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Van Peyma's Paper from Kansas City, Kansas • 6

Van Peyma's Paper from Kansas City, Kansas • 6

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Van Peyma's Paperi
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Kansas City, Kansas
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6
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BIO INCREASE IN POPULATION. DOCTORS CHAMPION ALCOHOL. SAVED CHILD'S LIFE. HOW TO MAKE SILK. TENNESSEE HAS A HEALER.

A REMARKABLE FEAT New School of Medicine In England Department of Agriculture to En Pennsylvania Mother's Horrible Experience with Snakes. Which Claims the Nareotio lias Strengthened tho Race, Even alcohol has found its scientific Mountaineering Expedition of an Englishman in Siberia. courage the Industry. champions. A new school of doctors Decretory Wilson Purchases Reeling has arisen which emphatically asserts that "the English race has become the Statistics Taken from Census of 1000 Show a Twenty Per Cent.

Growth la I'uited States. A percentage of increase of population In the United States greater than tk-it in any other country except Argentina is shown in a bulletin on the census of 1900 issued recently. The increase In the population of continental United States that is, the United States exclusive ol Alaska and the Insular accessions was 13,046,861, or 20.7 per cent. The present rate of growth In continental United States is estimated at double the aver better for its use of alcohol." Dr. Hyslop, a London doctor, started Two Venomous Rattlers Enter Brave Woman's Home Young One I Rescued from Deuth bjr a Broomstick, No Pennsylvania mother In Indian Mavliinei with Hopes of Estub-Hailing tho Business in This Country, Secretary Wilson exhibited on bis the discussion at the congress of the British Medical association by express times ever had a more thrilling expe ing his belief that alcohol was not responsible for general paralysis.

He was followed by Dr. Reld, of Southsea, who desk in the agricultural department the other day the first hank of silk reeled from the silk reeling machines recently purchased by the department. There are three of these machines, though age rate of Europe. It Is nearly double read a learned paper on human evolu tion and alcohol. only one of them has been put In opera Disease, said the doctor, In effect actually strengthens tho race, and the uni tion, the intention being to send one of the two remaining machines to Tuske- versally accepted doctrine of natural selection is incompatible with the theory that parental disease affects Some Remarkable Cares Crefllted to Man to Whom Score Are Flocking.

A sensation has been caused In the vicinity of Erin, within the last two months by R. H. Rives, who has a new method of treating all the ills of humanity. His method is somewhat after the plan of Welnier, of Nevada, Mo. His treatment is by the rubbing process.

Wonderful stories are related ol Rives' curative powers. He healed Robert Parker, who had for two years been unable to perform manual labor, as his right arm was In such a condition from palsy or other cause that he could not keep it from jerking all the time. He was forced to carry it in a sling, and the strongest man waE unabb to hold it still and prevent it from jerking. Parker la now sound and well, after one treatment. The very credulous are even saying that Rives has caused the blind to see, the deaf to hear and the lame to walk.

Persons come daily from this and adjoining counties to be treated, and the Rives residence has been converted into a hospital. Rives is being dailj importuned to visit the afflicted it their homes. There is no doubt in the case ol Parker that before he was treated bj Rives he had to depend upon charltj for the support of himself and family and that he is now able to do hard work such as plowing, chopping and sawing. geo, and the other to some other place where sufficient interest may be shown to learn how to operate it. Cocoons have been purchased from all over the In support of his argument that the use of alcohol did not tend to degeneracy, and its abuse to extinction of a race, he country and two expert women operatives have been brought from France to teach the operation of the machines.

that of Canada, and exceeds by one-sixth that of Mexico, and by one-tenth that of Australia. The region west of the Mississippi river is still increasing faster than east of it, but the difference between the rates of growth in the two regions 1890 and 1900 was little more than one-fifth of what it was from 1880 to 1890. The region east of the Mississippi Increased more rapidly from 1890 to 1900 than from 1880 to 1890, while that west of the Mississippi increased in the latter decade not much more than half as fast as in the earlier. The conclusion is drawn that the increased growth of the east and the decreased growth of the west may both be connected with a probable decline in the current of westward migration. Extensively but sparsely settled t-reas in the western parts of Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota show a decline of pop It is Secretary Wilson's desire to have the people of the south, and especially colored, persons, learn the business, because of the comparative cheapness of that labor.

Arrangements already have been made to have some girls come to Washington to learn to rience than fell to the lot of Mrs. Joseph Button near Haneyvllle, recently. She saved the life of her year-old child in a unique way and then dispatched an enemy that menaced her own life. The Button home is on the old turnpike that runs from Jersey Shore to Coudersport, and not far from the section of country locally known as the Black Forest. Mrs.

Button, comparative young and used to the dangers of wild beasts, is as brave a woman as one could find in a day's travel amid the hills of Clinton or Potter counties. Sr.s has a record of having killed a thieving bear with an ax and three deerskins in her home are trophies of her marksmanship. But her experience of the other day had to do with rattlesnakes, and she declares now that she'd "rather tackle a regiment of wild cats" than to face such a situation again. Mrs. Button had gone to a pasture to milk two cows.

She left her baby asleep on one of the deerskin mats on the floor of the kitchen. On the way out she stopped at the garden patch to pick some vegetables, so that when she flniuh'ed the milking and started back to the house more than half an hour had elapsed. As she neared the house her ears caught the prattling of her baby boy. Hastening to the house, Mrs. Button was horrified to see a monoter rattlesnake half coiled on the floor within Alone Ho Scaled Peak 17,800 Feet HlKh, the Guide nefmluK to Accompany Him Difficulties Encountered by Him.

A remarnable mountaineering feat lias been accomplished by an Englishman named S. Turner, of London, who 3ms just returned from an attempt to climb Beluka, in the Altai mountains, Siberia, The Altai mountains stretch from Tomsk, the capital of Siberia, to the Chinese border, southwest Siberia. They are very low at Tomsk, but after Bljsk thoy are fairly high. To reach the highest one leaves the great Siberian railway at the Obi station and travels through Barnoul and Bljsk to Katunda. Obi station Is 2,600 miles beyond Moscow, on the Great Siberian railway, and Katunda Is C40 miles direct south from the Obi.

From the great difficulty of reaching there It is not surprising to find that no European has tried to explore those mountains, and there is no literature on the subject In England save a short translation of about 20 Hnss from a paper read before the Imperial Russian Geographical society. Prof. Sa.pozlnokof of the Tomsk university, with four companions, climbed 13,300 feet from the south side of Beluka during the summer of 1900 ard then it was estimated that the mountain was 14,600 feet high. Mr. Tumor intended to try to confirm Prof.

Sapoainokof's measurements. It was in the late winter and, though the Russian authorities were helpful, they declared any ascent was "Impossible," but Mr. Turner engaged hunt-firs and crossod the steppes in intensely cold weather, riding on sledges for three days and two nights, there being snowdrifts everywhere. Katunda vaa thus reached and the journey was continued on hones past, the settlement of friendly Kalmucks, who had never seen an Englishman, and through a dense forest to the Akkem valley. It was first of all necessary to ex said the Jews, Greeks, Italians, Portugese, South Frenchmen and Spaniards, who had for the longest time had the biggest supply of alcohol, were to-day the most temperate people on earth.

Dr. Mercler, of London, praised the virtues of alcohol as a narcotic, describing it as the best we possessed. "A horrible fatalism," was Dr. Scho-field's description of the degeneracy and extinction theory. His belief was, he said, that where weakness and disease were borne successfully through three generations, it was absolutely stamped out in the fourth.

use the machines. Secretary Wilson says that the department is prepared to do everything possible to encourage the industry and that silk worm eggs as well as young mulberry trees will be supplied to persons desiring to en ulation in the last ten years, a fact which it is said may be connected with the in' crease of population in many agricul tural counties of Iowa, Illinois and ad gage in the business. The department at present is buying cocoons whenever VINEYARD AT NOTRE DAME. INTERESTING DISCOVERY. joining states, 1890 to 1900 after losing population during the preceding ten offered, but reeling centers will be es tablished as fast as possible, and each of these will be a cocoon market.

years. APPETITE MAKES CHARACTER. The silk produced is of a very fine So Says a London Newspaper Which quality. The department is prepared at present to turn out about 12 hanks a "We hope soon to have enough to make a flag for the president," said Gives Statistics to Prove the Contention, Secretary Wilson. "The United States A London newspaper publishes sta Imports $75,000,000 worth of silk an two feet of the baby.

Its rattlers were buzzing furiously and the ugly head was elevated and sw.aylng from tistics with a view to showing that peoples with large appetites become nually, and it behooves U3 to do all we can to establish the industry." Rare Wines Now Made by Frencl Monk Soon to Be Manufactured in Indiana. Plans are materializing, according tc good authority, at Notre Dame university, located on the borders ol South Bend, for the establishment- of a large vineyard, one of th largest in the country. For this purpose the university has been making large purchases of adjacent land, nearly 1,000 acres in addition to theii present great holdings. The vines will be imported direct from France and it is also said that 200 families will be brought here from that country to cultivate these vineyards. According to these intentions it would seem that the university has determined, since the expulsion of th friars from France, to transfer the Chicago Professor Proves Animal Eggs Can Be Developed by Chemical Agencies.

The announcement was recently made that Prof. Jacques Loeb, in a series of experiments he had just completed at the' University of California, succeeded in demonstrating that the eggs of animals containing both se-xes can be fertilized and developed into animals through physical and chemical agencies technically, artificial parthenogenesis. From these experiments Dr. Loeb makes the deduction that if science ever acquires positive evidence making for the solution of the secret of a biogenesis that is, the fertilization of eggs of animals where the sexes are separated it will be through artificial parthenogenesis. the chief nations of the world, and the nature of the food eaten has a striking relation to the national PRAYER RESTORES HER SIGHT.

side to side. Mrs. Button realized that It was about to strike. The baby had in his hands a birch switch, and with A Remarkable Cure of an Aflllcted this was endeavoring to strike the ser Woman Is Ilcported from Oregon. pent.

It was this that had aroused the snake's temper. The child had the switch upraised and was about to give Thus, comparing the daily expenditure per head with the exports of a country, it is found that people who eat most work most, as this table shows. The figures in the first column are pence and in the second pounds sterling: Dr. L. W.

Brown, of Eugene, re the snake a playful blow. lates a most peculiar circumstance. He was called to Cottage Grove the other night to assist in an operation to re Almost fainting, the mother tottered toward her child. Her strength gave way and she fell against the baby's move an eye from a woman who had great grape-producing industry to this high chair, which stood near the door. been blind in one eye for 35 years and it country.

Her arm rested against something Expense of food per head per day. United Stales 29 was deemed advisable to remove the use Annual exports. The lands owned and acquired by the university seem well adapted foi soft, and an angry rattle roused her to action. Another rattlesnake was United Kingdom 23 this purpose, being rich and fertile. Uermany zl France 19 Italy 9 The university recently disposed ol less member.

The operation was to be performed the next morning, and the woman was placed on the operating table and the attending surgeons got their Instruments in readiness for the opera large holdings in France and in addi coiled on the seat of the chair. The woman was in the same peril as the child. Springing forward, she hurled the two gallons of milk that she carried at tie reptile on the floor, at the same time deluging the baby. amine Beluka. Accordingly Mr.

Turner climbed one mountain 17,800 feet high, and did so alone, for the hunters fee took with him refused to run any risk and stopped at a lower altitude. The following day Mr. Turner climbed another mountain and then commenced to scale tue object of his visit. The party moved off at 11 o'clock, and after going over a very difficult moraine for two hours it commenced to snow, with the result that it frightened the hunters and they left Mr. Turner alone on the mountain on the distinct understanding that they would be up at his tent by four o'clock next morning.

It was a loiwly afternoon and night, tut the next morning, the hunters not visible, Mr. Turner started off at five o'clock. The snow had stopped and in ur hours he reached the base of the actual peaks of Beluka. There are two peaks and a saddle between them, but he could only gain those ridges by one very difficult way. It had also begun to show again, but he decided to push on.

At the top of the This latest discovery of Dr. Loeb is in direct sequence in a line of investigation already carried to satisfactory conclusions in the case of echynoderms and annelids. By the manipulation of sea water through various chemicals he produced a solution into which the eggs of these animals were placed. Then, without the intervention of any-male principle, these eggs proceeded to develop in the same fashion as if they had been fertilized. DIES FROM GOLF-STICK BLOW.

tlon is said to have received a fund of $1,000,00 from the church of Rome tion, when the woman shouted that the Lord had restored her sight. to aid In defraying these expenses. Those In attendance were greatly sur effect was, instantaneous. Ceas The maritime nations are great sug-ir eaters. The Englishman eats 70 pounds of sugar every year, the American 67, the Frenchman 30 and the German 17.

In regard to meat, the American consumes 3 pounds every week, the Briton 2 5-16, the German slightly less, the Russian 1 pound and the Italian one-half a pound. ENTIRE SEINE BRIDGE MOVED. prised at the outburst, but the good eye ing its rattling, the reptile on the floor was closed and she was shown several articles and could see them plainly with started for the door. Mrs. Button seized a broors and with a single blow broke Its neck.

Immense Parisian Structure Weigh' Ins 800,000 Ton Is Shifted Ninety Feet Down the Uiver. the ey-e that had been blind for years and called the articles by name. There At this moment the snake on the were half a dozen witnesses of the oc Philadelphia Girl Has Lockjaw as Result Which Terminates in Her Death, Akaost half Paris turned out the other FAMINE IN COD-LIVER OIL. high chair struck at the woman, and, barely missing her, fell upon the floor currence and all were dumfounded. day to witness the extraordinary proceeding of moving bodily one of the near the baby.

Here the reptile peculiarity gave the woman the victory. Al rattler never strikes except from the bridges of the Seine, the so-called Pass Price Has Advanced 500 Per Cent. In the Last Yenr a'nd Little Is to Be Had. The woman had spent several hours in prayer previous to the time for the operation, and just before going on the operating table offered a final prayer to God to restore her sight. She naturally feels that her prayer was answered.

erelle de Passy. The bridge is a solid structure of iron, consisting of two oil. It could have bitten the baby as arches at each end, each of which meas It lay stretched upon the floor, but, true to its nature, began to coil first. Before it could arrange itself for stcik- ures 100 feet, and a central arch measui ing 13G feet. WOMAN BLOCKS A RAILWAY.

ng the woman dispatched it with the t-rooms-tick. The entire bridge, weighing 360,000 tons, with its iron arches in the form of a was lifted off tho pillars and slowly rolled up the river 00 feet away. The remarkable part of this feat was that Great Enterprise in Mexico Forced to Halt Because of Prior Concession. CASE PUZZLES PHYSICIANS. One Leg of a McKeesport, Woman after only six weeks of preparation, for Is Sixty-Seven Inches Around, Cod-liver oil is 500 per cent, higher than a year ago.

Norwegian oil is now quoted at $135 a barrel. Last year's price was $22.50. Even at this prevailing price it is almost impossible to get the pure oil, which is practically shut out of the market. As a consequence, the manufacturers of the emulsions and other products into which cod-liver oil enters have been compelled to advance their wholesale prices on an average of 33 1-3 per cent. The unprecedented advance in the price of the oil is due to natural causes, and to the fact that New York speculators have cornered the extremely limited supply.

In comparison with 16,000 barrels of oil produced Recent advices from Topolobampo, Mexico, say the Kansas City, Mexico Orient railroad, promoted by A. E. laying the rollers and setting the winches, 24 men sufficed to move the en A blow from a golf stick, wielded by a playmate, caused the death the other afternoon of Bessie Herman, 14 years old, of Philadelphia. The blow severed tka main artery in the girl's left temple, and tetanus resulted. The girl's mother told the following story of the accident: "Recently my daughter was playing golf with two children at Sbiron Hill, when c-ie of the boys swinging a cleek struck tor on the tomjle, inflicting a large gash.

She fell to the ground and was carried home, where a physician dressed the wound, and she appeared to be all right. Last Monday night Bessie was playing the piano and singing, when suddenly she stopped and grew deathly white. I asked her what was the matter, but she could not answer me, and we found she had lockjaw." The girl was rushed to the university hospital. A singular feature was that just before death she opened her eyes and, recognizing her mother, said: "Hello, mamma," the grip on her jaws having apparently been released. USE DERRICK TO BURY A MAN.

Stillwell, of Kansas City, has been tire structure. A McKeesport (Pa.) woman is suf- second rid.ge he measured 13,800 feet, and left his name in Russian and English under a large stone and then continued until he came to an ice slope Ascending -from near the summit. Owing to the hardness of the ice it too-'t half an hour to cut one step, and as tMrty were necessary the climber was compelled to pau.ie and remodel his plans. E-3 tried to eo down the south side of the mountain, but the freshly aDon snow c.i the Ice slope slipped with him for about 60 feet and he was ftfad to' get back to the ridge again. Then a north wind up with all its bitterness, obliging him to beat a hasty retreat to his tent.

Soon afterward Mr. Turner felt ill and he attributed i.t to having poisoned himself by drinking soup out of a tin and a diet of snow water, with t'ack bread, dry rusks and tinned articles. His hands and face were swollen and it was hopeless to go on. Mr. Turner had Intended going to find pome which Prof.

Sa-pozinokof had placed on the south side forced to suspend construct-on work in Mexico owing to disputes over im ferXig from an affliction that puzzles the medical profession. Her affliction In mtdlcal circles Is termed The moving of the Passerelle de Passy was made necessary by the works of the new underground electric railway of Paris, which is progressing at a giarit pace, It will traverse the Seine above Mrs. Lynch's legs for 14 years have portant concessions involved in its route. Mrs. Owens, wife of a man who secured Mexican concessions years ago in furtherance of a huge colonization scheme that was never matured, discovered that the old concessions had not expired and they were placed in and below water level at six different places, and when finished will be one of been steadily 'growing until the left leg between the ankle joint and knee measures 67 inches in circumference the most perfect and convenient systems of underground electric railways in the and weighs over 100 pounds.

The world. right Its is also enlarging rapidly and her name. It is believed that the Mexican Central assisted her in developing her rights, two solicitors of the last two years has i-acreased to the measurement of 26 inches at the calf. in Norway in 1902, this year the total output will not exceed 1,200 barrels. Of this amount not over 60 per cent, is shipped to this country.

Intense suffering and many deaths will.be the probable result of the shortage of the oil, as in many pulmonary troubles physicians say there is no substitute for it. There are about 8,000 workmen employed on the various new lines, there will be more than 200 stations and the For almost 12 years Mrs. Lynch has that company having had her affairs In charge. Recently the supreme court of Mexico sustained her rights not been able to walk well, but within the past five years she has been barely able to be about her room. Day whole length of the several lines will be over 100 kilometers, which, within the narrow limits of Paris, will make it the best supplied city in the world with to the concessions.

Previously she is said to have offered to compromise with Stillwell for $2,000,000. PASTEUR SYSTEM ATTACKED. transportation facilities. About 220 miles of the railroad has TEST FCR LOCOMOriVES. ind night she is compelled to remain in bed.

She suffers little pain and has tittle hopes of ever recovering. Many physicians have visited the patient 0DINE TREATMENT POPULAR. Barbarians So Greatly Pleased with been built in Mexico, out of Chihuahua and Fort Stillwell, formerly Topolobampo, on the Pacific coast The route includes Kansas City, Oklahoma md Texas before reaching Mexico, Odd Features at Interment of Venn-. sylvanian Weighing Over Five Hundred Pounds. In the presence of 3,000 persons, and with the aid of a derrick Pennsylvania's heaviest man, Wilson Lippincott, weight 560 pounds, was buried in Bristol cemetery the other day.

Thirteen of the borough's largest men, weighing over 2,600 pounds all told, acted as pallbearers and carried the immense coffin from the cemetery chapel to the grave. At the place of burial, instead of the big 13, Charles Ycamens, Bristol's smallest man, had charge of the derrick, which, with block and tackle, was easily made, to lower the body into the grave. The coffin measured three feet four inches wide and dep and seven and one-half feet long. The grave was five by nin-3 feet. when it traverses the republic and finds on outlet on the Pacific coast.

Stains of Drug That They Purposely Braised Their Feet. M. Jean Ajalbert, a well-known au SAW REMAINS OF WASHINGTON Engine Hauls Seventy-Five Cnrs Which, with Contents, Welched Over Five Thousand Tons. The Reading company has been making some experiments recently to determine just how many loaded cars it was possible for a single locomotive of the modern size to haul between Reading and Abrams, Pa. The trains were prepared especially for the occasion, and were made up entirely of the large steel cars, better known among the railroaders as "battleships." The other day engine 1095 hauled 75 cars.

The train and Its contents weighed 5,023 tons. thor and explorer, who recently returned to Paris from a scientific expedition in the Laos country, relates a Claim of a New York Man Who Applies for Admission to Almshouse at the Age of 100. of the mountain, but in addition to tb3 siigh't po-'soning. ho had sustained severe Inflammation of the eyes through the intensely cold wind. The expedition had come to an abrupt close.

Mr. Turner adds: "The view I shall never forget. Our third camp was on the side of a lake that had apparently frozen to the very bottom, as we dug down the ice to about six feet and came to earth, and tki-3 was about 12 feet from the edge of the lake. The all around stood out like huge sentinels, but were scarcely as bold as the most massive group of the Alps." Novel Grounds Cor Divorce, For seven years Ark Fletcher at, his wife Martha have lived in the same house, at Cleveland, and yet the man ne-ver In all those years spoke to her. This is the declaration set up in the wife's petition for divorce.

And then, -when the seven years' silence was at last broken, she says, it was in a quarrel. She wants the court to dissolve the marital ties. They were marrted in Sandusky in 1869. Seven children have been born to them, fiveof whom are now living. The eldest Is 30 years old and you-ngsst 19.

Italian Papers Declare Deaths from Hydrophobia Have Multiplied Since It Has Been Adopted. There have been four deaths at Novara, In Piedmont, Italy, recently as the results of bites of a mad dog. This has aroused keen discussion as to the merits of the Pasteur system. It is stated that of the ten people who were bitten by this dog four were treated by the Pasteur sys-teni died. The papers demand an Inquiry into the cases which were handled at the Pasteur institutions in Italy.

Dr. Ruata, professor of hygiene at the Perugia university, printed a violent article attacking the Pasteur system. He declares that deaths from hydrophobia were rarer before Its adoption. The yearly average between 1875 and 1884 In France was 60, and in Italy 65. Since Its adoption Italy's average has risen to 85.

About 3,000 patients are being treated every year. Nothing; New. ourious experience. His native bearers, having ascertained that the doctor of the expedi tion used tincture of iodine to dress Injuries, bruised their feet on pur-nose. When all the bearers had A Gentle Warning.

Since that man shot his wife she was a burglar, remarks the Chicago Daily News, women will be more- After reaching the age of 106 years Edward Norris, of Rochester, has ap-plied to the county superintendent of poor for admittance to the county almshouse. Norris says he was born in 1797 at the town now known as Unity Springs, N. H. Clippings and other documents that he produced seem to bear out his claim to great age. He has spent most of his life in Kansas, but recently has been living on a farm near here.

Is orris claims that he viewed the remains of George Washington at the time of the funeral, but he was then only two years old. He attributes hid great age to the fact that he never married. passed through the hands of the doctor they looked as If they were wearing brown boots, repeated applications of iodine having turned their feet to a yellow color. The natives were so tickled by this fancy that they actually brought elephants to the doctor, saying that the animals were suffering from sore feet The emperor of Austria has Just snubbed the king of Belgium. The Chi cago Record-Herald remarks that old Learned by Experience.

The British commission of Inquiry Into the conduct of the Boer war is out in a report which makes recommendation as to the lessons gained. Some of the British generals who were engaged In that conflict will not profit much by the commission's conclusions, remarks the Chicago Inter Ocean, as they have long been familiar with its lessons. Cloud Evidently GVtherlno7. There are evidently some real war clouds on the Balkans these days, and the London correspondents have every reason to be proud that the predictions which they have been making for the last 20 years are coming true. Franz Josef acts like a person who never careful how they go through their husbands' pockets.

Old Adage Reversed. In the peace maneuvers oft the coast of Maine more damage was done to the American squadron than during the hostilities with Spain, says the Albany Argus. In time of war prepare for peace. Name Not Given. A dispatch from England says that the birthplace of Dickens has been sold.

Just what American bought it, remarks the Chicago Daily News, the dispatch; does not tell. had a scandal In his house. A Double Stagger. Sixty Feet, One Minute. There will be a clock at St Louis on which the minute hand will be 60 feet long.

In that case 60 feet will make According to British confessions, says one minute, instead of one second, re Deserves First Consideration. Canada will be perfectly welcome to try for the America's cup as soon as Sir Thomas makes up his mind to quit, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. But Sir Thomas has earned the right to be considered above all other applicants for the honor of defeat the Chicago Chronicle, the Boers not only Btaggered humanity, but pretty marks the Chicago Dally News, as the Too Late for Lecture Season. The usual arctic relief expedition has sailed, says the Chicago Chronicle, but so late that it can hardly return in time for the lecture season. teachers painfully pounded Into our nearly knocked out the royal ex heads.

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About Van Peyma's Paper Archive

Pages Available:
92
Years Available:
1903-1903