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Show WiLL PRESIDE.OVER THAW TRIAL THE HISTORY OF GREECE | eo! ons of ‘ ntil the | ll have come fe hem to de-j regi fartt to the e more sub ed and mani ma 1 of whi in turn i 1 Ὑ i hem the 1 for 4A ) nd 1 ef leading astward d@ir Be - b t η fic t ( ar or a os Two I 1 ἑ 1 ¢ I of he 1 Meult t t I than these ter ry where the 1168 I ' 1" art into its 2 bay a Wi \ nothing to the member till out low of narrow of the con the waters of » idge jand which was to add the island of Pelops, as the completest of peninsu tu las, as last and concluding member Thus, with the body of the mainland out of severing the continuous cohesion wo in the midst of | country, the in ha broad inland seas, abounding bors, meet one another, the one open the other towards ing toward Italy, Asia Peleponnesus. The Peloponnesus forms a whole by itself; it containg in its own center its principal mountain range, whose mighty bulwarks embrace the high in its land country of Arcadia, while ramifications break up the surround These are either mere ing districts. terraces of the inner higheland coun try, like Arcadia and Elis, or new mountain-ranges issue, and, running direction, eastward or in a south peninsulas form the trunk of new such is the origin of the Messenian, Laconian, and Argive peninsulas, and of the deeply-cut guifs between them, with their broad straits. Equal in rich variety to the outline of the country is the constitution of monotonous the On its interior, tableland of Arcadia one fancies one- | self in the midst of an extensive inland district; the basins of its valleys participate in the organization and the heavy foggy atmosphere of Boeotia; whereas the closely-packed mountain pre ito Lge open fron ΄ nouth off coast which prevails on {Π6| thrown itself on the eastern and those tribes whict ito the rear of the land, 7 SISTIRE Kicvoe DOWLING g., the this Western Locrians, means coast,} driven | such as, e.| were by from active participation in the prog ress of the national development rhe history of a τ DOLLARS LOOKED TOO NEW. —__—— — KITCHENE 8 ΤΗΕ LATEST. ---- nation is by no] ο. 7 2 aaoe | ; ᾿ en anne its local habitations Bat thus much it is easy to perceive; a formation of | Oll as peculiar as that commanding the basin of the Archipelago may well give a peculiar direction to the devel opment of the history of its inhabit ants In Asia great complexes of countries possess a history common to all of them rhere ons nation raise itself over a multitude of others, and in every case decrees of fate fall, to whieh | vast regions, with their millions of in habitants, were unformly subjected. | Against a history of this kind every| foot-breadth of Greek land rises in protest. There the ramification of the mountains has formed a series of can tons, every one of which has received | a natural call and a natural right to a separate existence (To Be Continued.) ὃς-------------γ------------ Pittsburg Sixth City in Size. Washingion.—The suit arising out of Pitisburg and Allegheny was decided by the sypreme court of the United States in favor. of the consolidation, the opinioh of the court being handed down by Justice Moody, of California. ------ ‘There has been a funny counterfeit | τ Golone! Henry B. C, Kitchener, Lomt | psivate office he softly stole out and left them together. Ten minutes later he returned and HARM DONE BY THE MOSQUITO splenictitania the sec- is rapidly Greeks impossible from the north,| becoming paralyzed by a strike. The isolating them from the mainland, and|trouble originated with the engineers, confining them entirely to the sea and| wo are almost entirely European, the opposite coasts, The very nature|and Tuesday and Wednesday great of the northern highlands forces their} numbers of natives belonging to the inhabitants to live in their narrow] traffic staff joined them. The most well watered valleys as peasants,| important section of the road, from shepherds, and hunters; to steel tneir| Calcutta to Allahabad, is practically strength by the Alpine air, and to pre-| tied up, and already 6,000 passengers serveit intact amidst their simple and|are stranded at Asansi, Bengal. = The sooner the young — Study Your Failures man dealing with men learns to study himself to discover the reasons for his small failures, the sooner he is likely to be on the read to the roundBy JOHN A. HOWLAND. ed ends of his ambition. Men are the materials with which he must accomplish much of his work. Knowledge of the characters and tempers of this material are essential to his manipulations of it. But first of all he must knowhis ownability and his own limitations as a worker in this human substance. When the young manasks himself why it was that he failed to impress a fellow man favorably under a certain favorable circumstance, he is reaching out for a knowledge that must be valuable to him. It is well to know why he succeeded in successful instances. Let him analyze those faculties, ways and means {o this suecess. But aboveall let him make a study of why he fails! There is a certain intoxication in any marked success just to the extent that it eomes Dwelling upon some success- ful stroke of the kind, it requires a little more than human nature if the man’s self-esteem does not over- Heloses his sense of proportion. Heis nursing a weakness rather than exercising his strength. “What's the matter with me?” is one of the most vital questions in the world, Success depends of Chicago, is attorney for the Chi- ; MANY-SIDED NEW YORKER In his immemorial time the mosquito has probably destroyed more human beings than exist to-day. One healthy pair of mosquitoes can start a progeny in June that in two months will rival the human population of the globe in numbers. Mosquitoes breed malaria. Mosquitoes breed yellow fever. Malaria kills 250,000 persons a year; 25,000 in the United States years ago to become a banana planter in Jamaica, is now in England purchasing material for the construction of an earthquake proof house on the looked in. They were close together and talking animatedly. He listened. Were they recalling early days or were they considering the division of “Kitchener” model, says the Cement the bequest? Age. Colonel Kitchener's residence in the suburbs of Kingston was badly damaged by an earthquake. He has decided to build a house with walls composed of rows of drain pipes placed on end and filled with cement, with layers of cement between, with a casing of cement on the outside and thin wood inside. He declares that this combination will resist any earthquake. The Syrian Cigarette Lighter, For lighting their cigarettes the native population of Turkey uses a kind of fusee manufactured in Syria in Austria. It consists of brown paper impregnated with saltpecre, each strip of which is perforated so that it may be torn easily into small slips, and is provided with a match head. About $30,000 worth is imported each year. Not Much. She—Don't you believe in bringing yourself in chose centact with ali in your range? August Belmont, whose name has figured so frequently in the New York traction scandal, is a many-sided man. American representative of the Rothschilds, a firm which ranks high in the public estimation of honesty as any in the world, he is accused of “entering into an unlawful combination and conspiracy” to manipulate a public service corporation for his own ends. An ardent churchman, he has been condemned by his own bishop for his connection with the state racing association, which winks at the law forbidding betting on races. He claims to” be a democrat and is said to have financed the campaign of Alton B, Parker. The descendant of the famous Commodore Perry ef Lake Erie fame, and of that other Commodore Perry who opened up Japan to the exploitation of the world, Mr. Belmont is a business man pure and simple with a taste for the excite ment of horse racing. He inherited a plethoric fortune, which he has added to considerably by Wall street methods. He inherited, alsc, a family tree which is a source of envy to those who are comparative parvenues in New York society. He is a member of20 clubs, a director of so many banking and industriat corporations that he could not call off half of them at a pinch. He is a member of the aristocratic Sons of the Revolution and occupies a box seat among the Four Hundred. He was the promoter and backer of the New York subway, which lined the pockets of those who promoted it. He has been successful in practically every field he has entered. Mr. Belmont has been declared a benefactor of New York and a publi enemy according to the point of view. Calcutta.—Traffie on the East India railway, 2,165 miles long, a αφ. aa in marking off the different parts of| heart, killing him. Before Lewis could the country; further, the series of! fire again Keeler had killed him. dering access to the dwellings of the} ond largest line in India, 2 -ᾱ. Kitchener's eldest brother, who resigned from the British army several laws, whic impress upon the whole! When Williams and Keeler entered cross-bars running out from the cen- not at all concerned at the threat, he has drawn out of the market, stuffed his millions and his 15,000 shares into a valise and is going home to tell his neighbors in the windy city how he scalped the scalpers. But Wall street MILLIONAIRE SOCIALIST of European Greece the mark of @ pe-| his place to arrest him, Lewis, before apon the true answer to the query. green matting walls, seare out in southern California, espe- [αἱ pre sent for apartments and rooms cially in Los Angeles and San Diego, with kitchenettes,” said a woman real All| at once a large number of silver | estate agent who caters to tenants in | William English Walling, of Indianapolis, who dollars dated 1878 made their appear- | the theater and hotel district. with his wife and his wife's sister, Rose Strunsky, ance in business circles, They| “A real kitchenette is a perfectly apand Kellogg Durland, an American friend, of seale. | seemed to spring out of the ground. | pointed kitchen on a small Walling, was arrested and placed in jail in St. it was not long until nearly everyfitted rather prettily for the use of Petersburg for a short time recently, because body had some of the money. Then tenants rather than servants, with of their association with members of the Finnish some one started the story that all plenty of light, ventilation, porcelain and progressive party, is the son of Willoughby the money was counterfeit. Because sink and ice box, and provided with Walling, former U. 8. consul in Edinburgh, Scotthe money was all new-looking, as if | drains, electujc cooking apparatus and land. He is a millionaire and an ardent Socialit were just out of a machine, a great fans, or else an up-to-date gas range. ist. Opposition to child labor in factories, which “But the average kitchenette that scare resulted and people refused longhe first took up, made him acquainted with lead er to accept the dollars. The police | one finds in the reconstructed dwelling Socialists, who got him to share their other got busy and an appeal was made to ing is merely a small room or else a views. Since his marriage to a Russian he has the secret service. Several specimens large cupboard and some means for devoted much time to studying conditions in Rusof the alleged counterfeit were sent cooking. sia and this was his third extended visit to St. “Kitchenetting is a good deal of an to Chif Wilki, who at once pronounced Petersburg. them genuine—as good-as Uncle Sam art, though, and not so much of a picWalling returned to Russia a short time ago ever turned out in his life. It was nic as it seems. It does not go on of discovered that many of these dollars itself, for instance, but requires lit- from Germany and France, where he attended Socialistie congresses. He is a friend of manyleading revolutionists and was accused of having given their had been lying in the subtreasury at tle thought and care and planning to cause financial aid, although this charge was not the basis of his arrest. San Francisco for years without be- be a success."—Chicago Journal. Walling is a grandson of the late Wm. H. English, who ran with Gen. ing put into circulation, The subA Subject of Common Interest. Hancock on the democratic presidential ticket in 1880, treasurer died some time ago and a He had sent for the two sisters. Mrs. Walling and her sister are Russians by birth. They are both writnew man was appointed. In this way They hadn't met before in years. ers and Socialists and intensely interested in Russian political matters. some of the money got into circulaThere was a property division that Mrs. Walling is very well known by her writings. She once collaborated tion. necessitated their agreement. with Jack London. Mr, Walling met her in Paris and married her early in When they came together ir his 1906. Earthquake-Proog House. culiar organization. Among tnese are} either of the officers could draw his the co-operation of sea and mountains} pistol, sent a bullet into Williams’ reach itself. with green velvet carpet, “There is a great unsatisfied demand we find, asserting themselves in all} attempted to arrest Lewis, who owned their severity, certain plain and clear|/a livery stable and was well-to-do, easily and unstudied. office is done in dark green, Mr. Walker's father, Edwin Walker cago, Milwaukee & St Paul railway so Supplied. tiplicity in the relations of the soil,|other United States deputy marshal, ΕΞ 5 exeluded Caused Scare in the Business Circles | Up-to-Date City Apartments Must Be | expects him back, and can wait for him simultaneously constituits Inachus Plain, opens towards the the greatdr Pittsburg bill south, and its peninsula, abounding tional, way received with enthusiasm in rocky harbors and projecting here. The consolidation gives the city islands, is both by situation and soil ;an area of 38 square miles, and an eslike a second Attica. Thus the crea- timated population of 650,000, tive nature of Hellas once more, in | Lina : a the southernmost member of the coun- | Deadly Pistol Duel. try, repeats all its favorite formaBartlesville, Okla.—George Williams tions, compressing within narrow i1mits the greatest variety of contrasts. |of Collinsville, a United States deputy Laws Regulating the Geographical | marshal, and Ernest Lewis, an alleged bootlegger, were killed in a pistol duel Formation of Greece in Europe. Notwithstanding this confusing mul- | when Williams and Fred Keeler, an- the Illyrico-Macedonic highlands, ren-| street of million On his desk are six Japanese screens, oil paintings and numerous prints. telephones which are ringing almost coi ly, and across the room are conduce to a superior healthi-| Justice Victor Dowling of New York will preside over the next trial of | three more. On the center table is a box of ¢igars and numerous bottles and I of climate, and is better adapted! Harr# K. Thaw, it is announced. Justice Dowling has not so far as is known | siphons. . for the foundation of citie Thus the! expressed any decided views on the unwritten law. The trial will begin DeWall street says it has seen comets before, and seen them come to earth, whole history of the Hellas has| cember z too, and that in the end it will get Mr. Walker's scalp, but although apparently of the river, as in the case of the Pittsburg.—The action of the UnitThessalian Penens, which flows out of mountain clefts; finally, Argolis, with ed, States supreme court in declaring tral range, and, in combination with ‘ no love I 5] chains of western Arcadia resemble the effort ‘to consolidate the cities of the wild Alpine scenery of Epirus. The correPeloponnesus west coast of sponds to the flat shores of the Achelous districts; the rich plains of the Pamisus and Burotas are natural gifts has of ha his stock. p-chested 1118 ache are tinged al He has a cool Ι 8 { < srule He dresses 4 f I at all averse to attracti: publie a [19 18 particularly fond of a dull brown suit with a greenish stripe, and a waictcoat of English πάππε] with a white silk back, and a tie of lustrous dull gray silk, pinned with a@’great white pearl. His coat he discards in th fice, Chicago fashion. His Me-| ov in the sea, and form the Inner group east side, and renders maritime inter ounce! the as just of the Cyclades, possible at almost every point o1 group consists of the continuations of a jong line of shore, at the same | Once upon a time Attica was t Euboea emerged with, vn as W in lan 1 t a λ | Φ Dyrrhachium Strymon, as far as Cape Malea, to the inhabitants of the islands hard by to sail into, or their own pop | ulation to sail out of, them. The form} cky his ] the of in 5,099 shares of stock he \ a flat shore, ar retion of | i, and disfigured by lagune | innumerable dee; bay and | the s ith $6.500,099 ( i πο | Gulf Vashes ΤΙ the covered the from 1 ] it dry and ur j and thin coating of earth, clear transparent a rounded by the mosphere of the island-world to which it belongs ituation and climate, by themselves Its mountain ranges car the southernmcest a weak | e . and rocky, to t W ich ected tinent of Greece Lome ot pec or, who made in three months and is t at 1 τ With fe is ! T ng ‘ | no mo th Bra Wall ) en Wall {| for-| 1 tf at ] | a! f I and a pti it admits 1 Ν ι5 -- A SUCCESSFUL SPECULATOR t| nhat n h Hor omplete vegetation on is } a 4 ‘ t Li this contizgu other which ] ng would in ly | of creation Again he listened. They were merely comparing notes on the best way to trim a black skirt. —Cleveland Plain Dealer. BRADY “GONE BROKE” John Green Brady, three times governor Οἵ . Alaska, used ta be the “tool of The Chances. “Which would you rather be?” asked the ambitious youth; “a great speaker or a great writer?” “It all depends,” answered Mr. Sirius Barker, “on whether you would rather take a chance on getting clersore throat or - name, and he goes back to his old home in Sitka “broke,” as the miners say. He is 58 j years old now, and he is forced to begin life { anew, youth, health, strength, money and friends | all gone as a result of a disastrous investment. Brady is the son of a longshoreman who lived in a water front tenement near the foot of Roosevelt street, New York. When he reached his 8th f [| run errands, carried satchels for travelers and She—There’s old Prof. Knowitall, the famous entomologist, always nosing about bugs and things. What do you think he’s up to now? He—What? She—He is trying to smell out the social life of the insect tribes. He—Well, there are moth balls. gyman’s cramp.” 2 tions” and accused of being in their pay. Those who believed the charges thought that he was amassing enormous wealth, yet today he is practically bankrupt, with not a dollar to his birthday he had sold newspapers, blackened shoes, Getting Proof of It. eens crete; the ¢Gorpora- wrifer’s Large Number of Mackerel Caught. Sixteen millions of mackerel have He—Well, not if it’s the kitchen been landed this season at Newlyn, Cornwall. range.—Baltimore Sun picked up junk. He slept in packing cases and hallawys, and in a packing case a policeman found him one night. Young Brady was shipped to Randall's island and in the summer of 1859 he was one of a party of 27 orphans and homeless boys who were sent west by the children’s aid society. When the company reached Tipton, Ind., John Green, a lawyer, picked Brady out and took him home. Green wanted to make a lawyer of Brady. Brady wanted to be a minister. He worked himself through Yale and finally took a degree in divinity at the Union Theological seminary. In 1878 he went to Alaska as a missionary. Soon business began to demand attention in Alaska and the missionary Brady found himself trading at Sitka. He became manager of the Sitka Trading Co. By 1897 he was looked on as a fit man for governor and President McKinley appointed him. He was reappointed by Mr. McKinleyin 1900 and by President Roosevelt in 1905. In that year charges were filed against him. He was accused of doing improper things in the interest of corporations, but was exonerated. Gov. Brady's friends advised him to resign after he was cleared, and on Feb. 14, 1906, his resignation was put in the hands of the pregitent. Meanwhile Gov. Brady has been interested in the plans of H. D. Reynolds of Boston for the development of Aiaska, and aii of his money has been invested in the Reynolds enterprises. On Oct. 11 it was announced that the Reynolds bank at Valdez had failed. The downfall of Reynolds ig the cause ef Brady's present difficulties. ~ ΝΙΝ ὋΝ"ων τ, 4 fp emgco poit |