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Napoleon of From a Biography c the Cosmopolitan. SMAGINE a procession in a line fifteen mi! bleating along twelve miles of hogs, 27.000 i rear, clucking and q six miles; and In th fifty miles and requii will see the animals of Swift & Compan; ^rould think that the bead of that < ?ever Derore in iue wunu ? wsiut^ . n such a stupendous scale or with si The commander of the army of 2 lUs first penny picking cranberries in years ago. It was at Sagamore, on th? to the house of Swift on June 24. 1 years later, when the boy was long the cape. It was like Napoleon , The Indian's P< By Dr. Charles A. E< MHE Indian's side of white man has neve: has necessarily been and largely from the ally anxious to secu conceal any weaknes Take as an illusti A rinff IVn Q f A\UCC. AtMQ >...w arming most of them firing toward the centre, killing near: f their own men. The soldiers then end shot them down in cold blood, zeports. The press of the country di fcand, General Custer was in pursuit their trail two days and finally overt Big Horn. The warriors met him 1: game. It was a brilliant victory for m disadvantage in the midst of their fiown In history as the "Custer mass f The Joy of W Pleasures of Wh Present is Deprf By Caroline L. Hunt producer of old had plea Tent knows not. He had the small shop. He had comir prentices in village politics haps, there was a personal , for friends or for acqnalnta portance because it rnetne which his own manner of mbhmJ the same social plane, prepa: pie, possibly known for mo: ^rtth which to hire him to make the ct - ? o ail CI lUCTt; ? ttS (I iCM anu a uc*4^< much she needed the piece of furniti What purpose it was to serve. The fa enter surroundings, the personal qual 'fulness were intensified in case of I. fcoose with and for those she loved. Now all is changed. The facto great, dingy shop with the maddening ? dates are strangers with whom he ha urork. He labors for an indefinite, f; irtmknown to him. He has for this c comes from sharing life in the same ability which comes from broad educ la Imagination across space and to pi to realize his needs.?The Chautauqua Arctic Ameri By Andrew J. Stone, OOWODU ? undertake to give pco] TTrrrTfTrTTI lea, or any part of it, 1 Trf^^r<tT& country is much larger DP I yU as beiug all alike?a co' 22 X SS and snow, and barren v ' SSuiljljH Arctic America there is iinffnTTu ,>eaut^ul summer-land < v? ? y less fields of beautiful -camp at the foot of the mountains, an * variety of wild grasses waved their to climb among the dense, tangled, an grew several varieties of the most bei Reaching the upper limits of the i lupine and dainty red columbine cov< fern* Among them, wild celery and other luxuriant foliage plants gave i pearance. A little farther, many lil vrlth their great leaves resting on tl iris bordered the shores. ' Still higher came the yellow sunflo fields, and higher yet. violets, pinks, and dozens and dozens of dainty, bio.' Purple is the predominating colo: pink dividing honors. But few red fi miles where every foot of my way fiowers in many varieties.?Scribncr's i A Look Into By President Roosev r"" E have every right to 1 Ws. our forefathers; but w descendants if we male* supine instead of an ii by our acts worthy of ti m?mm?am and Nation, iu the maun of our business and soc tain high and line quali v *k,i * the whole heart of ou still lives. We justly pride ourselves on our prosperity must exist in order to esii life can be built; but unless we do in the material prosperity itself will go Altered conditions, we must meet th ? the spirit shown by the men who in : explored, conquered and settled this irith thriving and populous States. The old days were great because ^ qualities; and we must make the new Ities. We must insist upon courage and fertility in resource; we must ii we must insist no less upon the virti for the rights of others;we must show corruption, in public and in private 1; If we come short in any of these ( ?s I believe we surely shall, we dev ?ren greater degree than in the past hall make of this republic the free Nation which has ever coiue f the Stockyards >f the Late Gustavus Swift is i of 10.000 cattle, marching two by two les long; let 20,000 sheep follow them ; miles of road; after them drive sixtoei strong; then let 30,000 fowls bring tip th< tracking and gobbling, over a space o; is whole caravan, stretching for nearlj """ n-rt ilnvc tr? nns? j\ ?riven point, yot lu6 n?v i ? c-devoted to death in the packing houses y in a single day. Surely a Buddhis istablishment had much to answer for as a massacre of the innocents organizec ueh scientific system. 10,000 men engaged in this work earner a swamp on Cape Cod. more than fiftj it historic peninsula, that a son was bori S39. and named Gustavus Franklin. A not picking cranberries, be drove hogj exercising his infant armies at school. 0. J0 >int of View. astman. any controversy between him and th< r really been presented at all. Histor: written from the white man's standpoln > reports of commanding officers, nutur re full credit for their gallantry or t< s. ation the so-called "battle"' of Woundei ormed about the Indians, and after dis one man resisted, and the troops begai ly all the Indians and necessarily innnj followed up fleeing women and childre: This is not called a massacre in offieia d not call it a massacre. On the othe; of certain bands of Sioux. He followei ook and surprised thexu upon the Littli n force and he was beaten at his owi the Indians, whom Custer had taken a women and children. This battle goe. acre." & rorking. ich the Producer of the ved. sures of which the producer of the pros ; quiet and safety and healthfulness of ; ion Interest with fellow-workers and ap ? or In church affairs. Best of all, per quality in his work because it was dow noes, and an ever-present sense of its iin eds which he had seen and recognized, ant life, similar to that of the consumer and 01 red him to understand. lie had. for exam nths that his neighbor was saving mone; test of drawers upon which he was work it in his labor because he knew just hov ire, just where it was to stand and jus vorable conditions of his work, the pleas ity of labor, the feeling of its ilirect use the housewife who worked in her owi ry hand spends his working day in i ; of the machinery in his ears. His asso s little or nothing in common besides hi ar-nway consumer whose manner of lifi onsumer neither tjse fellow-feeling whicl community, nor its only substitute, tlx ation and from travel to project onesel it oneself in the place of a stranger ant ,n. & ca. Explorer and Naturalist. pie a correct conception of Arctic Amcr s difficult. Although they know ihat ti:i than the United States, they look upon I ?! >*???? rlovL- irlntnrs fiol.ls of 1C( liiili y KJL lUlik,, uuitt If rnstes. In truth, -within Arctic and sub much diversity of climate. And ia ?lii: jf Alaska, there are In midsummer end plant life. Many times I have left mi d passing through a little meadow when top3 above my head, I would comment* d almost tropical jungle of alders, when autiful ferns. llders, great, waving fields of the purpli ?red acres and acres of the high, rollin; wild parsnip grew many feet high, am my surroundings an almost tropical ap ctle ponds grew beautiful, yellow lilies ie surface of the \vater, aud the purpli wers, white ana purpie uaisies in eiiuies; forget-mc-nots, buttercups and bluebells ssoming plants in many colors, r, then white and yellow- and blue ant owers were seen. I have traveled man: was one grand profusion of beautifu & & the Future. Bit. take a just pride in the great deeds c e show ourselves unworthy to no me: ? what they did an excuse for our lyin; leentive to the effort to show ourselvei iieiu. In the administration of city, Stat' igement of our home life and the conduc ial relations, we are bound to show cer ties of character under penalty of seein: r civilization eaten out while the bod: marvellous material prosperity, and sucl iblish a foundation upon which a bigue: very fact build this higher life thereon for but very little. Now, in 1903, in th< e changed aud changing problems wit! 1S03 and la the subsequent years gained vast territory, then a desert, now llilct the men who lived in them had might: days great by showing these same qual and resolution, upon hardihood, tenacit: isist upon the strong virile virtues, ant jes of self-restraint, self-mastery, regan our abhorrence of cruelty, brutality am ife aliiie. jualities we shall measurably fall, and If eiop these qualities in the future to ai , then in the century now beginning w< st and most orderly, the most just anc orth from the womb W time* \ PRESIDENT IN VIRGINIA * Mr. Roosevelt Spoke at the Unlverk sity Commencement. Charlottesville, Va., Special.?Presi, dent Roosevelt wound up his tour of > the continent in a visit to the Univer. Bity of Virginia. This was alumni day 1 oi the University and the occasion was ? made memoriable by the presence of f the President and many distinguished r men, some of them graduates of the ' University. The reception accorded the 1 President was a particularly warm one ' nr.d hp was irreeted with ringing cheers t when he arose to speak before the . elumni in the public hall and the stu1 dint body at the luncheon tendered him in the gymnasium, and they were . renewed several times during his two speeches. r The address before the alumni as1 sociatlon, which was first on the proi gramme, had been prepared by Judge ? W. Gordon Robertson, of Roanoke, and was to have been delivered by him. He. however, wa* detained at home by illness and his address was read by R. Walter Moore, of Fairfax, a member of the board of visitors of the University. Judge Morris then in a short speech of welcome Introduced the President. After the applause which greeted his appearance had subsided, the President delivered his address. The re> ception accorded the President was 7 particularly demonstrative. The vast t audience sprang to its feet when he . was introduced, and the cheering and j hand-clapping continued for several minutes. The President said it was a rimihio niAQQurp to- him to be present * today. "In the first place," he said, "be cause the University of Virginia is one 1 among that limited number of institu; tions of learning to which, because of ! its historical association, every Ameri2 can, proud of his country and his ccuntry's history, must turn. In the next ' place .because I have just finished a 1 trip across the continent, which at al? most every step reminded me of some i great deed done by a Virginian or a der scendant of Virginia in that wonder5 ful formative period which has. occupied more than half of this Republic's work." The President said he would have considered his first trip incomplete if it had not ended with a pilgrimage to the University of Virginia. He spoke of the work of the early Virginians and paid a tribute to Lewis and Clarke. 4 Zachary Taylor and Winfield Scott ' and other natives of this State. "Virginia has a right to be proud," he said, "of the character of the public men she has sent into public life. The two j . United States Senators from Virginia j j are both graduates of this University and it is a genuine pleasure to be brought into contact with them in * handling public affairs." ? The President spoke in high terms - of the University and the work it has 1 done, and said that when th'e White j 3 House was restored to its original de- I sign, the architects came to Charlottes- J ville and studied the architecture of the ' old buildings in the University grounds " to get the right idea. He recalled the v fact that Edgar Allen Poe was a gradut ate of the University, as was also his . friend. Thomas Nelson Page. He said _ he had called upon a number of Uni j versity of Virginia men to nil nign publicoffires and that they never failed him. He concluded his address as fol1 lows: "The University of Virginia has s stood for much in our national life, e You stand for the production of schol, arship; for the production of men who ^ arc to do well if ever the need of call~ ing upon them for their sen*ices may arise, but above all the University of 1 Virginia stands for the production of men who are to do each man's duty in the world. Every American who receives a university education, who receives a good school education, is by i the receipt of that education just so ' much a debtor to the State. Every man | graduated here has owed the State something for the education which he has received. A good American never ?! ?that Via Hops not seek - uwwj auviuu% iuwv . _ 5 to repay. (Applause). And the nan j who is content to go through life, ot, jng his alma mater for the education " for which he has made no adequate return. is not true to the ideals of Amers lean citizenship. (Applause). He is - honor bound to make such return. He r can make it in but one way. He can re-1 2 turn what he owes to his alma mater ^ only by making his alma mater proud j 1 of what he does in service rendered to his fellow men. (Applause). Of course the first thing a university man, like 1 2 other men. must do is to pull his own ; weight. You have got to do that first. .1 "Passing through this wonderful and | beautiful State of yours. I am struck not merely with its fertility and beauj ty. but with the steadily increasing prosperity. We must remember that 3 no man is to be excused if he fails to dc his part in keeping up that prosper' ity. I am the last man that would preach to any audience mere money 1 getting, but certainly I wish to preach Hot no man if* to t to every auuicuw 1 be excused if he declines to do small things that each day demands and not f want to wait until some chance for heroic action. The man who wishes to be a hero must begin by being a good e\ery day citizen. (Applause.) Then if the opportunity offers for heroic ac-1 tion. let him seize it, let him grasp it. | let him write his name imperishably among the names written among the ? nacs. but let him not wait till that opp portunity which may never arise, does arrive before doing anything, but let ' Lim do his duty to the whole State by I 3 leading a decent and hard-working life 2 as the average American must, if the! t country is to go onward and upward . (Applause.) "I believe in you. I believe in your j) institutions here, in this great historic ' University, both by its conscious aud its unconscious influence has sought to 1 implant the primary virtues of Amerir ran citizenship; thevirtures of honor.of ' "e "mmrtn adnsp and of that t JIUIltbtJ * \Jk tWiiiU Vu w-w? r _ a high and devoted courage which will j not flinch from the forces of evil, whether they be physical or moral. | 2 (Applause.) I thank you all for having given me the chance to speak to you j today. Many of you I have known and ' love already and with the history of * this great institution of learning, I r am already acquainted and now I can I feel that my trip from one ocean to the I 1 other is ended, and that I have come j at the close to this place so fraught with memories, imperishable memories i , for any one who rejoices as all of us must rejoice that an American Presi- j 1 dent can go from one ocean to the i ether and from the gulf to the Cana1 dian -border and everywhere find him- 1 self at home among his own people." THE OREGON FLOOD Details of the Horror Given By Man Who Was Present RESIDENCE PORTION ANNIHILATED Five Hundred L!ves Lost i?t Heppner, Oregon, By a Cloud-Burst Up the Gulch on Which Town Was Situated?Horrible Scenes. Portland, Ore., Special.?A special to the Oregonian from lone, Ore., says: Davir McAtee, a business man of Heppner, whose residence is on a beach above Heppner. was an eye witness of the disaster. In company with Frank Spaulding he left Heppner about 10:30 Sunday night on horseback. "On Sunday afternoon," said Mr. McAtee, " there had been a severe rain storm, accompanied with much rain and wind. I was standing in front of the house and noticed that a clouil of remarkable density approached the top of the hill on the eafit side of the canon. I turned for a moment when a roar caused me to look again at the hill. I saw a wall of water, the height of which I would bo afraid to guess, rushing down the mountain, carrying immense trees and timbers on its crest and tearing away the rocks from the foundation. The torific storm struck the upper part of the town first. The residence of Thos. Howard was the first to fall and his entire family was drowned. In the Krug home also, every person was drowned, as was the case in the Hale and Siling residences. All of these houses were about four or five blocks above the business centiv. The house of Abraham Hoswick was nearly demolished. The Palace Hotel was the first Duiiaing to stem me nue and all the guests were saved but the horses below the structure were blown I out into the street overturned and wheckcd. The residence of G. A. Rhea was carried away and tho entire I family, sonsisting of wife and three j daughters and Miss Adkins, a cousin, I were lost. "C. E. Redflcld, whose residence was I completely destroyed, was absent, but I his wife and baby were drowned. A. I C. Gciger's bouse was carried away i and Mr. Gieger was drowned. His I family is in the East. George Conser's house was reduced next, but the family succeeeded in saying their lives by rnching to tho upper stories; the house being carried down the creek threequarters of a mile. Rescuers found that the house had been cut in two and Mr. Concer was found standing in water up fo bis neck, holding hi3 wife upon the roof and keeping her from slipping with his outstretched arms. Dr. McSwatt and Ayers. who were living in the same residence, were drowned. Oscar Minser's house was next demolished and Mrs. Minser drowned. The rest of the family succeeded in saving their lives by climbing to the rcof. All of the Wells family but two were lost and the house was carried I away. With the Wells residence went j the house of George Swaggert. Mr. ' A?- "A ,1 o 11 n-Vi f nr 3 awaggeri h i?u luumcu uuu?u?ia yere drowned '.vith their Ave children. I The Mallory house was carried 130 yards and was found lodged against a store and Mr. Mallory. a crippled old man, was found safe holding a baby. James Matlock'3 house was next. Mr. Matlock was drowned but his family was saved. Dr. Pigg's house also went. Here one child was drowned, but the rest of the family escaped. Mrs. Elder ; was drowned in her residence. The | houses of Mr. Boyd and Mr. Walton ! were also destroyed, and both families ! lost. Mr. Barton succeeded in saving j all persons in his residence, although I they were badly bruised. The house i itself was washed away. "Perhaps the greatest loss of life oeI curred at the Heppner Hotel. This j house, which was run under the management of Jones & Ashbaugh. was I carried away. It is supposed that I there were about fifty guests in the j hotel, all of whom are reported to be I lost The proprietors themselves weie I saved, but tneir lamines are among me dead. "The houses of Benjamin Patterson. Mr. Dunn and Mr. Noble, are entirely demolished and all persons in these three families drowned, as were the families of James, Jones and Henry Blair. The barn of Dr. Swlnburn and the big livery stable of White and Meadows were entirely destroyed. E. I. Farsworth and Philip Cohen were also drowned. The entire residence portion ^f Heppner was destroyed, but the buinees houses, being on higher ground and being generally built of brick and stone, were not so badly damaged. The school house and court house, which stand on a side hill were saved, but two churches, the Methodist and Presbyterian, were completely wrecked. "Around the depot the rising wawr left great heaps of drift wood piled higher than the roof of the station and the rescuing parties were forced to demolish these pyramids of timber in order to extricate the corpses which were tangled in the brush. Undoubtedly many of the drowned bodies wore carried by the rushing waters down the valley. "Gangs of men are at work clearing away the piles of debris, rocks and timbers, which lie piled in heaps in the streets and taking out the corpses which are thus conseaied." Collectlors For Capt Ewen. Lexington, Ky., Special.?A subscription list for the benefit of Capt. B. L. Ewen. whose hotel at Jackson was burned by incendiaries, has been started by local newspapers and has met with a liberal response already. A call has been made on the people of Kentucky to make good the loss which it is said Ewen suffered in payment for his attempting to assist in aiding the law in feud-ridden Breathitt county. CLEVELAND NUT A CANDIDATE New York World Publishes an Interview With the Ex-, csident New York, Special.?The World publishes a dispatch from Princeton, N. J., quoting former Presidcn Cleveland as saying: "It is perfectly absurd to suppose for an instant that I have any desire to re-enter public life. Nor have I icmotely entertained the thought since I left Washington more than six years ago. Tho matter is as far from my thoughts as it was in 1896 when all must admit that It was not within my hearing or sight. I have no higher aspirations than to pass my days in peace with my family around me and to take no part in politics which any private citizen cannot take with utmost propriety." "I have never spoken to anybody on the subject of a fourth candidacy. I have ewer written a single political friend one way or the other nor have I befoic been written to or spoken to by them. There i3 not a political leader of any prominence endeavoring to advance any movement tx> nominate me in any State, so far as I have been advised. nur do I anticipate that any such efto:t will br made by any leader, prominent or obscu:o, in any locality in the country. "I havo oa several occasions within the year unde. taken to perform the labor which usually falls to the private in the rear ran.es but there has not lurked within me the hope of any reward save the consciousness of having made an eftort to assist in bringing about salutary conditions in the par* " ! could Noi Agree. Jackson, Ky., Special.?The jury In the case of Jett and White, charged with the murder of Lawyer James K. Marcum, was discharged, naving oeeu unable to agree. At 8 o'clock the jury filed into the court room and Foreman Richard Millard said: "Your Honor, we find no chance of coming to an agreement." Judge Red wine said: "I will keep you gentlemen until Saturday night, unless you get a verdict sooner. There i3 no reason why a verdict should no: bo reached in this case." Foreman Millard said: "One man has as much right to his opinion as another, and may stick to it." It is believed from this that there wa3 only one man between a verdict and it is conceded that only one juior then was for conviction. It is said the quesiion of punishment had not been considered, renter the iurv again reported that it was unable to agree, and shortly after I 9 o'clock It was discharged, so there ' will be another trial. The dominant faction evidently expected acquittal. There was at least one juror who held out against this. The scene after the announcement was in no wise exciting. Some who started to clap their hands were stopped by the court. The guards took immediate possession of the prisoners and they were closely guarded back to jail. People gathered around the court house discussing the case, but there was no disturbance or outward sign jf trouble. Attorney Byrd. after consultation, made a motion for a change of venue, i Judge Rc-dwine refused to hear argu ments but of his own accord ciiangea the venue to Cynthiana, Harrison county, at the next teim of court. Cynthiana is not in Judge Rodwine's district. He surprised the spectators by at one*? ordering the prisoners sent to Lexington under a detachment of soldiers accompanied by Elisor Jones. The Battleship Muddle. The battleship Galveston, which was almost completed at the Trigg ship yards at Richmond, Va., was seized by order of the State court to satisfy creditors. A Washington special of Friday says: The time of the cabinet meeting was consumed in large part by the consideration of the legal questions involved In the decision of the United States government to disregard the decision of the court of Virginia and seize the incomplete gunboat Galveston at the Trigg shipyards ILL AllUiilVuu. Ex-Postmistress Arrested. Ealtimore, Special.?Dora Campbell, 26 years old, formerly postmistress of Maysville, Ga., was arrested here on the charge of embezzlement otf postal funds. She resigned her position in Maysville, it is said, last May, and ame here for treatment at a hospital, where she registered as Dorothy Herndon. Miss Campbell is held at police headquarters for the action of- the United States authorities. Trains Crash. Bristol, SpeciaL?At the BlufT City crossing of the two railroads at Bristol late Monday night a freight train on the Southern railway plunged through a Virginia and Southwestern freight trai^. One engine was derailed and turned over and several cars were wrecked. The crew of the Southern i train jumped to safety. No one was injured. THE IN VtS! IGAI ION Into the Postal Frauds Made Public By the Department INTERESTING FACTS GIVEN OUT, Developed That Wholesale Stealing: Has Been Going on Through risny Years. Washington, Special. ? Postmaster ' General Payne's instructions to Mr.. Bristow, in regard to the charge of Seymour Tolloch, former cashier of theWashington City postofflce, regarding, the irregularities in the postal administration, and also reports of the inspection and investigation of the Washington poestoffice by inspectors between June 30, 1899, and July 31? 1900, together with the transcript of the Tulloch charges made some years ago and the conclusion thereon then reached by Postmaster General Charles Emory Smith. These papers constitute by far the most significant documents yet made public as a result of the sweeping postal investigation. The reports show the existence of many irtcgularities during the period involved. The inspector who investigated the irregularities reports that the files of the postoffice cashier show direct crders from superior authority for the disbursement of all the questionable items cited. The inspector urged "that the responsibility for the many illegal appointments, the payment of two salaries to one and the same person tho disbursement of the thousands ^r- * dollars for which practically no service was performed, should be placed where it properly belongs and the manyabuses corrected." In a summary of the several report* tho Postmaster General says: "The rhnrcp of Mr. Tulloch is in its essence against President McKinley and Postmaster General Smith. President McKinley is no longer living; Postmaster General Smith, who carried out President McKinley's policy, has answered for himself. With regaru to the present management of the Washington, postoffice and tee conduct of any and all men charged with wrong-doing who hsvo been in the postal service under the present administration, a tncrough. and searching investigation is now being made." The Postmaster General also says: "It will be seen that the whole subject was taken up by Postmaster Oeneral Smith and Investigated by him. Alt expenditures referred to were allowed by the Auditor and Comptroller, with, the exception o? $160." rietcalf Dismissed. Washington, Special.?As a result of alleged indiscretion in matters pertaining to the award of contracts for printing the money order forms of the government, James T. Metcalf, for. many years superintendent of themoney order system of the Postoffice Department, was on Wednesday removed from office by the Postmaster General. A full investigation of the case will be made later. The dismissal is the result or aers or iwr. aewsu i? opposition to the bid of Paul Herman, of Rutherford, N. J., the lowest bidder by $45,000 and in favor of the next highest bidder, the KynkopHailenbeck-Crawford Company, of^ New York, of which Mr. Metealf's son^is an employe. The story is briefly told in the letter of dismissal signed by Postmaster General Payne. Navy Appointments. iVashington, Special.?After a conference with the President, Secretary Moody announced the following appointments to the navy, all of the ap pointees being from New York: uap:. Chas. E. Rice to be chief of bureau of steam engineering upon the retirement of George W. Melvihe in August next, Pay Director Henry T. Harris to be paymaster general upon retirement of Rear Admiral A. S. Kenney,. Lieut, Col. George F. Elliott to be commandant of the marine corps when Major General Charles Heywood retires next fall. Col. Elliott is a native of Alabama. He is now in command of the marine barracks at Norfolk. Jews Attack an Editor. St. Petersburg, By Cable.?Kroushevan, the notorious Jew hater and the -? ->* Anti.Semite organ in can vi ui ? _ Kischineff, the Bassarabetz, the articles In which are believed to have been largely responsible for the massacre of the Jews in Ki3chieff, was attacked by a party of Jews In the street here. He was stabbed in the neck by one of the Jews. The wound is not believed to be fatal. Hi3 assailant was captured and proved to be a former student of the polytechnic school at Kieff. Chicago Strike Settled Chicago, Special.?An amicable adjustment of the hotel and restaurant ^ * -- J 'krv of strike htre was reacnee ami mo on,.*ers will return to work Frld?/ morning:. after two weeks of idleness. Alf differences between employer and employes aro to be settled by arbitral.!.;;:?. . The obstacle, which for the past week' has prevented a settlement, the demand of the joint board of the strikersthat union workers only be employed,, was waived by the strikers. Evidence Secured. It la now said that District Attorney Jejome, of New York, in person,, secured the first evidence against tichard Canfield's splendid gambling house in East 44th street. Disguised in a white wig and pretending to be an elderly visitor from California he obtained admission to the place and still retains some of the chips her bought on the evening of his visit