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"Don't Marry By Beatrice Fairfa has been said."'Of all th< Cpr! jj the straightest." This n or protective love, but pJkat woman feels for the nu world. Pity arouses all that sympathy; but I doubt They generally fall in love because tl force stronger than they compels the! To really love a man a woman n every way; when she pities him she A woman sometimes marries a r that she loves him; that he needs hei The love that many women fee! order, and of its kind it is a very go'c love, the love which glorifies the who! on it. A certain element of pity mingle not the forerunner. With real love c< pity, half fierce protectiveness and wl Some women marry through pity loved. Marriages of this kind are ri must gi\e as well as take. Pity is a beautiful quality, and slumber is a strange anomaly. Of course there are exceptions t lead to love. We hear of hospital nu have nursed through serious illness stirred, and they have grown to love because it has taken root and thrived These is only on8 thing to marr; pity for love. Do not think because marry bim and live happily with him may be the stumbling block to your lu To pity a person is to acknowle and when the pity wears out it is qui ^ will wear out, too.?New York Journ ? ? ? 1 Raising' Sqtial / By K. V. St. \1. the country woman \ j ^ little capital, tbere is nc F for market. Fifteen p thirty dollars, and if n in eight months there v will yield sixty squabs z at fifty cents each (even dollars a dozen), so that receipts coul ually increasing breeders?keeping s ten dollars would result in eighteen dental to household duties callled up< Pigeons are very easily cared for top and sides attached. Thirty minu *11 fifty pairs of birds would need, j , to grain at all times. The old birds i days o'd?market-time. Fifteen days the female makes a second nest and la days to incubate. All the year roun< tending two families. Any old house on the farm which "inside Is fitted with tiers of egg boxes dozen). Each pair of breeders requi straw or hay in a comer of the hous? box, and in the yard a shallow water salt in unlimited quantities are abs< r estimated at the highest, results at th . as they raise only four thin, dark'sk a dozen.?Woman's Home Companion. & Western Ame vs By H. W, Scott. great changes are ^ ^ Ocean commerce, to be f fj coming manifest. Inci mmmmmm States require Oriental i development both in Ai WPaffaW of steam on the ocean, a of the trade of all, coui than fifty steamships now sail regula and Washington to ports in Asia or in steamers and sail-vessels a continual! ish Columbia and ports of Asia. Ausi movement. It Includes not only the border on the greatest of oceans, but ent by railway across America to .01 from West to East over the Atlant Everything favors the growth of There is promise of development of 1 which, within the next half-century, 1 active theatre of the world's new e America. The two hemispheres, her except across the Atlantic, are now n Pacific, which is to effect large trans: additional factor, in the commerce < i Tlie Neressit Con Fly President Charles winning of satisfactioi fundamental of all obje< this satisfaction and con: mummi scale, the hopes and i< Therefore, joy in work s vataBft industrial discussion; f< It is only in the less s are also the commonest, that any q\ of satisfaction and content in daily > mat h pleasure. Every professional every person in whose occupation t'her and judgment, takes pleasure, or joy, < interest in.his work does not depen receives for it. He gets from it a 1; addition to. its pecuniary returns. ' satisfactions of the higher employme lower. On the right solution of this ] industrial democracy; for there can and satisfaction from the daily work o The Claims of the Individual. It is one of the confusing elements *' of modern society that anarchism, soo/-?an/?o onH froA thought are dttiiaiu, OV1CUVV) wuw ? VW ??o producing heroes and martyrs to set beride those of the definitely religious sects. There is apparently no school of thought or ethics with a monopoly of holiness. Somewhere in the mean of all these conflicting theories ltes the germ of truth fitted for mortal understanding, but mean time individualism is unquestionably safe in its assertion that no society, no oragnization, no consolidation whatsoever is nobler than the individuals th'at compose it, and that the development of the individual, not by the stunting processes of fear, but by the strengthening processes of freedom, is the first duty of man.?Harper's Weekly. Through Pity/ x. e paths that lead to a woman's love, pity's lay be true as regards maternal,, platonic, it is not true in respect to the love a in who is to her the one man of all the is best in woman, tenderness, gentleness, if many women fall in love through pity, ley can't help themselves?because some m. lust feel that he is stronger than she ia at once assumes the leading part nan through pity; she persuades herself , and that she can be of service to him. I for their husbands is of the maternal >d love; but it is not the highest deepest le earth simply because two people dwell s in all love, but it is the result of love, omes a passion of tenderness that is half holly love. and because they are in love with being sky, as pity grows monotonous, and love the woman in whose breast it does not o every rule, and pity does occasionally rses falling in love with men whom tney . Their pity and sympathy have been their patients. This love is apt to last in the most adverse circumstances. y for, and that is love. Do not mistake you feel sorry for a man that you can . The very thins that arouses your pity ippiness. dge a certain amount of failure in him. ite likely that the love that grew from it & bs For Market. rho must increase her income, and has thing so good and easy as raising squabs airs of good homing pigeons will cost one are sold for the first eight weeks, rill be forty-five pairs of breeders, which l month, easily sold to private customers i a commissionman gives upward of four d not fall below fifteen dollars. By gradome of the extras?a weekly income of months, and only the leisure time inci* >n. when kept in'a house, with yards, netted tes' time night and morning to clean Is K self-feeding box gives the birds access attend entirely to the squabs until thirty ofter the first two youngsters are hatched ys two more eggs, which require eighteen i, save at molting time, each pair is at* i is rain and wind proof will serve if the t to hold earthenware nests (one dollar a re two nests each. Put a bnudle of cut 5, a good drinking fountain and the feedpan for bathing purposes. Grit and rock jlutely necessary. Remember, outlay is e lowest, figures. Avoid common pigeons, inned pairs that won't bring two dollars m & irica . Eastern Asia.. taking place in the currents of Pacific allowed fast by still greater, is rapidly bereasing productions in our own Pacific markets, and is finding them. Railroad merica and in Asia, and increasing use ire effecting great changes in,the courses atries in touch with the Pacific. More rly from the ports of California, Oregon, i the great Pacific Islands and of "tramp" ly growing fleet. Between ports of Brittralia. and New Zealand there is similar local commerce between countries that carries also a heavy trade from the Orlnr Eastern States, and even to Europe, ic. this commerce to very large proportions, in international commerce on the Pacific may rival that on the Atlantic. For the ffort is now eastern Asia and western etofore^ scarcely at all in communication ipiuiy utrvtrjupmg aa lutcrcuuree uver me formation, or at least to become a great of the world.?The Century. ?? & y for itent in Work. > W. Eliot. i and content in daily work is the most ;ts for an industrial democracy. Unless :ent can be habitually won on an immense leals of democracy cannot be realized. J hould be the all-pervading subject of the pr it is at once motive, guide, and goal, ikilfull employments of mankind, which lestion arises concerning the possibility vork.. All the nobler employments give man, every business man, and, indeed, e is free competitive play for intelligence or satisfaction in his daily work; and his d principally on the amount of pay he arge satisfaction independent of, and in rbe real question, then, is whether the rnts can be measurably obtained in the problem depends the whole future of the be no public happiness without content f the masses of mankind.?World's Work. 1 A Wonderful Jewel. The most extraordinary pearl?or rather clusters of pearls?known as "The Southern Cross," is owned by a syndicate of Australian-gentlemen, who value it at $500,000. So far as is known it occupies an absolute position. It consists of nine pearls, naturally grown together in so regular a manner as to form a perfect Latin cross. The pearl was discovered by a pearl-fisher at Roebourne, West Australia. The first owner regarded it with so much superstition that he buried it; but it was discovered in 1874, and five years later was placed on exhibition in Australia.?Detroit News-Tribune. Perignon, the butler of a monas- ' tery near Epernay, in France, is said to have first made champagne success'fully in 1643. \ % j JAPS SECURE GOOD POSITION Russians Retire to the Next Position Without Fighting. St. Petersburg, By Cable.?The following dispatch from Viceroy Alexieff, dated Apgust 7, has been received by the Czar: "General Stoessel reports as follows: At 5 in the morning of July 27, the enemy having advanced a strong force, their artillery opened flre along their whole front, followed by a series of attacks, one of which, directed against Yupilaza Mountain, was especially vigorous. At about 8 In the evening the enemy were everywhere repulsed with enormous losses. I remained In the advanced positions we have held for two days against an army very much stronger mtro At four in the morning of July 30 about five divisions of Japanese took the offensive against our position on the Wolf Hills. In view of the enormus superiority of the enemy's forces and the weakness of the position our troops wera ordered to retire to the next positions without fighting. The movement was effected in complete order under the protect tion of artillery, which by accurate fire at short ranges completely stopped the Japanese advance. Our losses have not yet been ascertained, but j they wore not great. The losses of j the Japanese were very considerable, j In the engagements of July 26th and 27th, the Japanese had about 70,000 I men and a considerable number of guns. The morale of the Russian troops Is excellent and their health is good." General Stoessel locates Yupilaza Mountain as situated ten miles northeast of Port Arthur and says that the Japanese attack on that position was only a demonstration, the real assault of the Japanese being made on the Russian positions on the Wolf Hills, which, he points out, are only six miles northward, and nearer the railroad station. The general staff explains that this position consists of a long crest of hills, offering a great advantage owing to their proximity to the fortress. The staff is unable to account for the presence of five divisions on the Kwan-Tung Peninsula. All Unions With Strikers. Chicago, Special.?All the labor unions in Chicago have endorsed the stock yards strike; After listening to the strikers' side of the controversy, which was presented to them by Michael J. Donnelly, president of the striking butchers' union, the Chicago Federation of Labor, which is composed of every labor organization in Chicago and has a membership of nearly 300,000, adopted resolutions I Sunday night pledging the moral and | financial support of the federated ! body as long as the strike continues. | Each member of the central body will ' bq assessed a small sum per week and the* whole amount will be turned over to the striking unions to help in the support of the strikers and their families during the struggle with the packers. The exact amount each I member was to be assessed was left j in the hands of a committee with orI ders to report results Monday. While I the officials of the Federation of LaI bor were unable to give cut an exact ! estimate of the amount of money the ! strikers would secure from this i sourco, it was stated that the total sum would bo well up in the thousands each week. After a fight which has lasted for nearly four weeks, a settlement of the stock yard3 strike teems to be as remote as at any time since the struggle began. Neither side to the conflict, during all this time, has shown any sign of weakening. Many Escape Narrowly. Richmond, Va.. Special.?By the explosion of a stick of dynamite under a car of the Tazewell Electric Company, Tazewell, Va., Tuesday afternoon, a dozen or more people were placed in jeopardy of their lives. The dynamite was put into the flange of the track by unknown persons and when the explosion occurred the passengehs, numbering CN)ut half a dozen ladies and as many men, were panic-stricken, but no one was injured beyond being severely shocked. The car was so badly damaged that the passengers had to be transferred in hacks and taken hastily to the t'ain. The affair caused a good deal of excitement in the neighborhood. There is no clue to the perpetrators of the crime. Ex-Senator Vest Dead. Sweet Springs, Mo., Special.?After a lingering Illness between life and death for weeks, former United States I Conota?? n n Voot rvoooorl t\aooofnllw wvunvvi va. vjr. * wow |/ooovu yvuvviuuj away Tuesday without a struggle. He was conscious until about two o'clock Sunday morning, when he sank into a state of coma from which he never aroused. He lost the power of speech Saturday morning and during the* last 36 hours of his life his breathing was barely perceptible. Baltic Fleet En Route. Berlin, By Cable.?The St. Petersburg correspondent of the Lokal Anzioger says that Rear Admiral Rojestvnsky, commander of the Baltic fleet, has hoisted hjs flag on the battleship SouvarofT end that the fleet, which consists of 60 vessels, including eight battleships and nine cruisers, will leave in the immediate future, probably on August 16. The correspondent says it is hoped that the fleet will reach its destination within t>0 days. PORT ARTHUR Latest Reports Indicai Captured Russ SO RUMORED IN ST. PETERSBURG General Belief, Borne out by the latest Dispatches, that the Situation is Desperae?Japanese Concentrating all their Energies Toward the Reduction of the Fortress. A dispatch from St. Petersburg at 5:15 Monday morning says: "Aside from the official reports of the Ryeshitelni affair and the flood of belated telegrams from Liao Yang and Anshanshan, no actual news from the fronth as been received. There is a persistent rumor that Port Arthur has fallen, but it cannot be confirmed. There is no additional news regarding the whereabouts of the vessels of the Port Arthur squadron, save that contained in foreign telegrams. There is a general belief, which is borne out by the latest dispatches, that the situation at Port Arthur is a desperate one. Apparenly the Japanese are concentrating all their energies towards the reduction of the fortress in order to release heavy rej enforcements for the operations against General Kuropatkin, and it is thought that until this has been accomplished the advance on Liao Yang will be suspended. Tokio, By Cable.?Vice Admiral Kamimura encountered the Russian Vladivostock squadron at dawn Sunday, north of Tsu Island, in the Strait of Koprea, and attacked the enemy at once. The battle lasted for five Hours ana resuuea in a complete Japanese victory. The Russian cruiser Rurik was sunk and the cruisers Rossia and Gromoboi fled to the northward after having sustained serious damage. Admiral Kamimura cables the Navy Department that the injuries Inflicted upon his vessels were slight. The fate of the crew of the Rurik is not known. It is presumed that many of them were killed or drowned. The strength of the fleet under Admiral Kamimura is not known, but it is presumed that he had the Adsuma, Idsumo, Iwate, Takashiho and other light cruisers. Tokio is joyous over the news, as it gives Japan mastery of the sea and restores commerce. Flags are flying, lanterns are glimmering and cries of "Banzai!" are ringing in the streets of Tokio in honor of the victories gained at sea by Admiral Togo and Vice Admiral Kamimura. Underneath the jollity of the popu lace lies a reeling or aeep sausrac-1 tion and gratification at the disposal ' of a desperately serious problem of the war. The Russian squadron which confronted Admiral Togo refused battle. It was stronger than Admiral Togo's squadron in battleships and armored cruisers, and had it elected to fight, the result might have altered the fortunes of war. The strength of the squadron which confronted Admiral Togo compelled him to draw vessels from the squadron under Vice Admiral Kamimura, and this left the Japanese navy powerless tj operate against the Russian Vladivostock squadron and unable to prevent the raids of these vessels. The raid conducted by the Vladi \ = - - -- I No Change in Strike. Birmingham, Ala., Special.?There is practically no change in the strike situation at the coal mines Sunday. Sixteen hundred tons of coal were mined at the Blossberg mines of the SlossSheffield Steel & Iron Co. today. The operators claim the number of men at work is being increased gradually. The miners' leaders declare the contrary is true. Mrs. Maybrick on the Way. London, By Cable.?Mrs. Florence Maybrick, under the name of Miss Rose Inferam, is on board the Red Star Line steamer Vaderland,-which sailed from Antwerp Saturday morning. She was accompanied by her attorney, Mr. Hayden, who arranged the details of her departure. Mrs. Maybrick arrived In Paris Friday and was met by Police Barnard, of New York. On her arrival at New York, Mrs. May - ?? * x -M rv DriCK win De tne guesi in ui. ucuaraore. Mrs. Maybrick's mother, the Baroness De Roques, intends to follow her daughter shortly. Republican Hand-Book. Washington, Special.?Tariff, prosperity. labor, wages and prices, trusts, the Panama canal, Cuba and Cuban reciprocity, expansion and its results, the investigations of the postal and land frauds and punishments of offenders, rural free delivery, irrigation, the record of the Republican party and ihe record of Theodore Roosevelt, are the leading subjects discussed by the Republican campaign text book of 1904, which is just about to be issued. MAY BE LOST (e That Japanese Have ian Stronghold vostock squadron in July was ex tremely expensive to the Japanese, and not only was retailiation tempting, but it was demanded by commercial interests. The navy, however, grimly refused to make a diversion and stuck to Port Arthur. It was confident that the harbor soon would be untenable for the Russian warships, that it would eventually get a fair fight in the open sea away from the Russian land batteries, and that the Japanese would win. These calculations of the navy were correct, and the Russians, with the chances even, have been hopelessly defeated. Vice Admiral Kamimura, after months of weary and patient waiting, finally got his chance at dawn today off Tsu Island. He sunk the Russian cruiser Rurik and sent the cruisers Gromoboi and Rossia fleeing back from the fight. Japanese guns dominate the dockyards at Port Arthur, and in view of this fact it would seem to be impossible again to make seaworthy or flghtable the Russian battleships which have returned to Port Arthur. It is probable that the Russian baiueship Czarevitch will disarm at Tsingchou. The best possible naval force the Russians can now concentrate at Vladivostock is four cruisers. In the fight of August 10 the squadron, under Admiral Togo, was practically uninjured. Thfe battleship Mikasha suffered the most, but she continues on the fighting line. The cruisers Yakumo,' Misshini and Kaugo were hit, but repairs have already been made. Eleven wounded officers and G6 wounded men arrived at Sasebo Sunday. The steamer Gaelic, bound for Shanghai, at 10 o'clock yesterday morning, sighted a Russian cruiser, evidently the Novik, steering southeast by east. This course showed her to be heading for Van Diemen Strait. Van Diemen Strait is about 120 miles south of Nagasaki anC it would be presumed from the Novik's going in this direction that she proposes to try and reach Vladivostock by the east coast of Japan. Hearing Given. Augusta, Ga., Speclalr?Bailey McGown, former assistant postmaster of Ohoopee, was given a preliminary hearing Thursday afternoon before the deputy United States Clerk here for fraudulently misappropriating postofflce funds. McGown was left in charge of the office during the absence of Postmaster Bowman, and went on a spree. When the postmaster returned he refused to turn over the keys, and it was found that part of the office funds were missing. McGown was bound over for trial. News By Wif*. The Associated Press learns that Lewis Dixon, of New York, who has been in St. t'etersourg ior seyemi uajo, came at the request of the Russian admirality, and that negotiations are progressing between the admirality and Mr. Nixon, but whether for the sale of ships, machinery or what, is not ascertainable. Mr. Nixon is going to Sebastapol Friday to confer with the commander of the Black Sea fleet. A whole family was poisoned at Salisbury last week from eating food into vhich the cook had put some kind of poison. Sixty Escaped. Chefoo, By Cable.?Launches containing sixty Russian sailors are said to have entered Wei Hai Wei Sunday. The sailors belong to two torpedo boat destroyers which are reported to have gone ashore in the vicinity of Wei Hai Wei. These vessels presumably are the same which were reported Saturday to have been captured. Shooting to be Investigated. Mexico City, Special.?The Federal government has recommended activity to the State government of Sinaloa in rhp invpqticfttinn nf the shootinz of Clarence Way and Edward Lattimer by police officers at Aguas Calientes. There is no truth in the report that Torres, the alcade who ordered the arrest of Way, and the officers who executed his order have been sentenced to death. Alexieff Goes to Vladivostock. St. Petersburg, By Cable?A dispatch l'rom Harbin says that Viceroy Alexieff has passed through that place on his way to Vladivostock. Killed In Collision. Thomasville, Ga., Special.?At 11 1 U ciucK r nuttj 1115111 iwu ircigui iituus on the Atlantic Coast Line met in a head-on collision at Elba Junction, Ala. The trains were a local east-bound end a through train. The wreck was caused by disregard of orders by the local's engineer. John McLaughlin, of Thomasville. He ran by the meeting point. The engines were locked together and McLaughlin was instantly i killed. The fireman was injured and ( two brakemen were bruised. , NEWS THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY Paragraphs of Minor Importance Gathered From Many Sources. Through the South. * Andrew Dudley, a 14-year old negro^ was lynched in Nelson county, Va., for assaulting two little girls. Eight cottages at Ocean View, Va., were burned, the occupants escaping in their bight clothes. At Harper's Ferry, T. S. Jones shot his son, whom he mistook for a bur- " glar, wounding him fatally. Bernard M. Williams, a special delivery messenger of the Richmond postoffice, was beaten and robbed b? negroes. Washington Happenings. Secretary of Commerce and Labor Metcalf is slightly indisposed. A small party of Filipinos called a$ the White House Tuesday and paid their respects to President Roosevelt. The State Department proposes to utilize the services of American diplomatic officers In the collection of information concerning foreign trade. Inspector Carroll, of the Department of Commerce and Labor, arrived in Chicago to investigate the butchers' strike for President Roosevelt. In the North. Miss Clara Duff, of Newport, Del., committed suicide. The Cape May express was wrecked' at Woodbury, near Camden, N. J. In a riot among non-union negroes at Kansas City three blacks were wounded. Miss Sarah Bennett wa buried at * Atlantic City at the time fixed for her wedding. An exciting run was made on a savings bank at the edge of the stockyards district in Chicago. Senator Gorman arrived in New York for a consultation with Chairman Taggart, of the Democratic national committee. , Operators in the Pennsylvania anthracite field proposed that Judge George Gray arbitrate the pending disputes with the miners. Employers in building trades iq New York have declared a lockout against all their nearly 40,000 work- i men. It is estimated that the total loss caused by the butchers' strike in Chicago and the West has been $8,230,800 with no signs of an early agreement. Announcement was made in New York that the notification of Thomas E. Watson as the nominee of the People's party would take place on the 18th as first stated, and that there was no truth In the report that Mr. Watson would decline. The strike stockyards strike at Chicago was freer from roting Tuesday < than and day since the men quit work, only one small disturbance occurring. As a rule, the retailers secured sufficient ice by the use of their own wagons and the boycott was not as effective as had been expected. A San Francisco dispatch says the final Installments on the forfeit of $15,000 have been posted for the JeffriesMonroe contest, the date of which Is set for August 26 next c;.the total amount uf forfeit Jeffries has paid $5,000; Monroe, $5,000, and the same amount has been deposited by the Yosemite Club, under whose auspices the battle will be fought Foreign Affairs. Americans are being forced from official positions in Canadian railway service. The Sultan of Turkey has failed to keep his promises to Minister Leishman, and an American naval demonstration may be ordered in Turkish waters. Minister Bowen has vigorously protested against the seizure of the New VAt lr DArmn^oiT oonbolt mlnofl iviA auu iJVi IUUUVM uo^/uaii. tuiiiwi the concessions, it being understood, having been promised to Interests that aided President Castro in the last revolution. Minister Dawson, at Santo Domingo, has asked for a warship, It being inferred another revolution is threatened. The Japanese have renewed their attack all along the line in Manchuria. The exclusion of Jews from the ranks of barristers in Russia is becoming less vigorous. Most of the British expedition which is advancing on Lhasa, Thibet, successfully crossed the Brahmapootra river. Intense but fruitless opposition to enforcing the educational act in Wales developed In the House of Commons. The Government Opium Committee appointed at Manila drew up a plan to check the evil. . Miscellaneous Doings. Two men were hurt near Laurel, Del., in a fight with an alligator that escaped three years ago from a circus at Salisbury, Md. Judge Alton B. Parker's resignation 16 Chief Judge of the New York Court o:' Appeals was filed with the Secretary of State at Albany.