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SUMIIMARY OF WORLD'S NEWS SHORT ITEMS CLIPPED FROM DAILY PAPER DISPATCHES DURING PAST WEEK., Review of Happenings in Both East ern and Western Hemispheres During the Past Week-National, Historical, Political and Personal Events Told in Short Paragraphs. A long war is expected in ( hina. William Ilawttrev. the actor. is crit ien'ly ill. henry Strong. pioneer western rail ransd builder, lied Snturda. at Denver. \V. R. IHearst has gone back to the demoeraltie fold. lEx-Senator Aldrich has submitted his monetary legislation plan. Emper or Nicholas has granted a pen sion of 265,000 rubies to the widow of J'renmier Stolvpin. Eggs are selling at 20 cents each in (llylas, Mlexico, and other foods are correspondingly high. Queen Elizabeth of Helgium has un dertaken to revive or preserve the fail ing Brussels lace industry. Nat hlaniel Pitt lord, one of the dis coverers of the Yellowstone park and its first superintendent, is dead. iPino SinireiZ, llndidate for vice pres- I ident of Mexico, on the ticket with JFraneiso I Mlade ro, was eleoted. Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada. was se lected as the 1912 meeting place of the International Dry Farming congress. ,Johm S. hDawson, attorney general for Kansas, recently seized two car loads of bottled beer in the railj.road yards. The body of Eugene Ely, the aviator wtlio was killed at MaIlcon, (la., was iburied at W\illiamnislnrg. Iowa. his birth pi.ce, Monday. A jury in the ,\'Namar. murnder trial 'hy .lannary 1, 1912, is the prediction wnade by Attorney .1arrow, chief cotun sel for the defense. King Alfonso has signed a decree re. establishing the eonstitutiotial guaran tees throughout Spain, which were s0us lended September 19. Al rs. "Nat" I'. Moore, widow of tlih son of .. Ilobhart Moore. C'hicago millionaire, is now Mrs. ,ciniuel IIastings Arnold .Ir. of Broolklyn, 'The Archliduke Karl 1F'ranz J.oseph and Princess Zita of Parmia were mar ried recently. The bridegroomn is next in line to become emperor-king of Aus t ria-H uungary. A case of opiui \valuted at $14000, which had been shipped front China unider' bond antd in route was stolen 'Ifro tlhe storerooml of the St'eallr at San l"rancisco Saturdaty. By a vote of 11i to S1 the ('alifornia Presbyterian synod adopted a r'esolu tion demanding the resignation of Pro fessor Thomas IF. 1)ay from the faculty of the theological seminary at San An lelino, where lie is accused of te:'lhilng heretical doctrines. FIVE INJURED IN WRECK. Accident Occurs Near Warwick-North Yakima People Among the Hurt. (loldendale, \Wash.---Five ipasseingers were inlljured whetl the reatr coachlI of lie Lyle-(1oldendale local of the S., I. & S. jumiped the track and turned bottomii side up five mniles west of \Var wick station Saturday afternoon,. The injured: lI. i. D)abnev of Port latnd, bruised about the body; Mrs. lI. Ii. I)abney of Portland, biruised, wrenched, prostrated; the Rlev. .1. I. Martin of Neilorth Ii 'kiniai, slightly uat about the headl; Mrls. .1. J'. Martin of North Yakina, bruised and prostrated; A. Becker, piano salesman of I''ortland, bruised about the body. ''lihe train was milkinig labount 25 miles :ill hour, when the rear minclh gate a sudden ' lurch, left the t raiIks and rolled over the bank toward Swale creek, where it landed hottonl side lp. 'rThere werei I lipassengers in the l'r. Hood River Fight Fatal. Ilood Iliver, Ore.--As a result ot'f "a light between lpeace ,ithieers and three mlen who were resisting the arres! of iine of their number, .htlii RVilai is pr'obably fatally shot anild fran'k lRol inson is seriously' injuredi. The third illemllber of the trio. Lewis Adamsll, wtho was the calluse of the troublelill, wa injured. lie is in jail. Reyes to Live in New York. Mexico C'ity.-To, avoid tht, :l'ie ar anie of connlection with aiiny revI tionary luovemnent aigainsl the new got,\s 'rnntent it Mexico, (ien'ril BlernardI ley'es will leaves Sani Antonin, 'l'cxas, anid estabiilish his temporary lihoie in New York. Sixteen Bands at Apple Show. Sixteen bands of muisic, with 21i; players in various parts of the district, already have been signed for the In land Enmpire parade in Spokane o,n November 27 and Will compete t'fo prizes totaling $700 in the band con tests. lild memory h*ias its root in had at tention. NORTHWEST NEWS ITEMS. Mlnsfield's second big fire ,o'urred last week. The llprele i oure ( ,f Idaho ii i i ses sion :Iat Lewiston. .\ third drydoek at the Puget smi'nd naivy ynard is virtually assured. 'The Oregon apple show will hIe held in i'ortland November 13 to November I. The new flag of the Clhinese republic has been flung to the breeze in piort land. All the 'attle in 1ake and, Klaiimath g counties, Oregon, are being dipped to eradicate seaul. S liThe ewiston boost fiiund now is $17, (i48 and the collilnittees are endeavoring to raise $25.,000 for publicity. The steamship Victoria arrived in Seattle Saturday from Nonte, Alaska, with $1,000.000 in gold bullion and 841 itassengerll s. The recent death at Eugene, Ore., of John (ilbert Powers is reported. lic was an etarly settler in the I:Palouse country, George l)yer, who was acquitted of burglary at Paseo, was sentenced to from one to 15 .Years on a charge of ;jail breaking. H. B. Buchanan, a well-known local citizen of (olville. was ihstantly killed at the city gravel pit when the horses lunged forward. So far as the llarriman railroad sys tenl is concerned, the strike in the northwest on tI at system, according to officials oft th companliiy, is over. Sergeant Floyd MleNett of the rIfle team of ('ompany E. national guard of Idahlo., t Rathdtrum, won the governor's medal for the best ritfinan in the regi nenllt. Vanuouver, lI . I'.--B. P. O'Neil, president of tlie defunct Stat Bank of Commercee at Wallace, Idaho, has re reived two weeks' respite in his extra dition. P'erc.y Short, alias Campbell, whot wats found guilty of assaulting tarry 7 Holland. "I. with ian ax. was sentenced t at \Wenatcthee to one to 10 years in the pienitentiary. The .ev\. Etugene A. \Valker of Rear- I dan has ia pitcher that was once iowned ivby I(eorge Washington, who presented it it Mr. .ii amison, the grandfathert of Mr. Walker's grandmother. t The secnil \tf the eight sulbeon- f tra:.ors who will build the Bluestem- t (olumhbii htru.f' of the (Treat North- t ern railway liis started actual graling a of the roadled north of D)vetnport. Throe weeks have pisted 'ince tihe federtateil shopmen emtlloyed lIy the 11 Ilarrimian lines walked out and the sit- IL nation is ipractically the samie as it was t aIt the time the walkout was ordered. n Miclhel Sullivan, twho has begged in the streets of Sati Francisco for 35 Vourl., was founllld dead recently il a hovel. ttank hooks found in a imat tress showed delposits of more thanii $Sl)O,{)t|il. At I'ortlnadl 'htis Lewis was found guilty in thlie '. S. etrt on' a white sl'very ihn'l:g.,. Lewis was convicted of importing : 17-y'air-old girl from Walla Walla to La (Grande, Ore., for illicit lpurposes. Ul1ph 1)imtick, a young lawyer of I Portland, and well known in the Pa cific rorthwest and in the miiiddle west as :tan athlete, imet death, recently while delirious, tby ,jumpiing from the secondi story filre escape of a local hosplital. \ rellc of pioneer opiuli smuggling days caie to light refentlv when "E. Elsei was clearing land betweven Port 'T'owniseli and Por-t l)isioVery anlrd un earthed a iache iof opium valued at •1500. It was given i n the customs oftieir Is. •ludlge E.. I. Farlrington (,f Nevada, sitting in the district court, sustained the city and county of San Francisco in its suit agatinst tlie Spring Valley W\'ater tnrmpany by a decision in which hre judges the valuttion -of $25,771,984 plineedl 1,b the city orn the water corn polny's plant to be a just estimate. In a lfight with three toughs in New York on M iv. I, IS7, S. 'thauler Rogers had his skull t'ractttird. lIe lived frui 14 yiirs iundr thIi, iate of t (lGeorge Kelly, ser-ved in the navy, went cratzve at his houne in lPort llakely, near Si ittle, ion Octobier 11 iul thren clue to his seinses. \Vhenl lingers picked nu : newspal er in the hospital itatuldav antI read it the top of the lirst prage "Se Ittle, n'riday, October (it," lie ez limed: ''"A m I really in .Seattle!'' :and tihen broke dwon nld wept. ll, then Itr hl straight story if his :nr vtelouits erxlperinte ' I d not kno t-nw whiere I have beenrt of whtIat I have liee hdoing tfor I-I iei ns." lIeeently nt ioperation wits lpertor' d arl a portil i tin of his skull r mried whrlue it htd Ipressed oni his ]rlinl for I-I year- 1nI more. Race War in Oklahoma. Muskogeel, Okla.- -While what militit ntl hlie raisedl is Ieing rushed from hire by specil trarin to the iassistlane of tile white people of ('oweItta, large numbersli of trwitred Ieg- los P roi i sui ronitil Ig points are hlsteninllg tlthat townr tI assist u the fight with I the whites. JIesidt .s the killingi it' the city aitita rey and the lynching of his slaete, t Irinull ter (f h tlh r'tt's taVe Ibeeni shoti in the fights, nic-rdillng to roept11 ir rei vetl hire. Comet by Naked Eye. I"'lngstaftf, Ariz.- FIhljawski's cmlet I hlasjb'elli observted at Lowell observa- 1 1t t. every night since Ortober 10. rt I :(s lo.ated hv the nake eye by l'ro '- iro lowell Octoher 11. THIS PASTOR SWAS A WINNER d RE C V. T. RICHESON, UNDER ARREST FOR MURDER, A' e - HEART BREAKER. After Morning Serpon at Kansas City Church, Three Girls at Same Time Ask Him When He Was Going to Marry Them as He Promised-Now Charged With Murder. Kansas City.-The Rev. C. V. T. Riclheson, held in Boston on a charge of having murdered Miss Avis Linnell, was pastor of the Bethany Baptist church in this city from 1901 until 1904, when he resigned by request fol lowing the sensational disclosures of three young women, each of whom ac cused hinm of being engaged to her. A scandal resulted when the three women, two of them members of the church, made their accusations against the pastor at the close of one of his Sunday morning sermons. "All through the sermon,'" said a member of the congregation, "the three sat together in the front row. The sermon was an eloquent one on 'Temptations of Young Girls in a ('ity.' Just after the service the three women apllroached the preacher. "' You promised to marry me.' said one; 'are you going to do it?' " 'You plromised to marry ilme, too,' said the sec-ond; 'are you going to do it': " 'And mle, too," said the other, cry ing, 'How about me?' "The women all wept hysterically. The Rev. Mr. Richeson was calm ahd said there must be a mistake, and,left the church. Then he went to Liberty. The trustees wrote for his resigna tioll.' "Erratic," Says Girl's Mother. Ilyanis, Mass.--"Thnank God, I be lieve no mlistake has beenl made." With this exclamation Mrs. Edgar Linnell, mother of Avis Linnell, re- 1 ceived the news that the Rev. Clar ence V. T. Rieheson had been arrested for the alleged murder of her daugh ter. Mrs. Linnell later, however, voiced the belief that Mr. Richeson was not accountable. Later Developments, Boston.-Tn ther efforts to clear up a the circumstances of the death of Avis n ILinnel, the Hyannis Sunday school [ teacher and music student, with whose g murder the Rev. Clarence V. T. Rich- s eson is charged, the police have been tl , T 'il p"d . ý"^ '.rt -a .. . . .. . ý. .ý. ..ý,. ``ýý.ý 'ml P MA O EXOSTIN>UIDIGS PANAA.-CALI.FO,.IA EX.TPOSITION BUILD.INGS. San I)iego.-The two first buildings for the Panama-('alifornja Internae tional exposition will be begun before November 1. The first building will hbe the administration offices. It will be built at the east end of the huge bridge 5payning ('abrillo Canyon, forming the entrance to the exposition, and it will 1e a part of the architectural composi tion that has for its main feature the enormotus ('alifornia building, a strue t ire of domes and towers. Visitors to this exposition will see one of the most striking arghitectura. pictures ever created in America. From :I distance the exposition will have the llpearance of an old European city, with .the smaller buildings in the fore ground and the cathedrals and palaces nablq, it is said, to locate the recep itacle/which held the poison. \When the girl took the dose of cyan ide of potassiupi which caused her death she was in the bathroom pf the Young Women's Christian association Lhome, and though the house was search d1 immediately after her death, the poison receptacle could not be found. Gold Brick for Taft. Ieadwood, S. D.-Fn this city Sat iirdav President Taft was preseanted with a small gold brick worth more than $300. " It is a great pleasure to gold brick the president, " Representative E. WV. Martin said in presenting the brick. - "A great pleasure to be gold-bricked in this way," he replied. LATE SI .;dTINO G NOTE8.' Bell Ben,jamiin, for 2O ?ears sport ing editor of the Sanll Fritaeiseo ('lror icle, is dead. HaIns Wagner is the lending hitter i the National :and C'ohh leads in th SAnerican league. Hereafter in all fights in the state o New o'rk the contestants must )breal clean in the clinches. Pennant Winners 1911. 'I'hi. following are the names of thl baseball pennant winners for this year j American association---Minneapolis. A.\,,erian league-Philadelphia. ('cutral association--Ottawa. Cent ral league-Dayton. S('nn ecl ieut league-Springfield. Eastern league-Rochester. Tlli.,is-Missouri league-Clinton. Kaisas State league-Great Bend. Minnesota-Wisconsin league - Supe. Nat;onal league-New York. New York State league-Wilkes harre. North western league-Vaneon ver. 'T'exas league-Austin. Three I league-Peoria. 'Uniun association-Great Falls. \Washington State league-Centralia. \Vctern Canada league-Moose Jaw. Western league-Denver. Northwest Football Games. At Spokane-Spokane high, 20; Lin coln high (Portland), 5. At Seattle-Ballard high (Seattle), lo;: I'uyallup, 0. At Seattle-tUniversity of Washing ton, .5; University of Piiget Sound, 0. At Everett-Everett high. 20; Broad way high (Seattle), 0. At l'ortland-MMultnoiuah A. A. ('., 17; Willamette university, 0. At Tacoma-Tacoma high, 16; Olymn pin high, 0. At \VWenatclee-Vcnatchee liigh, 27; Queen Anne high (Seattle), 0. At I'orvallis-Oregon Agricultural colleh., 26; Pacific university, 0. At Kellogg-Wardner - Kellogg, 61; Newl'ort high, 0. Eastern Football Results. At C'ambridge-Harvard, 11; Am herst, I. At I'ittsburg-Carlisle Indians, 17: lUiiversity of Pittsburg, 0. At A.\nn Arhor-Michigan. 19; Ohio State. ti. .\t MLinnealolis-jMinnesota. 21; No A.\t ('hicago-C(hicago, 24; Illinois, 0. At West Point--Army, 6; Vale, 0. .\t .\nnapolis-Navy, 0; Princeton, 0. Biplanes for War Use. San Diego, ('al.-lieutenant .1. YW. Mc' laskey, 1'. S. M. ('., seven students aind five biplanes have arrived here and iimmediately went into camp on the avi tion field. 'These constitute the van iuard of army and nasvy students who will take up the study of aviation at the school opened by (Glenn ('Curtiss. in detail back of them. Entrance to the exposition will be by the big bridge, and progress through the different groups of buildings *will be by prados and courts decorated with every beauty known to horticultural and architec tural art. Since the favorable action of. con gress in behalf of the Panama:Califor nia International exposition and the friendship exinced by the president and cabinet officer's for the project, the expo sition has expanded fronm an affair cov ering 35 acres, as originally planned, to one that will require no less than 350 acres for foundations, streets and plazas. Brazil alone will have a build ing costing close to a million. The Cali fornia building, with its exhibits, will cost half a million. Lewiston State Normal. The Lewiston State -Normal opened its fifteenth annual session with a greatly increased enrollment. In 1910 1911 there were 332 registered; this year 32dare now enrolled and it is ex; pected that the total will he at least 400 for 1911-12. IEvery section of Idaho is represented. Students also have en rolled fronm 11 other states. The fnet that the life liplomua granted by this normal is recognized not only in idaho but in other western states as well, has without doubt had much to do with this great increase in enrollment. Flames Wipe Out 200 Homes. Constantinople.-The fire in Stam boul destroyed more than 200 houses and a mosque. OtiEUR I' ALENE in 1HAS BIi FIRE he - of IDAHO MERCANTILE COMPANY i1 SUFFERS A $125,000 LOSS EARLY SUNDAY, Flames Broke Out on Second Floor Origin a Mystery-U. S. Land Omce Records Destroyed-Larger Building to Replace Burned One-Businees Was Established in 18683 By Sanders. Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.-Half the pop; ulation of Coeur d'Alene saw the larg. s- eat fire in the history of the city de stroy $125,000 worth of property in the new Idaho Mercantile company build ing, Sunday morning, and toiled three hours to save the postoffice just across the alley and adjoining buildings from L. destruction. - Firemen had every line of hose in the city in service shortly after the fire broke out, but were unable to check the progress of the flames. The fire loss was confined to the second- floor of the building, the main floor and base ment goods being damaged by smoke and water. Shortly after the fire broke out, own ers of all nearby buildings were called to the scene, and valunteers were plac ed on the tops of adjoining structures with water buckets and hose lines to prevent spread of the fire. The en ergies of the firemen were directed largely to saving the postoffice. General Manager W. E. Sanders says that the firm will begin rebuilding at once, will add the third story to the structure, and have it completed by the first of the new year. Flames broke out in an office on the second floor, vacated 10 days ago by an attory. The origin is a mystery. Save Land Office Records. Through the heroism of Deputy Wil liam Ashley and Clerk Will T. Somer- l ville, who entered the United States I land office on the second floor of the r building and saved the tract and serial - records, withl several vouchers in the a safe, many legal tangles will be avert- t ed, although the valuable papers lost t in the flames will place the land office r records in a muddle for months. [ Correspondence form the land com missioner, applications for filing, all proofs for homesteads during the cur- l; rent month, all plat books showing the p townships, and all old record books, t containing valuable data, were destroy- g ed. I'resident Sanders started for Cali- ii fornia Thursday and is on his way to t San Francisco on a steamer. The Idaho Mercantile company was n established in 1883 by V. W. Sanders, e, who is now president of the company. ib SAVAGE WAR AT BENGHAZI I Turks and Italians Fight Day and d Night-Many Slain. Tripoli.-The fighting at Benghazi a between the Italians and the Turks has o; been of the fiercest character. After g. the engagement which lasted all day it October 19, the Turks returned to the w c'harge furing the night. They made fm a savage onslaught upon the Italian camp, but were repulsed. In the morn ing the Italian forces occupied the city. The Turkish losses were heavy and the 0 Italian dead number not less than 100. 'T'here are good ground for believing that the Italian forces at Benghazi have been severely handled by the N 'T'urks and their Arab auxiliaries. It er is understood the Italian losses are 61 mucll heavier than officially reported. it Color is given to this belief by the ii, hurried departure for Benghazi of four warships and the hospital ship Reina .[argherita. TI Steamer passengers who went to Henghazi, but were unable to land, say tr the Turks and Arabs have displayed th reckless bravery in nqking furious at- at tacks on the Italians entranched there. Turks Defeat 8000 Italians. Berlin.-Splecial dispatches from Con tr stantinople say the Turkish ministry a of the interior has news that the Turks pe and Arabs have defeated 8000 Italians at near Barka. The Italians lost 800 and pe the Turks 115 men. The Italians left ea large quantities of arms and ammuni- tr tion on the field. The Berlin newspaper mn print the dispatches doubtingly. at an Wiley' Gives Good Reasons. Louisvlle, Ky.-'" If a country treats its yonmei right and eats more sugar per head and uses more soap per head than any other country, then it is the greatest nation," declared Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, chief of the government's chemistry bureau, in his address this afternoon at the national woman's suf frage convention. 1)r. Wiley had been introduced by Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, president of the association. as "the man who is trying to give us a far chance to live." Want to Debate. Whitman and Washington state col lege may secure debates with the Uni versity of Oregon. Both colleges are asking to be admitted to the Intercol legiate Oratorical association, which now includes the state universities of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. An other request matde upon Oregon is that a triangular contest between the state universities of Idaho, Utah and Oregon. Give a man work and he will find money. AHO ODD FELLOWS PICO OFFICERS Next Year's Meeting to Be Held at Wallace. Twin Falls, Idaho.-At the meeting of the grand lodge of Odd Fellows held here the following officers for the en suing year were elected: O. M. Har vey, Weiser, grand master; S. D. Tay lor, Boise, dgputy grand master; Jaines F. Ailshie, Boise, grand warden and home trustee, four-year term; George H. Handy, Caldwell, grand sec retary, and W. E. Heard, Moscow, grand representative. The officers suc ceeded were Heard as grand master, Harvey as deputy, Taylor as grand warden, and E. K. Phelps as grand rep resentative, the first three merely be ing advanced on? office, and the last being supplemented by the new grand master according to the usual custom of tile lodge. The Rebekah assembly elected the following officers for the ensuing year: Sarah P. Driscoll, Payette, president; Retta J. Holman, Moscow, vice president; Anna Hite, Rupert, war den; Frances Crosson, Boise, secretary; May Gilbert, Harrison, treasurer; Sarah Jane Handy, home trustee, three-year term. Wallace was chosen for the annual meeting of the grand lodge, grand encampment, 1. O. O. F., and the Re bekah assembly next year. IDAHO SCHOOL LANDS. Of All Western States This State Feels the Best. At the conclusion of the recent sale of Idaho state school lands State Land Commissioner George Day stated that of all the western states none is in better shape as to school land en dowment than Idaho, and he predicted that at no far future date it would not be necessary to levy special taxes against property to raise funds for the maintenance of the public schools of the state. According to Mr. Day the school en dowment funds now total about $5,000,000, the money bringing in a good rate of interest by being loaned by the state on farm lands and gilt edge bonds. There still remain in the state ap proximately 2,000,000 acres of school lands to be 'lisposed of, and at the minimum price of $10 per acre about $20,000,000 will be added to the fund, and with the lands seldom selling at the minimum figure it is estimated that no less than $30,000,000 will be received. Aside from the 2,000,000 the public schools of Idaho are interested in 450,000 acres of special land grants, including a great amount of timber lands, these tracts being secured in part by exchanges made in lieu of see tions 16 and 36 of each township granted to the state by the govern lent, the lands being taken up by the interior department and included in he forest reserves and others given. Under the state constitution no iore than 16,000 acres of school lands ,an he disposed of in a single year. It s the policy of the state to distribute he lands to be sold to all sections of idaho, so that 'each year some of the ands located in each county will be lisposed, of. The state land board last year re ilized over $100,000 from the leasing f -sehool lands for pasturage and razing purposes, this sum growing to ts present size in the last 10 years, vhen only $7000 to $8000 was had rom rentals. TRAVEL IS O01TLY. Over $2,274,000 Was Paid to Great Northern in State of Washington Last Year, According to the report of the Oreat Northern railroad for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1911,' just placed on file with the public service commission it is shown during the last year the line carried a total of 1,798,147 local passengers in the state of Washing ton, who paid in a tbtal of $2,274,000, There were in addition to this number 430,280 interstate passengers who con tributed $1,345,000 to the receipts of the company, making the total for the state 2,228,498 passengers, and they paid in a total of $3,373,213. The local passengers in Washington traveled an average of 40 miles at an average fare of $1.12, or an average per mile of 2.75 cents, while the inter state passengers paid an average fare per mile of 2.46 cents, having paid each an average/ of $3.12 and having traveled an average of 127 miles, which makes the average for state and inter. state business $1.51 for each passenger and the rate 2.62 cents, a mile. The report shows that the average rate received by the company per ton mile. for freight was 1.01 cents, as 104,566,646 tons of freight in the state and 414,110,999 tons of interstate busi ness was handled at a total cost of $5,279,005. Aviator Robinson Quits, Rock Island, Ill.-Aviator Hugh Rob inson announced he had given up his ttempt to fly with a hydro-aeroplane from Minneapolis to New Orleans along the Mississippi river. He gave as a reason the failure of the river cities to furnish sufficient financial support, The big Poultry show of the north. west will he held at Spokane, December 12 to 17, 1911, in the State Armory building. One thousand dollars in cash prizes. Premium list ready November 1st. H. .T. Fuller, secretary; J. C. Clipp, judge. '.-Ie-How clean the surf keeps the sea shells! She--Yes; you know the sea is very tidy,