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Show IJVTE'RESTIJV G ITEMS STREET SCENES IN BERLIN 150 'REMO VE LOiVOTS MARBLE ARCH which overshadows ths church spire den had opposite the emperor's palace has no advocates In this metropolis. It la new and much of the money Inhave earned the repu- curred In Its buildings was supplied by The Germans thousand ble Arch, but not one in a tation for good behavior tn their ths present emperor-- White marble la Th f ftcQualotji vttb it history. memorial amusements and In their oomings and a Is It oral Impression U that In Berlin this does not bold howmls the streets congested with going. of some kind. The Marble Arch, good for Saturday night. As ths even- -, Wi It for Wad, the of the madly plunging horses, the ever, Is nothln(f ing wears on the drinking places are enbuilt by King George'tV. ss an bJjfU to life and limb for tbe crowded and towards midnight ths trance to Buckingham palace, whets enough to cross the business streets are filled with mW for 4id duty In that capacity And you enjoy ths change. but hilarious crowds bent on Jtway wUa Is rears. Grown men and anything but Inactive, but it lung development has a wy of doing things that com- - women, as well as boys and girls, comBut as the gateway to Buckingham Bsnds Itself to the visitor. It is sub-M- 4 This mingle In the merry-makinpalace the arch was s failure. It resIn Its business life, the effect of dwarfing the royal though It finds vent in singing, shouting, cheervlr pushing for trade with high pres- - ing and squealing. In addition, hand idence, and visitors who went to R exterior the royal home from the organs grind doleful melodies, orchesold an to tras play dreamy waltzes and bands quote of gate, "plenty parade the streets, making sleep Imscrlptlon, and little palace." From 11 o'clock until 4 the remote! possible 1850. in it was, Accordingly the din keeps up to the next PV morning to its present situation in Hyde terror of thoee who vainly try for a off-Ina- l was ths thousand pounds Eighty night's repose. At daylight the sounds cost of the arch j die sway and beer drinking Berlin Is edifices, such of Unlike the majority too full for utterance Even noisy the Marble Arch is not solid Paris Is outdone by this bedlam. Tbe "man In the street believes police make no attempt to suppress ths circumstance he has forgotten the revelry, as tbe authorities think ths In the time of the Hyde Park riot i f men must have some, fun, and so St W large force of police were hid in goes unchecked. A 3d of July night In arch and were able to disperse the r American cities Is a tarns affair to the 1 at the specified moment. Ths Saturday night of Berlin. at the timexclted some atteni isn The smaller- - stores of Berlin, and df for the police seemed to rise from of the toare nineteen-twentietthey ground, and the most knowing of stores are un for the tal, department Londoners and most provincial people rioters never anticipated that the a it) known, keep open from It to S on who come to London know the Mar- - hid so many policemen. 8unday afternoon. The law restricts opening to these hours. Beer halls and Monument to Ctnler. To Ditcutt Sunday Cor a restaurants, however, can keep their A met coal A number of prominent It is rather remarkable that Edindoors open as long ss there Is a deburgh Is still discussing the question Pennsylvania have decided to erei I mand for food and drink. Sunday Is whether It shall have Sunday street monument of coal to Philip Glnter, ths biggest day for such establishTHE RAINY WEATHER GIRL, Hill, BERUN APPLE WOMAN. cars. This will be one of the burning discoverer of that fuel, at Summit All Berlin la out for a stroll ments. side questions of the municipal elec- near Mauch Chunk. One hundred ws and avoids savoring 8unday afternoon and evening and the ths stone used end when ths son tion, There has recently been Intro- nine years ago Glnter lived In a roik) of boisterousnesa. everything Its roadways are aldewalks are uncomfortably crowded. shines upon this noble temple the efduced Into Edinpurgh a splendid in- cabin In the forests on ths Ms fect to strikingly beautiful The river far pedestrians as much as tor vehicles and strong-lungeBerlin Is strong-limbe- d stallation of cable cars, which is en- Chunk Mountain. While In quest aafi horseman quite the contrary would lnvokt Spree wends Its way close by and the 7 dwellers to her else tirely shut down at present on Sunday, game for his family, whom he had Paris, where pedestrians are tolerated ths elevator to make easy getting up splendid bridge which spans It to one and many people do not see why It at home without food of any kind, of the finest in Europe, on ths stretches for driving, but are and down stairs in ths five and should not be utilized on Sundays as foot struck a black stone. By maks millions where invariably made to suffer In n contenbuildings well ss on week days, especially to en- roadside, not far from the town tion growing out of the use of the their home. An American, who had HER COUNTRY FIRST. able the working classes to get out Summit Hill, be built n fire of wc of Berlin safe- been looking up quarters for his famhighway. The laws into the country to breathe the fresh and threw pieces of the supposed st He BsBs Delayed Her W eddte( ta CkrMea guard the man on foot and severs ily, found ths task a trying ona. air. One candidate, a lawyer, has come about It, so that the embers might a Revel Vena e penalties are Imposed against reckless apeat-thgreater part of three dsys In to grief in an amusing way over this longer while he was roasting a fc she might have ths honor of lest and n climbing stairways before he found This driving. guarantees safety question. When ssked If he was in Hs was surprised, after a little wh)u, pesos of mind impossible In New York suitable apartments. He informed me christening one of Uncle Sams warfavor of running Sunday cars he an- to see the stones glow and retain their and Pari. that he doubted If Berlin had half a ships and not violate ths tradition that swered In the negative, and followed heat for a long time. He carried a non but unmarried women may chrisThe buildings devoted to commerce dosen homes with ths elevator attachIt up by an expression of his venera- of the coal home and burned it th ten naval vessels, Mias Ruth Lawrence, compare favorably with London and ment. of few learned soon Tbe tion for the quietude of the dear old neighbors to The first city to daughter of Supreme Court Justice was Berlin Inferior., are hut Paris, decidedly Though Scot til h Sabbath. ' ' newspaper re- discovery, but there was no min those of ths American metropolis. Berexperiment with the electrical street Lawrence of New York, postponed for porter, however, found out that the to any extent In Carbon county ui lin will not permit the skyscraper. Sha car, her progress tn this direction does over a year the date of her wedding. , 1812 had begpn. gentleman in question spent most of after the war of looks upon It ss a disfigurement; as not begin with American cities. SeNow, however, her nuptials will soon his Sundays at one of the golf links In bjeotionabls an Innovation as has yet ven streets havs this kind of traction, be celebrated, aa on Wednesday at i the neighborhood of Edinburgh, which MclrOe "WorKJor Canal crept Into modern civilisation. She but all told tbey do not amount to as Weymouth, Mass., she broke a bottle f covered the defender of the Sabbath h of her popu-latlo- of wine on the bow of the United The executive committee of ths lores her parks, her open places, where much aa a city with confusion, M. E. Gilbert In Chi- llnols sunshine and trees and flowers and In the United States. On Fred' States torpedo boat Lawrence as the , association met In C; Valley Record. cago vessel glided down the ways tor her plants spread their wondrous beauties erick street, one of her busiest thorcago last week, and appointed a si committee which will go to Washing- before ths eye. Anything which hhuts oughfares, can are excluded and buses first plunge Into the briny element. Ttcuoor Royal Fa! ace. out the sun and the light and tbe are the only means of cheap transpor Miss Lawrence is well known in patriton this winter and urge upon C otic and literary work. She Is regent greenery and the beautiful coloring of tation. gross Its project for the building o fourteen-foo- t The magnificent church Is ths ca- In a New York chapter of the Daughthe flowers aha Is Inflexibly opposed deep water ship ca between Chicago and Bt Louis. Amo ta Therefore the temple of commerce thedral, Just away from Unter den Lin ters of tbe American Revolution. Durr those present st the meeting was O ing the war with Spain she fob- greasaaan Walter Reeves, who totfi t patriotic songs, which bate committee that In his opinion Con lished In book form. She 1 popular la gross would be inclined to listen wltl society and her forthcoming marriage more favor to a proposition to bull! Is attracting considerable attention a channel with an average depth d among the leaders of New Yorks swell Instead of fourteen feet In thli set, Mte Lawrence is a descendant of eight Little PUace at Livadla where the opinion Mr. Reeves had the backln one of America's most honored naval ruler of the Russius has bis private of bis colleague, Congressman Graff1 heroes, whose famed expression, apartments. The two congressman were overruled: Dont give up the ship, is on of the dearest possessions of the countrys however, by the almost unanimous Fit hind Mot ftnfut. sensa of ths committee, which Vfj Sunday history. Rev. L N. Marx Is rector of ths In favor of ths deeper chad' Protestant Episcopal Church at Lake strongly neL The Aiwtle Eislttaw. Geneva, the Wisconsin summer and was expected that the Windward piscatorial resort He has delighted . It and Mat Held the. TitULctnittf, would reach EL John by the middle Tbe Prince of Wales, who hag just sportsmen by declaring in a recent of September, but as she started tote , sermon that Sunday fishing is not sin- celebrated his 69th birthday, hfe now and had some trouble with her mac ful If tbe fisherman is too busy to fol- held his title the longest In Lragllah aome delay Is to be looked for, chlnery, low his sport on week days and if history. Previously the distinction be--i tbe Philadelphia Times. Still the says longed to George IV., who was Prince, there Is no neglect of duty or relig- of of her arrival is anxiously report 68 Wales for years. Within a month ious rasponslblllty.1 as she to' expected to watched for, of his birth ths prince was created news not only of Peary, but also bring of Cornwall and Rotbefey, Earl Rev. James Gray, formerly Presby- Duke and Dr. Stein. Lieut.' ( of Sverdrup Capt Baron Renfrew, k rjl of the terian minister in Pretoria, has been of Carrtck, to supposed to have established Peary Prince of Wales and Jtarl of appointed by Lord Roberts acting li- Isles, a depot at Cape Herto, tbe most northwhile In 1850 be ws made brarian of the library there. Ths Chaster, ern point of Orlnnell Land, at about Whe of be Dublin. vlshes to reverend gentleman n few weeks be- Earl 32 degreea north latitude, and to have on as Frinos travel the the goes quiet fore tbs outbreak of hostilities pubmad from there a dash for th pole. as Lord Renfrew and the sqetlmj licly denounced Krugerism from the Earl of Chester. At least this it was understood was his pulpit and had to flee to Durbin In Intention. Word from' him to" Conseconsequence. In ths interest of referm kfma. Pras-cov- lc quently awaited with some Im patience. , 4 March TheArlan From December SI to Capt Sverdrup, who Is OH board the every year In publish From with a crew of twelve men. In- odore Roosevelt" will play what Is for Russia a womans right calendar, Intended rounding the northern bounhim ths unaccustomed role of n pri- cluding the tows puaed relating to women and various women societies. dary of Greenland, coming down Its vate citizen. to Cape Bismarck. unknown east t Vr Dr, Robert Stein The expediting tie Geographical Surof th United vey, who Is accompanied by Mr. Leopold Kann of Cornell university and Mr. 8amuel Warm bath of Harvard university, U said to have been poorly eqnlp-pe- d and to have been left in a danger-oti- a position. 1 (Berlin Letter. fcwlln has not the push and roar, ths hurrying multitudes filling toewalk and roadway which New York and Paris. distln-Londo- n. good-natur- ed g, i London's Marble Arch Is to be razed to the ground before Jan 1. Most Hrilith Iron and The severity of American competition in iron and steel has led to the breaking of the British pool In those Industries. In Great Britain, as in the United States, there was an agreement to maintain prices, that of steel rails being held at from 7 to 7 6s per ton. As soon as the manufacturers were allowed a free hand open competition ensued, a drop In the price of nearly 1 a ton following In Great Britain, as In the United States, many orders bad been held up because of the unnatural prices, and these were released when .prices reached a normal bails. As a result the Ironmonger declares that the manufacturers will be real gainers. There is a hint in this Incident for the members of the American pool, who must know that many orders are being held In anticipation of lower prices. There is coming to be a well defined belief that the plan of th Iron and steel men Is to make successive reductions and take orders at each rate until they can get no more at that price, wen they will make a still lower rate! This, however, but leads to the holding of m6re ' orders for the lower prices. d, six-sto- ry -- fhtp one-tent- Fear Coatee "Death, The death of John R. feart In Chicago the other day, illustrates a point that hag been dwelt upon for years by and surgeons. physicians Mr. Besrt -- tn Apgust last "bad s struggle with a dog and was bitten in. three places, Tbe struggle In itself was of a character to produce nervous exhaustion, to say nothing at the mutilation by ths dog. Upon examination It was shown that the dog was not afflicted with rablea Mr. Beart recovered from the Immediate effects of the struggle and returned to his work. But s week be-- -- v fore his death be was taken 111 and he grew steadily worse to the end. Those in attendance believe he died of fear of ,7'l'9PbobIiJbefe.it nqjlsputf. M to the main facts In the case. The dog that attacked Mr. Beart did Wt have any disease. Mr. Beart had bo of hydrophobia, but hs symptoms lived for months In borTor of ths most dreaded of diseases, and this resulted In conditions that caused bis death. It ths dog that mads ths attack on Mr. Beart bad been killed, ns Is usual In such cases, the case would undoubtedly have been catalogued In the hydrophobia list As ths case stands. It gives strength to the theory that a cases of great many of the rabies are produced solely by fear. ed ole. The "Rummage Ths latest fad of society Is the rummage sale. it began la New England and is rapidly making its way all over ths country. In n certain sense the rummage sale Is a Sort of on a large scale. The househouse-cleani- keeper takes an account of stock, with the result of finding numerous things which art too good to give away or throw away and yet are hardly good enough to keep. Such 'articles have usually found their way to ths secondhand stores or the cart of ths peddler, but as ths owners get little or nothing the New England spirit of . tor them thrift has devised tbe rummage sale, which, so long as it remains a fad, will Insure profitable returns. Co ullrtant thebeartt-srkffffiffier"morte- Uhc 'Battleship Illtnoft -- CoeS Maao--nl Men, Joseph W. Steckler of Orange, N. J will erect a monument in Athens, Pa in commemoration of the soldiers and sailors of Bradford county. It will stand in ths center of the old academy lawn, on the spot where Gen. Sullivan t revolutionary fame camped en his march against ths Six Nations of New York In 1779. Ths pedestal Is to be of pink Stony Creek granite: Surmounting the pedestal there win be a bronsa group of heroic slxe, entitled The DeThe entire strucfense of tbe Flag. ture will be 20 feet high. General Juan Lula Bueroa of Guateis now tn San Francisco on a visit, was a lieutenant colonel on the staff of General John C. Fremont when tbe pathfinder made his second to trip acroes th Rockies. Hea went concesGuatemala in 187) and has sion for s Has of road over the Chuc-pscMountains, around the great volcano of Sants Marls, which Is 14,000 mala, who he feet big- - at Bnaa , Co lro the bouse. If The proprietor tact trained and deferring, 'tls of no Importance how large bis bouse, how beau'.ful his grounds you com quickly to the end of all; bat If the men ta If possessed, happy and at Inborne, bis house Is definitely large and Interesting, th roof and dome J9uj sat ss the sky. Under the humblest roof, the com-- monest persor In plain clothes sits there maselve, cheerful, yet formidable like th Egyptian colossL Behaviour. deep-founde- d. the Jtnt. of his married Ilf the prince of Wale spent a portion of each year at Btrkhall house, in Scotland, and In those days both the prince and princess made a point of annually visiting the great Scottish chieftains, a splendid welcome being aooorded to them dt.Donrobtn, which mile at that time was twenty-fiv- e from the nearest railway station. When In Scotland his royal 'hlghneee to fond of wearing the kilt, and he also prefers to se those about him so clad. .. .Wales .Wee Dariig the first' years battleship Illinois, Th first-clawhich to rapidly nearing completion at the yard of the Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock company in Newport News, to expected to go ont on her bnlldera trial some time during ths first week In December. At that time tbe splendid fighter will be practically complete, and. If necessary, could engage a hostile ship while ont ss - on bar trial Ths four thirteen inch guns, which compose her formidable main battery, will be mounted In the h turret fore and aft, seven guns will protrude from each side of the veesel, and even the smaller guns will be In place, while all armor will be riveted on. Tbe Illinois was launch d Oct 4, 1898, and was christened by Mis Daisy Letter of Chicago, six-inc- w wt ST A WORKING GIRL A MERRYMAKER. |