Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 9, 1900, Page 9

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THE OMATIIA DA!LY BEE: FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 9, 1900. e - T = _ — S mm— TRADITIONS OF WEST POINT [jhen ome to adance st a time at ois I ANOTHER PULL FOR THE POLE ", i “;',.'\‘..‘(“lf‘;.“,.‘l‘.‘.""}'.; Ady one commandment | gler's presence. Mr. recognized " } t t ¢ had taken a Customs as Foroeful as Law Handed Down| A favorite pastime among dets for | An American Expedition F _ p - : ) generations past has been to capture a n desirous from Class to Class, | 1and ndle on his back. As a consequ:nce many | 0 i no VIOLATION A SOURCE OF TROUBLE |5 irte has toen severely ~umpia- oy | RIVAL RACERS WILL HEAD FOR AXIS Ve v B il . [J — permitting & light to approach or cro sald, to vie with the l” mm his post nd the Italians in the race ru Anecdotes Illustrating o Patriotic Motives t the Move His offer to finance the ex Life at the Great Military Acad- Anecdete of General Sherman emy—Oficers Outwitted by An amusing anecdote is related of Gen sperienced M, ad It= |pe ly was at once accepted, it Tt - : Defintte being ! sie to place me in & position the Cadets, eral Sherman, who, as commanding general "t lertaks the work with absolute free- 9‘ of the army, visited West Polnt one June R o e he & younger man he would X~ —_ [ tor the graduation exercises. He accom- —_— ire journey, but his age William Ziegler of New York, who will 1 B K Dl RS will DEVeriies There s probably no place in the United |panied the commandant on his Sunday | Btates where traditions and precedents have [ morning tour of fnspection of barracks | v h SAitou. te. ¢ bexdod § uy the expedition for some SIS Ty w0 much weight as they have at West Point. [and on entering a certain room he walked [ ool 1 ATUS CRPRERIOn (6 be BEated By These traditions are carefully preserved and [over to the mantelpiece. Stooping down | ie ¥ B FEUEWER RIS S0 IO Tt tHe m 7 's record as a successtul handed down from one class to another, re- (he pried up a brick from the middie of [ oo, [P - (000 SEROTEE, OFG s8 man is well known lates the New York Tribune, and it 18 of the | the hearth with his sword scabbard and | F"C80 JEOEE RIY ooy} " fe. Ne th hodll — rarest occurrence for a cadet to do anything | revealed a hollow space about a foot | 4 ot EE ] i‘] AR bt ol LUB AND OTHER WOMEN. that s contrary to them. It he does vio- |square, in which was nicely packed a cone | 2 c8/¢F nor Mr. Baldwin Is ready . : pagn ] o e Flogil . ’ thne to reveal their plans, but this is diue (0 Deeds by Which Some of Them Scaled f t l t d b th 1618 68 important oas, (ke cadei In Question | siderable quastity of tobMsco abd oiher |y, geet (aat negotiations sre pending W the Meights of Fame. ortioiiet an a . 1s made to feel the displeasure of he corps | contraband articles. Meunwhile the cadets | o 1 ©HLFERE) HEOEE AEE O8 The clubwomen of Detnsylvania, who ia o6 Unmistakable manoer: | setupylhg, the toom 0ioud Yy, BAIP| e iurmonte 1o o ted Aierios| aiEared b P HAmApORL 1a Aata] coms Che_extra large cake Buch a tradition 1s that a ' plebe * as mem- | watching and wondering what sort of man ? and is confident that it will be succoes vention last week, represent a large and J' ld f t bars i h. ouri. am are culd, 14 Bver | o generawas o Bave bawn i 1o an: | CORHIERE HAC Il e T T or 10 cents, regarded on an equal footing with an up- | cover the only “cellar’ of its kind in bar- - . srompted solely by patriotic motives. 1f kind, says the Philadelphia Record. Whi k b TAF O1ABS mal URUI e has compleled bis| racks. Turoitg 1o the commandast tne|Eiomapied wiely by patrictio moiven, 1t ihe e TgATast vy WUILE mahkes two cakes of the clubwomen first year at the academy. He is invariably | general remarked 1y D Addréssed 4n D, Bo-and 80, of Just DIaIh | *" have boen wondering It that hole was | bOlere,th can | want the ars and sipes | advanced i tatetect S cuure, Lhe) u:ual toilet size and you to by raised there. I have are by no means all ambitious for a publie mister, and must always address upper ;m]« still there. 1 made It when I was & cadet|ayon 4 deep interest in Arctic explorations carcer for themselves or for others of thelr can uyno better Joa p bl L Bl b e e e BTl B | since 1 was a youth of 17. At that time I M £ them, in fact, retain the tra- ddition, he must be prolific in his use of . s 4 7 hat time I'sex. Most of them, at b+ Story of a Billiard Table, — — o bl RLAR e l’lce. the word “sir,” afixing it to the eud of ev | aty sentance. One of the most interesting of West It & pleba is asked by an upper class man | Point’s traditions is that relating to the bil- { ® what his name 6. e must reply «Mr. Brown, | lard table. Shortly after the civil war the wir,” or whatever his name may be, and it | cadets, always on the alert for some new he falls to do g0 he s certain to be told to | Schieme for amusement, decided that they “put & ‘sir’ on that, Mister,” fu a way that | Would like to bave a billiard table, and ac- will usually rause him to remember it, Of | cOrdingly organized a bilitard club. A col- course, a plebe koon learns this, and there | lection was taken up with which to purcha 18 no longer auy trouble with bim on that | ® table, and a suitable place was sought in score which to set it up. Until the present steaw The Haw Recrult, heating apparatus was installed in the cadet | barracks, alout twenty-five or thirty years | An amusing anecdote is 10ld of & raw coun- try 1ad who reported at West Point a few | 450, the heating was by means of furnaces yeurn ago co aing this use of the word | The busement of the sixth division of the T X » Kit‘g SO]Ofl‘lOfl Had i When the new cade's report at the | DArracks was used for coal bins, the bins \ y academy they first vicit the adjutant’s office, | beIng so arranged that there was a large one ity RN - t ti f wi d Qv thee Bt T T g d | A0 S o S, ok s | [ Weard reat Reputation ior Wwisdom give information concerniug tiaerr parents or | 0nly be reached by passing through one ot . y - Jans d their former careers. Next | the others. After considering all available e : N 2 . Lt . i - : o " - fu':y SHHlL €he trnarebs ofise: st .|.-p..:.v places this coal bin was finally selected as <\ WSS >y , . One of his wise remarks was “Of making many books there is no end. He had never what money they may have with them, and | being the place least lable to detection—for =5 seen the making of a great dictionary. It is like the making of many books and seems to then they go to the barracks, where they re. | It must be remembered the table was unau- : = b port to the cadet officer in charge of their | thorized. The table was bought in New \ 3 R B3 Ao ) ) have no end. In making the o v instruction. 1t is here that they receive | York and sent to Gairisons, across the river, ) thelr first taste of military discipline. Well, | for there was no West Shore railroad in this young man passed through the prelimi- | those days. One cold winter night it was narles, finally reaching the barracks, and, | bauled by team of oxen across the river on after several attempts to enter the office in | the fce, and up the hill, and was safely P \ i X (oS [ & military manner and to the muqmnm, stowed away in the coal bin before morning. | N A 7 of the ausfere leutenant In charge, b The table was soon set up and became a LA TP h asked by thal functionary what his name | source of great enjoyment to the cadets. A 3 bt R y was. keg of beer was always kept on tap, and ':,"h" Smith,” answered the 1,:1 ‘u].mm were hr:"m from the vv‘]l-y‘ulc, giving 4 an army of the brainiest and smartest men of the world was employed and a million dollars “Suppose you put @ ‘sir’ on that!" cried | the room a cheery appearance. he mem- g “m QT P T Y O 3 . ‘ the cadet officer, forgettiug for the moment | bers of the club used to gather there at all 3 spent. Take the BEST PRODUCT OF THE BEST BRAINS and the result must be satis- in his assumed wrath the equally Leinous | hours of the day and night when their pres- | | 2 e o9 factory. But with all this expenditure of man and mind and money omlssion of the “Mr ence was not required elsewhere by their \ ; " “Sir John Smith,” innocently replied the | dut'es, and sit around smoking, drinking and | || BUENR L UeooMbA et somred 0 (ke | ity rutosied whle ‘two o, chemspaves| - W] The Standard Dictionary is Offered for Jetter his suj ® injunction. For the | billlards WILLIAM ZIEGL FINANCIAL BACKER OF THE EXPEDITION. next few minutes that poor plebe's life was The authorities soon became aware (half — - - & burden to i all the cadets about | there was a bililard table somewhere in the | was an employe of a panorama of the Kane |ditional feminine qualities of character and the room at once wiing” him for | barracks, for they could hear the balls | expedition. My interest in the regions of are model wives and mothers, with strong ° his supposed attempt at facetiousness. The | clicking together, but they could not find it. | the far porth has steadily increased until | domestic tastes. It was evident from some name “Sir John' stuck to him throughout | The cadets continued to enjoy the priv-| now I am willlng and ready to place suf- | of the addresses delivered that not all ot his entire career at the academy and even | ileges of the billiard club for more than a | ficient means at Mr. Baldwin's disposal to | the club members realizo how greatly the i sHorltyil Y feti vw. aal y | e a A 3 T S dictionary, » e . followed bim futo the army | year. Finally one night soon after mid- | aid bim fn every possible way to get (o the | expansion of woman's interests has in- There are Ll d o points of superiority in The Standard Dictionary lFN!' from its mar It has been the custom in the corps from | night, as two officers were returniog from a | pole. 1 have always made it a rule to ac- | fluenced the sex and has developed in un- velously low price, that one can scarcely enumerate them. Some one has said there are in time fmmmemorial to “devil” plebes dur- | convivial evening at the me: they saw | complish whatever 1 have undertaken, and I|expected instances the qualities of phys- o D foti 3 1 2ac) e iali D A ctio bne. ch topic is the recialist. ing their first encampment. A reat many | two cadets, clad in their underclothing and | expect the hunt for the north pole to be | jcal courage, muscular strength and skill THE ST“\‘\I ARD 41 dictionaries in one. Ea pic is the work of_n.s[ ”,‘“ f of the practices indulged in ure perfectly | dressing gowns, emerge from the north | no exception. I have every confidence In|and self-polse. It may interest the club- Satisfactory to students and scholars because so complete, containing 300,000 words, Annocent, and so long as the upper class men | sallyport and disappear down the steps to | Mr. Baldwin. He {s a man of determination | women If we note the incidents of a sin- imes as ma as th d- ‘Webster's Dictio e bo s ds i confine themselves to them there Is little | the arcaway in front of the barracks. In-|and of experience. 1 would mot waste 5 gle week, us reported in the newspapers, nearly three times a My e old u!u.n by, Baby) eI LOOR LA NG or 1o opposition from the authorities stantly the thought of the billiard table | cents if T did not think we would succeed. | in which woman has been portraved as high favor among the wise men on both sides of the Atlantic, and that fact alone establishes An incident illustrative of this is told by | flashed through the minds of the two of- | I have told Mr. Baldwin that I did not want | something quite unlike thé clinging vine: e are 8 i ) ; ress, e are some opinions from the press of Europe w0 oficens who wus walking in the rear of | ficers und they started quietly after the | to see him return uutil he could bring the| Mys. B, F. Tremann of New York City its success. Here ar P i P P Company D's tents one afternoon in one of | cadets. On reaching the basement door- | Welcome news that the north pole had been | sprang at the head of a runaway horse the recont encampments of the cadets at|way of the sixth division the two cadets reached. ~We bave plans—very practical |and stopped i, after having been dragged West Point. Ho heard a voice from the body | entered and the officers, arriving a moment 0nes, too—and there is nothing apparently | some distance, and thus saved the life of neampment shouting in stentorlan | Jater, saw them climb over a pile of coal to prevent carrying them out to the letter.”” |an old man. Mrs. Bertha Valentine of “I'm mad' I'm mad: I know I'm|and enter an open door, through which Leader of the Hoboken defended a small street car con- Wondering what the trouble was, he | came sounds of laughter and conversation Evelyn B. Baldwin, whom Mr. /u.hr has | quctor against two toughs oth of whom walked a short distance further and looked {and the clicking of balls, while the air was chosen to head the expedition, is a man of | she knocked down with her flsts and one between the tents. There Le saw ‘a @ tent | jaden with fragrant tobacce smoke. medium height. He is well built, bas brown | of whom sbe dragged to the police station. 08y the company street a great, sUrapping | The oficers paused for a moment and hair and bright blue eyes. He has a modest | Captaln Margaret Kelley (brown-eyed and «... it were difficult to praise this monument of American learning and plebe, over six feel tall aud welghing more | held a whispered consultation. Finally, de- | manner and is one of the last men a person | demure) of the Salvation Army in Brook- splendid dictionary too highly. It is industry. . . From * publication of than 200 pounds, ¢ ping on his nds and | ciding that they would 11 the ¥ > other of- | Would select for a battle with the elements | jyn literally thrashed a gang of hoodlums a work for which all who speak the the Standard Dictio. .y America may knees about the tent, like a caged lion, and | ficers of their discovery and have all of in the Arctic reglons. | into me refusing the ald of a police- The Freema: Journal , Dublin, The Irish Times, Dublin, Ireland The Liverpool Dally Post, Liverpool: Ireland: “For scholarly accuracy and “. .. 1t will be recognized, we have “It is an implement that will be of exceptional fulness . . . it stands un- every reason to , mot alone vast service to those who cultivate rivalled. . . . Of other existing dlc- throughout the \merican continent, the literary arts on either side of the tionaries with which we are acquaint- but in all English-speaking parts ot Atlantic. It is & monument te Amer- ed, we know of none that can be com- the Old Wor also as an authority fcan industry, no less than the great pared with the Standard.’ from its fulness, discrimination, va White City by Lake Michigan (the late The Belfast Age, Belfast, Ireland riety and ample erudition. It is a Chicago World's Fair,)" ness English language may be justly grate- date a new period of the country's his every minute or two giving vent to the cry | them come down the following night and He has always taken a deep inter | man. Miss Lottie Poillon (who looks like [ (} ¢y tory.” that he was mad. Stopping for a moment to | enjoy the fun of a rald on the club, they meteorology. He was a member of a school girl) kunocked down and severely take In the situation fully, the officer heard | withdrew and went home. oxt day all | Peary Arctic expedition in 1893-1804, 1tk s ew and we o ext day o e 3 punished with her fists two rufans who HI QT ., in a mild and persuasive voice from a nearby | the officers at the post were informed of 1897 he went to Spitzbergen, having vol- | insulted her in Central park, New York THE STANDARD DICTIONARY has a great many attractive features. It is not feas- tent say, “Put more feeling in it, mister; | th | discovery and It was arranged that the | Uunteered to accompany Andree on his | Mrs, Margaret Hellmeyer of Brooklyn, on i 0 e erate all at this time. For instance, so many words are in constant dispute, say It as It you meant it.’ raid should occur ut midnight. All might | Aerlal flight, but, there being no room for | being attacked by a highwayman, struck | ible to enumerat ) 1 The officer, perceiving that the whole [ have goue well and the officers might have | Bim In the basket of the big balloon, he | he scoundrel across the face with a bottle Such words have been referred to 50 leading philologists and their opinions atken as final. thing was only an fnnocent form of devil- | had their little fun had it not been that | €Ould not proceed. In 1808-40 Mr. Baldwin | of ammonia and he fled screaming. Miss | The matter of spelling is also difticult to adjust. In the Standard that has beén settled ment contrived by some ingenlous yearling, | there were three cadets the prevl. | Accompanied the Wellman expedition to| Ryth Covington, society belle of Peru, i 0 made no report of it, but went on his|ous night Instead of two. The third | Franz Joset Land. Early in the present|Iud, with her own hands dug an Italian conservatively, yet accurately way. bad | forgotten his pipe and had gone back Year he made a trip to the Republic of| japorer out of a trench which had caved in The quotations are gems, illustrating to a nicety the use of the words. Another amusing incident of this kind | for it, while the other two went on and were | COlombia, South America, to visit his friend | yud buried him. Mrs. James Withey of . occurred one quict Sunday afternoon, when | discovered by thoe officers. The third, com- | 88 college chum, M. T. Snyder, on his| pocca Grande, . was attacked in her | The illustrations are numerous, in fact it is a work that will be attractive to children on moat of the cadets were asleep in their | ing along & moment later, saw the officers | bABana plantation and at once set about | kitchen by a large mad dog, which she beat | this account and consequently all the more valuable as an educator. tents and tho visitors' seats in front of |and quietly followed them, observing all| PUtting into execution plans for the pro-|into insensibility with a rolling pin and i the camp parade were nearly deserted. | their movements and listening to their | P0Sed expedition, Mr. Snyder and his|aragged outdoors. Mrs. J. F. Fullam of No home library where Prof. R. A. Todd, Columbia: “I am exceedingly pleased with its fulness, conden- A tall, slender cadet, wearing @ shako and | whispered conversation. When they with. | Prother having volunteered to ald him in & | Wushington Heights, New York, being an LEW sation, accuracy and completeness. Its mechanical execution is & delight to the artis- plume. armed with o saber, and rlding |drow e went in and told the members of | AD4ncial way. Later Mr. Zieeler, who [5 & | expert with the pisiol, shot i’ the leg & there are school children e genge.” | etween his logs a little tin horse scarcely | the club all b ¢ cousin of the Messrs. Snyder, heard of the | powdy who had attacked he JAn¢ - S Stan- President Bl Al ! v ExTvmiining » 1iite i borto scsrosly all he bad heard and secn. The| rowdy who had attacked her husband. Mrs. ||} should be without the Stan resident Bashford of Ohio Weslyan ter & comparison of many words I am quite cadets at once reallzed that it was il up | P1an and at once msked to be allowed to | Kerry of Alvion, N. Y., marched a vicious | A convinced that the 8tandard surpasses the Century Dictiopary in careful and accurate company street, brandishing his saber and [ with the club, but they dotermined to have | ©AUIP the expedition. Mr. Baldwin 15 well | tramp across a field to her husband, hold- dard Dictionary. definition of words and in its {llustrations, as well as the number of words defined. shouting, “Turn, boys, turn; we're going I a laugh at the expense of the oMcers. Ac. | KBOWR in many of the large cities. He was | ing a pistol in her hand. Mrs. Angelina | Later: “I say more emphatically than ever before that it fs the best dictionary in the back!" Back and forth through the dif-|cordingly, all arrangements were made be Vorino of Harlem, N. Y., whipped a police College men generally agree .y janguage, and 1 want it for conatant reference.” ferent company streets ho ran, Aragging | fore the club adjourned that night. man so severely that he was sent to & | 28 t0 the excellence of the work. Pref. Dufeld of Princ t will be consplcuous among the enduring momu- his horse with him, until finally he ran| The next night the officers met as hospital and & New York soclety woman | Here are some expressions con- p,..i "ot intallectual lite at the close of the 19th century. .. For comprehensiveness into the officer In charge, Who prompuly | arranged and crept stealthily down the aren. compelled a burly negro to get down from | cerning the work by colle8® ¢ yocupulary, accuracy in desnition, judiclous arrangement of materlal, Instructive il confined him in the guard tent. But all [ way and into the sixth aivision. Harios oo his wagon and go to the police station for professors: lustration and admirable typography, it {s superior to any other work of it class, and the camp had been awakened, and the fgound of clicking balls, some became Eaving been cruel to his horse, ere long will supersede them and be recognized us The Standard Dictionary.” cadets and the fow visitors had a good | sceptical and concluded the whole thing Instances of other forms of courage and laugh. The plebe was released the next |y as a hoax, but neverthel 5 b enterprise were reported durl 0d morning, none the worse for his night in ess they pushed P reported during the period Forninn, mo on and climbed over the pilo of coal. Open- in question. ~Mrs. Mercy McCormack of For $7.00' Exami‘]e the Book. ere greeted with a glow \ New York seized her gon in her arms when Trials of a Plebe Sentinel, of light, but still no sound. On entering ‘ bis clothing was aflame and, although she A plebe’s first night on guard Is gen- they found the room deserted, but there W i was terribly burne held him until the fire erally an unpleasant experience for him; | Was the billlard table, an almost untouched 3 was extingulshed. Mrs. Charity Cralg, a for, besides the oMclal visits of the varlous | k& of beer, several pounds of tebacco, AN daughter of the late secretary of agri- ° offcers and noncommissioned officers | Some chairs and lastly a note on the table ® culture Rusk, fought and downed an charged with his instruction, to see that|Addressed to tho oficers on duty at West established telephone company at Asheville, he understands all the fine points of his | Point. The note was to the effect that as N. C. and s now runniug an independent 1309 Farnam Street. dutles as a sentinel, he Is sure to be visited | the ofcers of the post had been so kind telephone exchange there. Two girls con- by & leglon of spooks, hobgoblins and vari- | 10 permit the club to continue its existence \ \ | fined at the Magdalen home, in this city, sus other unauthorized individuals for more than a year, It desired to present | escaped by sliding down a rope of sheets and An incident of this kind is related where | to them (the oficers) the table and all its N | climbing over a high wall topped with & yearliog, wrapped in a sheet, appeared | 4PPurtenances, as it was deemed expedient A barbed wire. A hair-pullng bee at the|mous appeal to the British people and | eclse. When he dies the caldron of Central | main as fnanclal secretary of the univer: o0 the post of & plebe sentinel at night. |t Wind up the club's affairs. The note was /N B BALDWIN—LEADER OF Cleveland College for Women marked | General Kouropatkin, the war minister of [ Aslan politics is likely to boll over. sity and conduct the business affairs and VHalt!" shouted the plehe “Wio is there?" | slEned, “The Executive Committee.” AN R PARENWINTHEARE | by blackened eyes, brulees, torn hats and |a peace emperor, proudly claims to he the —_ PADAIATHIN BRRIINE f i i ik “Moses and the ten commandments,”| The officers, of course, were much|_ " CPiTION. HnCiw: skirts and everything but weeping. The | inheritor of the smbitions of Skobeleft, So RELIGIOUS, A s Huptiat denomination, when came the response chagrined at being thus outwitted by the| Mr. Baldwin said he had definite plans | vigilance of Mrs. Davidson, wife of an | boleff and Kaufman. Chirches and Sunday schools will make The poor plebe thought there was some- | Cadets. Nevertheless, the table was re- | for several years counected with the |Euglish sea captain, saved the lives of [ But the great danger which threatens inesa gode are mostly made in Bir-| thelr offorings for the bible work of the Ihing irregular, but he remembered his |moved to the ofcers' mess, a cording | weather bureau service and at various | tweuty-nine wrecked sailors. Mrs. Rose|India is not alone an overt act of hon- | TjnENMm. ERgund e i e chapel of the Marble Collegiate RS e SR ot aaysr sllowiRK @ors 1on, 18 the one still in use there. | {imes was stationed at Washington, D. C., | Anderson allowed herself to be flung into | tility on the part of Russis, but the out- | heon vory Buccesefully. prosecuted 1 that | church, New' York, Rev. Donald Mac Nashville, Cairo, Toledo, New Orleans and | the sea from a sinking ship and clung to [ break of internal strife in Afghanistan. | country Dougall, & native of' the Scoteh highlands, o wils educated at Y \d Princoton, Although the reported | Moblle. He is 38 years old and was born | a cask until she was rescued The politics of the kingdom 18 at present. Over 1000 children in Havana are recelv- | Who way educated ut ¥Yule ar Princet a R o T ) n Conducts & service 1n Guelle every Sunday Y Portiand mine {s denied at tha | in camp at Sprivgfield, Mo., his father,| The week in which these varlous events | summed up In the perscnality of the king, | ¥ Instruction in the Protestant day and | Leternoon offces of the company In Colorado Springs | K. B, Haldwin, at that time belng a first| were recorded was not peculiar, and the | who Is probably the most absolute despot | *\" ¥\ Sipdhene reatoaman has recently | Ameng Gatholle women the demand for & that Tally belleved n mining cIrcles | oiptain in the Ilinols regulars. His father | incidents are not unusual. Within the same | on earth His military power {s much un- | siia that he feared that religlon would pe | Olege Father thin ¢ Gonas nt education hus hands of an’ Knglish syndlcate. consisting | afterward becaine leutenant colonel of the | period there were published an account of | derrated. Writers generally treat the Cen- | lost to his people unless they deified the | WRENCS K0P GURES i 1n the first \;’lm‘rl\‘:mymx':"rjmrln{‘ .Vrfi:-‘r“’n.-'x';"‘&‘5-“5'1”{;;5 | Elghth Missouri cavalry. | Mr. Fuller's acceptance of a position atftral Asian question as if only Russia und "‘:‘]‘I"fi“x"” dred and sixty-nine students have | Cathollo woman's college in the world, What Thi nm‘ha Citizen Says Only | Seutn Atrican diamond “ment & Co the | “Young Baldwin attended public school in | encral housowork in Syracuse, N. Y., and & | Great Britain were the protagonists, but ', S8 JURT @00 RN R AC QUG RIS | According to the estimate made by Cor ] S Only | Voo in s and railwi %t | Hlinols and finally graduated from North- | description of the beautiful embroidery | as a matter of fact Abdur Rahman's stand- | pingy of HBoston university—nine more than | 8l General ‘Goodnow, bhased ‘upon sta s said Faga g e B S it P ot o ‘ ‘ ne ade by refugec missionaries Corroborates the Story of Thousands, | sk e "t 7t (bt Zaldl caPoit | western coltege, Napervile, Ii., where o | work of & mun st Eransion 33 ing army mumbers 60,000 men. on the most | Ikt ¥ finte, made by, refigee, mislonrisn st p 88 s " Snyde conse, © estimate d It 18 sta that the missionaries who ‘ od th at the hands of thelr acerne: n the Aot that Caperty for il [ had as classmates J. A. and M. T. Snyder - nservative estimate, and unlimited pum- | 1t ) that the misslonaries have wuffered dea : K The particulars related by this represen- | examination of the property and from Lon- | the men Intrumental in arranging for CALDRON IN CEN L bers of wild tribesmen would eagerly flock been in China do not want any cliim | countrymen for accopting the Christian hundreds of others in this city. When there | The plan reported from London s to | Observe Baldwin visited Eurcpe when of the A g troops are armed with excellant modern Episcopalians of the Milwaukes | (08 G20 T Army held at Reading, Ps., wre scores of people, all anxlous to tell i 'fi.‘:f“‘l? ate the Portland with Stratton's | years old and toured Ir d afoot tray In oune respect Great Britaln has reason | T and first-class small arms and am- ‘I\:‘;" M m‘ hvor strong the appoints [ 1ast week Genera ll \\’I Duffi md“’n.‘l‘.’fi”"a about the benefits recelved from the use of | (N{SRERARRCE and to "“‘Il‘"\“u new company | ng his expenses by writing for magazl t6 ba thasktut tho Boxers, says the|mubition factorles arg in working order at | Joiit 0f & CORGIHIGE AL #8 4 'l“”f’.‘l:‘.'\”.’Ll'f”.flvn" e offioars Asd solCias Doan's Kidney Pills, the Rreatest skeptic | Such a consoiidation would Lreate mhe oniy | Returning to this country he became a|Chicago Record. The destruction of large | Kabul. The character of the country is| ppipiy-eight years go, after Y meeting. because 1t interferes with in Omaha must be convinced. Read this: | the greatest gold mining property in ¢ teacher in 11linois public schools and speut | portions of the Manchurian rallway and | Perfectly adapted to the warfare of dar- | faithful labor, all the Indlan minsl carmestness Mr. W. R. Taylor, of 1513 Webster Street, | 9749 but probably the ‘greatest tn his vacaticns traveling. Although nelther | (ho geperal preoccupation of Russia with | B8, bardy guerrilias, while it would break Minnesota were destroyed snd B0 ol At the convention of the Roman Cathollo smployed at the Omaha Hardwood Lumber RS R A Mr. Ziegler nor Mr. Baldwin will say any- | ugairs in northern Asia delayed Slayonic | the heart of European troops. The Rus. | Jiirderid Aut this was th g Jouns Mer'e National upign, held & fey 0., Bays:—"For & couple of years my back Monument May I'e Sold, thing about their plans for the expedition, | diplomacy for & time from pursuing its 8148 know all this and are unlikely to| "\ Groenwich, Conn., a crusade against | tion wis made by Hishop Meiaul of Tren wched, the secretion became highly colored 'll‘"- r“‘:‘v ‘{“" Nlu\. [ ‘[rh; sallors' and |t is understood that two ships will be | oieengive policy on the Afghan frontier, | #dvance upon India during his life, unless '8 golf playing has been started by the | ton looking 1o the federation of all Romar oldiers' moniment, one of the finest and sharp twinges cuught me in the kid- | ple shafts in the country, erected s | purchased, manned and equipped and sent \When the bulk of England's troops were | they eucceed in winning Abdur Rahman \ ‘v;!.‘.‘fl“:“'x‘m‘v .“;:h:‘.;‘:”.n“\:“ Catholic soc ;m,‘,‘ in the ‘Iy y‘;w“tl"r.i‘lu;.ly: e neys when stooping. Procuring Doan’s Kid- | what ‘more than a year ago c0st of | north, starting from New York e next | jocked up In South Africa and Russia had |88 &n ally, which at times has seemed JH BH BEROE Bunday n oA new, inatitution called ithe Rasgad ney Pills from Kubn & Co's drug store on [ 0000 and, dedicated by Prestdent McKin: | summer. One of these ships will return | yoching to divert its attention, some very possible Rev. George 1. Perin, pastor of the Every | the first service 450 men were present. Most the cormer of 15th and Douglas streets, I|of the committee in to :'..ln:-'"d.x"'..‘y home, while the other will push forward gangerous movements were made in the| The danger will come with his death, Day Universaiist 4V.u|‘v"y\‘n Hoston, nas | of them hud no h ‘;n.‘~‘4.u-|' were in r...‘”l took them and they cured me. I do mot | still due on it 1 pay ihe | aud cndcavor to reach the objective point. | airection of Herat. The danger passed for | That danger fs the mightmare of Indian WcCrhied the InVIaUon of Biv anomination) The chureh B Pondon. Coffee, Tolls and healtate in saying that Doan’s Kidney Pills | balince on the mopument cut of the county | Inapiring Motives, the moment when the Boxers gave the|administrators. It fs & wonder the ameer [of Universalism in America crullers are distributed at each service are a reliable remedy and 1 have spoken t0 | election held Tuesday and the vote was a | {or the important trip ¢+ |czar's legions other work to do. Now it lived so long and it is known that he | The Rev. Willlam A. Burch, a Methodist | Father Herman J. Alerding of Indian several of my friends about them.” negative one The county has “already | My friends and’ college mates, T. | is reported once more that military actiy- | may die at any moment, Three years ago |Minister of Chicago, has been appointed |upolls, who has been appeinted bishop of 10,000 to u ~ . nancla ent for the Northwestern uni fort Wayvne, to succeed the late Bishop ¥or sale by all dealerw. Price 50 cents. | EINeD $10000 to the monument fund and the | gnygar of Mobile, Ala., and his brother, J. | Ity 18 visible in Afghanistan and that Cos- | hls English physictan, Dr. J. A, Grey, said | FEAGRRR Tk Wiare ‘01 The' pravonod gore Wayne, o succeed the Iate {ieno; Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole | nanagers have an offer of §0,000 more | A. Snyder of New Orleans, Lo., cousins of |sack regiments in Turkestan are moving|in London that his majesty's health had |iwentieth century fund of the Methodiat | priest for thirty-two years. lle was born sgents for the U, §. than the shaft cost and the understanding | Mr. Zlegler, have for some months known |toward the boundary, The Russiaus are [been in a most critical state for years and 'church, 1le travel about the country wport, [y, and was educated at Bt t will be sold unless something | 8 o " 4 pi 4 the interests of the endowment fund of . the Benedictine monastery Remember the name, Doan's, and (ake no | if that it will be sold unless something 18 | o¢ ‘my ambtion for Arctic exploration,” 'much nearer the gates of Herat than they | that he was & doomed man, kept alive by |}, "5 VUral(y fne_ond L fund 4 1 the, jcting me substitute. balance. | ®aid Mr. Baldwin. “They had volunteered 'were when Charles Marvin made his fa- his iodomitable will more than anything now known br . Sheppard will lfluH»Vl\-nl) Blx yeurs, g Deal Pending,

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