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H .GOT TO PULL ALCNG, Hkt'g the use in eiglim' if your soul can King a song? dr.y, or scsny, you've got to pull along! ricane a-blowin', or tide a-runnin' Btrong. me is a-flyin'?is a-flyin'! it's the use in wishin' fer the dead an' dusty years? I't they have crosses? Didn't they have cares? it's the use in weepin'? World will never heed your tears:' me is a-flyin'?is a-flyin'! i the road contented?an' the old world at its best: rel eoon is ended; there'll be time enough for rest ?n the Shadow comes an' scatters dust an' daisies o'er the breast me is a-flyin'?is a-flyin'! me is a-flyin'?is a-flyin'! s ?Atlanta Constitution. E WHITE IIFS OF JDLIETTE mven ence of Always Telling the Truth Pointed Out ?n a Girl's Journey. From the Frcnch JULIETTE TO EBB PATIIEB. EAR FATHER ? No one DJj could 'possibly feel more O keenly than I your rcJS proaches yesterday mornfOW ing when I was just leavfor Cherbourg with my governess, a Harriet, and my littler brother, fl. In spite of your having forbidit, the last thing I did before my arture was to brush my cneeKs h my powder puff. his you perceived as you bade me d-bye. Caught unawares, I denied fa.pt as stupidiy as I did -euergetK y, and you did uot spare your deelation. f course I am heartbroken to think t I haw ever displeased you, dear a, so I immediately made up my d that the best way to prove my entance and show my respect for was to conform blindly to your nsels. his is how I sot to work to practice m that very day. o sooner had we taken our seats iu train, Miss Harriet, Paul and I, n the guard came to take our tickAccording to your instructions we bought Paul's at half price. [ am sure that child ought to pay full fare." raid the euard: "he is talnly more thau seven years old." .. He is eight years old, sir," I said, nly. ren francs more, then," replied the rd. ife paid and the train started. Miss rriet was not at all pleased with interference, and she scolded and uttered away until she finally und up by telling me that she did think v/e appreciated her suffiltly. [ heard your father say the other ' that 1 was stupid," she said. "You dn't deny it, for you can't!" f course I had to tell her the truth. Ele didn't say you were stupid," I wered, "but ho did say that you e a goose." ercy! That was worse than ever, s looked at me as if she would like ?at me up. She did not say much. I: I think, dear papa, that you iiatl ter be on the lookout for another 'erness. fe reached our destination without ther adventure, except at the cusi house, when we were asked to dere the brandy, the cologne, the game my aunt at Cherbourg and all the t of the things. This cost fourteen re francs! iter an hour's ride in the carriage at length threw ourselves into the *s of your sister. Thin and bony, re homely than ever?I am still beperfectly frank, you see?she stood itlng for us on the threshold of the house which you are so anxious to to her. Why didn't your mother come with i?" she asked me at once. Oh, mamma was delighted to get of us so that she could have a good e with papa," I replied, for was it the truth? 3iie is not ill. then?" No, indeed." 3he wrote me that she was ill. Ah! Understand perfectly; I am to have the care ana worry or raiuog cure the children while she amuses herE." he did not seem pleased, .somehow. led to caress her and soothe her. But you love nre, little one, don't i?" she said. Yes, aunt," I replied. As much as your mother?" was about to tell a lie. Fortunately smembered your words in time, &? I wered her truthfully. Oh, no, indeed, aunt, not nearly so 99 Is it because you think your mother pettier and more agreeable than I?" : persisted. That is exactly the reason," I reMi. he frowned at me as blackly ag Miss rriet had dene, but she gave me one t chance to redeem myself. Why, how old do you think I am?" demanded crossly. gain I was absolutely frank and i just what I thought. Nearly sixty. I should judge." rlittle fool, I am only forty-five," as she seemed quite inclined to box ears I thousht it was high time to ' * T U ^ J-~ loe presents tuui 1 uuu uituukui. ? " Here is ?. centrepiece that mamma it jx>u," I said as quickly as I could . hold of it. It is very prettyand aunt opired delighted. "But what espelly touclus me is the thought of all stitches that my sister-in-law has en for me herself." Oh, but she didn't embroider it herf." I said hastily, for I remembered v pained you would feel at such a larture from the truth; '"the waits did the work on it." .unt scowled more fiercely than bee, and I handed her your bo:: of >coIates. What! From Potin's!" exclaimed it, smiling, all her frowns vanishing if by magic. "His chocolate is alys the best, but it is so expensive." his time, dear papa, it concerned 1, so f told her the truth at once. Tlr- box is from Potin's, aunt," I l~ New Year's Day, but papa got thd chocolate at the little shop on our cor? j ner." Aunt looked as If she had a whold thunderstorm inside of her. and the frowns were i'J full force as she said sourly: * '1 hoped that your parent# would have the decency to come and see me themselves. Your father wants to sell ' me this house, and as he said he had j had it specially repaired for me, per* haps I might he suited very well!" "How curious!" I remarked, saying exactly what I thought. "There I haven't been any workmen here for j three years, for I heard papa say so!" "All!?Aud do you also know why j your father wants to sell the house?" I t was tempted to be sJent, but, in- ! stead, I said frankly: "It is too noisy here to be endurable j and, besides, there are stables close by." I cannot describe, dear papa, the un | fortunate effect of these uudenlabk> j ;truths. My aunt left the room hastily i and banged the door behind her. I should have renounced then and j there the attempt to be truthful if j Gaston de Tournettes had not just thai instant jumped from his horse and I come hastily into the room. I wished : to announce his arrival to my aunt; j but he stopped me, saying that he had heard of my intended visit here and had come to see me the instant he ; knew I had reached the city. He said that he wanted to speak to j me and not to my aunt. Thereupon he began to say many very pleasant things to me, and finally asked openly if I liked him. Ah! my dear papa, if it had been disagreeable to me before to tell the truth j 1 assure it was quite aiuerenc iuia i time. . "Indeed, you please me very much, Monsieur Gaston, and you always have." "Then you are not afraid to become my fiancee?" "On the contrary, I shall be delighted to do so," I said frankly, remembering how you had said he was the most eligible bachelor of the season. "And you will love me?" he contin- | ued. "I love you already?" But I will stop here, dear papa, foi it seems to me that I can see you frowning this time, and I can hear your voice growling: "Naughty girl! You have said as I many impertinent and awkward tilings j as you have told the truth!" * So let me hasten to reassure you, j dear papa. This is all a story that I I have made up to tell you. Paul paid no more than half fare j and Miss Harriet is convinced that we | pmild nnne of us sret alonsr without her, r and that we think she is the very salt of the earth! The brandy passed the customs officers beneath their eyes and | noses, and they never suspected a I thing. | My aunt is delighted with mamma's j centrepiece, which she thinks is all her own work, and she is perfectly satisfied with the cheap chocolate in the i Potin box. She will certainly buy the house. And as for poor Gaston de ! Tournettes, he is atill ignorant of my ; sentiments! I merely wished to show you, a triflo maliciously perhaps, but perfectly respectfully, I assure you, that the truth you talked so much about is not always expedient to tell. Indeed, you would not think it was modest or fit- j ting for a lady to issue from her well and travel about through the world without being adorned and veiled to a cor tain extent. You had far better trust to woman s ) tact, finesse and t.?ste to render her sociable, amiable and even pretty and bewitching without losing any of her natural grace! Cover her with a little anodyne in the shape of a few innocent lies and she may Journey freely without fear of injury. Thus, dear papa, do not scold me so severely another time. I promise that I will tell only nice, white, innocent little lies, and you must admit now, yourself, that they make life vastly more agreeable and easy to live! In fact, there is no getting along without them! JULIETTE. i Tbe Country Editor. The worm will turn. Sometimes it takes the worm a long time to make up its mind to do it, but sooner or later it does. Every man who has served time as editor of a country newspaper has experienced the trouble referred to in this little anecdote, but not all of them have had the courage to resent it. T 11 in JLfft inert? uu a ovticij the little city and the local editor present, some will approach liim with a smile and say: "Well, getting some news to put in your paper?" Of course they mean well, but they seem never to realize that perhaps even a country editor can lay aside his professional duties long enough to go out in society and meet his friends on a social basis. "Deacon" Dobyns, one of the best known, country editors in Missouri, suffered this sort of thing for years, and although it rankled in his bosom, he never let on, but smiled in return and nodded assent. But at last patience ceased to be a virtue. Not long ago he attended a social affair in his home town, going as an invited guest. While mingling with his friends a local grocer greeted him with the remark: "Good evening, 'Deacon.' Getting some new3 for your paper?" ' Yes. that's what I'm here for," re | plied "Deacon." "By the way, Mr. Sands, are you here to drum up some trade for your store?" Of course the grocer sot mad about it, but "Deacon" only grinned and resumed mingling with his friends.? From W. J. Bryan's Commoner. Cloven. The word clove is derived from a Spanish word meaning u nail?the similarity in shape between a clove and a tiny nail is easily recognized. Cloves are the floiver buds of a tree which grows to a height of fifteen to forty feet. These flower buds are the principal products of the tree. They are gathered carefully, exposed to the smoke of wood fires, and afterward to the heat of the sun; or again they may bo dried by the sun alone. Cloves are much used both in savory and in sweet dishes. In braizing, making a soup, stew or ragout, no cook would think of dispensing with au oniov stuck witb cloves. I f i ATTRACTIVE HOME GROUNDS' i I A Summer House May Be a Source of Pleasure at Little Cost. [W W1Q yard of sufficient size to admit of it ought to be j jVT without something in the v^T v*, wft.v a summer house. There are several reasons wuy iuis should be the case: First, such structures are attractive in themselves; second, they afford an excellent i opportunity for displaying vines to adj vantage; third, they give the children I of the family a place to play in, in | which there is ample shelter from A PRETTY SUM aent, but where all the benefits of pure air are to be obtained. But the probabilities are that a house of this , kind will not be given over wholly to the children. The older members of the family will find it so delightful a place to spend the hot days of sum- , mer in that they will make quite ns much use of it as the children will. With comfortable chairs and a hammock it can be' made far pleasanter than any room in the house. If built of good size?as every such house ought to be, when the grounds will admit of it?tea can be served there in summer, and it will really become the centre of family life from June to September. A house like the one shown in the illustration accompanying this article will cost considerable, for every part of It is well built and calculated to last for years. But those who cannot afford the expanse of such a structure can easily reduce the cost by using rustic material. Posts of cedar, set in the . ground, will afford ample support for the roof, which ought to be of shingles to beep out rain. For the railing and bracket work cedar poles and branclfes can be substituted, or, if these are not procurable, any kind of wood can he used. Cedar is preferable because of Ihe ease with which it is worked and Its pretty bark,1<whicb will last-for a long time. Any kind of material obtainable from the woods can be worked into such a building with good effect. The more crooked, gnarled "and fantastic it is the better for brackets aud railing. Vines should be set out about the house and trained up the posts and made to completely cover the roof. In one season it can be made a bower of beauty. Th#- best vine for the purpose j Is our native Ampelopsis, or Virginia eroent?r. This will take hold of the , rough [)oI;?s with its fingers and train j Itself. Our Olnstrus, or bittersweet. Is another cxcellmt native vine of very [ rapid growth. This will also train it- j self by twisting: its slender branches , about post and bracket. Its scarlet and 1 orange berries will make the place ] quite as attractive in wiuter as iu summer. 1 While a house like the one iliustrated may look better in some respects l than the cheap substitute of posts aud poles, it will lack the rustic charm which characterizes the falter. The boys of the family can build a house ( that will afford the entire family a world of pleasure, and the cost of it will be small?Eben 13. Rexford, in New York Tribune. 1 NEW, SECRETARV mm Charles Jerome Bonaparte lias just 1 to succeed Paul Morton. Mr. Bonnparl great Napoleon, being the grandson of . 11a, a brother of the Emperor. Jerome n wishes Miss Elizabeth Patterson, of Ba MECHANICAL CATALOGUE. Can Bo -Consulted M^ro Rapidly Tban a Boole. Some fifteen years ago the mechanic cal library catalogue made its advent; but, despite its obvious advantages, il has never come into vogue, possibly or account of the initial expense aud diffi' culty of maintaining In operative condition. Tbe principle of causing anj given series of names or otbt?r data to appear successively at an opening bj mechanical means possesses merits that should be sufficient to justify iti use oftener than at present obtains MRU HOUSE. Just at the moment a Los Angeles inventor is to the fore with a modification of this principle applied to cabinet city directories. The names anil addresses are arranged in alphabetical order, as is usual, and are mounted on a directory strip wound upon rollers. Means are provided for the rapid winding and unwinding of this scroll by means of a crank handle and suitable gearing. The ratio of the gears is sucli that a very rapid movement of the strip is effected, a necessary feature to insure quick reference An index cruide is mo.mted on separate rollers, which do not travel so rapidly and which enable (he operator to r^acb ip MECHANICAL CATALOOUIJ. the (lpsired section of tlie index coni opulently. Of course. it in apparent! that such a device would he very cumbersome if applied to the directory of \ larffe city, and consequently is better irinnted to small towns and communi tics. A supplementary directory strip [ id provided for th" addition of name?, >o as to keep the list fully up to datei rho entire top of thf case is made) transparent, so that a large numbeij jf names are visible at one time, and l movable guide is provided to per' mit of close scanning of successive :olumus.?Philadelphia Record The Florida phosphate beds wcrj 5rst discovered by the Governineni geologists about 1884. The new Sluiplon tunnel is exactlj twelve miles and 4."3 yards long. r OF THE NAVY. I>een appointed Secretary of the Navy te is a collateral descendant of the Teronie Bonaparte, King of Westpba>.arried in 1803 against bis brother's Itimore. - / The (food milker. j The apparently rapid milker is not alI "ways a good milker. The milker who | is mos t agreeable to the cow is the one who ciraws the entire flow of milk in I a steady, continuous stream and does it as rapidly as possible without any unnec?ssary jerking, etc. The cow that bs handled by such a man will generally give down her milk rapidly and easily and will not be possessed of that | nervous temperaraeut which is so com| mou among abused cows. Scaly-Leg*. v } Ttvif. trouble is causcd by a mite I whieb burrows underneath the scales | of the feet and legs causing an irrltatlou which results in a multiplication of the crlls of the epidermis, and, therefore, u much thickened scale. To successfully treat this disease the Scales must 3rst be removed so that the medicine can come in contact with the mites The legs must be soaked in a | soapy Water until the scales are soft, when they may be removed. Dry thoroughly ami treat with the following: Balsam of Peru, two drachms to one ounce of vaseline. Mix thoroughly. The disease readily yields to treatment if the first sttfp, that of removing the scales, has been properly done.?From Bulleiin 104, New Mexico Agricultural Experiment Station. Killing Untato Beetles. To destroy potato beetles ninny prefer to use one pound of Paris green thoroughly mixed in 200 pounds laud plaster for the first application. We have only used a tablespoon level full of gre en in twelve quarts of water, applying it with the hand sprinkler," knapsack automatic sprayer and horse spray ?r. There may, perhaps, be more dangtr of this destroying the foliage than svith plaster, but It has been sug gesteu tnat one pound 01 tresn, common lime use<l with every pound of Paris green in water will counteract the injury that Paris- green might do on tb 3 plants. The New York Station says, to test the parity of Pnris green, put a small quantity iu a little ammonia, or commonly called hartshorn, and pure Paris green will all dissolve.?H. M. Culbertson, in the American Cultivator. Importance of Grit and Lime. The. importance of providing plenty of .grit and mineral matter for poultry must never be lost sight of. Chickens have no teeth with which to masticate their food, and grit takes their place in a fowl's internal economy and is therefore on? of its necessities. In a ehickan's gizzard fine particles of sharp sand or pulverized glass serve to grind the grain into a pulpy mass, which is dices Pfl hv thp intPsHnos Tbi mineral matter is necessary in the formation of the egg shells, and those hard particles from which the lime is most readily dissolved are therefore the most useful. Nothing is better f?.p this purpose than oyster shells. The imount of mineral matter fed to poult -y depends on whether or not they are laying. During the laying season hens require more mineral matter than when they are not producing eggs. Three things, however, ought always to be in reach of the fowls, finely powdered glass or grit, to aid digestion, ground oyster shell for egg material and charcoal to keep the system thoroughly cleansed.?Thomas W. Lloyd, in the Tribune-Farmer. "T Clover a* a Fertilizer. In a bulletin from the Central Experiment farm. Ottawa. Canada, may be found a discussion of the profitableness of growing and turning of clover crops. Extensive experiments in this line have been carried on at that farm for a period of over eight years, and tbe results gathered therefrom con| tain a considerable amount of practical information and data. The advantages | derived from plowing under clover are briefly stated by the station as follows: There is an enrichment of the soil by the addition of nitrogen obtained from the atmosphere. There is an increase in the store of available - mineral plant food, phosphoric acid, potash and lime, in the surface of the soi. taken by the clover in part from deptts not reached by the shallower root systems of other farm crops. There is a large addition of humus, whereby the soil is made more retentive of moisture, warmer and better aerated, conditions favorable to vigorous crop growth. Humus also furnishes the material best adapted to the development of these forms of germ life that act so beneficially in the soil. As an agent for deepening and mellowiug soils, no crop gives such satisfactory results as clover. Clover serves a useful nurnose as a catch crop during the autumn months, when the ground would he otherwise bare, retaining fertilizing material brought down by the rain, and also that formed in the soil during the summer months, mu^h aC which would be otherwise lost through tbe leuchiug action of rains. As shown conclusively by the particulars obtained by careful experiments over a number of years with the more important farm crops, the plotving under of green clover has a most marked effect in increasing the soil's productiveness.? Massachusetts Ploughman. Keeping Up :? Succession. Keep up a succession of your young and tender vegetables by planting at rofnilai* inta?*tr*i1c cstinli no /Ia nAf quire too long a time to mature. Peas may be planted about every ten days up to the first of June, string beans from May L to August 15. beets to August LO, Early (lorn varieties of carrots to July 20. The later varieties of corn, such as Slonewell's Evergreen, cannot be depended upon to mature if planted after July 20, butearly varieties may be soavii a week or two later and will yield a late crop. Celery for early us? should be in a permanent place before July 4, and no time lost thereafter in getting the main crop planted. In private gardens the old method of planting in trenches is still favored as being more economical of space. These trenches are dug about twenty inches wide, and four or five inches deep; a liberal coat of manure is then placed in the trench aud thorouehlv iucomorated I with, the soil. These trenches will ae? commodate two rows of plants, planting them about eight inches apart in the rowSr Thorough cultivation and plenty of water should be given until the plants are ready to be earthed up. which for the earliest batch should? be no later than September 1. For blanching such varieties aa White Plume boards are now generally used after one or two handlings. The principal requirements for growing good vegetables after a suitable soil is secured are a liberal supply of well-rotted manure, piireful cultivation, and a good supply' of water in dry 'weather. Never allow any part of your garden to remain idle during the growing seaA M A/V/VM n l.n/. Kaam MAMI. gun. na nwii tig a v;iu|; uag uccn ^aiuered or become unfit for use, dig it over and plant again. In some cases time may be saved l>y plan ting between the rows of growing crops which are near maturity, and these must, of course, be cleared away as soon as used to give room and light to the new occupants.? H. Castbur?, iu the American Cultivator. Feedinjr Cattle in the Open. It is often necessary, or at least convenient, to feed cattle in the opeu field during the summer and fall months. In doing so a largo quantity of feed is ^ ' \ mo RACKj v Jn 'IT bU-/ n I I l\ fs wasted unless some means are provided for feeding cattle that saves all of the manure and mixes with it such feed as is wasted under foot. Sheds, as shown, may be built of any suitable length, ' one accommodating ten to fifteen cattle I find most convenient, writes an Indiana correspondent of the Orange Judd Farmer. The shetLs I have aire built with end sills twenty-six feet long, two fee< LJ'" \?. = ' ; i 1Z i. i? ! ' ? vii & - S S3 ter and metal workers' tools. For tie general needs of the farmer, we suggest, hand-saw. rip-saw, square, hammer, two planes, drawknife, spoke shave, four chisels, brace and six bits; three augers and the usual lot of small tools, awls, gimlets, guage, compasses and calipers. To be prepared to do all kinds of work yon will need a full set of bits, with four or five twist drills for boring either wood or metal, and also a sel of files, cold chisels, punches and hammers. The purchase of a good, heavy machinists' or blacksmiths' hammer th* first filing will prevent the breakage of many a carpenters' hammer and hatchet?tools that were not made to do extra heavy work with. You will also need a small riveting hammer, .1 pair of pliers, a pair of nippers and a good pair of blacksmiths' tongs. Othei tools will suggest themselves as they are nepded or as you feel like buying thiun.?Farmer's Voice. Danger SignalH. As we grow older we learn not to expect a good meal if the hostess sits down looking as unruffled as if she had never seen a kitchen.?Atcbisoc Globe. t~^ y 11 " -V- j| GB0UND PLAN OP FEEDING SHBI^ under shed and fourteen feet forward to support movable fence. A four-foot opening is left in each end for cattle to pass ia and out. A swing door (a) is,, made two feet high at rear, or thiu.j space may be left clear without door/ This allows shed to ..pass clear of the accumulated manure when moved from place to place. The front of the shed is left open three or four feet above the trough (c). Vertical bars (b) are put in fourteen inches to two feet apart to prevent cattle from getting into feed rack. My buildings are mads of boards j nailed to two by four inch scantling, and the roof covered with paper. Any uumber of theso sheds may be placed end to end far enough apart to permit free passage of cattle. The load of feed is driven in at one of the gates (d). and the gate closed to prevent cat tie entering feeding yard. In moving the shed, which I do once a week, the team is bitched to the fence end of the runner sill outside of the fence and shed moved to next feeding placed ,*?>-? ' " Tho Farm Worltnhop. Every up-to-date farm should have some kind of a building iu which repairs to farm implements can be made, gates built, tools uharpeued and other odd jobs done. If building especially for the purpose of a farm workshop, we would have the structure not less than fourteen by eighteen feet, ground plan, and ten feet high, to provide storage room for lumber and small implements overheud. The workbench should be on the south or east side, and should be made of tough lumber two tnches thick? Near the left end of the bench have a good carriage maker's vise fastened securely with bolts, and on the floor, three feet to the right of the vise, there should bo a chopping block two feet high and about eighteen inches in diameter. A pair of strong trestle benches two feet high and four feet long completes the furnishings of the shop excepting for some tool racks on the wall, above the bench iu front of the workman. The tools will depend upon your ability l.o use them, and may range from a $4 "frnminer kit" to a full set of carpeiu | " -i t. ' ' i / BIS' PLOTS FAIL i Nihilists Attempt to Kill Tv/o Russian Officials. BOMB STRIKES ViCE-GOYERNOff | [Nnianrt'A J'roMcut Uuler Hit Ity (nKtruiment of Oentli. ilnt Only Stunned? Procurator PolilerionofttMoff' Plnct'l in Uftncor by Auolhor Wonlri-Ke !Uur(leror in St. l*?terAburt;. llelsingfors, Finland. -Blown off his J'eat by a bomb from an assassin's hand, Vice-Governor Dentrich at a late hour in the aftcrno&ii was injured so severely that two examinations were needed to convince the physicians he WOllId stirvivo hi< ln?rlc The linmh was thrown at the Vice-Governor when he was leaving the Senate, two hours 'after the conviction ami sentence of Karl Leonard Hohenthal. who killed Procurator General Soisalon-Soininen with a bomb on February 0 last. It was hurled by a mnn standing fifty feet from the victim, the distance probably saving the Vice-Governor's life, as the missile foil short by a couple of yards. M. Deulrich not only was felled by the shock, but fragments of metal were blown into his legs and body. Soldiers picked him Up in aif ..nconscious condition and hurried him j to a police station. Act of Bed V?Dgeanoe. j It is assumed the attempt at assasI siuation was made to avenge Hohenthal, who was sentenced to hard labor I for life for the crime of last winter. | News of the sentence.,traveled, throughout the city in-the' two hours between its passing and the attempt on M. Deutrich's life. The Anarchists and other revolutionists were furious over the severe punishment, as they viewed it. jijutcicu uu iue uuuuerer <u me rrucurntor-Genernl, and it Is supposed they planned Ueutrich's death in reprisal, The man who threw the bomb must have known the Vice-Governor would pass across the square in front of the Senate Chamber at a certain time. He posted himself in the most advantageous position whence to take the life of the official. Tha* he failed was due to the inaccuracy of his aim'. An uproar followed the explosion. Passers-by wheeled and fled, but in a few minTrtes a crowd surged over the square and formed, a ring about jfJie prostrate Vice-Governor. Expressions of regret were heard. They were in low tones, the prevailing sentiment being that it was too bad the b<^mb thrower's aim had not been better.^ A platoon of naval cadets pursued the assassin for several miles, but he escaped in the environs of the city. N? clue to his identity had been found at 11 o'clock in the evening. The police who joined the cadets in the manhunt said they were determined to catch the criminal within twenty-four hours at any cost. It is known the authorities wish fr? m:ilc<? .in <?vamnl<* of lb# j man with the bomb. St..Petersburg, Russia.?Terror spread throughout the capital in consequence tof an attempt to kill the Chief Procurator of the Holy Synod, Constantino Petrovitch Pobiedonostseff. Vigorous attempts to check the rumor were made by the authorities, but so many persons had witnessed the attack on L'the Procurator that concealment soon SjjRas seen to be out of the question, 'greats. of imprisonment were made * Again stall persons who should repeat the report Such-warnings were ignored, and the people spoko freely of the attempt at assassination. It was asserted the Procurator's life was saved by one of his attendants, who seized the weapon with which the assassin was about to commit murder. M. Pobiedonostseff arrived here in the forenoon in a train from TsarskoeSelo, where he lives in the summer. He barely had stepped on the station platform when a man rushed toward him, grasping a pi3tol. One of the Procurator's retinue saw the weapon gleaming in the sun, and with a single spring hurled himself upon the man, bearing h:m to the ground. The Procurator's attendant wrested the revolver from the assassin's hand and handed it to an agent of the sccret police. Then he turned his cptive over to the police. His quickness doubtless averted a panic, as there was a big crowd at the station. So rapidly did he over power the assassin that only a tew hundred perrons witnessed the incident. If a shot had been fired it is probable a riol; would have followed. Moscow, Russia. ? Sensational incidents followed the opening of the All Russian Zemstvo Congress here. The police broke into Prince Dolgoruloff's home, where the Zemstvoists were sitting and commanded that the congress, be terminated at once. The 225 delegates to the national meeting refused to obey the police. Thereupon the police interrupted M. Golovi. Chairman of the Committee on-Organization, who was reading a paper outlining a favorite plan of representative government. Count Heyden. presiding officer of the congress, protested against interference on the part of the police. "Write down the whole of Russia!" cried Count Heyden when the police began taking the names of the zemstvoists. The officers ignored him and continued? compiling the list of the persons present. Mnny persons who were nnr rteipff.ifps insisted that their names be taken, too. The police, when they had all the names, retired to prepare ;i report: on the meeting. They returned shortly and listened intently to the speeches aud papers, but made no further attempt to end the meeting. KILLS TWO MEN IN CHURCH. Best Man in the House. Says Kentuckian?Shots Follow. Ceattyvi'le, Ky. ? John Miller, of Breathitt County shot and killed James Clrees and James M. Thomas during a fight in n church on Frale.v Creek. Miller entered the church and announced that he was the best man in the house. Greos and Thomas disputed this and the shooting followed. A inol> lormrd io lynch Miller, but !lie Sheriff landed his prisoner in jail here. Sporting Brevities. W. B. Jennings' Proper von the Long Csland Handicap. Bryn Mawr pnio team defeated the Hunt (iwnrtof at Cedai-lnirst L. I. " r. .T. Rwyer's two-year-old colt Quorum won the Atlantic Stake at Brighton Beach, N. Y. T.imftt' Ttt*nf1v*e liiorh nr\\i Oiseau won the Sp'.udrift Stake at 'oliecpslicml Bay, Js Y. "Alec" Smith, with a caiil of 70. eslablishcil c new golf recorJ for the public links at Yau OorUa?,Jt New jYork Citv.