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The Clinton New Era, 1896-01-17, Page 4
uarr 17, t89d TOPICS 4F A WEEK " Geprew w ...wile a 'I'RE 4 0 >gnoa, A BR * �» tlgeat at Terre klauter Ind., httR �,lt' d1Rltlil+eersd. ;�vw'+i. thal,�uid dtlltare � >ir+eln . trite bewereeat Weentr in *INV 'Mord Saw irk attune., A dude in Philadelphia wap turuoit q1,1 1 of the club to which he belonged because by d Ms teller's' mills twa tlaYd' War XcI he gat. the tllothee, , Vienne Parsing killed a man Iu Wr A foie Ki lzii le to bo :lighted i) ?. o1 iit,ltlor . 1zi4tgh flaunty, liter , Oa other' day', and iiTdli�ilAmit.N. WalkerteD iiittlts ani eleetelaxaltwit '. ,Dnridae bee It etheeping-4ough, 91040F « ter. -Love • 1)1v1110 Stale a wtte0;t.1, .of •kiulll mono.. I'tl Ipitio `tii41' 9r Q 'a�.Aiosoot 1 ' hi Foote 2'ote (O11Rtyr ! , 11i114. �. Arke0440;1nrnter.hs hound that Uxbridge Ap1i#pX44 of it.. gtreet getter z ;Illi .•Olt.toh hie tail In hie teeth and sod. amen, doYVn at hill faster then buy rather. hound Aintitler geedlgaa welt iggtbeun truck In the I ok n. run, ^, Rif Pelee iulaiid: , ":• A;•'doimatoh from Sagina , MtOb.;. earl .A fogy eenapittaiy fate be •._•2••1 at wo•den}and for Men In the lumber eroodn .190Pda b9:13. 1919r ee4 wages veep from ► 'I t� i4 1 W ER moot in yinO+ " X . Jl A\ ,11 raider, and the latest reports trout Dee'- *OQ A�ii•iTY O if401AM$- lw are yuoirie in tons. Oche Huy* 11%trntrire td, the .atn,ricatt i111eP wise "tout of x?i glair goatee moo �'14*re�►iMiege ertslt sR4ate l!met all / linilnder, 1e'i10 went a mfei*Z xer ,t►wQa . T4,1"1 ilal"I'144 ►e ibroor11tI�N Res tivtr 1"11.le Tless. tri tba 7 SW nder+aulttve sit. Jew 'roti, 1ndi 4 t�anttary whleill reality t aeaw4l wv1+MaMto eacyeiitla� wee berg, See under arrest far r uomu+eralhl Ula, and oouimuwo}edly 1t • �lr �V`iltiia has Net it►,«rri"wd from tee i�lir�lana, Ara of a seolal 1iAtur+►, and fond T 9' 'win iia oLta the; Otti+v'm i41610-0014130 hitt orlrh atiA1a :-801 ndary ISSg^ t*oUs : With Brazil. file CauadlAg$09. >i18 to 4 a morAth, X.4e ion, ,7ailq, 13, --There 'kms been a • Mho . rstiitfol W O. s :.xi'r )1ss establish.. dearth of ni' rid to-.ciuy re diad the ilii lit scalp kitolherl. d We' . 'Virginia man is se petgllarly eitua+tio>l In Bouth Attlee. and Eng- attooted b riding on a train that helot etacllltvllla 'r+tilll ham 4111t6thltr building t4 ob In hifnaeir to a seat to tsreven* hIA 1axis's ral€ttivno elsewhere, 'but it eau tie boo? ;?text seallOnk , . .. urnping out of Cha ear Windoyif,' said that the outlook In general is bet. ,P4latiee were plokcd:O.n ^Christmas day, A, Minnesota girl of 15 eandlattngulah ' ter now than it has been Per +some limo t'iu", Guelph g Q14'• no color, evairythtng being white to. hen, palet, The excitement has almost nom- Tw•enty.si;t familleR. are epeliding the sand shell' Compelled to wear dark glasses pletely died away, but the naval pre- w►ntera1t Island Pork, to protect icor eyes from the glees. • pnr+attons of the Government are pro - tet ,;fi oliitiatvvood twenty steamers are The servants in a eohool for girls In eeoding apnea, and. so far as 1s known ai lOP fee the .winter. Conneotiout, while Cleaning up the room tp the public, have almost been com- .iA1Cps11tsa7n , oapitallsta want to buy the after the echos' closed, disoavered 878 pDeted. Nothing has yet boon learned Iildilsok h144,filantieal, wads of chewing gum stuck about in vara- e OUB plates, 4g'�!►'�itllj� e�,ported from abort Otta- ;'W to Weeterit Ontario. Warsaw has a peouliarly named couple i9 • rlhoti,'ai'e reported to be Steepest and who will marry shortly. The prow tlitifal north of Quebeo, peative groom's name is Woodburn, while eDfraW Will soon vote on the question that of the bride to Tinder. It makes a good Combination for cold weather. Wete7rwOrks and sewerage. Ian Maclaren, the Sootoh novelist who ,Hlupken 'clubs are beooniing numerous has sprung into sudden fame, will leave genet, towns and villagea hie church in Liverpool, England, next ,T ia'11 trarles nI Canada last year yield- fall, and Como to this country to give rem than those of France. readings under the management of Major .tl' • $amilton man lost $10,000 by the Pond. no In Stooks at New. York. Baron Nils Posse, who recently died in At public auction the other day Brant- Heaton, introduoed the Ling system of aid market fens brought $1, 460. gymnastics into this country some ten fihq "` Kingston convicts had a 1,200 years ago. The King of Sweden and Quzul,ppldding op Christmas day. Norway ennobled him in recognition of his eminence as a teacher of physical oul- Willie .Green, aged 16, just died at tun 0ii,.1Q,11e, g. of otgarette smoking. Four hundred horses have been killed or. Little, London, gave 100 Christ- during the .fall and early winter On one urkoys to corporation laborers, range near Pyramid wake, Nevada, and e tale works are to be established in but t2 was realized on eaoh animal. The o;'N.S., by some Kingston capital- hide mane and tail sold for that amount, and the carcase was valueless. But even 9;German press of Detroit is red-hot at this Pelee it was cheaper to kill the aD1- ar ;between Great Britain and Ger- mels than keep them. Y M. Livingstone (Dem,. Ga.) introduced Ottawa offers the Westinghouse Brake In the House of Representatives a resoln- }In'pany free' site and water to locate tion palling upon the President to .in - are vostigate the report that Great Britain The Elie des Chaleu4e railway is to be had advanced her outposts on the Venez- d to satisfy workingmen's claims for man - n' frontier, and if it were true to de - 0'900 . mend their withdrawal to the lines on- . pied on Deo. 17, 1895. a6 to the destination of the flying squadron, although much oonjectur•e Is Indulged In ae to where its field of duty will be. The fact that Count Von'Hatz- foldt, the German Ambassador, went from London to -day to mate a teen to Brighton, is pretty strong evidence that there has been no further tension in the Anglo -German relatione. The ebullition of popular feeling against Germany caused by Emperor Wil- liam's attitude towards the Teansvaal was altogether too violent to last long, and there ate now very few evidences of any great desire to open active hos- tilities against Germany. It may be stated that the euggestlon made to- day by The Manchester Guardian that the preparations now under way are intended to support a new British pol- icy anent Armenia contains some germ of truth, but doubters ask why it was neoesetery to make all these naval pre- parationt against Turkey when one of the etxrongest fleets the world has ever seen was lying at anohor within easy d1t tance of the Golden Horn. So far as the Transvaal is concern- ed all serious trouble in that direction is endoubted'ly ended. As stated in these despatches yesterday the rank and file of Dr. Jaineson's expedition has started for the Natal boundary, and the release of the officers of the expedition is expected shortly. Every effort will be made to protect the mem- bers of the Rand Reform Comrnittee who :,ave been pierced under arrest, in- cluding the Americans. It Is certain that a bitter fight win be made against allowing the Boer Government to con- ttawa capitalists have bought a . There aro now 970,524 persons on the fisoate their property for their alleged tlmblgo property near Calabogie for pension rolls. Of those 8,828 are widows offence. The statement of ex -Prime Mi Ip�ppp, ni st er Rh od es at Kimberley yes - and 21 survivingsoldiers of the war of •':Betftn'a old town park is now balled 1812, 8,911 are widows and 8,012 are terday that his political career was "WOodeide Park" and the new one "Vie- survivors of the Indian wars, 7 688 are just opening and that he hoped to live iaPark," widows and 12,686 are survivors of the long enough to do much good for South Africa again arouses the idea that the '•';During, November the Galt and Preston Mexican war. During the past year 89,- ; objective point of his ambition is the keailway carried 15,000 passengers and 620 186 names were added to the pension rolls establishment of a South African re- -testa of freight. and 42,411 were dropped. • , public that will include all the territory `Ottawa will vote on the establishment • Franz Bendier, a farmer, shot and south of the Zambesi River, including Tr 'ota public library. A $,70,000 house is killed his wife Friday night at Viroqua, State nor ol and the ut of office he wields e vast ree •offered as a free gift. Wis. Boudler made no defence of his influence, and his doings in the future Mies Lizzie Cowan, of Wroxeter,reoont- action further than to say that he die not will be watched with even greater in- ly made some Honiton lace whioh was intend to kill her. He either committed terest than in the past. Little reliance bought by Queen Victoria. subside or was lynched by Ms family or can be placed in many of the news - neighbors Arriving at his house to paper despatches published here pur- The death rate in the city of Ottawa for arrest Boulder, the sheriff found the mur porting to explain the attitude of the 1825 was 20.82 per thousand, compared derer suspended by a rope In his woodshed powers toward Great Britain. The With 21.66 for the year previous. continental nations may not be friend - The iii St.Lawronoe has frozen over During the past week these two interest- ly to this country, but it Ls Nought at. CII all This hes been delayedto a ing decisions have beon rendered by the that any one of them would hesitate besets of this country: Attorney-beneral for a long while before striktng a blow leterdate than ever before known. Childs, of Minnesota, has held that the at England. • the new buildings at Albert College, opening of ubilo schools with the Lord's London, Jan. 18.—A despatch from p g p poqutatlon to claim common civil 'Pharr aael.e Ateatapf t e Onlehr Atxwrt. ; p1I1--1 ti irielidly vislie,, the etiquette of 1 wife at Whir* Now* we did nus Anil Shall fge eeted is J. el, Corgi, f ba whtitb would make a chapter sof 1%Mlt r the right whale so Valuable for its.whaie- ttrr Notre' Maw a 1.044etlt i+f U$ U1uah Attentfop I$ divan to the eider ' bone. The Antartttle ww, fltted out for SalrannetIerit. Ii�e hit U leadii - Welt:, of tear goof; while 1u the dawn of travel, ' i)8 hunt u1 that parlieular kind of whaia4 *Von there„ .ant es vary *ashlar, liar- { but wheil arrived witiodn a ++bort elate ee, , netertheleee 1 here no donbi that ehli wri , =too, wiio iu ati�o. 1144". 4411"14 ° 91 tiX1e1>k d4etigatlen a halt is called, thin oouislirrelai result of the expedition wean Rand O Ii tbt}41i Y. t +met i pantie» aro raileved df then' burdenp,, ahey der m a0 able nr bi we waR'ki l ohlaf rougin'6gR 4%04, , 1tatltnwau t1ai11; . rawhindde �o s MIs emigke �s Saud gala , IOIl . o p beer stn crf , wii a oil' . n . use so 11g>lli4 1 do nuto ble an ' uieane uuuslds r tkl bili R - e e . � o1 slur wail gttvlilti Met with. the. Anse • tht�►9 ' Axlawri'+1QAxae . Is 'Ehreateriiad• ,t'J,'ltw; .t!►.a'y4r#nr,lu�en, taelat+t# >h► hit OW n Sl oo ured , o 0 e k ,. whale In :tbusu Haas ap aouoluaiyi r qo , fiecla.titlati,,, 1i�1'.''tiQ tsae ¢ beams f glita f seinen:, deo. seem �tit ' the United ;uritis Government I iVVN for tbelr anfnaetun.;ilud+ride 417 in -their beta.IXieteneer'in the hey' Ali 1, OO * sno+ikt- u:rrver PQrrAtt tho Haar -*gory er' ; . &dranoe, A iaurMririe party 1e not ►n he 1201}x; • 'lie. Anterotic fetter t lis AIM mem' to execute title thaa'eat0 Indian's lipb of amu9emgiltiif; hs. takes htg . whalti 00.13lipbell: ,}land i , witiiier' no aa1►bt that Vtr.".11itxI octet wind moo,uilswirea but riot so tritlltl4.: 'tivae; the boati fastened to #v0.-01' iii a, other Americana belonged to the" ....tho l toren Committee, wihich - was a body The young men retnru with Messageie ilia ; `a QwhiQlti Q e ere (II ,,elle W eitug fot4ned in a 'tittle of elnergencY that weluamtl i sometimes ineniberq ' of the - w, •10 m i t� net aeen1 nieht►b t was sufficiently aertoua. to jue'tity the family t0 be visited oom9 with thein. pili+ ?Tow, wvhalae 11u +out% 10; tbitt bay', i L pr ,- ialn 'Ulf/tandem in • setts�• ae they did. soxiaily' to conduct the arid. ' xilatarisa j,AndE where 1<tosq RRw tb0 Uam+mond s atrrast: was not brought I Meanwhile, all have been busy pilules the eu1?imtr, and return, north • in ;the to the attention of the State Impart- ing; brushing and braiding their looks, winter. �t •would Nein lhoredib1s thala meat :t> (It �sr Mr. Mwnygti b by I painting thvlr faces; and donning thele man of . SI; Janheo Bore's standing, sun.. til the of Hammond in this otter. VII- fest gear, the wide prgirie their dreMirtg Porto$ ae hp was by able poliantistawd,lgk 01 the is officially reported Mr. I r " erianeod, wbeaers, Olney Will of probably make liner ape- room, their mirror each others Slee, p s#ao111d hitvo ndNde le , cine repr eentejons as to the - Hair. -When the visiting party is attain en roatee, gratve error when Cao said that thio val'aa- mond case. Mr. Q1ne'y'p despatch to there is not a man or woman who 1, not able whale was to be found in, laRtte nua1� Arnbeeet.dor Bayard is considered as gorgeous with color and the litter tie bees in those Southern lotitades. significant in ..'hewing that despite the shell or feather finery. Even the chilli - The difference In the appalarano. of tiM reeme'ivhnh strained feeling' caused •hv i ren have daubs of fresh paint on thele blue whale, as we found It thorn, and bile bi~r, Olney note and the Preeldenteg mesesge on the -Monroe doctrine the relations between Great t3ritain and the Butted Staltes are cordial. It is Improbable that oonside�rabie benett in bringing about a. speedy settlement of the Venezuelan boundary question may result through Mr. Oiney'e instruotlore plump little cheeks, while the dudes are right whale, in the method 01epoutiiole, 10 wonderful to behold, resplendent in seek- so atrlking that even the moat casual et • lakes, cm broldered leggings, and shirts, server could not easily be dewaived. Yew' and with ornaments innumerable braid- possibly, had we penetrated farther roll ed into their soalp-looks. The visit over, the large open bay discovered by Rose in. the Indians go batok to their homes pleas- the vicinity of the volcano petite 1�rebug ed and contented, happy if they find, as and 4.error, we too would have found the; to the Ambassador. C1et+ta4rtiy it is the may not always be the ogee, that the right whale in great numbers. We sad',,; Bret opportunity this Government has i enemy have not been at work in their very -many blue whales, but had not that had of showing tts feelings towards I abeenoe.—" Tribal Life Among the Qma- appliances to take them. +treat Britain since the Venezuelan has," byAlice 0. Fletcher, in she Janis- As I remarked at the, International massa, to was sent to Congress, and •tGeographtoel Congress, a found few may be•that the Admin4stretion was ac- wry Century. twined In directing Mr. Bayard to se- seals. They,increased, hq ever, In nun{• oure the good offices of the Brdtis'h of - ber us we worked eastw rd, and seemed Petals by a desire to show the British afraid of the land. All f the seals that HOW TO CANDLE EG08. Government and people that the United States Governm,en't is not hostile to Great Britain in its intentions and will take all proper means to avoid possible misunderstandtngs. This afternoon Secretary Olney received a cablegram from Mr. Bayard saying that Colonial Secretary Choanberlain gave assurances that he had instructed her Majesty's High Commissioner, Sir Hercules Ro bineen, to extend the same protection In behalf of John Hays Hammond and anv other Amerioan citizen involved in charges of rebellion In the '1' 'anevaal as in the interest of British h subjects under like circumstances. Paris, Jan. 13.—The Temps publishes an In'tervie'w with Junkheer Beelaerts Veto Blenian, Minister of the South Afriean Republic to France and Ger- many. The Minister declares that the Tr nsva.al fully accepts the convention of 1884, and acne not dream of denounc- ing it, but it does not contain a word about British suzerainty. It only em- powers Great Britain to veto any treaty the Transvaal may conclude if in the opinion of the British Govern- ment the treaty damages British in- terests. The Transvaal wholly adheres to this He denies that he has had an interview wit's M. Berthelot,the French Foreign Minister, with a view to ne- getlating the holding of an interna- tional conference on the affairs : the Transvaal or on any other subject of unusual irmportance. New York, Jan. 13. The World prints the following despatch from the Trans- vaal —The position is that within the Transvaal there are 70,000 newcomers and an (Ad population of 14,000. With the development of the gold industry to a fuller extent the newcomers will amount to 600,000 in five years; eventu- ally to a mililon, probably more. From time to time the position will be upset by the attempts of the new Belleville, were formally transferred to Prayer is in violation of the constitution of the Board of Managers on Friday. that state, and Judge Barnard, of this `-Toronto bank clearing returns for the Cate, ' as set aside as void a will be• ;past week were $10,136,918—the largest gneath: money • for masses to be said in the history of the local blearing house. for the sun, of the testator. C. W. Bunting, managing director of FOREIGN. *he Mail and Empire, died at his real- The latest reports from China say that -lance, 25 Queen's Park, Toronto, on Tues- Li Hong Chang, who is living in retire - day morning in his, 69th year. ment in Pekin, is rapidly failing in health. The dead body of Wm. Cole, sr., of A despatch from St. Petersburg says ' Strabane, Ont., was found in his house in that there is no doubt that Russian opin- tbat village. The man was nearly eighty !on is against Emperor Williain'e action. years of age,and had lived alone for a The citizens of Havana are greatly ong time. afraid that the insurgents will destroy the At a general meeting of the share- waterworks, which are situated about holders of .thientanque do Peuple held five miles from the city. , Friday In Montreal, it was decided that The National Zeitung, of Berlin, says -the bank's affairs should be put into that no correspondence in the nature of a voluntary liquidation. diplomatic or state paper has passed be- - Mr. J. A. Girard. a widely -known in- tween the Queen and Emperor William. d urance agent and appraiser of Montreal, News has been received In Rome that swallowed parse green on Thursday theItalians in Abyssinia h defeated 4. early Saturday , morning. An tit Emperorin wroath Africa • The Shrans are said to have lost heavily. London Jan. 13. --The Poet this mom- {, ., It is stated that Dr. Jameson's force, ' Transvaal, The Times says —'Tharp Rhodes, ex -Prime Minister of Cape The house of a resident of St. Pierre, on its way to Johannesberg, marohed one is far too great a disposition in same I Colony, in which he declared that Eng - , Pierre Letoarnean, caught hundred and sixty miles In ninety hours, I quarters to assume that the Transvaal I land should have Amerioan sympathy e Suring bis absence in the • woods. never halting more than two hours at a difficulty is ended. It can only be tru- in the trouble in the Transvaal. In its Medians Letourneau, aged about 50, was time. j ly said that the immediate danger of issue to -morrow the paper will attack Unit - getable to make her •escape in time and The Westminster Gazette says thin if its bloodshed tea been averted. But all Mr. Rhodes for appealing to the Unit - isle In the flames. the evils and terrors which made a die- ed 9tatee. It will say that if President pinformation is oorreot the Marquis of turbance in the Transvaal, with or CleveOand oonedders that the rights of 1A resolution of Sympathy with the Salisbury's desire to be better friends without Dr. Jameson, merely a quer- Americans have been infringed he Armenians, and praying the British Gov- with France has already brought forth tion 0f time, still remaih unsettled." knows how to vindicate them. The enrgeft.. to take steps to arrest the law- fruit. New York, Jan- 13.—A special cable United States oerteinly does not re- leetness whish is desolating their country, It is reported in Portsmouth that a ' despatch to The Sun from London says: quire the assistance of Mr. Rhodes. efi paired at a palati meeting in- the One of the great factors in the Euro- ' The same may be said of Great Brite second special squadron of warsbips, con- peen crisis which must Ree reckoned , alis, but it first must be made clear Central Methodist church, Woodstock. slating of fast bruisers, has been told off, ' with is the neew-born spirit among the that the British subjects helve not put While a young mechanic in Brantford, and will be in readiness for commission ' English peeple- It Is patriotism of that themselves out of court by their notion. Ont., named Harrison, was taking down at a moment's notice. ; kind of Intensity which makes war. It That Mr. Rhodes has much to answer Nine survivors of the brew of the wreck- i compels the respect and admiration for apart from the question et Dr. a gun from 6 shelf in the house Monday,even of England's enemies, but it is Jam'eson's raid and the Uitlandere it went off, the contents lodging in the ed steamer Ealing arrived at Canso. , full of danger. Its manifestations are must be admitted. He must eotplain bead of his mother, who was reading a Their sufferings were dreadful, and nine on every hand. It finds Spontaneous why his police force at Mafeking was :e piper oontaining a description of the New- others who started in the boat died before expression wherever people congregate I -ready for active aerv'lce the moment a -port tragedy land was reached. - —4n churches, in theatres, at banquets, letter from eena.nneeeerg came to bane. A militia order has been issued an- It is understood that the Imperial Cab in the press, everywhere. In several and also why he did not inform Gov'er- 'iinoing the retirement from the aotive p London churches yesterday the nation- nor Robineon, or if he did inform hire, /'inet Council of Saturday considered the al anthem wan sung with more than re- why the latter did not communicate !m- ,feroe of COL Walker Powell adjutant t1 t e establishing sir t d1 1 ll P It i the English cut; Portsmouthto The Pall Mall Graeette rights,which eventually they certainly says that the channel squadron is now must get. Statesmanship should give ready for sea. The vessels compristag them some rights now, as the present the squadron have provisions an board state is im'posetble for the newcomers, sufficient to last six months. t the ships end who own more than half the soil of will assemble at Portsmouth at end the Transvaal, anti nine -tenths of the 0f the week to receive final orders. Therwealth of the country- The new males shipsnearly of the new flying squadron are outnunu�ber the old five to one, and are nearly ready for sea. A large force of , corrvposed largely of Americans, in - men worked upon them all day yea- 1 eluding the principal rnine,managers. terday (Sunday) fitting them out, and England Is the only great power lei work is almost complete. It Is not yet , South Africa. She is now threatened known when the squadron will sail or witb German interference, which she what le its destination. The Manchester Guardian says :— is 'beefed to resent and resist. In this "Emperor William's message came at she should ,have America's sympathy. Just the right time to give the Mole- Blood is thicker than water. Amerf- ters an excuse for making preparationa cans above all nations insist on civil really intended to back their new policy, rights in one's Ind strias here at the which will end the Armenian horrors Cape- In the Transvaal all my man - and bring the Sultan to his senses. The aro Americans. And yet we latest rumor points to a land Invasion have the spectacle of the two great by the Russians and a joint naval de- monstration at Constantinople by Great almost on the verge of war about some Britain and France." The Guardian in- barren land in South America, whereas • tlmates that the new flying squadron is working to perfect hart* he peace a ns have more likely to go to Constantinople the world would be d _ night, from the effeote of whioh he died than to Delagoa Bay or any other ed) C. J. Rhodes. Menelek's forces at Nakaleh. point bill be held Concerning the situation in the ing publethee a despatch sent by Cecil question o r a g eo diplo- giouo fervor. o c- mediately with London. With these Gineral of the Militia, with a retiring al- matio relations with Venezuela, but no tom for the orchestra to play a few facts awaiting explanation The Poat lowanee, and the rank of colonel on the definite oonolusion was reached. bars of "God Save the Queen" as the says it does not see any justtfioatiOn retired list: The order contained a high The movement in favor of arbitration audience le leaving the theatre. New i for Mr. Rhodes' extraordinary appeal anile tatental tribute to his personal and in the Venezuelan question with Cho everybody remains and sings the whole to the Americans. The Daily News will a!idl character. United States Is increasing to London. anthem with pent upenthusiasm. t nay that Mr Rhodes' Ingenuous argu- is Thera was a wonderful scene at Daly's .pt in behalf . of concessions to the UNITED BTATEs. The feeling is in favor of establishing a Theatre on Saturday night, when Mr. Uitlandere proves too much. On filo permanent Court of Arbitration. Hayden Coffin sang a new patriotic same ©towing it would justify Great at Baytleti preacher in Georgia refuses The Porte has decided to prohibit the ballad. The lines are spirited, begin- Britain in annexing the Transvaal with to. baptise converts except In running distribution among the destitute Armen- sing 'England, to arms, to arms, Cha all the consequences that such wtoked Water. need is high," and the chorus bon- filibustering would entail. ▪ A 'branch of the State Anti -Saloon Lane of the funds bo11e0ted fa foreign eludes, "England for her own, my a tvlll be formed in Cincinnati early countries for their benefit, and says that boys, it's rule Britannia Still." There i London, Jan. 18.—Count Von Hatz- .iesg „ the alleviation of their distress is the have, been come surprising demongtra- ' feldt, German Ambassador to Great in Sinewy.. • function of the Turkish Government, tions of popular feeling by this -uncle- Britain, has gone to Brighton, and his Pearl Herein, the Wtlkeebarre girl who president Kruger, of the Transvaal, monstrative people of late, but never i departure from London Is taken as a bee been,eleep since Nov. 28, died with- has re lied to Seorot Chamborlaln, anything like the toad enthusiasm of sign that the Anglo -German situation otlti,e *Wakening, p ' that crowded house. At the last, when is becoming more calm. g thanking the Queen for her kind oxpros- the ptay was finished and the drehbstra A despatch to The Times denies the 'oteph lir Ingalls, of Bridgeton. Me., tions, and renewing his promise to hand sounded tlhe familiar strains', 'the whole truth of the report that the deposition le :' 9 yeetrs of ago and was shaved for the over Dr. Jameson and the other prisoners company came upon the otage, and the of Dr. Jameson from the Office of Ad- llrbt titne last Week. to the British Government for punish- pit, gallery and stalls rose up and at- ministration of the South Africa Ok m- li`. Dirge - btgvb Werke h,e been. shut lrnent y', tempted to sing "God Save the Queen." patty was made upon the recomtnenda- f, Sueb scenes as this are more pregnaxit tion of the eompan rtlevrri throwing over fO0 mon out of The United Press correspondent at of meaning than flying squadrons or Praetorla, Join. 12. -•'-Among the per - Work, . at C4ineve, N. Y,' Honolulu, writing ander date of January messages of Prealdent© and Emperors. sons arrested at Johanneeberg are J. S. People Int' Madleon County, Ky., • who 2: Bays that on Now Year a morning the I should fait to record the meet eignifi- ' Curtis, an American engineer,'anti soy - eight remaining pot/nth/al lnI corers, Gull- cant feature of English public ecntl- I oral other Americana, .wlioee names have married ,Stair he sh• rif .'• - led to be ltioe, Ward and Bowwles, With Wileos and ° ment at the present moment if I did are not given bis the deopatchee from b the hortfP there., inN><'rled �� 1 � '' Wise and throb natives, wore released not add that hatred or dislike of ,A.rrl- t eyeral hordes have died through eat- +ram priers, erica meths to 'have no pate in the Hamburg, Jan. 12.•• -Tufa Etam•'burf' e i a ere,. nd nt b1 s'hels e co 0 t t. Of authenticIttt• ech pu t tura� z glass,. Which Was placed patriotic rte to ou po er! td as ! tilt' '1r , In 1 1) pulverized stet - in i' s d a m eel n t i3 cif Seiler of me, Norman, the there l little. Onfl grave cord -official eirp tot # B in tketr grain at Masdiltoa, 4, tui rix ,ru rimer l a g'ra "' iljceial cominiaRlonor of ilio i�onelori Dally rumor: is ,rilifeulatirig In the . emelt.. Ina' that trio ccndltidn that the Trarie•� I to an Sac naive Bleary' to swear• Ord. dl lbinatt' Cirele, ACrordin '. to this -Vaal Goirernxnent wl&hee to' impose for t l i.lttrtltintJ ,set "aru5illt,tl,tlfl, lg>.;ti�ictt. Crbt't P the sixaets of Red Ettaik,N.J ,The ++fibber t,i' : °l i 'ai c 1a ala report Great Britain early lnat•week: the Invasion et its territory terthe'pej+- llr ill a p vii b� � t r rn Ct ?tiv+ • ..0,41;4 , , E • *:,i+r . ,,• t. uiie3' . • 19:311 :', for abet -hint:; Us Sabi trnops through•,ling. The abolition of X3rltieeli Sheet lny A flaatik Vi Z'011na ittoel+•� oalrnb be > t 1"" , t ' i'1 n '1 f ' h '1" tit ` to >deniatitled cin• n -polo frdxti • Il tfliatiy' Trent; pt An indetialllty 02 £I,f100;000' oder- ' *fine nI 10 e"nta for oath blah> i tt ger tl 1"q, r 1, t +•,, • i , , ru, , u . Irortti,' own IosetAsr-lis-laW reotntly, Thai is b tl: r iiia.: , ' l ..f , ,,;su•,i, leer's} , stye elft Li sew the "rife of hIr krtilh atdldilM ari.if lti t . 0•1 +• i ° *thin y ' i,r the r.. ; uta ttirritoi'y into the Tient. ter' 50 not an lentis, fo the rknsva Vattit krd the t1ernittn Amhamatitlr holy • ham hot reetignl%r.21 tat 1iusterallity notified 1...)rd $alishurv' of the refs Sal elm* 1P4. The &Helped ttif'rni,nd for•the of the Germain (#overienent tc9 nota sly. abolition of rrialalld'a righbr al. Deis. ''There le no adequate authority for thle goat Ytay is untrue, It Requires Considerable Practice to Eriool in This Operation. Have a room as dark us you can or use a box 12 by la inches in size painted bleak inside. Stand on its end and open one side 8 inches from the bottom. All above 8 inches closed, set box with this open side towards you and set the light In it, Nail a piece to bottom, under front edge, with the top of box back, this will enable you to see better. This box oan be need in any plane, though It Is better in a dark place. Take such light as you have; the best oandlers use common Dandles. Take two or three eggs in left hand and the eggs you oandle in right hand, and hold sideways between you and the light, as close to the light as you oan, and let 11 rub against one of the eggs in left hand; some are quite partloular about this, as the eggs. reflect the light through .each other; turn the egg round lentil you are satisfied you have tested it. Take a strict- ly fresh egg as a standard to judge by. If a place like the vacuum in a mason's spirit level appears on the upper side as you turn the egg, it is not strictly fresh; though if this vacuum 1s small and the egg is all right otherwise it may be oompara- tively fresh, A dark or blank spot in- dicates a poor egg: the white of stale eggs also looks thin and watery. Remember dark -shelled eggs are thinker shelled and do not candle as easily as white ones. You oan only learn by breaking auspioi- one ones, and it requires much practice to expel.—Charles W. McQueen, in Farm and Home. Where Sound Travels. Eighteen miles is the longest distance on record at wbioh a man's voice has been heard. This occurred in the grand canyon of the Colorado, where one man shouting the name of Bob. at one end, his voice was plainly heard at the other end, which was eighteen miles away. Lieut, Foster, on Peary's third Arctic expedi- tion, found that be could converse with a man across the harbor of Port Powen, a distance of 6,696 feet, or about one mile and a quarter; and Sir John Franklin said that be had conversed with ease at a distance of more than a mile. Dr. Young records that at Gib - /altar the human voice tae been hear nc at a diatoe of ten miles. Sound Ii remarkable foroe in water. ColladoD by experiments made in the Lake Geneva, estimated that a bell submerg- ed in the sea might ba heard at a dis- tance of more than sixty miles. Frank- lin says that be heard the striking to- gether of two stones in the water half a mile away. Over water or a surface of ion sound is propagated with great clearness and strength. Dr Hutton re- lates that on a quiet part of the Thames, near Chelsea, be could hear a person read distinctly at a distance of 140 feet, while away from the water the same could not be beard. Persons in a balloon cin bear vans from the earth a long time after they themselves are inaudible to people below. —Chicago Times -Herald. Destined for Success. A few days ago a business man on High street, New Bedford, Masa, adver- tised for a boy. Among the replies re - calved by mail was ono whioh read as follows: "Dear Sir,—I want the place. My parents is ded and I got to hustle. Beets bell haw hard timea Is. Yoors trooley, William --." Being a man of shrewd business sagacity, the merobant engaged him by the neat matt, I bad considerable interest in the career of this enterprising young man, and a few days after called at the store to see how he progressed. He had one blank eye and a pronounced limp and a generally broken - up appearance. He had been in the business but two days, and In that time had thrashed the porter of the store, fal- len down, stairs into the cellar and bad won 12.60 from the boys pitching cop- pers); had also shown np on time every day and got in a full days work. If this young man 1s not destined for a groat commercial career then all Signs fail.— New York Herald. Ser Own Mistress. - "If I wore living my life over," said an unmarried woman of 60 the other day, "when I reaohed the age of 26 I should ask my father to give me ono of his little houses, of whioh he owned a good many, and let me go and live in it. When a girl grows into a woman her lnstlnot leads her to long to bo at the head of her own home, whether she is married or un- married. To be abeelute mistress, even of a single room in a lodging house, after n day of toil le often +lett-ar to her than to be under the absolute cc4il`rol of her parents in a odmfortable bb' ` ':arid this, oven though there may be .a tenderest love between them. I • there' at; least w n eaK o tt of nrbitr bVelr rtiilto autgr w e+l�e,sb wry prolirietorehip In their ,. tlatightorg, and few daughters between the egos of 05 and 40- tan be thoroughly contented In. any,.. hofne ''of whish they 'ars not inistrress, her/seer patiently and pobly ahoy MAY conceal tlleir feelings, • • After 401hey are Often Orr, tired a+c to be glad to he rellevad $,1 ski ,llbnsibllity." ,• @r Al', 1# Y.,r •.. .ti we met on the shore showed muoh un- easiness, and speedily made for the water, a fact whioh strengthened my belief in the existence of a large enemy of the seal - on the continent. I do not doubt that the settle congregate together in larBer numbers at some planes on the bay. I consider the guano bode whiuh we dis- covered of great commerolal importanoa and they qught to be well worth the at- tention of enterprising business men. The specimen whioh I brought book with me oontalns a large percentage of am- monia. Furthermore, from the analysis of the specimen of rook which I brought baok with me, the possible and probable pres- ence of valuable minerals on the contin- ent is proved, although the lava and the volcanic aspeot of the coastline do not speak favorably for the presence of heavy metals near the surface.—"Tho First Landing on the Antarctic Continent," by C. E. Borohgrevinit, in the January Cen- tury. She Did Have Their Mouse. A summer air' Caine out of a city resi- dence the other laiorning and noticed on the pavementetweenen, who anted as 11 they were trying to catch something. She gave them very Indifferent attention, bat as she stepped out 'of tho gate she heard ono of the men say, excitedly : "There, Miss, it ran under your dress." "Ran under my dress's" she cried with a lively jump "what ran under my Breast" Why, a little mouse, he answevi, _ "We upset our cage of them out e and have caught all but ono --the e that is ander your dress. •' The summer girl soampered back into the house and osmo back shortly quite indignant. "It is not so," she said. " Your mouse didn't get on me at all- I examined my dress thoroughly, and it was not there." "All right," the man said. "I saw It go under your dress; we have lost a white mouse, and yon have got it." Still indignant, the summer girl want- ed down the street. Several squares away from home she felt a queer wiggling sen- sation on her person just under the clothes at the belt. She grabbed the spot and dashed into a doctor's office, which Tee fortunately at hand. "Oh, please," she hurriedly exclaimed to the doctor, "won't you pall your wife? I think I have a mouse on me." Mrs. Doctor Dame to her rescue and sure enough.snugly hidden in the folds of the summer girl's fluffy gown, but quite dead from the hearty squeezing, was the poor little lost mouse. Re Walked. There is a man up on Connecticut avenue whose coachman bas been in the family so long that ho really feels as if the place belonged to him. He felt palled upon to attend a funeral—the funeral of some personal friend of his --early in the fall, and as an especial mark of reapeot for the deceased he asked the head of the house to allow hie oarrlage to be driven in the funeral procession. The head of the house good naturodly consented, and the coach- man, with a adored friend, rolled off to the obsequies. That afternoon there was a football game somewhere in the sub- - urbs, and the head of the house, who L inordinately fond of the game went. lie went on foot, but just as he trudged In through the gate a oarrlage passed hint going in. It was his own carriage, with , his man on the box and four mourners in- side. They had set out for the funeral, but the procession happened to pantile football grounds, and their sporting blood couldn't resist the temptation to see the game. They sat in the carriage in luxury • and watched the game, while the man who owned the vantage sat on a plebeian' pine benoh, and —well, yon know, what you'd be likely to say yourself.—'W sh`1ng- • .,: ton Post. Tho Little One Would Do. ' A gentleman'of this oity, wishing to take bis family into the country for the summer, looked at a small farm with n view to renting it. Everything was very • ranch to bis mind and the negotiatioil wee nearly completed, when the gnettlon of hiring the farmer's cow cerate tip. - She was an exoolient bow, the farmer laid, and even after feeding het calf she Waris give five quarts of milk a day. "Ele quarte a day said the eity man; "their: more than our whole faintly Could UM. Thos, noticing the calf folloteing iM mother about the paetdre, he 'added, Z. tell you what, I will hirethe small ooW., I think she's just about oif'r btze rr. Il'olson and 1'olftles. i Fox, the Bushell statesman, lead onus approached Witte the preposition, "thick i dto he lndfanarit �' detained, ed, pinion the Fmperor Napoleon. But Idris before' ,the time ,of Vox the Romans hat rejeotidy, leen' While T!berl sohbmo tO a F Vert .ir l lts',. p refuted to entertain' is plropoeltidn No , poison the (ben in n (ieneri11 i ititalad. ''; -, t)bnt w.•, f . Mird�lrry afrt Yi s "1 Want it fine 3ul0 :steak, waiter." `Yet, afro Clot or, Carrie.., err DO rue Pro