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I NATURE'S UCrTENlNC TOUCHES. Yet still the irilding flowers would blow, The golden leaves would fall, The seasons come, the seasons go, And God be good to all. JAbove the graves the blackberry hrmg In bloom and green its wreath, lAnd harebells swung as if they rung The chimes of peace beneath. The beauty nature loves to share, The gifts she hach for all, The common light, the common air, || U ercrept tne graveyard 3 wau. It knew the glow of eventide. The sunrise and the noon. 'And glorified and sanctified It slept beneath the moonWith flowers or snowflakes for its sod, Around the seasons ran. And evermore the love of God . Rebuked the fear of man. Secure on God's all tender heart, Alike rest great and small; iWhv fear to lose our little part, When He is pledged for all? O fearful heart and troubled brain. Take hope and strength from this? That nature never hints in vain, Nor prophesies amiss. Her wild birds sing the same sweet stave, Her lights and airs are given Alike te playground and the grave, And over both is Heaven. ?Johu G. Whittier. f THE HOLE } t T1VT TRF! i It ^ JLJLM JL JLXJUi J [} - WALL, j 3B|GI0l6(0?*iS neighbors called okl Sir S? I I * Giles Travis a misanthrope 11 H * and a miser- ^'ot tbat tliey IL knew liim, for lie never left jOOOCDCjfcK the high walls which surrounded his estate, and on ao account was any one allowed to enter his domain, save the necessary servants and tradesmen. One warm summer's afternoon Sir Giles was being drawn in his bath chair across the lawn, thence along a jiarrow pathway uutil the wall was reached. Under the tree there was a I-comfortable lor.nge chair, in which, with the help of his footman, Sir Giles took his seat. "Push me a little nearer the wall," he fcried, irritably. "Now you can go. Come back at 4 o'clock." The baronet gazed after the footman until he disappeared among the trees. He then proceeded to displace a stone near the bottom of the wall. His fingers groped around, and he gave a sigh of deep satisfaction. * "No letter. They will come, then." A quarter of an hour passed, and he tapped his Angers impatiently on the magazine which lay in his lap. "That's the boy," he muttered, as there' came a soft rustling of dried leaves. "She, is late." The voice was impatient. Sir Giles chuckled .-softly. "The impatience of youth." A glad cry was heard, the sound of a kiss, then another kiss. "The girl now," the old man said softly. Twenty years of solitude had left their marks on his face. As he listened to the love chatter of the young couple on the other side of tbe wall his face gradually softened. Not always had he been the recluse fcnd misanthrope. There was no prouder .inri hnnn'fM* man than Sir CHIps hnrl I been some twenty years ago. His life and hopes were centered in his son Jack, a fine, manly young fellow, such ?s -would gladden any father's heart. The quarrel was a sudden one. The reason?a woman. Hard words were exchanged, for they were both possessed of the Travis temper. A parting in anger and two months aftoriward news came of Jack's death. Not a line or message had been left for his lather. The blow was a terrible one to Sir Giles. He closed his heart to all human sympathy and retired to the seciu ion of Travis Towers. A few months afterward he was ?tricken with paralysis, and the long years had been wearisome with suffering and ennui. For the hist two -or three months a new interest had come into his life. The whole pretty love comedy seemed I to have been played within earshot. Wien first they met there was the difference of youth. Their voices at first were louder, but as their love increased their s?ats on the fallen tree Without the wall grew closer together, and their voices were lowered when they began to exchange sweet loving nothings. A week ago the boy had declared his passion. The old man's heart seemed to unfreeze and grow human again as he listened to the passionate pleading of the lover, the shy, timid answer, O nrl f ha f ran?!It?ecnc? +I10 f tt-apa IW&41U iuv t i v ?!t.?v.u liiOOVO ILiUU nuc CA" jrhanged. Only twice since that day had they met, and a cloud had appeared on love's horizon. "What did he say?" she asked, feagerly. "He refused absolutely," he answered, mournfully. "What reason did he gi\e, Jack?" she demanded, indignantly. ,? "Your guardian told me that I was a penniless adventurer, and that it was your money I was after," he replied, moodily. I "The wrotch! But it doesn't matter. [We c?.n marry without him." "I did not know you had so much money, dear one. You are rich and I have nothing." v "But we have love." ' "We can't live on that. It is true I have my profession, but I liava only just become a doctor, and it is an uphill game unless one has money to buy a practice. I have none;" "Did he not hold out anv honr>?" sho I asked, tremulouslj-. "Yes. He said that if I could prove to him that I had a practice which would bring in five hundred a jear he would give his consent. I must say that he is reasonable, but?" "Will it take you very long to gain auch a practice?" "Years." "Let us marry at once," she cried. Jrapulsiveiy. "I don't mind being poor." There was a silence and Sir Giles looked irritably at the hole. I "I have made up my mind, dear." i "I-s." "I an going away at once?to-mor row. You uiust forget me. It is noi fair to you." Thorp wns n sound of sobbing. "Don't cry, darling," he said, plead ingly. "The fool!" the baronet muttered. "I can't lot you go!" she cried, miser ably. "I will work hard?an?in time, per haps " The boy's voice broke. "Don't go to-morrow. Stay till Sat urday. It is only four days," she asked pleadingly. There was the sound of a passionate farewell, the rustle of leaves, and al was silence. Saturday afternoon came, and Sii Giles looked anxiously at the hole ir the wall. He took a large envelope anc placed it in th& hole. They came at last. Their words wen few and their voices tremulous. "The last time. Jack, that we shal meet here," she said, brokenly. "In the future, perhaps " "And I shall have no more use foi that dear little bole in the wall, when I have found so many love message* from my darling." She leaned down as she spoke. "Jack, there is a letter here," sh< cried, excitedly. "To Jack and Joan, with a lonely olc man's love," she read in wonder "Open it at once." With trembling fingers he broke th< seal. From the other side of the wall then came a hoarse but gleeful chuckle. Jack drew a legal looking doeumeni frc^> the envelope, which he began t< reau. "Good Heavens!" he cried at last "Am I mad?" "What is it?" "Old Dr. Rutherford has sold hi: practice to me." "To you?" "Yes. and the money has been paic -?2000." "Jack, what does it mean?" Again they hoard the hoarse chuckle There was even more glee in it. ******* Two vears have Dassed. Jack's most valuable patient Is Sii Giles Travis, and once or twice a weel the old man sits in his chair near th< hole in the wall, while a fair and happj girl plays with her baby on the lawi beside the old baronet.?E. Piatt, ii Illustrated Bits. Can't Reslat 'Em. "Children are sometimes more cun ning than we think, and when I saj 'we,' I am speaking of the men whe have a right to know something of chil dren because of the parental responsi bilities they wear," said the man witl a couple of youngsters. "Close ob servation and experience have taughl me that disobedieuce, so far from beinj offensive, is sometimes a virtue, t virtue because of its cleverness anc because of the evident good nature ol the breach. It would, in my judgment be decidedly brutal in some circum stances to scold a child for disobedi ence. Disobedience should be offeusivc only when intended as an offense, wher it is a wilful and purposeful defiance of the parental injunction. I have a MSA in noint whirh will illustrate Der fectly -what I mean. My little girl is very fond of sausage. I thought she had consumed enough for one sitting and told her so. In a few seconds she had slipped around behind me, and showed her head up under my arm 'Papa,' she said, with a mischievous twinkle in her eye, 'let's play dog!' and as she said it she threw out a chubbj hand and grabbed a piece of sausage and dashed away with it, laughing as if she thought it the finest joke of the season. What could I do? Stop the laughter by scolding, and suppress the evident good nature of it all? She flanked me and got away with the goods, and since it was evident she meant no offense, no disrespect by her disobedience, there was nothing for me to do but accept the situation and laugh and frolic in her dog's game with her. And so I did. Wouldn't you act in the same way when disobedience is put forth in such sunshiny garb?"? New Orleans Times-Democrat. Sight Through Bripk Walls. Dr. Paul Sollier, director of the Sanatorium for Nervous Diseases at Boulogne-sur-Seine, tells a remarkable story of sight through brick walls and around corners -which he is studying ia one of his patient3. The man. whose nervous trouble began as the result of falling from a train, is a good hypnotic subject, and is being treated by suggestion. In the course of treatment Dr. Sollier accidentally discovered that when hypnotized the man could see him when his back was turned. In order to test this remarkable "eyeless sight" the doctor made the following experiment: "Having as before plunged the man into a state of deep hypnosis, in the course of cerebral awakening. I went into a closet separated from the laboratory by a hall staircase over sixteeu feet wide, a wall fifteen and one-half inches thick, and preceded by a small vestibule having access to a gallery shut off by a glass door. When inside the closet I made a movement with my hand as if to draw him toward me, and immediately he rushed to the door of the laboratory. The noise he made because he was not allowed to go out at once apprised me of the success of the experiment."? New York Globe. f Something to Think Abont. How to live comfortably with one's neighbor?that is the problem; to avoid the knocks and frictions which draw lines to men's faces and toe often con tract tfieir souls, it is paradoxical, out true, that the larger the soul becomes the more room it creates for itself? a margin of quietness in which it remains untouched by petty jealousies and hurts. By the practice of charity and unselfishness a life builds for itself "more stately mansions" wherein it may dwell in peace. A song in one's heart, a smile upon one's lips, cheery, a wholesome message of good will on one's tongue are won> derful helps to all kinds of people, There are so many burdens of sorrow and care and poverty and sin; so many doubting, discouraged, tempted hearts To comfort and to make strong, tc utt up and to oiess?are tnese not mis sions worth while? Try it, friend, ant prove how truly your own heart anc mind are cheered and made brave bj your very endeavor to carry sunshine into dork nlaces. A ;! Evan Roberts, thi i WU .-i^v ' j , /, ji^ L " L ! ; .",t"j? *'. _ - r! / 11'. jjBUfaSt faMMft !! '': ' * ^Bfl| ' ''^ ' ' H *'y i'j.ii'.^Vr.^Z^^Hr " -l5ft5* ' W*/TWuggwg. .. i:; vriy/il ^flawaHi^WMBW > Six months ago tlie world had n J heard of Evan Roberts. Now in i j | thinking circles he stands out as o: i of the most striking personalities t i the time. Of the thousands of peop > ! of many nationalities who are flockii i to Wales to see what this revival j like that every one is talking of, n j one would feel that he had seen it u ! less he had seen Evan Roberts, ti } central figure on whom its white lig ! is focused, and who seems to be once its cause and its result. j I We find ourselves in the presence ? tall, fair, gracefully built young ma who looks younger than his twenty-s L I ^ J I MAXIM! GORKY, . L J Russian Author, Who Sympathiz With the Laborers and Socialists. PiffBr and Plecr. ' Mrs. Edna Pigg of Wichita wants i divorce from Carl L. Pigg. Her coi , plaint is that he wants to be the whc liog.?Topeka Capital. 1; I \ tgea^g :1 Vs, > 111 \ mtcy T Tjv\ DYNAMITE GRENADE USED WI' DEADLY EFFECT BY RUSSIAN AN'D JAPANESE SOLDIERS. j Two hundred carrier pigeons are ko j in every German fortress. I Japanese Troops Ready ti '[ as,- ,, r..,-:,<v , r ." i ' . \,i -O' t , ;.'v v . i;-> " : j : , .1' .Mi < ' ' \ yV >' v7 ' - >. vo ; . ,. :r J* a . [From stereograph, copyright, 1905, 3 "Welsh Revivalist. ill ot years, and who fails to impress us aa ill possessing any qualities, intellectual ae or otherwise, above the average. Exof cept for a smile of some charm, and tie an air of purity about his person, he ig might easily pass without notice of is any kind. Evan Roberts is the son of ot a sturdy and independent couple who n- may be taken as types of the Welsh lie mining class in Wales. His father ia ht a collier of sterling character, not at noted for any specially marked traits; and in this case, as in so many others, of it is to the mother that may be traced n, some of the religious simplicity and ix zeal that are so marked in the son. ELECTRIC BATH FOR CATTLE. Since the discovery that the terrible "foot and mouth disease" has begun its ravages among the cattle of the New England States every means has been utilized to stamp out the plague and prevent it from spreading to other herds, the State and National Departments of Agriculture co-operating with the farmers to this end. It is not improbable that the apparatus here illustrated and recently patented may be of considerable value in this work, having been designed especially for the purpose of freeing animals of parasites. As will be seen, the idea is to immerse the animal in a bath, thus subjecting whatever parasitic growths may have found lodgment to the action of the liquid. This of itself would destroy many of the germs, but the inventor goes further in his work and applies! the current of electricity to complete the treatment by destroying any parasites which have survived the bath. ELEOXBIC BATH TO KILL DISEASE GEBM? The liquid preferably used is a weak solution of acetic acid, as this will^add to the conductivity ?f the^batjT, tliat a weak curr$nf^r*o^e "of low voltage may be sufficient to kill the germs without injury^ to the_ animal In applying the treatment the animal first driven Into the bath, in whict one pole ofjthe battery is: placed- A metallic yoke or "fork is then placed over the neck, with a wire leading from the end of the fork back to the battery to receive the return current; the animal's head being forced undei rH the surface of the liquid for an instant to allow the current to act on all parta of the skin. pt One-third of the 100,000 Japanese li this country are said to be in California ft Wftvft Into the Front Line. by. Underwood & Underwood, New York.] ' TORNADO SWEEPS' LAREDO81 R. Texas Cities Badiv Damaged bv Oj. i/mi* r> i oiorm, Miimea ocore. Col SEMINARY BUILDINGS WRECKED Hoof of Mexican National Hospital Blown q Off?Huts of Poorer Classes Razeil? Tree*, Fence*, Telegraph Poles, Chltn- erD neys, Walls and Debris of AU Kinds rar Strew the Streets. Laredo, Tex., via Bermuda, Tex.? yai Tweuty-one persons were killed and Tli scores injured in Laredo and New sev Laredo by a tornado which, tore gaj through the citi.> late at night, cross- an( ing the Rio Grande. The property damage was large. The dead are din chiefly Mexicans. the Four of those killed were members det of one family, and were crushed to death by tt.e falling of the heavy car wails of an adobe house which they 1 occupied. Others met their fate in a o'a similar manner. pai ha] Narroxr Escape of Tenchorfl. br i The damage wrought at Laredo kii: Seminary was extensive. Noti one of ? the group of buildings escaped dam-- Un age. The escape from death of the inj ' teachers at the institution was nnr- art row, as the walls of some of the build- on ings they occupied were demolished. Mc Mrs. Easley, one of the teachers, was wa ? rescued by several students, who pin lowered her by a rope from a second dra ( story. She was severely bruised. dai The roof of the Mexican National soo Hospital was blown off. for A trip through the town failed to an< show a block which did not suffer. wr Trees, fences, telegraph and telephone Col . poles, roofs, chimneys and walls and da\ rJolirto i\f oil l.-inr1e ctroir tlio ctrpots alS The authorities commenced at once "we clearing away the wreckage, and the J city soon began to assume its custom- cut ary appearance. Linemen endeavored ele to straighten out the tangled wires. sea cor , Death and Damage in Mexico. R, Conditions in New Laredo, across the ( ; Rio Grande, were similar to those on J this side. It was not definitely known a ^ how many were dead or injured there, * but a city officer said that he knew ^"a of five dead. This would bring the number of dead in both cities up to ~r about a score. The storm appeared from the southwest, in the neighborhood of Lam- ^ pasas. Mexico, seventy-two miles from Laredo, and it was reported that great j?0( havoc was wrought at Lampasas. Isj| l although it was not thought that auy 3 I loss of life resulted. ai}| I When the storm struck Laredo, the I huts occupied by the poorer classes 'I"11 ! wore razed, and as the wind increased Jur ! in force the more substantial build- ma i intro wopo mirnnfdri nn'1 m.inv wore P?' I demolished. ' *** ' I Lightning flashed vividly and con- 1 tinuously, adding to the terror of the people. The storm lasted about an " hour. of The Mexican National Railroad has ^01 temporarily abandoned its service, on Yo account of lack of telegraph wires for at T.ispatching trains, -hysicians were n01 busy attending to the wounded. Dr. wa H. J. Hamilton, of the United States Marine Hospital Service, placed 150 tents, with bedding, at the disposal of the homeless. -- in Laredo a County Seat. Laredo is the county seat of Webb ^ County, Tex., 153 miles southwest of San Antonio, on the Rio Grande, op- ^ posite Xuevo Laredo, Mex., with which ? I it is connected by bridges. It is on I the International and Great Northern, j . ! the Mexicau National and other railj 'c^ds. Among the public buildings are ' market, a convent, Mercy Hospital, a ? j i fine courthguse and .iail and Laredo /" L j Methodist Episcopal Se;rinary. La- H, I j is in - a fertile, agri^i1!nud> I stock raising district, Tvhicn also ^3? ' * ? raluablo mineral deposits, especially . * f ! )f coal. It is an important commercial L: ;entre, with a large international aYid fl? v local trade, exporting bricks, wool, [i livestock, coal, etc., and has extensive . r. concentrating and sampling works, car and machine shops, brick works, a > tannery, foundry, furniture factory, I ?tc. It was settled by the Spaniards N -nd laid out in 17G7. It was first in- _ ; corporated about 184S by a special .. . charter. The population, according to j Uie census of 1900, was 13,i20. I BIG CHICAGO STRiKE. i j , Teamsters Warned by Federal Government Against Violence. i I Chicago, 111.?Federal Judge Kohlsaat ' i fssnpd an iniunction azainst the strik- a c iny teamsters, and orders -were issued j1 j from Washington, D. C-, to transport ! bullion in army wagons with a military | cruard if the express companies should **n j find themselves unable to do so because Ul ' it strike violence. at< or( Old G. A. R. Commander Dead, ' Former Chief of Folice Joseph P. "] Cleary, of Rochester, N. Y., died late th< at night after a lingering illness. He th; joined the Rochester police force in to lStif) and became Chief in 18S5, which up position "hii held tin til March 1 last, when lie retired because of ill health. c0] j Chief Cleary was born in Ireland in to ! 1842. He had an excellent Civil War p0 j record, and was Department Com- ca< ; mander of the G. A. R. of New York j State in 1893. Edward Welcomed in France. qp j King Edward, on bis arrival at Paris, Coi I France, received a warm welcome. titi Troops Fire on Strikers. | Troops tired on strikers at Czestoch- i j owa. killing four and wounding many. pr( ! Fears of trouble at Warsaw are in- eff i creasing. an joi Minister Bowen Ordered Home. ste i Minister Bowen was ordered to Tb j Washington, D. C.. to explain bis con- vei I nection with the charges against Acting mi Secretary Loom's. tbt The annual parade of the Automobile Club of America wps tield iu New York I 1 City, despite of raiii. ' Ui Individualities. For thirty-live consecutive years Syl- } vanua W. Hall was postmaster of Marion, Mass. 11 Francis T. F. Lovpjoy, the Pittsburg C1J( millionaire, has decided to make Colorado Springs, Col., bis bome. 'J ti??? c?i,n-iin.n Mm r>^rto;_ err: lUCUUUlt' i- ^UUUIC, uuuiu luc x i. wor ? dent lias placed at the bead of th* be Panama Canal Commission, is of Dutch descent. Ya The Duke of Orleans has just bought * 1 the Belgicu, the vessel on board of i which the Gerlache expedition went to Yu i the South pole. J. JK; 7'fjy. 3ECIAL TRAIN WRECKED C Og-den's Annual Excursion ot Educators Ends Sadly. liaion With Switch Engine In Yardj at GreenvlUe, S. C., Cansea Accident. rreenville, S. o ""ae special train txing the Ogden i>arty on Its Southt trip in the interests of education i into a switch engine early in i morning as it was entering the ds of the Southern Railway here, e engine of the Ogden train and eral cars were wrecked. The bagje and dining cars were telescoped 1 caught fire. The two dining cars re destroyed. l flagman and three employes of the ing cars were killed, and several of i Ogden party were injured. The id are: Charles M. Coope, flagman; Little, W. W. Cuinmings and J. F. ynes, negro employes of the dining s. 'he train left Columbia at 3.30 lock in the morning, and few of the ty Lad arisen when the accident apened. Had. it occurred at the ;akfast hour many mif'it have been led 'roifessor Henry W. Farnam, of Yale iversujr, was yauu|Jo luuol ocuvuoij ured. His head was bruised and a broken. Mrs. Farnam was hurt tho shoulder and arm. Dr. St Clair Kelway, of the Brooklyn Eagle, who s in the forward dining car, was ioned under timbers, and was igged out unconscious when the Den were reaching him.' He was u revived and was unhurt except a wrenched back. R. M. Ogden, son 1 secretary to R. C. Ogden, had his ist broken. Dr. Dreher, of Roanoke liege, was bruised. Mrs. Thorpe, jghter of H W. Longfellow, was 0 bruised. All of these passengers re in the forward dining car. oha F. McCoy, tourist agent, was : in the head. W. C. Kershaw, an ctrician of Jersey City, received lp wounds; C. B. Wilcox, did!ng car iductor, cuts over right eye, and D. Rohns, dining car conductor, scalp unds. )r. and Mrs. Farnam were taken to ospital. jnong the passengers on the luckless in were: Charles B. Aycock, former vernor of North Carolina; Dr. A. S. aper, New York State Commissioner Education; Dwight Kellogg, the v. Dr. Arthur B. Kinsolving, Seth w, former Mayor of New York; RobTreat Paine, George Foster Pealy and Bishop McVickar, of Rhode and, who suffered from shock. Ir. Ogden, who was deeply grieved 1 shocked, ordered that the best posfnnprsi I hr? tliA dead, and it every .attention be sliown the ined. The people of Greenville invited ny of the passer jers to their homes iding the departure of the special in for New York City. ractically all of the baggage, said be valued at $12,000, was destroyed was said that a misunderstanding orders led to the accident. Th< rthbound passenger train to New rk City had orders to take the sidinj Paris, a way station four miles th of Greenville. The freight, whicl is being made up here, was on th< tin line. At the Coroner's inquest ; train dispatcher testified that or s to the effect that the Ogden specia iuld arrive at 7.15 o'clock were filec the yardmaster's office, and latei it another order was filed that th< jcial would arrive at 7.55 o'clock a The yardmaster testified that h( :eived no orders whatever to thai ect. ["he Ogden party decided to abandoi trip, and arrangements were mad< the Southern Railway to start f ;cial train from Greenville for New rk City at once. The itinerarj tich vas abandoned included stopf Asheville, N. C., and Richmond anc imoton, Va. lobert C. Odgen is the resident mem r of the John Wanamaker firm ii w York City. Consistent with a cus n he has followed for several years had made a large party of educator! ; guests on a special train, that tooi >m to the Eighth Annual Conferenct Education in the South, at Colum i. S. C. The start was made from w York City, and at Philadelphia Itiuiore, Washington and Richmond ?train stopped to take on additiona imbers oC the party. A STARTLING RULING. sts Nothing to Kill a Student, Says Judge. Uloomington, 111.?A unique point ir iamage suit has been brought out bj decision of* Judge Wright In the ampaign County Court. A railroad ling car was derailed last fall, anr ,lph O. Roberts, a student of the liversity of Illinois, was killed. H( is a prominent athlete. The accidenl racted considerable attention. Rob :s' administrators bringing suit foi ).000. The defendant's attorney moved thai i suit be dismissed on the ground it no evidence had been introduced show that any person was depending on Roberts for support. It was reover, urged that Roberts, being a lege student, was really an expense his parents. The Judge decided tlx int well taken and dismissed tlx se. An appeal will be taken. Germany Stands Pat. >ount von Tattenbach-Ashold, tlx rman envoy at Tangier, made an un iciliatory statement on Germany's at ude toward Morocco. New Grain Tariff in Texas. ?he Texas Railroad Commission has >mulgnted a new grain tariff, to take ect May 12. The principal changes i as follows: Making maximum nf- linp rate-on srraiu fifteen cents in ad of seventeen and one-half cents e maximum joint line rate to Gal 5ton has been fifteen cents, and the lis will now get the advantage ol it rate. New Minister to China. tT. W. Rockhill has been appoin lited States Minister to China. Education Brevities. s'ext year the commons at Co'.umbic 11 be under university supervision, rassar College has decided 1o in its annual charjre from S400 t( oo7 L'he total number of students in tb< lduate department of Brown num rs 107. Hie financial statement for the las ilc "prom"' shows $7<JG0 receipts, am profit of $354. V second prize of $30 for the bes lie choral song has been offered b: O. Heald, '73. . ! . . "WiIops on mm J Strike Situation in Chicago. III.. Reaches Critical Stase. FEDERAL HELP CALLED UPON % Oue Man Killed in the Heart of the , Bnsinea* Section ? One Thousand Extra Policemen Called Oat?Government Refuses Request For Soldiers at Present. Chicago, II!.?Senator Thomas C. 1 Piatt's boasted political pull was not sufficient to induce the Treasury Department to order Federal military protection for the express wagons of the United States Express Company, during tho teamsters' strike here. Sen- "6 ator Piatt, President of the express company, it was said, added his personal request to that of the express company's counsel for military proteci tion in carrying on its private business in the Windy City. This request was : mcde by telephone from New York City; to Acting Secretary Taylor. The contention was that the Federal Government, under a contract with the United States Express Company, had promised to furnish adequate guards in times of riot or strike for the delivery of money from the Sub-Treasury in Chicago. The substitution of arndy 1 wagons, strongly guarded, for the transfer of this money, which had been arranged for in Chicago during the teamsters' strike, it was contended, was a violation of the alleged contract. The express company, it was said, would be compelled to relinquish the" actual possession of the Government monpv. while still held resnonsible for its safe transfer and delivery. Acting 1 Secretary Taylor replied that the Treasury Department had received no ' complaint from the Chicago SubTreasury, or from any Federal offices in Chicago, and that, in fact, it had not been found necessary to call on the commanding officer of the Department: of the Lakes to take charge of the transfer of Government money as had been contemplated, as the strikers had assured the safe passage of all Government business despite the strike. He i declined to grant the request. ( Refused to Deliver Coal. , The strike situation has assumed a peculiar aspect. The interests which have been opposing the striking team] sters are not as united as heretofore. [ The team owners would not give a definite reply as to what could be expected of them. At the Union League ; Club a meeting was held between rep[ resentatives of the Employers' Association and the large team owners. The team owners declined to deliver coal frt nnr firm -ivllprp 51 strike waj in Drosr ress, giving as reasons that their own. * ffl oien would be called out and they,wojild be involved in the trouble, with 1 which they considered they had no ) direct concern. [ They were informed that if they, \ would not make deliveries their con. tracts with the business houses, "Ji J | amounting to millions of dollars anl oually, would be canceled. This'did i not change their attitude, however, and j. they persisted in their refusal to takepart in: the strike. The railroad men.' [ present took practically the same ^ stand, declaring that the fight was . something into which the railroads did ' ? j aot properly enter; that they had contracts with the team owners; that these j Contracts were at present being ful1 dlled to their entire satisfaction, and' v they could see no reason why the railroads should be dragged into the | iBfl&l? " 33?^ [ Officers of the Central Supply Assor :iation, which employs 380 teams, said r :hey would make deliveries wherever, } cheir contracts called for them, irre-, I jpectire of strike conditions. The ! Commission Team Owners and the r ?l.~ T.nnonni-fQHftn Tonm Owners' i issociaTTons have taken a similar stand ' !o the Chicago Team Owners' Asspcia:iou. .!~! "'.r5S?i> About 1000 new men were added to 1 die police force and put on strike duty is rapidly as tbey were needed. Judge C. C. Kohlsaat of the United States Circuit Court, at the request of Jie attorneys representing the seven: express companies, issued a temporary i injunction restraining all persons from | interfering with the wagons of the petitioners or the men employed upon ^ them. _?j Fierce Street Flghtlajr. . The fighting in the streets was even more fierce and savage than that previously. The fighting occurred in the i aeart of the business section of the city, r | aieu being shot down within 200 feet * $ ? jf the retail store of Marshall Field & [ I Co.. clubbed neariy to depth at the I I Auditorium Hotel in plain view of > hundreds of women, who were com? I nelled to run from the mob. t As far as known but one man was ,:?j . killed during the day. He was Charles Beard, struck on the forehead in the tight near the Auditorium Hotel. He.. t died of a fractured skull at a hospital [ *vhere he had been taken. I Frank A. Fulton Discharged. ' Frank A. Hilton, the siayer of Guy 1 Roche, in New York City several weeks 5 ago, was discharged on his own recog! nizance, with the consent of the Disr trict Attorney. Arming Their Teamsters. Disorder, growing out of the team ' ster's strike increased ic Chicago, III.. and the employers began to arm their drivers with rifles, which are carriedl openly. Gold Count Found Correct. , Gold in the Treasurer's office at San. Francisco, Cul., amounting to $5,940,| 000, has bei'n counted and found correct, the count being necessitated by the shortage of former Tax Collector E. J. Smith. , ' Diplomatic Transfers. Minister Barrett is to be transferred from Panama to Colombia, ana joiiu Hi.-ks. of Wisconsin, will probably be appointed Minister to Chile. it was announced at Washington. D. C\, Injunction on R. R. Commission. i All t!i" railroads operating in Florida. Jiav-? sKiirtHi an injunction against the. Florida Railroad Commission putting, ) :nto effee" the reduced rates on lumber. Uuildings Unroofed. Saver?. 1 buildings, including St. Mary's Church, were unroofed at Car- > I lisle. Hi., by a tornado, which did tip? wards ci' S'JOO.QOO damage. * Monument to Fitzhugli Le<\ ' A movement bas nlread been started at Rich mono, Va?, to erect a public moaumeut to General Fitzbugli Lee. * . ">?