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•ltI<r«X.lto OOPIJE»«. f IVE CKMTH.
A FASrrUT >EWSrAl'P.R or l,0< ai. A.MI I.ENKRAI. INTEI.I.HiEM K.
VOL. IV.
FRi:p:poin\ n. v.. Friday, march it. isim*.
TIIM«: tl.tO TKABIT » ABTAaiA ^
NO. 20.
Sank of Rockville Centre
YIUaAOE AWXXIE, UpekrUle Centra. L. L
CAinnn. r. PBILLIPS, Pr«aU*a«.
7BOMAS O. KNIOHT. TIea-PraaUaBt. HlBAMa. BMRB, OaaUst
WABO or DDIBCTOBS:
W« do » OiMwal FtonWiig BoalaeH ol DtpMtt aad UaooBiit.
btarat FUd on Bpcoiia Depoaita. . IMrti I—Bd on England and tha
Tow VUKmrnge BoHdtMl.
l>Milrti» Hoon-t A. M. to I P. M.|
aattwaar.aA.u.touu.
Bfcpowi Day-Timdaja and Fri- ianttl^M.
THEFRBEPORTBANK
CAPITAL. S30,000.
•iiR Street, • Freeport, L I.
fOBK J. KAKDALL, PraaUaat. OBAimOBT .T. BPBAOUC, TIea-PrasMaBt ; WILLIAM a. BALL, Caahlar.
BOAKO Ot DIBBOTOmS.
J. Baadall,
Smu p. Ooldar, '. Gomwall, ¦mllh.
William 0.,l
n. Wnlay Pla*. neon* Wallaoa, Cola* relUI.
- gaiih.
«a^"»^^^SJ?.^=^
, ttam (. a. ¦. ta »r--i; -~T" -. -T^Maaaaaaata fes
iiimYmXar'iSaMim BuakaarVrS^iam. ¦Miaa, aad eterf aeogatodatloa aa <ar aali iowslstsatttttkuiiiiasslaMw aissmisat.
- „lala;satgttfctraja»*ttoaapaaesat faU aa
^nMBSi OB ainarls «( Karapai Daaa a Massai Baaklaa hastatss. assaaala tt mwaoraWaas. m
Urtlsa, ata.. salkWadr
_bJM taUstectioa faaraataad.
- -fiSlBrlMwUrfMsir* praapt attsaUsa.aad iaiissi lally aasw#fad.
• Greater New York • 3Dexital Farlors,
lOMIHCKU » IRIOMME.
OOR. TUVtOK AND GOLD ST8.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.
r'Stt a
¦a.a« ¦¦! •i.oa ai.
a .tmam.
rmaoa and oold struts, Opp. Laaaar^, Brooklyn, N. Y.
WILBUR r. TnEDWCLL, . j OOUMMLOR-AT-LAW.
I laa Baasasa Straat, BiMUyiB, IT. T.
aa BiMrt BaU. rfaaport, L. I., Ivanlscs aad Satordays.
rilANCIS a. TAYLOR.
LAWTBB.
COKNBB MAIM AND PULTON STA.
K. Vv^BALDWIN,
^BANJO SOLOIST.)^
Coacsrt Bomaiaots at Low Rat«k
Addraaa, MMPSTUO or FMiroHT.
CHARLES L. 8CAMAN,
Carpenter *»«> Builder,
rWCCPOBT, I. I.
BttUulaB cbaarfBllj glTs^ Ooatmcta tiikaa.
THE MAWKETK,
lata Wkalaaaia Prlaaa af Caaatry rradaaa
Owaiaa la Itaw Tark.
11 unt km OBSAif.
Tha aTSraca priea paid lor th' snrppjs .in ths plattonas has baan iH' t It. nal tn skipper. Ilaoeipta ofmlikanil craam at the diffanat railroad dlatrlbatlnn points in and asar tha elty tor tha weak have baan as Iollows: ATfiraa* dally reoaipts of tba week.
flald milk, eans K.lli
Ooadsisiil milk, cans... I"ti
Oniam, cans SI'
atrrras. Oraamery—Wesl. extras, t
Pints
Thirds tn seronils
Stete—Thirds lo lirsts
illsi* Dairy labs, extraa
Imitation Craamerr
Paetory, fresh lirsts...
Low *radaa
omaaa. Itata—Pan eraam, laney....
Small
Part aklma, irood to prime.
Pnllaklms
lOOS.
Saarby—Paaoy late and Pann—Praab......
Waaiem—Oholna
Soathem—Oholoa
aatiis km rats. Basna—Marrow, eholee, 1S>9 I M^O I M
Wodlum, IRM I tti'tm 13T,
Pas. «hole«, IMS I Sl'fiO 1 s^
Bad kldnay, ebolee, ISf*... 1 Th BIT!' WMIe kldnay, eholee, IRW I SB « 1 tw
TaDow mre — • 1 «'
T.lms, Oal., * Mllbs US BIM)
aresB psaa, ba«s — • 1 IXl
raoi-rs aao aaaBTas—miaa. apnlea, llrMinInn, V bbi. 4 00 B S IKl
Baldwin, « bbl 17.1 9 tM
Spv. » bbl 4 00 B 4M
Cranberries, Cape Cod, P bbl UUO (B 9 S"
- Bt
ID 0
III 191
lit »
l'.t «'
l!|li«
- •
la •
— 0
19 B
7!fi»
tarn
- m
iKiim
Mi<«
nn0
*i
lit'I
IB<(
111
191*
17S-
14
i'l\i
IIU
Vi\
1\
°
2-.
31
S'
'l\
Jeraey, p bbl.
aora.
illala—IMS, eholee, * ih
Pair to prims
Psellle Ooaat, ISM, eholee
Oommoa to prime
Old odds
lira rom.TBi.
Powls, P ih
riiinlrens, P Ih
Iloostera, P ih
Tnrkeys. P »v
niinks, P pair .
Oeeaa, p pair 1
Plffeoaa, p pair
Baaassii rovLTsr.
Tnrkoya, P »i
Oblekaas, Phlla
Jarsay
Powls, Stata A Pean., V ».. Dneks, Western
Maarhy.ppi
Sqnaba, V dos.' V........ I
¦AT san sraaw. Bar—Prims.PlM »
OloTSr mixed
OloTsr
Straw—Long rye
Taaartai.ts. Potatoes, Wealem, P bbl... I
Slala, p hhl I
Sweat. P bbl.
900 9 ttt
Oabba«ea, P lOtt
Oatoas, Ooaa. while, P bbl.
Badaadrsllow, PbbI
¦«« plaat, Phox
Tonaloas, P aairlar ,..
S<]aasB, marrow, P hhl
Tamlps, Basala, P hbi
Or«an paaa, Pla., P basket..
Oaaiiaowar,« basket
Btriag baaas, Pla.. V aralo.
Lattaaa. Via.,« basket
Celsiy, Vdoa...
Splaaoh.PbM
BMU,*bbl
ICala,*bbl
Oarrota,p bbl
Parsalps, P bbl
aaam, aro. Plonr—Winter Paients
Spring Patents
Wbaat-No. IN.Pnlntb
No.lBad
Oorn—Mo. t
Oats-No. 1 While
Traek mUod
Rye^ Western
State
Lard—Otty steam
I 15 B 300
1 M B 3 00
I T.t B 1 711
4 00 BlO'Ofl
HOO B KOO
I DO B 1 75
100 B 400
100 B lim
no B 75
76 B I 00
Ml B SOO
1 m • SOO
400 • SOO
100 • 460
10 B 00
ISO B sgo
TS B ISO B lis
« ISO
9 aoo
ISO
S TS B 4 00 990 #1 410
41KB
- •
stH*
- •
- •
Vlli ttu
BOSINKSM CARIM,
''lAMESTXuiiER.
REAL ESTATE AQENT,
PATCHOGUE, L I.
nraoas barlot TUlace PropeHy or Psnaa
statlBc fowsal eaah prIee, and I will adrartlaa taa aaaa at my owa eaprsaa.
a. a. assatae, aea aaa.
E. A. OORLON,
BONDED AUCTIONEER,
aas siLiewa' aieea.
niiTea ar., asaa cHuncM, rREBPORT,
E. S. RANDALL, AretiHaet. OBea ror. Brooklyn ara., aod Mala at, app.
Rallraad Depot, Prsspsrt, L. L Plaas aad BpaeUlcaUaaa pi ipai ad tar all elaaaai
CEORGE \ GILSOI RATIOR,
CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS. FREEPORT, L. I.
Havlac rerantly rompleled Iha REVIEW
PI1II.DINU w* ar* prepared l« lake
conlraela,for flrsl claaa wark.
Vtuaaaat, lay Oa*(Bsa<at.
Biilden; Geoenl Contractors, 1*
BROOKLYN M. Y. ksT* fw «la at FREEPORT, L. I, tbt
¦oat daatmbla building plota oti Loaa Hioaly giadad atrasta. wltl iTAe. Alao, hoMaa baill P
I am a fanner located nf;ir Stony Brook, one of the most malarious tfMrkUin this Sute, and was bothered wiih m.il iri.i for years, at times lol could not work, an.l was alw.iys vciy consiip.iled as well. For yean 1 had ni.ilaria so bad in the sprins. when en^ tged in plowing, tiut I could do nothing but shake. I nuist h.ive taken about a barrel of (|uininc pills besides dozens of other remedies, but never obtained any permanent benefit. Last fall, in peach iim-. I h.id a most seiious attackof chills an J then commenced to uke Ripans T.ibules, upon a friend's advice, and tho !iist box made me all nght and I have never been wiihout them since. I t.ike one Tabule each morninR and night and sometimes when I feel more than usually exh.iusted I take three in tliay. They have kept my stomach sweei, mv b«)wels regular and I liavc not h.id the le.ist touch of m-il nia nor splitting head.iche since I commenced using ihem. I know also th.it I sleep betler and wake up more icfreshed th.in fonnerly. I don't know how many complaints Ripans Tabules will hvl;\ but I do know ihev will cure any one in the condition I was and I would not bt without them at any price. I honestly consider them the cheapest-priced medicine in the world, as tilty are also the inosi beneficial and the most conveuientio take. 1991 twenty-seven yeais of age and have worked hard all my life, the aiwi as moat Cirmeiv Imih^.ifly an.l I tie and in nil kind? ol weather. Md i liave never cniqveJ such good he.ilth .\i I have since last fall; in Act. my neighbors h.ive ail remaiki-d my i-nproved condition and have M^'** Sav. John, what are you dovtg lo looi^ so healthy i "
.-Aaaaa«(iaaanuktka* airs a-a^ui • i k»va. la^ aaaaae.*aa4f^uaausa imi3mXVtSS!m!mtm l ra** ¦« la* •¦!«••• aaa ar«.p»^*^w»;» >.i ^*a^
ail>>atfiy53Utaaaeilliii «wttsa«>»«r*«i*id'»ia*aBaaat««mwa»c»rR
SINCE LOVE IS CONE.
i
Bln<?e love Is aone. will e\erythlii>» *eeni
dear In day or nlRht nr season ol thn vear, Tho ButJmn Iwl .1)1 ir tho llrst spring
dawn? Will aaythlng nr-tm sweet ainoe lore Is gone?
Hince lore Is gone how Khali 1 dare to go Through old wood pathways tbat I usrd to
know, Seeking in •bettered upots tlower-Iaoes
sweet And talking to the brook beatdc my teot?
Lore was the only theme wn talke.lupou, And will tbey know me now since luve Is
gone?
• ••••«
Tat, wben I sought them In their solltinle
01 field, sod hill, add OTerlapDing woods,
'They smiled al me in q'llte the same old
way. And listening close I hesrd their Tolcns
sst: "Two things sre socred, desr, 'twIit ua
snd tbee, And one Is lore snd one la memory." —Juliet T. Strauss. iolDdlanapollB Journal.
BETH'S TEA PARTY.
BT L. I. CBIirCKDEK.
HILE the lea party waa read;, no gnests bad come. So that wBM the reason Beth looked over the wall.
"I shall go iuto the highways sn,l hedges for guests, because Angle hasn't come," she thought. ' Undar the wall croaohed a bleary- looking man, Beth hadn't really been looking for tbia kind of a gnest, bnt ba waa in the hedge, that was cer¬ tain, ao she naid: "Won't yon please oome to my tea party?"
The man looked up, sarprised. "H^," be asked.
"N-n-no," said Beth, "not exactly bay, bat mnd and water tea, iu acorn onpa."
This time the man grunted and made no reply.
"There's more coraiog," Beth hast¬ ened to say. "Bridget is baking oookies and lots of good things; and there's always bread and milk, bnt Angle and me pretend first and eat seoond."
"I'll OQme when you are through pretending," said the man.
"Bnt Angle hasn't come, and I have oome into the highways and hedges and found you. Father preached to do it, and he never told US what to do if the hedge people would not oome, either."
It was a perplexed face, framed in a pink snn-bonnet, that looked dowu ou the man.
He got up at onoe, and then Beth saw that he limped, and was very much dirtier than the people she was aconstomed to eat with.
"I'll go right up lo the honse, now, and get the real tea," she said, "and —and if yon shonid want to wash your faoe and hands, there's a brook in the hollow, and I'll bring a towel."
Tha man was dripping and much cleaner when she returned, loaded with things to eat and with a whitu towel over her arm. After be had emerged from his rubbing he hsd lost something of the bleary look that Beth wondered at, and he sat gravely down opposite her snd in frout of the flat rock, whereon their feast was spreail. "Will you or I ask grace?" she asked.
"Yon'd better, I reckon; I'm out of practice," said the man, grimly. ,. "Make ns good and thankful, please Lord," said Beth with folded hands. Then she served her gnest.
He ate like one famished, and when the end of the bill of fare ws» reached he heaved a mighty sigh. "That's good," be sai'.; "flrst I've cat ainoe yeatarday."
"Do you live near here?" asked Beth timidly.
"Yes, I did," said the man, "I don't now."
"Havo you moved?" "Ooin' to," he replied, pulling hin hat down over hie eyes.
"I've met with bad luck," he eon- tinned.
Beth waited patiently. "You see, I've got a pard, a boy, my nephew really, au' him au' me's been keepin' switch over to the beud. He'a got a thing the matter with bis leg, not jnst now happened, like mine, bnt grawed so from trouble with his bip. That boy is smart an' all that, but he'd rather walk 'en anything. 8o we found ont wbat it 'ud take to fix him up, an' we saved fur it, scrimped and saved un every corner, an' the boy he trapped some animals and got some birds and stuffed 'em, an' it bronght him in right smart, so at last we bad enongh, an' Dick he fixed it. I was to go to town—'cause he'a lana—an' gat the money put to- father in a uote or something like that, an' ha'd kaap awitcb till I come baek. Tben we'd go to the city to¬ gether and I'd leave bim with the doctors an' I'd coma ba;k and wait till he'd git well.
"So I took the box, with it ali in, an' I started." There was a pause. Then ba'went on slowly: "You see. miss, I used to drink, bnt Dick — Dick's his nsme- never thought I'd do it again, snd I wouldn't, I reckon, if so be I hsdn't lurned my ankle down tbe road there close lo Bob's balf-way house, an' I limped in, sn' tho smell sn' sU msde me wild, beside Ihe pain. Bob filled me np with whisky, an' I never knew nothin' more tilf I woke up this morning with tbe box cleau gone sn' my boy wsilin' au' trnstin' me—that's why I'm goiu' to move. I ain't never gning back lo face his big blue, trustin' eyea again"
"How did yon lose the box?"asked Beth, much interested. "Did you spend it all? "
"Xo, I don't recollect opeoinp it, or ', even seeing it, afler I got to Boli'a, i bul I rechou he or some of em Ihat | uz Ihere seen it, cause it's(;one. ' |
"Might be It's lost," snggested i Beth. "I've joggle.l things outuf my ! pocket Btuhbiug my tue. s.imetimei'. I Pld yon look?" • I
"So, mias, il you knew Bob's place an' Ike men thst'a there, like I do, you'd not l.xik either."
"Where did you (sil?" |
"Ont in the timber right nearR<ib's. aaifbt 'a' been a trap, did usk with ' rootaiastaaprawiin, an' me a lookin' : kiady longia' an' kindy dreadin' st i Bob's windows, so I fall like a plnmh i gawk over them trip-np*."
"It father was here he'd help yoa. ' 'eaaaa he know* Bob and everjhodv. ' Father's a minister, but everyboiiy : likea hiss, only he's away thia after- Dooa. I'll aak mother if I can gu on mr wheel Agwa to th* tiatber aad I'll i
try snd find tbe box. lou wait nere while I go."
So Beth went up to tt-e honee.
"I've got somo highwa.-s work to do, mother; can T go on my wheel to the timber?" pho asked.
"Highways?"
"Yessum- -an' hedges. I'U bo good and not be gone lone."
"All right, dear," said her mother, who was used to what they called Beth's queernesseK, but knew she was to ho trusted.
The man lying on his back beside the flat roek saw the pink nunbonnet flash by ou the otber side of the hedge and knew ehe had started on hor er¬ rand.
It was not very far away—Bob's place—or the poor fellow with the lame ankle could not have reaobed their hedge. ,Sbe rode Rtrnight past it to the old oak with sprawling ruots, and there, sitting quietly reading, was Bob's ouly treasure, his young son, Bob junior, a delieale-lnokiug lad. who seemed too refined for such a home.
He looked up and smiled as the small figure, bent over tbe handle
burs, came flying up, for he knew one in autiioriry, sud ite.is loilowej nnil Beth, SB almost every one did who Uu.-teil. lie sniil to M.ises, Thou hast lived about there.
THE SABBATH SCHOOL.
INTERNATION/IL LESSON COMMENTS FOR MARCH 19.
Le»onT«il: "Thrlil thr lioad Sh*ph*rri," .Inlia I.. 1-ln—llolrtra T*«li John i.. 11—Cominenlary on th* Day'* l.«atoa Ii; th* n«T. n. M. Strain..
1. The mliconduct ot lli* si-rlbrs and I'harlsCMS, who ourIU to hiivi» hren the liillhlul shepherds nt tho people, bring.! to mind the words by the prophers. nntHblv to Jer. uili. and Eiek. uiiv. lul«ltbfulne»s au.l unheltef seem to prevail lu all ages In Ihr prolesslUK people ot Ood. By the gate ol Kiteu. wllh Ita sword and saorllli-e; by the gat.' and door and veil ot the taber- nude He taught the iieopin the only wav ot access to lllm»elf. He now reminds them ol It and snys that all o'lier ways are invcutrd by those who wouM rob (lod ol Ills honor
2, Tho true shepherd ac.'cpts Ood's wny nud knows no other. Like >o«h hullit- Ing the ark or Moses the tabernacle, he hnt, no suggestions to make, but stluply otievB Ollll Impllcltlv. He does nol «p- |.olut hlmsell to oM.'e. but Ood calls lilm sail appotuts hlm. ns He did Mos°s and Joshun Iind Hamuel. Isniiih, Jeremiah and Ezekiel. the apo..tIes sad all who are irlll- ing to be wholly subject to Him. **
Ills voice Is recogalzeil « '
"Oh, Bob, I'm so gind you're here —you'll help me, won't yon?" she said, and theu sho plumped down be¬ side him ond told her slory.
Bob junior luoked sober over parts
fouud grace In My sight, and I know thee by nnme (Ei. xxxitl., 17). fhrough Isnlah He »ntj. Fear not, lor I have redeemed tlien, 1 have cnlled thee by thy name, thou art mine (Isn. xllll., n.
4. A grent mnnv people who bear Ills uiimn and scum to be doing Ills work do nul nnderstnnd thi.s, lor thev complnlu of
iillni;
uf it, but when she got through he uot_ been able to nccompltsh whnt thry said: "You were right, Beth, he lost itont here, and I fuuud it and have it upstairs in my ruum. T knuw Dick and his uncle right well, and—and
I'm awfnl Borry about his getting
things to drink here. We are going | while "siiee'p 'win not follow n stranger, away soou. Father has promised. I '
am going to school, uud I'm so glad Father isn't so bad, Beth; he wouldn't steal or onytl-ing, nud be is good tu me. He hadn't eveu thought nbout it being wrong to sell such fitiift', till your father came dowu wheu 1 wns so sick aud talked to bim. Uo thinks lots of your father."
"Fathers as fathers." remarked Beth, wisely, "are good any way you flud them, aren't they. Bob? But I'm so glad yoa found tbe box."
"So am I; and I'll tell you one thing," said Bob slowly, "I'm afraid Dick's uncle isn't to be trusted with
it. He iutends to do right, and does, I EdenT'thT'gnto and''door when Dick is around. Bnt you tell ' him it's all safe, that I havu it and will give it to your father, whu will fix il all up for Dick. Dou't you tbink that is best?"
Yea, Beth thought it was, so she rode toward home again to tell the man and to wait until ber (ather had come iu from the country. "^She beard her father's buggy wheela raltliug down tho road before she reached home, however, aud she stopped to wait for him.
He was somewhat surprised over the ontcoiue of the highways and hedges j satsn, wbo tried lo take Adan and* Evs sermon, but he said nothing about sway Irom Ood
r get where they There must be n mlsunilcrst where, lor when we follow w all should b..ensy. und when He goes be¬ fore He will not leave ohstncles lu the wny ol those whom He lends.
6. Pheep must be wiser than people, for, hlie sheep will not " sny who call ihemselves Chrlstlsns lol
low those who do not follow Christ and yet think they sre In the right wny. They do uot seem lo know the difference lie¬ tween Uls voice' nnd thnt ol strangers. His word Is His voice. It Is true from tho beginning nnd forever settled lu hesven (Ps. cilx., HD).
C. "They understood nol." II seems a compnrnttvely simple parable In the light ol the prophecies wo hnve relerrod to,.but 11 wns all dark to them, for they were more (ull of tradition than ol His Word, the Hcrlptures. It is evon so uow, and s DIble study to those nnnccustomed to it ts something very strange. How sndly He says even to Hla diaoiples. Do ye not yet understand? llow Is it Hint ye do uot understand? (Mnth. xvl., !i, II).
7. Now Ue saya plainly, "I nm tho door ol the sheep." The gnte of the gnrdon of ¦•¦ • _ ¦ ¦ Ilol the taberiyiele, the door of Nonh'.s nrk, the entrance to the city of refuge, wore nil typlcnl of Him vtho Is the wny und the only way. There is none other name given under heaven smong men whereby we may be suved (Acts iv.. Itli. Christ told meu to look unto Hlm aud they would be saved. Christ la Ood, nud when we re¬ ceive Christ we receive tiod. The Son hns left ou record that blessed truth, "Hlin that Cometh unto Me 1 will In nowise enst out" (John vl., 31).
8. All belore Him or beside Him were thieves and robberr. I tnko It thnt the expression ".^11 tbnt ever cnme Iieforo Me" hns the same thought aa iu Ki. ix.. 3, "Thou abalt hsve no other gods belore
The drat tbiet knd robber was
that, ouly to the man when he met him he stretcliod out a friendly hand, and after supper the three drove out to where blne-cycd Dick was anxious¬ ly waiting.
"Must you tell Dick 'bout this?" asked the mnn anxiously as they ncared the bend.
"No, not uow," said the minister, "for I think yon bavo learned a lesson that fo'. tbe sake of your nephew, and my littlo daughter, if for no other, you I will try to keep."
The man stretched out his hand and | the minister grasped it. Behind the -¦ tears iu the man's eyes glowed a reso¬ lution that this timo wns going tu be i kept.—Chieagu Record. i
PRANKS OFNAVAL CADETS. :
An Amuslna llncounlar Between Calitaln . riiirk aiid^ rntiMfii Cuofc.
Wheu tho famous ("aptain Mahan was a lieutenant und ouo uf the uftices of the Naval Auademy at Annapolis, ] it becamo bis duty une eveniug to ; award severni demeiita to {'add I Clark, now or reeeutly captain of the i battleship tirogon. The circHmatances | wore such that Clark felt that he ha.l numo reason fur i2;rievauco agaiust his roommate, uow Captain Cuuk uf tho cruiser Brooklyu, who had escaped bis demerits by being fuuud in bed, where both should have been at" the time. Su Clark bided his timo to pay Cook off, aud soon tho opportunity came.
'J. Again Ho says'that'iHe l.i the door, and He speaks of safety and jilenty. Not only Is He Ihe door, but He Is also our salvation snd our lood. He snld, "He that esteth Me, evon He shall live by Me " (John vl., 67). Any ono may enter in and llnd in Him salvation und rast and peace nud plenty.
10. He desires to give life nn.l Ilfo nbuu- dnntly, whilu the thief seeks ouly to de¬ stroy. The (ather of nil tho thieves Is cnlled tho adversary, who goeih about seeking whom ho muy i.ivour (I Pet. v., 8). Christ ia our lile. When we receive Him, we have Ilfo, nud wheu we let Ulm llllua with HImseK we hnve abuudnnce of life.
11. He savs, "I am the Oood Shepherd. " Elsewhere ile Bays, or rnther Is spoken of ns tho Orent Shepherd and the Chief Shepherd (Hob. illl., 20, 'li; I Pet. v., 4). As tho Oood Shepherd He gives Hla Ilfo for u» that lie mny anvo us. As the Orcnt Shepherd He worka tn us tho things which are rileasing to Ood. As the Chief Shep¬ herd He will reward ua nt His coming for tho service we have permitted Him to n,-- compllBh In us.
1'2. rho hireling thiuks more of his own life thnu the weilnre of the sheep. Hols n.jt oue wilh the tniod ShepherJ, though professedly serving Hlm. This and luo nent verse are fully set forth lo those chapter. In Jeremiah aud Ezeklel nlrendy referred to. Let eact nnswor for htmaell lis pnator, teacher or Christian worker. Am I one with the Oood Shepherd In sell-re¬ nouncing aud selt-denylng labor, seeking nothing for royeeif, but only the welfare ol those with whom He brings me lu oon- tnct?
13. "Because he Is s hireling." Thera may be Christian workers iu nli poiltlons, oven as mibslonnries on the fcrolgn fleld, whose princlpsi thought Is their positiou and their salary, rather tban the salvation ot souls and the glory ol Ood.
14. He knows Hla sheep, und they know Him. The Lord knoweth them that are Ills, snd In the Judgment Hewlll make uo Two days in the week was known I mistake. He weigheth our actions aud rr¬ at the academy as iiie-daya, becauae gnrJs our thoughia aud Is ever ready to pies of all vanot.es and in great aliun I •,-r.l'u','?'H!m"'(Trcb';'in!"''x?l'.''»)!''Te dance then glorified Ihe dinner-table, { eveu keeps n book for those who think
upon Him (Mal. ill., i«).
although there were uever onough to satisfy the cadets.
One day at dinner Clark saw Cook, after giving a stealthy look around the table, pull a sweet-potato pic to¬ ward him, and slide it deftly off the cloth into the recesses of bis jacket. Witb another look around at the faces of hia companions, whu seemed to be all satisfactorily engrossed with their plates, he carefully Imttuned his jacket over Iho prize, whieh reijuired tender handling, and aent uu euticg his din¬ ner.
Aa they marched out of tho mess- hall, Clark, in the rank lieUiud ("ook, leaned forwar.l ond whispered, ''Say, how about finishing that wrestling- match we were having the other day? "
Cook shook hia head in emphatic negation, but as the ranks broke up in the outer ball, Clark, disregarding bis friend's frantic winks, frowns and attempts lo back away, grasped and girt him «-ith both arms.
"Here! Stop' Wait' Hold on, confound yon, hold uu!" implored the victim, wriggling in tho grasp uf his tormentor, whu did hold on harder than ever.
Then a soft yellow eulistasice came creeping over the tup of (ipok's col¬ lar, oozed from the breast of nis jacket, and iuto s fringe st the but- torn. With s wrench, he shook him¬ aelf free from Clsrk'a srms, tore open his jacket, and eijmsed the mashed and ciumbled remaius of the sweet- potato pie.
"You inspired idmt!" said he, more in sorrow than in anger. "Seo what you've dune! Why, I was going to give you bsIf of it! ' — Youth's Cnm- pauiun.
Kaglaad'* Meal Hopplj.
The extent of the foreign trade in refrigerating beef is shown by tlie fact thst (ire.it Hritsin imp.irted in I'avii* tl.ia meat to the sm.iunt uf JJ'.i.uilil,- Dii I. I'rulislily it all csme from .\mer- ics sud .\ustrslia The tfade has aniuuuted to more Ihan Ji.'i.OlHI.iKH) ye rly since 1's'.li',. The dependence uf Ureal Britaiu un other Latlnaa fur her Uk>'\ aupply is ahown ss the valu¬ ation ul food importa of all kinds in 18i»B.
Protrrtlnc rnblUher*.
Senstor .Telka has presented tu the .tlabtma Legislature a bill protecting pnbli8he»-| fr.im luiahwhacking libel suits. T. 1 act pre videa that when by
miatake ..r .n«.lvert4.n.-» •n injririoa'
publication is made, if the aame ia re- tracteii or apnl.igy made within five daya from .lemand, theu the party aggrieved shall be considered snf- flciently recompensed and the matter droppe.1. Tbe presa >f Alabama ia earnest iu support of Mr Jelks's bill.
15. The Father la wholly occupied with Ills Sou and with Ihn wellure ol all through Him. The Kon Is wholly occupied with Iho Father and wllh seeking the wel¬ fare of nil whom tbe Fnlber has given to Him. Thry understand each other per¬ fectly. They would have us ns ouo ol them. BS they are wltn oach other.
16. "Other sheep I hnve." L'ntll alter Hla resurrection thcro was no command In prcnob except to tho Jews, but now the commnnd Is lo go Into nil the world, to every creature, Ihat all who will mnv come. Tha worker must not bo discour¬ aged because all who hear do not I rllevc. All that thr Fnlber giveth llir shall iimir to Illm He shall aes of the (ravnil of His soul and shall lie sntlsncil, nud He shnll not tall uor be discouraged (John vl., 3,'; laa. Illl., 11; xlil.. 4i. Mny Ihe (re- nurlll rrprtitlon uf llirar nnd olher texts lu theae lessons in- as lielplul I) Ihe render ns 11 Ih* writer. 1 .1.1 bellovo Ood.-1 eaa m Uolder.
ALLEGED RUNIC STONE FOUND.
rirkwll'pln Mlnnesata and I'art ol thr
Inirrlpllon* Tran*lntr.l.
A atone tearing luscriptlons lu •o-callod runic characters was lound threo miles .lorthen.'.t ol Keuslnglon, in Douglas | County. .Minn. Prufessor lirodn of the PtatkUnlvrrslty. t.i whom the stono wns aubmltt'.d, aaid. tbal whrn the Inscriptions [ were flrat submitted lo htm as being from a j possible tunic atone fouud In tho western j i iirt of Minnesota ho was disposed to laugh j Nl runic sto.ies ha.l ever b.-eu found In America. Nrvertheleaa lie look tho slonr | act mn.te up thn following tranalatlon of Ihe i.-icriptlous. dashes ludlcatlng the loca- ! tl.in of wor.ls of ciinn.ctrre which he could not make out, not befog corre.'t runes: j
".siTi'iles aud-N'orsrmrn "n a jiurneyof I dis.'overy from Vlneland west —wr campe.i ; —one day's Journey north (rom this stouc. We llulshed one day. Alter we ..ame hom" I we lound—man red with blou.t aud drat A. V. M. savelrom —have—meu atlheocrau to look after our shlpa—dav's journey from j this island. Year—. '
I'roIrssorBrrdasermsto regard thr atone as pi.isibly grnutur. Hla theory la that at < the tune tnr stone waa deposited at tho place (.und It wa* on the shore ot Lake j ^u|.arlor, whlc'j then, .'«) vears ago, waa i several bundn'.l feat atinv.' Its presrut level, | making It entirely poaall.le that Ihe |.iec* ! of ground at that'plncr wus an Island. Tbe ; fct.^Dr I:a* bren sent to Pr-ifrsaor Curx.e. of | the Njrtb'vr.tern fnlversllv, who will mnkr a canttul axainlnatloa ot Ibe luscnp- ; nous. I
A Mrw I'M, ror Turd.
rsrir.ers nround lllnghsrot"n, S"W tork. ' ii»»r i". -ind a n*w uae lor curd, raore prof- , liallle thau chraae-maklng. which promises Id send the price of tbat product up. Thev . arr shipping It tn b.irtels to a baStrr com- lanv In Uwrgo, wher* it Is made Inlo alz- j Ing for pap«r. It is kiln dried, and when sent 10 thr paper milla strongly reaemblea | ri"". Th'new proeea* Is jost coming Inlo UI.C and nron>i«~ ».-> c.;E?'j=e a larg* 1 nm.utofcurd. ]
IlllUracy la Ih* Brltlali An»v.
The annual report op^.n racraitlog Tor Ibe British Army shows n slight taeraaaetc the physical drvriopineot ol rh,, reeruit*. but thIfty-Bvr per cent, have siii' b«uu re¬ jected owing to unsatisfactory pbyaiiue Tbe sarpnsloa aanouaermeat la iaa4*lhat rIchteeD prr IOOO are attrrlv iltiierata, aod tbat only lorty-nine per IMM are deacrlbe-J as weU-«dacaled.
NEW YORK SI ATE NEWS. The Srliool* of Ihr Rialr.
The report for the laat year of Stale Sii- PSrintendrnl nf Public Instruction Charles R skinner shows that the number of, hii¬ dren nttrnding school some portions of the vear was In thr towns 447.451. and la Iho cities r,!l| in. ranking a totnl ol I.Ifis.- S3I lor the Stale. This shows a decrea-e In thr townsof :^.^.M.^, and an Increase In the cities of ,1740. The average dnilv nt- tendanc-i In Ihe towns was Sl(i.J4(1. and in tbe cities MS.41:'. slionliig an nrrrngo nttenilnnce for the entire State ot«27.r,.W. The numhsf ofll.'enaed trnch- ers employed wns '20,330. an Increaae of 741 over thr prerioiis year. The amount paid tor teachers' snlnrlfs was SI.S.t.'ii,.i7s, an increase of «99(i.2l8 over the previous yenr. The average nnnunl salary paid durlne tb" last year was $.Mii."'i nn Increaae of fll.'Vi over the previous venr. Thn sum of tl,0,S7.- 979 was exprmlod for building-, sites nnd repairs In thn towns nnJ |7.5,sn.56? In fho citlea. inaking a total in the stnte ot fS,. 611,818, This shows nn Increnee In the totnl expenditures tn the sute over the previous venr of *i!I!J,87i. The total value of schootliouses aud sites In the state as reported last year was 7I,R.'1J..1II, an In- crease of «6.7.14.9I1 over Ihe previous year. The total emeudlturea for all purposes I'onoectrd with Ihr piili'tc schools of the Rtstewere 821.175,R7l.»fl. an Increase over the previous year of tl,7,S6.flI.M7. Begnrd- Ing the dual suaervlslon ot si'hools by Ihe Regents nnd Pepnrtment of Public In¬ struction, Superintendent Skinner snvs- "1 have earnestly urg.'.t thnt a line ..f de¬ marcation boestnbltshed between the work porformeil by the Department of Public In¬ struction nnd tho university ns follows; "First thnt every achool nialntatne.1 bv general laintlon be supervised by nnd pinced under tbecoutrol ofthe Stnte lie¬ parlment ol Public luslrucllon, which should Isaue Ib-ensos to all teachers em¬ ployed therein, apportion and dlstrlbule according loalatule nil public lun.la raised l)y Stnto tnxntlon In support thereof, and have charge of all professional schools (or the training ol teachers therein. Senond. thnt the university shnll assume the cara of all the school libraries as n part of Ihe general library system of the Stnte, of all private eohools and evory other depart¬ ment of educational work not muintnlned by public tainlinn, also of all exaralna- llonsinthe Interest ntthe cltljen for en¬ trance to tho professions." Supertntendent Skinner urges the passage of the revision 6( the .'ducat lonnl Inw prepnred by tbe Ktitunrv Revision Commlaslon na well na the nniictment 01 the l»lll pending In thu Legislature Increnslng the pny and iiunll- llcnllons .ll School Commissioners.
The ran-Ainerlran Eaposltlan.
The actual work of building the "White City" of the rnn-Amerlcan Exposition whioh Is to be opened in Buffalo In liHll, WIII soou begin. The Exposition is nn ns aiired (act. The hill approprlnting t.SOO,- 000 for the New York State building and exhibit has passed both Rouaea of tht Legislature, aud was signed by Oovernot Roosevelt immediately. Congress hns nisc appropriated $500,000 for the natlonni oi- hlblt. Tlier.i la now the sum of i«2.'ino.OrO behind tlie Exposition. Theclty of Iliiflnio nnd western New Y'ork hnve rnlsed by popular aiibscriplion fi.400,0011, Congress lias appropriate! (500.000 and the Stale 4f80fl,<IOO. riurinc Ihe next lew weeks other Stales will approjirlnte Inlgo siiius for their exhibits, nu-l the work of |.re|i.irliig Ihe exhibits 111 other countrle. of the Western Heralsphrro hns nlrendy Iiegun, The 300 incorporators of the Kxposltion have elect¬ ed (he folIowlDg-nauied men to bo direc¬ tors: Mayor Conrad IMelil. Chnrlos W. Qoodyenr. Joseph T. Jones, John N. Scnicherd, Oeorge K. BIrge, Oeorge L. William, J.J. Albright, Thomas W. Svmons, William H. Ilotchklsa, Oeorge I'rbnn, Jr., (iiiitaln John M. Uinker. W. Caryl Elv. Colonel John B. Webor, John O. Mllburii, Hijrry Hamlin, Frnuk B. Dalnl. Carlton Rprague, William Hcugerrr, ilcnry J. Pierce, Oeorge Blelatein, V. C. M. l.nul;-., il. M. Oerrans, Herbert P. Blsaell, E, tl. s. Miller and Ilobert F. Schelllng.
-iilaslon. whether committed by him- • his assistants." ]
I.ainmerts Is Indlrtnl.
Sixteen Indictments hnve beeu reported bv thoNlagaia County Orand Jury against Ex.County Treaaurer J. C. Lammerts. All charge tlio mlsupproprlntlou of lunda of tbecouoty. each Inillctment denling with nipectflc trauaactlon. Nine of the indict¬ ments are for grnud larceny In the Hrst de¬ gree and the balance for forgery aud fel¬ onies. Tbo (elouins charged are for keep¬ ing a litlse jouroul aul making false entrlea therein. The forgery charged ia In lbs third degree. The Ornnd Jury recom¬ mends that fn tbe luture the Incumbent In Ihe Couuty Treasurer's ofllce bo made to make mouthly reports.
Ornr
f Oen
It
s of ng
. tielw«
a.
nvn
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en
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uep
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tauatsmmcuie
iPUh Vmw liectared l:Dconslltutlonal.
Justice Lambert, In the Supreme ("lourt. Buffalo, haa rendered n decisiou declaring the New York Stnte Inw prohibiting the handling of pike and jdckerel caught or purchased outside the Hlato uf New Y'ork during tho "close" senson of Kebriiary, March and April to be uncuustltuttonnl. The declelon is ol great linportnuce to llsh dealers of the Stale, who Import large quantities of the flsh mentioned from Can¬ ada almott dally
Paul Prlghl While llrading Ihe BIblr.
Mra. Dennis Tabor, o( Hillou, died under peculiar circumstances a lew daya ngo. Hhe opened a meeting of the Woman's Christian Temperance Pni.mi lu IhnBaptlsi Chur.'h In the village. While rending (r..m the Bible ahe waa aeizo.i with stage fright and lioeame urn'oiiscinus. lu which state she remained till she .lied.
Curlew Urdlnaiicr ¦
Tho Common C.iun.'ll passed a curfew or.ilnanr cbildreu under ailteeu yea off the atreota after '.' p. r and November, and alter a p. m. teitwcen Novemlier and April, unless accompanied liy iiarent or gunrJiftU or having proper cfedeullnls.
A ri.rir.rr Killed liy » I'asarnari Ti-aln.
Francis Rupert, a farmer, sevenlynlue years old. wns struck by n passenger train i.n tho Fonda. Johnstown and liliversvllle Railroad, ut llounis Crossing, n mile nnd n bnll north ol Oloversvllie. a lew days ngo. Hi. waslnstnntlv killed He ienves a wife nu.l llveehlldrrn.
All Around Ihe Klal*.
The rgg lamlnein Western Now York hns abated. Prl.'KS of the hen's product hnvn dropped to normal flgures.
John Walbridge. a well known Attica character, waa struck aud killed by an Erie tralu a faw days ago.
Olonns h.inJed endrbtednrss upto Feb ruary 1 wan (314.572.59. Last vnar il was redui-ed (22..505.15.
Abraham Ebner. residing lu lllca, is 117 vrarsofag'.. He is the nPlrM j.rrs.iu In Sew York, and Is crrtnlnly the ollest of the»iirvlv,,rsol the war lit 1"12. ot whom there ureal presrut about right.
Farmera bnve ab<iut.|rBlr.iyeii the bicycle cinder pith between North Totiawanda and LjSalbi by driving over It.
Elmira lealars In fruit wh . linv" Ir.'o ipnking an inveallgntbin have mad" up thrlr minds that IU" pencil ernp in Ihn southrru tier of cjuntles Is (.raeticully rulneit.
Thomas Pair, of Angola, prrmeliiatelly fhot hlmsell through the heal witii a re. volvrr. Heath reaultedshortly alt 'rwurds Pair wa« al.'k and despondent. A wife an I se-feral cblldren ara left.
Frank Furnel. farmer, living u .:ir Perry, mixed pans grum with lau Uuum and took Ibecomblnatiiiu He.ll»J lusMllty to c.,ile.-t money due blm is I.elleved l.l bave lei Furnel to take thr rash step. H" leaves a wife au.l flvg chil Imn In destllut* circumalances
AVALANCHE REVEALS A MINE.
A Trn-rool Cipper Tain lll*r<ivrr*d l>» Ihr Pall or > HoBldar In I'lab.
An avalanehr on the LaesI M'.untaln. aear Park Ciry. fiah. has uucoven»d a tm- foot copper vein atsaylng twenty per cent. Fopper aod cantalaiBgan eight-Inch streak nt gissc* oaaaying saveatv i«r cent mrtal- 11' copper. L. C. Trrnowltb, wh.i baa iweu working •ome clalma oa Ibe mouolaln, ha> hrea Boding oostldarabir float rarryin. f ftv par cent, cupper, bul b* eould lit ocate tha lead. A huge boulder, earrl»1 into tbe gulch hy the avalanche, broke, rr veailog rich oojpcr vtlaes The Iirmei •It* of the boumcr was marked by tbe cop¬ iier vela wbleh bal been aacoverad by tbe eartb anil sBowsllde.
.-«. i;.-it::i.si.-4i4_i'-«:ia«
Removed From His Command by the Cuban Military Assembly.
HIS STATEMENT TO THE PEOPLE.
The llrposeil l.rv.Irr Arciar-I nf Brine a Tri>llor-«n.n<):l,oni \pwri.prlatl..n Nol Kninrlrnt~4rllnnnrthr Asirml.ly Con- drinnril In llavana-li.tinei Sara Hr Is liUJ In Ue Prre-Ketlrrs I'onlratr.l,
nm>». Culsa (By ('ahle> -The C-jbaa Mllitnry Assembly In public session Sltur- day afternoon l'jip'>,ichel Osueral Maximi O.imc/,. an.l remjvel hlm Irom hia co-n- mau.i as Oeo»rnl-ln-C,ilef ol the Cuban Army, Ihe flrst bnilot taken resulting In twenty-six votes bclni; .-ast In support o( the motion to Impeach ani remove ("ieneral Oomez ag\lQst four lu opposition.
Oeaeral Ocn-w's onlv supporters were Oeneral Cespodrs and Oiineral Nunei. The .irlglnal motiou. which w:>s introduced by Manuel Saugully. provldej for tho aboli¬ tion ot the grade of (i ineral-ln-Ctilel. but nn amendment wns offered • this by Senor Aguerro which rca.i "loaoOllah the grade of Oenernl-ln-Chlef and to remove Oenoral dome.-, for failure In his mllltnrv duties and disobe.l lence to the Assembly," Senor Aguerro declared that Homo: waa insub¬ ordinate and shoul.l be punished, anl Seuor Snnguily inalnuntel thnt thi Oenernl wns n Irnilor to Cubn.
Much pnsslon was evi.lent In the siieeohes. In some of which Oomer, was de¬ clared to have been delinquent tn hts lutles nnd illsolieJIenl lieciuso he had a.'- ceplod Ihc proposltiou ol Uibi.rl r. Porter, Presideut M'Klnley'a special emissary, without cousulting "the Assembly; because he had taken upou himself the arrange- men's for the payment and iltaarmlng of the Cuban troops independent of tho As-
TELEGRAPH OPERATOR A HERO.
Radlv liijnrrd Man Send* a Waralag Ov*i Ihr WIrr anil SaT** Llrr*.
EnwAaDsviLLx. I.l. (Speclall. —Peters. • small station on the Clover Leal Boail south of here, has a hero ia tbe parson ol John F. DIckman, telegraph operator at the station. The lives of two Iraln erewi were saved a few nights sgo by bts per- formnn'?e of dutv.
11 Ick man recelve.l a measage to hold a train at the siding nnar Peters. Healartel across Ihe yards lo .("liver lh« disnatCi to the engineer, when hr wisatruek bv ao ap¬ proaching througli Ireig'tl. Hs was thrown about lorty leet Iro-n the trick. His skuU was fractured aol he was other wise bruised. He lay uoconaolousf,>r so'n-i minutes, an.l when he came to bis senses the through and local (relghl had morel on and he was lell slonr. None of Ihn crew had wltnesaed the acridant.
The operator reinembarel that a train was.schedule I to Ieava Malison, ant that thh would collide with Ihrlocal if nn order to hold It was nol aent. Ile draggsd him¬ self tnch bv Inch to the •tatton house, almost fnintlnc as he reached tbe opera- tor's desk. He would probably bave loat conaolousness again bad not hts brother Wliliara entered and caught htm. With bis broiher holding lilin tn his arma tbe opera¬ tor opened the key and "oa'd' thetbrongh Irelgtit and nottflot the chief diepalGher at Charleston of the departure of the looal. A cataatronhe was averted. Dlokman'i In¬ jurlea are serious.
iTlSHMTiTSBL
; Owners Have G ven Up Atl Hopes fat.) j Their Safe Arrlvil in Por«
CHICAGO AGAIN IN SERVICE.
WisBiNoTos. P. C. (8p*elan.~Tbe Chi¬ cago bas been detached Irom tba squadron of Rear-Admiral Sampson and haa sa1ie.t from Havana for Hampton Roads. The Ciilcago Is to heooma the Bagahip ol Rtar- A.lmlral Henry L. Howlson, wbo has t>eea asslgnel to command tbe South Atlantic statlou In South America.
This ntatlon was abandoned at Ihe be¬ ginning of the Rpantah war, the Bagshlp at that time being tbo Newark. She and two gunboats were brought North to take part In tbe war.
The last^duty ol the Cbicsgo wss s* flsg-
Stale ICnalnerr Adaina's lirporl.
Tho report of fornier Slate Engiueei I Adams, showing the canal w.irk done In | tho department over which ho prest.lo.l i :lurlng the year ISIIS, hns been trnnsinltted lo the Legialnture. A'nong olher things, he says: "In the execution of the cnnnl i Improvements, which havo luvolvud nn ex- I pendlturo of «!),000,000, but which hns siif- floed (or tho completion of only 200 oltho i 154 miles whloh It wns hoped to hnve Im¬ proved with thla sum, probably some nils- j takes were mnde. I think It iinlalr, how- sver, that those charge 1 with thu investi- I iattou so lar mado should have eoucelve i i It to lie their dutv to entirely overlook the inluoua iliitiea which the State Engineer , hnd to perlorm, and to hold hlm singly nnd | personally responsible, eveu to a criminal {
lent, for every error, oitlier of omission j
I'NITED STATES CRI'ISEIl CHICAOO. (Alter iiudergoiiig repairs nud alterations the warship hns been pinned lu nnd assigned to thn South Atlaulic Hiiuadron.)
eemhiy, aud becauae lie had declared to the Assembly that h" lyouid observe Ils rulings ia so fnr as he const.lered thom benelicial to i;ulia.
The Assemlily ngnln d.iclired that tho (3,000,000 was luaufflcleut. Senor Oonu'Viei; do (^tieaada. who nocompanled .Mr. Porter 111 t^uba, wn.s ntlnckeil by Seuora Oualherto Oumer., Saiiguiiy and Aguerro, who .ie- clnred that he hn.l nc:eil lo bnd faith and lieceivtMl them.
Oeneral .Maximo O imez has Isau'id a statement to the Cuban people and armv, part ol which Is ns follows:
"By the use of the supreme facultlns wllh which It l^en.l.iwel the Assembly, repre seiitlng the nrmv ouly. lina deposed in" as ("omrann ler-ln-Chlef of th" Cuban nrmy, which grade It conferre.l upon me during the Inst war. As Coiumunder-in-Chiel I al¬ waya followed tiio dictates of mv boat cou- rclenee nnd the cull ol grent untloonl needs. I endeavored In nil circumstances to fuinlt my duly.
"As a sincere mau 1 coule.ssl thank Ihem liecnusetheyrciliiveine.it grent pulilicnl obllgntlons,nnd alao leave mo (rec tu re. turn tomvaliuudoiied home, which, during thirlv vears of cintlnunl sirife lor the good of this country that I love so much, splrntlou. Foreign.
as been my ono . s 1 am. I did not ountry bylii'iping It ereennry i
to sorv
this
ijuently. since the ojipresslvo power of Spain has withdrawn from this land and lelt Cubn In (reeilom. I had ahoathed my sworl. thinking I had linlshod the mlsalon which I hnd voluntarily impose.I upuu my self. 1 am owel nothing. 1 retire con¬ tented and aatlsiled nt hnving lone all I e.iul.l (or tho benelit ol iny brothers. Wherever destiny rules that I make ray home there can the Cubans depend up.in a Irleiid."
, fbe Assembly la belug strongly crn aured by Cubans on nli sides, and thrrn were popular ilemonstratlons Sunday at- lernoon in favor of the deposed Oommau' • .•r-in-Chlef, the crowds shouting "Lo .g live Oome/.! ' and "Ileath to the Assem- lilyl" Oeneral Oomex received numerous visitors, all 01 whom assured htm of their affecliou and loyalty. There Is no doubt thnt a majority ol the peopb support hlm aa against thn Asaembly.
lieurral Oomez, It Is said, enjoys tbe full conltdeuce ol the Amerioan military au¬ thorities, and, although be says that hn is glad ol his new-found liberty, since It will enahle him to reluru home. II Is not li"lioved tliat h« will leave Cuba at present, Ile haa always Inaiste.i that an active share iu dis. tributing tbe money would fall to him, and nuul vlaer
OTIS TELLS SPAIN TO STOP.
lie Purlilds thr OITrr ot Money Por Ihe Krlearr ol Hpaalil. I'llsuarr*.
Mlvila, I'hillpplnB l8lni,Js (Uy Calil-- Oeueral Olla haa lorbldden the coutlnuau.'ii of the nsgoliatlona between the S|iaotah CommlBBlonera and the Filipino, lor the releHae ultheSpanlah prisoners held by th" unUves.
lils object in doing thu is preaumnhly t*. prevent the Filipinos Iron obtaiulug Ihn liumeuse Indemnity whb'h they demand fur freeing the prisoners, as the money woubl undoubtedly lie used in nlllog Ihe nalire -ause.
An Indlaa T*rrll«rr Plrr.
A strip ol country Ihree miles wide aii<t four miles long. Just uorth of liarlingtou ludiau Ageu-y, uear El Ueno, lni. Terr.. Una be.iu ilevaslatel pyaprairle fire. .Many bnud of i-atlle linlou'glug to the ludUll farmers wero liurne,! au.l much dnmagv ti properly was .lone. A squaw aud inr-;-. ludiau chlldreu were burno 1 to doath.
Tl.r I'raDsylvanla Troop* sfu*tcr*J Oul.
The rhlrternlh Peunsylvanl* was mus¬ tered oul at Algusta Oa., a few .lays ag .. The men were paid -ill lu coiiipaules, ao 1 nearly ttei eniiiu rngliueut linmedmteiy leil I.r huOic.
ahip of tho While Sqiiadr.in, 'jnder com¬ mand nf Rsar-Admlral Walker. She was ono of the flrst veaantsof the new navy,bul was not Htted for mo.lerii sea aervlce, and for several years paat haa been undergoing repairs which have praollcallv made bar n new ablp.
TROOPS TO RESCUE A TRAIN.
Oalnrrd Hrrors uf San Juan lo I>lc Ou Snowbound I'aasrnger* io Ihe West.
CBxrEMst. Wyo. I Speoiai). —rhe colore.l troopa at Fort Russell, four eompaoies o.' the rwoniy-four Infantry, volunteered on Saturday tu go out as Bhovellersia tha at¬ tempt to bring the Cheyenne and Northern train, which, wllh forty-two paasenger., has heen snowbound ac Iron Mountain, flftv miles from here, for two weeks. Oao hundred were acaepted, and formed a re¬ lief party under Mayor Sehnltger and At¬ torney Ureekons, and look out a train loaded with provlalons.
The anoW'b.iund passengers have bee-i living the pnst week on a stenr killed Suu¬ day bv Superintendent Rasliach, wbo is in charge of thn train. Twi relief trains which linva gone out aro in the drifts, between here aud Imn Mouulaio, a llercn blizzard ot snow and wind wbloh iirevalled fer tweivs hours a few days ago having snowed tham in. Th* Iroopa going oul are thn one* wbo flrst roaebad tbe oreat nf San Juau Hill tail July, sad It believed tbey will break the bloohado.
NATIVE TROOPS TO BE ENLISTED.
Adiulnlalralloii lleolde* lo Trv Ihe Ea- iwrlinrnl In Cuba and ill* Phlllpplaa*.
Wnaai.soT.iN. 1). C. (Special). As au ex¬ periment the Administration haa daoided lo enlist some native troopa iu 0ab4 and the rhilippines, and perhaps in Porto Hlco. fo Bsoerialn bow native troops will I'onlorm to the restrictions .if ao Ainerlcau soldier's life. Secretary Alger bas autbor- Ixed Oeueral Otis ar Manila and General Brooke at Havana to each organlae a bat- lalllon, one of C'ubans aad tba other ot Filipinos. He baa Bent also a telegram to Oeneral Henry, oommandlng .the Depsrt- raent of Porto Rleo, reqaeatlog bis views ou the Bubjeot ol eailBting natlvaa of that island. Ills reply wa* favorable.
To Make I'p Ih* DaBell.
A clause In tba Sundry Civil bill passsil by Congreaa permila HearalaryOage, oltbe Treaaury Departmant. Wasblngton, to use (110,000,000 of Central I'anlfle iioteslo make up this year's deflcit.
Pour Killed In Calllalaa.
In thu midst ol a blinding si:uw storm, making lit Impoaaibia to ae* Hlir last ahead. Iwo Burlington eogloes coliidad head-on Imlween Llocoln and Waat Lin¬ coln, Neb., a few days ago. Pcnr were killed, their namea being Hio>~ Doran, Mart<inls\ and Uubols.
Naval tCallBUaaBl Lancthaaad.
The term ol enlistment (or ganaral aer¬ vlce In the United Htates Navy bas bean Io¬ creaaed Irom three to lour years. Order* Irom the Navy Lirpartineot.WaablnttcD.to Ibis effect have lieeo recelvei al Iba Navy Yard, Boaton.
.lumpod lo Ileatb In llrr Father's ITat*.
.Mis-- Lucy laul, twenty years old, laughter ol Joseph Faur, a riilred pa:t if Knoivllle, Tenn., kllle-l herself a I. .tnyn ago b> Jumping Irj:u a raliro iirilge ito leel uigu luti tne I'euue-., hivvr. nij.7 ««« ru Hivaild and had :ua repusle.! efforts to couixlt aulclle. li .ntner was wit.'i nrr wheu an* lanpo'l.
"Cnbaa Slavy" Waal* Rccrnll*.
Airbiilous patriot* are adTertlslug lii Iluvann papers fi-r re-:rults t-jt 'tho new ( ubau -SavT ' wUMh lUey profew Is al>ju: t.i Oe luriued. i'be appoal la «slM>rlall.
¦lira'.'ted to forukar mmi'ioym. ul tbu spaais . \a.,.
Cyrllaa ](««**.
Th* French Touring Cluh, alter Indulg iug In a little aritbmatio, eoaata on bavlag something like (90,000 in Ibe bank at tbe end ot IHM,
Tba two weeks cycle racing louraamaal, whli:h Included a six-day and a Iwanly- four-hour affair, al San FraaelBoo, raaolled lua to** of aeveral I bousaad dollars lo its promoters.
A kind of race Ihal la not entirely naw but which la uncommon and oarer bas been trie.l out to dlacover wbetbarorout It 1* a auci-eaaful attraction, li tb* swaap slake bicycle race, i'he promolara Ibl* year propose t., ruu a uutnhsir of events of Ihia charai'ter .luriug Ibe suiamar.
II all rider* on the roads hsd the 'loalrol ,1 thrlr wheels wbleh la poaaaaaed by thoa* who can ride "hands off," thar* would be ..•a wabbling und lower accldeat*.
The Natiooal Cyetlals' Unioo, o( Eaglaml, laa decided nol tu limit ill nalloaal ehsoi- plooahlp* to Engll*h-born a'>ol*alaala. Aa jrratolore, the cbampioDshlpa will be opea IO the world.
A French court ha* juat mads a dselaloa that aalabilaba* lb* pulsl la Kriuu* tbat wb*a a bieyeilal !¦ atiaeked by a doa. asd in allempllug lo dnveii off maala with in- ;ury, tbe ownef ot Iba dng la liable.
It Is a mc.gnlud (act Ibal tbia year will l«i one ol big teaou •aupoftad bv Iha bl- -yele maaulaeturM*. Oleoaia*. -.hay will uut tie paid a* In 'Mand M, aad yat maay ol the iia*t m*a bave raeelved good offer*.
OVER THREE HUNDRED ABOARD.
Tb* Valar or th* Sieaiaar* aaa Tkatt rargors PlaeMl al •S.SOO.aaa—All al Them Prelakl Koala—Thay OaiTta< N* raaaengam—Sappoaed la Kave r*rl*h*d la ih* Rer*iil Blarma.
Ntw Y.JRE Citv (Speoiai).-0( tha tsaay steamers reported overdue alter th* Sevan storms ol early February, ten have aat since baen reported, and are now glvaa iij . as lost. Tbey add ten to Ibe record ot van- sets "never beard from." Tbey ara la ad* dltlon to those wrecked on laa ahoies ot i abandoned at sea, tbe crews ot whioh hava been taken offend brought lo port. latha case ot these tan tber* is lillla bopa tkal sny ol tbeir men will evar airsta ba seaa, (bougb there ia ol sours* always a ebaaaa ol a mlaaing seaman turning un •Iter (MBf weeks aboard soma slow-going ablp af> riving at a port on tbe otber aide o) tba globe. None ol Ihaaa vessels carried pas¬ sengers. Tba liat (ollows:
Arona, Brillsh, 3400 tons. Captain J. P. Baxter. Thompson Line; timber laden, (rom rortlsnd, M*.. January 17. (or Loa. don.
Crott, British. 2700 tons. Captain Laad, Arrow Line; laden with grain and gaaaial inerebandlse, Irom New Vork, Janaary M, (or Leitb. ,n
Port Melbourne, British, SOOO tone, cap¬ tain Smith,lunder obarter to tbs Atlantle Transport Line: laden with grain and general cargo, trom New York, Jaaaary 27, (or London.
Laugbton, Brlllab, 'MOO tons. Oaptata- Hodgson; laden with grain and ebtt^a,^ Irom Norlolk January 39, (or Oop~" hagen.
PietoD, British, 9400 tonr, Captsla C. /. Payne:iadea with grain and cotton, Iroa Norlolk January 30, lor Sllgo.
Minister Msybsob, Oermsn, SttO toaa. (3aplsin Prellei laden wllh oil In balk. Irom New Tork Jsnusry It, for Baabam.
Allegbeny, Amerioan, 3000 tons, Oaa.: tain MoOifllvsry, owned by L. La«ka«-. haob: laden with oU In bulk, Ira* Ptm York, January 16, vis Ualltax JaaaalT tk, tot Dover.
Oity of Wakedeld, BrltUb, MW tOM, Captain Townsend; Isden with grata aM genersi manbandlse, from Morwalk, Jm< uary M, tor Rotterdam.
Oora Forster, British, 2400 tons, Oaptato . J. B. tVoolay; laden with eottoa, fiogt. Savannah, January 33, tor Liverpool.
Oberon, British, 3300 tons.Oaptaia Laalyt laden with grain, Irom Baltimore, Jaaaaqf 36 tor Antwerp.
Tbe value placed by ataipping naa o« tbeae vessels snd tbeir cargoes ti tl,M,- 000. o( wbloh tbrae-flltbs rapteaeata tbat ol theveaaaU snd two-fl(tbs that ol Iba Mr- goaa. Tbe orevrs aggregate bet waaa IM and too men.
ITALY'S ACTION IN CHINA.
MInisier Canavare aiaU* Tkat VIel aaaa Might I^^are area! Britain.
Rous, Italy (By Oable).-In ths Obaabar ol Uepuliaa on Tuasday Admlrsi Oaaaraia, MinlBter of Foreign Affairs, mads a aoa« prabenstve slatemenl regardlag ttaly^ aa> lion In China:'"' He contlrmed the rep reeall of HIgnor HnHIno, llallaa ' at Peking, nnd announoad that Italy I
obtained the approval of Qreat Britala i .
Japan before demanding the ooaesaaloa al Ban-Uun.
Orest Britain, however, had reqaastad, he said, that force abould ool be emptovad"' and had promlaad In return to clreMt ^ diplomatic aupport to Italy at tbe Ooart at . Pekln.
Otber (riendiy powers, the Minister aoa- 1 tiDued, were then notided sad Iadleata4 Ibair se^uleaoanoe.
He expreased confldeiic* In the uHlstata" Bueeess ol Italy's polley, snd remladad tba Cbsmber tbst Ilsly's duly wss to retraia ' from lorce ss fsr ss possible, sinoa aha hsd gone to Oblus wllhonl say pre* : vious provocstiva Incident, ot violaflM" rigbis to Justify a resort lo vlolaaaa,. whiob might. If adopted, disturb tba >^ Interustional eqnillbrlum In tha Far lai| ;y and exerelfe a fatal reflex aollon la !•• ; rope, besides injuriuft Great Brilain, WbOj'id bad proveil herself Italy's cordial Irlaad, and exposing lo conflict other Powers tbaC- bad shown tbemaelvea Ihe well-wtaibers ol ' Italy.
CUBAN ASSEMBLY MUST CO
WasHisuTos, I) C. (.Spei'iall.-The I nounoemeut waa made on I'lieadav by tbO'^ War Department that tin. Cuban Assembly waa lo be dispersed by Oeueral Brooks,aa4 Ihal Iba military authority of the United Slates would be aaserled until iitberwlao; i ordered. This move, made ujion thn haeta'-^ of a pcpulnr deniunstraliou In Havana againsl the Assembly, and In lavor ol Oaa- eral Oomet. indioates Ihe opinion of Iba* Administration Ihal tbe Cuban Aasembly la a bodv oaleulaled lo provoke and looreasa disordar.
Tbe opinion of Ihe War Depsrtaeat seema lo be tbal tb* Cuban Assembly la a . bodv of adventurers, uaurping snihorlty with the bupe of being able to cxton (roa tbe Treaaury ol the United Htates larnr sums ol money Ihan Oeosrai Oomaa kaa Intimated would be aooaptable ss aoapaa. . satinn for tha (Juban army tbat be Is aboal to diaband. The Aaenibiy is nnl regarded ns al ali repreaentatlve, snd Its authottly Is prsolloslly nothing.
Oeneral Brooke baa not baan deflnltnly loslrnatad aato bow ba shall gal rid of tba Cuban Aasambly. Tbe manner ol Ihe dla persal la led to Us discretion.
HE THREATENED THE PReSIOCNT.
Henry If allar Arraatad lu Monlraal Ml llapaly Ooaaal aoriasa's CoqiiilalBt.
Moaraaat., Quebae (Speoiai).—Beniy Mullar, a Oermao, wb.j haa served la tha UnUad Statea army, waa arreetad bera a (ew days agn ou a charge made affstait bim by United HIate* Deputy Consnl aor- man that be ibreaiened lo kill PreaMait MoElnley.
Muller addressed a latter to PrasidaM Aogall ol Ann Arbor Uulversity, stattM Ibal be latended lo go to Wnsblagloa aal kill President MeKlnley beoaaae ba w*« hnstlie to the Oerman* In Ibe ttUem Muller la held for extradllloa.
Dectors Aaeasad «l Manalaagblerf'
Prealdenl Edmund Soaobon, o( tke Mlib- Board ol Haallb, aad Dr. QaHaui' Kohnke. of tbe Oily Board, hava b«i»; ladlnied for aliened aaaalaagbtar W, East FellBlola for bavlag aaaaed a Mlfe In Ihat parlab tbroagh tba latfodaatta*', of yeUow fever froa Hev OHaatfc - U. Tbe indletaeat la tba taaaU al ni . sbarge of Dr. MaeKova. wbo plalaa4 tlMt' i
«uar||« Vi vr* aamvaAvtwme wwtv^^e^w^m .
the two doetots bad heU tbat yallo* fem'. vt typbald MfJMis 1 tbey -
notify tbe eoaiity parlabaa of tl
was aot aa infeeMaaa aa typbald aa4JMls^ qnaraatlaable, aad that tbey daaUMflt*
alleged fever'. The wanraabl tMM^x served si New Orleaas and tha tmttmm..:^ were taken lo last Pettnlela.
Malaa Moalaipol CleetlOM. Manlelpal eleetloaa have baaa haid ta aaay Maine towaa aad ettlaa. VMl tbg exeaplloa of llddelord, wherethate wmtm''' lively soateal, tbe vote was aagH, M« Btddeford tbero vas a poeallar atala Wi affalit. Ooloaal L. U. Seadall, eoav~' of the First Mala tbe ree
pablleaas for Marer - . -„
bemoerata, bal ba waa beatea, aat tats Clllseas' aoalaee woaliy a good i
dae Biwlaeat oi lalaatfy !• , «ma aoalaalod by Iha ttt^ farer aad ladetiad by tta;
Oaraaaa Arwy iBereaae Hsfaasd.
The Ralebalag. by a vole ol 303 to llt,.'^ baa rejected tba army Inereaee aakad fag' by tbe Garman Oovoramanl.
Haaaed ¦¦ MU Owa Clellmv*. Bobert Lewta wa* banged at AjlaaM, Oa., a few day* ago lor Ibe nsarder Cbarlaa Hayaas, oa the gallows MlHl { Lewis Iwo >ears ago, whan etaple>a4C~ workaaa. Cbarlee Hayaas was la* t aaa ef a sew balldlng Iber* aad _ obarged Lawts. Tb* lalter aal ¦ayaaalt,' Ueoaeibar loal aad aavi Um lo dealb.
I Twelva FarMi la tlia Jfertb aea.
A ateam trawler lasted a'. Abardaea, ^ »e}|laad,a few day* a^o, Iwu *ogiaeaM|f^ aad a seaaaa belvaalag t<i Ibe MeraagM Btaaaer Idiael, wbleh lonndaeed la f North Ilea. Twalve other awaber**! rfww .if lb* Idroai war* kau
^m
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Nassau County Review 18990317 |
| Date | 1899-03-17 |
| Month | 03 |
| Day | 17 |
| Year | 1899 |
| Volume | 4 |
| Issue | 20 |
Description
| Title | Nassau County Review 18990317 |
| Date | 1899-03-17 |
| Month | 03 |
| Day | 17 |
| Year | 1899 |
| Volume | 4 |
| Issue | 20 |
| Sequence | 1 |
| Page | 1 |
| Type | tiff |
| Mode | grayscale |
| BitsPerPixel | 8 |
| DPIX | 400 |
| DPIY | 400 |
| FileSizeK | 43394 |
| FileName | 18990317001.tif |
| FullText |
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