Ihe 7hited Oepulchre The VV Tale of O Pelee By Will Levington Comfort Conrrlaht. 19)6. br Will LeTlniton Comfort Coprriiht. IW7. br J. B. Lippiwcott Company. All rlehti reerrrtl CHAPTF.R X VI 1. ( Continued.) All thnt had been serene partook of itrnngc- disorder now. Negley should have made an effort ere this to roach him. The power that devastated the city and with unspent violence swept the morne might have reached three leagues t 8ea' Snv that the gray was unchangeable in the roof of the world, he could not believe that all this was one day. Lara would never forgive him for being whole, at the price of her mother's eyes 1 Thore seemed no adjustment possible for this cruel play of his service. He called the mother's name softly, but his words made no impress called in frenzy at last, and felt her shudder in his arm. "Hoy !' "Yes. yes." "Tell Lara that there was no yesterday no last night! And leave me here In the dark!" How long afterwards he. never knew, but he awoko to find himself uttering in coherent sentences. The woman was unite dead. The hours drew on into eternity, but the gray still lived in the sky. He loosened his arm. and the blood rushing into the strained limb lwrc with It a thrashing pain. The water had cool ed, but he did not put his burden down. He had not yet fathomed the extent of her surrender, nor (he signet and color of her personality upon every word she had spoken. lie heard a cry from Lara, and deemed it the encroach ment of personal madness. Scornfully he nnswered. Again the voice of the wom an! He arose and called her name. A .shadow darkened the orifice, and he saw 'lis lady in the sky. It may be in this marvelous world, where men carry on their wars and their tvooings, some pursuing their little way of darkness, some bursting into blooms of valor and tenderness it may be that af ter the most exalted passage of agony and terror, two of Earth's people were, return ed to each other in the strangeness of these. One swooning at the curb of an ancient cistern, under the hot leaden sky. the falling sea before, and Pelce, with "his tens of thousands slain, on her right band': the other in the pit below, standing in the cooling water, and calling upon her to forgive him for failing in that which only the gods could do. It may be that In the collection of Karth's tableaux an other such film Is curled away from an other age and another catnclysm. "Niver you worry your hcarrt. sorr," called Macready, to whom the voice of his friend had brought imperious conscious ness, man-wise, instead of collapse. "Th' faint is nothin. 'Tis a fortune fur thim as can faint fur joy, an' no hurrt in ut, sorr. Have you th' strent' f do th' over hand up th' chain, wif th' fairest av tin t'ousand at th' top, sorrV" Constable placed his burden upon the stone slabs, caught the chain, and pulled himself free from the water. His weight was a mountain. The five days had don what four had not played havoc with the one hundred and ninety pounds of manhood which 'Struggled upward under Macready's cheers, and fell across the rim of the cistern into Macready's arms. Lara awoke- and found Constable bend ing over her. Her eyes rested upon his lacerated hand, upon the swollen veins in his throat and temples. She saw blood npon his clothing, blisters upon his neck, sweat and mire upon his face. The reality came that he was praying for her to forgive him because her mother had died in his arms. "Peter, my beloved!" she murmured. "You say that mother " She halted, for the grief uprose in its fullness in her mind. The day had put a look of horror in her eyes that months would not efface. Hut there was no mortal hurt upon her. Her nostrils, lips, hands all moved in their way of dear perfection. Some time she would see that he had done his best. Though he had failed in all else, he had saved this masterpiece from barm. "But if 1 had not come back, she never would have known." he pleaded. "And she forgave me I'm quite sure as you'll forgive me " "What are you saying?" shefcried sud denly. "What do you mean? It is hor rible, but I came thinking to find you all lying here as they are in the city all dead and down and I have found my lover living !" Macready and. Ernst, afar off, watched the puffs of smoke and steam rise like gray-white birds from the ruins. "Ernst, lad," said the other, "th' boss an' th' l'adln' lady are bavin an Intel lechooal repasht in th' clnter av th sta-age, be th' ould well. Hear in molnd you're a chorus gurrl, an' conduct your eilf in accord." CHAPTER XVIII. The Madame was steaming down from Basse Terro to Saint Plorre. It was the third morning after the tragic eighth of May. On the evening after the eruption the ship had touched Tort de France, and loft the natives there to join Father Da mien's colony. Then the Madame was dis patched to Dominica, where Constable cabled to New York for officers and men to complete the ship's company, and suc ceeded also in reaching Mr. Stansbury by cable, with the word that his daughter had been saved, hoforo the planter could get passage for the Whlted Sepulchre. Constable and Lara wore sitting to gether nt the cabiu door in the sunlight and soft winds. Tho girl wqrc a robe purchased roudy-made In Hawse Terre. It was white and lustrous, a strange native fabric, which the man regarded with se riousness and awe. This was an item in the first consignment of feminine apparel he had ever had the honor to purchase. The Joy was full and rare. "I come to you empty-handed and very 6oIled from the heat of the Journey, sir," she had told him; "but father will reim burse you." "Father will be allowed certain priv ileges, but not that." he had replied, and many were the booties, flounces, ribands, and mysteries which they drew, together ind apart, from thq treasure houses of ittle Uasso Terro. Peter was In white, too, of a freshness mly found on shipboard. His right baud vns In tho swathed stato which denotes repairs, and n thickness of lint was fitted mder his collar. Thero was, too, a drawn look about his mouth and eyes, to which the recuperative forces had not yet at tended. Negley, multifariously bandaged, was on tho bridge, In company with n new officer, secured temporarily at Dominica. The captain was unable to walk, but sig nified his intention of healing above decks. Constable was regarding the sad face be fore him, and the beauty of it had made him dumb for several moments. "Lara," he said finally, "we'll make the pilgrimage together to Saint Pierre or the place 1" "She was very beautiful and very proud our mother!" the girl whispered unsteadily. "She told you to leave her there In the dark, so that we would never see how changed she was. I know how she felt." Lara, Peter and Crusoe made their ar duous way up the cluttered road into the Hue de Hivoll. A smoky charnal, Saint Pierre, made human only by the lamenta tions of those who had come down for their dead from Morne Rouge and the hills. The wind was still; and the sun shone through silent towers of smoke, and it was noon. No one had spoken for sev eral minutes. The fruit shop had fallen in part. The stone arch remained, al though the wooden door had been levelled and partly devoured by fire. Crusoe re mained outside with Lara, while Peter went in to sec if the place was safe. They heard his steps upon the stones, the rat tle of falling plaster. The waiting was long before he appeared and beckoned. They followed him into the little stone shop. A breath of coolness still lingered in the dim place, and the fruity odor of spilled wine. The nsh-covered floor was packed hard, and still was damp from the susts of rain through the open door nnd the broken-backed roof. Steady as a clock ticking there was heard the "drip, drip" from somewhere among the merciful shad ows, where the old soldier of France was sitting. "Lara, dearest, I shduld have spared you this. Must you go farther?" Peter whispered. "Crusoe and I will be only a moment." "I am going, too," the girl answered. The three climbed over the heap of stones, which was the rear doorway, and entered the court from whence the song birds had Down. Across the drifts of ash, Into the dark beyond, they made their way, Constable leading, Crusoe last. They were sitting together the lovers. She had been listening, like Desderaoua, as he "spake of most disastrous chances battles, sieges, fortunes." Soronia had been the first to see the sinister face of Iago at the door! She had bent forward and covered in her arms the face of her soldier, her painter of pictures. Thus they had fallen the adventurer In the shelter of the golden vine. Pelee had covered them with dust each particle of covering dust fresh-wrought from the fire iu which the stars were forged. "Don't touch, Crusoe!" Peter warned. Something in the tone caused the man who was accustomed to do as he pleased to forbear from his investigations. After all, his own life had been spared because Constable had taken him captive, nnd the trip had paid. Crusoe did not understand what was between the millionaire and the revolutionist. It occurred to him at last that this something must have been great er even than dollars: yet he was not sure. The look upon Constable's face as he led the woman into the sunlight was that of fortunes lost! Crusoe left them there, and made his own way back to Fort de France, to wait for his ship. He was happy to be alive, but he carried a crown ing mystery in his brain. This had to do with a millionaire's generosity on the one hand, and a millionaire's perversity on the other. After all, ho acknowledged that he knew less of Constable than when he left New York. Peter and Lara bad descended nearly to the shore when she said: "If your strange friend had not come into'our lives, we could never have known each other as we do now. We might have loved and gone our way, without knowing all that it means to be human, without knowing all that our hearts could make us do." "It all worked out like a mosaic for you and me, Lara. Our valiants fell about us, but we were left. Always in our greatest need a man arose to help Breen, Negley, Ernst, little Denny " "Was there work for Pugh to do?" she asked. "Ah, Pugh the weak sister! He kept you from going into the harbor too soon ! I shall pay him and let him go his way to-night in Fort de France. The sea is a strange mistress to mother two such sons as the lion Negley and the poor little jackal Pugh! Sweetest Lady, I am in love with you and the world! Bear witness that I forgive Pugh aye, forgive Mondet! See, down the Hue Victor the wreck of Les Colonies! The little editor was there, perhaps writing his paragraphs on the stanehness of Pe lce! Once, Lara, my mother said, 'Peter, some time you will breathe the breath of life !' I know what she meant now. I wonder bow she knew?" "Mothers are close to the heart of things." There were tears in her eyes. To the right of them, among the ruins, a walling woman had found her own. They had traversed the Morne d'Or ange. The sun bathed the fields, Tho wreck of the great plantation house was hunched closer to the ground. As he neared the rim of the cistern, Peter halted suddenly by the stricken lianas, and beck oned Lara back. The well curbing was broken away, and the earth for yards sur rounding had caved Into the pit. "Mondet was right, after all, about the earthquake," he said. Without speaking, they stood there for keveral moments. Then Peter took her hand and led her back toward the won. ai the Sugar landing. Night had fallen. Up through the streets of the capital, they strode, the man and woman. Casements wero open to the stars nnd the sen, but the people were dull with grief. Martinique had lost her first-born, and Fort do France, tha gentle sister of Saint Pierre, was bowed in the spirit of weeping. They had loved nnd leaned on each other, this boy nud girl of the mother Island. Through tho silent crowds Peter nnd Lara walked, n part of the silence, pass ing the groves and towers, where the laws of Franco are born again for tho little aliens; treading streets of darkness and moaning, streets of light and tears. A field of fire-lights shone ahead, their red glow shining upon new canvas. This was the little colony of Father Diunlen brands plucked from the burning of Saint Pierre. They passed tho edge of tho bivouac. A woman sot nursing her babe, fire-light upun her face and breast, drowsy little ones about her. Coffee and night air and quavering lullabies; above all, beautiful Josephine In marble, smiling dreamily among the stars. " It was the most potent Instant of Constable's life; some great joy or thrilling tragedy was breathing upon his heart. lie saw a tear upon the cheek of Lara. The voice of Father Domien came from the distance: "Go thy way, eat thy bread with joy, nnd drink thy wine with n merry heart; for Gpd hath already accepted thy works. Iet thy garments be always white; nnd let not thy head lack ointment. Live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest, all the days of thy life " There was a cry from behind. It was from the lips of the woman with the Imbo at her breast. She had caught tho gar ments of Lara in her hands, and, half kneeling, with her face toward Peter, she exclaimed in a voice of joy: "lie is come! lie is come!" The silent camp uprose with n shout of gladness. The remnant of Saint Pierre pressed about the man and woman, cry ing, laughing, kissing their hands. Con stable had not dreamed of such glorify ing gratitude; nnd yet he wns humbled to tears. Those wore so few, and Saint Pierre so vast! "Father Damien," he said, when his voice came to him. "we are come to take you out to our ship " "Not on the ship, but here now !" the old priest cried. "It is the moment of ten thousand years!" And so they were restored to each other, in the midst, of their devoted, in the fire-light, beneath the Seven Palms and the blessings of the Empress. (The End.) LITTLE BOY WON REPRIEVE. Son of Attorney General llreVNter I'lcntleil for Criminal. The coming wedding f "ss Mar Brewster and Donald Cnssells Is of great interest to nil old Washtngtoti inns because it united two families who have always been Identified with Washington society. fbe grandfather of the brlde-t'lec was Benjamin Harris Brewster, who occupied the position of Attorney Gen eral during President Arthur's admin istration. When a young man Mr. Brewster risked his life In a heroic effort to save his sister from death by fire, ami was himself terribly burned and disfigured for life. He had most fascinating manners and was noted for his brilliant conversational powers. There Is a very Interesting anecdote told of Attorney General BrewBter and bis soil Andre, now a captain In the United States army, which Is prob ably not known to this generation. During .Mr. Brewster's term as At torney General a notorious highway man ami criminal was caught in Louis iana and brought to trial It was a celebrated case, and finally the trial ended, and the prisoner, having been proven guilty, was sentenced to be hanged. But his counsel put In a stay of proceedings, and telegraphed tho Attorney General, asking him to In tercede with President Arthur and se cure a reprieve for the prisoner. This telegram did not reaph Wash ington until tho day before that set for the execution. The Attorney Gen eral hud gone to Philadelphia for tho day, and the telegram was sent to his house Instead of his office, and placed on his desk to await his return. Andre Brewster, then a little lad, full of life and mischief, was a priv ileged character an only son and a great favorite with all the prominent government officials. He had the run of his father's library, and from tho moment that telegram arrived lie be came possessed with a desire to read It. Finally, curiosity got the better of him, and when lie had mastered Its contents he was deeply Impressed with It. During the afternoon he asked, his mother all manner of questions iu regard to the President's exercise of clemency, and she could not Imaglno why the boy was interested In that subject. Andre kept Ills own counsel and reluctantly retlrea to bed beforo Ills father's return home. Late that night the Attornoy Gen eral returned, and, going to his desk, found on top of the pile of letters tho lyouisltina telegram, with this Indorse ment, In Andre's round, boyish hand: "Dear Papa: Give the poor man a chance. ANDRE." It was raining and sleeting, hut At torney General Brewster's canrlago had remained at his door, and, taking the dispatch, he hurried off to the Whlto House. President Arthur rend it, and the Indorsement ; laid it down, and turning to tho Attorney General, said, with his kindly smile: "This is Andre'B first case, Brow stor; send tho reprieve." But, alas! for Andre's success as a special pleader. Twenty-four hours later the President was besieged with letters nnd telegrams from Louisiana bogging lilm not to reloaso a dangerous criminal In a law-abiding community. Washington Post Tim Hurnl Home. So Important has agriculture beoomo to the nation's prosperity that Presi dent Roosevelt recuntly appointed a commission to suggest menus to ninke the rural homo more attractive and as sist In keeping young men on the farm. Mnny of tho conveniences that add comfort to a city home could be In stalled In the country residence. Tho fanner possesses an advaivtage over the majority of residents In cities In that ho owns his own homo and In nominally tho dictator of his surround ings. In cities dwellers tiro crowded into npnrtmciit buildings for the want of spaco for prlvato residences and to secure economy In living expenses. The owners of apartment houses have In stalled steam heat, porcelain bath fix tures, gas stoves, electric lights and ninlntnln the apartments at great ex pense on account of the costly fixtures and the frequency of repairs. The ten ant forms no attachment to h!s homo and Is ready to change his residence when other apartments are discovered thnt more fully tfult his fancy. In the country the rural homo Is permanent and all its Improvements are consummated with a view to the future as well ns the present genera tion. In no -other profession does the home dweller enjoy the work of Ills hands ns In agriculture. If man Is what lie makes himself, so the rural home reflects the owner's Idea of beau ty and convenience. With the land pro ducing Increased crops and agricultur al products selling at record prices the farmer can afTord to adorn his home and linprovo it with many modem and sanitary appointments. The water supply may come from a shallow, Inconveniently located well and tho supply may be contaminated by surface seepage containing the mi crobes of typhoid fever and other dis eases. The water supply Is the great source of health, cleanliness and con venience on the farm. Tubular wells are permanent and of cheap construc tion nnd their depth furnishes living water free from germ diseases. With ! windmill and tank the water can bo piped Into the house nt small expense and a supply furnished nt all times by turning the faucet. A hot-water heat er can be attached to the stove and hot water provided without additional "xpense for fuel. With ample grounds a bonutlful .awn could easily lie arranged with ornamental trees, flowers and shrub bery that would outrival the homes of city dwellers. With the Instnllatlou of modern conveniences at small expense rural homes enn bo made Ideal for ronifort ami thus stimulate content ment nmong the younger generation to follow the greatest of all professions, agriculture. Goodall's Farmer. Convenient llnrn Truck. No dairyman can afford to ignore that which will lighten his lnbor In any way whatever. Be his stable ever so conveniently constructed, ho has enough to do. Hence tho Importance of his considering the truck or car pre sented In the cut. Made of good lum ber, the only Iron about It Is the han dle nt each end, liy which to push or pull It along the feeding alley In front of the cows which are to be fed, and the trucks on which It Is mounted. The wheels procured, any good blacksmith can make this, so that the truck Is by no means difficult to construct. It should be about 2 feet wide, 20 Inches deep and 4 feet long. Silage can bo convoyed In It from the silo to the mangers very readily. If tho silo is some distance away it will save much hard work, Indeed. Fred O. Sibley. In Farm and Home. (IrtiHKK Kveryivliere, Grasses are widely distributed. Wo usually think of them as existing In our tonipornto zones only, becatiso hero we have the perennial pastures and neailows, They are, however, to be found so far north that the soil is rosmi under them during the greater mrt of the yenr, while they are also omnion to pnrts of the South where the frost Is never known. Even the nountulo tops that are clothed with Mirpetual snow have Just below the mow lino their carpets of pons that ,'row and bloom through a brief period very year. The grasses push hard igalnst the eternal snows. ' HoK Mmiife, The following simple remedies are iffered ns cureH for niaiigo In hogs; . Creosote, one and oiio-hnlf ounces; ard, two pounds mix well and apply o affected parts. 2. Sulphur, one mid no-half pounds; lard, two pounds; mix veil and apply as above, a, Turpen Ine nnd sulphur at tho rato of ten arts of the former to one of the latter likewise said to bo nn effective rem-tdy ITiiiIiico Price ClnlnM Higher, From the figures of n report by tho bureau of labor thero bus been ex tracted the Interesting fact tlmt miio prices of nearly, overythliiK reached n higher level last year than nt any tlinu during tin' InHt eighteen years, and the farm produce lends nil tho rest. The bureau divides tho 258 commod ities of tho country Into nlno groups and farm produce showed tho highest Incrcnso In price uttnlnod by any of the groups. And the encouraging font uro of the report Is that tho panic of last yenr did not affect prices of rami stuff very much. In fact, taking every thing sotd, the farmer got more nionuy Iu 107 than the average of tun years before. Sum farmers mny not know this, but It Is true, because Mr. Powderly's hu reau says so. Aside from tho musty figures of a departmental report, the fact Is evident that the farmers of th's 'country are more prnsporoim than tlioy havo ever been. It Is shown In better houses, bigger barns, fatter bank ac counts, fewer mortgages, better ma chinery, and, inoro important than any thing' else, higher Btandard tOf living fur tho fiimUv. L Thero Is one small fly In tho oint ment, however, and that Is tho ract that while farm produce has been rais ing In price, clothing, Implements, lum ber and building materials, house fur nishing goods and some other tlilngB farmers must buy have, gone up. too. But as these commodities have not kept pace with tho advance In the price of things the farmers have to sell they may on the whole feel that they are gaining ground and that agricul ture Is not to bo despised. Ilniulllnu Alfiil'n' Criip. Methods of handling the alfalfa crop rrom the time of seeding until It Is In the burn In the form of well-cured hay are given by the Wisconsin Station bul letin. In brief. It Is as follows: The lest soil for alfalfa Is a rich clay loam over a gravelly subsoil. It Is best on well-ciiltlvatetl soils. If the nitrogen forming bacteria are not In the soil, the soil should be inoculated. Spring sowing Is the In-st. Where ground Is Inclined to be weedy m a nurse crop, barley sown at the rate of three packs to the ncre being the best. Thin seed ing of the nurse rrop Is preferable. Twenty pounds of alfalfa seed per acre is recommended. The year following the seeding three good crops of hay can be expected. Cut when about one-tenth of plants are In bloom and on n morn ing after the dew has dlsapjR'arcd on a day thnt promises fnlr weather. Cut stubble at least an inch high. In the afternoon of the day cut, rako and put Into small cocks. These cocks can In covered with light cotton duck caps and left until the hay Is thoroughly cured. To Kill lunelc Grnaa. Quack grass Is sometimes known as Johnson grass, and also by other names. It Is useless to attempt to get rid of It after the laud has been plant ed to n crop. Now Is a good time to consider fighting it. Plow the laud late In the fall, Just before winter begins. Plow Just deep enough to get under the roots, leaving as much of them as pos sible exposed to the frost of winter. These exposed roots will be destroyed. In the spring harrow or rako over the roots repcntfdly, doing the work over and over again until almost every root Is removed, and then plant the soil to IKitntoes or com and give thorough cultivation. FKEWNO TatTCK FOB THE HTAIII.E. Value of I'nrni I'roilactn. There are about 7,000,000 farms In the United States. In 1007 the value of the products from these farms was $7,112,000,000. The average for each farm Is about $1,058. This means gross products whether consumed . on the farm or sold Iu the market. Help In Hits Pnnn Home. When through using a tool, or inn chliflj, put It up. - Young ewes should as a rule never be bred under 14 mouths. Little leakages cause big losses In the aggregate. Remeiiiber that. Bacon Is fine when baked In tho oven. Pour off the grease frequently. Watch the butter milk and bo sure you are not losing lots of butter fnt. A bit of alcohol on n soft cloth will make your glasses shine and save your eyes. Feed the horses regularly. Irregu lar feeding encourages bolting of fowl, leading to Indigestion. A slate hung In the kitchen Is a very handy thing on which to note things to be ordered from town. Doil't forget that charcoal Is good for the hogs, salt, also, Havo It whoro they can help themselves, Large animals consume Ickh pounds of dry material per 1,000 pounds live weight than do small ones. It Is no longer a question; Does the silo pay? Rather, what Is tho best method of handling the silo? Tho road horse stuffed with hay makes a poor traveler, 'Feed light on hay and heavier on oats when using tho horses much. Kerosene will start a stove flro all right, but no wise woman will uso It. Dry corncobs are nearly as good and u great deal safer. Dipping the ends or corners of arti cles to be hung on the clothee lino In very strong salt water will prevent tho part from freezing and makes It easy to put on the clothespins. Invito your neighbor to havo dinner with you occasionally and never fall to go out when you aro Invited. Wo nil get tired of homo cooldug In tlmo una a nbanvn Is a good thing, I I EtiL fw II i' IS II V Win tal fl3 mrftKM . .J 151D-TI.0 Spaniard under fv tcrod the strong fllld " Xtt of Choluln. p0pll,9," ') KlSn-Tho colonial rtmrfe, f M,Hlf. tts wf.s nmmlhl l,y ,h. Kg government. m 1002 Tim ll.li i.i. nwny William VmC "Ti Tights In PennsylvX ' ""wSirtt. " 1 l-74-.Hrlg IWgy stwnrt niidii,,,,, of lea J wlroy by the wtor -MiuapouH, TIib fim w can Congress, hnvlng flnl.hr.1 , J llberhllmis, adjourned J vinclnl congr.-H of Mnnwbwti Z termlued to rnlmt men for th Z fentte of the proWnre, for lk, t time, under the nnmoof Mlnot Jla 1S05 llrltlNli transport Acnrni trm off Newfoundland, witi. ,110 men. 1807 Russia declared wnr ipliutOMl Britain. 1812 KiixHlaiiN re-ontfml Moc w lowing the evacuation, of tbe citr bi 4 11 ft . . . 1 . loi.t commodore ivrry, Becoming by Gen. HarrUon nml Cius, . arrived In Erlo nnd nu m.4 with great onthuiuiira law States frigate Ooticrow upturn! sti destroyed the llrltfuh xhlp Ikw. 1811 British ship Bulwark cttnrl !fc American privateer Harhoij, 15 guns, 115 men. 182." FInr.1 completion of the Kriecui) celebrated at Albany. 1820 First daily paper imti la R4. ester, N. Y, 1842 Completion of the Crotoa wn works celebrated In New York, 1814 Holler explosion on the Oitorim steamer Lucy Walker it Xrt bnny killed more than fifty proa 1850 Th Nortliwmt PamS diiatwl by Captain McC'lure of the lawtf gator.... First national conrettkn of the Woman' Suffrage put; tut In Worcester, Man. J854 Remain of Hlr John FnuuKrt exploring party discovered nr Gwt Fish River Hue, in the Arck ocean. 1855 Grand Trunk railway opened It Brockvlllr, Ontario, Monroe county, MichlRan, 18JrtTwentyflve hundrrd houiei stroyed by fire hi the Fffflti qui- tcr of Quebec. . , . Deilirttion of til htonownll Jncknon cemetery t Wi cheoter, Vn. UJOR Shock of earthquake felt it hi Frnnclnco. 1874 Kplscopnl conference In wh!o i New York ndopted a resolntioa t iwsing rltunllHin In tbe church vice. 1878 The Hon. Rlmon Hugh Holowbe came Premier of Nora BeotU. laSJl Tho Mnrnul of Undone stimcd office ns governor gcnertl Canada. 1884 Repiihllcani. carried the 1 BU congremlonnl election! In OSW. 18S7 Queen Victoria Kusenle of Sjih born. 1801 Phillips Hrookn wniecraud of .MnfKftcliunettii. nni .mm -i.t lrtft-erance. with 'Mf' ...... i. in t m Are le W90- iccn mm, WIM-KplM-opnl blM.oPa agreed vorco canon which permlu tv rlnge of Innocent parties. 1005-Pn.sldent Roo-evelt ' Carolina... .rrrimi" 1 - . .. 1 I.-. A In Hod lurminRuui"! 1007-Knlckerbocknr Trait CvW New York mwpW PI' . .TTrteTTlV. Tit AD E ANU la"va""nnM Minneapolis lm. n'rt 7jr lar gns plant, through ponnd to reduce th prl" of C" to 80 cents n thousand. Dokken. of Bouth 'ti W disuse of 5.000 a. re of he 8 tt Ing lands In Mcnd County W Tho roductlon f ,f SSoOOO pondta fc Minnesota IncmiKed ',-,,,iie toti! four years and now reJ m of 87.044.817 pound, for tho year Charles W. Mor. moter of H.o American Irj WP the. Consolidated h!cn..i . - (4 and who until I ho P'' " yt ennlrnlleil HOVOrnl fc 1 iMsd Is facing a Jury In Jj 0, of flu, United BtntcM Circuit Wu p . . 4 11..-.. III!! JIM"- 1 nil iii. inmiru Ti .1 .. ....... America. tinM Tho record for pep ., m ncHOta Hiirenii of Oral.. a record, tho numb r o f cw . being almost double the numw cd In September Unit yr. show t1. total nberin0' , orthc ,nft,,dlnir tlmo last year f 's. i.,.uvmua w i 1 "wi enrs WOI0 lMPrr partmcnt nttrlbi. n - v to tho goon rim -- . S v year, early movement, ot market nnc.