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1 Bl I ? ?@ I ? @ i 9 ? @ L I / NEW |'^=?##FOR CON! ' ! ; fffi * i THE OUTDOOR TREAT!* ! ??<? ... , .. . i @ W" / ?<? I Dr DAY A] IH^fl T was a little over twenty r, JES1 O years ago tbat Koch disI T covered the minute form of life which lias been called i IhII [(a|) the bacillus of tuberculosis, ?a proof tbat consumption Is infectious. What tbe eminent savant detected beneath the microscope resulted in a radical change in tie method of treating this disease. As medical men have studied the various methods, the benefit which nature could confer In eradiating It has been more and more.appreciated, until the time seems to have come when medi? ' cine may be considered but an incidenr-y ial in successful treatment ' ' It may be an exaggerated prediction o make, that twenty years hence may see the man or woman whom the physician has diagnosed as suffering 1 OETTIXQ READT FOB A NOONDAY MEAL I AT A WINTER CAMP. from lung trouble starting for the gS health camp in the vicinity of his or ber abode, to return a few weeks or J *ew months later restored to health, ?nd able to again take up life's pursuits,? an era when some of the hospi PATIENTS TAB tals which have been constructed and ^ equipped purposely to care for pulmonary patients will be needless, and r ^.'"(consumption In its advanced stage ' almost as rare as smallpox or yellow Sever; yet, judging by the results . which have thus far been attained, there is a possibility of this state of affairs coming to pass, and not far in the future. The fact is. that out in the open, even amid snow drifts of winter, there are elements which have more curative properties than any compound ."which has yet been prepared by the chemist, and the one who is not too !far advanced in illness to spend nights as well as days^ living in almost as primitive manner as the Indian of the last century can be restored to health jWithout the necessity of going thousands of miles to sojourn on a mounItain top or in a land where snow is unknown. ) At a recent gathering in Pittsburg. ~ mAof nrAmliianf f X UiiC Ui iuu aiuot [iiv/iuiiiviii . physicians of the State made an adb |dress, in which be gave his formula lor the cure of tul>erculosis. It was [this: "Eight hours a day in the open air, unless the weather is so inclement as to make this a practical impossibility ; a clean, healthy diet, consisting largely of milk and eggs; and the exercise of proper precaution against wf Infection from the germs of the dis ? m PATIEXT8 TAKING r (. ?ase." The physician in question knew | 'of what lie was speaking, for he has i itoeen using fresh air for several years I as one of the principal remedies in a I :Banitarium among the Pennsylvania 'bills, which has received many a 9H 'patient whose liito had been ''given up" by the family doctor, and who had come here as a last hope. SIR It i9 trulv an easy and enjoyable way of getting well for any one who la a lover of nature, for the main k , V @ @ @ @ ?A g, <? i lAnr @ nurt 5UMPTIVES!?v= (jp @ (a) 1ENT OF TUBERCULOSIS. @ @ vt' (51 wili.ey. (si principle carried out is to get in touch with that which is out of doors,?to be amid tbe trees, continually breathing the air purified by natural processes, to exercise and eat and sleep, if possible, with tho sky for a canopy. The medical man of the olden time would indeed be shocked if he could " ? if *_ ? .?? ONE OF THE WOMEN'S CAMPS visit one of these places, to see socalled Invalids hard at work in the forests making their camps, lolling about in hammocks in summer with heads uncovered, and lying muffled in blankets and furs in the sunlight in the dead of winter, with no shelter but the blue sky above them. But these are only some of the ways in which health is sought Tatients who :iNG A SUN-BATH IN WINTER IN * are able to stand the exercise amuse themselves by clearing away the snow from the verandas in the winter,?even the women handling the brooin and shovel and enjoying it. Coasting on the hillsides is another strange recreation for those whom we call consumptives encouraged at the Massachusetts institutions. Physical culture is one of the requisites for those who are able to attempt it, and daily a dozen or a score of patients are put through these simple movements, under the guidance of perhaps one of their number or a member of the medical staff. The tent life is a part of the routine of the women in summer as well as of the men, and it is an actual fact that in Massachusetts some of the women I linvo thpir own ramns for win ter. decorating the walls with posters and photographs, ac-1 converting them SUMMER VIEW OF ONE OF THE MODEL CAMP*. MOBN'INO EXERCISE. into miniature crub houses, where they occupy themselves in conversation, reading, sewing and various games. These camps are unique in many respects. The buildings are composed simply sheds, having a floor to prevent of but three sides, that facing the south being left open. They are the dampness from the ground affecting the inmates. Some forest trees are useu lor posts, and the walls made of planks or boughs fastened to them. If the temperature is too low for com- | fort, it is moderated by the use of a i small stove, sometimes an open fire. Draught is furnished by digging a tunnel through the earth beneath the . j shed, terminating mi a length of clay , ^ pipe. When a fire is started the air j is sucked through this conduit, and ( that keeps it burning brightly. , These men and women realize that every breath of the pure atmosphere, is a bar to their ailment, and their eagerness to be in it?to inhale it?is not strange when one considers the years some of them have fought to regain their health.?years of suffering and endurance which none could appreciate save those who have the same affliction as themselves. Recognizing nature s remedy, it may be said that ( titViao nAnowlorarl OKcAlnfolr* nonafl. sary is medicine or stimulant adminis- \ tered, and the comparatively few who ( require these are usually recent arrivals. whoso systems have been weakened by long duration of the complaint. AT WHITE HAVEN IN WINTER. As they improve, an effort is made to 1-i-- J 4-U^ fAntn TKa f j bUUSIJLUIt? LUUU IUI LUC lUiHV.. x i i menu Is not limited. It Includes the1 t usual meats and vegetables, with tea j g and coffee; but, as already indicated. 1 milk and raw eggs are considered of I 1 special value, and all are expected to ? add these to their dally diet. Sleep is s another essential and physical effort j t is encouraged as & promoter of it The^ t c t IASSACHUSETTS. J occupation of the mind also tends to t keep off the melancholy feeling which j } oiren anecrs uie cuusuuipme e?pei:r t ally, so the sociable atmosphere is con- j s sidered to be one of the most valuable j i features. In fact the absence of sc , J rr.any of the dreary accompaniments of hospital life is remarked by the f visitor, who might easily mistake the t purpose of one of these settlements f 1 THE HOLMES TENT COTTAOE. (On three sides are double-canvas walls, J * hich may be opened by raising the upper * half of outer wail like an awning, and dropping the inner wall, thus making a pavilion q lent, vvnen closed, a space just atiove T wainscoting cf outer wall admits air, which enters the tent at the eaves.) o wore it not for the appearance of some of the patients, whose features tell too plainly the inroads which disease has t made upon them.?Fro in "The Outdoor li Treatment of Tuberculosis," in the h American Monthly Review of Reviews, e t Charm of Ciroua Life. C "There is a charm, a fascination o about circus life that is hard to ex- d plain," said a veteran showman. "It is a surely a tough existence, being buffet- a ed about from place to place, often li without a bed to sloop in. and the < wages, outside of the salaries paid to a r few stars, are amazingly small. Yet t when a man once gets a taste of circus ^ life it's all up with him. lie's nevei * good for anything else and novel e wants to be. There must be a cerm. h bred of the sawdust, that gi'ts into his c blood. Take the cauvaser, for In- t stance. They get $20 a month ami r their board, which usually consists of s bad grub anil an impromptu bed iu a t( wagon. Often they don't take theii a clothes off for weeks at a time. There's one fellow I kuow who possesses more than the average intelligence. He has a trade and during the winter he * makes, on an average, $20 a week. And ? yet, just as soon as the circus season opens, he throws up his job and goes I3 out on the road with a show for $20 a 11 month. In almost every town the v management is besieged by men and boys who want to go along, and munj of them offer their services for tbeii | v board. It's a queer state of affairs."? B Philadelphia Record. * All But the Right Way. h Some men try to make a living In every way except working. j j AN INDIAN DAILY PAPER. Edited by Indian Humorist, Advocate of State Rights For His Race. There has been launched at Eufaula, [ndian Territory, the first issue of the arst dally paper ever printed or published by an Indian, says a Guthrie, Oklahoma, dispatch to the New York rimes. The editor is Alexander Posey. siiowu as lue ureetv duiu, <t ujcllujcl >f the Creek tribe of Indians, who already has achieved distinction in the newspaper field as editor, poet and lumorist. He is one of the prominent nen of the Creek Nation and took an active part in the convention held at Eufaula recently, called for the purpose of formulating an Indian plan for Statehood. He helped frame the famjus appeal to the people for an Indian State, separate from Oklahoma, in tvliicu 110 intoxicating liquors suouiu ;ver be sold. Although known as the "Creek Bard," Posey is only half Creek, as lis father was a Scotch trader, an ?arly settler in the Indian country. He was born near Eufaula on August i3, 1873, and was educated at Bacone University. Muscogee, I. T., from which lie was graduated seven years ago. \fter leaving school he engaged in iducational work and was successivey superintendent of the Creek Orphan School, superintendent of Public Instruction for the Creek Nation and superintendent of the Eufaula Creek Eligh School. Before entering the newspaper field Posey had won a eputation in literary lines. As a boy ie gained some renown as a writer )f verse, which he signed by the nom le plume of "Chinnubble Ilarjo." In Vlarch, 1902, he became the editor of :he Indian Journal, a weekly newspaper at Eufaula and the oldest paper published in the Creek Nation. In addition to making it a thorough lewspaper he has won a reputation hrough its columns as the original and rnly Indian humorist. Every week his paper contains a humorous and gently latirical column of comment on Inlian Territory politics prepared in the !orm of a letter and signed "Fos ^ixico." These letters are written in he dialect used by the Indians, who hus far have not accustomed themiclves to the idioms of the English anguage. They made an immediate lit from the time of their first appearince, and to-day they are reprinted as ioon as published in the Journal by ilmost every paper in Indian Ternary and Oklahoma. His comments >n the Statehood--situation have atracted especial attention, and have lone much to establish the Indian in he opinion that he should have a State vherein he may control. Leading Cherokee politicians express hemselves as being in favor of abolshing the office of editor of the Cher- 1 >kee Advocate, published at Talequah, !. T.. and to permit that old-time Inlian journal to pass into history, as it ! s claimed it has filled its scope of use- I ulness and is a needless burden upon he funds of the Cherokee. The Cherikee Advocate is the only paper in Inliun Territory printed in the Indian anguage. At one time it was a great taper among the full bloods, but durnz the past two years it has been cut | town in size, and the expense? of runling it are very great. The salaries if the office force, it is contended, are lot sufficient to justify good newspa>er men in taking charge of it, thereore the Idea of passing it info hisory. Not in the Bible. "There are a number of sentences :ot iii the Bible which everybody hinks are there," said a clergyman. The chief of these sentences is: 'He empers the wind to the shorn lamb.' fou would search the Bible pretty horougbly before you would iind tJiat entence in it. Where you would find t would be in Sterne's 'Sentimental ourney.' "Sterne gets a good deal of praise or the origination of this sentence, lut it was originated, as a matter of act, before he was born. In a colection of French proverbs published n 1594 we find, 'Dieu mesure le vent l la breblstondue.' That convicts >terne of plagiarism. " 'In the midst of life we are in leatli.' Everybody things that is in he Bible. It isn't, though; it is in the Jurial Service. " 'That he who runs may read.' This s another sentence supposed, wrong- : y, to be Biblical. It is not Biblical, l hough the Bible has something very I ike it. namely, 'That he may run that I eadeth.' I 'Prone to sin as the sparks fly up- i yard.' The Bible nowhere contains I hose words. 1 " 'A nation shall be born in a day.' | ?he nearest thing to that in the good Jook is, 'Shall a nation be born at nceV "?Philadelphia Record. Hobbies. When man realizes the supremacy of he inner sight he will be able to enjoy \fa'? snnnv ship in larser degree, for | ie will then see things as they really xist. We are proud to magnify everyhing in these days of struggle and ompetition, hence whatever we enjoy r suffer is exaggerated and of short uration. says the Brooklyn Eagle. We re too impulsive and too unstable to pnreciate the sweets and comforts of ife. It behooves us. then, to study oncentration, and this can bo aceomlished in no more practicable manner han adopting a hobby of some kind. .res, a hobby is the thing. It is one of lie secrets of real happiness. Did you ver notice fiat he who harbors a pet obby or study is less selfish and more ommunicative than others? This feting away from self is equivalent to Islng above the clouds and seeing the un in all its glory. Of course, the bf?ter the hobby the higher will be the spiration for still finer things. "Wept Himself to Death. A sixteen-year-old boy bas died in Brooklyn, and the physician in charge f the cast1 has given excessive weepQg as the cause of his death. It rought on heart failure. John Crowjy was informed that an uncle to k-hom he had been passionately atFiched from babyhood had fallen from he cars and been killed. He began to reep hysterically and nothing could top him. He sobbed all night and hrough the next day. He wept hrough the funeral and after he cam3 tome. His parents Anally called a ihysician, but the boy died a few mintes after he arrived.?Detroit Free 'resa. V " I FOLDING PROPELLER BLADES The use of auxiliary yachts is fining iuto increased vogue, for the evident reason that in them are combined the delights of bounding along under FOLDING FBOPELLER BLADES. the influence of the wind, without the uncertainty of the craft entirely dependent on sails. Men of business who wish to eujoy the pleasures of the sea cannot indulge themselves, for the reason that there are so many possibilities of a delayed return, owing to the absolute dependence of the craft on wind, weather and tide, but with the auxiliary yacht this element Is entirely eliminated, and when the wiDd dies out or the tide is unfavorable, it is cnly necessary to start the engines and proceed without loss of time. The presence of the propeller hanging idly on the bottom of the boat when the sails are in use has always been regarded as a drawback to the completeness of this combination, and many ways have been devised to dispose of it under these circumstances. There has been,rpcently invented a folding pro-,, peller shown in the accompanying cut, which has the irerit of novelty if nothing else. This one is so arranged that when it is in use it is as effective as any other, but tin minute the engines ire stopped and the sails raised it folds up of its own accord, and the blades are' disposed of in such a way that they in no way impede the forward motion of the boat. The blades are shown in the acoom- ; panying cuts iu their closed and open j positions. The invention ij that of Arthur W. Learned. INVERTED GAS JET NEW SYSTEM'OF LLLUMilN ATIUIN ur GERMAN ORIGIN. A German firm has just put upon the market a now- gas lamp which the inventor claims excels every other gas " ^ | | INVERTED OAS BURNER. lamp known. The light burns in sus- j peudcd mantles, being, therefore absoiutely shadowless. It is said that the light obtained from these lamps is five ( Limes that of an ordinary electric in- j candescent lamp, whereas the light of i this gas lamp is about one-tenth the 1 cost of the electric light. The normal power of the new lamp is seventy-five standard candles, while the consump iim JfL/ih ; Hffi!C /NHl ft : CHANDELIER OP NEW OAS SYSTEM. t ion of gas is thirty per cent, below < be Auer light. The two accompanying j :uts show a section of the new lamp ind a chandelier equipped with four ^ >1 tuese lamps. i ; I CMP??ro" Thrice Convicted Murderer of Gov r?-.L-l x. D_ U I ernur uueuei iu uv uangcu. DRAMATIC SCENE IN COURTROOM Brother of Viotim Overcome When He Keallxed That His Work For Vengeance Had Been Successful ? Condemned Man Once the Secretary of State of Kentucky. Georgetown, Ky.?Cnlel) Powers, formerly Secretary of State of Kentucky, who mnwlnfod f7?r j-h? third timo r>f the murder of Governor Goebel and sentenced to death. Judge Bobbins overruled a motion for a new trial and fixed November 25 next as the day for the execution. At his two previous trials, which were reversed by the Court of Appeals, Powers was sentenced to life imprisonment. Powers' counsel permitted him to make a speech to the jury in this case. He made an impassioned appeal to them, declaring that he was innocent of the murder of Goebel and had no knowledge of it. Those who heard Powers' speech thought it would have considerable effect on the jury, but this proved to be untrue. The jury retired and soon brought in a verdict of guilty as charged. Caleb Powers, like the man of iron he has proved himself through all his trials, received the verdict without emotioD. When the jury went out he was sitting chatting with friends, and aside from glancing up as the jurymen filed out, made no move. After this cursory glance he turned to his companions and resumed his conversation. "It's an u?just verdict, not warranted by the evidence," declared Powers. "I shall certainly appeal again." Arthur Goebel, a younger brother of the murdered Governor, has spent practically the whole of the last three years working on the case, and it is largely to his efforts that the confessions of others implicated in the murder were secured. He collapsed under the strain when the verdict was announced. He has sworn that he will do nothing until his brother's murder is avenged by the law. Immediately after the conviction and sentence of Powers h? sent this telegram to a brother who is in the West: "Powers' trial ended. Sentenced to death." At the two former trials, which took place here, Judge Cantrell presided. For this trial, however. Governor Beckham appointed Special Judge Robbins. From him the attorney for the defendant secured the granting of an appeal j C: r the case to the Kentucky Court of ! appeals, it was tn:s court, wuen composed of Republicans, that twice granted new trials for Powers. The court is now Democratic. Should it refuse to grant a new trial the counsel for the defense may try to get the United States Supreme Court to take the case under consideration. Powers was removed to the Scott County jail immediately after sentence I was passed, to be held there pending j the appeal of his case to the higher i courts. A telegram from Indianapolis states that former Governor W. S. Tay- | lor said: "This verdict affects me very ; much. I cannot say a word."' 1000 BULGARIANS SLAIN. The Situation In Macedonia is One of Extreme Gravity. Salonica.?The Bulgarian insurgents sustained a severe reverse at Smilovo, 1000 of them being killed. The insurgents to the number of 3000 occupied a position on the heights, which was stormed by six battalions of Turkish troops, commanded by Servet Pasha. After losing 1000 of their number, the Bulgarians lied in the face of the heavy Turkish artillery | fire. The Turkish losses were insignificant. The Bulgarian insurgents on capturing the town of Neveska, seized the arms and ammunition of the garrison, levied a contribution of $3000 on the town and withdrew to the mountains. The Turkish troops on their arrival bombarded the town, but receiving no response, xuej eiuereu wiuioui muiesiing the inhabitants. i London.?The Salonica correspondent ; ' of the Daily Mail describes the eitua- i ' tion in Macedonia as being one of the j ! utmost gravity. The insurgents are : everywhere increasing in numbers and ' | holding their own against the Ottoman j 1 soldiers. Anarchy reigns supreme. [ In a few weeks famine must ensue, causing untold misery. Any outrage { in the city of Salonica now would turn the Turks into soldiers and the popu- ! lace into wild beasts. The country | west of the River Varda toward the j vilayet of Monastir is expected to rise . ' iaily. 'Thief Returned Useless Booty. ! , After stealing certified and cancelled j. checks aggregating $05,000, a thief j took the trouble to restore them to the j , bank, from whose messenger he stole i J them on a cable car, at Chicago. The ( ; crner ieri me vattse wtui uie casuier 01 l restaurant and sent a telephone message to the bank. ^ Agitation on the Milk Question. The Agricultural Department at i Washington has issued a bulletin on ; :he milk question, in which it says j :hat the agitation lias done good, but j :hat at the same time much unneces- ; sary alarm has been caused: sugges- j :ions are made for the improvement of :he milk supply. Cotton Trade's Bad State. The cotton trade in England is in t worse state than for the laet fifteen s rears, in consequence of the shortness 1 >f the supply of cotton. Heavy de- < nands are being made on the benefit \ societies owing to the large number of 1 jersons who are idle. auepi A??J WJ Two women and two men who were $ vatcliing the Waimunga geyser at < Lake Potorua, New Zealand, wore i iwept away by a rush of boiling water t nto the river. t' The Sporting; World. Ouggleby is pitching great ball for :he Phillies. The new race track at Los Angeles. * :al., will be called Ascot Park. The football game between Princeton r ma Annapons una ueen cauceueu. Harvard expects to have the new sta- c lium ready for the big football games. The upper end of the New York * ipeedway has recently been resur- r 'aced. 1 Gold Saint won the Albany Stakes at :he Saratoga (N. Y.) race track and jj raines R. Keeue'a Futurita. at thirty ' 1 to oae. beat the best sDrlntera. * . ' v 'X :t^jg - STARVING MEN . MARCH .? *!*? ?? ^ Foodless Miners in Alaska 'irjiagtt Reach YuKon River. Aj.. Some Fall With AH flope of Succor Gon? But Are Saved Just in Time ?A Relief Expedition. , Tacotna. Wash.i?Two hundred foodless meo are attempting to cross the Alaskan divide aud make a 500-mile journey through the wilderness on Na? zina River and the Copper River Valley to Tanana Valley aud the Yukon River. * \ These miners joined a stampede to Nazina last spring, and finding there only shallow placers, determined to push on to Yukon. Most of them sold I their outfits, understanding that supplies could be purchased at several posts in Tanana Valley. In this belief they were mistaken. Walsh & Lawrence, owners of the trading post at Tanaua Crossing, had only a small *4. iK!., 4KaW 4-rx siui'ii, 'auu ujuat. ul tuia iucj gave vvr the. impoverished miners as they, passed along. x/^| News of the men's destitute condition was carried to Fort Egbert, on the Yukon, by Henry Bratnober, of San Francisco, a noted mining expert, who represents' the Rothschild family in. this country. Bratnober saved three men from starvation, and urgently recommended to Captain Perkins at Fort Egbert that he send a military relief ' .peditiou to the rescue of the foodlesa miners, whose number was stated to Bratnober to be not less than 200.. Captain Perkins immediately wired Washington for authority, and is presumed by this time to have dispatched ' a detachment of soldiers with supplies to the Upper Tanana Valley. The man -rescued by Bratnober were T> A RnHrr ./if Anlonn M V William -A. n* A?VVlfpt VM. A/^IUUV, A* JL > , TT 111IUK* Krahm, of Baltimore, and Herry Behrens, of New. York City. . ''jj When Bratnober reached them these men were lying down exhausted in a small tent, being too weak to move and: scarcely able to speak. For several weeks they had lived on berries. Bratnober furnished them with provisions from his pack train and inquired regarding others along the trail. Retig has spent two years in stampedes to Koyukuk, Nome and Nafcina. He formerly lived in Philadelphia^* Bratnober is known as the most con- " $$ servative mining man in the West He said at Dawson that without doubt many will perish unless assistance . ',M reaches thefts and he fears some al- * ready have dieck of starvation. He praises very highly the generosity of Walsh and Lawrence, who gave away fli ni>AtrioiAnci hi lil Gil lUUUgU lOiUUO CIU worth $1 per pound. ; TAUCHT IN SCHOOL OF THEFT. . Coy Shoplifter Caught in 8t. Lenis Exposes Chicago Institute For Thieves. S;. Louis, Mo.?Fred Spies, the boy; shoplifter, who was arraigned on seven charges of petit larceny preferred by various department stores, has admitted to Chief of Detectives Desmond that he was educated in the art of stealing in a Chicago school of crooks. and that he was sent to St. Louis on purpose to steal. He said that he sent the stolen goods to a -"fence" in Chicago, conducted by the persons who taught him to , steal, and they disposed of the property, sending him part of the money. He had a letter, written in German, and inclosing a money order for $2500 from Chicago. It commended his efforts in St. Louis, and made suggestions about what he should send in future. Spies gave Desmond the names of all the persous in the gang, and Desmond hnnps tr> aid the f!hicnco nolice in can turing the entire buncli. According to Spies' story many boys are educated in the same way that he was, and afterward are sent to other cities to steal for the gang. SIX DROWNED IN COLLISION. .Metropolitan Steamship Sinks a Scliooner Off New Haven, Conn. Stonington, Conn.?The Metropolitan steamship H. M. Whitney, from New York to Boston, ran down and sank the schooner John Booth just west of New Haven during the night. The Whitney rescued Captain Emmons, of the Booth, and the Maine, of the Stonington Line, saved a sailor, but the five other men in the Booth's crew and a passenger, who belonged in Salem, were drowned. - The schooner had been struck about amidships and her side crushed in. Being granite laden she settled quick- ? iS ly and sank before boats could get near tier. One of the Maine's boats rescued i sailor named Hassell, who say3 tye was one of the deck watch with the captain at the wheel. The weather tvas fairly clear, but the collision, he says, was. entirely unexpected, j.ne schooner John Booth hailed from New London. Conn., and was 414 tons bur- V$j lea. She was bound for New York. r-.| PROFESSOR'S FATAL CAT HUNT. R\ H. Detweller, a Philadelphia Teacher, . ? Accldently Kills Himself. Philadelphia, Pa.?While attempting to shoot a sick cat at Hatboro, Pa., lear here. Professor W. H. Dctweiler lecidentally shot himself and died a few hours later. Professor Detweiler was a teacher in the Manual Training School in this ily, and was spending the summer iVith his family at Hatboro. A neighjoi asked him to make away with the int. In crawling under a porch to Oioot the animal his foot slipped and he revolver exploded, sending a bullet % rnshing through his brain. Professor Detweiler was thirty-live ears of age. He is survived by a vidow aud two children. Lightning Kills Three in Indiana. Central Indiana was visited by a levere stonu of rain, wind and lightling. Hugh Arnold, living near Mun !<*: Jesse Irwin, a farmer of Millers-ille, and William Enoch, of Cumberland, were killed by lightning. 10,000 Cattle Dipped in Crude Oil. The experiment of dipping 10,OOP Q teers in vats filled with Beaumont rude oil to relieve them of fever tick? i in progress at Ozona, Texas. It i? bought that the oil will be an effective indicator of the ticks. Labor World. The price of labor in Alaska is $4.50 o SU.50 a day, with board. Planers in Holland are paid at the ate of eight cents an hou.\ Puli <1rivf>r<a nf Pnrlc thi-onf. n to strike for increased pay. The strike of building laborers a Jinneapolis, Minn., is causing a d^ >arture of many bricklayers to ethci ields. A legal bureau bas been established >;* the Chicago Federation of Labor t? Ight injunction and other Court pr?vediugt' , '\vj V ' ' V r ; -1 ?2&St?&- '-2sm