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F VOL. XII. | BILL ARP. | It seenns to nio that I had batter answer some of those interesting questions througn the far-reaching medium o' the press. Hero are three inquiries from among your leaders who wish to know something definite about these so-called dog days. Of course, i know only what I get from books, but a vast multitude have not the hooks nor access to them. Whether the advent and the influence of dog days be a superstition or a fait, all that is known should ho disseminated. Pliny and Herodotus both wrote about dog days 400 years before Christ. Ancient astronomers and modern n:u s rerPii ill - -l-thin!" In Sir! no n v <i* mi lignant influence when it arises iti conjunction with tlie sun. for it i.s the brightest star in the heavens ami Its gteat head added to the heat of the sun inerc-ists and intensifies the ten* perature as long as this conjunction continues. Hut this rising with the sun Is not a fixed day. It varies from 1 n 3rd of July to the 1.1th of August an 1 hence th^ almanac makers take tin average day and set down July 20th as tho first dog day. Some date it July l'4th. but these dates may miss It two or three weeks, it la generally believed that thi e dog days continue for foriy days, but in fact that is an Indefinite, period, for the conjunction of Sioius with the sun sometimes lasts for fiftyfenr days. Tho sum of the whole matter is that about this time of the year we may look for very hot weather an I showers almost every day, and io call it fodder pulling weather would he its good r. name as any. Whether Sirius has anything to do with it or not we can only surmise, but Sirius is the dog star end gave the. name. S'ritts is the very brightest star in the heavens, ami is in the nout l of a hig dog a constellation that tho ancient astrnnom rs named ranis major. The ancient Egyptians mapped off the starry heavens with imaginary animals and men, such as dogs, heats, dragons, hmis. ilrr ulos. Orion, eii.. and the nnmer they gave tR groups of stars have never been enang(?ll. There is li r ihvr ninl n liilln i!ni< a bit; bear and a little bear, a big cl"pper an' a little dipper. Right In ;tie tij) of the tail of the little Dear in a very n nablo star called Ibo 1* ie star, or North star, thai navigatova used to sail by rn-'l they called It Cynoskurons. which in Greek means a logtail. From ti 1 iname we have the void cynosure and so when we say of a beautiful woman ia an assembly that she v.as the cynosure of all eyes it Is equivalent t ? saying that she was the dog tall of tne concern. Just how the sailors gor to calling this star the dogtail is l.ot known, for it is really in ursa minor, tho little bo.ar's tail. Tho ancionts ga\w nainy names to the stars to fit. things in nature that they resembled. The word comet comes from cometus. The means a mare's tail. The word lunatic comes from luua, the moon, for the anyicnts brtieved that the mind w:w affected by changes in the moon. Those old Egyptians wire very imaginative ami superstitious, but they were very learned. How they got so f.v ahead of tho Hebrews. God's favorite people, we c< not know. Their astronomy, mathematics and architecture have never been improved. Tho scriptures tell us that Moses was learned in all the wis<!om U; tho Rpvntlnna T*\K "Cans:, thou bind the? sweet influences of Pleiades or loose the hands of Orion? Amos nails them the seven stars and mythology nanus them the seven sisters, but modern astronomers saV there never were but six and there are only six now. Henee the superstition about the lost Pleiad. Their "sweet iniluenees" aro said to tome from the fart that whenever set n in the heavens it is a sign of good weather and a safe time for vessels to sail, for pleian means a sail. It is liko the pretty word lialeyon that literally nuaas durh eggtime. for the eider duck never builds its nest onthe eiiffs by the sea until pleasant weather comes to stay for the season. Hence the word als the sea and eon an egg. ^ Hut I reckon thi" is enough about . dog days. Some noble person?I believe it was 1-ady Montague?said "There is no entertainment so cheap as reading and no pleasure 33 lasting. Especially is this i. nv. uunuud^a wucu inert' is so much to read Lhut in cheap, instructive and interesting. In fact, reading is now the best part of a liberal education. A well read person is wiser, happier and better fitted for the duties and trials of life than the scholar who lias graduated at he top in the arts and sciences. Of course, I mean good reaJing, sin-has history, ancient and modern; biography. where we get both example and precept; good story books and standard novels that teach good morals; go'irl magnxino literature and good newspapers, whose editors are con. seientions end ;'oel their responsibility. "As a man hows, hu shall he reap." and we might as truly say what a child rrads. i_o will his or her moral and emotional character oe. The Softools educate the intellect only, but reading affects tho Vrtirt 1? J V, bUV CillUlIUUO 4.1U11 pussionc rind established the character of the young for good or for evil. Man hap been defined to be a bundle of prejudices. and these prejudices most generally come from the books, magazines or newspapers that we read. Little stories like "Androcles and the Lion" or "Damon and Pythias" have n.oldod the character of thousands of children, and just so have "Robinson Crusoe" and "Young Marooners" and the "Swiss Family Robinson" established the character of children of a larger growth. Whether a man despises or admires Napoleon depends on whether he has read ricott or Abbott. ? JHKxb'jir. A '* . .... . OR! Whether a man was a whin or a democrat in the old times depended on the new; paper h- took. As great a. man as P.*. Miller. who was an old lino vhic. had i contempt for Thos. Jefferson, beeauae he was per-so the founder of the d< m.oeratle party. "Jefferson must have been a very great matt." sn'd I, "for ho Wrote the declaration of independcnoe." "And what Is that." said the ' doctor, "but a series; of migrant mat leal | platitudes that any school-boy might have written. The first sentome is ridieulouB. for it says a decent rcsp'vi. for the opincus of mankind. A decent aspect! Who ever heard of an Indecent respect? Why didn't ho say "respect for" and h avc out the decant," and l.e arlflced the whole document from a whig standpoint. Well 1 was ruminat'ng about tills while raiding Percy Gregg's high-toned but merciless criticism of Harriet Ur.ocher p.towe's 'Tr.cle Tom's Cabin." (b? ti: had soinnrne l in tho I ing slavery times and know the bonk was a lie when ii was written, and that it was written to inflame the Northern mind aixl precipitate a collision. That Bee. her family was smart, unprincipled and malignant, >.11 was Henry \Vhrd Bencher who incited old .lehn Brown to his reckless deeds and daring and who declared from lits pulpit that , Ship's riflrn were better missionaries than ltibles. and that to shoot at a j slave holder and miss him was a sin ' against heaven. It was that same i Brrchcr who. while a preacher, so; dncod the wife of one of his members ! and broke up the family, and after I weeks of a mock trial got a whitewashing verdict from a packed committee. B;:t ! was ruminating about the farj reaching influence and effect of that book and how it fired t.ho Northern j heait and the English h^art against us, ! and how it was a lie and wholly ml*rcprescnted our people, and how the ! I-ord cursed Shemiah, one of the prophets. because he made the people believe a lie, and how St. John said no oue should enter heaven who loveth or tuaketli a lie. and so 1 was wondering where the Beechcrs are now.?Bill Arp, ; in Atlanta Constitution. Brvnn in o Wreck St, Louis. Special.?Wm. .1. Bryan v ?. y vcroly shaken up. hut escaped injury in a small wreck on the riemn<1:: 1 tall way. near M unt Vernon. III.. Sunday. Wliilo running at full speed iii* train ran into an open switch and ( was delayed several hours. Beyond h.'iiiEes no one was injured. Mr. Bryan arrived here from Louisville. K>\, and ecu tinned his journey to Sycamore. II. Textile Strike linded. Philadelphia. Special.?Tlie textile strike in this city, which was inaugurated ten weeks ago, was Saturday . ultcmoon practically declared ff. 21).I tOO of the strikers through their exrmtive board deriding to return to : work on Monday. It is estimated thai ihcut 60,000 textile strikers arc still or. trike and the determination of oneI third of these to return to work, it is x lieved will force the collapse of the t: like. The Inland Waterway. Norfolk. Special.?The inland waterway hoard, eon listing of three arm) engineers. Col. C. J. Allen, of Wash ington; Lieutenant Colonel Quinn. ol Savannah, and Captain IC. E. Winslow of Norfolk, met here to consider re ports received from Norfolk and otliei j Southern cities, upon the feasibility ! and advisability of the construction ' by the United States government of I an inland water way between Norfolk and Beaufort, N. C. The beard fonnu lated a report to the chief engineer but nothing regarding the nature ut the r? port wa3 made public. Carnegie's Latest Gift. London. By Cable.?Andrew Carnegie has made known his intention to donate $2,500,000 in United States Steel Corporation bonds to Dumferline, Scotland, his birthplaee. He stipulates that the gift shall be employed in keeping up the estate of Pittencriff. which contains the tower in which Malcom Canmore married Princess Margaret, i and which he recently purchased as a j pleasure ground. I Governor Yates R -elves Negroes. Springfield. 111., Special.?Governor and Mrs. Richard Yaf.es. assisted by Auditor of Public Accounts McCul. lough. Assistant Secretary of State Clanahan and several secretaries of deUMtments nnrt fifflcors /->f tVi? n. linois National Guard, gavo a reception to the ofllcers of the Eighth Infantry, I. N. (?.. the negro regiment now in camn of instruction at Camp Lincoln, a*, the Executive Mansion. During the evening, the regimental band, stationer! on the lawn in front of the mansion's principal entrance gavo a conceit, which was listened to by an en-' thnsiastic audience of citizens, mostly colored. Did Not Serenade President. Oyster Bay, Special.?In a driving rain storm Wednesday afternoon, a brass bnnd composed of colored boys from the Jenkins Orphanage at Charleston, S. C.. marched from the villago to Sagamore Hill, about throe' mllos. to serenade tho President and ins family. The band did not reach , the President's residence, being turned bnck to Oyster Hay by the 8ecret Service officer on duty. n# FORT MILL, S. C? WI VIEWS ON LYNCHING Prcsid2Kl Scuds Ms Congratulations to Governor Dtirbin AN UTTERANCE BY THE EXECUTIVE H-. Rootevclt Hulils That Lynching l or Any Crime is Subversive of All Law and flust Be Suppressed. Oyster Bay. Special.?In a letter, >li?' publication <f wnicli was authorized. i'reri'icnt Roosevelt. commends I \?o\< UOJ 1' .1 r Uiil, CIL JIKIKIIIU. ?i<fl lil< I attitude h<- assumed recently respectiiij; lynching., The Provident also cmbraces the opportunity ($1 rqm ss his >wn views on lyntjfr&vifc-l mob vio knee generally. poimfuiC' out tluit. i mob violence is merely Ntme form I anarchy r.nd that anarchy is tnc 1 forerunner of tyranny. The Presld- nt ! vigorously urges that the penalty for tlmt crime which most frequently induces a resort to lynching shall lee applie d swiftly and surely, but by due j process of the courts, so ^liat it may , b< demonstrated "that the law is adcj quate to deal with crime by freeing i it from every vestige of technicality and delay." President Roosevelt's lotj ter :n full to Governor Durbin l'ol: lows: "Oyst r llay. August fi. 1903. "Governor Durbin: Permit me 10 thank you as- an Americ an citizen for the admirable way in which you have vindicated the majesty of the law by I your recent action in reference to lynching. I f el. my dear sir. that you have made nil men your debtors who | believe as all of the far-seeing men must, that the \v? 11 lining, indeed, the vc rv < \'h fence c>f th< republic. do sends upon that spirit of orderly liberty under the law which is as incompatible with mob violenc e as with any ; form of despotism. Of < ourse mob I violence is simply oil" form of anai'chv. rviil smsirehv is now ns it si 1 - ways !?as been. the handmaiden anil 1 fciv runner of tyranny. "I feel thai you have not only re| Hoeti <1 honor upon the State which for its gn.;d fortuno has you as its : Chief executive, but upon the whole ! nation, li in incumbent upon every man throughout this country not only io hold up your hands in the course von have been following, hut to show his realisation lhat the matter is 0110 of vital i t m-ern to us nil. I "All thoughtful men must feel the j gravest alarm over the growth of t lvuching in this country and especially ovvT the peculiarly hideous I forms so eftcn taken by mob violence when colored men are the victims, i on which occasions the mob seems i vo lay moat weight, not on the crime. ; but on the color of the criminal. In a ! certain proportion of there coses the i man lynched lias been guilty of a ! clime horrible bevnnil ilpscrin inn n rime so horrible that as far as ho himself is concerned he has forfeited the right to any kind of sympathy whatsoever. The feeling of all good citizens that such a hideous crime shall not he hideously punished by mob violence is due not in the least to sympathy for the criminal, j but to a lively sense or the train of i dreadful consequences which follow ! the course taken by the mob in exacting inhuman vengeance for an inhuman wrong. In such cases, moreover. it is well to remember that the criminal not merely sins against humanity in inexplicable and unpardonable fashion, hut sins particularly againsl his own race, anil does them a wrong far greater than any white man can possibly do to them. Therefore. in such cases the colored people throughout the land should in. every possible way show their belief that they, more than all others in the'eom munity, are horrified at the commission of such a crime and are peculiarly concerned In taking every possible measure to prevent its recurrence and to bring the criminal to immediate justice. The slightest lack of vigor either in denunciation of the crime or in bringing the criminal to justice is Itself unpardonable. "Moreover, every effort should be made under the law to expedite the proceedings of justice in the case of such an awful crime. But It cannot he necessary, in order to accomplish this, to deprive any citizen of those fundamental rights to he heard in his own defense which are so dear to us all and which lie nt the root of our liberty. It certainly ought to be possible by the proper administration of the laws to secure swift vengeance upon the criminnl, and the best and immediate efforts of all legislators, judges and citizens should be addressed to securing such reforms in our legal procedure as to leave no vestige of excuse for those miscnid* d men who undertake to reap vengeance through violent nntthods. "Men who have been guilty of a crime like rape or murder should b? visited with swift and certain punishment. and the just effort made lot the courts to protect them in thaln. rights should under no circumstance! lie perverted Into permitting any mgt# technicality to avert or delay their punishment. The substantial rights of the prisoner to a fair tr.'al of course must be guaranteed, ti3 you have so justly Insisted that they should be. but. subject to this guarantee?the law must work swiftly and surely, and all agents of the law should realize the w/ong they do when they permit ? vH 'Kl'llW1 ' - LL ' :dnesday, august justice to be delayed or thwarted for technical or insufficient reasons. We must show that the law is adequate to deal with crime by freeing it from every vestige of technicality and de lay. ' 'tut the fullest recognition of tic horror of the ritne and the most complete lack of sympathy with the criminal cannot, in the least diminish our horror at the way in which it lias heroine customary to avenge these I'imi"! m.l rit I'm i-fnn-n.i W ??i I ? ?*'.? ? I ?4\ ??l \ i> I li .1 L are already proceeding therefrom. It i;: of course. inevitable that where ? nji* since is taken by a :iv b it should frequently light on innocent people, and the wrong (lone in such cane to the individual is one for which there is no remedy. But even where t li?* teal criminal is reached the wrong done by tlie mob to the community its< if is well-nigh as great. Especially is this true where the lynching is accompanied with torture. There are rutin hideous sights which once < 11 can never he wholly erased from tl; mental retina. The mere fact o having seen them implies degradation. This is a thousand fold stronger when, jmstead of merely seeing the deed, the Irtiuin has participated in it. Whoever I in any part of our country has ever taken part in lawlessly putting to I drath a c:iminal hy the dreadful torture of fire, must \; rever nfu r have the awful spectacle of his own handwork s 'arrd into his brain and s >ul. j Me tan iKver again be the same man. This matter of lynching would be a Urrihle thing even if it stopped with the lynching x( men guilty of the in- ] human and hideous crime of rape: hi t as a matter of fact, lawlessness of ] this type never docs si >p and never u:n ,s? u> in such fashion. Every violent man In the community is ? n ( uraged by ev< ry case of lynching in which tli" lym hers uo unpunished to himself t 1-?_ the lav. into his own hitn*ls win never it suits liis own eanvi nience. In the same way t!i" use of torture by the mob in certain eases is sure i i spread until it is apnli? d more less Indiscriminately m other cases. The spirit of lawies ness grows with what it f; re.-: on. and wh'tt nt'bs with impunity 1\ i h criminals for one cr. se. thc\ are certain to In ;ln la I;.'; h i- d or nllcgcd e.imlnaU for i .!? r etrus. s. In the n < tit easts of lynching o . r thre'-fourths wtre not for rape at all, but for murder, at* tempted titui !' ; and even 1- -s hein as t fiYns <. More ve*. the history of fuse re. nt eases shows the awful fact that when the minds of men are habit tinted to the use of torture by lawless l;i> lb s to aveng e crimes of a peculiarly revolting description, other 1;> l<-5T bodies will esc f-'ree to a cotuplish crimes f an culinary type. Surely no pet riot can fail t > see the fiyrfui brut a ligation and d basemen; v. hich t!io indulgen. e of such a spirit and such practices inevitably port. no. Surely nil public men. all writers for ibe daily press, all clergymen, all ttp.chers. all who in any way have o light to address the public should with every energy unite to denounce such crimes and to support those engaged in putting them down. As a p?\ pie we claim the light to speak with peculiar emphasis for freedom and for fair treatment of all men without regard to differences of race, fortune, need or color. We forfeit the right to speak when we < ommit or c ndone such crimes as these of which 1 speak. "The nation, like the individual, cannot commit a crime with impunity. If w< are guilty of lawh ssn us and brutal violence, whether our guilt consist in a.tive participation therein, or in nure connivance and encouragement. Wt shall assuredly suffer inter on liecause of what we have done. The corro -stone of iliis republic, as of all free governments, is respect for and obedience of the law. Where we permit the law to be defied or evaded, whether by rich man or poor man. by black man or white, we are by just so much weakening the bonds of our civilization and increasing the chances ' ? its ovetthrow and of the substltu tion therefor of a system in which there shall be violent alternations of anarchy and tyranny. "Sincerely yours, THEODORE ROOSEVELT. "Hon. Wlnflehl T. Durbin, "Governor of Indiana. "Indianapolis, Indiana." Legislator Assaulted. Atlanta. Special.?Representative C. C. Houston, of Fulton, was assaulted in the street here Saturday by .1. J. Spalding, an Atlanta Lawyer, who Ptruek Houston on the head twice with a heavy cane before bystanders interfiled. No serious injury was inflicted. The attack grew out of a charge of lobbying made against Mr. Spalding by Representative Houston and followed a general investigation of similar charges by a special legislative coin mlttec. Col ma Active. Tuxapan, Mex., Special.?The Colima volcano continues in a violent slat? of activity. The eruption Saturday whs the most severe that has yet been known. Great clouds cf smoke poured from the crater, but no ashes fell. Eearthqualtc shocks extending along the roast, as far south as the Isthmus are "reported. At some points the shor.l; was oscillatory, while at [Esthers they were of a trepidatory character. No damages or casualties a-e reported. A reader of The Commoner asks whether the nation has reached the zenith in matters of education. There ought to be no zenith, as that, term is used, in matters of education. It ought to be a continual growth and development toward better thiDgs and better methods. vdifek >/? - 12,1903. Livi? 1TD1S or NEWS.j s Many .Matters of (icncral Interest Tb i Short Paragraphs. Down in D'xle. r.V.vcv. cashier of tho Nowherno. X. <\. bank, whs stole $131,000. is still .it loi $1,090 ir\t-ar.l is offered for his ! arrest. i bo Jefferson Auditorium at Charlottesville, Va.. was sold by tlio il'.>top|is to Mr. It. ('. M. I.eiboru. The lui.ly lit' Helen Greoil, tile little Sir! who was downed nt Windiest'r Tuesday, was found at night lodged in the root;; of some trees. The funeral j \vu held Thur.day. At Tit? National Capital. General Miles says he is not a candidal" for ComniamhT-in-Chirf of the Grand Army of the Uenabli . it is stat *d that President Toosovelt :-! nsted tho general features of the a : nrt viditig a civil government for ! the >.lo"os. The t'nitcd Sta'es Knrop in Squndrrn lias neen ordocd to sail from luslio:i for "some quiet Mediterranean ports.'* preparatory to target practice m\t month. Of tlie sr.T.Ot'i immigrants who arrived in the I'nited States in the last flsenl year only 11.2s 1 went to the Stairs west of the Mississippi river. Congressman l.itauer issued a statement in answer to Secretary of | \Vh Hoot coneernig tlie glove contract with the Government. 1 Senator Hanna declared the Civic j Federation had within two years i brought ahout the settlement of over ; It?i? strikes. At The North. Churl Lake, a life guard, was i drown .1 at Atlantic City. Frank Heine, a gypsy, killed his wife and wounded her c onipnnion at j \ a nark near Philadelphia. twelve p o?.le wiTi1 k- I> 1 and two 1 hundred seriously injured liy (lie ecilapse of a pan of the gra >d stand, at j Philadelphia, Saturday. Storks til Wail street broke badly. Unit d Slates Steel Corporation and Virginia Carolina Chemical being among those that fell farthest, i A recently imported elephant be!oiy;mg to Frank C Rostock ran jstnac k at Coney Island and two moil \n re badly hurt. Mighty storks made new low marks on the exchange and the failures of Sharp AL- llryan and llurlhnrt. Ilateh & Co., of New York. were annottneed. tlar Harbor is believed to be the objeetivo point of the attacking llett in the "war game." Mrs. C.raee Snoll Coffin WalkcrI.ayinan, of Chicago, is said to be petitioning for her tift.Ii divorce. An explosion during a storm in the \V; rld's Fair buildings in St. Louis killed and injured a large number of persons. William Hamilton, a white fanner, was lynched at Asotin. Wash., for the brutal murder of 1.1-year-old Mabel I From / cross Tlir Sea. The Humberts. celebrated swindlers, \\<re arraigned for trial at Paris ' Saturday. Viceroy Curzon, of India, announced to the Council that he would accept the petition a second time, hut would take a vacation to England in 1901. Incendiaries are reported to he tiring the oil wells at Baku. Russia, and strikes are epidemic in Southern Rusj sia. A non-commissioned oflicer of the German Army was convicted of brutality to soldiers and sentenced to imprison men t. ' Refugees made homeless by the | Soufriero Volcano in St. Vincent unreported to he sick and starving. Miscellaneous flatters. Charles M. Schwa!) resigned as ! president of the United States Steel I Corporation and William E. Corey was I elected to succeed liim. Col. W. .1. Btvan denounced exI President Cleveland as a "bunko ! steerer" at Urbana. Ohio, where hohad { a conference with Mayor Tom L. | Johnson. j "Phil" May, well-known humorous I artist, died in London. Whitaker Wright, the promoter, was released on $Jf>0,000 bail in Iajudon. 1 Andrew Carnegie announces that he will donate $2,r?00.000 to Dunfermline. Scotland, his birthplace. Cardinal Oreglia was reappointed i camerlengo. and it is believed Cardinal Agliardi will be chosen Papal Secretary of State. Pope Pht^'X. received a body of t American pilgrims before those of any i other country. Lieut.-Gen. Nelson A. Miles, commanding the army, was placed on the retired list last Saturday. Representative Rliea, of Kentucky, proposes that each State he free to deal with the race problem without intei icrencc by Congress. Col. Henry '.ippinrott will not- be promoted to the grade of brigadiergeneral in the army. President Roosevlt has directed that his name be. withdrawn. The stock of the Evansvllle r.nd TVrre Haute Railway wc?, transferred to Rock Island interests. rQ I NO. 21. NEW POPE fiOES IN /? ? ? Pius Tenth Now Wears the Famous *; Iriple hira THOUSANDS WITNESS CEREMONIES nn'.tiuv'es Stood lor Ten Hours on llleir i ect to Ciet a (iiiuipse ??f lite New I'ont ff. Rome. Hy I'abio. The t-o'cmnny oT t::coronation of |V?pp Pins X iook tiiti?'> in tho basilica ( St. Peter's. in tit |,rp.?t ii; i <>;' tho prima < an ' '.1 i ' untilnri's of tin ("tr.rcTi. diplomats am) !toman noble:;, ant! with all the :>o 1 c ;: 11 Ity an 1 : ndor associated with this, the most magnificent rite in the I ontan Catholic Church. As Cardinal A'.a? hi. the dean of the cardinal deacons. id::: e;? the triple crowa on ttie in ad of the venerable Pont iff .the throng of 70.000 persons '.'atbored within the cathedral burst into unrestrained art latnations. the choir into a liyinn of triumph and the lulls of Rome rang out a joyful peal. It is .">7 years since the Romans and Mnrope assisted at such a function, in St. Peter's. The great basilica, popularly supposed ne\ >r to have been quit:: full, was overflowing. A bewildering mixture, of gold, red and silver was erected in front of each altar. Contrary to custom on tlifse ceremonious occasions there were no galleries and the h:. llira bore more ?.f its normal aspect. Oil the altar, which was dressed in \ late, stood the famous silver gilt candh sti'-Us and a ntagniilcf ni crucifix. All th availalile standing space within the ca.thed al was divided into sc tions by v.ot; h a lie: tiers. which, to a certain extent, hep; the \ ro'.vd in order \ thh k fog ov? rhtuig Rome ia the < .i ly hours. ht;t lite sun crane out later end it was unhenrahlely hot. At t> a. ni. tiie riivln;; of hells announced the imminent op ning of the church doom :mk1 ;i commotion at onee began among lit rov !. Hut ten minutes had to ele.jist hofo'e the <! mrs opened and eaeh seemed a erntury to the waiting crowd which for hours had been siundii:before the closed portals. Tit poliee and Italian .soldiers bad a diifici.lt task, to maintain order. When the doors vw-re opened the rush in was terrific. Many who started from tin bottom of tlie st 'ps outside were lifted off their feet and carried into the cathedral. it was a great human torrent lot loose. Tito compactness of the crowd ptoved to he the safety of those who were caught in it. Women fainted mi co! iaarat iv< ly largo munh rs and < v? a were overcome by tin lic.it, * hut no serious accidents were reported. Fortunately, tlure were few children present. Aii< r their entrance tlie pc:>ple had further Ions; hoars of waiting and it is computed that the majority were on their feet together ten hours, iivo before the ccremonv ami nnnthnr five while it lasted. Those who had received special invitations. including tin* high oec 1. slastics who v ore not participating in the proccs-sion. the diplomats and the ltomnn aristocracy, had a. reserved entranco through the sacristy of St. Peter's. Prince Massino arrived aecomp .nied by his daughter-in-law. Princess Hentrlro. the daughter of Don Carlos, nnd they were given prominent seats, Duka Robert of Parma was the only other in em her of the royal family to attend. Among the aristocracy there was u great mixture of those Roman nobles who remain faithful to the papacy and those adhering to the Quirinal. Sir Thomas Ksmonde, representing the Irish parliamentary party, was received by two Knights of the Cape and Sword, one F. McNutt, an American, and conducted to the diplomatic ni losurc. After the preliminary "Tcmonics, which were grand beyond description, the triple tiara was carried before the new Pope with appiopriato remarks in latin. Cardinal Deacon Segna then thn ~ * -1 n 1 wiivm o mi le ?11111 Cardinal Dfiason Macchi placed on the v<?nerahle whito head tin? triple crown. At this moment the church was filled with the ringing of bells, the blowing of silver trumpets, the triumphant strains of the choir and the acclamations of the multitude, which no longer could he repressed. When comparative silence had bt n restored. Cardinal March 1 addressed the Pop' In l.atln as follows: "Receive the tiara ornamented with three crowns. Remember thou art the father of Princes and Kings, the rector of the world, the vicar on earth of our Sivior, Jisus Christ, who is the honor and glory of all centuries." "Amen! AmeA?% again hurst forth from the concourse. -4K* Pope Plus was quite ovcrcomt and had scarcely str. ngth left to Impart iii ;ipu.-o.our nciicuicuon. iarui:iais Macrhi and Sagna. granted a plenary Indulgence to all pr< sent and the procession thou re-iortncd and loft the basilica in the same form as it came. The Pope was visibly fatigued. Strong as the Pope la physically, he supported the ordeal of his coronation today perhaps with less fortitude than did Leo XI11 wlu n he was crowned, although the latter was merely a shadow of a man. This evening when the pontiff received the Duke of Parma ho said to him: "Not counting the election, today was the most tremendous experience of my life. I must find a way to stop the noise In the Church. It is an offense against religion."