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FORT MILL TIMES. ' 1 VOL. IX. FORT MILL, S. C., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28,1000. NO. 37. ARP IN A CYCLONE. Bill Goes to Mississippi To Deliver Lectures. RIPLEY ONE OF THE PLACES Just As He Was About To Speak Storm Strikes Place and Audience is Terror-Stricken Blue Mountain, Miss.?Some good people called me over here and 1 came. My wife said I had better go, for the winter was at hand and the family needed clothes and she waa obliged to play old Santa Clans, as usual, and provide some Christmas gifts for the children and grandchildren. Thai is a good part of her life and happiness ?'pleasing the children. She never asks for anything for herself. Sho don't have to. The girls tell me what she needs and 1 surprise her with it if I have the money, and if I haven't I strain my credit and get it anyhow. Professor lx>wrey called me here to talk to his college girls, for he is a noted educator and nas 260 girls out hero in the woods and is building up an institution that is the priue of north Mississippi. He got four other towns to join him in the call, and 60 I lectured in Tupelo last Monday night to a large audience in a large house and found a warm welcome. It is wonderful how these old towns are looming up and taking on new life. Twelve years ago I was in Tupelo and I thought It was pretty dead. I had only about 100 people out to hear me then, and this time there were near 400. Prosperity has done it. Ten cent ootton and a cotton mill has done it; McKinley had nothing to do with it. I^ast night I was l.Ttcd for Ripley? a nice old court house town not far away. The evening betokened a storm and by night the lightning was Hashing incessantly all around the horizon and the thunder peale? heavily. Coun. try people became alarmed and hurried home, for * everything seemed ominous of coming trouble. There seemed to be sometaing in the elements that was brooding over us, and sure enough there was. The court room was about half full of people who hod dared to venture out to hear me. Suddenly the storm came with fearful fury. There was an awful roaring sound from the southeast that was like the sound of many waters. It hushed the audience into a soiemn silence. I did not iake the platform, but waited. In a few minutes some wild, exc-ited messengers came rushing up the stairs and called for me doctors and other help, for the cyclone had come and torn up everything in the suburbs and killed men and woon.) I 1A 'I 111*711 mill .1111111111. I 111: infill WiUi IIItonsely dark, but the men rushed to the rescue in haste and the lecaire programme was broken up in a twinkling. Everybody hurried to their homes or to the scene of t.ho disaster. What an awful thing is a cyclone! What a merciless thing it Is! How quickly It conies and as quickly goes, leaving swift, destruction in its track. HaHppily it gives no warning, for the terror and apprehension would be worse than death. This morning we rejoiced to learn that nobody was killed, though man)' were badly wounded. Some bouses were wrecked and blown away and many were unroofed and some were set on fire. One man was lifted up and carried away and thrown to the ground in the woods, with only a few bruises. How strange, that so few people are killed by a cyclone. It seems providential, and this morning the question discussed at the breakfast table was whether God or the devil was the author of these (terrible visitations. One said that the spirit of evil was still 011 the earth and was ever contending against . .e spirit of good, and this spirit brought famine, pestilence, tires, storms and all disasters. Another saui that all these things came from natural causes, and that neither God nor the devil had any agency In them. Another quoted from Job where the l>ord delivered him over to Satan, who was going to and fro upon 'bhe earth nnd walking up and down in it. He anlicted job awfully, but was not allowed to take his life. Another quoted from the Saviour's words when He said: "Think you that those upon whom the tower of Slioam fell were wicked above all people? 1 tell you nay, but unless ye repent ye shall perish." Professor John Fiske, a very great and learned man, hus written u little book called "The Mystery of Evil." I have road it twice and fnnnrl but ll?tl? ... philosophy in it. His argument is that evil is of divine creation and designed to illustrate and exalt the good. That but for sickness we would not appreciate or enjoy good health. But for an occasional famine we would not enjoy the blessing of abundant food, and but for sin we would not enjoy heaven. His book loaves you just where it found you, and the mystery is still unexplained. We know that God loves' His creatures, und that is enough. Not a sparrow fulls to (he ground without His notice, and He did not wish to destroy Ninnovah, where there were 600.000 people and much cattle. "And much cattle." Thht was always a very significant expression to me. Well. 1 had to come here fiom Ripley by private conveyance. We had a good team, but the road was fear ful, for it had rained nearly all night. Mr. I'itner, an old Georgian, had the lines and did not anticipate trouble. ) but when we got to the river we found the lowlands flooded on both sides for a quarter of a mile, and after we crossed the bridge the horses plunged suddenly into a washout and submerged us into deep water. It fiowod into the buggy and over it .and up to the cushions, and for a time we were both alarmed for fear of a collapse. Hut we got out of it safely, and here I am with a valise full of wet clothes and no change for to-night. Here I am at the college and will have to stand up before two or three hundred pretty girls to-night. Fortuna?.?.y Mr. L<owrey is about my size and says he will lend me some garments whjle mine are being renewed at the laundry. HaHrd, hard, indeed, Ls the contest fo freedom and the struggle for Christmas money. Cyclones and floods arcpursuing me and disturbing my tranquility. Hut one thing more may come which I cannot fight, and that is a Methodist revival, for like a cyclone, tlioy are terribly in earnest and always break me up. Old Simon Peter Richardson says in his book that the Methodists are all fire and the Baptists all water, and some others are all wind. I hope they won't all cotne upon me at once. Hut I am still hopeful and trying to keen calm anil serene. Tn-nitrht 1 shall be inspired with the presence of these college girls and for an hour or so will be the cynosure of their beautiful eyes. Yes., the cynosure. That word conies from two Greek words which mean the dog's tail, and bo 1 will be the dog's tail of the fair assembly. Professor Lowroy's father was the brave old eoldier known as General Lowrey who succeeded to General Claiborno as commander of that corps in the Army of Tennessee. He is buried near here, and 1 shall visit his grave. I go from here to Pontotoc, the oldeet town In the state, where the Indian agency was located and the chief of the Chcka-saws lived. From there 1 go to New Albany, and from there to my own home, where there is always a light in the window for me and many nappy ones to greet me.?Hill Arp in Atlanta Constitution. RAW'S HORN BLASTS r*T"^ he content with 'fI '?ss 's to liavo Jless discontent. y's~~?\ ^ very little %child may open a * very large door A Wwl *uto heaven . -/"^*v5Jnp\ 11 18 poor re" Hgiotia exercise UaS(* U balancing <111 one W\?R k A A foot on the edge of sin. {^Y"'vCr The modesty of I. I ' true worth is only equalled by the worth of true modesty. Getting Christ into the people will solve the problem of getting people into the church. A blank carttidge will make tho inert, noise. Fidelity to old t ruths demands hospitality to new ones. A man's wealth may be measured by his capacities, not by his coin. There is only one single stop from the level rock over the precipice of ruin. When we think to thank God for our pleasures it will be easier to bless Him for our burdens. Ie needs no courage to choose evil in the face of good. If you would escape all censure, do not walk with Christ. When you open your heaic to ln$>t, love will leave your life. Not man. but the Cnrist-inan, is the crowning work of creation. Modern murmurers are bitten with the fiery serpents of their own tongues. If men put more sense into tneir sacrod service the world would put more faith in their sanctity. It is mockery to pray that your children may be gathered home in eternity while you do nothing to keep aifim at homo in timet Census of Two Stnlci. The Census Bureau at Washington announced the population of Rhode Island as 428,550, as against 1545,500 in IS'.h). This is an increase of 83,500, or twenty-four per cent. The population of Illinois Is 4,821,550, as against 8.S20.1151 in IS'.Ki, nu Increase of 005.100, or twenty-six per cent. ltrok?-r Fail* For KI.OOO.OOO. Francis I). Carley, n broker, of New i oik * ny.nns humi a petition In bankruptcy with liabilities $1,000,000 am! no assets. M'niitH Kural Free Uellvorv Kxleiulfd. All enthusiastic plea for a wide expansion of rural free delivery is made in the annual report of W. M. Johnson, First Assistant l'ostinaster-C.eneral, at Washington. lie says that the extraordinary development of this system during the past twelve months is eonelusive as showing that hereafter it must be a permanent and expanding feature of the postal administration. Vossll ltrnmlns Found In Missouri. Fossil remains or men and animal of enormous size have been found at Montcsano, Mo. Thibet is a country forbidden to European eyes, and no "barbarian" has >yei set foot in the capital, Lh'asa. . ' TORNAUIJ IN TENNESSEE Most Destructive Storm in Its His. tcry Sweeps the State. GREAT DAMAGE TO PROPERTY Score* of Lire* Are I.out mid Many Arc Injured? IIuiiilreit* Ar? M ule- Homelo**? Toriindo Knlere-I TVnumMrc Kroia Northern M l*HlN?ii>|>i I.onvluf; i* Troll o| Dcntli nnd l>e*trtictlmi In Ita Wake. [ Nashville. Teun. (Special).?Tennessee was swept by the most destructive storm ever known in the State. More than fifty persons were killed and n hundred more injured, while the damnee to houses, timber and oilier liron crty will rencli large figures. The storm entered the State from Northern Mississippi ami swept across in a northeasterly direction. Croat da ma Re is reported from the counties bordering on Mississippi and. further on. Columbia, in Maury County, is the heaviest sufferer. Lavergue. Nolensville and Cnllatin also felt tlio wind's force, the storm finally losing its force against the Cumberland Mountain range. At Lavergne. sixteen miles south of here, the velocity of the wind was marvellous, and from best reports lasted only about twenty seconds. In this short time about thirty-five dwellings were turned into kindling wood. Two lives were lost. Many lives were lost at and near l.agrange. Tenn.. forty-nine miles east of Memphis. Property damage there amounts to nearly Sio.ooo. The streets are littered with the debris of destroyed buildings, merchandise, telograph ana telephone wires and poles. The loss of life was greatest in the vicinity of Columbia, where the number probably will exceed thirty-live. Most of the dead are negroes, about about twelve or 'ourteen only being white. Immense damage was done to farms, and hundreds of liend of live Ktock were killed. Considerable dam nge resulted ut Martin's Mill ami at liuliau <"rock. In Williamson County great damage was done, hut the town of Franklin pscaped with compuratively small loss. Houses mi l timber in Sunnier County ilso suffered considerably. The number of houses destroyed in lie Xolcnsvillc neighborhood is six| teen. There were two fatalities there. Lumber firms whose mills are located on Wolf River, the northern boundary of the eity. suffered da mayo Estimated at more than JfdiMi.tMM) by the overflowing of Wolf River during the night. Hundreds of cabins 011 plantations a ear Iatla, Miss., were demolished and four negroes were killed. Near T11aiea five negroes were killed in the collapse of their cabin. A white man Hid a negro were killed six miles south vf Hernando. Miss. Many plantation louses, a cotton gin and a church were destroyed. At Love's Station. Miss., a dozen residences and churches were wrecked, but 110 one was killed; only one perI011 was fatally injured. Twenty houses at Dallas. Ala., near lluutsvllle, were demolished, Imt no lives were lost. At l'.oxley's a storehouse was destroyed and three 110Iroes were killed. ( ?ti* til New York State. TbifTalo. X. Y. (Special). The wind Mew at the t.ite of sixty-live miles ail lour. At the Rail-American grounds !lie building for the eyelorama of Mistinrifirv i*i. ?* j i. .1.1 imin ii iiiiwii ami mother Midway building was scriousy injured. North Tonnwnnda. N. Y. (Special).? I hurricane wind rushed through tliis lection at eighty miles an hour. Over JJoO.noo damage has been done. Lyons. N. Y. (Special).?A torriflo A*ind storm swept over the surrotmdng country. Orchards were upturned tud buildings unroofed and blown lown. Schooner Wrecked In I.nUo Krle. a Lorain, Ohio (Special).?The schoon r St. Lawrence, hound from Kelly's Island to Cleveland. with a cargo of limestone, went ashore near here during a heavy gale. All on board were rescued. Olio Man Klllod In Paterson, N. J. rSpeciab.?One man: Was killed and live were seriously in-' lured by beiug liuried under the wreck Sf ??ve half built iee-liouses which Were blown down by the high wind, lames Spcer was killed outright. IN FAVOR OF ICE. COMBINE. Ip|irttnt? DIvIkoii of tlie Supreme Court >ii)? Testimony Ih Not CoiitptilHory. Albany. N. Y. (Special).?The Appel late Division of the Supreme Court decided to grant the writs asked foi by President P. \V. Morse, of t lie American Ice Company, and the Attorneys lencrnl is restrained from com peiuug ill" directors and ?>tll crs to appear before the referee npiiointed to tuke testimony as to an alleged combine. It is not thought nny appeal will bo made unless ccrtiiicntion therefore is made by the Appellate Division. The appointment of Kefereo Nusbauin is vacated by this decision. Attorney (lonoral Da vies will take tin appeal. I'nder the decision the combine cannot lie proceeded against or its officers prosecuted. REDUCTION OF WAR TAX Ways and Means Committee Decides on a Decrease ot $30,000,030. FOR AN ARMY OF 100,000 MEN riip Committee llt-nrM n (aooil Flnnnrlnl lU-port From Secretary (ihro- l'liuin For HrlnKlnK Homo Voluntooro Kroin tlx. IMllllppltlCH Will lt?< SUH|MMX|?'<1 I'cmllnK the Action of CoiiKrcm. "Washington, I?. C. (Sm'cinli.?The Ways and Monus C-omuiittee lias deoldod on a reduction of about $3p,0tK),(XX) in tho war revenue taxis. A few days ngo Soorotnry Cage expressed tho opinion, niter a meeting of the Cabinet, that a reduction of only about $ir>.OOO.OO0 should bo made. Later the President expressed tho intention of recommending a rodiiotlon of $20.bCi>.000. but the nnnouneeiuent of tho Ways and Means Committee shows that there is a tendency to indorse tho views of Senator Aldrlch and members of tho Senate Finance Committee, calling for a swooping reducMon. President McKinloy's doterniination to ask Congress for nil army of 100,00(1 men, increased naval expenditures and prospects of the passage of the Nicaragua!! Canal, Ship Subsidy and Pacific Cable bills were taken into eonsiderati m by the Hepubliean ineinbers of the House Committee on Ways and Means when they met to consider the proh.em of reducing the war revenue taxes. Secretary Cage was before the committee, and presented the financial condition of the Covernnicnt in rather better light than had been expected, lie predicted iliat tho surplus of receipts over expenditures for the present fiscal year would amount to about ?SO.OOO.OOO, this ill Spile of tlie fact i that it is only a little more than ! sy,<Mu),<MXi up to date. The heaviest receipts ntul t lit* lightest expendit tiros usually fall within tin* latter half of tin* tiscal year. All preparatiotts for bringing homo tlu* volunteer troops now in tho IMiilippinos havo boon suspended pending tlu> action of Congress with reference to the Army Reorganization hill. It Is now almost certain that the work of j transporting the volunteers hack to | the *"nlte?l States will not liegiu until about .1 tin nary 1. Recent reports from the Philippines. Including (leneral Mat-Arthur's declaration that he could not spare any of j the military force now in the archipelago, has convinced the War Do- : partment authorities that there can he j no material reduction of the troops in tla> Philippines for some time, and that ever.* volunteer regiment will have to he replaced if returned to the I'liilcd States. To do this will require the passage by Congress of a bill an thorizing an army of about HNMMhi men. and the present intention of the Secretary of War is to have presented to Congress as soon as possible a bill for the reorganization of the army. It is expected that by January 1 it will j he apparent what Congress will do along the line, and the War Department otlieials eno I li< 11 ohm f?n* <i <r..n. I crul reorganization <?f tin' military , force in the Philippines. Reports from recruiting otlicers in this country, however, show that there will he no trouble whatever to secure tnen to raise the regular nriny to 100,000 men. PRESIDENT OILMAN RESICNS. II end of doliUH llopklnx f ill vt>r*lt v Will ( tire ?t Clone of Mcltnliisiir Year. Raltiinore, Mil. (Special).? President Daniel Colt <lilni.an. of Johns Hopkins University, litis notitied the Hoard of Trustees of his intention to retire at the close of the present scholastic year, after a service of a quarter of a century. Dr. Oilman in a letter to the trustees referred to Ills approaching seventieth birthday, and said he felt It was time for a younger man to take hold. An unwritten law recognizes seventy years as the^ige limit for university president-1. Itorlie*t?-r flirt Slain In the Street. The body of .Miss Theresa Keating, a respectable young woman, who lived with her two sisters at Rochester. N. Y? was found in a vacant lot near the New York Central Railroad tracks. The girl had been robbed of assaulted and then choked to dentil. The police can lind no clue to the murder "Oon*rl?*iice" l'ayin--nt to 1,'nclo Sain. Treasurer Roberts, at Washington, has received n "conscience ilopusit" of *'J00 from Boston, Mass. The letter accompanying the money stated that it was due 011 account of internal revenue. . Trial For I?r. Kennedy. Because of errors at his trial the Court of Appeals at Albany, N V.. has granted a new trial to l?r. Kennedy, the dentist who was convicted of the murder of "1 tolly" Reynolds at the tlrand Hotel, New York t'ity. Effective Method. , "She attracts a Rood deal of attention." "No wonder; she's so outre!" "In what way'/" "Well, for one thinR, she tries not to attract attention." Detroit Journal inpr* THE NEWS EPITOMIZED WASHINGTON ITEMS. Tn Tts preliminary report to the Pros Ident the Isthmian Canal Commission favors the Nicaragua route against nil others, ami recommends a thirtyfoot waterway ut a cost of ?ll!0,000,boo. The Secretary of State sent a new note on China to the Powers, appealing from the extreme course suggested by some of the Powers. The population of South Carolina as officially announced is 1,340,310,against 1.131.149 In 1890. Tlris is an increase since 185)0 of 189,107, or 10.-1 per cent. Secretary (Inge announced that Treasury refeundlng operations are to be discontinued after December 31. Captain W. M. Meredith, of Illinois, was appointed Chief of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Negotiations for a reciprocity agreement between the United States and ltusln are In progress. Iu an Interview Count Casslni. the Russian Ambassador, emphasized liis country's unselfish aims in China. The House Committee on Ways and Means has decided not to remove tlie tax on tea. OUIt AI?OPTKI> ISLANDS. Secretary Itott sailed from Nnevitas. Cuba, on his return to the United States. Dorotion Karrainlnp. an insnrpent T.ioutennnt-Colonel, and Mantielo Lastars. were arrested In Hularan Province. P. 1. Karrapdap had previously been arrested and paroled. The Cuban Constitutional Convention decided that its sessions shall la public. Filipino correspondence at Honp lvonp shows that Apninaldo lias been severely wounded. The natives control both branches of the Hawaiian l.epislatnre, but have not a two-thirds majority. The Philippine Commission at Manila discussed a bill for a provincial povernment in Itenpuet. Cotntnamler I.neien Younp. Captain of the Po-t of Havana, called for proposals for removinp the wreck of the Maine from the bottom of Havana ll-ll-lior I?OM KSTIC. The Vermont Somite passed a 1)111 lo abolish capital punishment. tioverno"* Huosevelt dismissed the charges against Mayor Van Wyek, of New York City, for connection with tlie to called Ice Trust. Kentucky's liailrond Commission in creased the assessed valuations of the I.otiisville and Nashville and other railroads n the State. Two white men whipped a big mob of negroes who were looting the town of Ilyndman. l'enn. The Tobacco Trust notified .the retail dealers in Iowa to stop selling cigarettes. as a will not light the prohibitive tax law. Chicago's commerce for the year 11100 will show a great falling off, as compared to tout oi previous years. At a meeting of all tin- World's l-'alr Committee in St. Louis about 'Jolt leading citizens were present and more than S'JOO.OIM) was subscribed. Mrs. N.'lllCV 1 lollittobl u-lin iti.nl .i I Clin riot tt\ N. (was said to have I ecu 1'Jl years old. Five persons were killed by the upsetting of a stage at Santa I'.arbara cm. Frank Spenstnaker. Mayor of London, Ohio, eoniniilted suieide. Charles Hartley, a hunter, arrived at Watertawn, N. V.. after wandering four days without food in the Adirondack s. Coventor .lolin Cripps Wiekliffe r.eekliatn and Miss .lean Kinpta were married at Owenslioro, Ky., the wed ding being the most largely attended and one of the most notable society events in Hie Mali's history. I'.rooks Story, ji well known express jobber, escaped from tin* Mississippi J'cnitentiary. This is liis fourth us* rape. John Beert. of Chicago, died from fonr of liydrophnhln nfh-r lighting n m range dog with his own tuutli ami hands. Major-General I'it/Jitigh Gee arrived nt ,Ncw York City from Havana to take uonitnand of the Department of the Missouri. The anti-noise ordinance was defeatid in the City Council of Chicago. KOICKION. General Roberts reports n British /lisastcr to an outpost of "Buffs," six being killed, live wounded and tliirtyone eapt tired. The typhus epidemic at Copenhagen. Denmark, is asuining serious propor lion-. Three steamers sailed from Corunna. Spain, for the Culled States, having on board -Tot) emigrants. The Colombian rebels at Buenaventura have been completely crushed. A Rome dispatch says the I'ope visited tlie Basilica and became so fatigued that lie had to take to ids D-d. It i-- reported that lie fainted twice. A house collapsed In Darmstadt, Germany, burying a score of workmen, of whom tweive are dead. The I'orle detlnitely refused to grant an exequatur for the American Consul at Harpoot. The Ami Semites and a number of Ci liservatives introduced a Dill in the German ltcichslug against the imiui gration of Jews. AN OVATION riflifel He Receives an Enthusiastic Welcome i on Landing at Marseilles. MS BRITISH ARE BARBARIANS /ormer Itulcr or tlu> Trmi?vimt I'rorlnlm# III* ll.-llcf on Arrl\tug oil Krvncli Noll ? Il?> ll.-t-Inr.-M Tlinl llir llorr. Will Novi'r Sui ri'iulrr mill Tliul the llriliiilt, Wu|(i' it Snt RKr Warhrc. fttarsellles. Franco (Ry Cable).?A" saSute of twenty-one puns from the French shore batteries greeted the Dutch cruiser Gelderland when she arrive;! here with former President Kruger, of the Transvaal Republic, ou board I>r. Catalan, the Health Ollieer, at once boarded the vessel aud granted free pratique. Then.) was a great crowd on the quay when Vlr. Kruger landed. He was out hus|j?*t ic.ally cheered by the people ami thora wore cries of "Vivo Krujror! Vivo los liners!" Tlio foinior President of tlio Transvaal walled to a carriage which wits in waiting ami lioforo Heating lihnsolf lorom piously salutoil tlio crowd. A prooosi^jn was formed around the carriages o 'tupicd by Mr. Krugor tnr4* tho Tloer delegates and they woro osoortod to tho hotel amid continuous cheering. When Mr. Kroner reached tho lloto) Noailles at noon. In response to olioor* l>y the crowd ho appeared on the billcony and made .a speech, lie salt! lie was glad to land on the soil of France ?a country of liberty. He felt that lie was nmntm a free people who received him as a free man. lie thanked the French t.ovornmeiit for the many marks of sympathy that had been shown him. lie declared that ever since 1 >r. .lameson's raid he hail always desired to arbitrate the differ" dices with Ureal i'ritain and was convinced that the enemies of the liner* would be obliged to recognize the justice of the cause of the South African Kepublics. inn me j.ngiisit 11:i<I always refused to arbitrate tho differences ami they wara now waging a war of barbarism. He was not Ignorant of tin* usages of savap- warfare. he said, hut had never known a people more barbarous than tho Kngllsh. who had pillaged and plundered and hunted farms and driven women and children from their homes and left them without liretul to eat or a roof over their heads. If tin? Itoer reptthlies must lose their indcpemleuee every Itoer man, woman and child would have to he killed tirst. Mr. Kroner wore :i dark gray overcoat and a high hat bound with a deep crepe hand, lie had on gold rimmed spectacles and his wludc personality, was much more striking than Is suggested hy liis portraits. President Kruger is much neater in appearance than had hern expected from his portraits. Ilis hair and heard have heen trimmed. He walks with a thin step ami shows no sign of illness or age. Mr. Kruger sent the following dispateh to President l.otihet: "In deharkiug upon the hospitable shores of France my tirst act is to greet the worthy chief of the French Kcpublir ami to forward to you n testiinony of my gratitude for the marks >f Interest your tioverninciit and country have so kindly wished 1o offer me." Will I'roxioottK tin* ('ulnrnilo I.ynrhem. fdstriet-Attorney MeAllister. of <'olorado Springs, Col., has ordered Sheriff Freeman, of Lincoln, to proceed against the members of the mob who burned the negro, Preston Porter, Jr. c.t the stake. Sir Arthur Sullivan licml. Fir Arthur Sullivan, the popular musician, whose name lias been known more familiarly, perhaps, to persona of Hngllsh lineage than any composer that ever lived, died in I-nmlnti ?( heart failure. Ill* dentil was wholly unexpected. He was horn in 1 Sill. I.icutt-iiniit lt?l'ie?il It.v I'lllpinoH. Lieutenant Ai* uetler. who was recently captured ny Filipinos, was released and arrived at Manila. I.i'lior World. The Cornwall Ore Conipnny, of Lebanon, l'enn., lias discharged nil for eigners, and ! employing only married men. A thousand American clgarinnkcra in Tamp , 'la , llnd themselves out of employm ut because of a strike of Cubans in no trade against American workmen, t Nearly .000,000 women in Spain work lu tie fleld as day laborers; 350,m?u \vo11h i are registered as day aervints Ilia is, they work for their food and lodj-tng. There is 110 such clasn anywhe*_* else. ? . . i " *! The eeent feat of a Long Island wonmt! bicycle rider ought to result in cbangng the view eonuuonly held on the s.liject of tnnsciiline as compared with feminine endurance. I. A ' V . ^I t 1