OCR Text |
Show HELEN GOULD. THE MOST POPULAR WOMAN IN AMERICA REV, JOSEPH F, BERRY. NEW METHODIST BISHOP I ooooooooooooo-ooooooooooo- o 1C O. A L THEi AT WASATCH MINE; Oof coal is tbe best there is for steam and domestic purposes t I i t AT THB MINB THB PRICES LUMP STOVE Bca liJsstij. Patronlza a ..WEBER COAL CO.. jjasmf r - c:cy' Rev, Jof ph F. Berry of Chicago, lS.'ifl, and reeehed his education In who was elected by the Methodist gen- Milton Academy, Ontario. I)r. Berry era conference as one of the eight entered the nimii.try In 1874 and rapidhew bishops, is a distinguished memly rose in the esteem of the church ber of the church, a ho has boon editor leaders. He was editor of the Michiof the Epworth Herald since 1000. He gan Christian Advocate from 1884 until was born at Aylmer, Canada, May 13, 1890. KOUROPATKIN-I- N HELPED BY, CARNEGIE REAL WAR. General Facing ' Foemen Worthy of Hia Steel, It ought t be a source of considerable gratification to Gen. KouropatkJn to hare the opportunity of encountering a completely equipped and highly intelligent enemy. A warrior of his oraclty could hardly have died replete if the scanty fare of his previous campaigns had not been supplemented by this brawny piece de 'resistance. For thirty-eigh- t years Kouropatkin fought Bokharians, Algerians, Khokan-dlane- , Turks. Khlvans, Samarkhan-dians- , Khirgbizes, Tashkendlans and His foemen variegated were worthy of the arsenal of stars, words and crt'seep.wwh'nhdM czar. They were wolves. But that Is Just what they were. Even the Turks, because of the Infirmity of their government, resembled a pack of wise animals rather than the army of an organized nation. When Kouropatkin went to St. Petersburg tn 1893 as minister of war he must have felt that he had been not so murh a conqueror of men as a hunter of inferior breeds. aa he watches Kuroki com toward him over the Manchurian hills with a commissariat department and a chess game plan of campaign, his .heart should bound with the prospect of maklnd hl first offering In the Temple of the Real Thing. How many strange scenes, drawn from strange and widely separated parts of the habitable world, must float now through Kouropatkins mind! He must see himself ss he was In 1874, young enough to have the "wandering feeling in the feel," and therefore wandering to Algeria in the French trtuy undor Loverdo. How far away, how unreal those Algerians must seem with whom he fought on the desert sanfls nd over whom he tod Into the Legion of Honor! And then the Turls especially the dead Turk under whose body he lay, wounded and unconscious, all one cold night! They must come back to him together with his chief Skobe-leff- . standlng shoulder to shoulder with him In hand to hand encounters .with and, dripping equally with blood while Archibald Forbes asked them questions and his newspapers his famous description of their gore embossed uniforms. Turks and Algerians, however, must be but feeble images to Kouroc patkin compared with those Turcomans Bokharians, and the rest whom it was hia life mission to subdue. "The Russians will not be able to conquer the .said Turcomans, Salisbury. "The Turcoman barrier will last for It was Skobe-lef- f our lifetime at least and then Kouropatklo who riddled this prophecy. The Turcomans yielded to marches as magnificent as that of Lord Roberts on Kandahar and to massacres as promiscuous as those of Caesar in Gaul. Does Kpuro-patkiremember Geok Tepe now and the 20,000 men, women and children delivered to the flesh and. blood lust of the Russian soldiery in one of those thorough dissuasive lessons which, in the book of Russian colonial assimilation, precede the Insidious suasion of administrative gentleness? Certainly there could hardiy bo found for any Individual man lu any t previous period of the worlds history g more varied retrospect than that which comes now to the Russian gen ersl. who, a contihuent away from borne, is taking whar ja perhaps bis Bust stand against the enemies of his sovereign and is fighting instead of hunting. Russian - To-da- y, basht-bazQuk- a mild-Asiati- Kho-kandia- n , Helen-MilleGould, through whose influence the sending of race track dispatches by the Western Union Telegraph Company has been stopped, is distinguished for her benevolent work. She ia a daughter of the late Jay Gould and bora ia New York June 30, 18C8. At the beginning of the war with Spain she gave the government 8100,000, and for the care of sick and convalescent soldiers at Camp Wikoff she furnished 83O.OC0. Miss Gould is a sister of George Jay Gould and of Howard Gould, both of whom are distinguished men tn the financial operations of the country. PLACE OF HISTORICAL MEMORY. ARROGANCE OF THE RICH. r INSTITUTE Dr. Lehmer Given Funds to Complete Successful Invention. N. Lehmer, instructor in mathematics at the University of California, has been voted the sum of 1300 by the Carnegie Institute to be devoted to hiring assistants In order that he may complete a table of "smallest devisors which he has been preparing during the last three years under a new and successful method. Dr. Lehraera achievement la the dla-- . covery of a new and simple processi for finding the factors of all numbers, up to 10,000,000. The task has been rarely attempted on account of the enpfmous labor Involved. Dr. method is brief and complete. While his tables carried out to the 10,000,000 would take a period of forDr. Derrick Frauncss Tavern In New York a New York Millionaire Fence in the Public Domain. Institution, Both because of its antiquity and beMost of the very rich New Yorkers cause of the many historical memories now own their own private hunting that are associated with it, Frnunees grounds In the Adirondacks, in Maine Tavern In New York well deserves to or In the C&rolinas. A great many are members of clubs which owd such be taken over by tbe city and as public property forevtr. territory. The Vanderbilts, the RockShort of that, however, it Is not un- efellers, the Morgana and the Drex-el- s all have preserves. fitting that it should now become the In spite of headquarters of the New York lute the democratic idea that unused land Society of the Sons of the Revolution, belongs to all, they fence off a few hundred square miles wherever nawhich has now purchased it j The tavern stands at the eoheast ture haa been particularly bountiful, y corner of Broad and Pearl streets, and erect Do Not Trespass! signs, wardens and guards In livery with originally waa the mansion of tbe family.' Having later been loaded guns In. their hands to keep off ty years. turned into a tavern. It became as the public and make of the most beaula a Prisoner. early as 1768 assured of historical tiful and luxuriant spots In America Few people realize that for nearly memory, for la that yeat It witnessed private hunting grounds that are as of Turkey the organization Of tbs New York carefully preserved at ever the royal thirty years an forests were in the early days of Norhaa been kept a prisoner at Kourbad-Ji- , Chamber of Commerce. man kings. it event which Its widest The on th Bosporus. This unfortungave ate man is the Murad, the fame, however, was Washingtons fare v Only Wanted to Talk. eldest nephew of Abdul Aziz, who well meeting with his officers at the e They-arstill telling stories In' came to the throne' in 1876 on his close of the revolutionary tar, Washuncle's death, but waa allowed to ington chose it for his headquarters Washington about the convention ol reign only three months. He was in when he entered tbe city alter the the Daughters of the American Revoweak health at the time and there was evacuation by the British.', Be re- lution. .On several occasions half of a strong party in Constantinople mained in New Yori but nits days, the women were talking at the same which .waa desirous that his brother, and then at noon on Thursday, Dec. 4, time, and Mrs. Fairbanks, tbe presithe present Sultan Abdul Hamid, 1783, he summoned the chiefs of Ms dent, had to make almost constant use should be caliph. An intrigue was army to meet him in the great room of the gavel. At one time a New Jer-edelegate Insisted upon talking therefore set on foot to declare that of the tavern. Murad was Insane and he was quietIt was one of the few occasions In when the motion before the house was not debatable. She was Informed of ly deposed and Abdul Hamid reigned Washington's life when he gam way this situation, but calmly replied: in his place. The now who is to emotion. With the men before him 64 years of age, has become seriously he had shared the perils and hardships "Madam President. I do not wish to debate the question; I only want to and his life is despaired of. of the long years of the wag Bis about 1L Now, if this conventiwords to them were: "With S heart talk on-" The gavel fell with a t Could Not Predict Further. full of love and gratitude I now take JNew and the Jersey Indigdelegate More than two years a friend of leave of you. and most devoutly wish refused to continue her reGeorge B, McClellan made a wager of your latter days may be as prosper- nantly a dinner for a dozen friends that he ous and happy as your former ones marks, could write the tam6 of the next mayhave been glortobs and honorable." Paya Taxes Under Protest or of New York on a slip of paper. He drank their health, and after a -Mia ' 1 cannot come to each Mary Anthony has paid her He wrote the name of Mr. McClellan, pause saitf: put the paper in the safe and won his of you to take my leave, but shall be taxes again under protest. She writes bet Mayor McClellan and this grand obliged if you will each come and to the city treasurer of Rochester, N. shake me by the band." Geo. Knox Y.t "Once mpre all women, politiguesser were recalling the remarkable feat In political prediction the other came forward first and then ths other cally classed with minors, criminals, lunatics and idiots, are compelled to day. The mayor said: "Take an officers silently in turn. contribute to the support of a governother peep Into the dim and distant Afterwards, aa before, the' tavern future, old' man, and tell me what was long the gathering place of the ment which denies them any voice is new honor ts in store for me." "Cant men of wealth and fashion of New the control of affairs, and once more I ply my taxes under protest Please do it, Mr. Mayor,? was the reply. "Mr. York... Many a political movement In Miss Mary Aothony Murphy, the Tammany boss, has not the early days of the republic had It so fiecord It and her distinguished sister, Susan B. taken me - into hia confidence - this there, snd the meetings headquarters time." of the Clinton men. who call4 them- Anthony, never pay taxes without a of this kind. selves "Federal are protest Leh-'tner- WUa i em-pl- art a ta to d t t AKD tt ti t i GROCERIES d 's Tom & DRY GOODS ai maia-talne- Ya.nt Some? Do You t i it X i (I CASH BARGAIN STORE fir ii COALVILLE. UTAn k ( i S. re- - Ex-Sult- ii! toV n n Good Job Work.... J b wtral end el people G6 Time office is fust the piece where you can get It el y 111 roa-ta- prices that wtU suit ...All Work Promptly Executed GRASS CREEK COAL 1 -- - Coming Arbitration Congress. Fifty thousand dollars has been placed at the disposal of the secretary of the treasury for the proper entertainment of the delegates to the international arbitration congress, which will hold its next meeting in the United States during the falL This is the first time the United States have had, the honor of entertaining this body. The International Arbitration ty give the organization its full title Is composed exclusively ol mem bera of parliaments and national legislative bodies of the different Euro-pea- countries. Worked Hard for Materia). gathering the material for a recent book S. R. Crockett lived for nearly three months with a family of smugglers on the eastern Pyreean frontier; he spent a week til a camp of Carlisle, --and with them ran away from tbe gendarmes; he passed three nights with a berthit who dwelt among the rocks at the upper end of the Val ley of Arlege; In a fortnight among charcoal burners he .discovered that ids and they were mostly "not so very much ex either," as Mr. Crockett eavs, . - Tn a Republican Few especially remembered can buildings have- - had an If that term may be life fhlch stretched over so long Ve have tha toy best Coil then b oq the market for domestic cr Ameri- Kosciuszkos 8tatue In Capital. TJie secretary of war and congresused sional committee appointed for the period purpose expect soon to take up the as had Frauutes Tavern. j matter of erecting the statue of which is to adorn one of the DEPEWS STAND FOR' MORALITY. corners of Lafayette square, opposite New York. Senator Indignant at the White bouse. Just before its "active gesa purpose Kos-dusxk- close congress paved a resolution auThought of Anything Shady. Cbauncey Depew heeds the list as thorizing the acceptance of a statue, a director of companies, being a mem- to be erected at the expense of the n ber of no less than seventy-map-. citizens of the UnitHis fees for attending the meetings of ed States. Theodore M. Heiinski Is such bodies would male a rgj t com- president of the central committee of fortable income. Nee Yorkers are en- Polish organizations. joying a laugh at the senator Jaf now. The police are making It uncomfor"Primrose League to Celebrate. table for keepers of poolrooms, The Primrose league in England is Md allege that the Westirn Union Tele- already making preparations to celegraph company is giving gj t0 the brate the one hundredth anniversary gamblers. Mr. Dopew fa virtuously of Disraeli's birth on Dec. 21. It was Indignant at the idea that a t0rpora-tlo- be who culminated hie striking and of which he fa a direct would somewhat theatrical career by making deliberately as, fat in vi0Utjag the Victoria empress Of India It eas perI will not stand, he law. haps natural that the late queen preBtja "anyferred him to Gladstone, aho'was a thing which Is even tainted t th If I find that the rxlk gifaca-tion- s poor hand at flattery. Mr, Gladstone, Are true I shall resign the Victoria is credited with saying, harboard - On reading which angues me as though I were a public average New Yorker winks the eye. meeting. Mr. Disraeli talks to me as Chicago Chronicle. a woman." . Vim $2.25 1 SCREENED DOMESTIC LUKIP AND ST0YE ffiXED. PW Pollsh-America- n pe-gallt- s.-i-- There b we hive no t a wsTJo SPECIAL CHUTB FOR TEAZ13 GRASS r TOM, LOADER) f Y i |