The Cairo messenger. (Cairo, Thomas County, Ga.) 1904-current, July 29, 1904, Image 2

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MOTHER’S LOVE. liar. Wh t it T* And <it ><• your ronn m 11 i ' acv. M hen others o 1] you "dear” and at A ml h t id your band- and kiss y l -1 You'll et tar anovo AW olhtis la x mother >ome cSav. Moug stranger- it. tar distant In your new home beyond the sea, When at your c bahv hands And children playing ;.t yo.ir knee (• then, a > 1 l you. side they trt ov». lion 1 hate loved you you will know* Some uay, \v hen you must teei love's heavy loss, A ou will remember other years When 1, too, ’ ent beneath e (: ross. And mix rav *ieniory with your tf 1 ’ f In such rk lioin-'. be not afraid: Within th- ii- shadow 1 have prayed. Some day, Amur daugl let 's voice or smile or eyes, My face will suddenly recall; Then you will smile in sweet s.irpr.se, And your soul unto mine will call In that dear an forgotten praver. Widen we- at evening used to siiare. At long; it Some day. -i cannot be long, I sIih'! with glad impatience wait ' t Amid e glory and the song. w« For ; vi before the Golden Gate. After « itii's parting utnl earth's pain, Never to part! Never again! The Aristocrat. i ! iter KllEN Herbert B la^com's ef w fects were moved into the Jloibein studios the other occupants ithered in the front windows and jeered upein \. itaseom, whose bearing was siiigular’y acute, caught the comments as far up as the third floor. The only trouble with Bascout's ef fects was that they were new--dis tressingly new. l'rom the oilcloth for the tiny kitchen, to the l’ersiau rugs and Turkish hangings, they all came from first-hand stores. The llolbein ites were unaccustomed to such extrav agances. They had bought second hand th mgs when they had first set up, and tbe-.->y had acquired merit in the • yes of ihose already established. It was mibohemian. as Tolliver expressed it. to have glaring new furniture and things in one's studio, It argued the posses m of unseemly qualities of money nj small artistic merit, l-'rom 11 k* men:ent that the first delivery wagon iiacked up to the door Bascom lost his surname, so far as Ids fellows were i •’ eerned. and gained the title of 1 he at : .ocrat. It was Tolliver’s nick name, nt it spread rapidly, and no French communist ever bated the name more then the llolbeinitos. As soon as the place liad been seeded Bascom wont around one morning de Iiverin:." invitations for a studio tea that a'! moon. There were many moved to accept the invitation, for the delivery wagon of a leading grocery bad unloaded much that loo 1 ,;: •u attrae live that morning. But Tolliver made a persona] canvass and win n Bascom hurried home that afternoon, laden with additional pack ages, lie was met by a neat pile of re grots earefnlly jiinned upon bis door. As a result of Tolliver’s activity it had hem: decided to snub ibis aristocrat who sought by means of the tea to flaunt ids rich possessions before bis eyes. It was mibohemian. and bis presence had to !>«• tolerated, it hip and fellowship should In* withheld. Bascoin was no fool. 11 <* roadii.v ceived tviiy lie was being snubbed quietly accepted the situation. nodded in a friendly way to tli• ■ men when in* met them in Hie balls gravely removed bis bat when passed tiie women. , For the rest went io work and found in this an sorption which <:id i:ot permit him worry about the attitude of his neigh bors. He missed tin ir but he had letters in pieuiy. Sim-e artistic colony refused to recognize he devoted himself to his society 4 r geinents when time permitted, b.V bringing- forth addirioual as to the gorgeousuc-s of ids Tlicn came Mi-s Alice Caswell. was Dm a decorator of ciiina. but effects were pitifully meagre, and was ;u once accepted i>y the rest of inhabitants a** a Bohemian. 8bc was a br.glit. brisk, J»ered girl, and before the week nm she had mads* friends, even H.c .janitor, a teat hitherto supposed be impossible. -<110 had the across Hu* ball from Bascom ami lore she had learned of his Ii.-u, already formed a friendship him. Mm had needed some which site did not have time to go lor. and he had generously .supplied wants. Mn< bail noted with eye ids skill as a draughtsman and sense of color. After that she soon ([Hired flie habit of dropping in to his advice about her designs, his wide experience of great value. By the time the other dwellers in studio building had thought to her of tiie intruder in their colony intruder had Jiecome iter mentor, elm grieved greatly as one after a or the rest of the artists let slip caustic fling. i ••But ho is a really clover man,” she j assured Tolliver one day as lie sat ; ; perched * in the window seat declaim- i i i ‘ against the aristocrat. "I assure I you that his paintings are very uuich j | nltove the average.” Tolliver snorted contemptuously. ".My | dear child,” he remarked patronizingly, ( you do some very clever china work, i ! Don’t Iry to get heyond it and set u;* ; as a critic. There never was a man I came into this place with new fnrni- ! ! tnre. lie can’t be an artist.” Then the ' conversation dropped. There was no ; he called i arguing with Tolliver when one "dear child.” j A feu weeks later she had a birth- j , day party. Early in ihe morning the occupants of tiie other studios began to i arrive, each with some little token and j j the invariable inquiry as to whether I Bascom had been invited to the even- I ing festivities. It seemed odd to her | thai thev should lie so interested in his possible appearance, but she readily | answered that lie would. Ao objection being offered she personally rounded • up Bascom when the time of the party j arrived, and got him across tiie hall on | I ,, .ne piea , . »aat 1,1 she needed iii Lcip „i. m • ,, the , preparation of the supper. i Bascom had interposed J many * objee- ' J lions when she had milted . . lnm, but | j site had pleaded with him. and on her j assurance that the attitude of the oth- i j erg had materially changed be decided l to risk it because she wanted it. I Slit 1 never realized that the abate- i ment of the criticism was because she j I vas openly , , his . champion, , . and , the lest . j ■ had decided to respect her "delusion.” j ; ;s thev termed it. She was so happy i | getting the spread ready that sin* | | never noticed the clock until all of the preparations liad been made. i "Why. it's 0,” site said, wonderingiv. 1 "i asked them to come in about 8. I’ll ! lake a little run down the hall and re- | j mind some of them.” | Bascom sank into the easy chair in ! i I front of the eaiinel coal tire. Cannel i coal was a luxury in the Holbein flats, j hut he had sent two scnttlefuis that | moniing in honor of the event. Alice ran down the hall to Tolliver's door. | ! There, pinned to the panel, was the i sign. "Gone to the theatre.” 81ie re traced her steps to the stairway. On every door was some card giving notice that the owner had gone out. 8iio de- , j scended to tiie lower floors, apparently . not a soul remained in Hie building. ! Bascom. by the fireplace, was startled j by the tiny figure that darted in and j sank sobbing upon the home-made cozy | corner. | It took small questioning ro get at ibe trouble. The cause he already knew. The form the opposition had taken was all he needed to ask. "I wouldn’t have minded so much,” ! site sobbed, "only 1 did so Want them j to meet you and see how nice you really were.” "Did you get it all ui> for me?” lie j demanded eagerly. She nodded. "That isn't the worst of it." she confessed. “L even invented tiie birthday. Min * was seven months away and i couldn’t wait. I thought tiny would lie more apt to come to a birthday party. Now 1 have all their presents, and they wouldn't come.” lie drew the tearful little face down upon his shoulder. "Little girl,” he said, gently, “don't you think they would be more apt to come to a wed ding?" "1 couldn’t invent that," r> protest ed in a muffled voice. “It’s very easy.” he persisted. ‘•Just say ’yes.’ i will look after the rest, I have valued to a-x you l’or a ion time.” Even Tolliver came to the wedding and led the chorus of "lie's a jolly good follow,” as lie poured several quavG ... li.-c (.own , toe eietulov , shale oi alter the departing pair. James had discovered that Bascom really had to work for a living, and that the studio had boon inraished by a maiden aunt, who insisted linn he be started right. Jasper Collingwood, in San Francisco Call. A Warning- 1<> l'nt l.mpi-s. A lesson that bo may read" who runs not, because lie is not built way. i< taught by ibe Armenian lover who sent to the old country for his sweet heart to come and marry him. At Bi li;; Island she saw how l'orr years in America had tilled out Ids once sketchy j Dame and said, in effect: "Too fat. L { cannot, marry him. Scud me back to \ Armenia.” Of course, there is f ;! t and fat. Just: : cnougii ol ir, and nicely distributed, may lend an aesthetic veil to an other wise unconvincing bony structure, hint at possibilities of girth and testily to an amiable disposi.ion. Strong and maniv men Jn.ve frequently consider able lateral dimensions. Yet there is a degree beyond. M lien a man, and especially a young man, he \ gins to waddle as he walks, is it not | spherical time for him build to .consider jn'esents whether ad the ; any van | dagos ever that of the Apollo Belvi j dere. eithef for health, for business or 1 in quest of the l'avor of the fair? i Out of tlic Mo nths of liabes. ! One day while four-year-old Margie j was walking with her nurse the latter pointed out a cemetery. Margie was much interested, and upon returning home, said: “Ob, mamma, liursee showed me where Lie dead folks live,” —Chicago News. SERMON FOR SUNDAY l AN ELOQUENT DISCOURSE BY THE REV. A. B- KINSOLViNC. r;*• I)(ht to raesai* awl to M list Not Permit • b« “Huge >f iiinl«nc Machine** to lln»« j Over Our SouU. ' South ampto.n, L. I.—jv. 11. Kinsol- ! v mg, rector, of Christ Church, Giinton j street. Brooklyn, preached here Church. Sunday j j morning in St. Andrew’s Dune His subject was "Our Debt to Caesar and i Oar Debt to God." lli.s text was chosen j from St. Matthew xxii:21. "Render there- i *. olv unto Caesar tiie things which are ; : Caesar’s: and unto God the things winch j are God’s.” Dr. Kinsolving said: Were ever words more palpably just and j fair? Could any statement he more ea.iniy self-evidencing? Could any disentangle- | nient of the provinces of God and Cue ~ U1 i be more distinct, or any declaration ol our j respective duty he more lucid? M*b tilings— have j ; always been confusing these two I j their dent to Caesar and Cieiv dent to <»o« w ith the other, fancying‘that when thev have ais;eha v *geu one they have done toe j other also, finding the one to conflict with • »* other taroagh some niisimderstand-ng ■ * he pignity a 'id weight oi the re-pec ive j ^.‘ .And not of peoples omy m and private Stales uie, what hat in . the I j storv <*oii;u sion. what blundering has there been! j j jO0 n how the cruel Roman empire tried I through years to crush out the life of the ; Christian martyrs for simply doing their ; duty empire to had God, been and conquered then in turn, by the when church riie j j and and the had papacy erected was its seated palatial upon Vatican its throne amid j j the ruins of the old order, sec liovv the j haughty earthly embodiment of the hear- ! ,,„j v autocracy sought to bring low and j r akt subservient the tilings oi' Gaesnr! ) ^ oil are mmiliar. <loni)liess', will tne way the saving v.-.t* brought aim at. A warty of ! ! y oung Pharisees—ihe old hacks had recent j v retired in confusion—had joined with j some Herodians or Jewish nationalist* in „ut to Jesus ii eatcl. question to ensnare : Him. "Master.” said they with feigned 1 ! earnestness. ”we know that Thou act true. and teachest the way of God in truth,- j ; neither earesr. Thoa ft any man. for Thou J regardest not the person of men. Tell is, j ! therefore: What thinkest Thou? Is ir I lawful to pay this distasteful Roman poll j j tax or no?” If He had answered “Ses” Ho would ' have been at once discredited as the Mes stall K.ag oi Isiac. Ij no it 'MflJd - have been treason aou rebellion against i Rome. So instead of failing int the trap j ! set for Him. with a complete, a divine grasp of the whole situation, He declares a )»rineipie whieh is the key to this wnoli* complexity "Why in life wherever it may hypocrites’? possibly ! occur. tempst Me. ye j Show Ale the tribute money. Whose image ! is this stamped on vour iiirrenr coin? Caesar’s;. \ e,-v well. Then what is (nr- j ku-’s give hack to Caesar, and what is (_b M i’ s to God” i 1 The impression it produced at the mo- ' ! ment was profound. “When they had heard these words they marveled and left Him and went their way.” He haci lifted the whole controversy out of the imme diate and passing circumstances into the region of largest and widest statesmanship, and ail the centuries of human history that i have rolled by since hove not exhausted its wisdom. "Render therefore unto Caesar llu* things that are Caesar s.’" Not a great: deal of time, J. take it. needs to be spent in on forcing this behest, fi marks the sanity. ; tlie wliolesomeness of Christ's religion. It it is no_star-gazing inveterate other cult. worldliness Tiie charge agabist libel. j of is a : Christianity has always faugh t man to nobly, patiently, heroically his full duty- ;o the State, to rulers, to society. AYc arc part of a social system which has already taken shape. "Wejxtss \Ye are in debt freely: to it in many ways. its coins we enjoy its mi dowments.” Its image and superscription are on us: We belong of right to our age; our era of civilization, our nation State, i-ity, community. All that is around us is but the providential setting and environ raent of our lives. It is never perfect, There is, and for a great while to mime is likely -to be a vast deal that is faulty about-, it. But we have no charter from Christ to be hopelessly sour in ourjittributes toward it. We are to trust, you and I. the upward growth, the slow and painful evolution of human civilization. We are to believe that at the heart of the movement there are deep-hidden, interior principles which, in co-operation with those special and power ful incentives which God brings to bear from above, are steadily bringing the king dom of Caesar to some better fulfillment of itself. So then, even when we see things neighborhood, in tiie nation, the municipality, the go wrong; even when we see tyranny and corruption and abuses, we are not disgust. permitted We to turn away in despair and have no right to stand aloof as if our bands would be containin' ' a ted by any contact with it. Our duty is to duty go bravely the in and try to discharge our to civil and secular powers, re specting the moral worth of the things of Caesar, and confidently trusting truth and God and humanity for the dawning of tiie brighter build day. We are set as Christians ] j God not to a dazzling visible chureiwoi upon the ruins of the dynasties governments of earth, as was dreamed by j tin* medieval popes and doctors, No, but ratlicr is our book to infuse into organized | human society the healthful spii •it or the kingdom of .Jesus Christ, and meanwhde, as Christ's words here ek*;t?k, teach us. to kceji the two spheres distinct And on the cauie principle pre-.-iseli T j think our Ford L >1 would have us deal with j to presume to use religious authority to j deny the ascertained and verified eouem j -ions of a genuine science--as was done, j nisiam-e, m the ease oi Gub':c<>. and lias j j ( along .. TOim . m its d. Naun-al distinct seiem ,* must proe, ed own and •< parate lines, | R <••'««<» out oi its .sphere to teach the “ifepze!'^Kn’a^ l ° lilft YtY , ts mv n proper i. the sphere tribuie we nm-i respect it. ^ owe render Caesar n. the our sincerity. " ” lusl .<> tlmigs that In ns Ti ''ve origin pa'lis^d'^ihe 01 sinne ' *’* , time to "i-cndci to God the Tier,:;- t f * u t: are i God-, | j , urging But i- that ii in mos, the men point fail tim, now I (days? lave men Is j it hen- thai we need to thru \ our einpha ! >is ,<n tins • Render to Caesar?’ Ar ■ there not certain forte- itt the realm of Caesar .which;of wiiixt is doe tlmnseives there? exact Dees the this payment tribute of not get itscl/jjaid self-netiug i,i as do the State taxes by a soi’l ot process,- so that in a rough the way real it trouble has to be forthcoming? not now that '-<> im . et so and many eases surrendering to Causa mo, e more ox the things which belong » 10 God? ovc r 1C line nas ill. ' » of incut" VOIKi t ru li* with its immense volume ; ‘j human interests, human g: •t s. hit it and industry, it makes more ad more ieit u* o:u j over ig. ruling fact. It. for tilts tire things scene, Where is there any room the of God? Where can the spirit move and t)Vt\ the? Where has the son! fied?” Be ca .sc of the pressure upon their lives o the world oi" Caesar, hecau Oi jruiTcnts that sweep them along, soul and body, our debts to God too often go un paid. You know how if is without big describe detail. Industry, my attempt to it in with jis iron necessities, grips a man: he flings himself with good American pluck and pur pose into the thing before him. a: \ and by the very headway o. slice's, ill very stress of competition, is found using up all his strength. Hoon his pra get thinner and poorer; lie lias scarce » file for them and feels less and ■< is netd for them. When his days and nigiiL- at ihe office are through with, lie rectipera les his tired energies at the ciuh. where he can still with tiie waning nerve la k ' over the course of the market—or else lie goes out of town to get the relaxation Vsl i.W« m ' 1 ' ! jj e 4 j OCi uoi JueHn :l t to return nee , llis obligation to God. For some time lie ‘ pays j, fi, the worthless currency oi good intentions and good-humored apologies. he by even these are omitted, and and friends begin to justify the dereliction God the the • *.o on score oi • me re a-, mg -claims oi Caesar. ’This laxity on the of men and women to-day God i . giving back 1o God the tilings that are s is simply • upalliog in view or God’s unrivalled gifts and blessings to us. h it he true that lO whom much is given of him shall much he required.” and that judgment will ever he gin at the ii.ir.se of God with the privil eyed, whut is to Ik* said when we- all stand. as i stand we shal!, before the Son of M in < "Ve eaitno, serve Cod and muiimioi!." Christ •!< to dhts no 1 ohuk the way oi our paying our just debt to Caesar, bn He does warn us with the utmost plain ness not to give Caesar everything, J i we allow "ibe huge nimtduoc machine to run over our sou is. tik- so..... ea, o. Juggernaut, dom and initiative, crushing out shad otiv religious be hor. live- -i> we y fluilened in our manhood, our sympathies. i iv ideals, our eoiieepi’ons of life. Tiie results may i nt appear tuliy ior n wrii.e. out m tne end there win bu expenenceu an iinpoverisiunent, eripjiled an atrophy, which a sinister, will ,naiHietl ; >»<i growth ! n a ^‘‘ “ s J( ! r ' , H citizenship : 'i tn ■ . . j M br-'innim- ,"*• ids Ivd-oe ' to *•> the " ' Ronw-s |be uU capuai 1 '-. u * city !'»“ ( aesar 'V M-eauu ho t ! ,e1 ' -accounts ,■ , or ,n t,!t ' io«;ow»Hg •<»' li '-’ '.'V i!M! * . *ue ;c ainl <ie<*aokTice n- u v»t. i i‘ 1Kto:,, : ht \ ielis i % n \ v hen l ,, 7 God, i . they g.onlied , Dm not as God. 1 . H< ‘ U,U ' J XU:I<> >•»»’»wim. roiess.ng Giem ^ «« C ' ° ( ™r JOO> '. ll,cy k”' iiu ' h ,vu, ‘ ;i im " 'V 01 ' Creator, d au<t serve.l ttie . blessed ciTaturc move.than tt " e who is forever. "as an awful b.nnoei. No greater could lie made tn any man or peop.e. They made iiie wcu'iu they iiveu m r.ien- ; hei.' only' god. ami -worshiped and ■ erve< i with their tyhoie hearts. They w urslii ped power, knowledge, pleasure, v.cu.tli. nmt, passion, art. They lived for these tilings until they fancied that these vein the only tilings to live for. Me know the re sult, A- they rejected Him. so God re jeered them. As a punishment He g ive them over io moral corruption, to an abandoned mind, to a festering decadence, "And men crowded around ami strove for place and food, and the strong beat down the weak, and the rich wen- gorget! and the poor were sent empty away , and strife and cruelty tilled tin* earth with violence. '' That was happening at the very moment Christ spoke these trernen dotis words: "Render to God the things which are God'.-:.” This i- the sort of , ncauienisni wmmi <",!<:• ovti y wnerc on eanl’. where if - not pfi-.~;-i-.*u;iy .?.']}'* V°i v, \ >v ‘‘ S|, ‘ I '' ot Christ, / ’ *‘ M ' l .‘! e Hiings ,. that iii-k boil s! r, Goo tiie tilings tnat are Gou s!' Let that l l ' v uaunt you until it campe** you to pay '>'»»>’ <!ei n 1 ,ve the, enn-age to look, oa t . ,!and "'hat giving the - 1 ® one you are to " oral represented by * aesar. and <»u the otue - «i what you arc aetnal.y^ aiving to ,,0( *- I* mis^mg His rights: 1- your duty to Him threatened by Im- jmver and P°oip oi this massive e-nth? Aii! then a »i the more .awful that your deb; to heaven is paid. By tlm blood <n tin* ( ruei l< gne | l'’- tour K:k to soul, ( | od wh; ‘ f r; ' ail >' ,’ • vonr in.-ari. votir von yictunis, nil youv these rpirituai rea.ity. y.uir eternal to God. for they art Hi-*. Believe Him when He tells you uett ail ,v >mit j se passeth '^v ami handle Aye. (ros is inn Him a shadow lion *!c p.edges away. Hi.- help v you wiiein \ e>- you wieerelv want to follow Him. and protu- 1S ® - never to leave you to struggle on by yours li. 1 brougli Him who condescended to make His borne in our hearts, v. bo by J"ake •**>« spirit such "heipeth offering oniyniiijmit: let us to L,od as y: we can. Bive (,od. through Jesus < h -St", your Saviour, _first <>.i aii yonvsehh no will ae ‘‘fPt clutch nothing the in the stead of you. Do not portion oi goods that lalietli to • VO! ' ii)u ‘ ,D'.V to have them all to yourself j 11 some jar Fat country, tier's voice where you GuiII Hi- never ! but ,ear whatever do or >u- face; you cave from Him, whether more or less, try to enjoy it a- a in your Kadier's house. idea the ; constant benedictioji of His siime. In the ! , taco of this tremendous pressure of earth, j Sou), wiiiclt b< rs down so f.eavily upon every ! icsom mantidly that you avII' not yield; that the great and firs: command ment of < lirist. "Thou --hail love rim ] ord ' (aesar H*'’ the «'“ tilings d} ht ' that "Render Caesnv's. irate and are nii;,, Go 1 Hie tilings that are t* jh. i (Terns <*(' Tjimii'til, Tl i acre is nothing ia 1 wlucii ire nc.s not i I s i lesson for i:*. or ,m giit.- Buskin, travel slow’v. ana, tor a , * I" * whl; woo). -James ids. A ho-, Garfield. feet God reads <mr eluu-.e-i'rj- in mi;- pi: y* is. V 1 -bat we love n< . V, he, we covet muse. ('ll t!, '- u lev. ves tne key to our ir l ' . J.. v tne good thing:- thai we navr niissca i iu This world sometimes nw!:c ns sad; but the sad things that we have misled shou’al "^1 V’T ilV Uu 1 ^ , g:ve • us i spirit ' "'he ' live--- lhat. we an livin' ‘ Oh way in which we fail I [ , <■ k‘ ■ •iiend, or, when we do f.'ompre ( le j ’ y to omseives ;hc iugm.--- of that j thing wliiv’ii it is to lie a man. :*) if j child or God!-- Phillips Brook-. A ••(•!!”ion that stays in the <-!ouds >s of .definite, to use to practical, anybody. useful—a Religion must be ! ' of daily life- else i- binding ru.e or it us much a mock - try as the gilded praver wheel of the iivuld ! hist.-Bhii .v.h-iphiu Young I’e.'p'e. B I TO BE SEE; Russia Promises to Stop With Foreign Vessels,' CZAR IS BADLY BLU i Government Waives Rigit oi s a ing Neutral Vessels- Orders Se to Volunteer Fleet. A St. Peter, mrg special t K’ fj Duke Alexis presided n Sun: council, which Count LamsdorB. foreign secretary, and V* e A ,’j Avelilan. chief of the admiral;, partment, and oiher high naval L'ffiers attended. The result of ,he confert •no moves all doubts concerning the ont attitude of Russia with regs the volunteer fleet. The valid; the view expressed in the Britisii 1 regarding the irregularity of j that Ion of the the council vessels was so far ada j agreed to waivi ! right to search. | After a long discussion ~ 0,mt ...... . '^ ® leaning , i - an 0} U)JK a was decided that the presents i of the volunteer fleet was not ciently defined according to id ! tional law to render further sea ; an .i tpiyures felt! advisable ,h! ant th* ! ' ^ <)!e w Htts^ia i,, ill the mte.eSi Its 0? f( I ly relations with the powers s] I withdraw the author!' given tin ! unteer fleet in this respect. ! « Orders have been sent to tie J and itn.eer Smolensk, fleet steaine:s, to refrain So „ from! Pftej f erence with foreign Shipping It is expected these steamers i eventually join the Baltic seaM i be replaced by ordinary warship! j The Associated Press- is ab-i ; sta,e ih hi . authority , . tt I ° n « K ntl « r ! Russian and British goversij have agreed on a mutually sai ; tpry basis for a settlement 0 , of question of the status Rhsmi ! unteer flee: steamers in the R« and the seizure by them ci B ■hips. A few minor points still rema settled, but these will probati cleared up immediately, and it expected that further ccmplid will arise. On Saturday, and before the j B agreement wvt reached. Count endorff, the Russian ambassadi . notSfil London, received official j from St. Petersburg reporting t& 1 tnre of two more British chips j Red sea and instructions from hi J eminent to notify Great Britaii ! 1 ! ' arae P ! ’Oce<luie will he fo! as in the case of the Malacca,t the vessels will be taken loan port for examination by ib p c( of the two nations concerned. j The steamer Scandia, of the, j burg-American line, in charge j Russian prize crew, entered the I | canal Saturday. i j A dispatch from Hamburg I The officials of the Hamburg-] can line:- declare that the . S J ; their sieamer Scandia by m* i sium is inexplicable, as her mu any , o w ! i show she did not carry ; war material for Japan, The col j ha foreign office ^ ! up the mailer and secure an tion. ■ Steamer Scar,dia Released A special of Sunday from f’ cr : states that the Hamburg-Aia i line steamer Scandia has been! Pd. The Russian crevf which ® i her lias landed and w -b ,,roc< ! j n , * , . ” „ v boat. Tiie / '' • j dia is awaiting orders from ers. Advices received ai F°rt Y that the Russian vohivh per | J i steamer Smolensk fired I f.hots across the bows of |] :< j s’earner Arden a. the cargo of «> ■ : consists of coal and ’explosi^ the vessel not stopping the M | sent two loaded shots a l i-.isifl | them passing over her atrir; i the other her stern. Tin i over : was th -n seized and in ■ crew - | ferred to the Smolensk. ; TWO KILLED; ONE WOl'M 0 I | In Quarrel W'ith Four Whit® M«8 | i )#ed Gun With Fatal E»* £t ' At Alexanders, 10 ntilP p i ! Waynesboro, ([a.. Saturday - al' :e j •Sampson Flournoy, a neg!' 0 nl * i double-barreled shotgun. f‘ !H j all _ ! I party of four fishermen. : killing aged -D ^ j James Minor, Tomlins, aged A- •' I and Evans ^ - i rally wot uuded Edward Nfl» 01 married. The negro escaped- I a quarrel over a Trivial maa" one of the party, went av.ub trie gun. returning, fired | in?:. A. a nearby farm bous* ! a untie, on which Ik , escaped-