The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, January 01, 1908, Image 2
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|raaBBBMBMMMh?amMMHHmWUWWHi
WARS
The December day set for the
starting of the "Practice Cruise to
the Pacific" will doubtless go down
in history as one of the red letter
days of the American Navy, for the
departure of the Atlantic fleet from
Hampton Roads on its 13,000-mile
-* ? -?< ?? ?Ko mn?t inn.
jour?.jj- mauguicLico
ment-" js undertaking of its kind that
the world has ever seen. Perhaps
the nearest approach to it was Rojestvenskv's
ill - starred journey
around the Cape of Good Hope, but in
strength and numbers his fleet can
in no way be compared to the mighty
armament which Rear - Admiral
Evans' flagship, the Connecticut, is
to lead through the winding channels
on their way around to the Pacific,
of the Magellan
Strait.
Although the trans- X;
fer of the fleet from
ocean to ocean has
been discussed as no : vv<
movement of a fleet
has ever been discussed
before, it is ' s| %
probable that few yet | W$,
. realize just all it &||?1 Wi0is$M
means. The statement
that it is equiva- *
lent to the -transfer
frnm the Atlantic to
the Pacific seaboard > / teg
of a highly disciplined >.
army of nearly 2,- ?fm
000,000 men may l''Z . ' |?fl
seem extravagant, JBC
but, in a sense, it is
no less true. In a ?&
recent essay read before
the Naval Instl- V'ji'V V-'mBtgt
tute, Captain Bradley >' flraj
A. Fiske drew an
analogy between bat- a?
tie-ships and armies, ;-.V:
ana m wnicn tne ppn|H|
author asserte'd that
a battle-ship is a
much more powerful |p;
thing than an army *r '
of 100,000 men. "On '11
>. land," this author 3
100,000 infantry car- ,
ries 100,000 rifles. If ?
those 100,000 rifles
Were all fired simul.
taneously, the com- ^
bined energy of the . rr.m,
bullets at the muzzle
wcNld be eq.ual to only seven per cent,
more than the energy of two twelveinch
guns in one battle-ship. And if
the total energy of those 100,000
men could be concentrated, it
would not be more than 25,000
horse-power, about fifty per cent,
more than the horse-power of the
Maine. The 100,000 men would
weigh about 7200 tons, about h?lf
the weight of one large battle-ship."
But. as CaDtain Fiske adds, the
fire of 100,00*0 men cannot be concentrated,
v neither can their energy
BASE AT MAGDALENA I
nor their weisht. So it would seem
that the battle-ship is a machine of a
higher order, possessing, in her gunfire,
a greater amount of concentrable
energy, in her engines an
energy more1 than half as great as
that of all the men and horses in
\J. S. Army Transport Service Flag
The section at the left is red, th?
section at the right blue, and th?
centre section white, with the letter;
In red and the insignia in blue.
Arkansas Diamond Fields as
Rich as South Africa
Little Rock, Ark.?The diamonc
field discovered in Pike County, thi:
State, is rich, according to the repon
of Professor Philip Schneider, geolo
?ist of the Syracuse (N. Y.) Univer
Bity, who was employed by the Stat<
Department of Agriculture to mak<
an investigation.
In his report he says that, whil<
' much of the land which he inspectet
Is worthless, a few acres are rich pro
ducers of genuine diamonds, equalinj
the Kimberley mines.
Halls of Congress.
ISO currency 0111 is iu ue cuusiuertsi
before January.
Speaker Cannon read a greetinj
from the new State of Oklahoma.
Representative Charles N. Fowle
pointed out the need of currency re
form in an interview in Washingtoi
through the "credit currency" sys
^ tem.
The President sent to the Senat
the nomination of Colonel Charles bl
Whipple, assistant paymaster-general
to be paymaster general of th
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Msg
HIPS PLAYING THEIR SBARCH-LIGI
that army; possessing also the ability
to go farther in any given length of '
time, and be self-supporting for a i
greater length of time, and possess- :
ing in her armor a protection, may
be said to double her offensive
nfroT??4ln - '
~ ?o
The author of this paper does not
mean to imply that a battle-ship
could do on land what 100,000 infantry
could do, but that on its element,
the se?, the argument is that
a battle-ship is a more powerful thing
thsLn an army of 100,000 infantry is
on'its element, the land. And that,
furthermore, 100,000 men cannot '
march 240 miles a day, whereas a
battle-ship can go 240 miles a day
with ease.
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8883838^^^
REAR-ADMIRAL EVANS,
nanding the Battle-ship Fleet.
Not including the six destroyers
which are to accompany the fleet,
and leaving out of count the supply
and repair ships which form a part
of this vast armada, the total battleship
tonnage which is to make the
voyage from1 ocean to ocean./is 223,836
tons. There are about 13,000
men attached to the fleet and Its
auxiliaries, and it will require more
than 6,000,000 pounds of provisions
to supply their needs throughout the 7
three or four months which will be
required for the long voyage. These
KJMf?^-1 J
! AY, OBJECTIVE POINT OF CRUISE
[supplies include 1,200,000 pounds '
I flour, 1,000,000 pounds fresh beef
I urozenj, suu.vuu pounas potatoes,
300,000 pounds smoked ham, 1,000,- {
000 pounds of vegetables, the list including
turnips, cabbages, carrots, 1
onions and asparagus, 200,000 '
pounds tinned corn, 200,000 pounds
tinned pease, 150,000 pounds tinned
tomatoes, 150,000 pounds salt pork,
110,000 pounds oatmeal, 100,000 ,
pounds each of rice, lard, mutton and
corned beef, 500,000 pounds of
caniled fruits, including apples,
peaches, pears and other fruits; 100,000
pounds of condensed milk, 100,000
pounds of coffee, 15,000 pounds
of tea, 40,000 dozen fresh eggs,
5000 pounds of mustard, 5000
pounds of pepper and 5000 pounds
of salt.
Nearly everything that a person
can think of to eat or drink, except
5 intoxicants, is included in the lists of
i supplies. In making out the lists the
i Navy Department officials took into
consideration the fact that the ships
Prof. Wm. James Finds a "Psychic '
Marvel" in New Hampshire.
1 Boston, Mass.?Professor William
j James, the Harvard psychologist, has
t examined the strange case of Mrs. 1
- Nellie M. Titus, of Lebanon, N. H.,
- and has discovered in her, he says, i
3 a "psychic marvel." He gives three
3 explanations of her power and expresses
the opinion that she has a
? super-normal faculty of seership.
1 Mrs. Titus in a trance located the
- body of Bertha Huz, of Enfield, who
j was drowned off Old Shaker Bridge :
nine years ago.
\ Fresh Incidents of Foreign Life.
Germany is getting scared at the
i large, numbers of workmen returning ,
from America.
; Secretary Taft made a plea for
world peace at the American banquet
r in St. Petersburg.
Kurdish tribesmen looted and
1 burned twenty-two villages in the
- Armeno-Kurdish district.
Much interest is manifested in the
e plans for President Fallieres' visits
..'to European sovereigns next year,
it I: was reported in Glasgow that
e contracts for the first ships of the
new Spanish navy had been signed.
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ITS.
will be at sea on Christmas, New
Year's and Washington's birthday,
and special dinners for those occasions
have already been arranged, as
Is shown, by the large number of
turkeys, plum puddings, pumpKiu
plea, nuts, dried fruits and other delicacies
named in the lists of foods required.
The Navy Department realizes
hoyr long and, at times, how
monotonous the voyage is going to
be, and it was determined that so far
as the food was concerned the men
would not have any excuse to
grumblje.
The officers of the fleet must lay
In their own supply of provisions at
their own expense. They may choose
what they wish without reference
to. the provisions which the Bureau
of Supplies and Accounts inakes fir
enlisted men. All of the food provided
will be kept fresh by means of
cold storage. Water will be distilled
aboard ship. At the ports new supplies
can be taken aboard, but the
orders of the Navy Department are
that the ships be provided without
reference to any stops they may make
The projected cruise has already
involved the purchase of nearly a
quarter of a million tons of coal, and
the charter of a fleet of colliers
which is numerically greater than
the battle-ship fleet itself. The millions
oi! dollars which the coal and
the cciiiers cost can only be approximated,
but they ate many.
The cruise itself bids fair to oe
jne of absorbing; interest, not o^ly
to this country alnd to. the nations
which will follow its movements as it
inakes its way down the great dip
3f sea hill which sweeps from the
Line to the Horn and up the lati:udes
to the Line again, but.it promises
to be eminently spectacular to
ill of those whose fortunes will be
:ast with the Armada.
''i?>' :*.r^v;
WaiiS/rT^S^iX'- ' iSr^x-yV-r ??? iX'Zglgjj^g.>
THE BATtLE-S:
'Twould, perhaps, be "worth ten <
'ears of peaceful life, one glance at
hat array," as, under the eyes of the
?resident, it moves out from Hampon
Roads?sixteen superb battleships,
with their attendant cortege
>f supply, hospital and repair ships,
rhe first stop will be at Trinidad,
vhere the fleet will renew its coal
mnnlv frnm thfi fleet of colliers
vhich will be awaiting its arrival
here. Then it will proceed to Rio,
vhere another supply of coal will be
aken on board from another fleet of
vaiting colliers; and then begins the
ong run to Punta Arenas?one of
he most dreary regions in the world,
ho jumping-off place?sinister as the
3it itself. Coaling again from coliers,
the fleet will resume its way,
aking passage through the Strait of
Magellan. It is expected to arrive
it Callao, its next stopping place, on
February 18, and at Magdalena Bay
>n April 6. Here it will effect a
lunction with the vessels of the Pacific
fleet. This is expected to comprise
the six new and powerful arnored
cruisers of the South Dakota
:Iass; the Tennessee and Washington,
)f a later and even more powerful
:ype; the three big protected cruisers,
St. Louis,, Milwaukee and Chicago;
the battle-ship Oregon, that
famous old dog of Santiago; the bat
;le-ship Wisconsin, wnicn is 01 tne
Alabama class, and the new battle
\
THE ARMORED CR1
Trolley Car Searchlights Hypnotize
Delaware Rabbits.
Wilmington, Del.?Rabbits are ensnared
by trolley cars in Delaware.
The capture of many animals would
be easy for the crews of the West
Chester, Kennett and Wilmington
Electric Railway.
The cars ara equipped with powerful
electric searchlights, and when
the intense rayn appear, at night,
rabbits make for the light. As the
ravs strike them, they perform all
sorts of gyrations, and when hit in
the eyes are completely hypnotized.
The News at a Glance.
The new Berlin subway is to cost
only $15,000,000.
The Sons of the Revolution took
possession of Fraunce's Tavern, New
York City.
Two Frenchmen recently fought a
duel in the shade of the Pyramids of
Egypt.
No wine may be sold in Spain on
Sundays, and the inns must be closed
on weekdays at midnight.
France, to protect and preserve its
art treasures, may follow Italy's example
and prohibit the exportation of
imuortaDt art objects.
U. %'J
THE FIGHTING STRENGTH
OP THE BATTLE-SHIP
PLEET.
Officers
Ships. Guns, and Men
Connecticut 24 881
Kansas 24 850
Louisiana ' 24 881
Vermont 24 881
Virginia 24 812
Georgia 24 812
New Jersey 24 812
Rhode Island 24 Sl2
Alabama 18 713
Illinois 22 690
Kearsage 22 690
Kentucky 22 686
Ohio 20 800
Maine 20 813
Minnesota 24 881
Missouri 20 779
360 12,793
,
ship Nebraska, but recently commissioned.
In addition to these are the
four protected cruisers of the Denver
class; the cruisers Chicago, Albany
and the gunboat Yorktown. The
Map Showing Magdalena Bay,
The Coaling Station Leased by Mexico
to tha United States.
,
combined fleets will therefore have
the following strength:
itefctle-ships 19
Armored cruisers 8
Protected cruisers 9
uboats . 1
I>. .^troyers 6
Total ! 43
This immense armament, by far
2$c, -ii'* ':if^-->;3
HIP MISSOURI.
the greatest ever assembled by any
nation, will be under the command
ot Rear-Admiral Evans. The Incongruity
oi having so vast a force under
the command of an officer with no
higher rank than that of Rear-Admiral
is recognized most everywhere,
except in- Congress. The creation
of the rank of Vice-Admiral and th&
bestowing of it upon "Fighting
P ?Af i nnroo oo
DUU WUU1U, Ui tUUI OC, UUl iuvi vuuw
the competence of that distinguished
officer; but the rank would be a more
fitting one for the commander-inchief
of this mighty fleet.
Upon the junction of the fleets
in Magdalena Bay, the present program
contemplates a series of extensive
maneuvres between the coriabined
forces, and target practice, including
the?firing of the guns when
the ships are in a rough sea, and
record practice when they are in
smooth water. The vast armament
will be divided into two fleets, and
the fleets sub-divided into sauadrons
and divisions.
This story of tho projected cruise
of the fleet may well leave it in
Magdalena Bay, for no prophet may
tell where it wili go from there. Some
official utterances have laid its
course north to San Francisco; whereas
some others, unofficial, have plotted
its track to the Philippines and
thence around the world via the Suez
Canal and home.
JISER TENNESSEE.
Professors Calls Fraternity
Houses Devil's instruments.
Chicago. ? Charles W. French
branded high school fraternity houses
as "instruments of the devil" and
a "plague spot," and the fraternities
as being surrounded by a store or
more of degenerating influences.
"Who that has 3een the chapterhouse
open day and night, with its
tobacco and profanity and too often
orgies lasting into the small hours,
can fail to see a vicious influence
which tends to ruin those who participate,"
he said.
Curious News Condensations.
New York's Zoological Park has
2243 birds.
German tourists head the list in
Alpine accidents.
One drug store in Moscow has a
staff of 700 employes.
Th? bulk of our exDorts art* as-ri
cultural products.
In Hungary traveling Is as cheap
as three miles for a cent.
The Emperor of Japan has thirty
physicians and sixty priests.
Wives are still obtained by purchase
in some parts of Russia.
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I Nil THIHS TFRfiT
II W ?! ?? tb.HI |
? R003EUEL1
V?
Announces He j ^gf Qevi2t<
From Election Nig^. DgQjgration.
DECISION THEnLde STANp<
Statement C, w,lite ?ou5,
. President S#; ^ ^
Changed ?nd F ^
ihe ecision Announced."
Washington, D. announce
ment was given oF^ bUcatl
at the President b| ^ ^ ^
House:
"On the night a#
? .. election I madi
the following ann<?*
10^ Picement: 'I an
deeply sensible of ?
. . #e honor done m<
by the American r , ,
... Aople in thus ex
nressins their coi?. . . .
~ , , Blerice in wnat .
have done and h? .
* * * fe tried to do. ]
appreciate to the ,
in' the solemn re
sponaibility this m
j r .jbnfldence impose
upon me, and I shfi ? .. . .
v .. . do all that in mj
power lies not toff , .. ,
a xr u JBorfeit it. On thi
4th of March nextt , ,, . .
, , it shall have servec
three and a half m . +.
and a half yearsfars-afn^0thi1svt^rre'
;term. The *tee fco?ns5lht>h^miti
iuA DrAdMh'M xjEiistom which limiti
ISHS ^Ftwo terms regard.
nnHflf fn PllJ!? not thC TOTm' aD(
MnrilHn^A fnr!!l3tanCe Wil1 1 1)0 '
inaticm accept another, nom
I have not c] anged and shall no
change the decia on thus announced,'
In this manne. Roosevelt endi
the pressure teal hag beeh put on hln
las few weeks i be country for fth<
last tew weew tQ make some sort o!
declaration whte^ WOuld end the un
certainty <*emrheTe etlating as ti
what he would i lo in regponse to th<
loud demand, p^rtjy reaj and largely
manufactured waa being mad<
for his rfinominf?ioI1 the Republi
can National C^venti0n a^ Chicagit
next June.
Throughout -ihe clamor of thi
third-termers 11 has been perfectly
well understood and nowhere bettei
than at the Whi'te House, that it cam<
from several clauaeB 0f men. one was
composed of thtgg wij0 honestly anc
sincerely belief that tte presidehl
Y?.u . Jmost available candi
date to succeed himself whom thi
Republicans co lld name<
One was milde up oniy 0f syco.
phants who th< ugllt tbat shoutinj
for his renomIiatjon tbey COuld besi
please the Pr<?j(iJnt and most serv<
their own pun l0se8> especially in the
matter of pat .onage- Another wai
composed of n en wjj0 are really opposed
to Mr. ] iooseveit and what he
nfanda for. aiNT_t-_ n 1n..*
?> ?-p -woo mougui iua.1. tm
use of his name ^ a cloak would besl
serve to concej^ their real intentions
and desires, j r
Among thejclosest 0f the genuine
friends of thl president there has
never been an? <joubt, however, as tc
the sincerity If his purpose to stand
by the declaij^tjon made on the
night of his ejection three years ago.
But the menj who were known in
their comm^itIes as his friends
created a nevTgituati0n.
-Had it beejj on]y the known enemies
of the Pf.e3ident who had joined
in the cry foj. a third term, the announcement
might not have been
made. But ^ aim0st every State in
the Union nie^ r p0rted to be friends
of Roosevelt, made it a business to
circulate the;8tory the nomination
were tenderer to Roosevelt he could
not decline if"
. In deciding t0 isgue the statement,
the Preside^ acted With the advice
of Secretary Root> postmaster-General
Mayer Secretary Garfield, all
of whom are stanch friends of Secretary
Taft, aiy 0? secretary Loeb, whc
is an equally 8trong supporter of Mr,
Taft. !
j BRYA? KOT SURPRISED.
I
Never Belie?ed Mr< Roosevelt Would
^ 8 Candidate Again.
Lincoln, K-eb ? When told that
President I^ogevelt had repeated his
declaration ^at he would not be t
candidate ?,r re-election, William J,
Bryan exprlSSe(j no surprise. He declared
thatft^ position of the President
was a; he ^ad thought It to be,
Mr. Bryan )al(i;
"I have assumed from the beginning
that >,~,3ideiit Roosevelt would
not be a can^da;te.' T^he statement
that he Issued he n5ght of the election
left no room<>OI. misunderstanding,
apd I, bave f<jt ^at his friendi
were doing him an injustice in suggesting
thit he wouK change his position
on the subject."
M?v mirnmrn
H'l K51 iLUliV;! Ai^CUTED
New Jersey's New Execution Ijaw ^
Force at Trenton.
Trento i, NJ J.?The death wijjd
Saverio c i Giovanni, murderer, knb*
he could not avoid, the death in foa
of which he had lived many days o
indescrib ible terror, came to him ii
the elecl -ic chair in the New .Terse;
State Pr son. A few moments befor<
'he was p it to death he was awakenet
from tbi hideous nightmare be hat
suffered 'or three weeks. Death wa
his relM
The lionth in which di Giovann
was to d e in the electric chair for th<
slaying < f Joseph Sansone, in the lat
ter's fr ilt store at Raritan, com
menced three weeks ago, and sinc<
I . ? 4KJ 1 nsnfoll.
Itneil pnBUUBi' lleta uccu uicuvai',
tortured) in a living hell.
i A? 1 -ii-' .
Owen and Gore Elected Senators.
At Guthrie, Okla., Robert Lathan
Owen apd Thomas Prior Gore wer<
I elected to tHe .United States' Senate
[ after a long wrangle over the ques
tion whiether the Speaker of th<
House cjr the President of the Senat
should preside over the joint session
Conanission Sent to Goldfield.
President Roosevelt appointed i
commission to go to Goldfield and re
port tq him the exact status of affair;
there, i
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The Labor World.
Half a dozen unions are In pro
cess of formation In Fargo, N. D.
Minneapolis will entertain the
1908 convention of the Bartenders
Union.
Samuel Gompers was unanimously
re-elected president of the America:
Federation of Labor.
President W. D. Mahon and othei
officers were re-elected at the recen
I- XT ^1-1 P
WUICUV.IUU Hi i>t;w unudiid ui um
Amalgamated Association, of Stree'
and Electric Railroad EmDloyes o:
America.
mmi . f :% : v
S'
&-r,: ..V. . . l
' i nlrfcra^rrvf *"' i
th|annijal H'
i
r across y
E x a^ i <
I --Jcclisy Club's
(r 1 Refined Violanc^ to j,
> Brooklyn; N. Y.?Abolition^
, poolroom foe good end all OwL-hou)
r the country 13 expected sooi ft^ej
r January 1 n^xt. Action btelnh_ ^.
* Jockey Clul of New Yor| 8L.
i .conforming jto the now fijWp*^?^.
f mont-SIicer agreement mMr Js?1"
1 to keep nefs from the f?IL v
" been follow? officially in
} permitting facing and prjtfi^rp**.,,
be in the la it two stronghold!?cj
poolroom n en- -Louisiana
f! fornia. . TJF*
In both hese States tjwtljLj-,
51 tures are es pected to paaajtetasz:nt"
ing State racing commlariMt^j&t,"
' eled along tjhe lines of
' and Kentucky bodies. Tmw|-. .
5 probably will be asked ttfWSHE
| | censes to tracks which djpl
- to suppress Information tf ta&Tfagtf
'5 If this be doneJ poolr ?oM *t Tx
; things of the past.
New York an4 Brooklyii fOll^?j0
1 are, betting this-winter fen fh? vj?w
' Orleans races, or on the Qakl)u?rCOc.
? tests, are doinp sojon the ,'Engli|JgI.e_
>; tem?or handbook wayf Th# Jjet
no advance Information .'aaKe^jJ5 a
1 few instances, a^d rely entlre.?on
1 the morning papers for the p^93
Following of the B6Un0atf}ic~er
agreement has cost the
thousands of dollars ami kai^&ed
' the ingenuity of the b|st de(^{ve
1 forces, in the country. VW<My^iias
1 been used unscrupulously'In
1 fare, though no actual de^ttark?*? o>?
' curred as far as is known.?Thfc "sihol<
1 story of the war betweft^tift^acki
and poolrooms probablycM^WgH^irb<
told, but if written wojn^i^^ the
DEAF MUTE
MILLIC&AlR
Miss Mary J. Crane, Hvirss of i
, Study (steady I
1
' Chicago. ? Announcemat thai
Mary Josephine Crane, daphter ol
the multi-millionaire iron manufac
turer, Charles R. Crane, ?nds tc
1 j become a farmer, is arou*# much
1 interest in Chicago. '
Miss Crane, who has beefte^f and
" dumb from birth, Is twentjAarsold.
' She Is. about to finish a years'
course in agriculture in tMenlverj
sity of Wisconsin, at Madisrn^ Hex
. pronciency aa a bluucui. uaowiavicu
H favorable attention from thftUtemberi'
of the university facultyj-rnd stu"
dents. r*.
Miss Crane's companio, Miss
r'
interviews wit*!
show hew i
Financial Trouble Has Had No Res
1 the Situation it Wore En
/!..1 : f /
? ' . [t
r Boston.?The Boston Hertitt pubr
llshes a symposium of reports jof the
f business conditions thipughait New
1 'England, gathered from thti feading
V i jLditors of this section of the cjuntry.
j I Abese show that the recent lUrry in
1 | th? mon0y market bad smilj effect
' Industries. __
3! * icPrG bAs letup
| of thfe wheels of actln|b| 'raekndtfsi
trial situation 1" ^ Sflifcfi
a encou^ng tiris;w$3^?tm I {nr.
- mer yeaJV Order?^Ioocl3 froni
- the West and South
a heretofore.^ There hasten xfcon7
siderable reaction oSftrce i anv
of the places ig^mr^vnent.
Kil bourne Cojmended Bo:Fine
\jork in Target Pr^^T
l , Washington?Official comn;n(|j..'
. tlon has beenmade of Captain-; *3
Kilbourne, insommand of the
" fifth Compau of Coast Artill,-.at
I Fort Monro? Virginia, for Ot6
achieved in trget pract.ce at Btttfry
Parrott. (twctwelve-incJ rifles
per cent, of its was made, the^^n
range beingn041 yards., (
1 Four shot, were firedi1? ^nrfjc- i
- ute and niii seconds. Jdreo > *jtie <
s four shot3 Suld Have pafced ;
a rectanguir targat 5 byjiO Jiijf j
nt SUOPf.
j.to jvitau ?
Cy YoJg, the of
- the twirll- box- *?} |3ln B *xgenial
taakT the eariy jjng. j ls t
i to coach ?e nine of twvvest^ ^
' Military Aademy. L ' 1
SometAg like ^^ce^t11 ?
' playera tR, have Been , the P
lvj i>u.u AlSj Will ^
i- with the.? Jorg. again a?- -e?in. b
t it is a* _ced thatB?'e|"^bady, n
J of Phila<y?h,a js to Iea?,.a!l5ar5e
fl new riMjP adjoinin5 La?d-Vine c:
t' Springs, 1ware, for ,^e Pu>ose it
of givinM^?1^ ^ WP?5 mat?1es. b:
-I
OLIDAV PROBLEMS
?From the Cleveland L^S^bH^D
i may be rnrnt u9h|
Fomia Will Prohibit Sanding <HHH|
-Every Means Used, IncludiMMBH
teep Information Secret. HnH
i Old Sleuth and Deadweod Dgfl I
; look like Sunday-ecfiool booj^NflBHIH
Armed Invasion of premiiH^B^^H
poles overlooking the 'tra^HHN^H
1 erected; catting down of^^H|H|^H|
i servation towers while
r drawn pistols stood over
men: blowing Up a hi I
Belmont Park with dynamitJMHflj^^E
catting of every^wire ieac^R^H^B|
a town (Saratoga), were
of the-fight. For weeks arnfl^B|^9H|
guarded every foot of erem^JMS^HII
in#, into the tracks, andlflHB|^H
spies were employed to
rooms and from there
sources of information if
.complete.
? $ The heliograph and th^H^^MBBj
the w i g w a
the ^
iBmen. h ftHfOi W>t^ bjMH
U\t the &$&**#?
I of t tie .past hre
I Jickey .ClajT^ronr^^BfM
3 Steer ?^ee&ra^-win beWoiB|H^H
3 raq g?nl
'~ * hh
Camp, whj as an
young w^S15t'0 theTlajMWBBB
i ta.ies not% jor ter, althoaBfi^B^Hfif
i ter can^%Qjit8tand almost^^^HBH^B
of thleaBStw? watcbiDS<mH
attend* examinations
not yet ^ai?d,to pass with^Rfl^BHHg
She has L?it? > -rental aSHHRfll
TITjIT ?*
to diet 0l^p and care
Recenty j^g Crane's
i her a *&;m iuar the Cr^BUH|H
home At'.r.alfftj Qeneva.
personaly to'direct thefl^^^B|H
next sunmer ^KBHHbb
1DING EDITORS!
FNGLIMH' PROfiinH
1HW ? If BlHWWW
Li " ' ; * ;
il Efff?tj|joi? Industrial
couraflh^. Than For Yea^H^99^H^B
-?HH
nHnn
ordBfS.jpr goods are fulI^HgV^^^BJ^^B
a ye*jrlf^ "When the deiflH^^NRHH
n?rti?^nie effect ofHgH^H|^^M9|
s^imm Holyoke waHKHgHpBHS
to MraSwIiceable. HnMB
P?rtSf0l3th, N. H., e?BHH|
tU^^'iest winter in its
e^everi months of the
greater than the wholej^MH^^^H^^^B
Lynn and Lawrence
have the same story to
Republics Reward
Who
Washington. D. C.?
to the Senate a^BHH^H
tions sought to be c^F^^HnHH
foreign, powers to
Included In the
shape ef a large silver.
by the Central AmeriL
Commander R. RicbAn?r^^9HH|^^^H
command of the YorktovS^^B^^^M^f
friction arose between tn^HH^H^BH
American republics last ^HE^H^R[
A'hich he was largely ln^^H^HBB|
removing.
Far Eastern
The Russo-Chinese Bank^RjflHHHI
;ooa proms since me war
Korea has borrowed
rom the Hypotheo Bank
Nearly all of India's
roduction of cottonseed
be j9HH^^nB|
The Fuji paper mill,
eing fitted with AmericanHK^H^^H
lachinery of the latest tyfl|^^HH^H
Armstrong & Co., of
stablishing a branch cor<HP^HHR9fl
Tinnn TKio in ~an n
* Uio la UillCiaiiy
v the Japanese Minister (^HHH