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THE SANDERSVILLt HERALD.
MINIVER CHEEVY.
Miniver Clioevy. child of s<orn.
Grew Icon while he assailed the sea
sons;
He wept that he was ever horn.
And he had reasons.
Miniver loved the days of old
When swords were bright and steeds
were prancing;
The vision of a warrior hold
Would set him dancing.
Miniver stalled for what was not
And dreamed, and rested from ids la
hots; . ,, . ,
lie drcatned of Thebes and Calm lot,
And l’r'.nm's neighbors.
Miniver mourned the ripe 'cnotvd
That m -le so many a name sofa grunt
He moilin'd Romance, now on ttie lotwi,
And Ait a vagrant.
Miniver loved the Medici.
Albeit lie had never seen one.
lie would have sinned Incessantly
Could lie have been one.
Miniver cursed the commonplace
And eyed a lihakl suit with loathing,
He missed tie mediaeval grace
Of Iron c lathing.
Miniver scorned the cold lie songdit
Rut sore rnnoyed was lie \, il u cii
Miniver thought. and thought,
thought.
And thought about it.
»"" k -
Miniv<*oughed and railed it fate,
And kept on drinking.
Aillngton Robinson, twribnei s.
Edwin
♦>
♦♦
*♦♦♦♦
The Fourth Monkey.
<>♦♦♦♦
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♦ ■
It was hou set-leaning time, anil
things wero scattered about in ’h'
queerest places. The parlor chairs
wore ctowded into the dining loom,
and ihe sofa stood in the middle of
the kitchen floor, with the ironing
board leaning against it. A good many
of the parlor ornaments had been pul
into the storeroom, and mother had
asked the twins not to go there to
play, for fear of breaking something.
The twinB had on their blue sailor
dresses, each with a white anchor in
front and white stais on the collar;
and each head of bushy brown hair
-was tied with bows of white ribbon.
The twins looked so much alike that
most people had long ago given up
trying to tell which was 1-aye and
which was Fern, and only said, “Here,
Twlnnie," when they wanted some
thing.
They were waiting now for Miss
Margaret, who came twice a week to
give them their piano lesson.
"Lei's play hide-and-seek while we
wait," suggested Fern; "there’s such a
lot of good hiding places when things
are all moved around so."
"Yes, let’s,” replied Faye, scamper
ing off to hide under the table behind
a screen of (hairs, while Fern hid her
face and counted.
Then Fern hid behind the bureau In
mother’s room, and, when it was
Faye's turn again, she crept under the
Ironing board.
New it was Fern’s turn io hide.
When Faye hal counted 25 and had
sung out twice, "Bushel o’ wheat,
bushel o’ rye,” she searched through
the dining room and kitchen, and then,
without thinking, opened the door of
the store room.
I Just as she did so, she caught sight
of a :air of startled brown eyes gaz-
ilng into her own, and of a blue sailor
dress with a white anchor in front,
and of white bows tying the bushy
brown hair.
- Hastily shutting the door for feat
her siiter would rush out and get to
the goal lirst, she suddenly remem
bered what mother had said about not
going into the storeroom to play,
t "Fern's forgotten," she said to her
self, "and 1 ’most forgot. I’ll remind
■her when she comes,” and she hurried
hack to the goal to call, "One, two,
three for Fern!”
But no Fern appeared. Instead, ihe
( front door suddenly opened, and Faye
heard the sound of flying feet as Fern
ran out to greet Miss Margaret. And
.the game was forgotten as ihe piano
'lesson began.
After the lesson Faye lingered a mo
ment to listen again to the hollow,
!echoing sound tiie piano made in the
nearly empty room.
All at once she heard Fern sav to
mother out in the dining room—
“No, mother, I haven’t been In the
, stoie room today."
Fare caught her breath sharply.
What could Fern mean? She wanted
to rush out and say, "Why, Fern, I
saw you there,” hut held herself back,
thinking, "I must give her a chance
to tell It herself.”
"Faye,” tailed mother, "have you
been in the storeroom today? Some
one has let the cal. in, and he has
knocked down the monkey curving
■and broken it.”
The precious carving that Uncle
George had brought form Japan!
Often and often Fern and Faye had
studied the three queer little mon-
I keys, one holding his paws over his
’ eyes that he might see no evil, anoth
er covering his cars that lie might
hear no evil, and the third holding
paws over his mouth that he might
speak no evil.
At last Faye spoke. "Yes, mother,
I opened the door a little ways before
II thought, but 1 shut it again and real
quick, and I don't think Tiger could
I have gone in without my seeing him,”
she said, looking hard at Fern and
wondering why alie didn’t speak. But
' Fern was busy tying her shoe and
didn’t even look up.
“Well,” said mother, at last, "per
haps 1 let him in myself.” And she
went out to get the glue pot to see if
i the carving could be mended.
"O, Fern,” began Faye, “why didn’t
lyou tell’”
"Tell what? There wasn’t anything
to tell.”
“There was, too, Fern Shepard.
You know you hid In the storeroom
that last time and you know I saw
you there.”
"It Isn’t true! 1 hid behind the
piano the last time."
"You didn't!”
“1 did!”
Mother, coming hack with the glue
pot, heard Ihe shaip tones, which
had grown louder and louder..
When she had listened to both sides
of the story, she gazed into each an-
giy, exrilcd little face. It was evi
dent that both the twins thought they
were speaking the truh.
“I cannot understand it," she said,
"but 1 think you must somehow have
been mistaken, Faye.”
Faye's fare flamed scarlet. Didn’t
she know what she had seen?
It was a long, miserable afternoon.
Faye practiced at her piano lesson
twice as long as usual, and then
helped mother dust some of the fur
niture while Fern practiced; but over
and over in her unhappy little mind
she kept saying, "How could she tell
such a story?”
Toward the close of the afternoon
mother called Faye and asked her to
go veiy carefully into the storeroom
and bring the tack-hammer.
As Faye opened the door she gave a
start, for again she met a pair of
startled brown eyes and saw the blue
sailor dress and the white hair-rib
bons.
And then all at once she discov
ered that the big mirror from the
bed room had been placed against the
wall opposite the door, and that what
she had seen was the reflection of her
own face!
It was a very hnppy little Faye that
bt ought the tack-hammer back to
mother, and when later she and Fern
were standing arm in arm before the
table where mother had placed the
mended carving, she said, soberly:
"I think there ought to he four lit
tle monkeys, Instead of three, the oth
er one holding his paws over his fore
head to remind us that we should
think no evil.”—Lily Manker Allen, In
Congregat ionalist.
IMPROVEMENT IS DEMANDED.
Bureau Drawees Alwavs Stick—For
tune tor Man Who Can Remedy
Difficulty.
A fortune, a large, a mountainous
fortune,” said Mr. Shortly, “awaits the
furniture manufacturer who will put on
the market a bureau with drawers that
won't stick.
As It. is, 1 suppose that half the bu
reaus In the world have drawers that
can’t he opened without a struggle, that
couldn’t he entirely closed without a
mall, and that could not then he open
ed without an ax. I have one silch
bureau myself—a bureau with drawers
that will never close entirely; a bureau
that tries me sorely; and 1 am a man
of even temper.
"If bureaus of this sort affect a man
of my self-command In this manner,
what must their effect he upon myriads
of people of dispositions more excit
able and explosive? See what trouble
one of these sticky drawer bureaus has
brought upon a friend of mine;
"He was a nice man, but Impulsive,
and somewhat given to self-indulgence,
and he fought with himself until one
after another he had cut out all his
vices except sweating, and last spring
he cut that out, and came forth tHa'
strongest of all men, the man who has
conquered himself. And in that splen
did strength he continued until day
before yesterday,’when he fell.
"On that day, confident of his own
strength ol mind, never doubting, nev
er thinking ot it, in fact, he had be-
i ome now, as lie supposed, so settled
in his power of self control he tried to
get a collar out of his top bureau
drawer.
"This drawer had stuck before, but
up to that day he had always managed
to open it somehow, and, what was far
greater to keep his temper in opening
it; Inn on tHat day it wedged and stuck
and resisted in a manner that would
have tried any man, and that proved,
alas! too much in the end, for my, as
it turned out, not yet sufficiently well
grounded In strength friend.
“For when the drawer wouldn't come,
anyway, a cloud seemed to come over
his mind, and he grasped the two han
dles of it with his two hands and plant
ed his foot firmly against the face of
the drawer below, and pushed with
that which he pulled on the drawer
viciously.
“And the drawer did yield at last, but
when thut came (he bureau went over
under the pressure of the loot he had
against it, and the heavily loaded draw
er came down with its sharp back edge
square on tHe toes of the other foot;
and all the neighbors said—the win
dows being open everywhere, as at this
season, so tHat all could hear—that
they never heard anything like it, nev
er, and my friend has got to move. All
were willing to admit, when they learn
ed the cause, that the provocation had
been great, but they won't take an
other chance, and my frined must go.
“And all because of a sticky bureau
drawer!
"Bureau builders! Think of the ben
efits you would confer upon humanity
by making bureaus with drawers that
would open and close easily! But I
don’t appeal to your philanthropic sid^
1 appeal to your cupidity. A fortune, a
Himalayan fortune, awaits the bureau
builder who first puts on the market
a bureau with drawers that won’t
stick.”—Washington Post.
PEARLS OF THOUGHT.
Religion can only defend truth as It
discovers new truth.
The closer you get to men the near
er you come to God.
One secret of sin's hold on us Is
our hold on secret sins.
Love is the first word and the last
in the lexicon of religion.
That is a good prayer which forces
you to answer it yourself.
They who forget no injuries do
their forgetting on benefits.
Light heartedness never comes from
feeding on the froth of life.
A little kindness will lift this world
more than the greatest creeds.
Obey the best you know and the
better will take c.ire of Lself.
Hatred always works greater havoc
on its source than on its objects.
Christianity is a campaign for char
acter by the power of character.
There is not much good In the man
who thinks of himself as good enough.
When you brand a vice as harmless,
you have augmented its power to hurt.
It is easy to mistake a regard for
the past for a resolution for the fut
ure.
The wise man never hires a brass
hand when he bids farewell to a wrong
way.
The places where we have helped
others are our milestones on the way
to heaven.
His heart Is dead who feels no draw
ing on things within when a. child
takis his hand'.
You can not advertise your own
straightness by uncovering another
man’s crookedness.
In the filial appraisal our increment
from life depends on our investment
of our selves in it.
Character is soon narrowed when you
try to he liberal in regard to questions
of absolute light and justice.
Many a man who makes up his mind
to do better next year would do a great
deal better if he would only bite off
one day at a time.
The great question for any church
is not what contributions can it get,
hut what contribution can it make
to the life of the people.—From "Sen
tence Sermons” In the Chicago Trib
une.
Georgia Briefs
Items of State Interest Culled
From Random Sources.
THE SPOT ON THE CEILING.
Mr. Flatdweiler Talks About Leaky
Steam Radiators.
"I hate to he growling all the time,”
said Mr. Flatdweiler, “but we’ve just
had a fresh stain come on the celling
of one of our rooms, caused by the
water running through from a leaky
steam radiator overhead.
“Of course, radiators ought to he set
right to start with, and properly
equipped so that they wouldn’t leak,
blit if they are not so people ought to
look out.
"Perhaps 1 ought not to blow my
own horn again so soon, hut 1 repeat
that in all the time we have lived In
flats we have m .vor yet spoiled a ceil
ing under its by letting water run
down upon il from a leaky radiator.
Perhaps we are lucking in some other
respects. At least as far as leaky
steam radiators go, we have always
looked out for the people below as
we'd like to have the people overhead
look out for us.
"And yet I've known some of the
nicest people hi the world, people
who were punctiliously scrupulous In
every other respect, who were forget
ful of their radiators. But we are
none of us perfect, we all have our
little shortcomings of one sort and an
other, and 1 suppose tills must he
theirs.
"One of our neighbors is a boss plas
terer; an amiable man he is, and with
a fine sense of humor.
“ 'Why do you growl?’ he says. ‘Why
not take a look at it from another
point of view? Don’t you know that
leaky radiators constitute one of the
chief sources of revenue for plaster
ers and kalsominers? Do you want
to take the bread out of people’s
mouths?’ ”
“Ami I say no, I don't; that. I am
a friend of the plasterer and of the
kalsominer and of all men besides,
and I want to see them all do wen;
and yet—for all the benefit It may he
to others—I cannot bring myself to
admire that spot on the ceiling.”—
New York Sun.
Bride Registered as a Boy.
M. Lenoir and Mile. Deschamps
were about to set out to be married at
La Haye Malherbe, Normandy, when
the village schoolmaster, who is also
the village clerk and registrar of
births, came to them, exclaiming:
"The marriage is impossible!”
He explained that his predecessor
had mistakenly registered the biith of
the bride as that of a boy, and under
the registration ' Mile. Deschamps
would become liable to serve as a sol
dier this year. The bride and bride
groom hurried off to the mayor and
magistrate, and implored them to au
thorize the marriage, urging that the
mistake in the register was self-evi
dent.
The authorities turned a deaf ear
to their pleading, for French red tape
is not to be treated lightly, and it will
tali etime to repair he mistake.—Ixm-
don Standard.
Locker Club Members Indicted.
The federal grand jury at Savannah
Saturday returned sixteen indictments
containing the names of forty Indi
viduals connected with locker clubs In
Savannah. Arrests will follow.
• * *
G. A. R. Organized at St. George.
A branch of the Grand Army of the
Republic was organized at St. Georgo
Saturday with n membership of twen
ty-five veterans. P. Q. Stoner of Ohio
was chosen commander and Smith
Warren of Iowa, vice commander.
• • •
Wesleyan’s First Graduate Dead.
Mrs. Katherine E. Benson is dead
at her home in Macon after several
weeks’ illness. She was the first grad
uate of eWsleyan college, and was the
first woman in the world to receive
a diploma from a chartered college.
She was widely known and beloved as
a woman of excellent Christian char
acter. She had reached the advanc
ed of 86.
♦ * *
A., B. & A. Approves Mileage Books.
It is announced ily the Atlanta, Bir
mingham and Atlantic Railroad com
pany that the new mileage books of
the Southern railway will be honored
on their lines under certain conditions.
The action of this road makes the third
road to become a party to the books
as the Seaboard and the Atlantic Coast
Line have already agreed to the South
ern's plan.
* * *
Can Run Only 10 Miles an Hcur.
Following the report of an inspec
tion made by one of the track walk
ers in the employ of the .railroad com
mission, the commission has issued an
order to the Fitzgerald, Ocllla and
Broxton railway company, operating
between those points in south Geor
gia, to reduce the speed of all pas
senger trulns over Its line to ten miles
an hour until certain repairs which
the commission deems necessary shall
have been made.
* * *
Brewers to Ask Modification of Law.
There Is a movement on foot, bnck-
ed by the brewers of the state, which
contemplates urging the legislature at
its next session to modify the state
prohibition law so ns to permit the
Bale within the state of beers and light
wines. Those urging the modification
of the law, It is reported, base their
hope in a large measure upon a pub
lic statement of Governor Smith, made
last December, to the effect that he
hoped to see the standing saloon elim
inated everywhere* and such modifica
tion of the law as would permit only
the use of light drinks, such as wines
and beer, at the table as food.
* * *
Auditor Resigns Temporarily.
Rpecia't Auditor L. C. Mathews, wno
lias bo.-n in the employ of the rail
road commission for some month", has
severed his connection with the com
mission. at least for the present,
though it is said to be with the un
derstanding that he will be recalled
whenever the commission has occa
sion to require his services.
It is stated that the position o^ spe
cial auditor was not Intended to be
permanent, but that he was employed
for certain work which has now been
completed. The principal part of tills
work is said to have been an examina
tion into the books and accounts of
the Central of Georgia Railway com
pany in Savannah, upon which the
commission now has a complete re
port. The Central afforded Mr. Math
ews every facility for making this ex
amination, although it does not con
cede the light of the commission to
make such Inquiry.
plan of holding the fair under the
auspices of the union. Among # the
plans that will he proposed will be
that of holding a mammoth national
convention of farmers in Atlanta dur
ing the fair. Two thousand delegates,
representing a membership of 2,000,-
000 people, will be present If the meet
ing is held.
President R. F. Duckworth of the
Georgia division will Issue a cail for
the various district executive commit
tees In the state to vote on the sub
ject of holding a state fair In Atlanta
this fall, in connection with the At
lanta Fair Association.
Following this action National Pres
ident Barrett will take a poll of the
various state organizations in regard
to making the fair national In Its
scope.
TAMPA FIRE-SWEPT
Fifty-Five Acres in Florida
City Laid in Ashes,
The Difference.
"Say, Pa, what’s the difference he
tween an optimist and a pessimist?"
"An optimist, Johnnie, thinks the
times are ripe—a pessimist think’s
vhey’re rotten.”—Harper’s Weekly.
Why He Fought.
Magistrate—Pat Murphy, the con
stable says you were fighting. What
have you to say for yourself?
Pat Murphy—Well, Your Worship,
Oi had a clean white shirt on, an’ I
was so mighty proud av it that Oi got
up a Hit of a row wid a man so Oi could
take me coat an’ wescot off and show
it—Tid-Bits.
George Barton Captured.
George Barton, one of the prisoners
who made a sensational escape from
the Fulton county tower, Atlanta, on
Sunday night, February 2d, has been
captured in Dessemor, Ala., and re
turned to the Atlanta jail.
John Harper, the other prisoner who
escaped with Barton, is still at large.
The escape of Barton and Harper re
sulted in the grand j’^y finding indict
ments against James Brown, the night
jailer at the tower, and two trusties,
Joe Williams and Euiace Wallace. One
of the trusties has made a written
confession, in which he says that he,
with the connivance of the night jail
er, opened the cells of the two pris-
ones, thus making their escape possi
ble.
Harper was under sentence for mur
der, and was held awaiting an ap
peal to the supreme court. Barton was
charged with robbing a safe. There
is an outstanding reward of $250 for
the arrest of Barton, and one of $600
for the capture of Harper.
* * *
Want Fair to Be National.
Enthusiastic plans by which the an
nual state fair, to be held in Atlanta
next October, will he given under the
auspices of the farmers of the state
will be proposed at a meeting of the
district managers of the unions in At
lanta during the present month.
It is believed the farmers of the
! state will enthusiastically favor the
Cotton 9eed Meal In Great Demand.
According to the Fehmary report of
the tag Bales given out at the depart
ment f f agriculture the sale of cotton
seed meal tax has increased by twen
ty pter cent over the amount Bold up
to this time last year.
This report also shows a corres-
sponding decrease In the sale of fer
tilizer tags under the number dis
posed of a year ago. This tremendous
increase in the sale of cotton seed
meal tags, which it Is estimated will
bring the total sale of tags up to
200,000 tons over 170,000 tons for 1006
1907 is attributed by the officials for
the greatly Increased per cent which
is being used as a cattle feed In Geor
gia.
The pure food analysis shows that
cotton seed meal lui3 38.62 protein,
whereas the most generally marketed
is pure wheat bran, which has only
14.50 protein or about one-third as
much.
This is the great thing for Geor
gia, and the south, as it is turning
over our southern product and keeping
the farmers’ money close at home.
Another consignment of cotton seed
meals tags, which go twenty tags to
the tou, has been ordered for the
spring use of the department,
* * *
To Enforce Pure Food Law,.
State Commissioner Hudson has Is
sued a statement in which he calls
attention to the fact that, beginning
March 1st, all violations of the pure
food and drugs act, passed In 1906, will
be hereafter certified to the proper
court for settlement as provided by
law.
The statement points out that since
the law went Into effect last August
the department has < inducted a # ’igor-
ous campaign of .education, with a
view to inform the public of the re
quirements of the law, but that the
time has now come when further vio
lations must be looked after in the
usual legal manner In the courts.
The order will be one of the great
est Interest to manufacturers, jobbers
and dealers in meats, milk, sausages,
other foodstuffs and beverages. The
order states that if the manufacturers,
jobbers and dealers are not familiar
with the law they should Inform tnem-
selves without delay, as from this date*
on no excuse whatever will be accept
ed for the violation of the law, because
the ‘Ignorance of the law is no ex
cuse.’ The order closes as follows:
"The one great fundamental princi
ple of tills law is truthfully labeling
and thus putting the consumer on no
tice of the exact character of the ar
ticle he is buying. Injurious sub
stances and harmful coloring must not
be used in any food product; for ex
ample, preservatives in milk, sausage,
meats und other foods as well us
beverages.
“All manufacturers, jobbers a \\ deal
ers in stock feeds should inform them
selves of the provisions of the law reg
ulating the sale of their products and
should not offer for sale any feed that
contains any of those substances spe
cifically forbidden by law.”
FOUR VICTIMS OF TRAGEDY.
EIGHTEEN BLOCKS BURN
Northeastern Section of City Hard Hit.
Over 300 Buildings, Including Sev-
eral Large Cigar Factories,
Destroyed—Loss Heavy.
The entire northeastern section of
Tampa, Fla., composing the city prop,
er, was destroyed by fire, which raged
from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. Sunday. Th e
area burned covered fifty-five acres or
eighteen and one-half blocks and three
hundred and eight buildings wetn de
stroyed, with a total loss estimated
at $600,000.
The burned section Included four
large and one smaller cigar factories
and numerous restaurants, saloons
boarding houses and over two hundred
dwellings occupied by clgnr makers.
The factories burned were M. Stachel-
berg & Co., loss $100,000; M. Perez &
Co., loss $50,000; Gonzalez Fish r &
Co., loss $40,000; Esberg Gunst K- Co.,
branch of Stachelberg, loss $40,000;-
Fernandez & Brother, loss $20,000.
All factories carried large stocks of
tobacco and cigars. The area swept
by fire embraced all that portion of
the city between Twelfth and Michigan
avenues and Sixteenth and Twentieth
streets.
It originated in n boarding house
on Twelfth avenue, and fanned hy a
strong wind, spread out, fan shaped,
defying the force of the fire (H-pnrt-
nient, which was crippled by very
weak water pressure, owing to the
smallness of the mains In that sec
tion. Occupants of over two hundred
dwelling houses thrown into a panic
rushed out, attempting to save but lit
tle of their belongings. One fatality
Is reported, a Cuban woman in « de'l-
cate condition, who dropped dead from
the shock, ner bod/ being rescu 'd from
her burning home wi.h difficulty. In
tiie big factories ir was possible only
to save the most v;.ruble of records,
hooks, etc., and the valuable stocks of
leaf tobacco and manufactured cigars
ready for shipment was left Jo the
mercy of the flames.
Citizens volunteered assistance to
the hnrd-working firemen, hut tho
spread of the flames was so rapid that
litt!e effectual work could he done.
Among buildings, other than facto
ries destroyed, were the hotels and
safes of Perez & Castro and Maximo
Caras, six saloons, twelve restaurants
and ten boarding houses. The (Ire
finally burned Itself out at the ex
treme northeastern corner of the city.
Fully half of the people rendered
homeless were out of work, owing to
the dull season in the factories, and
also practically out of funds and their
shelter became an Immediate prob
lem.
The insurance is estimated at not
more than half of the loss. Telegrams
were sent to Lakeland, Bartow and
other nearby towns for fire apparatus,
but later were countermanded.
In the Stachelberg factory was de
stroyed a solid silver ease, In which
cigars of the firm wero displayed at the
world’s fairs and expositions, valued
at $25,000.
At the home of Miguel Rodriguez, a
cigar maker, the corpse of a child In a
coffin awaiting funeral services, was
cremated. The state militia was placed
on guard Sunday night in the burned
district to prevent depredation".
Children’s Quarrel in Kentucky Leads
to Duel by Parents.
Three men were killed and a fourth
mortally wounded In a battle with re
volvers, following a quarrel in the lum
ber camp of Congleton & Williams
Bros., on Rose creek, near Evelyn, Ky.
John Hamilton, James Bowles, Rich
ard Spicer and George Frazier had
been working together with about 70
other men, hauling lumber and staves.
The children of Bovles and Frazier
had fallen out with those of Spicer and
Hamilton. The men quarreled over
the matter, as they worked, and final
ly resorted to revolvers.
KING KILLERS ARE SAFE.
Murder of Ruler of’Portugal Will Nev
er be Fathomed.
Advices from Lisbon, Portugal, state
that the mystery behind the murder of
King Carlos and Prince Luiz is not
likely ever to be completely lifted.
The new Portuguese government pre
fers that the crime should >he regard
ed both at home and abroad as the
deeds of individuals carried away by
the political passions of the moment,
and inasmuch as the republicans are
also anxious to clear their skirts of re
sponsibility for regicide, both sides are
glad to see an investigation which
would probe the affair to the bottom
smothered.
SUDDEN DEMIST FOR HAMILTON
Was Custodian of ‘‘Yellow Deg” Fund
for Insurance Companies.
Andrew Hamilton, formerly counsfll
to the New York Life and other In
surance companies, and in charge h> r
many years of insurance litigation and
legislative matters In all parts of thin
country and Canada, was found dead
in bed Sunday morning at his bom®
in New York city.
“NOT GUILTY," SAYS ALIO.
Anarchist Slayer of Priest Arraigned
in Denver Court.
Giuseppe Alio, slayer of Rev. I- 50 '
the Catholic priest, pleaded not gaiW
to the charge of murder when arraign
ed at Denver, Col., Saturday, dudg®
Greeley Whitmore set his trial f° r |
Monday, March 9. Peter Bossie wa3
dismissed as interpreter in the ease
because of the charge that he 8
member of the anarchistic organize
lion.
FOUR VICTIMS OF FIRE.
Father and Three of His Children Pe r ’
ish in Burning Home,
Anthony Schultz and three of bis
children, Nellie, thirteen years
Joseph, eleven, and May, eight, wer0
burned to death in a fire in their l oin®
in Depew, N. Y., Sunday. Mrs.^ScfcuH*
and the four youngest children weie
rescued.