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A LITTLE FELLOW'S TIME. I ( Wher vou were Jiilto iln! you have A !il.tlt? fellow's rune'' _ j That is? I moan?a jjrancvine swing ( And piarly frees U> climb. And awkward leered calves to (liasc, t And yellow chicks to hold, I And t:i old hissinc gander, too. I To scare .vou sli/r ;.ud cold.' .Say, did vou have a little iamb, S And colt, all for your own, And 'mi old cow's sleek sides to stroke. And an old bowlder-stone 1'eside flu- kitchen floor wnereon You, ;i woe yellow-head. "Were word (o sit and swing your heels And oat your lasses bread? And was i.here. too, an old c?rny :naro. A "Dobbin" or a "Kit." On whose broad hack", with daddy's help, You used Koineiiir.es lo sit And ride away down 1 o the creek ? Jn which she used to wade , And thrust her nose nnlil you screamed, it made ,-ou so afraid? A mother and grandmother, loo? A erandpop and a dad To take you with them t.o the fields And woods and make you clad With goblin stories, lold so d?ep. You didn't care lo cheep: And nights did thev just fairly fuss To smuggle you to sleep? O, meadows, fields and wooded ways, And creeks of long ago! 1 0. awkward calves, and hissing geese, , And cov.*s that used to low! 1 What pleasant memories ve make 1 iim 1 J w lieu u"?? uu???i i n*: Of him who. jiM a kilted babe. There ate his 'lasses bread! ?J. M. Lewis, in Houston I'ost. i ASTORYOFmEAD-ROOM. I By CAPTAIN BARCLAY. "I presume, doctor, there are many sorrowful scenes which present themselves in your profession," I remarked to the surgeon of our regiment, as I spent an evening in his tent, while we were in camp. "Yes, indeed," he replied, with an air of nonchalance. "Eut, then, captain, you are a soldier, and you know how a fellow will get used to most anything. You do not shudder now ' at seeing dead men lying around loose as you used to do, do you?" 1 j "Well, no," I replied, "that is too true." "I remember one incident in my life, when a student of medicine in a New York college," continued the doctor, "that has never been erased i fiom my memory. It is full a quar- c ter of a century since it occurred, and 1 yet I remember it well. I would to I Heaven it could pass from my mind, t "War is full of horrors." continued 2 the doctor, "and I have been in hos- c pitals where the shrieks of the i wounded and the groans of the dying t mingled, and went about my ">usi- 1' ness almost as the weaver listens to 5 the sound of his looms. But this is i a. story of the dead-room, where no i sound is heard but the sharpening of t the scalpel and the almost noiseless Iread of the surgeon. r "Among the professors iu the med- t leal college at that time was Dr. F?, r >n English surgeon. He was a man \ jf brilliant attainments, both as a r k scholar and as a surgeon. c "He was probably sixty years of t age, and had no family, a!; least he r aever spoke of one. Why he left his f native land, and why he hardly ever i smiled, no one seemed to know, and i probably no one cared to ask. We, I as students, naid our money for a v knowleJge of medicine and surgery, ind did cot trouble ourselves about :he history of those who taught us. "The winter season of lectures had sommencad, and students from nearly 2verv section of the United States were in the city to attend them. Subjects for dissection were required, and sometimes, like other articles in the market, the supply exceeded the demand, and at other times the dead" room was short. Body-snatchers were employed at the current rates, and were paid for the bodies furnished by the law of supply and demand. Subjects were scarce and in demand the winter I have named, and prices rose accordingly. "I happened in the English professor's room one morning to examine a medical work that required my at- \ tention. A gentle rap came on the door, and the doctor said, 'Walk in.' i "I knew the visitor and his calling 1 \ at a glance. His soulless eyes glanced y \ caunousiy arounu me room, ana men he asked, in a whisper: 44 'All right, doctor?' ? w 'Yes; one of my students,' re v plied the surgeon. 9 " 'Have a fresh stiff, doctor. Found F it floating in the harbor at daylight ; this morning. Female, about fifty, I and good form. From an English vessel, no doubt.' 44 'What is the price?" asked the I surgeon. 4* Cannot deliver it at the college for less than a hundred," was the reply. 44 'Too much,' answered th3 surgeon. 'You are above the market.' 44 'Sorry we cannot agree,' said the man, with a scowl; 'but the fact is, doctor, no class of individuals, takes such risks and work as hard for our money as us fellers, and mostly for the benefit of science.' "He was about to depart wheu the ! surgeon called him back. " 'Make it seventy-five and you can bring the subject.' " 'Sorry, doctor, but I can't. You ' see, Jim and I is in partnership in this stiff, as he happened in the beat . with me, and when we come to divide ] the matter it will be only fifty each. ; We honestly earned every cent we ! ' ask.' | " 'Well,' replied the surgeon, 'bring i the subject to the dead-room to-night, I and your price shall be paid.' < "The following clay the professor ( auiivu uv^u iU IliO LUUl UUlg IUllU; t I ' that a fine female subject had been i obtained, and that in the afternoon he should dissect it in their presence and for their benefit in the science of obstetrics. A fuli class and a careful hearing were demanded. "The subject ha 1 been placed on the dissecting table in the dead-room, i and a white sheet carefully secured it from view. A full class was .11 [ attendance at the afternoon i:xer- j cises. | ' "The professor dwelt with warmth | 1 upon this delicate branch of medical}: scienfft anrl Saul I he thomo tt"jy nrn- I I .'ound ami in part revealed the m ler of our creatiou. "Stepping from iho platform w icr.lpol in baud, he then advanced lie table, removed the sheet fr< he corpse, and while ^azinsi or. t 'ace of the dead woman, the co eft his cheeks, the scalpel ohook lis hand, he gasped for breath, a >a.iu. Jane! Jane! Great Heaven, it fane!' and fell in my arms. "Restoratives were applied to I bloodless lips, and when he had :overed sufficiently to speak, he sai " "Gentlemen. I am ill. There w ip no dissection this afternoon. Lea he room. To-morrow meet me he usual hour." "What became of the dead body lever learned. It was removed tt light?by whom and where to w lever known by us. The surgeon a! lisappeared that night, and never c :ered the college again. What I :ame of him aiways remained a m; ery. He may have departed 1 Surope in the morning upon soi vessel leaving port, or he may ha :omitted suicide. A body resembli he doctor was found floating in t Sast River some weeks after, but vas too much decomposed for iden Ication. "The mystery connected with t lead-room never was fully explain* ilumor had it, but it was never fu ionfirmed. that the doctor's wife h leserted him in England many yes irevious to tms event, ana rau aw with a British sea captain, and tt he doctor came to America under issumed name. Being a skillful si ?eon. he readily attained the honor ank he held. ' How the woman met her untim< leath no one ever knew. Her pai nour may have grown tired of h is is the general result, and she m lave welcomed death in a wat? jrave, or she' may have accidenta 'alien from the ship's deck. T! >he was the doctor's wife there can 10 doubt. , "Now captain," continued the d< ;or, "I have told you the story of t lead-room. The mystery connect vith the affair can only be left :onjecture."?New York Weekly. \ Profitable Crop in the Northwe By A. E. DICKEY. The second factor making for t lew prosperity may be termed "t liscovery of flax." For years the lad been a few scattered flax fieh )ut it was only in the middle nil ies that the Northwestern pione iwoke to the discovery that linse >il was of a more truly golden hi lot only than the wheat field, t han any gold-bearing quartz Ca ornia ever saw. And so the endl< ;olden yellow of the fields of whe jave place to the blue flowers August and the tinkling bells in Sf ember of the flax fie}d. Those who have never heard t inging of the flax bells have miss i truly wonderful sensation. T ound seed pods, smaller than pe: vhich contain the seed, give a fai netallic sound which as one dri\ >r walks through a field, setti housands in motion, seems like it iads of infinitesimal bells tinkling aintly as to be all but inaudible. N s the mere sight of a flax field in t nellow August soon to be forgottt magine a hundred-acre field, fill vith flowers of a blue more delics han violets. And of its profltal iharacter one illustration will si ice. In June, 1900, Ole Jans lought a hundred and siity acres he heart of the great flax belt f ilO an acre on the crop payme >lan. Ole "broke up" that fall a he next spring a hundred and thirl ive acres and planted it in flax, ound numbers, he threshed in t !all eighteen and one-half bushi o the acre; sola it tor rnishe ; total, $3500; a little mc han twice enough to pay for 1 and out of his first crop. Not or vas the flax immensely profitable ;elf but it removed from the cod ry the stigma, "one crop country ?From The World To-Day. Railway Acquaintances in Americi "You may travel 1000 miles on ailway in Europe and never a nu vhether English, French, German vuau uui, mil upcu ujo jLuiruuu. ipeak to you if you are a strangei ;aid J. W. Pike, of Philadelphia. "For a total freezeout I accord t lalni to the English. Your tr Briton regards any man who b lerve to speak to him without e\ laving been formally introduced esking with effrontery, and, thei ore, to be disdained and snubb< . want to except from these a ch )f Englishmen who have been abc he world a good bit. I've met a fi >? this sort who had knocked abc he world and who were not si jicious of a stranger who address ;hem that he had designs on th locketbook. "Maybe in the course of time a he process of evolution we may ? he same clamlike reserve over he n America, but I don't expect to s t in my meume, ana 1 am gjau .hink whenever I enter a parlor c .'or a ride to San Francisco or Seat hat though I may not know a bless nan on that train when I enter, c LOO miles have been traversed 1 sh je talking with some good Americ vhom I never saw before as thou ,ve had been friends and comrac Yom our earliest youth."?Wasliii .on Herald. Horse Must Xot Shy :?t Motor. Horses have- no business to bo frig niecf at motor cars. Such is the 1 ^st decision of M. Sere de Rivier :he "Good Judge" of Paris. A c? ?vas brought him by the ov ?r of two horses which had be frightened by the passing of two n tor cycles ou one 01 me imuni. in? svays in the Department of the So rue. The driver, in trying to mas 'he horses, was run over by the cn i'iie owner sued lor damages. 1 Judge decided they were not due, horses ought to be trained so as i to shy at the noises of motor ve :les. If peasants had 110 motor e; to supply the object lesson, so mi the worse lor the peasants.?P? Uorresnnndent London Telesraoh; " TO DRIVE ANARCHISTS 3! GUT OF THE COUNTRY he j iUl I in Immigration Officials Ordered to Work With Local Police. Ill . . ixis DEPORTATION AFTER ROUND-UP re- I d: ill 'Ocretary Straus Orders His Men to ive Co-operate With Police in Locatat ing Criminals ? ludorsed by Roosevelt. we lat i Washington, D. C.?Tho United as 1 states has declared open war on AnIso j .rchists. As a result of the great ;n- j ncrease in crime and the growing Je- j >oldness of those who are enlisted *'s" | tnder the red flag, Commissioners of or mmigratiou and Immigrant Inspec21e ors have been instructed by Secretary V6 j itraus, of the Department of Comi aerce and Labor, to ally themselves ^ j vith the police and detectives of the ti- I dties and aid in putting an end to I lerrorism. The order was issued im he I mediately, and is said to have the l(j hearty indorsement of President : * I tloosevelt. *| I Secretary Straus orders that the a" i immigration authorities shall take ir6 jtteps necessary to "securing the coay I Operation of the police and detective lat j forces in an effort to rid the country an j of alien Anarchists and criminals fallir I 'nS within the law relating to. de^ iportation." j The order of Secretary Straus fol' lows: i "To all Commissioners of Immigrara-j tion and Immigrant Inspectors in er, .'charge: It is hereby directed that, ay ! with a view to promptly obtaining !ry I definite information with-regard to jlv I alien Anarchists and criminals located ^ ! in the United States, you shall confer 1 fully with the Chief of Police or the be | Chief of the Secret Service of the I city in which you are located, furnishdc i ing such official with detailed inhe j formation with regard to the meaner | ing of the term 'Anarchist,'-as used t0 j in the Immigration act of February I 20, 1907, and with regard to the inhibition of that statute against aliens of the criminal classes* explaining the powers and limitations imposed by said statute upon the immigration St Officials with fespect to such persons. "You should call to the attention of the Chief of Police or Chief of the Secret Service the definition of 'Anhe j archist' contained in Sections 2 and he j 38 of the act of February 20, 1907, Jre | and the provision of Section 2 placing js i within the excluded classes 'persons ' ! who have been convicted of or admit ! having committed a felony or other feJ srime or misdemeanor involving e(* | moral turpitude,' pointing out that if ie, any such person is found within the mt ' United States within three years after ,li- landing or entry therein he is amen;sa able to deportation under the provisions of Section 21 of said act. in "The co-operation of said officials m should be requested, making it clear 'D* that in order that any particular Anarchist or criminal may be deported, he evidence must be furnished showing ed (1) that the person in question is an b0 alien subject to the immigration acts; 1S (2) that he is an Anarchist or crim' inal as defined in the statute; (3) the date of his arrival in the United 'es States, which must be within three n? years of the date of his arrest; (4) iy- the name of the vessel or of the transso portation line by which he came, if or possible, and (5) the name of the ke country whence he came, the details With respect to the last three items ' ' being kept at the various ports of e" entry in such, a manner as to be lte available if information is furnished >le with respect to the Anarchist's name, .if- the date of his arrivaj, and the port of en entry. in "It is desired that the above inai, cated steps shall be taken at once and that no proper effort shall be spared n* to secure and retain the co-operation a" of the local police and detective forces ty- ! in an effort to rid the country of In i alien Anarcmsts ana criminals ianhe i ing within the provisions of the states ute relating to portation."' a The Adminio^.ation has viewed .with increasing uneasiness the spread ,r? of Anprchy and Socialistic teachings. 118 | The threats made against, citizens of ily wealth and position are becoming it- more numerous with every month, in- The attempt to kill the Chief of Police of Chicago, the riot in Philadelphia following the dispersal of an ' Anarchistic meeting, and the threats made against clergymen have brought i. the Government to a realization that something must be done to make life and property more secure, in, or t0 AMBASSADOR'S BANK ROBBED. r," $300,000 in Mexican Money Taken ke j From Senor Creel's Institution. ue I El Paso, Texas.?The Banco de ias i Minero of Chihuahua, Mex., largely rer j owned by Governor Enrique Crsel | (who is also Mexican Ambassador to Washington), has been robbed or r?" $300,000 Mexican money. The banknotes taken are of the denomination iss $1000, $100, $50 and $20. >ut Governor Creel is the president of ew the bank and the principal stock,ut holder. One of the directors is his iS? 'ather-in-law, General Luis Toirazas ,od -the richest cattleman in Mexico. 1. % .'hey said that the robbery will not eu" .ffect the bank's standing. The robbers got into the bank nd jault by digging under it jet ire j Wife of Former Senator Dead. >ee Mrs Frank J. Cannon, wife of forto j ner United States Senator Cannon, of :ar i Ltah, died in Ogden. tie I ;ed I 5000 Granite Men Strike. ;re | More than 5000 granite cutters, all nuarrymen and others employed in au the granite industry in Massachuj petis, Vermont, Rhode Island and i Connecticut went on strike following les the failure t) adjust a new wage ?S- j agreement. Puts 3000 Out of Work, The National Cash Register Comht. ! fany. Dayton, Ohio, suspended operat_ j tions. affecting SOOO em|)loyes. " | Officials of the company say they canes' uo? tell wheii work v,*ilI be resumed, ise ?'n- Oklahoma Cots Historic Flag:eu A joint resolution was adopted by 10- the House of Representatives, Wash,]j. ington, D. C., giving to the State of I Oklahoma "the first flag bearing . ! forty-six stars, which on that day t'oi e- . Hi/, first tinif> fln.irHd over theCanitol." lit. rpjle ix-soliitioQ places th? llay in the 'lit- custody ot tba Oklahoma. Historical as Society. lot hi- 5000 Ilcturn to Cnppir :irs Betwcu -1001) anil Guo" men reich turned to work in the Butte < Monvia tana) copper camp. Practically all the important mines which wen closed were reopened. | NE.WS B] THIRTY-SEVEN ROADS MAKE HARD 1 Washington, D. C.?Operating c parts of the country were in attendanc the Interstate Commerce Commission nt thii tiirio nf thfl sroine into < ICII^IUU \JL tUV wimv w- 0 w In all thirty-seven application;; were asking for the extension. All of them it impossible to procure the services o tors in such numbers as will enable th and that, even if they could obtain the forced employment of so many additi hardship which the carriers ought not Hero Dies of Starvation. Kei Cleveland.?Dead from a lack of I nourishment, Russell Page, a Civil the War veteran, decorated by Congress out for valiant service at Fort Donelson, was found dead in bed at his home. Sor While he was dying his wife was J searching for work. Page, who was per confined to his bed as the result of a of wound received the war, was too tra proud to ask for assistance. fire . anr Rioters Railroaded to Jail. per Philadelphia, Pa.?Dominio Don- of elli, Joseph Troi, Michael Costello and tre: Francesco Piszicalo, leaders of the un- roa employed foreigners who rioted on Broad street, were convicted and sen- Dri tenced respectively to five and two I years, eighteen months and one year. Ale the To Make Ohio Dry. lou Columbus.?The Ohio House, 79 to sco 46, passed the Rose County option prohibition bill, under which Anti- Wa Saloon League officers predict that j eighty-four of Ohio's eighty-eight ecu counties will oust saloons in a year. dus cot Frightens Women Card Players. cid Richmond, Ina.?me juayor ui i wu Hartford City has procured the names ! of all women playing cards for prizes To and prosecution is feared. ' ) Fai Disarming Italians in Montreal. dir Montreal.?The provincial deted- ses: tives are going around with Italian tio interpreters, stopping all Italians and 19( taking away their weapons. 00( John T. Robinson Nominated. < Washington, D. C.?John T. Rob- J inson was nominated by the President hai to be United States Attorney for the me District of Connecticut. \ bee frei Very First Signs of Spring. Winsted, Conn.?Robins have been A ] seen in several country towns near 1 here and makers of maple sugar are wa; preparing to tap trees. Coi fini Kidnapers Sentenced. Stc Chicago. ? William Jones, alias Birmingham, and his wife, Irene Al- Je* zina Jones, were sentenced for the ] kidnaping of Lillian Wulff, an eight- Da year-old girl. He was given a thirty- Rh year term and the woman twenty-five Da years. em [news r7 BLUEBEARD MONK, SLAYER OF TWE> Verkho'urye, Perm, Russia.?Ru dotoff, who murdered twenty women their bodies In his forest hermitage, to penal servitude for fifteen years, judge with a threatened curse in case life imprisonment or to death. Nc Grimm's Bluebeard has such a mom known. Under cover-of his monk's gc he was supposed to work, Feodotoff 1 fairest women in Perm province'. T their jewels and money and finally m Honduran President Dead. Off Tegucigalpa, Honduras.?New9 of ] the death abroad of Marco A. Soto, So< who was President of Honduras from tre 1876 to 1883, was received in this pei city. General Davila, in accord with the the National Assembly, issued a de- pui cree ordering the holding of religious and other services to the memory of Ru the dead statesman. j * ..iSoldier Dies of Yellow Fever. bu Havana.?Robert Clifford, a private c?? In the Fifteenth Cavalry, died of yellow fever at Santa Clara. There are s0* si- soldiers now at that city convalescing from yellow fever. Annul Franco's Work. gai Lislnn.?The Council of Ministers a5 decided to annul the decrees issded by nfl Franco, the late dictator, dissolving *'? the Chamber and reforming the tra House of Peers. Elections for a new Chamber will not be held earlier than 001 April 5. An A Victory For Women. ' Copenhagen.?The Universal Mu- gr nicipal Suffrage bill passed its third j reading in the Landsthlng by 32 Za votes to 29. ?r0 Pope to Give Angel. jn< Rome.?The Pope intends to present a gilt bronze angel with which it is proposed to decorate the top of the j Campanile at Venice. . ^ Altar Lamp Fires a Church. ^ Lima, Peru.?A big fire, caused by ^oi the explosion of an oil lamp in front of an image of the Virgin, destroyed the principal church at Chorlllos, a ^ watering place nine mileB south of i this city. tal British Temperancc Wave. J*?* London.?Asquith introduced In ent f Vi Rrlfian flnvornmpnt-'fl rai iiauicub vuc * iwuu ? _ . yui bill to regulate the traffic In liquor, j A Japanese in Hawaii Hospitable. ] Honolulu, Hawaii.?The Japanese pej of this Island are preparing to enter- sw! tain Rear-Admiral Evans" fleet, should of It come to this port. leti Hosband Held in Connection En With Grewsoine Tragedy. Foicroft, Me.?Herbert Woodbury i was held without bail for the Grand An Jury on the charge of murdering his has wife, Phoebe Maud Henderson Wood- she bury, whose body was found hanging the to the dooricnob of an upper room of ] the Exchange Hotel on February 18, tloi after she had been missing for three lefl months. we Judge Smith, of the Dover Munici- fro pal Court, gave this decision at the giv conclusion of the preliminary hearing tris of tho charge against Woodbury. poi Forty-six Stars For tho Flag? Coi Army Orders liearrangement. , T"rr ? i-*. tv n Tho fnftv.ali'fh I t , vv.asiuugiuu, ij.\j.? iuv, star, signalizing the admission of the {.lie ' State of Oklahoma, will soon be add- Ed ( ed to the United States llag. The Qen- to 1 eral Staff of the Army adopted an cov amendment to the army regulations lat authorizing the Quartermaster-Gen- bat eral to provide another star. rca This will necessitate an entire re- in . arrangement of the field on the flag, Mr [ and the Navy Department, under the pre s law, will supply the now plan. New she flags will be dlatributcd at onco. ! in3 < WIRE-1 DIES PLEA. fficials of railways from all e upon the hearing given by on applications for an exjffect of the "nine-hour law." received by the commission assert that they have found f competent telegraph operaem to comply with the law. necessary operators, the enonal men would be a financial to be subjected to. ntnclry House Passes "Dry Bill." ^rankfort, Ky.?The House passed I county unit prohibition bill withdebate by a vote of 75 to 14. ithern Reduces Wages. Vtlanta, Ga.?A reduction of ten cent, in the wages of all employes the Southern Railway except conct labor, such as engine drivers, i men, etc., effective March 1, was lounced. A previous cut of ten cent, affected all general officers the company. The general renchment policy adopted by the d is given as reason for the cut. ve Men From Religion. lichmond, Ind.?Dr. Robert J. , iy, of the Indiana University, says effeminate likenesses of the Savr drive men from religion, and he re3 the painters. ,ges Cnt in Cotton Mills. Atlanta.?At a meeting of the Extive Committee of the Georgia In itrial Association, representing ine ton mills of the State, it was deed to make a reduction of ter. per t. in wage3 of operatives. Assess Directors $1,500,000. Vaynesburg, Pa.?The defunct rmers and Drovers' National Bank ectors have been notified of an assment of $1,500,000. The institun was closed on December 12, )6, having a shortage of $1,800,). Sirls Can't 'Phone Middies. Annapolis, Md.?The telephones re been removed from the midshipn's quarters at the Naval Academy ause young women call them up so quently. ' Finger Worth $500. 3aterson, N. J.?A verdict of $500 3 awarded against the Algonquin mpany for the loss of the third ;ar on the right hand of John ilars. T Davis Declines Debate. Little Rock, Ark.?Senator Jeff vis has declined to meet Prosecutor oton in joint debate to discuss vis' alleged misdeeds while Gov-lor. cable. i rTY WOMEN, SENT TO PRISON ssia's Blubeard monk, Feoof this village and buried was convicted and sentenced Feodotoff had terrorized the ?the latter condemned him to >t since the fabled times of ster in religious garb been >wn and the marvelous cures lured to his forest shrine the here he attacked them, stole urdered them. ended Kaiser, Gets Three Years. Berlin.?Rudolph Oestreich, the :ialist leader, was convicted of high ason and sentenced to three years' lal servitude. Oestreich offended i Kaiser by urging the army to reiiate the Kaiser's authority. ssia Abandons Big Navy. St. Petersburg, Russia.?Plans of > Russian Government for the rending of the imperial navy at a it of a billion have- been vetoed by j Minister of Finance, M. Kokovtr. igands plunder Train. Kielce, Russian Poland.?Ten briids attacked a train, hurling bombs it and firing many shots from their es. They killed one soldier and unded three soldiers and three in hands. They made their escape the engine of the train with $10, J 111 guiu. lerican Tactics Win. Calcutta, India.?Lord Kitchener roduced American tactics into the itish army in India and won a oig- . [ victory over the mischief-making kkakhels tribesmen on the Afghan ntier. :ome Tax Principle Indorsed. Paris.?The Conservative memb9r3 the Chamber 6f Deputies who ve been filibustering against the vernment's Income Tax bill for eks sustained a decisive defeat en the principle of the bill was inrsed by 386 votes to 14C. ist Pay Husband $23,000. London.?Sir Francis Eurdett, a h baronet who was formerly a Capri in tho Rovontoonth Lancers. ha3 ?n condemned to pay damages to ! amount of $25,000 as co-respond; in Alexander Boyd's suit for di ce, to which no defense was made. $100,000 Swindle. Paris.?It was reported that Euro- | in banks in eight citie3 were Indled out of $100,000 by meaDs photographic copies of a New York ter of credit. uim Goldman, Anarchist, Not to Be Permitted in This Country. Chicago.?If Emma Goldman, tho archist, appears in Chicago, as it } been reported she intends to do, > may be arrested and deported by Government. * [t was declared by local immigrau officials that when Mi3S Goldman t the United States last year and nt to Europe she cut herself off m thi3 country, and orders were en by the Immigration Bureau Lt she should be arrested and deled upon her return. ok County Satisfied With a Million. Chicago. ? Judge Walker denied ! motion recently made by Maxwell gar, of this city, for an injunction prevent a settlement jjetween tho I inty of Cook and the estate of the j o Marshall Field for $1,750,000 in ^k taxes. A compromise was .ched upon $1,000,000, to be paid consideration of a cash payment. . Edftar sought to restrain the com- j )toise, claiming that the county i >uld receive tho full amount orlg- I ,lly asked for. I / SHERIFF PiTMETT SLAINf Man Who Killed "Silly the Kid" Shot by New Mexican. Wayne Brazle Surrenders to Sheriff ai:d Says He Killed Famous Ranger in Sclf-Defense. Santa Fe, New Mexico. ? Patrick F. Garrett, until two years ago Collector of Customs at El Paso, Texas, was shot and killed near Las Cruces, New Mexico, by Wayne Brazle, son o" an old settler. Garrett was the slayer of the notorious "Billy the Kid" In 1880. He served as Captain of Texas Rangers and Sheriff of Dona Ana County. He was a personal friend of President Roosevelt. After the shooting Brazle rode five miles to Las Cruces and surrendered to Sheriff Lucero. Ha said he had shot in self-defense, and that he had not drawn a gun until after Garrett had reached for his shotgun. The , i?i Si ? quarrai ublwccu uaucii. auu u>um started over a ranch that had been leased by Garrett to Brazle, and on which he had pastured a herd of goats. Garrett remonstrated with his lessee, and declared that goat pasturing was fn vlola^on of the contract between them. He threatened to resort to the courts to prevent what he thought a breach of contract, and the men quarreled. . Garrett was Sheriff in Lincoln County, New Mexico, thirty years ago, and his campaign against cattle rustlers was replete with dashing arrests and bloody encounters with the cattle thieves. The best known of his exploits was the killing, while an officer of the law, of "Billy the Kid," who after kill?*?g, according to some reports, twoscore of men, was lodged in the Territorial penitentiary, only to escape. Garrett took up the hunt for the outlaw, and found him in Dona Ana County. Garrett managed to secret himself in a house where "The Kid" was to rendezvous, and as the outlaw stepped into the place with his gun drawn Garrett proved to be the quicker on the trigger. Garrett used to say, after passing through a perilous experience, that he would die with his boots on. norro+t first annearftd in New Mex Ico in 1878, and went to Lincoln County, where he engaged in ranching and cattle raising. He soon gained a reputation as a cowboy, and in 1830 he was elected Sheriff of Lincoln County. Later Garrett moved to Dona Ana County, where he served two terms as Sheriff. Garrett was later a Captain" of Rangers in Texas, and did much to help make the reputation for fearlessness which the Texas RangerB then had. '' . . * *"ANDY" HAMILTON FOUND DEAD. Former Yellow Dog Fond Custodian Died at Albany, N. Y. Albany, N. Y.?The picturesque career of a man whose influence had been felt in legislation in this State and in many other States for many years was ended when "Judge" Andy Hamilton died in his home in this city. Death was due to heart failure and he was found dead in bed by ono of the servants. His health had been failing since last July, when his wife died, but he tried to hide his grief ber fore his friends and outwardly he was congenial and cheerful. Wherever the insurance interests were threatened there Hamilton went or sent his representatives. He was on/inoaoflll In moof r?f hi* pffortS tO O UVWUU* U* U*vw? w ? , _ _ . defeat hostile legislation, and that he spent money* lavishly was shown by the books of the New York Life Insurance Company. The "yellow dog" fund of this single company was more than |1,000,000 when Charles E. Hughes, then counsel for the Armstrong Committee, brought the fund to light. Hamilton left a mother and three daughters', one of whom is Mrs. Jas. Cox Brady, of New York, daughterin-law of Anthony N. Brady. Hamilton was born in Lansinburg, North Troy, N. Y., April 29, 1854. SHAKES HER FORTUNE. Former Mrs. Weightman Walkei Makes Gifts in Philadelphia. Philadelphia.?Within a few hours after the marriage of Mrs. Anna Weightman Walker to Frederick Courtland Penfleld in New York, he* attorney in this city announced on behalf of the bride many gifts to rela? tives and institutions. Mrs. Penfleld is the daughter ot the late William. Weightman, a wealthy manufacturing chemist of this city. As the only surviving child she was made sole heir of Mr. Weight- | man's large fortune, and her wealth J has been estimated at from $40,000," 000 to $60,000,000. Avalanche Kills Thirteen in Hotel. An avalanche descended near the village of Goppenstein, Switzerland, The enormous atmospheric pressure which accompanied it demolished a hotel at the mouth of the Loetschenthai tunnel works, killing thirteen persons and injuring fifteen others. Four Lives Lost in a Fire. Anthony Schultz and three children, Nellie, aged thirteen years; Jos? eph, eleven, and Mary, six, were burned to death in a fire which de stroyed their home near the Gould Coupler Works in Depew, N. Y. Can't Issue Scrip Dividends. Scrip dividends cannot be authorized, declares New York's up-Stato Public Service Commission, which has denied the application of the Erie Railroad Company for permission to issue such dividends on its first and second preferred stock. $1,171,000,000 Canadian R. R. Cost. 1 Mr. Graham, Minister of Railways, ! gives the total amount invested in ! Canadian railways to data as ?1,171,-1 000,000. One-sixth of the popula- j lion, he said, owe its livelihood tr j these undertakings. Women in the Day's News. I The civic authorities accepted the offer of $25,000 made by Mrs. Rus- I sell Sage to restore the historic Gov- j ernors" room in the New York City ; Hall. j Tim Empress of Russia 13 again . suffering from norvous debility and a ! jtaini'ul affliction of the eyes. Phvsi-1 cians strongly udviss, a change of cli-1 mate. Tiio English factory code is still In advance of tl>at of Germany, where J there is as yet no legislation prohib*! iting female labor in mining and; smsltin? works. i ______ ! HHIFF OF PHI ICE KB IS MPS IMCir Murderously Attacked in His Home in Chicago. GEORGE M. SHIPPY SAVES LffE ! i His Son and the Coachman Participate in Desperate Encounter J With a Supposed Anarchist? Mrs. Shippy Present. Chicago, 111.?George M. Shippy, , . ' chief of the Chicago Police Department, shot and killed an anarchist who invaded his home, and who shot the chief's son, Harry, in the lung and severely*1' wounded the family coachman, James Foley, as well as wounded the chief himself. The chief . / of police was stabbed in the hand. The aLsailant entered Chief Shipnv'ci bnnoo urfcila flio phidf an/1 Mo son were alone in ono of the rooms. v The man is said to have handed the chief a letter, which the latter opened and began to read. Almost immediately the anarchist drew a revolver and fired at Harry Shtopy. The , boy fell to the floor and his father grappled with the kssailant. Foley, hearing the shooting, rushed i to his employer's aid. As Foley '? entered the room the anarchist broke ; *} from the chief's grasp, aimed deliberately and shot Foley twice. Again the chief closed with the man, and the latter turned on him with a knife. Chief Shippy attempted ~ to grasp the weapon, and. received a deep cut on the hand. The offlttial then succeeded in reaching his own revolver and fired shot after shot at his assailant. Every bullet-.took effect, and the anarchist fell to the floor dead. "When he handed the envelope tot T& me the thought struck me like a ' ~ v? streak of lightning that he was up, to some wrong," said Chief Shippy. "I i j didn't like his looks. He appeared to me to be an anarchist - I grabbed his arms and, forcing them behind his back, called to my wife who was in another room. When she ran in A I said: 'Mother, see if;this man has a revolver.' She felt one of his back pockets and said that he had.'* x >. "I tried to hold him with one hand ' : and draw my revolver with another, but he jerked away and fell against : -V the door. I caught him again, and he fought hard to reach his-revolver. My son must have heard the struggle, and just as hq came to my aid, the man freed one hand, drew his revolver, and fired two shots at my son. Then Foley ran in and the man shot him. "By this time I was able to draw my own revolver. I fired at the man :' four times. The, first two bullets entered his head and the others his . ;j body. He fell at the first shot and I flred three more into him. The , man drew a knife also in the strug- , '< gle, but I didn't know I had been cut until after the fight wajj over." The attack on the chie' is believed to have been inspired by the recent activity of the Chicago police, following the killing of the Bev. L'eo Heinrichs, the Roman Catholic priest who ' ^ was shot by an anarchist in Denver, Col., while the priest was administer- ^ ing the sacrament to his slayer. The police succeeded in identifying . the assassin as Lazarus Averbach, a Russian Jew, twenty years old, born (n Kishinef and living with his sister, Olga Averbach, a seamstress, at No. . 218 Washburn avenue. SHAH SENDS PROXY FOR BOMBS. Three Outriders Killed and His Impersonator Hurt at Teheran, Persia. Teheran, Persia.?Taking the pre* caution of seating a proxy in the regal automobile while he himself rode ; '1 at the tail of a procession in a xnodest < , v carriage, the Shah of Persia, Mohammed Ali Mirza, cheated would-be aseassins in an attempt on his life here. Two bombs were thrown from a roof. One exploded over the Shah's automobile, the other landed in the street and blew the car in wreckage against the side of a house. Three outriders Df the Imperial bodyguard were killed ' and a score of persons In the street were seriously Injured. The Shah's proxy, clad in the magnificent robes of the ruler, was taken out of the wreck of the automobile, cut and bruised and suffering from internal Injuries. BOTH DIE AT SUPPER. . Aged Comrades and Neighbors Had Spent Afternoon Together. .. Ansonia, Conn.?Before they had fl 'shed their supper Fred H. Wet? J n.nU U Pnhorto twn Cif I mi auu juaviu xf. awuv* i the best known residents of this city, fell from their chairs at the supper ? table and expired. They both lived on the west elde, , had been together during the afternoon and seemed to be in the best of health. They made an engagement to take recreation the rest of the day, but they died within a few minutes of """ h other. They were both over ee. ./ years old. ?????? Bishop Duncan Dead. Bishop W. W. Duncan, of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, died at his home in Spartanburg, S. C., having been in ill health for some months. He was born in Virginia in 1839. He succeeded his brother as president of the Randolph-Macon College, and it was from that position 1? hoonma a Rlshotl. U6 was ijaiicu tu wgv/v4Mw ?- vOur Battleships Faulty. Commander Sims, naval aide to the President, told a Senate committee, at Washington, that our battleships are faulty, and charged RearAdmirals Converse and Capps with making misleading statements. Suicide Mania in Prussia. Statistics relative to suicides in Prussia during 1906 are just available, and present striking figures. In the twelve months 7298 persons, 55S4 men and 1714 women, ended ^heir own lives. / DEVASTATION IN RUSSIA. Biahop Wilkinson JnstiGcs the Government's Policy. London.?The Right Rev. Thomas Edward Wilkinson, Bishop for North and Central Europe, writes to the ~ ' ** " * JJally Man xrom ruga, ueatuuma devastation wrought in Kussia generally, and particularly iu the Baltic provinces, by the revolutionists. He says that its ex-eat is quite unknown in England, and fully justifies the measure of repression adontpd by the Russian Government. : .. .