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[ B 8Y WIRE AND CABLE, t ~;lig Items of Happenings Throughout : The Entire Country.. LOPING COUPLE TURNS UP. ef a (ireat Inveulor-t-.retaus d fi to Unite with (reoce-A Bad "J.enger "Wreck -A Chicagoaan A Chicagoan Robbed. SLester Goodman, of ('hicago,who in wife has apartmennts at 221( ` 12th street, P'hilaltell,hia, Pa., º ted to the police Fr'iday that $3. Sa2 mcney and jewelry had been f% from their roonis while they Iout 'walking. u· s Urged to Unite with (;reece. Sdispatch from :Athen-, (Greece. % The warship Alph,,r,,' hags been to Crete. A steamnr has beetn o deport refugees. Te national r.t everywhere are ursging that. 3rretans proclaim a union with . Seven hundred refugees are to arrive shtortly on the island Statner Heavily Finedl. j t, Tlobit, agents for the Sierra iof steamers, Saturitay deposited with Collector Winlnsy of Gal n, Texas, can:e (.aipt. Alqua of teaship Ida fuiled to, produce a if health from the eonsul at Liver i The steamer naturina, of the line, also failed to produce a hill ith Saturday except from the sort visited, and it is subject to a ar penalty. A Fatal Colliston. bad freight wreck occurred at eville, eight miles east of P'itts , W. Va., at 4 o'clock Saturday rling. Two sections of a freight going east on the Baltimore and and the second section ran into first section. Engineer Jonn ardson was killed and Firen.~n fatally injured. Two brake whose names are not known, badly hurt. Trains were de I eight hour.; The Highntand Park Deal. ae deal for acquiring use of High Park at Detroit, Mich., was closed lrday. The property is not pur 'ed but is leased for seven years ,by new association from Cat. W. 1'. 'enson, the owner. 'l'The lessees they will'expend $25,001) in en iing the track and will have accom ations for 500 horses with all modl improvements. They will arrange Iwo eighteen day running meetings year with a week of trotting. Death of a Great Inventor. 6tain Alex IIamilton Gilbert, who · his brother, John Gilbert, was iinventor and builder of the first m of dry docks, in 1840, died dt at Chester, Conn., at the age of The brothers built the dry docks ensacola, San Francisco and Ports th. Capt. Gilbert's last active ik was the construction of a dry 'k at Tola, Austria, in 1857. An :'sr brother, ~Ienry S. Gilbert, wae '<first to introduce the printing press Argentine Republic. An Eloping Couple Turns Up. .mong the passengers from Hono Son the steamer City of Peking, c h arrived at San Francisco, Sat ay, were Mrs. U. C. Pinkney rris and Cavalier Smith, of Phiia phia, whose elopement last year ated a sensation. They werd en Son the cabin list as Mr. and Mrs. ith, and registered in the same m at a local hoiel. They went to nolnls, intending to proceed to ian, but changed their plnms on ount of the notoriety given to their yements, m Wins the Hundred Mile Race. e hundred mile bicycle race at tral Armory Cleveland, Ohio, Sat y night between Louis Grimm and o for $250 a side was won by Mr. h by about 14 feet. The race an interesting one and was wit ed by a crowd which filled the ory. The time was 5 ho: rs. andi seconds. Hale refused to set the e except at the start, ~ihen he was aepelled to do so, and during the it 40 miles he took it easy. On that count the victory of Grimm is count all the more creditable. At the ainclsion of the race the crowd broke wn the railing around the track, s(hed in, took Grimp on their shoul * and carried him about the armory. Woodall Case Transferretd. iWhen the case of RIoloff, Luls and 'rjillo, charged with violatiops of ae nceutrahlty laws, was called for ring before United States Commis bner Shields at New York, Friday, ied States Marshal McCarthy asked t the accusation based upon the de adabte' alleged participation in the oodall expedition be dismissed. is course was taken in view of the t that indictments had been found ainstle men at Baltimore, from icb port the Woodall sailed on her called filibustering expedition. Thw mmiasioner complied with the re eat, whereupon the bench warrants m the Baltimore court were served the accused Cubans. Counsel _ e defense waived examination he harges relative to the Hores ht expedition and the men were released e upon their.recognizances, A Bad Passenger Wreck. Fallbrook railway passenger train N No. 1, ran into a huge tree, which had rolled down from the mountain and out on the track, Saturday afternoon, at Woodhouse, IPa. The train was round ing a carve and the engineer did not see the obstruction until he was upon it. The engine was thrown across the track and the train rolled down a twelve feet embankment into the creek. William A. 1usted, fireman, was crushed to death. The engineer escaped by jumping. Conductor Wil liam Doolittle, Expressman Day, Mail Agent Donaldson were more or less injured. Capt. Ball, of the Christian Crusaders, had his shoulder broken; John Ilalford, of State Run, received t serious internal injuries; John Mur- 1 ray, injured about the legs; Jerry I Shain, track surpervisor of the road, o badly bruised about the body. Harry B Bloom, of Corning, N. Y., who was on 8 a cot in the baggage ear suffering with t rheumatism, was badly injured. 'The French Alllianes Commemorated. One of the mo:,t brilliant banquets of the season for Now York was given I Saturday night at )Delmnonieo's by the t Empire State Society of the Sons of h the American Revolution, to commem orate the 119th anniversary of the r signing of the treaty of alliance with France, on February 6, 1778. Two hundred and ten persons were present. The president of the society, Walter S. Logan, presided. Among the speakers awere Dr. John S. White, French con- I t sul general; IM. E. Brewart; Capt. Al fred T. Mahan, United States Navy, and Lieutenant Governor Timothy 4L. a WoodrrntT The "following cablegram was sent to President Paure of France, e "The Society of the Sons of the Amer II ican Revolution, on the 119th auniver n sary of the treaty of alliance, with a France, greatly remembering her priceless services to our nation, greets her illustrious president and generous people and expresses itti tincere wish for the perpetuation of the friendly re ht lations of the two great republics." ;_----- .dam.. __--- .v G'Ierman Minister to Siamn Assaulted. At A special to the New York Herald d from Bangkok, Siam, says: Here are a the details of the attack on the Ger n man minister: While driving, his n pouy shied and injured a Chinaman. L- The minister stopped to inquire into 1, the extent of the nman's hurt and was L- promptly surrounded by the police, who seized and struck him. He was hustled to the police station,ldespite his protests and his declaration of his rank. An Amotican engineer and an English otiicial of legation ex r plained the situation in the vernacular, but the police assaulted both of them, crying, "Down with foreigners." The minister was then detained. The pub lie apology is considered grotesque. ° No mandarins were present, but only t- a petty police officer. Following the assault on the American consulate at ;e Chieng Mai, the affair caused unusual g excitement. Consul General Bar rett's position is strengthened. An idiot Goaded Into a Crlme. to Atflockton, Ala., Monday afternoon, as Isaac Creel, a half-witted boy, aged 15, at murdered Elijh Pierce, a prominent it- citizen. The boys and men of the of p'ace, it seems, lhad bleen lr the habit k of teasing Creel by throwing rooks at ;s- him and otherwise making light of ve him, Pierce, whil." partially Intoxi ry cated, was aImuing lhimself by annoy n- ing the boy, who leosme enraged ae Fearing violence, Picrce, drew his 5O knife, when Cre'l raised an ax and ad vanced. Before Pierce could act Creel struck him in the hi:d with the ax and crushed the entire top of his skull, r causing instant death. The boy was g, jailed. Five weeks ago Creel assaulted t- and almost killed a small boy with an y- ax under almost similar circumstances, a- but was not iunished, because of his ar mental condition. Pierce leaves a n- family. no Eastier for Prisoners to Escape to The building of the Trans-Siberian to railway is causing a complete reorgani " zationof the Russian convict system. r The present rules are that exiled of fenders shall be sent to nearer or far., ther parts of Siberia, according to the e. article of the code under which they at were convicted. The appointed place kt- of exiles for lighter. offteuses is nearer Ii European Russia than for serious [r. crimes. It is not dificult even now for cc offendters who are courageous enough it- and who are p)rovidet with means of he support to make their way secretly ud tack to Europe or to go abroad. The he needful passports and disguises are ;as usually procurable. The real utility he of the Siberian convict system has de st pended upon the physical difficulties :it. 'f traveliug the vast distances back to he civilization. The new report4 elimi ke nate these obstacles. It is reported k, from Moscow that the island of Sag nl- halien will be the future destination of y. Itussian exiles. This island is already used for the imprisonment of. crimi nals of the lowest type. ,nd - of Sulclded With Ch orororm. or A special from Starke, FlIa., says: Ais- rs. Dr. N. S. Burnham, of Chicago. y, committed suicide in the Commercial ed hotel some time Monday night. As de- she did not come down to breakfast the Tuesday morning a servant was sent to ed. call her. No answer was obtained and the the door being locked the girl entered md by the window and found Mrs. Burn om ham dead. An empty chloroformbot ,er tle stood near. Five letters addressed 'he to different persons were on the table. re- Two of them were for her husband, nts Dr. N. 8. Burnham, at Palatka. Mrs. ved Burnham was for some time connected seel with the editorial department -of the ion Chicago Inter-Ocean, having been an 'ru art critic during the World's Fair. DUN & CO'S, TRADE REVIEW No Important Changes In Business Re ported, ORDERS FOR WOOLEN GOODS INCREASE. Wheat Makes an Advance of 1 3-4e Cotton Goes Down to 7 14c-Spin ners' Takings are Small-Increase in Fallures. R. G. I)un & C's. weekly review of trade says: No important changes in business appears, but the number of manufacturing establishments starting much exceeds the number of those stopping during the week, and so much so that the curtailment of working time in many cotton mills, probably, does not lessen the aggregate produe tire force or amount of wages paiJl. There is a distinct increase in ortiere for woolen goods. some gain in silk manufacture, a waiting condition with Igain in one branch of boots ani sboe4, and indications of better things coming in the iron and steel manufac ture. All symptoms are favorable it the money market and a large sale of securities in connection with the North. ern Pacific and Oregon navigation in terests to open purchasers will put oil still farther the possibility of gold ex ports. It is also cheering evidence ol confidence among European investors. To many it is the most perplexing ol current events that wheat does not rise much, though it has advanced lbe fog the week. Atlantic exports have beer only 1696,04i6 with flour included, against 1,965,456 for the same week last year, while western receipts have beer only 1,468,170 bushels, against 2,800,. 407 last year. The condition of the market is not explained by any special information, but current prices shoe that no great confidence is felt in the estimates of supplies available for the rest of the yea.. Cotton fell to 7;c, after the agreement to close Fall Rivet and other print cloth works became known, but recovered the quotation: of a week ago, 7.31, without furthei news. Spinners' takings have been s+ small this year, those of northern mili, about 400,000 less than in 1894 9!5 that the narrowness of dry goods ha! considerable weight. Sales of wool have been smaller than in five recen weeks, but in far excess of the con. sumption of all mills for a week, if al were fully employed. There has beer only a slight stiffening in prices, bni more foreign wool will be taken ani markets will be stronger, it is believed, if western holders continue to dcmand high prices. More important that these indications is a little better de. mand for heavy weight goods, whiel has led some of the smadler mills tc buy wool more freely and thus enablei a number to start operations. Failures for the week have been 311 in the Unitedl States, against 223 las year, and 63 in C anada, against 67 las year. Emperor Toasts the Czar., A dispatch from Berlin, Geormany, says: The Emperor Alexander Regi ment, so named for the late cziar o Russia, paraded in the Lutgarten Thursday, and received ribbons whiel Czar Nicholas had sent to decorate th" standards. The parade was attender by Emperor William and a number o high officials. Later a luncheon wa given by the officers of the regiment The emperor was present and pro posed a toast in honor of the czar. EH begged themessenger who had brough the Czar's gift to Berlin to convey hi thanks to his majesty. He recallet the brotherhood of arms of the Rue sian and German armies, and referret to the czar heading at Breslau recenti; the regiment whose name would eve be a symbol of the relations betweel their respective ancestors, Three Friends Libelled for Piracy. The steamer Three Friends wa seized and libelled upon its retur, Saturday to Jacksonville, Fla., fros a towing trip down the coast. Th libel charges piracy, in that a eHotch kiesgun was mounted on the bow o the steamer and was fired at a Spaniel gunboat at the mouth of the San Jus: river, while endeavoring to land a: expedition. The name of the ganboa is not given. The persons named i: the libel are John O'Brien, W. ' Lewis, John Dunn, August Aurint Michael Walsh and Ralph D. Paynt Judge Locke fixed bond at $5000, whic was immediately furnished and th boat was released upon the specia provision that a deputy marshal shoul be placed on board and have authorit to take charge of the boat in ease a attempt should be made at any time t violate the law. An Exztrordinary Charge. Wayland Trask and Alfred H. Rat kin, composingthe firm of Wuylan, 'Trask & Co., bankers and broker, in New York City, were arrested Fr day on a charge of grand larcany. Th 1 complainants are Andrew J. Willets member of the New York Produce E: t change, and S. W. Bowen. Wille 0 and Bowen are in the produce bus Sness in Brooklyn. The complainan I charge that through a series of promi Ssory notes the firm of Wayland, Trat & Co. have swindled them out I $5,000. The aefendants allege thi Willets sent through them, in invet , ments, money that had teen entrnste Sto him. On losing, they say, he a d tempts to redeem his lossees by tryi, e to force them to pay him money. Ti n prisoners were held for examinati, on Feb. 15, in $2,000 bail each, Do You iari H7ve 'l ntanewd 4i f'or Pent·, F!or .time::i W ant a On (l Ent, F lry ( Terim,. GRUNEWALD'S, i18 NE CaORLEANS tiA, MULSICS $ Sec:o'd~) HAN-Qulte good, Isc; eachl; little better, $l it); munh better, $180; very tine, $22.5 " NF A 'V P(,NO-$1.73 each; imlproved, 2'50; better grades, $310i,; fe grades, $40J); finest gaulesi()00. Lwbiurnrn Viable : PUE 8111 RP'S WEEKLY LTT1ER.1 TIlIl BARTOW PH ILOOPIH El, PLA Y$, TlIE ROLE OF NtURSE. RUM!NATES WHILE CHILDREN ROMP Left Telmilar'rily ilh Clhargefi of I1he lIouLI hold--tlHi l .elingt; Veri Mu.chl.i U1ttited. I coa)-idr mys i f an injiur,, per,. ;ife. gp le to the lisiot10y l tii' t1tI: . ily I WI) daughters gonule v\itiintg and hoer I vat a!lone with three granlid.hiflren gnt to wat.l'I them till somet, v cot's. I've nevor .,.eun onel of thle stok thatl w:L:n't full of nmisihlief and frolic. Thhought I wuuilid !ake a little lUp Oil the adfa whilet they playiii.l l rod, but it wa' no use. The v go. all the 'lu irs In a row and played railroad and li,.iiiotive awhile. IThcn lhey playedl ,soldie'r. wiI rilrl guns and killed .onti a:elIher it ad toll dead. T'len they playd hor:, and runi rtung tl he .onter tableh. I thoughit the littrle !;iris wiould get tired after a while an.d *. Iti ,t '.wn it) their dolls anid n:ake) a plavholuii.ll.ut I he boy didn't like lIhat i.o tIho rwket ilttinultd. They turned the t .i-h , ch.ir upsidt 'nl. tll nd slid down theo ta-k. hrarl,',1+rmo,. and Ir'lled over and turinled suin:ti:ireuilt, and lohn't jumlet'd off thle table the oih ng.' aI shook the lour mil mad, tihe windows rat tle like an earth tinik. Will thee; never get tired!? thought I. No, nvve'r. Itut Iy and by, when m,'; wife 'ia' ",sh t' settled thein down and play"I .t iith list and trinml b' to, with lthetll tand I had lnt *p. lMy folks. hiat. gott ot lidean that it :Siits tnP to take u'r', of th. :hildlren. n, tl he ehilirn havt tan id'a thai lthy iiar t' do is a: they phleast when) th n'rls nt m'it' h'il ,tilli ni', dand ;no . sitTer lnmy:.., I it .p':s.,l it and fletel like an injiure l l rotill . I bell'.: I 1 r ill g: to ithe mi5siolnar'y 'se i :'y imy'it: ' ,X\t tiio:. But after all, I hNr i, 011' in p sing ia a dourestii martyr 'r r pal rita rnhol a.khiorse dhout these thing:.; fir I do like o haUK= the little chap't around lnwi ,el,'.l:ial!y little girls. Children are a I -n 'ingri, It lie :4iebihld. iThl'y take alivi rll r e'lI!shnssll+: a.n:d unrify i our feelings.. Tlheir jy' ad glen and spor tivre hlupinus ',:a-rie:. tlh elI, ,hi poile, ,bauk to their early lifte, h-eul thi~ mv': w'tre ale sun -hie. It is ia sard yvrlpatihy we f'il iwhe:: cet see them so lha;ppr nvt'W- /ti: fort-es'i tltu trouble: i thata wal( t hnmu, l'oor r,- iinoed. ihow gad he wlt- wit.i l he o'-dil tu.i-,e Stouuting lihe,: "'I ntc llelhlh.'r. "I r it a iti :am r! Tlhe fi r tr ' s lrk rani ll;h: I u d l to hti:k ki hil' -lehu,Ir lops Were ' lra aga inst tilt` ally. It wtie it rhilldith igrn ,'t'un.(' But noww tii. i ttOi , jy To ktnow flur itltlr ol l'ffromi hii:It.a' 'tihatn Whi I wir. a ).vy." Tl ere, is no hnlli,:-s like a tn l:ill'. If I could I wouhl ix-han.,lllg all that I htave realizd . 'sine I was sixt,,n ,'ars old for that I hiud Ibeforo. iTh:;l .:xtlien yarr. are about on::-third : the ::ver:tiae lilt, and the nOitIiories oif thol arti: imore lir.t-ti'.u , thani all the irot. If a oehill it Ili,wl with lov ing, indulgenlt lIare:nt; lIth:Se yelrf ar' ani t nhlrokoen seoinli of unalloyeld ernjyment. onmrtines I ."oe my w'if: lt' king ýtl and dlr:amirly into, thoe glt ing mlb irs andl know sht is thinking albout ih r uhihihrne or her ellhildlho l anr d -ti eatlling r ti i( i jy.s ifIt h )r youth when se had a mollt hitr atl 'eoud lty her hld upon her lap and fuel ithe, clt ,nr' :s of e er Y'itle hand. Wlhat u weight of ettarn j and anxiety Iprei:i; I ontinally ,upo)n the heart of a mother. Iltw oft.n (sit, lher pray er.s ascend to heaves in the dark watlhe:i of the night--prayer:; fur t-hir he ltlh, their welfare, their good tconductt, their s Ilation. But with all the, ar,'., a:ities and fore boding, t:hild lron aro our :re-te,.t bl'ssing andi the iitnily the great(:a,t hulwtarki of good Isotlety and good govornua',iit.. It is thel law of our being that man aind woman shoutld iimate and niarry and roar bilrtn, antd there, is no subhtitute for the marriaget relation. I Shardly knew the vtlue of a child until a few t weeks ago a dear little granl.hilt got sick .- g very slIek- -and for days and nights was very nlear tht giato of heaven. She wtoslferd and we wat.'htd aodl -ufT-roid with hir. Her lit - tle lips andI throat w ,n e wliu and inflanIod with diphthareti: ;tores. Her Jungs rattl--d with pneumt nia. I,:,w shi pleaded with u for help--for reli.--pleadotd with t'yts and h ands, and we could do teothing It cta.l'ress Sher andi weep. [ would hai e given a mil lion dollars yes. ten million, if [ bad had it--to relloeve that chil andi save her from suff(,ring. trayor , or medicine or good n.rsing or s.Oathlig ss''d her, andl we areo all gr-teful. What is the value of a child, anyhow? If oin wa-m up at auction what would the mother give? How insigniliant is property or gold or silver wlen otnipared with it. What ar we all working for but children, their happiness and prortperity? Daniel Webster, thm greatest man this (.oun try htas ver( produoed, stid: ", good father will shrink from no toil, no saerillee to raist his children to a hetter condition than hias own." If I was a judge andi a father was brought before me for -tdealing or even for robbing, I would seek to know thoe hidden t mnotives that lr'ompted him to the nrime. Many a man stealS or cheats to get some thing for the children, and the world is out Sragedl and calls hlm a thief and the law ' enls him lo tie chaingang. S But after all, it is the mother who screens them, protects them and wraps them in her bosom. I thought my wife wa; tired and, 0 would like to rest in her old age, but the maternal instinct still possesses her, and she d seems as much concerned about the graud children as she ever did about her own. In Y. fact, she is less exacting, and moro indul gent. The little boy we havo with us is a o young cyclone and keeps the home in an uproar. When I get outraged with his tu multuols racket and thi'eaten him with inin Ishment, my wife takes his part and says he is nothing but a baby. Yes, a four-year-old baby who Mr.ms the 1- door like an athlete forty times an hour and don't mind anybody and I could regu ,.te him in.an hour if I my way. y : wife never 'allowed such liberties from her 1- own. They were afraid of a spanking a or of being shut up in the parlor when they got too boisterous. And now she pleads for this boy and says he is nothing but a baby. But I'll get him somo of these ts days when she goes to the missionary j. meetIng-s-e If I don't. I've promised him te a licking every day for two months and he retreats to her and looks deflance at 8' me. But I'll get him-see if I don't, Hie sl Is nothIng but a baby, but he takes the dog of to the cow lot and sets him on the cow, and when I tell him that the cow will horn him and that she gives him milk, he says he t. don't want any more milk. He lets the d chickens out of tho coop, but he is nothing t- hut a baby. But I'll get him before the year is out-lee if I don't. I'11 do like Dick igJohnson, who was trying to raise his boy on Le love. But the boy got so bad that one day z Dick pleked up a lath and walloped him good. It was a desperate remedy an4 had a Ifie temporary effect, and Dick walked the Al ,,,-0 l t 'l,' o gi ki n r, m, in ! the rang -s 1h1 r vablel .annot he e:ifimate,,lia do)lla.%. and acents. 1f stn, is .,* iou,.y si,'k rhalatlnr piraw with a triuhin iout strh hil+e. "1 Vo whipyou f W going to whin ya. vsir. For flv walk iightiy and ,,los t h+, do,,r ,.ently and nbr yeathour rayers I havsiltIly. I swh diesppi thrand now yau achig veid ih. wrl o ca1 , eveiit fought a grist battle a n Whippl? Whe ligt.e ie ' ra i kil ls h mut n t h, pr hltnwynrt' r . 3u 1 efor is vt. it didt do the hou, anyad or tin~ good. The w hipping ruwtui ,just fi ve yvsara',1 thouo d or I fty thounnevr did tnke tording to his ons tqu hoe,,, but tht b i ro.thi ys rhyWe with OI opared wi th value f little r4tschild. Hwa gn r rioc, tie rwmokrher or a Ir, rich in their horhin It t)1a] I. sreiaine1 stranuge: L'. me that. 'to th ,ren! Iloiw t r btterly p'eor whie n ihey rI.J *.t I rdlan Commiskor it ight. I ' I tug 'hs. The two ithmembers of thre Canadian boys parlimerdint, thessrs. nCartwrigh ut t mandt lDavies, who are in Wash ngton in the interest of closer trade relations with A ou.'t little' girl Ism a t~r~ti uiu ill I Ill Fainm- I~ the United States, iterviewed a num-ge. I ber of public men Saturday. They were eva;scorted by Representative Hitt,l Ia. of Illinois, whoI ii sntroduced them to the leaders of both houses. they had W a thalf hohu's talk with SFeaker lReed, wvhisch eniled waithii the remark by waichard Cartwrightdo thiat it gsemtld to 4 bre the idea of the people of s deach there' is an aeloitug void I ho w nt a ut ui~vi~r till. Whacountry. i th at if they could build a high t tarioa wall around their own domains lw e 4 for his Value.. It amyi hi u th~ou-cullu nr tin they would enrichfty thou emselves eoriat theis 'Onseiie ni1 lio, 1)111. that Is it'ii hlt'; wVheut eon! xpen~s oi their aeighbors. Speak. Iing for tl new Cat ins a dr rmh ini their hiln, #4 he said it wa.t theiu'r whpe that the United States would i en A that retitiro-t. Cala commercial agrisoment would betn- I The two nmemberms of the Canaidian # eprit both peoplt, Messrs. Crtwrigt and avies, who by his Washife.to in ti interest of closer trade relationrs with rthe United St commisnterviewed a t tfn ber of public men Saturday. They' Clwere escorted by Repre.shot dead bi Bitt, of Illinois, who introduced ::0t the o the leadersc of bothe couple, sNo. They had Zce trt.a half hoaies and hik withfe livheed u which ended withe tragedy was the remark by sult ,or a' long series ,,f quarrels. 'Mrs. 1 Davies wca artwrigh t that it seemed the shootingdea on the peoparge of eamurche I country thaken if they could build a high wept triterly, aroun said their sown dband ins ad they would enrich themselves at the extene of their unkindly and had galled foher bithe names.aian init ttit, h e s aid it was theior hope that then. u e United States would see that rtles itro safiled Tuesday from N,,w York forI Gal commercial agwhere ne will bd presentedei with a silver service in the n~ame of the: ceitizens of Texas. TRESPASS NqOTICES. : Huning oTf any hind on Greenwood t ieorgu) Davie's, for mater )'tears a plantation, likewise shoteining, i positive ly prt, ibited under penalty of trespass. Any permission heretofore granted is" ' ow revoked. No exceptions. Ca.s. H. REEt,. Freet. Daviesnd andfter this widate all hunting lt~plily, anud the tragedy was the re ult of any kindlong sembrosia'and Independls. Mrs enee plantations is positively p~rohib iav ws arrested under penshortly alty of trespassing.r the shAny one foundg, on thes ae places without "O'ben ta~ken into Custody, she wept pttermly, on wil be cohidered trespass-d trttting, and prosecuted to he fucallextentd - her bitter names.. of the law. 8. D. Bannow. Hunting aith firearm or dogs on the Oakley and StatOgden plantations is positively prohibited under penalty ofr trespass. Any one found on these placlves ithout pwhere missionhe will b presented sidered trespassing and proseented to citizens of Texas. L. Mrws. From and ase er this date, all hunt TRESPASS NJOTICE:S. - Hunting ofand ishingy hind on the Cottage planta-wood plantation, lik~ewiset seining, is positive-4 ltion is positively prhiohibited utinder penalty of trespass. alty of trespassion. Any one found on this place without permission will be considered trespassing, and prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Ru. nAD Berrin. Hunting of all kinds, with dog or gun, on the Rosebank, Pecan and In dian Mound plantations, is hereby prohibited under penalty of trespass. Persons found so engaged on any of these places will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. .o , ~Mns. M. Brusu.D From and afiter this date, all hunt. ing of any kind on the Pecan Grove plantation is positively prohibited an der penalty of trespassing. Anyone found on this place without permission will be considered trespassing and prose ecuted to the full extent of the law. IL. MA. LTEW. From and after this date, all hunt ing of any kind on the Greenwood plantation i6 positively prohibited under penalty of trespassing. Anyone found on this place.without permission will be consi dered trespassing and prosecuted to the full extent ot the he BneA . fBerULEl. SROOMS 'BOARD1 .:;7 Iuaroulelet .t., N 1w OW LE )l N., LOUISIANA, /,+. .l1rs. W S. 1Pilkar. SLoveation convenient to Cansal `triC s~treet cud the busines portion .ofi t city. Good tables at all assons. Large airy rooms. /. TERMS JO.0DEr AT~. F. H. Tenney,' . ..., )ealr m . iI CGroceries, . Dry Coeds, ID -: Boots, Shoes, 3:. Hats, Notions, TINWARE & HARDWARE. <- tF Ia11M Brick i Lillhiae, BRICKS and PINE LUMBER 1MOUE Ceiling and Flooring, at lowest price. deliv.red to any point on the Mississippi Valley Railroad and Missisiippi river. . Room 71.0 Heonen Building, 1e0 Orcans. Louisianaa. «'C7,K, : i ..,.ldelll, G.R. Hill, SPRACTICAL SWATCHMAKER Alt Work Guaranteed. L Office in Woiflin Bldg., 4 EAYOU SARA, LA. ** ne,.eogs,.smag,,as.,*@eMneINs SJLs. MA1Axr~a. ww1. DAVmsOx. Magearl & Davidson,K 6*.... BUTCi ~H~ERS... a, LEAD THE MARKET T 1: 3 With FRESi[ MEAT, -ONEST ' rWI PRICES. I T 9ir :Th1 drink the best ' t High Sport S Whiskey, 9 , e Fa.hion affects suicida s .well t8.:) i other things. "Tie time was," .J1 Sthe London Lancet, "when laudarul n ':, morphia and opium were the favor?-t b ea poiCons, but now carbolio acid has.a taken their place, and according to dthe last available return (1894~, thl. Snbtter caused more than twie an Ssicidal deaths as the three fotqd Scombined, for, whereas tLhe OPi~ i poisoned 82 persong carbolio tIr poisoned 167." ---*