. P. Ervin, 1.G.; 8, L, Scriven, O G.; Dr.J.H. Bugg, M.D.;D.J. Deal, E. M. Wilson. D. J: Scott. trustees E, M. Morse, Grand Rep. E. W. Sherman, Alt, On December 15th, the following officers of Mt Moriah Chapter, 0. E. S. was elected: P, O. Burgess, W. M.; J. W. Armstrong, W. P.; M. 8. Oapps, A. O.; Jeannie’ Springs, Treas.; M. White, Seoretary, ; e Lucas, Cond. ; 0.1. Branch, A.; A. ‘P. Leater, Ady.; L. Hazel, B.; M. Bryan, E.; L. Beck, M.; E. Hill, Elec.; §. Hughes, W.; W. S. Speighte, S.: Dy Pringle, Ohap. ‘The officers ware than inatalled by Dis, Deputy, MoNair-of Atlanta to who they extend many thanks for his worthy services, Branch 578;.National Association of Letter Carriers, elected the fol- lowing officers at a mesting held this eels Pre, EF. P. Edwards, Vico Pres. Geo. B. Tyson, Secretary Financial, F. L, Gurley ; -Se0’y, Re: cording, J. O, Hamilton ; Treas, 8. |B. Cooper; Ssrgent at Arma, J. G. Garoy; ‘Lrustess,.0;.0, DeVeaux,. P A. Danegall} F. I. Carley; Delegate ‘to Oonvantion, F. Le Ourley 5 Aiter: nate’L. M. Pollard . ddine Ceremony. }) « Luésday.eyening December, «th Mies F, Evelyn. Hendricksun “anc Mr. Monroe.N. Work were joined: ie ‘wedlock at,the residence.of Mra. H. T. Hendrickson} the bride’s mother, 503 Bowen strest, es Amidét a‘mass of beantifal deco- rations and beneath s bower of Mis- tletce and Holly the bappy couple were united by Rey. Jas. Jackson. To the strains of Mendelsohn’s beantifal wedding march, the bridal party entered and through the cere- mony the mandolin and the piano digcoursed softly the beautiful atrains of Angel Serenade. - The bride, who is one of our popu- lar school teachers, was gowed in chiffon shirred and hand embroider. ed, entrain. A beautifal tulle ¥eil draped oyer a crown of orange blos- soms completed the: beautiful cos- tume. The bride wat accompanied by Miss D. A. Blyler, the maid of hon- or, who was tastily costumed in white chiffom trimed in lace. The bride entered on the arm of her uncle Mr, John Hendrickson. _ ‘The groom,Mr. Work is one of the Professor instructors at the Ga. State Industrial College. Ho was accompanied by Mr. N. J. Gordon. After the ceremony the happy cou- ple received the congratulations of bhe numerous friendsand acquainten- ces assembled. Second Baptist Church. Last Sunday at the Second Buptist Church services were well attended. Rey. Smith delivered a ‘discourse in keeping with the occasion, and the cholr rendered some choice seleo- tions. Sunday January let the church will engage in fasting and praying, and st 8 o’slock the Good Samaritan society will have its an- niversary sermon delivered by Rev. Smith. The third Sunday in Jan., willbea rally day at the church. The congregation has become quite inspired through Rev, Smith’s activ- ity, and every one is expecting grest results from the rally.. ———— . 4~ Memoriam. in sacred memory of one friend Lizzie G. Flemming, who died Dec. 27, 1903. + Friend thou was 60 mild and loving, Gentle as the summer breeze, Pleasant as the air of evening, ‘Wheo’it floats among,the trees. Peaceful be thy silent sfumber. Peaceful in the grave so low: ‘Thou no more will join our number, Here with us will meet no more. Yet again we hope to meet thee, When the day of life is fled; Then in heaven with joy to grect ther. ‘When farewell tear is shed. * - A FRIEND. Working Night And Day. The busiest and mightiest little thing that ever was made is Dr. King’s New Life Pills. ‘These pills change weakness into strength, listiessness into energy, brain-fag into mental power. They're wonderful ia building up the health, Only a5 cents per box. Sold by all druggists, — AMUSHMERY COLUMN. Coming Events in Phe Se- eial Werld. The mid-winter dance of the Hyacinth A. and S, Club will take place at Marga; ret St. Hall, Monday night, January oth. Admission, single 1s cents; double 25 cents. ‘The Eastern Stars A."and 8, Club will give a grand dance at Morse’s Hall, on Monday night, January 2nd. Admission 15 cents. : «The Union Bisters Aid No 3 G. U.O. of U. L, A. will give a ten nights fete at Duf- fy street hall, beginning January 2d Ad- ‘mission fo cents. $0 fo the -Public. I desire to inform the Public that the Undertaking Business ‘of the late J. H. Johnson will be continued at the same place No. 331 Jefferson street and I beg the Public fora continuance of their patronage and good will, assuring them of the same prompt and careful attention and courteous treatment’ that have characterized this business in the past. Mr. W. R. Fields who has for sometime been ‘closely assoclated with Mr. JH. Johnson in the management of the business will assume its General, Macagemént .and devote his entire time to same and to all who entrust any business or engagement to him, I guarantee perfect satisfaction, Epwaxp E, DesVzrnzy, Administrator. —————— Holiday Bates. ‘Winter Tourists Rates via Central Rail way. Excursion tickets on sale daily ‘until April 30, 190%, to resorts in Florida, Cuba, Nassau, Texas, etc. Final limit of tickets ay BI, 1905. ‘or farther Information relative to rates, schedules, etc. Apply to nearest Ticket Agent. Exeuysion Rates to Jacksonville, Fla. and Return, via-Central of Georgia Rail- way. Account Southern Educational As- soclation Dec, 29-31, 1904. One fare plus 25 cts. for the round trip. From points within a radius of 300 miles of Jacksonville, tekets will be sold Dec 29th and 29th, and from points beyond 300 miles radius, tickets will be sold Dec, 27 and 28, 1904; final limit. of all'tickets Janz 4 1905. : For farther information apply to your nearest-Tickets agent. * “iL LL DENTIST 240 Bernard St., Savannah, Ga Does all tind of high grade dental work ‘of the best quality nnd workmanship, Gold crowns and bridge work. White Porcelaid Pivot, and Gold Crowns mounted on the satural roots, Gold, Filllags, Cement Filt- ings, and Silver or Amalgam Fillings, from nine tog fall set of ‘teeh $7.00 and 2° '‘Broken:Places mended .and teethiadded to ‘old:ones for aiaall Costs; ; BellPhine, 1244 All Gold ‘Crowns Guarentee) wae we Golat ~<a ~ * ~ 4 | Bere * naghe ® ee ae: > aS J sie , & ' 2PEnm ATA ey MINTER SOS | i fay Blacks, Bludé or | | ig if Fancy Mixtures. § eas * i po ¥ | _ ‘Phe Largest and Best Line in 4 | f t 4 ; the Oity- i | & a> . -, eg, 7 . 4 + ‘_ _ Brices: —- 3 y (A . oe + Re Eerste : * Be $10.50 to $25.00) © —=—_— eee _ Stetson Hats. This is the only Store in Savannah that handles them, Beautiful Stiff £ : and Alpine Shapes in Black and Brown. | | ! PRICE $4.00. 3 B.H. LEVY,BRO. & CO - _ 5 Broughton Street, West. - - os eames WEEE inl “FIELDS & RIVERS, GROCERIES, 730 Gwinnett St. E., 2S “pS Abont the Srd of January BL oe . + * Dr. E. D. BULKLE¥ Will move his office to : ° ‘ sae oo Cor. Taylor and Hast Broad Sta, Where he will occupy the second floor ofthat two-story: brick building fitted with all modern conveniences ; e . and will be pleased, to see all of his patrons ei . ~ and friends. * UM er ee ee RT RST We carry a fine line of Groceries, Fruits, Oigars, Tobacoo, Wood and Goal. Our motto: Moderate Prices. Quick delivery. Polite attention Give us a trial ‘ —_———— . Wanted. Young ladys Stenographer and Typewriter. One quick at figures preferred. Fair salary to begin with. Apply Metropolitan Mercantile & an Qo’s, office, 222 WY. Brough- ton street, Savannah Ga. tf. P.usans aoe era ATE ANTIC COAST LINE et ee eee onic. 4 OFFERS UNEXCELLED SERVICE., A Florida and West Indian Limited leaves Savannah guzg:m. “¢ (xo:t2 2, m, city thme), arrive Jacksonville 1:45 p.m. Sanford—. 6:15 p. m., Tampa 10:30 p. m,, Tampa Bay Hotel roxo g..m., ~~ Port Tampa 11:00 p.m. Close connection at Port Tampa with, + steamships for Key West and Havana, sailing from Port Tampa’ * Sundays, Tuesday and Thursdays at 11-40 £3 m., erriving Key”, West Bis0 p. m. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, arriving Hae.©* vana 6:36 a. mi. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, passing un, , der'the guns of Morro Castle about sunrise, Less than 46 Tenens from Savanaah. This traia carries through Pullman sleeper Sa- * vannah to Port Tampa. Dining car Savannah to Jacksonville: .d ‘New York and Florida Express leaves Savancah 4:15 a, m.,‘city” * Hime, arrives Jacksonville 8:40 a. m., making close connection’ with trains leaving Jacksonville 9:45 a. ma. for all_points {Southy, $ | earrying Pullman Buffet Parlor Cars to Po'rt Tampa and St. Petersburg. Connections made for principal resorts in Florida. _ “Savannah and Jacksonville Express leaves Savannah 4:00 p.ti., - | eity time (Train'ls made up ot Savannah and Is always.on time.) » - jarrives Jacksonville 9:15 p. m., connecting with train leaving ~ | {Yerksoniille 9.35 p.m carrying Pullmam Sleepers to Tampa'and *: rt Myers. . ae | “Effective Jaw. 10, the famous New York and Florida Special, a # | train-represeating the highest standard of perfection Ja’passenger 3 service, solidly vestibules, consisting of Pullman. Drawlag-roomi, Sleeping Compartment, Dining and Observation Cars will leave Savannah 11:55 a. m., city time, arriving Jacksonville 2:50 p.im., | St Augustine giog p.m.” ee ‘Atlantic Coast Line offers the public train service nasui ‘ In elegence, speed and luxury. H. M, Exxnson, Traffic. W. J. Craic, Gen. Pass. Agt.. Wilmington; N. C. We Lxauy, Div, Pass. Agent, M. WALsH, Trav. Pass. “Agent, «Savannah, Ga. . 7 = Grocery Store-and Restaurant. I wish to announce to my many friends and patrons that I have re- opened my Restaurant at No. 464 West Broad street, next to the Wage Earners Bank, where I will alsd con- @uct my Grocery store. I will fur- nish first class meals as before, and keep on hand constantly a fall line groceries. The patronage of the pub- lic is solicited. BR. H. HOOKS, Prop. * 464 West Broad Street, Bat the best meats. You can find this by visiting the OLD BBLIASLE Stall No. Si: City Marker, Bes?, Veal and Mattea, And all kinds of game in season @eods delivered promptly. F. ¥. JONES & 8OR. Beth "Phone (28. | L,$ Reed, Money, = | : ' Real’ Estate,. r : Insurance % 20K fw: Ga. Phong 870. = e ad Hg os West Side Pharmacy: ; 5114 West Broad Street, atm ~ me ® . SER am Comer Mints Streig§ ee" The populat'idowmite:date” = ; Se ag» : \ COLORHD:DRUG STORE... ga Oarriés.a full ‘life vf Drags, “Toilets, ‘Cigars, “Tobaceo™, «Contest ora a Ss Calo atkight, Enemie Soaeaige tatiemedblepeces, en f eee. Wak eR Fal Deca? Be 5G: Pe Watts ‘and,Dr. J: iF, Ford, “Dragpists,-: : ee ae cere. so Bae a Meme — Baca Es 3 eee ar eee Be Me ee ee ee Oe rear co et ees s oe ne ee Ad b. FERS ea ce se i ES a th | eee: Bene eS eS BE SS eee SB ulin. ke oe es ate pe LEN? Sam TS ie, 2S A See eee VABLTING)§ RP ° PB 2S SUS pe ORM Sele BEER mre tg igh Mae Sipe AE at rg gett bleh Saping ciclo. Begala ae ak Soo Buggin pale ob thee Se Perea oa pita teal pps tes Ai entre ig the nd, CCE eS. aactn, "e NaRMaMmam es ooulOercaeh, ttl, 0. Bech, 6 Gee Jb, fo" PS RMD sta erst rin. Aa cr Se eg a _saren Bore conutp Bact chia RV Lott the cone. xe el as Moet Word Dourts br ete ea Mg Ue Soars Gary Vectecrashse Foi kitiwzsba to SPabont dehtitéct highs OW owes oeusetieder, and.swing yourself, ove | pach aff tiicse! arive-smalligiiesa’ little the crasiplecé as Cie pietyre' shows.” f ees er bee Eee cee ENS 4 oe RSE ey E me mS es. Ce Pes eS Passe all 5 hi se oe ey (lg as i : ads ~~ oe ys 62 de “iS cpu! oH”: 7 iE al ea oe: ook fBsd eee eS... HES era Pens oo oS 8 0 Se | ne f SRE TT Rey etl latices Ui Rey B92 0E A BORE-VAULTING: OV ER, THE, CROSSBAR zo Cie ~— — =, fam esoc bout an theh apext, {it 19 chey) choukh as ci He PE: Cu et ere te a Baber! Leave! tivo feet ot seven Ohleit feet Dis MMe sKe. ole or stipot who, Gatiothrer.mmattén bod frontamTess oe et Thertecret of bled ron Pefaatavshariystike make tyedibotes’ grasp the rope a3'far,f Cis round, beneath tho tredalliibs as possible, throw Foi (MiG Noid your rope. ‘Make these ward, ralse your. feet | ie eDont ‘si ‘fect apartand about nearly straight up, and BgMerEAnches deep. Now put your toward the crosspiece i zi stats: te holes andsdrive them lifting your whole Body. wis, SZvince, with the uailspolnting over the croasploce 1 Btic“sanlerway-oif bottr poles: Get a heights by- thié-mcans, Buislath or slender stick, long enough your-frlends will find. xo fg2teich” Between the posts and light exciting and healthful gPorh:to rest-on the nails, ~ _ Nork Bails * Byes STHAT CAPS provided ‘tho@ali 1s of | Peat knora his way oll over the fown, ‘| In raluy:weather there ~siAud in any‘sentence can find a noun, | of srater'for tho-footg 1 pS EES alo ag te, ater water tates fips ‘Batson Post, in Little Folks... | i obss mines atlas aye. ——— & Jor, the Jeaves.jn the PSs Sse aaneTOUR. . "The only ator, that J FY oWuripczwome years gf Queen Viitd- ‘greien SirFrancis Bertie was AS: -gistant ‘Under Secretary ‘for Forelgtf ape ‘Hils-oflce made¥mnecessary wags Grialtt t tho Queen at Windsor SBalmoral, and it was bis custom coe abbdd' ot(ftin.! tie : signed. it simply vith djs last PaAhies Divlog ond ot Mi" idlerviews ‘swith the Quéen! she gala'te bim: "Miv :Rertle,.1 must ask you in fature not. to Aden telegrams announcing your arrival PeertloN for it makes, me expect. my poscond then { anr‘disappolnted”- eee —— pki ‘THE TREES GO TO SLEEP. R¥rhen the wyoods put on their autunn KE of gold and crimson; and the Bow of nature is“bright withautuion ives,” do thé jittle'folks ever wonder Phy thé’ jiali' green of summer abses, 86 suldedty to such beautify! giving mqlors, Rerhaps .the gtowz- Bé will eay.It-ihep are asked, that Beck Prostdoes it. But thqt ts ‘great stake, eee ghalt sat ia we: only Rais, tho trouble 10° tits 9 ttle LEAs Bturcl snd igre ronan, Pat the red.maple “erimsans,to coral af, ang tt tain the years when the Fsrést;comesijate that the léave¥ ,color: WaiAE Deantifullp. **’-F t+ te of Pe ant, then, is the ‘redvoa ‘tor’ “the phiseciot colbrs' that midkes:the'agtiliah Ryrobiit’ sq beapiitnl? We'fo, not know, startle. Bren. fhe? wiseameople. who, Awifte'sclentific hanks do-notemite un> Madera It, but they do téllons,a few, heh P which iid tntorertnered fot : fiThe yellow colb? Inthe ‘ledvés ee seagate way, Ae. ‘eecty hod Faifiplants, 16, pradegd, by',sonnephifys (c “ehlotgphsil, from “tivo “Greek” B ‘esimply: (‘leat.-gretns} fSphfir'is nine up'otitwe sb- Reg one Mluisit S58 oe serie, “oo every sitlgsman’od fro att ud! ortaf fpaint Dox Knows, these-two col. ki fe Rbr haake. crete, News whet! pee treciis Belting xpady ‘for fone * these :t3y0.,igubstanices “stnarate, He bine dishes ake hevelowe te Jett to‘givetis color to the heath ag sg sed Golo 39 note go atv To fee donreatiat epg ihe jraste aaiperal taatter which“lidgticey coneets. oglu: the tree since Jast sprisé,, This $e taken up by:, tha Spots tie natin, Gehicheit is helm bus espa orale tn Pe Mep sod, (oz 8tored, Chledy tn ‘the’ ‘Agaves; Wehebgeit.(s. gery much In ite Ways but .patti ‘throu: thig: fore’ ES Nome Done Seat TNFa th HERS ery Ula alaciiies eg ae eat way Tass 3 4 searstten| eee : tbe len ven bars rit fe HM ata ee Pectin’ CLA ae ah TS i Mees ee NES it 19 Sa Th arb as you will find athena fy Mexbut-to make a vault seven ‘onsigut feet high—well, that 1s iotier.matten, gs phe ecret of bfgh-tope vaultitig Js to grasp the rope ns:far, from the ground as possible, tlrow: Four body kack- ward, ralse your. fect {Ill they point nearly straight up, and as you swing toward the crosspizce pull on the rope, lttidg your whole bods. ‘You can pass ‘over the erossploce ,at astonishing heights by- this-means, and you and yoir-friends will find xope vaulting an exciting and healthful sport. — New York wail ol * 7 ‘provided ‘the®all is of the right kind. In ralny-weather there Is a great deal of water for the inots to take up, and Mevmore’ water’ aven into the trees ‘the méré mineral matter is stored up to color, the Jeaves jn the fall. } "The: only Qior, that Jack Frost’ has Anything’ to We_ywith is dark brown. ‘That is the cplor of death, “When tiv Geifcate ‘cells St the leaves are frozen they die and.turn brown. ’The3alling ‘of the leaves Is another thing for which Jack Frost is usually Held responsible} hut+with which he jing nothilug, or at least, very little, to ‘dd, Treés shed ‘their lenves in coun- Urlbs-where it never-fréezes at all, and [egies Nertt great many fail before the frost comes. Neither is It the au- umn sends. syhich make them fall, ‘though they-help a little, lke’the frost. ‘A wind stroig enough to blow the Teavés “oft ould take the twigs, -too, and rery-likelytiproot,the tree, “__ ‘The leaves falt simply because the ‘tree cuts them off. Lt has no ‘use for loavéd'in winter. It doesn’t exziect to ‘at. dating the-winter sleep, and.tliere- Bre’ Joes nét tieed-the-food which the Tehsee manufacture, and thougti it al- qmays has "to,’bieathe if’can breathe through, its:roofg,and, Bark, just-as hu- ‘man belngs,can breathe through-thelr akins?. > “tae “Beajdes being’ usélets/ -the leaves ayould afsq"be dangerous If left-on Gur~ ing the Winfet, as they Would’ catch the. anow, aud yrind, and tins break the twigs anf branches; - Sometimes: an carly snow finds’ thé trées, unprepared, Suid, threhthéy2hinve a very'hard time, ‘idee, ‘The one éollects on. the eaves and.the welglit breaks off gent Hiranchles,as, thiol, Sne'g'irm. This would happen every year if the treo had not fearned.to:take off its summer ‘efothéa'In rood time, ~ - rene, cutting-oft processbeglus-when Suyouier \s at Itg,bbfebt® Away, Pack. inthe dog days;the'trées besan togrow somo, cork, celis Hetrgea, the ieatistem and-the trege This was'to, prevent an, open twoundswhen thé leat should fajl, ton's'trée catr'bé wourtded just like an animal. ‘Then, ‘sbore the cork seal St grave. a Inger of another kindat cells. Tis Is called the Meyer Of sépitation;, sb cutting ogctayer, and cai easily’ be seen.on:the blackberry,.whiere 1€ forms a Fellawih*green ring on the, purple Wat stalk. ~ ee ‘tmrhexefare ihrge royjs pf, cells Invthis patueseeer lage and aftel awhile ‘ie milddle:one disgsolves into mucilnge, 's0 thal tigre Ar olllgg-ett fo, hold, the icf to, the ols exeept some, woody, threads wipe’ ats, shrough. tho, cat= ciate Srila aserof Ong * A Sizgttare. lett be~ aie bye ree at sh apay: Seine ey we Stl sat lage vad pert potas ith aM soe see Ed - ae Sioa BRS iecere ah ‘el ei cule Ess teat is leg OE een, Y ork Prbbetieg) +5 ge a A eA Pop ern Se ep. 4h ping nema er avd 1225 ce oe Biel INDUS TAA ih Winget te ick SET iethe Pay cadtebe uetthinen balte se Dinnieegon Or within p-baley Fy ERAS OT, BOG We ee Seats ber toy in inersta Atslind,( Central Ast; the Rgekiés and Wiskagn Satin se, BALES on uventor an eanferted Sie WOME ob Tap. ablemopley intg ‘aphinthas ex hich are; omeratedsby. the auras EAs whistlos,arg conteolted Aanaiggeetgietemallcgnber balls, ti Bonestiva Syn -wAB spokes,..and pro- ake pemmee lsutee moleh, enslly Bee, ra.the é of {rane iy eSrscte TO a (Sete ages ce and tees ‘sinkxintadieceaxthand,nré lost. -A irecent Sipcaberyin thejdistrict of Ene Ja labeyes. Shab tank toon ehbterran san. Jakeattwauty:tye or Milrts; feet below, ‘the ssiietade)iamd these lakesy if they prove. tosonthifcnymadent potable, wa- -tety até expeeted to Mad: tothe devel- mbmerit, of’ new; territories in the arid réglon fa whe Yhey Gecur. ee a} Of genatel ster at twelvo-valumes: 1s pronounced: pyaN¥ A. Renaril the best.preserintiye of mim. Addéd, dl- rectly tteaeatteing, in ‘the proportion, of two tot fliree”per cent. it decon- peslyin six or elght hours into water ‘apd’ oxygen, leaving no forelgn sub- sstinge is, do borax oF salicylic acla,’ and | Yeistog ‘aorchange liké,bolling.or freezing: THé, ‘antiseptic’ action per- ty lone enooeyto prevent alteraélon. A new vegetable for table use 4s,the scrambgtainga}ah pmbelifers plant ‘resembling séa-kale. The geweet roots, ‘raw dnd cooked, are eaten by"Tartars, and Cossacks, and for these and the, sprouts also, it 15 recommended for Joltration Uy 8 prominent member of 2 Academie de Cuisine of Paris, who Wedlares that {t is finer in flavor than espargeps and cauliflower, whicle it ‘suggests. ‘The! roots' af botled in salt ‘Wdtkadil, seasoned ‘In butter, a salad .of young leaves ‘atid. stices.of root being “ andhep.dainty loxury. * + A Now, Multiplex Zelexraph. 4 The invention of newrmethods for “sending ‘a umber of: messages simul- taneously over the ‘shme Wire. con- tinnes, and one ofthe-most recent of these is due to Professor Mercadier, of the French, High School for. Post ‘and ‘Telegraph. In ‘tiils method an ‘alter- nating current is employed’ whose fre- quency. depends upon a tuning-fork having a certain number of vibra- tions. ‘The current of such, an Inter- rupted cireult can be broken by an or- ainary key, and signals transmitted over thesline wire by am induction Hransmitter. On the line at the dis. tant station d¥e a number of 6o-called monotelephones which respond to cur- rent of o§e frequency, and are tuned to the forks in the circuits at the,send- ing station, Thus -each particular cir- cult» bas its own telephoue,which ts connected by$tibes with the ears of the recelying operator, and {responds to the sigalg made at ibe seating sta tion, In all, trrelve ‘transmission cir- cuits ave proylded,soithat twenty fou mestages may bebecnt: over te" Ulne simultaneously.—Harper’s Weelly, ee What strikes the American con stantly In England Is the homogene ousness of,the people. | We have the forelgner ‘so, much with us that ~we ‘miss.him when we’ come to England. When I take my’ ‘walk in Central Park I am‘Ukely to hear any other tongue oftener than English, to hear Yiddish, or Russian, or Boltsh, or .Nor- weglan, or Brenig, SF Ttallan, or Span: ish, but when I Tike my“ walks on the leas at, Folkestone, scarcely mote than an hour from, the, polyglot-continent of Europe, I hear nothing but English. «Xwiee, indeed, I heard a few French people speaking together; once 1 heard a German. Jew telling a story of a dog, which he found so funny that ho almost Durst with laughter; and once again, in,the Jower town, there came to 'mé frofii tHe.open door of an eating house: the souzd of Itallan. But nearly everywhere; else was Eng. Uist, wand, the signa-of Tee on pari Francais were-alniost .a8 infrequent in the shops.—W. D-Hoyrells, in Harper's Magazine.; # i, ea Sheriff Mays, of McKean County, went to Kane.to.sell, tie belongings of Charles Mahood ‘ti “a sult’ for debt. Mrs. Mahood, with? tears in“her eyes, told the sherift Jiow‘ hard, ‘tuck had come to her. iusbandcand hérselt ‘and concluded by saying’ that her ttle child was then in a “dying, contiition. ‘he sherlif went to:the.clild's-bedside ‘and. saw: the, woman's ‘pitifal story iserified. «The Uttle one expired while ‘the office? was in the house... Then; 13- ‘stead of preceeding’ according to law, ‘the genefous sheriff circulated a’ gnb- scription: paper,which he*headeq witl ‘a. donation’ 6f his own. Soon*he-stic- ceeded in raising’ a.tundastsiclenit to meetythé, ebligations_ of, Mahdod. and “tue threntened legal execution ald 'ndt "fake place—Btailtond Era ‘Tetaisphowor the English Tongue. An, Engiigh speaking xiaticn *bas ‘grown, up on;the west sidejot the At- plazitic Sebich, hes; done; and ‘is ‘doing ‘hnore thanthe-parent-conntry ‘to give ‘the:tdhgue'a qrorld rogues.“ wo-thirds Jor ihe pebbles who spepis-Bngilsh lve ini thei Untied States,” The: industrial - uid ‘egmmetelal <eonquests “which. this Somer oe ent : peoplt's-tongué! A. Cexttary“azo Prevell, HBpaktak eat “Gipemanletattar lead , ofy Hnglieh 10 ge numbérsof: persons epee et t fohicleyof epeech: bat te seaibichae Bib ot Sole joke by Mpeobig; today: Sle Aunt tiie ised tongue. Chicago gaenasS'4° 1 ihe “carcadk” LEA e oes ce ais BE Ye OE eae ie ra ee eee JO 9: RN a A NE discal eae asa way: SE, as Oe erday? Whew Mey AC Giuing Pao! OM, the necting “eettedt's Sadrad-Fon’ the! wit. moss atid, kee TudmeiOoxer'a Ledert Low Bhicoa'-whotrealder ini China, te ioldiniing thorestatstettiby Chew Bing ‘Quoia, pSuiatepel of Cutaatowe pen the. apposlbg eialmsbt: fs "Luni <Qacla, 's. oe E Wekrwite Chew-Bing Hquolictor yearshere.+ Tt {e.ollegéa, that Law shia eas loeuls married £6 Chen Bing Quotid jn. ‘China, and ‘that "Lani ‘Quolaforyents here, stile alleged that bin. “Vice-Cénsy! Onyab Bilas soles preted ;the Consiil’'stestimony, No regular ‘GChinesd interpreter Jn the elty, spoke, Bay Gonsmie- “Alatect, tty fyaia stated, and* ,g9 fe. vjce-consill, was called Sy ,. Judge Coffey ;snitled when informed ‘by the’ consulthat, thera wore 0 at: torneye-at law practisngiin China, and that lawyers were not’ wanted ,{d' thd courts dhérs, ‘the judges’ doing ‘ait ‘the questioning to ascertain spe facta Srno cousuf stated “tiie Hd wha ac tqualited with-the’laws of/the, Cinkad empire and bad read tho ae ie ‘relative to “marriage. He” tdentitied } Chinese book's which ‘wérs produced fn coprt a8 copits of Lno-iniva’of th em pire. . He sald: that’ an! essential fea- ture ot every marriage: In Chins*wad "tho sending of acard giving the bride's jpzcestrs for''at-Yeastilhree’ genera ‘ona.—Sen Krandisco Chronicle: The Early Diag Ont! te ‘DelAle. " “The Uttlé Gopper . artoking *foun- -tdins for dogs; put'on, thé'strest or ‘tiers &t the bottont of laimpposts,” siifd the man who' staiiay all day ‘at Fifty: ‘ninth street and“Lexingtén aveniue ‘batding out traaéfer’ tlekets, “would be 9 fae thing I, hodogs ‘gota chase at them® They are attractivo, {nap ‘pearacno, ari revalt right: until treez ‘Sng ‘time. They ate !too shallow for ‘winter weather, The dog ‘fountiins are Miled every morning? by amen, from the Humane Society, and it {a the carly ddgtthat getsithe'drink. As soon as tho car, rash-begins,,goodby doggie. “This fountain has beén here jus one weol.In-that,time I have seen a man waiting for a crogstown ear spoll tha dog's ehance with. a mouthfyto tobacco juice; then, kids ind; young men fill ‘em up, with, clsafettes; seen women and girjs throw orange peel and apple. cores into them; matches aro thrown {ato thenr by. the ‘dozen. “Before noon that-dog fountalti stools lke a small swill-pail., Dogs prefer'the Jeakings of a fire hydrant on the op posite corner, ‘qn oammer the dog fountains "wl bo.a blessing, but-the people, pill have to bertaught that.they. are, for,thause of dogs, not hogs.”:-New York Press Naval Médice!l Practicd. ° Fancy sending & gunboat ito the China Seas without a surgeon ot board! But such things used to hap ‘pen. ‘The Admiralty provided a, well atocked medicine chest. Bu the. cap tain knew nothing of medicine, so he ‘had all the medicine bottles emptied 4nto a big tub, and then assembled the “Gompany.. “AiNthe stuff {s thero,” safé ‘no, “and if any one goes sick he shal havo a dose of the mixture, for there's bound to be something in ft that wil sult you!"—Londoa Mall. ITSpormaneatly eared. No tts ornorroas- ossaftes ies, ayn "uss of Dr. Kline's Great -Nervelleatoror, ¥trislportloaad treatise free Dr ky Hmerse,Ltd,, vorrei, Pallet, Pa At a French penal colény the convicts hive‘ organize a band, = \. . To Care a Cold in One Day- Wake Laxative Brome Quivine Tablets» All gruggids Felina money iE fala to care Ey fa dignature is’on box. 253. An dstensivesuhway system for Chica iscunder Gnteraplatiog. = JemsarePiso!sCaro.forConsumaptionsared yilleires years age. Aine. Phases Ho. Five, Maplo St, .Norwlah, N.¥., Feb. 7, 190) , Dan Leno, the comedian, left his estate to bis widow and children. » leg OT RREIEOM are Foe Eten, icting, Blind, Bieediog, or Protradin Bites, Drusgete wil eland money if Pare Ojatment falls,to cure in.G.to.24 days,” 20 ; Medals are now asid to'be ‘theap In Eng: land Ach Gured in 90° minules by, Woollord Beet iNtree falta ‘soit eal elec 1. Bail ‘orders promptly tie frogelete gi. Mall ordtes promptly is China has a national biography, devoted entirely to-women.: ~ eames Sram Mansa. Se: » Heré, is a- bunch of ‘names ‘picked at random from bne isste of thé Lui renee Gazette: Dolph Blampfed, Wy. W; Calpitts, Jessio Mohundro, Xarsaeies Bledgeaux, Mrz, Dent Theselitine, Van- Yer Vries’ dnd Jolin Hunt—Topeka Capital « 3 — a —— i \Sreawte. hte? + Wo offer Orie Hundred Dollars Reward for fase ot Catary shit,eansot be cured by Yinifecaquri Cust t Cave ane REREE # Cooled, 0° { Wo, ithe undersigned; heve“known'¥: J. “Chandy forthe last 16 yeuts/and belfevo hin ‘perfectly honorable;te ail business. transse- ‘tons ‘and Ananclally-able.to carry qutrany pbligations made by their drm, ae {fast & wear, Waalpsalo, Dragetsts, 7%. eu 180 DG ac PS ie s Wixom’, Kimuas “Latians, Wholtsale +, Deagtists; Toledo, On Wall's Catarrh Oureis taten fnternally,act- ‘lag directly upon the blood and taucoussaz- tunes of the oystern, # Testimoniels sant {roe ; +6; 766. per bottle. Sold by all Drageists, Pakocdtal’s Bailly Pile tor\canstipation, ¥, « Robeeh cingce 2 ead; | ¥ (ASD Tedch faWyek Liedn Ptety slett ia ae bb fail A aoe Bre hoa tes Hl Ee RMD le Be Bs ee Kis: eae (ts, ena terer; pelpotescher |.may, vbr iallede tskescoprameontan el soeulenting pity for, -amlapabe: amon SS) peertaccr cotter arta BRUM Gee dedi soa ta ist Guecgp ul agers Lis er ahs <i Meew,’ he ee Re OS ee A eee iY Ree a ees 52 Rae ae a: Perens on 1 SEE Se BRU RS, es PS ay f - pe ARH See 3 pees Beatie ees Se eee ph ce Pk Eve ae. ae Nee erga fn ea ie pasa xs Fe a5 Ba ae 4 bere CaaS PY poi hea net, <9. Rae et Spt Pe pee yh Blea itd <. PS er ees Me a, | OR i he ae Sot. Oa aay 83 toy aS NET egy ln © aha bs | MS of aes & woe Sa 09: ly" eS ea eS s@ al ras Qin, "3" Beas om el s el eee Sse ¥ 9 it : a ot : ye —_ ee ® F te Yt 2 S, PT gd 4 a CC tae P “ i is ) pa 7. * ie ie Ze Ss nag? i creases caters ie a peal on F vb 3 ta BRN aa a Of eee re ' Ns Ys 7 Se ay wow Peete XS Ne af . ; ’ GBS :| Miss’ Rose Peterson,- Secretary att Parkdalé Tennis Club; Chicago, from-nex-* perience: advises all -young girls who have pains-and sickness'peculiar to. their sex;,td,usé Lydi Es Pinkham’s Vegetable Compotinds« Hoir “inany beautital young gitla develop into wors, listless abd hopeless women aimply because sufficient atténtion”has rot bein‘ paid to'thelr Physicil 'dévelopinent. Nojvoman is exemzptyfrom physiedl, * wréaknets ant perioiiic pain; and yourig girls just. budding into oman- '* hood should be carefully gaided physidally.ns woll as morally: sypeiai ° * 4400 knowof any young Iiidy:who is sick, and noeds motherly adyice,.ask her to write to'Mis: Pinkham at'Iynn} Mass:; qo wilt, givé her advice free, from a souive of Bnowlelige whi o- equalle COND ETT, | nof hesitate abgut,stating details camalled ‘siting Bre abont, and which are essential £08.” # fall'understanding.of the case. . . we Zp Miss Hannah E.Mershon, Collifigé Pe wood, N. Ji, says't Cities 7” = z MS. - “I thought I would: write, arid.tell* you. ry enue ane LOE aitioard fel ls ca Serene ee YS SB iteastcnstion wad ieee lice: PF “1 tried aybottla of ‘your Vegetanlé Com i = §, pound and began to feel better sight away. Tebn. ° ai Urine ies"ase, andam now well and. strane, and Frye c/ eevsvine your znpdiciny dd for m2, ne Ee f Nes x How Tirs. Pinkham, Helped; so are). Fannie Kumpe:? 9 j.. . me . “Dean Ms, Ponta: —L teal {forme 8 2 ‘write and tell you of the benefit Lhave derived trom your advirs antl the nss‘of Lpdia 1. Pinkham’ Vegetable Compound. ‘The Pains tn.goy bagkjand womb-haverall loft me, and Joy menstroal frou ig 96 "am very-thankful for,the good: ou. gave ‘me,'and 1" shall recomiend your medias to ‘il ho eutfer from fetnale weatksess 7" Aliss Banoviz Kuarr, 1928 Chester St, Littld Roth; Ark/(Dec- 1651900): * Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. ;will eure’ Miiy’ . syornan fn the land who' suffers from womb, troubles, inflaminas”*, tion:df the dvaries, Jddney troubles, nervous excitability, mezyoua, 7 prostration, and all forms.of woman's special ills. oy S5OD DSS a oe Zydia E, Pipkhiam Med CoS Tenn, Mase, ~ “ALMOST INSULTED... x fe 8s a _Eniietie "tat me tut a6] MALSBY. & CO. a ol : 3 Oe tee SAGs Sed bonded scoundrel | if Sout Fordyih hy alante O22, proposition as you— Ba vise Hawkins—what? g ~ RR Dawhlns—Erer, saw, Ss BQ. 2! i I ees At5S-05) WSS re 8 ‘ereamars.: £23, © (er sihot ee ROSY P oe A Prine é a Pat Nn er cet Ge. _CORN-BIELDS: fk @) ARE GOLD FIELDS “@, (2 to the farmer who under (AY Gh, sands, how to feed bis YT) © ' crops. Fertijizers fot Com EP Past jcontaid at least, (f i. Rercentactual ~~ "| Rissa tC 3 i: YPotash © Gaetere iol @ selwhy Pamaals arpecessary A torplagelife as sud-end rainy | sept Free) ff you cok. Write. We ‘) todayo So “yy 1S oemmaceas wonxs, |” Hf {D. Néw Yore—93 Nescan'Strectioe ee esas | o QP wows so a : ; ia ZEN , ot oe q Beshin. tat vil ‘Ganits{Planlors, dnd Diotcibalics, *- aR avanainehrbenn ” ~ “ipiempactenaetnit ‘gatriedscos . Tatog, 08 PP Neen Cee NOBLES: Pa aan omR | esti Tala ncear Dee War eR aT TO ALOR Oo MEAUAGHE.. etalon dedisbetcl ley stalker kad ben enero fe tReet = gta hadorns eee tetas forest triers adlsrooe ou Saat ee btens tied Puceene be tena “iiate oti you eoomend ics dew aye sien seus, ny + Best for rs FEOF re bowels as Be ~*~! a a SOVOCOUECAD * Ze esate - ty ca a pe aan “NSS re ere I “prngsh nlc leh eal s gi” rahe Rin ee ae Reg Sepa tenets Dae PORN __ Sterling Remedy Gos £1 aan AMAL SALE, TEW MILLE bie 2 ee Pen bones: ° B Rivest’, A F- fi SVs gee! ? Fest chtube one fai, Barercbees oF secon ss on RE tl See ence Magma a hes" sa a Gee a ae Ferrers ty 5 ape point dnvips aera Rage ss pas ee eg ASAT