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Show WORSE ' THAOdLCUT- -' ; gafdas and alter them. ti , pi-- t, Pvtai It koar HE DREAMED IT. that the exjrrT i iv f jr n , trail-polalion,, It. d ar i t re' . n a a- - $4V 93. an Inert avo ; over one and a hat! m i ' i m c'o! r' oi-- t r tet iou ycar Mail fxr.U'e region Did you ever hear of my oriental adi of Ala-l- a ul J i r the venture said Tom, perching hhnseli i. if. , bmel t of ti.f- - pip O' tr- - t ht re u, .on the counttng house desk. The pr.ibiiu'Ii as de-- i ' Your oriental adventureasked tirt 3 lo , i I. jii ir, Nevv Ned, amazed. York .o.d l!;o , od a said Tom, Well, it worth hearing, rapidly jo ' nt of If It did happen to me. It was when I ei ornu - i , was In Damascus, a mere attache of a vaiiVe-nrm- i a ttiy flf bo, tsho t ii night a well have been lost at home, I Lilli ioti rung of appose t h rkt . had bought cigar cases and smokm t !! o 'a' (i ait .t.in , .McConnell, 3 iccvd p i a! ato rtion to ing caps and tebacco bags and all aorts I had slippers ti e grill I j r to .e t.i'" if Mr. and if things' said Tom. Mr- - W.iHer M for in.l.veadai and I was ' mother, my p bin i dc from buy ing a pipe of oriental style, with a to tc.iraed with i, c, long ete n, and a water bottle for the arhu, l.c dw U,V-- ss in;j. i pre smoke to pass through, when a great tented otrrT nn ar i .''imi 'nces. lie add- - the fa c did not difti r from uffy bag of I lack silk which enveloped a lady paused near me and squatted or linart dow n before the shop of a young jewel the po lu, merchant for the purpose of examining Co.ilii-- i ju-- TAS BUCK HOLE - tr- -a Naida x Owe HiUrt 'ahr'"rhrw. lnl VucMitCini-iliiet- r . Hkom llleit SeThrlr lSI(kl-l'- p Mnd. Pwtrld .Filthy, I One Knru In London, Nov. a. The Dufy New will tomorrow publish a letter from an English merchant In the Philippine Islands that was dispatched to London on September 3a The writer alleges that horrible atrocities have been per petrated by both the rebels and the Spaniards, and more especial !v In the latter, -- who . torture their prisonwhen they are ers, particularly to forcprominent men, with a vi-ing them to confess complicity in the rebellion. He declares that In somecs-c- s prlaoners hands have been nailed to walls, while In other cases thumbscrews have been used. A hundred prisoners were thrown In one night into a dan. geon In the fortress at Manilla, whete there was hardly room for thirty. The place waa worse than the Black Hole of Calcutta. The poor wretches were up to their knees lit filthy, putrid mud. A reign of terror exists in Mara. .a and elsewhere in the Islai ds. Wholesale arrests are made dally of tnnocci.t and guilty persona. The writer adds that the rebellion is due aolely to the rotten and corrupt administration of the Spaniards, which the xiatlvet are unable to endure an v long er. The outlook Is of the blackest description, and business is at a complete standstill. The writer was compelled to leave hla estate, the government refus ing to guarantee his safety there. Prisoners are executed by the whole--salIn treating of this subject, the writer describes the shooting of four men on the public promenade. The troops held their rifles so close to the heads of the condemned men that when the weapon were discharged their heads were blown to atoms. Crowds of Spanish women went to see these four webels executed. Calltoraln Wheat A brand. Calcutta, Nov. 2 The arrival of ' thousands of tons of California wheat at this port has had the effect of causing a reduction In prices In some parts cf the district affected by the famine. It Is be lleved that a total of 30,000 tons of wheat have been purchased for impor tation into India. The government Is doing everything possible to alleviate the distress. It has employed 53000 persons on works which hate been started In order to furnish work for those who without it would probably starve to death. The effects of the failure of the crops are not felt at Seri ouslr now as they will .be later. The worst distress will be in the middle of December. THE ' Cl BAN REBKUtOS. that Niter Han treated Traeh a Healed. the AnNo-- , The Report a. The report that Havana, tonio Maceo lias crossed the military line after attacking Artimesa and befrg repulsed with great loss, according to official account, is again denied. It is stated that the insurgents upon that occasion acted with unison, disobeyed orders, made no attack upon the forts and were unable to capture the Spanish Incumbents. Artimesa, in a conaersa-tiowith the manager of a firm near Manga, Pinar del Rio, deplored the lost his forces sustained, and admitted that It was no easy matter to cross the military line. The Spanish forces are slowly occupying the positions Maceo may hate intended to use and he is said to be rest ing In order to care for the wounded. There are two versions of the whereabouts of Maceo. One has it tba Mace 3 and Rubla are In the mountains on the limits of Cabanas and Cayrjabas, v hies constitutes part part of Sierra del Rosa Rio. Another report says he is In the of SUrra soutii tif range of mountain 'San Cristobal. The Span's'll troop-ar- e continuing to advance w eslward to vard the Insurgent strongholds without receiving any , assistance frc-- ifis ti aoj t stationed along the m'iUary line w hit a 1 being still further strergtlienid -- A Dynamite Explosion. Wallace, IdaNovjJiiJVCJkrrkii, In js cabin near the lower end of the town. a dynamite, explosion "occurred Saturday afternoon resulting in one of the mo-.- ! sickening tragedies that ever took place In the Coeur D'Alene, Thomas Cor lett being blown Into small fragments The cause ofc the explosion remains complete mystery. No reason for suicide being known, It Is supposed to havd been accidental, a he was known tot , keep giant powder In the cabin. atit'-pa-Hy-- r , Yf,rw' 1 1 -- ! upon Castle his e ntn-th- s' 01 - W th.it there mi j 1 article- - and rxpiv.- - d tt It wr. proper ca f ,r wrr'tiyitl si bv i the Co tion r f mui'n jury, out , 11 set t n , it r m the ilnrgts were of ssrlrg of he ca-,t to 3 , ,1 m. in Trouble in Tm lie) Lond 11 Nm , e . ei pat, h to the stintim pie sa s: , Dally Ma I from It It rum r, d tl a decided to pu,kOh C' tie rtnenhiis have tie ws'er supply, and the autinrit' , - tnki riM precaun- Pa'itrt- - are of dm, rxcurrence. T lie n r atrtthi 'tu in the price f ! read as st , , i,. approach '1 he of mt h'ttir-- t strife ex L ts mini-Ur- a Y1 K'o-imony i Thir are ii.moi-o- f the td min-is- t tions, ,e - k. rs r.i, oSK lal 1 The suheus are Only sup iori r an It f. P Paha 1 A IUI- - He'll I ,. New York, Nov 2 Captshi . of the brig Cnb, which arjived tod-ifrom Trutillo, reports that on Mont-gouic- ri Ostoher 19 about midnlpht a "ar lessel without 11 hts uisjdaetd, was sighted. ShorlL afterwards tie stranger blew his wh'sMe liiivb t a'tract at ter tion, tied finding that we did not heed him, bred n ujtt. The brig was hove to and tied for 20 u inults until within speaking dL'anfe. The r.tr.mger prmed to oe a man o' war. Wc were hailed and aske'd our aessels name and whither hound , also if we had seen any fter receiving re Spanish 'ves-tels- . piles they thanked r and said good night, s'eaming away to the eastward wlthou showing her lights. The night was dark and it was I npossihle to iis. tlngulsh Ills rieginr; sc-rj- eo abroad. Th2 Timas this 3 I.onJon, nwrnl'.g anno snevs thatl 111 Issue on No bracelet. Only the eyes of the figure were vis- 1 Aw Wc X v cniVr 9 a fan fpridurtlon of the Times of November 9, 1796,000 tabling Wa-- I ingtonb farewell ndclress (tiers tnlnry e Old. Warsaw, Inst, Noe 2 L t'e lari night Dt nrstx Sant was in the Wii.ona canal. He wav a native of Ireland and chumrJ to he 119 years of age. He ha betrt lvitig alone for over two years In a sma'l hut, furnished by the chrrity of a ni"re! prosperous fellow llis wife dleJ two years countryman. ago at a very ad ancet! ag". Scanllin was, in all probability , the edderi man In the stat-- , 1 ilaon rvplain. Washington, Oct. 27 As hUnt Wthon said t ight concerning the lost etttr of Ifni, Thomas Watson, vv hie h1 wav addressed to beimtor Butler: All the nml f r dors and representatives sent tithet I j the senate or house postoffice. As soon as It U received by us it is wni diwn Into the basement , of Ihe postoffice building, w here a nu nber of r.i.n ate employed to do nothing Hse but baud e the mail. Tiny semi It to the Thvre it is d livered. and fiotn Capitol Ila 'he h tier fcetn hand'd hr cur evirierv it wo. Id .imp! v he j repoMerou-U say th it it could ha.ecvn hell for eight days. It c n.d in', s- -a that D 1 MO not ktios.-t- l M Bpiy all la :ic is to It- 6 cui'om fi'ls.vc' tt ihe snUcjoHt.-o- ! : ' c 1... Vt Post-imst-- 1 1 - Vf ktl Lj i ei I.jl'ud4t) tt tie tuoc- - t0 the okoi't f r U e tun . slit nre ip. posed tr he-- on tLvir way t li'C I idian Partht.lar of the hidduy Territory, cannot be ob'aii ed. , I Snator Teller hts wired Chairman Jones at Cli'cago an emphatic denial of the story that he had given up the fight for Bryan election. I A'cvinder and EiTatitJ liar, brother Railway Hail Nervier. iivirg nar CasslvtV, Wis, quarreled Portmasteis lover a tri lal tnaltrf and Edwrd-be-i Washington, Nov. 3 Alexa-vw ar dead Ganerat Wllacn gave out a report the pprstlopi ot the ra'lwsv l v?v. reiied. ir-ai- With a shriek, I rushed aftV the re treating slaves and -- awoke said Dick A wok"?5 Tom That was when 1 was down whh had feer three years ago, and Sam had been showing me a Turkish plp :nd nn black haired had read me to sleep with the 'Howadji .In 'yyrla,' and ot t of theae thing my 4d enture In Damascus with the beautiful maiden was born. Exchange. t- -n ''lit ible, but they were blacker and mors beautiful than those of any heroine of the Arabian Nights Entertainments, and they lit on me once, twice, three times and sent a sensation through my heart to which It was happily as yet a stranger. Behind the figue stood a lest carefully veiled person of an old female senant. That it was a young beauty thus hid under the silken balloon I had no doubt. The jew el merchant was busy with his wares. No one but the old woman saw the beauty make a little sign with her exquisite hand, but she did It. The sign seemed to say Walt, and I waited. What I waited for I hardly knew. My repertory of gesture Is not large. I nodded a Yes. No Englishmans Is. It sufficed As she went away, guarded by her old attendant,, she repeated the motion Walt, it said again. There was a coffee house close at hand, open to the street like all other shops There I squatted on a cushion and sipped and smoked. I saw a figure pass, pause, ' make a sign to me. It was the old woman, the servant of my mysterious beauty. I flung a coin to the story teller and followed her. to me, but at last she paused under the shadow of the blank plaster walla of a house In a quiet part of the city, and suddenly letting down a long wisp ot gray hair took from it a letter, a little crooked thing, written on bright paper and drenched with perfhmet. I a little English know, tt began. I 'wait for My mother she English,. you1 Come. .Where shall I gof I, asked the old 1 woman. She beckoned. Again I followed. We walked on, she going before, 'I following, until she paused before a white plastered wall, In which' waa . a narrow dooi. Unlocking this, shd motioned me to erder, arid, almost treading on my heels 4 n her haste, Instantly slipped in after me and relocked It. I found myself In ttie most beautiful garden Imagination can depict. Beyond ' It was rose arbor Obeying the old womans motlons, I entered the door of this fragrant retreat. On the instant two beautiful arms were cast about my'neck, and a voice like that of the nightingale softly breathed these words: Oh, how lorg have I- - waited for , of my soul joy you, It was the giri whom I had seen at the hszaar. I knew her eyes and her hands at once, and I knew 'that ' I had met my fate. I loved heron the Instant as well as she seemed to love me, Bother," said Dick. I cant make you understand that delicious emotion," said Tom, sighing. "There wc sat together, talking like lovers wlm hail been parted for years. She slipped a ring upon my finger.. I gave her one from mine, I vowed to her away to the land where lovers pet were not the staves they were (here, and she promised to meet me at the little n gate at midnight, Going tt fast," said Dick. Suddenly, as wesat there, the old womaq ushed Into the arbor. She whlvpeieJ a word to my youthful lady-lovwho wruig her hinds In terror. I for your lUf.he a aid. It Allah spares mr life,! wi, meet you at th gates' at midnight. If not, adieu until wc meet In'paradlse. At rtil.lnlght I sat upon tse atone beach nain, dad In a coarse 'oriental !re, Lut with a pLtol hidden beneath 1. f had resolved to die rather than to .TtVV hci'Ti be torn from me Awaited. The moon rose roond and eilow, in the sky, A strange bird ut tered a shrill cry. A dog harked I heard steps within the gardenanJ shrank back Into the shadow. They were not the step of women. 4 As I listened the gate opened, and four black slaves, bearing a burden, emerged therefrom. Ai the moonlight fell upon them, I taw that they had the sides uf a great sack, They marched away toward-th- e river, As I watched them, dreading I knew not what, tha old woman, with her hair dUheveledj rushed out of th "'"7 -- 1 ga-de- e, 1 ut, yn)ls pointed 1 What has happened skrieked, Into threw She rnyhand, a little note-- I tore It open and read these words Adieu L The caliph h discovered alL I was .his wite The fate of an unfaithful wife in th , land Is to be aewed up In a bag of hrur'and cast Into the ther. A It u forever 5- -3 -- Horrible Atrocities at the wringing Speed of Sound and I. jht Therd ere senr.il quter Ways , of showing the wonderful difference In the speed of sound at d light, but the most remarkable, according to the Ideas of Ye Curlou Man, Is that mada In the calculation which supposes both to traverse the distance that lie between our world and the sun According to the calculation, which la by a well, known philosopher, if the sun gave forth sounds loud enough to reach the earth they would be 14 year In traveling through the the great tea of space which separates us from the tolar center of energy. w On the other hand, a beam of light would flash across the tame great void and dash Into our aea of atmosphere and finally reach .the eaitha surface only eight minutes after leaving the sun. - St. Patrick tod th. Soaks. 1 an old legend to the effect St. Patrick banished all reptiles There that from Ireland by beating a drum, but no one, probably, seriously believes the Itory. According to the myth, he took his drum out for the purpose mentioned end commenced pound'ng tt 0 vigorously that he knocked a hole in the drumheed, thus seriously endangering the success of the miracle. While pon dering what to do, St. Patrick was astonished by the appearance of an angel, who Immediately set to work to mend the broken musical Instrument After the hole had been mended the angel vanished and St Patrick continued the work of serpent banishing, being sue cessful in ridding the Island ot every representative of the snake' tribe except one old stayer who had lived so long that his tusks protruded from his mouth like horns. This monster refused to leave the "land of hla fathers end the good saint resolved to practice a little He removed the piece of strategy. fcafch" which the' angel had put on the drunfhead and then persuaded the ter pent to creep Into the drum for the night When the reptile had done as requested St. Patrick glued down the magic patch and then threw drum, serpent and all Into the tea. A sunken bowlder off the west cotst ot Ireland It called St. Patricks Drum." 1 LITTLE CURIOUS NOTES. A million dollars In silver will weigh 56,931 pounds. , Matches were first tnde by liahmaa named Walker, In an Eng Jor Sleep. Tho Mystery of Electricity.' " By use of the word electricity," we express a phenomenon which la known Only through Its mantfestatlona. Sometimes tt If spoken of of electric fluid," but that tt la not a fluid la the true tense of that word U well known to all sdentlsta. The word electricity" la alto used to name the tclencee which treats of the power and other characteristics ol the unseen force. Electric force when In a gate o! rest tailed AUrical, electricity 4. motion donamlcai v electricity. This , wonderful and mysterious force may be brought Into action by heat, friction and other agencies, but what tt la end whence the source ol supply no man knoweth. the-emo- v vat lyiTTAtL. Odd Thlafs ta Natural History. The spiders eyes are not In hla head, but In the upper part of hla thorax. The shark manifest achotce for the flesh of certain race of men, preferring sn Asiatic to a negro, and a European to either. ' Of British bird the cuckoo lays the smallest eggs In proportion to Its site. The largest animal known la the rorqual, which averages 100 feet Leuenhouck says that the eommon caterpillar has not lest than too muscles. A white crow with pink eye was recently caught at Durham, N, C, A negro living at Madison, Wis ha a live specimen ot the common bullfrog which has three perfect eyes. Rattlesnakes are said to have a natural antipathy to the leaves of th white aah. Some naturalist assert that a rattlesnake placed In a circle composed of half white ash leaves and half hot coals Virginia's Ic Mis. One of the greatest curiosttles In the will Croat the costa before he will enUnited States, or In the world, perhaps, counter the leave. ts the wonderful ledge of ice which Talking Imafoa of Oldae Tlaaoa. exists, even in the midst of the hottest Several of the magicians, sor. summer, In Scott county Virginia. This natural Ice house is situated on the north cerert and alchemist are given the side of Stone Mountain, and about six credit of having made speaking heads miles from the mouth of a smalt stream or talking Images. la moat Instance known as Stony Creek. The marvel is these heads were made of brats, but said to have been known to atieast one other metal waa occasionally employed. Golden Wonder," th monster of the early settlers, a Mr. Dan ridge, The who, tt is alleged, discovered it while talking Image made by Olaua Magnus deer hunting away back In 1830. Ow- was composed of bras with the exceping to the fact that the land on which It tion of It head, which waa wrought was situated could not be bought, Mr. from pure gold and weighed 68 pounds Danrtdge positively refused to tell of without it internal machinery. The the whereabouts of the Ice ledge, and total weight of this wonder was 58I The Golden Wonder" was " only visited the place when tt waa abso- pound. lutely necessary to obtain a supply to be alto called the Inanimate Prophet," oa account ol th fact that It was said to used In case of sickness. The old man died many years ago have made many predictions that were from that time until 1893 the location of remarkably fulfilled. Finally the head Danrldges Ice Mine" waa unknown, did at the parrot did la tha story talked the old gentlemen never even having too much. I predicted thd death of a certain notorioue pirate oa a certain day, taken his own family Inti the secret. In the year last mentioned, however, and when he was seen alive and well a party of herb diggers visited the un- a week later the people repaired to the frequented region contingent to Stone hop ol tho magician and amashed th Mountain and were fortunate enough to Image out of all semblance to humanity, rediscover the lost Ice mine."5 The metal of the head was afterward During two or three months In the coined Into lucky piece, which were middle of summer the Ice Is only pro told et from twenty to on hundred tected from the suns rs)--t by a this k times 'their real value. Certain supergrowth of (post. The formation of the stitious person who came Into possesIce ' layer Is similar to that of a 'coal sion of these magic coins declared that vein, being thin In some places and their lucky" pieces talked and made thicker In othtrs, the 'average thickness prediction just as the head had donef being about four feet. Persons of some Friar Bacon I given the credit of havscientific attainments who have tUlted ing made a brasen head which constantthe place for the purpose of studying ly repeated the words "Time comes, the wonder, saya that It hat the appear time Is The monk, Gerbert, who past. ance of having been there since the sfterwarda became Pope with the title Ice Age which the geologists talk so Sylvester II., Is said to have fashioned a much about.Another plausible! theory head or bras that mlnutely predicted is that somewhere beneath the bed is the after career ot Its maker. A fourth situated a great natural laboratory where peaking head was that made by Alber-t- u either I constantly formed and expelled Manges, tho great magician of thf and that the process of freezing la now Thirteenth Century, and nnothar waa constantly going on.Whatever vlqw la made by Roberto Grosseteste, an Italian taken tt la one of the greatest natural Bishop, who lived In England about thy wonders the state affords. year 1253. old-tim- e -- 1 - The residents of Nova Scotta are called Blue Noses. ' The coin dealers pay $ a for the United States dime dated 1810. The iree which bears the vegetable ivory of commerce la a native of Peru M Victor, the French naturalist, says that s toad will live 38 months com pletely Imbedded In plaster of parts poured on as a liquid and then allowed to harden, the father of history, Herodotus, declares that the Inhabitants of the of Switzerland fed lake dwellings their horses and cattle on fish. Gossamer Iron, the wonderful product of Ihe Swansea (Wales) Iron mills, Is so thin that tt takes 4,800 theela piled one on the other to make an Inch In thickness. A great ash tree In Sterllngshirecot-landwhich was planted by Sir T. Nlch olson, In 1596, it still In a flourishing ' condition. N4 Th the most Important compensation for effect, cf 1 igue it sleep. Ewf; body, even the man mentally most In ert, devclopes. when awake; a mass of mental effoit whiett he cannot afford We continuously without suffering. need, therefore, regularly recurring periods In which the consumption of mental force shall be slower than the continuous replacement. The lower the degree to which the activity of the brain sinks, then, rapid and piorc complete the retoverjf. The mental vigor of most men D usually maintained at a certain height for the longest time !o the forenoon. The evidences of fatigue come on later at this time of day than In the evening, hen the store of force In our brain has been already considerably drawn upon by thq whole dy'.work. If no by sleep ti enjoyed, or tt Is lin perfect, the consequences will Invariably make themselves evident the next day In a depression of mental vigor, as well as In a rle in the personal susceptibility of fatuge. The rapidity with which one of the persons 1 experimented upon eottld perform his task in addition tank about a third after a night journey by railway with insufficient sleep. Another experimenter could tell the effect! of keeping himself awake alt ntght tn a gradual degree ot vigof lasting through four days. This observation was all the more surprising, because the subject was not conscious- of the long duration of he disturbance, ard was first made aware of It incidentally by the results of continued measurements on the causes of the manifestations of fatuge. Ap pletons Popular Science Monthly, By far - Ths Coeosnut Crab. The cocoanut crab is one of the od dost specimens of the whole crab family He lives In the South Islands, and makes adiet of cocoanuU. This specie ha, pale of front legs terminated with a strorg pair of pinchers, and ft Is with -- Old Ab, th Wsr Ea(la, Dr. Maberly of Boise, Ida., waa held Old Abe," the famous Wisconsin wsr while on his way to church and up In was of the 1861, eagle, captured spring robbed of a gold watch, a Masonic pin on Flambeau river, near the line beand $7. tween Ashland and Prince counties, by a Chippewa Indian chief named Sky Any great fright, so the naturalist say, will cause the lobster to purposely The bird was then about the size of common chicken hawk. The Indian drop or amputate hi great claw. Durtraded the etgle to Daniel McCann, of ing thundej storm thousand of them Eagle Point, Wit., for a bushel ot corn, thus drop their ctawi and swim for deej and McCann sold tt to a Mr. Mills, of water. The London Times correspondent at Esu Claire, for $5. Mill pretented Ihe bird to Captain J. E. Perkins, who was Berlin say that the exar has decided to then organizing the Eighth Wisconsin postpone the currency reform which tt The bird thee began the wss proposed to submit, to the state regiment most remarkable career that hsa ever council thla autumn. been known to a member of the feathAt a session of the chamber of depu. ered tribe. At Madison before the regi- tie M. Gustave Isenbert, editor-in-chiment left for the south, the esgle was of the Republlque FrancaHe, was electof the chamber. given the name of Old Abe, In honor of ed A perch waa then President Lincoln. Col. John R. Fellows Is quite 111 In made for the bird, which was carried at Louisville end has been forced to cancel the side of the colors of company Cof date for speeches In the Eighth Wisconsin, At the siege of Kentucky." a calm Corinth Old Abe sat on Perry Bathalow, United States consul aa though nothing were going on. an at Mtfence, Is being prosecuted for ae Incident .which is said to have caused verely injuring an Inmate of hit house the Confederate General to declare that by striking him on the head with a rehe would rather - capture that vussed l volver. 1 ef cb these thit he husks the nuts and breaks through the weakest portion of the shell. The crab begins by tearing the husk, fiber by fiber, and always at the bird than a whole brigade oLYankeea." end where the eyeholes ofAhe nut are All together Old Abe participated In situated, that being the Weakest place 38 battlea and engagements." After the, in the shell. When the husk has been close of the war Barnum offered $20,000 the removed crab commences hammering the shell with his heavy claw, and soon makes an opening, through Which he extracts the meat of the nut. Mr. Darwin, writing of this crab, says: think this Is as curious a case of in stinct as I ever heard of, rspeclally in structures so remote from rich other In the scheme of nature as a cocoanut and a crab." A whale 80 to 90 feet In length hat throat to small that he could pot w 19T biscuit, for the eagle, and a western mlillootlre went" the prince of showmen one bet ter," offering to- ezchange $25,000 In gold for him. During the last years of hit life Old Abe was kept In a cage in the historical department of the cupitol building at Madison. He died March 26 1881. His body was turned over to taxidermist, who fixed the bird up until he now looks as natural as he did In - life. The steamship Havel from Europe, brought $1,235,000 go4 to NiwYork I Pablo, The Ute Indian under sentence .to be hanged thla week, tor the murder of a squaw of hi tribe and he"r lover and brother, died In the Colorado penitentiary of consumption. Billy O'Donnell of Memphis knocked, out Jimmy Griffin of San FrancUcoln four round before the Tine Bluff, Ark, Athletic dub. The men fought at 140 pounds for a small purse. -- , Tha annual, report of Com mod Hlchboro cb'et of the construction bureau to, the secretary of the navy, eontalpa a recommendation for the purchase of a tug , for th Puget sound fttval ttattoa at a t9tol5vov ' |