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Show I The Story of a Designing Woman and an Innocent Young Man lfy and by tlie i hint ul Illness, a By HOWARD FIELDING The Salvation of Whitey bee Bowen atfeeierecejeerer 3 ! a 3 CWilbL 2 & '2 1IM. by OrlM W. laok i $ IliERE vai vvvvJiV-J- Pi a woman affairs, whom destiny ap- pointed to be the sal Will ley vation of Bowen, and a very remurkabla appointment It waa. Had 1 In been deatiny'a place I ahould not ' have selected lier for such a service. Hha would have aeeined to me much more likely to destroy than to save him, or any other man in whom she happened to take an Interest. Yet aside from a single instance of heartless and mercenary conduct I know of nothing reprehensible that she ever did. ttlie was. In fact, a mystery Slie arrived in the rough little city' of Caril-jui- i. X, Um on- - the edge, of an October afternoon' and went to the Merchants' hotel, where she wrote upon the register. "Mrs. Celia, Lome and maid. The maid (tame a few hours lster by a train from the opposite direction. She was g colored w oinan of middle age and of g singularly number demeanor. There whs an ill founded rumor afterward dial 11 rs. Lome came from Hi. Louis ' gnd the insld from Denver. The lady herself waa Mlender. dark rjed and aomewhat Intense lit her planner, yet always under control. Khe had narrowly missed the fatal gift of beauty spoken of by the old romancers; her face was spoiled by high, prominent cheekbones and thin, straight lip, tote waa not past thirty and might have been believed had she called herself twenty-livexcept that nobody ever Mieved lira, Lome. That was one of her peculiarities. 1 know of only a single serious falsehood In which she was detected, yet long before Hint time hud leumed to distrust her statement! as if they had been uttered by- a haam as I it So far aware, bitual liar. waa the same with all who became acquainted with her In Carillon, and this was no secret from herself. Hhe used to tnuke a Jest of It while declaring that she waa the moat truthful of. women, liven Whitey. liowen, who wae in hive with her, could not take her word, and If she euld that the sun waa whining he would glance out of the window nervously and be BMbanied of himself the next Instant. We called him "Whitey because of his pale yellow hair and very light gray eyes. He was a handsome fellow and wonderfully well built. Hla father waa a Kaunas fanner and Was called well t do, as we learned from the son, but Jaler developments proved that the elder liowen must have been a bit of a nilHcr and extremely reticent about hie YTfJfS-tl- ec : for he way worth fiv? time as much money as tlie nieinlwrs of hla own He had sent household supposed. "Whitey to the Ohio Stale university, and the boy had made an excellent record in arhiihirsliip and athletics. he liad aiiuiocd that bumptious suianiority which one reads alamt in vvvV , ; Bowen begun to said to him seemed to produce un effect tin n. Indeed, the exactly opposite to that which would son showed au hi isu.g unxicty. hut time been the ordinary sense of the i no go it did wants, showed no great liking for him unit did not encourage him to seek thing w liich lie i ill one of those iter society. Yet he waa druwn lo her. would have callvt ' nut as s man may lie tantalised into was not said, ai.t after that whivh la difficult of striving w hit it was. attainment, but because he felt from m me after a little tin' It became ubvn-i.very bcgumtng that she was Ida was really friend. while that the oil In- toward he g and that ,nr failing Mrs. Lome la tlie most sympathetic in urge woman I've ever met. said ha to me knew it right wcl. him.suchut to without go "Whitey" after a ctuivcrsslioa la which we three cess. He could n ' lead between the had been parties. be was not old lines of those lot I remember staring at him In amassenough to recogt.ur ih.it presentiment ment, for of all tits cold blooded, cyn..in of advanced ical talk which cornea to that ever I heard in thla world years when the end ol the long Jour- Mrs. Lome's upon that occasion waa .i i.' memhad a lie draws ney really easily the chief. What element of symory of hia father, i.isgr.l and strong, pathy with anybody or anything bel'i-tnot othwas he could ttiat slid Whitey had been able to And in It erwise than as he lu l been. I waa unable to discover. He felt her i Iiowi one was. which letter There and that was syuiiaitliy, lie moved Whitey inure uihii the others. the end of it. declared, It contained a bit f news about a girl 1 ought to aay here that lira. Lome's In the home town, and this news, conduct while in Curillou was severely i iiiixeiiuenee than a no of mule though For Instance, she hud a new gown so little in fact, that 1 have at tlie hotel, but neither private parlor waa what it had entirely forgotten Bowen nor any other man waa received .been expressed wiili ,i n ude slid simple in It, there waa milhlng to pretenderness. The ,,,ii"inv was one of vent. though In the public imrlur or upon the un of which writer those Mrs. Lome entertained all her romunce would giie u itch to be able to veranda inale and though she to him took acquaintances, pen. yet the like ol it will the wrong able of every nmral lil-i- i. t t i H j chance i i . I s i E 1 v .in question and applauded every sinner whu waa mentioned in her presence, she preserved a certain delicacy of language and theme, and required It from all with whom alia conversed. Therefore her utterly wrung liearlcd view of life waa the mure duiigeruua. An exultant sympathy with evil may he expected of a coarse sod rude transgressor, and it Influence I discounted, but when a woman of exterior refinement takes It upon heiself lo be the devil's advocate she alund a chance to carry her case la tha courts of thla perior. It is certain, SOME world. "Mrs. however, I hut he was going downhill und that the life lie led. especially hi preposterous neglect of rest, would wreck Ids glorious youlh. He iieeincil to dread a pillow and would ncvv't go to hod while there waa anybody up to keep him eomiHiny. We who loved the boy used lo exhaust our ingenuity in schemes to lure him home from the various bulling plscea of the lilght, where he did no great liarm except to waste the hour when lie should have slept. After he hud liecii in Carillon about six niuiitliM lie began to receive regular letter from lit father; hi mother wui long since dead. I saw some of the letters. The earlier ones were full of a stubborn pride und an offended authority. They gave the boy an option of submission to the paternal ceirpf.e v. Jit and were more than vague in regard to the reward that would follow. Tnen I la gun to delect an undercurrent of anxiety und nil old iiiun'u longing fur hla soil. The feeling wus sternly re tressed; only n pit rase here und there revelled It. There were quaint, almust laughable, hints of pecuniary assistance in i iihc tlie young man should lie l;i difficulties, but no money ever came. Whitey u I ways replied lo these epistles, but with distressing brevity. Tile tone wus always Hrfectly respectful, but it must have been direful for ail anxious father to read thoae deadly HASTY boy goodby. An hour later a man came running to niy office where I was sitting alone and In gloom, glad that "Whitey" had gone, yet missing him to tha bottom of . Lome at Ira up all the good me, auld Wlilley to me one day. "That woiuau will be my salvathat's III "YOl' HAVE SAVED ME. tion. he would plunge Into wild diminution and make a mlaerable end. 1 now know that Mrs. Lome had more accurate Inforinatluu regarding "Wliltey" pro poets than lie himself had. She happened to have a correspondent In hla home town, and she had learned Dial Howell the elder waa almost a rich man, that he was 111 very bad health and that he still loved hia son. She had not come to Carillon with thla knowledge. My opinion is that ahe hud been aent there ae a result of aoiiie treaty with her family, following a scandal which Involved some serious iiecunlary Irregularity of here a crime. In face It la needless to stale the evidence upon which I base tills verdict, but it i fairly conclusive and ia supported by (he fact Hint ahe remained at Carillon exactly one year, deaiailrlng. I'lani the other hand, she openly encouraged the young inun'a wildness, laughed at hia best aspirations and praised him fur the worst of hla escapades. Among the singular contradictious of her Influence I will tiienliou thla: Though he waa drawn lo her so strongly at first and fur a time gave up hi thought of going home, he presently begau to move Iu the opposite iilrec-tiu- n. . "I dont know, I don't know, he would eay to me while pacing up xnd W iRDH. down my room In the dead hours of the night. "I've been talking with Mra. never saw I the comic papers, but miy Lome thle evening. Perhaps, after all, In nor him In any other sign of it 1 ought to go home. college man, for that matter. However, "Did aha tell you to? I would ask. In the the father and son, quarreled "No, no; not exactly, he would adsummer following llie young inau's mit with liealtatlon, in fact, aha graduation, and Whitey admitted to rather admired my It; spoke against too me that It was because he knew spunk and all that. Hut somehow she , much. me see made that It's the right thing "I tried to make my father over," "MRS- - LOKNK 1st THE MOST SYMto do." said he. I. couldn't be autlHlicd with PATHETIC WOMAN 1 EVER MET. And then he would once more add Ills him aa be was. only when he forgets his art. It showed customary phrase that she would be I'pon another occasion he was more that this girl wav dear lo the father be- the salvation of hltn. explicit and stated that the first grave The situation was in some respect cause he always thought of hi anti quarrel arose from his attempt to rewhen lie looked at Iter. Then, Indeed, Incomprehensible to me. I knew that form his fathers table etiquette. it the boy waa In love with Mrs. Lome hud strong hope pf. sending Whitey appeared that liowen senior hsd the that he had no reason to be hopepernicious hHbll .of eating with hla short sentences. Three or four of them i home, but Mrs. Lome appeared in and ful. (She woe euppoeed to be a widow, knife and that he bitterly resented any penned, in un enormous hand covered Carillon and siKiilvd the chance, From the flrst meeting between them but aa the information came from herInterference with hla liberty In thla half a sheet of puiier and conveyed as wholly unreliarespect. There were some haty word little information as ever I saw in a thla woman exerted a strange and con self alone it was to mewere Whatever ah ble. and though she really free tradictory influence. and a suggest Ion that Whitey would letter. WERE THERE Lome, and she told him not to go. That evening he settled all hia affairs and climbed aboard the engine of a feat freight bound eaaL The engineer wae Andy Russell, a splendid fellow and a good friend of Whitey." I waa at the atation In a pouring rain to bid tbo my heart. "No. ;i has been wrecked!" cried the messenger, bursting in upon me. She's all piled up a mile thla aide ef Leonard's. The engine crew are dead, and Whitey''' gone with them under tlie engine, the whole lot. What do you think of that? I did not aay what 1 thought I ran to the station bareheaded and did not utter a word till I arrived there. This I what had happened; A washout had undermined the rails at a point about fifteen miles from Carillon, leaving them standing with nothing under them, aa will samel I me happen. Like gliosis. the two bright lines of Iron gleamed In the rays of the headlight : like ghosts, they vanished, and the great iiiuiliine plunged downward. The cure that followed piled tlieniselves so high above the pit that the wrecking derrick which was aent out from Carillon could nut reach the top of the pile. 1 obtained permission to go out with the wrecking train, and whtl tl wsi being made up I waited at the station. I aloud outside In the rain, loo sick at heart lo feel the need of shelter. Suddenly a hand clutched my arm, and I turned to face Mrs. Lome. Ia this true? aba cried. "Is it true that lie Is dead?" f s, e, would not make Whitey Howen'e any better, for Mrs. Lome would never marry a poor man. The were over helming that the end of this lomunre would be conventional. yet no leu tragic for it commonplace quality. "Whitey would be led finally into a mad proposal: he would repeat ll many lime, and at last, t h-'- lictler learn how to earn his final before he set himself up aa an uutlunlly on feeding, and thla was the trivia! beginning or much sorrow. "Whitey went forth from his father's house: hut. unlike the prodigal of Scripture, he carried liu Krlfnn of goods with him. After brief wanderings lie csine to Carillon, where he evemuully found employment aa a brukcinan fur the Hunts Ke railroad. The schedule of his toil gave him most of his leisure In I'urllloii, which was not a good place for a young nuin. Wtiiley" liowen brought few bud habits with him; It wus. Imiced. quite for they could be acquired in our city without the slightest diffi1 culty. uud i eg n-- t iu say that Whilcy showed cousiileralilu aptitude. The fact Ih that lie fulL disgraced by his quarrel with Ida father. He hud Hie terrible handicap of a start in life which destroyed h!M self esteem. Moreover, he hud alfSolulelyio interest In railroading and did not cure to rise, although he might have done so easily, for lie was a limn so thoroughly reliable by nature flat not even strong drink could destroy this quality in him. and. he laid the Immense advantage of a splendid personality, which iinule liliu known and remembered by hia su- 1er-Inil- i . though during the last month or two she rnual hava been anxious to leave. Meanwhile "Whitey drifted more and more Into her Influence, and yet he waa ever more clearly persuaded that he ought to go home. I am sura that he had already proposed to her one and had accepted a flat refusal precisely aa he always look everything that ahe said exactly opposite. He was even cheered by the rejection. Then came a really grave letter from home. Tho father's elate of health wae nearly aa bad aa It could bo, and ho wrote lo plead for hia sun's return. "Whitey" took this lottor to Mrs. ' Yea. said I. "II la true. Kite thrust a sheet of yellow paper before my eyes. There was a lamp above niy head, and I could read the words, it wbs a telegram from "Whitey' Howen's home from Mrs. Lome's correspondent there. It contained the Information that "Whltey's father had died that afternoon, leaving the bulk of hla properly to tale oon, aa amaunt exceeding I1M.9N. That Is mine, said she in a lane aa i cold aa steel. "I am hla wife." "Hia wife! I cried. "When did thla happen? "That will be proved at the prepay lime. said ahe. "The money ia mine. And, Isn't ll queer, she added In an Indescribable tone, "I aent him a note tu be handed Iu to tlie engine cab at Hlayton's, three miles up. 1 applauded hla resolution and told him to go beau und never come back." "I got your note," said a voice behind me, "and I came back. You have saveij me. It was "Whlley Bowen. Aa ever, he had taken her advice by contraries. He had walked back along the rails in the drenching rain because she had told hint lo go on. At night of him Mrs. Lome screamed the flrst emotional outburst to which I ever knew her to yield. Then she turned and fled through tha rain. I gasped. "Did you heai "Yes, said he wearily. "It isn't Iruei I suppose she had made some sudden plan to prove our marriage; but, of course, ahe can't do it now. I shall never ace her again. Aa soon aa tills wreck is cleared I shall go home, too late, too late! But thla has made a man of me, my friend. My salvation has been in It somehow." A ROUNP TABLG FOR JUVSHILS RSAPSK-f Vr : SOME DONKEYS ARE WISE ANIMALS i By ALBERTA 4 PLATT XY a time you have heard the expressions "stupid donkey I .ind "stubborn aa a donkey. Now, the fact is that the dim-- ;. much more shrewd and inlelll-- :. Ilian nuiny another animal that let credit for having more sense. It la the tiniest Shetland pony. They are so strong that a small .one can often bear the weight of a man who could lift the little creature In hla anna. A young English lady with the odd name of Miss I'leasnnpe Rugglea-Hrls- e amuses herself by pelting and training young dnrikeys. When you hear what they can do you will never again think a donkey is stuidd. Miss Ruggles-Urls- e buys. bar donkeys when they are very young and taken care of them herself, so she will be sure they are always kindly treated. Bhe feeds them, trains them to drive and teaches them tricks. Bhe even makes their harness. Four of her pels are triilued to go lu harness together, and Alisa Rugglea-Hrls- e may fiequenlly tie seen bowling along the roads holding the rein over her donkey team. Her home la ten miles from llie railway station, and the youAghidy drives her friends to and from, trains In her carriage drawn by Ibfe funny little animals. They cy ii. easily travel ten mile an hour. Two of hr especial fuVurilea are named Jack and Jill. Elia liaa four-in-ha- JACK HEC.H FOR HIS DINNER. fnip tills humble creature is stubborn, but centuries of bad treatment from bnmsn licinge have made it no. The aa tender and careful donkey ninl her 1 children' as a human mother cuuld be. In some part of France, and Hwitxerland donkeys' xrilk nil nourish delicate and ailing liuiiia.ii babies when they could not be Iwid alive on any other diet. All varieties of the domesticated don-be- y sre descended from the wild sas families of Asia and Africa. The Aai-d- c wild hns Is found in western and t'eatral Asia, especially In Persia and Tib-- i. u is go swift that not even a Fieytiuund or an Arabian horse can tali'll it. Its flesh is eaten for food 'hen it can be shot, as It sometimes is. The domestic donkey ds descended from the African wild ass, which was caught and broken In to the use oMiuin aa far baik a a history goes. There are sev-e- rt varieties of domestic donkeys, un of them aa large when fun grown a email hone, others no bigger than In i sii SHADOW. llttla shadow that goes In and out with me. And what can be the nss of hhn ia mors than I can see. ser and addressed it to the emperor wry Ilka me, from tha heels hours play and are tired of their toys and lie la very, in Berlin. Wllliln twenty-fou- r up ta the bsad. of Ha dispatch Ihe local authorities games let them go into Ihe kitchen and And I sea him Jump before me when I handed the mother a sum of looney and ask tha cook for some eggshells.' You Jump Into my bed! The funniest thing about him la tha way instructed the lad to present himself have no Idea what pretty little ornaha likes to at the Htettin school for tha prepara- ments may be made from three dainty Not at all like grow proper children, which ia officers. and noncommissioned a I wars very slow. If shells with the aid ef bits of twigs tion of sumetlmna shoots up taller, like an he For physically lit he will be admitted and plenty of sealing wax. India rubber ball. A useful ornament la a little receptrained for the army. And he sometimes gets so liltls that tacle for burned matches. Thla la mads there's none of him at all! Robert Louis Stevenson. A Cmrm Heak Dell. by using three fairly long twigs whlrh For the wee girlie a corn husk doll la are tied securely In the middle at anAs bad as a bey. the nicest companion. To make a doll gles so that they stand firmly together. of thla kind dampen some corn hooka A small neat of moss la next formed and and when soft tie them In the center. preseed into the niche, and fluflde the Roll cotton batting Into a small ball, moaa la placed half of ail eggshell tie securely and cover with hunks for which liaa been painted a bright red dolly's head. For the arms take aa color. many strips aa you think will make a A funny toy Is an old lady going te nice fat arm and slip them up between market. The whole of an egg la need the section neat to the tied neck. Lay for her body and a smaller one turned husks over tha shoulders and under the lengthwise for the head. Twlga form arms crossing back and forth until the the arms and Ices and tiny bill ef flat arms are atrong. Twist and tie these shell the feet. All these members are at the wrist. Now you have made the attached to the body by means of sealdoll foundation, upon which the ether ing wax. and tha face la pul In with husks are folded until the IllUe lady pen and Ink. This old lady looks very has a good figure. nice when dressed in a cloak and hood The face ie painted in with ink. the of colored crinkled paper. All kinds of eyee ere colored wtlh bluing and the fanny animals may be made by using lips are stained with currant Juice. feathers and qnllls. Do net attempt to Dully may be dreaaed In husks or as cut the sheila Into ahape, but let them A DONKEY AND HEN BABY. an everyday little glri. suggest lileaa lo you. If you wish to A boy may make hla com husk doll use an entire eggshell make a hole in were dead till ahe gives him the word cunning beast knew the gardener had Into an Indian bVave by fringing the each end and blow out the contents. In come to life again. When he Jumps traced him by his tracks. husks to look Ilka Indian clothes and One esn hardly believe a donkey sticking chicken feathers In the hair. up after dying for hia country Miss A barer Waer. Huggles-Bris- e gives him aoine delicacy would lisve sense enough lu cover up A asld to hla alstur the ethlittle boy Hnnclio Is to eat, making him aland upon hla hind Ida tracks, but this Jual what Her Proper Title, LIMIe Janet Mamina, ia a man called er day: legs and beg aa If lie were a dog. It ia tried lo do. H wulked In among the "I bet I can coax you te act fire te rare fun to see Jack and Jill go through plants again sod cropped the leaves off a mister? dress. your Aunt Clasie (who has been to bring to the went Yea. one. back then their tricks. Mamma hla favorite darling. Well. I know you can't! she cried her niece home train a children's parLittle Janet Then I suppose a womDonkeys when well treated make gen- walk. Hut as h did this he actually scornfully. tle and affectionate peta for children, scraped the dlriover hla tracks. destroy- an Is a mystery, Isn't a be, mamma? ty) Your Angers must be almost fro"Well, I'm willing to wager my new zen, Peggy. Why don't you put your arho can have endless sport with a liting the telltHle hof marks. He thought A Him Puaale. Jackknife." hands In your nice warm muff? tle cart and one of these small fellows. he could not be traced if hia hoof All right. laughed ahe. "I'll wager full of mince pie. Peggy I cant; 9ne family thut owned such a pet used marks were not there, but he pawed my Parle doll that you cannot." ' to let the animal run free In the gur-dthe earth about so awkwardly that he Then the boy began: The Lamented Canary. giving him to understand thut he only made the plsce where he trod look "Please set fire to your dress! Please, Teacher -- Bessie; name one bird thut must keep off the flower beds. Hut worse than it did before, so that Mr. Is now extinct. please do! once or twice Ssncho saw something Ssncho wsa easily found out In spite of "Are you tired?" aslced hla ulster at Little Bessie Dick. to hia In very templing one of hia knavery. palate "Dick! What sort of a bird is length. the beds. He stepped off the walk and "Well. I've iron my bet all right I Into the flower plot and hdped himself the gehenlbey. The Kaiser said that I would coax you to do H. and "Our canary. Tho cut egtlncted to the delicate plant. The gardener saw A schoolboy recently I have, said the bay. him." 8un-lihis hoof trucks and gave a wrote to flic Emi"ror William from the New the brother and sister are trying whipping., Pa nr ho understood perfect Pomeranian village of Nakel a lettr Riddle. to solve tho bet. and ho lo wondering U l!r that the whipping waa to make him In which he graphically described hia What U that which tha more you take know what he would get if he stole widowed mother's perpetdhl struggle Find the name which ia printed in he wants the doll, and she lu wondering from it the larger it grewa? A holm If ahe w aula tha Jackknife. again. It was very odd, too, but this with poverty aqd begged for a chance each of the circles. I have a litelMm,, . its n. DONKEY ' FOCR-IN-HAN- taught them lo die for Iheir country and obey other word rtf command. When ahe says ''Jack, die for your country, Jack will fall upon the ground and lie as motionless as. if he FAR. a few yards near the posts used for the wires. Tolstoi hns finished preliminary note and researches for an extensive study . of Khakeiiieare. Thorium Is a rare melal discovered In mid Is bund In by Ci.ollnn. Ili.ixi). i ertMii: Hand in 7 a V Norway s .r.q niund. ,tt !lnlrs lined in the ci'iInil.-Ptiil ne.ir yin!'i. iu Can'!. It is qua.'.'ii'J out of the Jins! of Ihe thatr ad Iwelvc-yeiir-o- FROM. NEAR AND An English writer who 'has been studying business conditions In this country says that the foundation of American prosperity Is high wage. A singular sequel to an Installation of overhead electric wires Is reported from Cologne, with the exception nf about the houses, the city and 1" environs have heroine bereft of biM. uhich have il cd n region ll'--il is now deadly tu t'.e ulurl" trili. As numy , sixteen deinl bud ho it bc.-- picked up in a sulk (ii MV to earn an honest living. The luck of AMUSEMENTS FOR A WET DAY mepns, he said, prevented hla being apprenticed to a good trade. On wat days when It rains or anewa The boy begaa hla letter "Dear Kaino hard that children can't go out to S lil -- ground like granite. When it la dug up nerves and muscles, has been invented at first It Is aa heavy aa rock, but when by research workers In the physiologIt has been crushed It Is as light as ical laboratory at the University of ' feathers. In the rock state it is worth Chicago. aUrat 1700 a ton. A watch was the only '.asset of h The I'nlted Ktatea supreme court liaa bankrupt with 119,511 debts whose, reaffirmed tlie decision In the case of creditor met In Iaindon lecenlly. Fiirter versus the slHle of Texas, in healthy days I rise at daybreak tlie exclusion nf uegrnc finm and usuuilv mile until iimiu. Aftr grand Ji:rii in (.uses Ingidvhig criiu- -' i. tiiiit'hetni I 4.1 yl'i't Jt tqlk all h myself. hi.il charges apalrst meiiil.ers of ihe ' fur uhni then milks I mu hciil uhiii rni-i- ' inn'inist ll uiinu:i. umbering impi' ssloiS mid iiinui doing The in i i.lnry ele-- rn'ii.inrier, a new iiene iii'id lliinkiiiq.'' says Tolelol In ill.' i!fii ;it !lMfi Iff H'lfiSliT icce.il Inurvleit. liaa t iliu milium Uistiuii'iii. vf cleq'riciiy in i - Tnu liuutiicJ and till) dullai . . : ' l 11 with the Imm- in the final two composition and tyl been naked In Lincolnshire, England, sentstlve te predominate. Word for word traasla igration bureau with the object of difor a single daffodil bulb. are not required. The first specimen of the new element recting Immigrant to good place on tion W. J. Hammer. Edison's ch1."? radium produced from minerals found forms. Australia ha elected fourteen labor 1st and electrical enl'mW between In . Colorado was made by Professor to nounoed that unuilumky and the Jap-dluto the senate and twenty-tw- o men Princeton at hi In laboratory Itillllpa exists near Bedp a light has house of representative. In Ausnear the Silver found ore from university N. Y. Bsmpliy, not liuown in the senators sre elect edby poputralis . t'lty. . lar rote. been hlijpedtoM.av: no o'clock thla II Is expected that thousands of tsl-l'rencl schools have iulopied a rode Paris discoverers of pgion of censors Inn iiinnigiunt during Ihe coming sch-- I The Transvaal eou boned on Null nf sgi'iciiltlire will be available ns fur modern hmgiiiige teaching Mint providing for a hill for the admlssb pgn fiiiiii laborer, wherns lieretiifure Ihe ' the direct met boil six yesrs' course. For the first two borer. iWhtwo ol h gone sl'iiost exInflux rmm Italy h ' yem'N tin tesihiiig is esseullslly orsl. the mines and half clusively In thq Imxe i':li s. Tlie aud 1 public woika, Ian government has arroluled a lepre- i lot the next two mute theoretical, m y, ! -, ; : Jl I |