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<'"v THE OLD CLOCK AGAINST THE i * WALL. 3 i Oh! the old, old clock of the household s stock, | t Was the brightest thine and neatest; , Its hands, though old, hacl a touch of gold, j ' And its chime rang still the sweetest; J 'Tvras a monitor, too, though its words i were few. % \ Yet they lived through nations altered, And its voice, still strong, warned old and young. ] When the voice of friendship faltered. j *'Tick! tick!" it said?"quick, quick to bed, For 10 I've given warning; ,Up! ud! and go, or else you know. You'll never rise soon in the morning!" { A friendly voice was that old, old clock, ] As it stood in the corner smiling. And it blessed the time "with a merry 1 chime, < The wintry hours beguiling; _ ] But a cross old voice was that tiresome clock. 1 As it called at daybreak boldly; 1 iWhen the dawn looked gray o'er the misty ( - way, And the early air blew coldly. ' *Tick! tick!" it said, "quick out of bed, J For 5 I've given warning; j iYou'1! never have health, you'll never have , wealth. . Unless you're up soon in the morning!" ' I ] Still hourly the sound goes round and j _ round. |, With a tone tliat never ceases; i ( jWhile tears are shed for bright days fled, And the old friends lost forever; ] Its heart beats on?though hearts are gone, ( k Yet love still lives the stronger; Its hands still move?though hands we love I Are clasped on earth no longer! " 'Tick! tick!" it said?"to the churchyard ! bed, ; j The grave hath given -warning; Up! up! and rise, and look at the skies. And prepare for a heavenly morning!" ?New England Grocer. ( Q iMUiwm ? r C&L Q n; . iTTlS LITTLE JOKE j: I 9?0 1 !L! _JJ.: Tte girl witb tiie nat mat naa a 3"hugo cabbage rose on it permitted a ( frown to gather on her brow. "Al- ^ .ways," she said, slowly and distinct- ] ly, "I have thought that I disliked ( people who play practical jokes and j now I know it is even worse. They ( arouse a deadly hatred in me!" j "You talk like a cheap melo- ( drama," remarked the girl with the angelic eyes. , ? "Melodrama nothing!" remarked j * the girl with the cabbage rose. "It's ^ -a tragedy, nothing less! I suppose . Bert Randall thought he was justi- , fled because I had been boasting that ^ I was too sharp to be taken in by ? any ordinary sell?and then he never ( did like the minister anyway! If j only I could lay my hands on him j o *r? flnrl r?nt '' C% AJLJ 111 U tv WV VUV "I've often wondered which of the "two you liked the better," interrupted the girl with the angeliq eyes. "'Did the joke help j'ou to find out?" "Don't be silly!" said the girl with the cabbage rose. "I was called to the telephone yesterday," she went on, "and a curt voice announced that the speaker was a newspaper reporter who desired to verify a notice his paper had received to the effect that my engagement to Jthe Rev. Mr. Fairman was just announced. I nearly choked in my 4 hurry to assure him there must be a mistake, that it wasn't so at all, and for godness' sake not to print any ?uch dreadful thing. He was very nice and said if the announcement iwas premature the paper had no de\ -eire to print it. *T hrnlro in tn OTnlnin that if . iwasn't premature and then he broke in to inquire in an injured voice why 1f It was so I objected to the publication. Then I had to eiplain in detail that it wasn't premature because It wasn't so at all and wasn't going to be so. "He said that sometimes one could not tell and that he really could not understand why such a notice came in if there wasn't some truth in it. So there we stood and quarreled about it, I was getting madder and madder at the universe in general? at the reporter for his persistence, at the Rev. Mr. Fairman for ever existing on the same earth with me and, most of all, at whoever had sent in such a dreadful announcement! "Just when I was almost crying there was a break in the even, polite tone at the other end of the wire and like a flash of lightning it burst upon me that no one but Bert Randall had that particular little quaver when he ,was trying not to laugh. "You think you're mighty clever. T Bert Randall, don't you?" I asked, ,with hysterical calm. But he wouldn't give in. He said he really couldn't * .understand me. So I said neither could I understand him. Then I ^ (hung up the receiver. "1 wanted to cry and I wanted to j laugh?because it was so cleverly , done. Don't you think Bert is dread- ' fully bright?" ( "Oh, horribly!" cheerfully agreed j the girl with the angelic eyes. 1 "Well, in a couple of hours the ( phone rang again and this time the ^ .voice announced calmly that the speaker was the Rev. Mr. Fairman ; and he wished to inquire about some- . !thing rather odd. I just flared at j out at that. I thought Bert was ' going rather too far. I knew it was . Bert because Mr. Fairman never called me up on the phcne but once in his life and th?.t time it was about .the bazaar. "I determined to give Bert a little excitement, so I answered in a sweet, smooth voice and said I supposed it . was in regard to our engagement. I asked if he knew the papers were to print the announcement the next day. Bert played his part to perfection. He seemed politely troubled and murmured that he had not been aware of the fact. I called him dearest and rallied him about his forgetfulness. m That confused him so he couldn't say a word. Then I piled It on. "I called him Chauncey?that's Mr. Fairman's name, you know?and said I had simply been counting the minutes since I saw him last. I asked .when he would be up again. I mourced over the publicity when the ;world found out about our engagement and asked if he thought we'd ]be just as much to each other as beJore. "Then I paused a moment to let it Sink in, after which I asked Bert if ibe had enough and would call it -ix? TT? nnt/1 V A Vi AII orli f if n?nnlH XJU1U3. XXt5 DftlU AV nwuiu . fce lots better to call It quits, but he I - . -y , it i really did not understand. I told him it was no wonder, because his brain .vas not constructed to stand so much strain in one day and that after all I ;hought the joke was on him. He ;aid it certainly seemed to be. Then [ got tired and hung up the receiver, ?or Bert's fun goes about so far and ;hen he gets kind of stupid." "There certainly wasn't very much point to it," said the girl with the mgelic eyes. ******* The girl with the cabbage rose regarded her mournfully. "I haven't :old you the point yet," she said in a itifled voice. "You see it really was ;he minister who (Jailed me up the second time. At last when I got Bert on the phone to-day to tell him igain what I thought of him, he cowed and protested that he had jailed me up only once yesterday xnd if the other man said he was Mr. Fairman he was Mr. Fairman, for ill he knew to the contrary. And the wretched part of it is that I don't tnow whether or not to believe hidi! fie may be still joking, you know." "And then again he may not!" said the girl with the angelic eyes. 'I think I'd run whenever I saw the ninister coming, if I were you!"? Chicago News. SUBSTITUTES FOR AIR TIRES. Efforts to Replace the Pneumatic Tube, i "Inventors may come and inventus may go," says the Motor World, 'but the penumatic tire goes on forever, seems to represent in a nutshell :he status of the present universally ised type of tire and of the horde of inventors who are vainly trying to lisplace it with something that shall possess all of its advantages, but lack its defects. While the history of ;reat inventions clearly shows that t is never safe to deride a device or its inventor regardless of how bizarre )r far-fetched his idea may appear at Irst sight, there would seem to be ittle of permanent value in the mass if spring devices that are now ap- i pearing so constantly as to run a ' :lose second to the non-reflllable bot;le and the rotary engine in the pat ;nt records. "People, great and small, learned md otherwise, ridiculed the telegraph and the telephone to a far jreater extent than is the lot of the ' lirship of to-day, and not alone the I iverage tire user, but the tire maker i without exception, regards with imused contempt the thousand and )ne attempts to utilize wierd and i 'reakish combinations of springs and ubber to obtain the degree of resiliency that experience thus far has i lemonstrated is only possible with ubber and canvas-confined air. rhere are two fundamental principles i lpon which rest the value of the i meumatic tire?the extreme elastic- i ty of compressed air, in which re- I ipect it is equalled by no other < cnown substance, and the fact that i his indispensable quality is applied i lirectly at the place where it is most equired?the point of shock. 4 i "Many of the devices that have j :ome and gone in the past year or ? ??a V? o rrn Vt o r\ i n PArnnri fori -In fhatr I n V/ UUTO UUU 1UVV1 i#W4 UbV\4 4U l>uv*4 nake-up one or the other of these I jrinciples. Many have placed the I iprings about the rim In the attempt ,o concentrate the desired effect vhere most wanted; others have em)loyed rubber confined air about the lub and yet others have virtually )laced a pneumatic tube beneath a solid rubber tire, only altering the :onstruction of the wheel itself to he extent necessitated by the ihanged form of rim. With the ex:eption of the last, which it realy a orm of pneumatic tire, neither of i he most numerous classes have emwdied both of these sine qua non, vithout which the results now afbrded by the pneumatic tire are imlossible. "Whether a device that will do so sffectively will ever materialize, or vhether one of the army of geniuses hat is laboring to this end will suc:eed In discovering some totally new nethod of achieving this much deiired result is a subject upon which it s not easy to predict. One thing is :ertain, and that is that no great imount of progress has been forth:oming as yet, and that little or nona s to be expected from further adlerence to the ideas that have bees )roven to be fallicies time and again. !t would doubtless be better for those nost interested if the slate could be nriped clean and a new start made." The Craze For Speculation in Mines. It is now coming to be realized :hat the real estate boom in certain iuar.;ers has been overdone, and attention is now being turned to the subtle attractions of mining securties, for unquestionably the get-rich-mio.k Aispase> has nvertAken hish and tow. These attractions have been blazoned from Alaska to Maine, from Canada to Mexico. Mors than justice has been done to the importance of recent discoveries of precious metals; tales true and tales preposterously false, yet calculated to hypnotize the ignorant, have been scattered broadcast from end to end of the hemisphere; thieving "promoters" have been sold space by the page in newspapers with pretensions to respectability, and have by this means cheated millions of women and men; ana, lastly, certain brokers are not exercising the influence they admit would be proper to discourage this pernicious species of gambling. As for the New York Stock Exchange, it is in a way aggravating the unsavory aspect of the boom by stolidly refusing to do anything itself to regulate it, yet absolutely prohibiting fVin roononfolila olomont nn fVm /*nrH VU CUV. VU4 U (which is by no means inconsiderable) from organizing to elevate the tone of the market and to endeavor to put a ban upon fraudulent stocks. ?Journal of Commerce. The New Socialist Colony. Upton Sinclair's colony, "Helicon Hall," ought to make a nice vacation place for people tired of the world and its diversions and engrossments. But even with. Edicor Lewis, of th? "Yale Lit.," to run the furnaces nightly, and a Smith College graduate for laundress and a Vassar girl for chief cook, the program won't last long.?Holyoke Transcript. . r- . . - V ' "vlV. \s- . IN THE PUI \ THE REV. IRA W. I PREACHER AND A WRITER OF READ- ca so ABLE SERMONS APPEARS. N ci< The Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, whose convincing and readable weekly sermons are now receiving so wide a circulation by being published In hundreds of newspapers throughout the United States in the same way that the late Dr. T. De Witt Talmage's memorable discourses were reproduced, was born in the city of Brooklyn, N. Y., on the 2d of March, 1878, the son of Thomas J. and Grace W. Henderson, lifelong and widely known residents of that city. He was educated in the common 3chools of his native city and at the age of eighteen entered Hamilton College, Clinton, N. Y. While in college Mr. Henderson was a prominent athlete, being one of the fastest sprinters in the college. He was also Interested in oratorical affairs and in (lis sophomore year was a' prize speaker and in his senior year a prize debater. After graduation from ! sollege Mr. Henderson entered Union Seminary, from which he graduated three years later. Mr. Henderson's first call was to the pastorate of the West Avenue Presbyterian Church,. , Df Buffalo, N. Y. Here he served] with success. The strain of close ' work telling on him, Mr. Henderson, after two years of labor in Buffalo, resigned. Last May he was called to the pastorate of the Irving Square Presbyterian Church of Brooklyn, N. Pi Y. Here his work is so successful as :o focus him in the public eye. One jf the finest features of the work done in his parish is a boy's brigade, the best in the city of Brooklyn, with a membership of 137 young men and St boys. d? Mr. Henderson is a member of the m: Chi Psi fraternity and a Mason. h? Three years ago Mr. Henderson tr was married to Miss Julia Carman th Gildersleeve, a descendant of one of br the oldest Long Island families. They pi have one child, a son. hz Mr. Henderson is a preacher be- CI ^ ' jNgULT Wretched Boy?"Hi, guv'nor! D'j New Idea in Cans. cl In emptying a can of corn, or like P( vegetable, or a jar of jelly or pre- a( norvps some of the contents natural- r ly adhere to the sides. It then becomes necessary to scrape off as much as possible with a knife or spoon. Even the economical housewife still sees some on the bottom of the can that she cannot remove. To prevent waste of this character a Kentucky man has devised a rather unique idea. He uses the ordinary type of hermetically sealed can, which is opened by means of a key. Within the can is a disk, which is of slightly less diameter than that of the can. This disk lies on the bottom of the can. Projecting upward from the centre of the disk is a rod having at the upper end an eye or loop which forms a finger-piece. The rod is approximately as long as the depth of the can, so that the finger-piece is directly beneath the cover. It will be obvious that after the cover is removed the contents of the can can be readily removed by pulling on the rod. As the edges of the disk lie, - ' ' / . 3LIC EYE. Ij | ? ? ?* ''^^^S^''! >;iy^^^^? n - v, pJpJH H t: ' \ jBK?^ a ^ . *99mHnHgni l) I c c , c 6 t I 1 3 I t HENDERSON. j use he enjoys the work. To win ' uls to Christ and to aid in some easure in the transformation of so5ty is his one aim and ambition. ' The King's Cup. { * i resented by King Edward VII. to the New York Yacht Club as a jjj Perpetual Trophy. i p % 1 f. Serious Loss to tbe Tramp. & Lady Frances Cecil is giving up ockton Hall, her beautiful real* I V, r./~iO H QhlMlt UlUtt UU kUC 5icat aw4 * vmm mvww. Idway between Stamford and Granttm. This will be a serious logs tr amps, for every one who called a e hall received a small loaf c ead, a thick slioe of cheese and nt of beer. As many as fifty a da ive been known to call.?Londo ironicle. -V }'- JllSj ' V? TO INJURY. rer want any help?"?Punch. ose to the sides of the cans it is im jsslble for any of the contents to Ihere to the can as the disk is being smoved. \i& i m f i/^'' ' i'; ' I !Mif 111 L i d\ ? Puling Rod Empties Can. dMi 'l\ , , - V' . - ; . household J Matters Keep House Plants in Pots. I do not advise turning plants out f their potd and putting them in the round in summer. My reason is his: Plants treated in that manner rill make a great growth of roots, lost of which must be sacrificed rhen the time comes to lift and pot be plant in fall. This leaves the lants in a weak, crippled condition t the very time when they ought to e at their best, in order to stand the rying change of conditions which hey have to meet when they are takn indoorc. Plants kept in pots esapa this ordeal.?Outing Magazine. / Keeping Milk Fresh. A simple device for keeping milk weet when ice is not to be had is to ? u a. a ? ill. T?UA caiu IL. OL'diUCU 111Xin. is uut a\J uiv^c or a good many purposes as if it had tot been scalded, but it does just as rell for cocoa and coffee, and proved great convenience in a summer cotage where meals were taken at a armhouse across the way, and there /ere no facilities for keeping perish,ble foods in the house. The milk eft from the evening cocoa was acordingly scalded for the morning oftee, which was served before any >ne was ready to run across the treet and get fresh milk.?E. M., in he New York Tribune. _____ A How to Make a Photo Frame. Did you ever see a frame made of leanuts, or "monkey nuts," as pertaps you call them? Well, try mak* ng one for yourself, and I am sure rou will want to make others for >re3ents for your friends. Get a plain little wooden frame, he right size for the photograph, a >ag of peanuts and a pot of glue. Brush some glue on the frame, and hen lay the nuts?in their shells, of :ourse ? on it, taking pains to fit hem in snugly together. Drop a ittle glue between the nuts as you jlace them, so as to hold th6m firmly. When the frame is quite covered vith the peanuts let it lie on the taDle till the glue is firm and hard, ^nd "hen go over it carefully with a brush lipped in varnish, says Home Notes. . If you like you may use acorn cups ind little fir cones as well as peanuts, jut you would have to wait for the lutumn to collect these, wouldn't ' ... Care of Stocks and Collars. Half the battle In always wearing leat, fresh-looking neckwear is to iav6 a place where it may be kept in jood order. No matter how beauti!ully laundered stocks and collars nay be they will soon become rumiled and untidy looking unless they ire carefully put away. A box twelve or fourteen inches ong and wide enough to hold the >rdinary stock will be found most iseful for turnover collars and cuffs is well as stocks. It should have a linged cover that may be easily lifted and that will fall back Into ilace, for only the very careful wonan stops to put covers on boxes Rrhen she is in a hurry. For linen collars, which are being again this season, the leather bllftr box?a that may be obtained at furnishing story are most cuMf * have soft leathW "- dth a draw itr t little room, it cka that are \ ar lip fresh hl??- &iinrtrv Tktte turn ol creP? J. pHcea of ,:::\v e, with the -t derneath It . '? pasted of ribbon ' .. '"V , f the ends bbon ends * of the .Serosa I to form * tine form place. f y * v '2 A. % p ; on Juice. tie of mln*** -meauart of ^fgl^ at <Jf~mH*.or W*r double boiler Add two tableter and grated p. aful of Sftlt, onefourth teaspoonful of pepper and two eggs, well beaten. When cold form into squares one inch thick and two inches across. Roll in egg and cream crumbs and fry in hot fat or bake in the oven until brown. uream canes?Put two-thirds of butter in a coffee cup and level it with lard, then put the same amount of water to boll, then when boiling turn in your cup of butter and lard. When boiling turn in same amount of flour with a pinch of soda. Mix quickly and well with a spoon or whip. Put to cool, then break in five eggs one a a time, working each one well with your hand. Drop into a pan at Intervals, bake in lower oven with a fair fire. Creustade of Lobster?Cut off the top from a loaf of stale brea4, scoop out all of the interior, leaving a half wall, spread a coating of butter on the inside and bake until crisD: nlace a layer of cooked lobster meat over the bottom, then a layer of boiled thinly sliced tomatoes, adding a white sauce, highly seasoned, between each layer; put fine bread crumbs on top, dot with butter and bake fifteen minutes in a hot oven; garnish with halved stuffed olives, lobster, clams and parsley. ' c 1.3,'. ' K 'TV?'- *-3?: / ;".' .."*. V ' . ' . ^-vO > \'. V; f" ; ' % ' .. ' V- !;^-v /.J? V HFT 6llfES A RESPITE 9 TO MHO SOLDIEBS f Suspends the Presidents Order uismissing tne Battalion SCENE AT FORT RENO, OKLA. Twenty-four of the Men Were Dis- g missed?Delay in Carrying Out s1 the Order?Some Men Had u Started For Their Homes. tl Washington, D. C.-r-Secretary Tkft on his own responsibility 'instructed the Military Secretary, General Aina- n worth, to telegraph to Fort Reno ^ directing that the execution of the 8l President's order to dismiss three tl negro companies of the Twenty-fifth ^ Regiment, be stopped until Mr. Roosevelt's return. % . > c An order from a Cabinet officer suspending the operation of a pre- 8; vious one issued by his chief, the President of the United States, is an ^ event probably without precedent. It j, is certainly most unusual and extra- c ordinary. The action was taken, j, however, when Secretary Taft learned g that the actual discharge had been a started. s A Cabinet officer might issue such 0 an order with the knowledge and v consent of the President, but no instance is now recalled in which with- s out the President's permission any j of his subordinates has ever ven- v tured to interfere with an Executive order. t The occurrence of so remarkable i an event is taken to indicate that t Mr. Taft has enlisted zealously in the c cause of the discharged soldiers, and <] is determined to uphold them at any j cost. There is probably no other s member of the Cabinet, not even Mr. t Bonaparte, who would have ventured ^ to place himself so squarely across t the President's path. , ruf - ! Men Were Paid Off. ? Fort Reno, Oklahoma:?Before the i receipt of Secretary Taft's order bus- ( pending the President's decree dis- t missing the three negro companies 1 of the Twenty-fifth Infantry, twenty- j four ihembers of Company B had 1 been expelled from the army without i honor. < "Pretty rough weather to be turned out in the cold, but we will i have to stand this," was almost the < only comment i The fiygt snow storm of the season j was raging feere. The men in the ; barracks waited the summons to a,p- i pear at the Adjutant's ofgce. ?r- < rangemonts had been made with a ] bank to furnish the necessary cash. < The soldiers were marched'Into the office in groups of from eight to ten. < As each soldier was identified by \ Captain Kinney he received pay, j transportation and his discharge. \ About $2500 was paid, i ] Some of tho men proceeded at i once to their distant homes, some < Xew stopping off at El Reno to purchase clothing. They were orderly ] and well behaved and not one of ; them displayed any ugly feeling. 45,000 MURDERS IN FIVE YEARS, i Judge Calls This the Most Criminal i Country in the World. i Chicago. ? "During the last five years 45,000 persons were murdered J in the United States. More persons ( were murdered last year ..than died of ] typhoid fever. This awful total has , Men due to the way in which the i, law was administered. And the law < -:t - - - ?? l. vi i \. itself is baa ana memcieni. it u> . ^burdened with restrictions and tech- j nicalities, and in almost every case , the criminal has nine chances of escaping to one of being found guilty." So declared Judge Marcus Kavanagh in an address before the alumnae of St. Ignatius' College on "En- ' forcement of the Law in Large Cities." He declared that the United States was the most criminal country j in the world and the jury system the most loose and antiquated. I PRISON FOB BANK WRECKERS. Conviction of Twining and Cornell Upheld by Court. Trenton, N. J.?The Court of Errors and Appeals, by a vote of 7 to 2, sustained the conviction of Robert i C. Twining and David C. Cornell, officers of and connected with the wrecking of the First National Bank ~oT Asbury Park and the Monmouth Trust Company. The technical charge was exhibiting false papers to the Bank Examiner in the case of the Monmouth Trust Company. The men were each sentenced to six years' imprisonment, and were out on bail pending the decision. 20,000 JAPS FOR HAWAII. Immigration Companies Prepare to Send Many Laborers to Islands. Honolulu, Hawaii.?Captain Mizume.commandingthe Japanese steamer Chiusa, says the immigration companies of Japan are prepared to send to the Hawaiian Islands by next June 20.000 laborers, which the regular transportation companies are now unable to handle. Six thousand j'oung men are now in Yokohama ready to exnbark for the Islands. The Chiusa brought over 900 immigrants to this port from the Ryuku Islands. Dr. Crapsey Found Guilty. The Protestant Episcopal Court of Review sustained the verdict of the ecclesiastical trial court that the Rev. Dr. Algernon S. Crapsey, rector of St Andrew's Church in Rochester, N. Y., was guilty of heresy, and he will be suspended from the ministry. Prize of $50,000 For Airships. Lord Northcliffe, proprietor of the London Daily Mail, has ofTered a prize of $50,000 for an aeroplane race, and declared 11 win lase piace next spring. Stab Ends of News. The Beef Trust was said to be forming a Soap Trust. A severe coal famine is already threatened at Toledo, Ohio. The small steamer service in VenIce, Italy, has been municipalized, r a* 'Wttirrion Manchuria, an Amer r lean Consulate General has been opened. M. Briand, Minister of Public Worship in the French Chamber of Deputies, defined the intentions of the Government in regard to the separation law. - ' v . ? 1 - - .^> V,?v.. r.^H -v rows iars en orty-three Passengers Go Down in Puget Sound, Wash. ';i 'a* - - fcv; 'o-v-yda teamer Dix Collides With the Jeanie in a Smooth Caused by kvr Mate's Carelessness. * vv.'V Seattle, Wash.?Forty-two passen- era and-members of the crew of the teamed Dix were drowned In a'colslon in Puget Sound. The neWs of U le disaster, the most tragic an^. pe- . ^ uliar in the history of local nayigaion, was brought to this port flfcrly; . ext morning by the steamer Jeanie, "* v ith which the Dix had been In colslon, and which had on board thirtyeven survivors of the Dix, among lem Captain P. Lermon, her skipper. . 'he rescued were of those only *rho 'ere on deck, with the exception of ne woman, the sole occupant of the abin to escape. |S The impact between the two vesels was so light that the Dix, alho'ugh a total loss, was probably ab- . .[' olutely uninjured by it. Oddly, . hen the vessels met, the Jeanie, irger of the two, lifted the Dix ptk auslng her to careen to port so vloBritly that she was practically enulfed. The blow to the Dix was ' ^ baft of amidship on the starboard ide, and after she had rolled faf ver, taking on a large quantity ol , rater, she righted herself. Then the rater below decks rushed to the tern, and she plunged stern first into .00 fathoms of water and disap eared. In the few brief moments before :';i he Dix took her final plunge life I loats and rafts were pushed over>oard, followed by men, women and :hildren in a wild struggle for life, rhe orders of the officers were lost n ortfartma on/1 Aflaa i\f tKa P. j?* xx tuo OU4 gauio nuu vi iVM wi. buv v* trlcken passengers. Precipitating' hemselves Into the icy waters, those vho could swim made their way to he Jeanle, which lay a few yards iway, and were pulled aboard to tafety. Others clung to raftB, boats md pieces of wreckage, and were >icked up by the Jeanle, which irulsed about until 10 p. m., mora \ * han two hours after the collision, ooking for those in peril. Several persons were found floating, buoyed lp in an unaccountable way, while .-r&S lot a few, exhausted by their exer- , # Jons, sank to death. More than half of the passengers were trapped in the cabin, all except' , \'*Ji JiltJ gUUlg UU W II Witu bUO tDbOWUOk ' without, p chance of escape. The single survivor, Alice Simpson, a fifteenrear-old. girl, may be able to tell something of the horrors of fne trag- . 3dy in the cabin. She is now in the tiospltal, suffering from shook and . >> azposure. * ^ All of the members of the crew, excepting the master were lost Alicfr 3impson could not swim a stroke. It Is not known how she escaped from' the cabin where all others Derished. \ ' J but she was thrown into the water ,; by Bome one and kept afloat by her clothing until picked up. Nearly all of the victims were from Port Blakeley, a town .supported entirely by the lumber plant of the '. ^ Blakeley Mill Company. The little place is almost helpless in its grief. Not a wheel is turning, and all of the population Is trying in some way to /'if, aid In the efforts the recover the bod- % les of their dead. <$ According to the captain ot the ; --fej Dix, who was collecting, fares-Of pas- -'v-Js aengers at the time of'the' collision, > criminal carelessness on the part '%* bis mate, Charles Denniaon, at the wheel was responsible for the disss- v ter. The collision occurred while the sound was almost as smooth as a. mill pond, and grter tae coats naa /? been steaming within sight of each other for a quarter of an hour. AT BAT, LAUGHS AT DEATH. Ashe villa Posse Kills Negro After a Ten Mile Battle. Asheville, N. C.?Brought to bay by bloodhounds, which had tracked him from the- George W. Vanderbilt estate at Biltmore, James Harvey, of 5 Forest City, Va., otherwise "Will ,v. ^ Harris," a negvo, who killed two po- * licemen and three negroes in this city 'A was killed at Fletcher next day by a ' posse. / He refused to surrender, led hla pursuers a ten mile chase, in which hundreds of shots were exchanged; and-wwrnded two more men before his death. When his cartridges were exhausted he faced the mob, folded his arms and laughed as the death' vnllpv was noured into his body. . * ^3 FIVE DEE IN BURNING HOTEL. <? Several Others Probably Fatally Injored?Loss, $100,000../ ' Hegina, Man.?The Hotel "Windsor was destroyed by Are and five persons were burned to death. There were sixty-five guests in the hotel at ' ;-1 the time of the fire. The dead are: W. Musster, manager of Regina Milling Company; L. Musster, assistant manager of the Regina Milling Company; Donald }, Walker, day porter; Robert Johnson, >j laborer; Harry Jones, a hotel em- w pioye. Several others were severely burned, some of whom are expected to die. The cold weather hindered the work of the rescuers. Loss, *100,000. Iowa Bank Robbed. Safe blowers robbed the Bank of- , ^ 'M Wpnrtprnnn. Ta_. of 33000. ? ( .. . . . Jewish Protective Committee. The American Jewish committee, 1 having for its objects the protection, the preservation and the extension of the civii and religious rights and privileges of Jews, was organized ill A New York City. '? -:Jj Panama Governorship Abolished. President Roosevelt has abolished the office of Governor of the Panama '".-j* Canal zone, and placed Chairman Shonts in supreme control of work on the isthmus. m?rnmmmmmmmmm?mmmmmmmmmmm?mmmmmm ^ Feminine News Notes. La Francalse is a new Paris daily, > aevoieu iu wuiueu o i^uu. "Some of the railway lines in Russia have smoking cars for ladies. Mrs. Aurel Batonyi won several p^.zes with her pets at the Toy Spaniel Club's show, in New York City. Mrs. Alice Hegan Rice, the author of ' Mrs. Wiggs" and "Lovey Mary," S will contribute a serial story to the :v^ nev: volume of St. Nicholas. In Crell's "Chemische Annalen" of the year 1784, reference Is made to. women students attending lectures oa chemistry. In Berlin* I