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HONOR TO GROTIUS.
REMEMBRANCE ACT TO INTER¬
NATIONAL LAW MAN.
The Graceful Tribute of the Pence Con¬
ference Recalls Memories of a Man
Dearly Lovod Slnee Three Centuries
Ago—Made for History.
On July 4 last the members of the
international peace congress at The
Hague performed the graceful act of
decorating with laurel blooms the
tomb of Hugo Grotius, the father of
the code of international law. Though
250 years have elapsed since the death
of Grotius it was appropriate that the
members of the pea.ee congress should
honor the memory of the man who ac¬
complished more toward uniting the
powers of the globe under the benign
influence of the olive branch than per¬
haps any other individual of his time.
Grotius was born in Holland. During
his eventful career he played many
useful parts, being jurist, theologian,
statesman, poet and founder of inter¬
national law. His name was Latin¬
ized from De Groot. In 1613 Grotius
occupied the modest position of pen¬
sionary of Rotterdam. Six years lat¬
er, as a remonstrant, he was sentenced
to life imprisonment at Lovestein.
Through the aid of friends he es¬
caped from this prison in 1621. Fly¬
ing for safety to Sweden, he was wel¬
comed with honor by that country
and was mads Swedish ambassador to
France. He died at Rostock, Germany,
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HUGO GROTIUS.
In 1645. His best-known works, aside
from his essays and volumes on the
law of and between nations, are es¬
says on the credibility of the text of
the Bible, annotations on the Old and
New Testament and two tragedies—
sne on the fall of Adam and the other
lepicting the patience of Christ. The
wreath which Andrew D. White, our
minister to Germany, laid upon the
tomb of Grotius bore the inscription,
“In reverence and gratitude from the
United States.” The tomb is at the
Nieuve Kirk, Delft. King Oscar of
Sweden telegraphed his homage to the
memory of the author-statesman.
THE AUTOMOBILE.
Some of the Chief Essentials of a
Horseless Vehicle.
The distance an automobile will
travel without replenishing the reser¬
voir (whatever the power material
used) is, of course, dependent on the
cdpacity of the latter, and the effort
being to keep the bulk of the apparatus
at the smallest limit that will serve the
purpose, the result is generally a trip
not much greater than the twenty-five
miles accorded to the practical electri¬
cal vehicle.
The weight of the compressed air
carriage, with its apparatus, is little
less than that of a storage battery ve¬
hicle of equal capacity. The motor
apparatus suitable for carbonic-acid
gas, ammoniacal gas and liquid air
would differ little from that of steam in
appearance and weight. The lightest
automobile of which I have learned is
a French wagon for two persons, all
equipped with a steam motor, the en-
gine^weight being stated at 140 pounds.
Several of the applied motive powers
have apparatus sufficiently compact to
be contained in a little more than the
space under the seat of the vehicle,
among which is the very volatile pe¬
troleum spirit.
All existing automobile vehicles ex¬
cept the electric carry apparatus for
producing an electric spark or a flame,
for igniting the vapor or gas in the
cylinder, or for warming the expansive
material.
Most motors now recommended for
road vehicles can be driven at any pace
up to the speed of an average trotter,
and the day of automobile racing has
already arrived in France, and prob¬
ably will not be long delayed in other
countries. The prize contest at the
Charles River park exhibition of horse¬
less vehicles, in Boston last summer,
involved the following conditions:
Speed at level grade, at greatest pos¬
sible grade; turning round in the
smallest space; stopping at an unex¬
pected signal in shortest space; econo¬
my of fuel; quickness of preparation,
and durability and cost of machine.—
Lippincott’s.
Women’s Odd Pets.
Some minds are strikingly original,
even in the choice of pets. Certainly
this was the case with the wife of a
gentleman farmer, who, according to
Woman’s Life, made a pet of a pig.
The animal lost its mother early, and
the lady, taking pity on the little or¬
phan, bore it off to the kitchen, where
she succeeded, by the aid of a feeding
bottle, in rearing it.
The pig became a great pet and used
to follow its owner like a dog. It
eould hardly have been its outward at¬
traction that won her heart; it must
have been Its qualities which endeared
it to hor.
Another very singular pet was that
of a frog, which was tamed by a young
girl in the country and would come out
from under the leaves at her approach
to be fed with a strawberry.
A lady who was confined to her
room had a fowl whlnh, before her ill¬
ness, was a constant companion. It
used to be regularly taken to her room
every morning to see her and be fed
by her own hands, and allowed to take
a short walk about her room.
Another member of the feminine
gender actually made a pet of a tur¬
key, and declared it should “never be
eaten, but die In its own good time,”
which it did of old age.
A much more extraordinary instance
of a strange pet, for a woman at any
rate, was where an old lady so far
overcame the natural repugnance of
her sex as to tame a mouse which had
been caught in her store cupboard. So
successful was her treatment that at
last the tiny animal would take crumbs
from its mistress’ Angers.
AN ALINE STAMP.
Mark on the Magazine Cover Prevented
an A it pat.
“It used to make me mad,” said a
lady teacher, “to find the backs of new
bought periodicals disfigured by the
analine stamp of the newsdealer.
‘What right,’ I used to say, ‘have these
fellows to print their advertisement on
things I pay for?” Now I feel differ¬
ently. It came about through a visit
which I paid to another city last week.
As I passed through the depot I bought
a magazine at the news stand, and lat¬
er on, when I wa^ up town, I had occa¬
sion to step into a large department .
store. As usual they had a book coun¬
ter, and -while looking at a volume that
caught my eye I laid my magazine
carelessly upon a pile of periodicals.
When I was walking away a strange
man stepped up hastily and said: ‘Ex¬
cuse me, madam, but you have forgot¬
ten to pay for that magazine.’ ‘Why, I
didn’t get it here,’ I replied, greatly
startled. ‘I had it with me and have
been holding it in my hand all the
time.’ As soon as I spoke I realized
that that wasn’t strictly true, and the
girl clerk, who had rushed around the
counter, contradicted me at once. ‘It
ain’t so!’ she said breathlessly. ‘She
wasn’t holding it in her hand! I saw
her pick it up myself right off the top
of-the pile!’ ‘I witnessed that myself,’
said the floorwalker; ‘madame has
probably forgotten,’ he added, ironical¬
ly. I thought I should faint. A thou¬
sand things rushed into my mind. Of
course, I could prove my innocence by
the man at the depot, but that would
involve the scandal of an inquiry—
probably an arrest—and some people
would always have doubts. On the
other hand payment would be a confes¬
sion of guilt. The affair would certain¬
ly cost me my position and blight my
character forever. I held out the mag¬
azine mechanically and there on- the
cover was the big, hideous, blessed
stamp of the dealer! We all saw it at
once, and oh, I wish you could have
witnessed the abashment of the floor¬
walker! He groveled. The very curl
came out of his mustache. He told me
he had a wife and children, also a mo¬
ther, which I took the liberty to
doubt. His anguish was all that sav¬
ed me from hysterics. The clerk shed
maudlin tears and ’oped the lady would
not bear no malice. I treated them
both with scorn. I spurned them.
When I went home I bought peanuts
of the depot news dealer.”
AN INDIAN ARISTOCRAT.
This distinguished-looking gentle¬
man is his highness Maharajah Bhan-
war Pal Deo Bahadur Yaduk.u Chau-
dra Bhal, and compared with him
Queen Victoria is a low-born plebeian.
His pedigree stretches back to the
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CHAUDRA BHAL.
time when the Yadu or Jadon kings
ruled in Asia, and centuries before
Caesar landed in England this worthy
prince’s noble forbears were an old
and respected family. His highness
of the many names is now thirty-five
years of age and spends most of his
time in India shooting tigers and
studying his antique pedigree.
Mrs. Scrimp's Gardening.
Old Friend—“Did you have much ot
a garden this year?”
Mrs. Scrimp (of Serimpvifie)—“No, it
didn’t amount to much. In the spring
I gave a grand garden digging tourna¬
ment, the young men who dug the most
to have the pick of the girls for the
evening, and it worked very well, but
it cost me ’most two dollars for re-
freshments. Then I had a planting
bee, and that wasn’t so expensive, only
the planting wasn’t half done. Later
on I tried to get up a weeding festival,
but somehow the young folks sort o’
lost interest, and I gave up gardening
i n disgust.”
LADY SALISBURY.
WIFE OF THE PRIME MINISTER
OF ENGLAND.
Her Present Illness May Result In a
Political Crisis—Husband’s Devoted
Loyalty to Queen Victoria—Division in
the Tory Party.
Among politicians in England today
the renewed serious illness of Lady
Salisbury overshadows even such ex¬
citing topics as the Milner-Kruger duel
in South Africa. The best traditions of
English public life respect the privacy
of the domestic hearth even of the
greatest men, but grave political issues
are once again forced upon the atten¬
tion by the attack of partial paralysis
by which this august lady has been
suddenly stricken down. Among the
English statesmen of the Victorian era
Mr. Gladstone is alone comparable
with Lord Salisbury in the simple hap¬
piness of his domestic life. It is the
rarest thing in the world to And the
latter in clubland. He hardly ever
dines out. He lives the life almost of
a recluse, neglectful In a strange de¬
gree of social fame and of Ackle pub¬
lic opinion, and is only kept by bis
keen sense of public duty and his per¬
sonal devotion to the queen from the
quiet joj's of his beautiful Elizabethan
retreat at HatAeld and of that labora¬
tory where his friends say he has pa¬
tiently evolved a scientlAc discovery
of no mean Importance. This is the
man whose conAiet between private
iy,\]
i JfSs few
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LADY SALISBURY,
sorrow and public duty today awakens
the keenest sympathy among all Eng¬
lishmen, for they know that domestic
anxiety is the one superadded burden
which the overweighted prime minister
and foreign secretary cannot bear. It
was that one superadded burden that
nearly' forced on his resignation of one
or both of his portfolios last autumn,
and should the universal though not
over-sanguine hopes for Lady Salis¬
bury’s speedy recovery be frustrated,
the ministry will, in the last year before
its appeal to the electorate, be brought
face to face with a crisis in that ever-
recurring personal conflict which has
harassed it ever since Mr. Chamber-
lain made the provision of offices for
his personal following the price of ins
alliance with the Salisbury and Hicks-
Beach sections of Torryism.
Her Sense of Humor.
There was a man out at one of the
suburban resorts night before last for
whom I felt the sincerest sympathy,
says a writer in the Washington Post.
He was a very young man and you
could see from his looks that he meant
well. The girl with him was younger
even than he, and pretty enough to eat,
and he was doing his best to be witty
under the most disheartening cir¬
cumstances. Story after story he told,
till the perspiration trickled down his
cheeks and every time he told a story
the girl either didn’t laugh at all or,
worse yet, laughed in the wrong place.
At last he remembered one he knew
she’d like.
“I was over at Alexandria yester-
GOV. SAYERS OF TEXAS.
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Joseph D. Sayers, the genial and pop¬
ular governor of Texas, who Is the
chief promoter of the anti-trust con¬
vention which is about to meet in St.
Louis, is a man of microscopic preten¬
sions and gigantic ability. His most
notable political work was his active
campaign against extravagant expsu-
diture when he was chairman of the
committee on appropriations, succeed-
ing “Watch Dog” Holman in that po-
sition and fully carrying out his ideas,
day,” said he, "with George Robinson
and Pat Sheehy, You know what a
brogue Pat has. Well, we had to run
to catch the ferry, and George was a
half block behind us. By the time he
got to the edge of the dock the boat
was ten feet away. Pat was terribly 1
excited and dead in earnest. He lean¬
ed over the edge of the boat:
" ‘Jump, George,’ he says, with his
brogue. ‘Jump! You can make It In
two jumps.’
Here the young man loaned back
and waited for his hard-earned ap¬
plause. None came. The girl looked
at him expectantly.
“Ain’t that a good one?” he asked,
a bit discouraged.
"Oh, yes," she said. “And d.J
George do it in two jumps?”
“DRUVTO DECENCY.”
In Many Place* tlie Triumph of “Good”
Leaves Maoh Required.
I stood at Seven Dials and beard the
policeman's account of what it used to
be, says Jacob A. Riis in the Atlantic,
Seven Dials is no more like the slums
of old than is the Five Points today.
. . . The policeman’s story rambled
among the days when things were dif¬
ferent. Then it was dangerous for an
officer to go alone there at night.
Around the corner there came from
one of the aide streets a procession
with banners, parading in honor and
aid of some church charity. In it
marched, young men any boys with
swords and battle axes, and upon itr
outskirts skipped a host of young
roughs—so one would have called
them, but for the evidence of theil
honest employment—who rattled col¬
lection boxes, reaping a harvest oi
pennies from far and near. I looked at
tho battle axes and the collection
boxes and thought of forty years ago.
Where were til® Seven Dials of that
day, and the men who gave it its bad
name? I asked the policeman.
“They were druv into decency, sor!”
he said, and answered from his own
experience the question ever asked by
faint-hearted philanthropists. “My
father he done duty here afore me in
'45. The worst dive was where that
church stands. It was always full oi
thieves”—whose sons, I added mental-
!y, have become collectors for the
church. The one fact was a whole
chapter on tlie slum.
London’s way with the tenants we
adopted at last in New York with the
slum landlord. He was “druv into de¬
cency.” We had to. Moral suasion
had been stretched to the limit. The
point had been reached where ons
knockdown blow outweighed a bushel
of arguments. . . . The rear tene¬
ments were chosen for this purpose.
They were the worst as they were
the first of New York’s tenements. The
double-deckers had, with all their
evils, at least this to their credit, that
their death rate was not nearly as
high as that of the old houses, That
was not because of any virtue inherent
in the double-deckers, but because the
earlier tenements were old, and built
in a day that knew nothing of sani¬
tary restrictions and cared less, The
mortality of the rear tenement had
long been a scandal, They are built
in the back yard, generally back-to-
back with the rear buildings on the
adjoining lots. If there is an open
space between them it is never more
than a slit a foot or so wide, that gets
to be the receptable of garbage and
filth of every kind, so that the win¬
dow's in these walls become a source
of greater danger than if there were
none.
Advice.
“I know what you are going to tell
me,” said the high-browed youth who
wore a uniform; “you are goiug to ad-
vise me to learn to say no.”
“Not at all. I was about to advise
you to learn to say nothing.”—Wash-
ington Star.
Gov. Sayers is a native of Mississippi
and first saw the light of day at Gre¬
nada fifty-eight years ago. When he
wae a boy of ten he became a citizen
of the Lone Star state and before he
was out of his teens had enlisted in
the confederate army. When the war
was over and he gave up soldiering he
went at the study of law and was re-
markably successful in his praetioe up
to the time of his entry into active pol-
itics in 1873.
"CANGWAY!”
A New War Cry Kaieed by Our M«n In
the Philippine*.
The Manila correspondent of Col¬
lier’s Weekly, writes as follows: The
enemy were invisible ami shooting.
That made it necessary for Uncle
Sam’s troopers to go on nutil they got
near enough to got a good close view
of the little brown euemy, And they
did it with splendid spirit, rushing,
shooting, cheering and laughing. Two
companies of Cook’s battalion of the
Third were ordered to the left of tho
railroad, while tho other two com¬
panies, under Captain Cook, kept to
the right of the track. All four of the
companies were made up mainly of
“rookies,” as recuits are called, but
they made up in Hpirit what they
lacked in effective drill.
As the two companies to the left of
tlie track, under Captain Day and
Lieutenant Hannay, got their first
glimpso of the shooting euemy their
officers shouted out to steady their
commands. It was unnecessary, Ono
tall rooky, who was the first to catch
sight of the heads of the mass of Fili¬
pinos ahead, yelled gleefully: “Gang¬
way!” With one accord tho two com¬
panies took up the cry of “Gangway!”
aud oil they rushed. It was their
slogan. They kept it up until they
reached the thrown-up dirt of the
trench and saw the Filipinos, now an
irregular mass, iieeing a hundred
yards ahead of them. The Filipinos
gained another trench, but “Gang¬
way!” was the battle cry that drove
them out of it. It was the same with
the third line of trenches. Parenthet¬
ically, it is understood,, of course,
that our boys shot oft' something be¬
sides “Gangway!” Dead and wound¬
ed Filipinos strewed the ground and
filled the trenches. Our losses all
along tho line that day were tri¬
fling by comparison. Day’s and Han-
ney’s companies, for instance, which
suffered rather more than the average
losses, had five men killed and eleven
wounded.
But that cry of “Gangway!” is fam¬
ous over in the Filipinos Hues, In-
surgents who have been brought in
either wounded or prisoners have in¬
quired eagerly the meaning and po¬
tency of that mysterious Yankee word
which invariably preceded a Filipino
retreat. And so the Third has con-
tributed anothar famous word to the
technical slang of the American sol¬
dier.
Indian Village Lost.
Historians are at a loss to account
for the apparent ruins of an Indian
village in Silver Creek Township,
Michigan, about half a mile west of
Indian Lake. In 1848, when William
Gilbert, one of the wealthiest farmers
in this section, built his house in this
locality, he built upon the ruins of
what had evidently been a church. Iu
fact, settlers in the twenties claim to
have attended church there, the ser¬
vice being conducted by a priest from
Bertrand or Notre Dame.
Other old settlers state that in the
early thirties one Slater taught school
there, later goiug to the vicinity of
Yankee Springs and continuing that
occupation there. The fact of its be¬
ing a sehoolhouse would not preclude
its being used occasionally as a
! church, aud there are in existence in
this city records of baptism of Indian
children at tha “Church of the Indian
Village.” ruins of
On this same, farm were
nine sugar camps, each about twelve
by sixteen in size, with holes bored
in a log at the back, in wttich sticks
had been driven on which to make
| their beds. knives, Copper nails kettles aud were hatchets used,
| and copper
i of poor temper, have been ploweci .ip
j ti lere . There is not an Indian in this
j vicinity who knows anything about
| ! tLia this church church or school, yet the evi-
■ donee that one did exist is iudisputa-
ble.
Indian Lake was named from tlie
fact that this locality was the faworite
resort of the Indians in the maple
1 sugar season.—Detroit Nev?s.
Dentist Tells by Signs.
A peculiar aetunl or imagined cor¬
respondence has been developed be¬
tween physical acts and mental atti¬
tudes. The elocutionist declares that
the sledgehammer gesture indicates
emphasis and the hands opened with
an outward spread of the arms candor.
The student of handwriting assures
you that the up curl at the end of a
word indicates a hopeful mood and
the droop a despondent one; that if
the handwriting begins boldly and
ends in smaller characters a weak will
is indicated, and vice verna. Curly
hair is supposed to imply a quick
temper, and the dentists will tell you
that the teeth of the curly haired man
pull hard.
“I can tell as far as I see a man,”
one of them remarked, “whether
his teeth will be difficult to pull. If
he has a bull neck and curly hair, yon
will need your strongest forceps.
Somehow the roots curl themselves
up in the bony tissue of the jaw in as
much of a tangle as the hair itself.”—
New York Mail and Express.
Kata and Trap Swallowed by a Snake.
A remarkable snake story that is
vouched for by the family of Charles
Braddock, Sr., of Shatnong Township,
N. J., is told by John Dellett, the
hired man.
Dellett went to the barn the other
day to milk the cows. Upon entering
one of the stalls he saw a largo white-
throated blacksnake. It was curled
up inau apparently comfortable posi¬
tion, and it was noticed that a rat’s
tail was hanging from its mouth.
Dellett summoned Mr. Braddock and
other members of his family. At
first the men arranged to give battle
to the reptile, when it was found to
be dead. An examination showed
that in its hunger and greed to get
the rats, three in number, the snake
had swallowed the trajt,and all. This
caused its death.
44 A Gentle Wind
of Western Birth”
Tells no sweeter story to humentty then
the announcement that the heelth-ghier
end hselih-brtnger, Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
tills of the birth of an ere of good health.
R is the one reliable specific for the cure
of ell blood, stomach, end lever troubles.
Two Movers’ Bibles.
The other evening a tolerably well-
dressed young man entered a junk
shop vritb an exquisitely bound vol¬
ume. The denier gave him in return
for the book teu ecuts. He had sold
hi* mother’s Bible for a drink. A few
minutes later another man strolled in
this same place and bought that very
Bible. It was worth something more
than $2. “My mother.” he explained,
"gave me just such a book two years
Ago, nnd this one looks to have been
need considerably. When she sees it
she’ll think I’ve been reading it. That’s
why I want to buy it.”—Knoxville Sen.
tinel.
What 1* Tetterlne?
It 1s a sure cure far all skin diseases. It
cur'*a itch, tetter, ringworm, eczema, salt
rheum, etc. Never fails. Nothing is “Just a©
good.” Don’t accept substitutes Try. an<3
you will be convinced, as thousands of others
Have If your druggist doesn’t keep it, send
50c. in stamps direct to the maker, .7. T. Shup-
trine, Savannah, On., fora box postpaid.
Large possessions bring graat cares, and
these too often silence songs of praise.
How’s This ?
Wo offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
»ny caae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & < o , Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cho-
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per¬
fectly honorable in all business transaction*
and financially able to carry out any obliga¬
tion made by their firm.
West & i buax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo.
Ohio.
Walbino* Kin van Martin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act¬
ing faces directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
of the system. Testimonials sent tree.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
HalTa Family Pills are the best.
Advice is seldom welcome, .end those who
want it the most always like it the least.
No-To-I.nc for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, bleed pure. tOc, $1. All druggists.
People should not judge others until they
themselves aro free from being judged.
CORE TOUR HORSE
of Spavin, Curb, Splint, Capped
Hock, Sore Tendons, Cuts, Kicks,
Bruises, etc., by using
j
Also an invaluable remedy for man. H
When Cramps taken and Colic. internally It is it the cures best jg p
antiseptic knovin.
Every bottle is warranted. Sold by dealers lx
and dmegists generally. Family size, 25 c.
Horse sise, 50 c. and $ 1 . 00 .
Preparsd by EARL S. SLOAN, Boston, Mass, g
t fR \ 81
ill ii i
“I have been using CASCAHETS for
Insomnia, with which I have been afflicted for
ow over twenty twenty year8>ana years, and I t ean can say any that tnat Cascaretss uas
have given memory re lief than any other reme¬
dy ", '' I have ever tried. ’ ‘ X * shall ' " ocrtainly ‘ ' ’ recom-
_ my GiLam? , Ihgin? . M B
represented.” Tnos. Ill.
j
CANDY
CATHARTIC
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Et«rHn* HfrapSy C«3»psir, fblcngo, Montreal, Jfew York. 820
BQ-Tsme 8 tfistc o!<l and to CUSSffi 1 guaranteed Tobacco by all Habit. drug-
Maisby & Company,
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
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H B.M. WOOLLEY, M.D.
Office 104 N. Pryor St
SALESMEN Wood WAITED! Tobacco ,Grt*ei»»l»oro^\.C> *3,°,:,?^*
w Berger- Co.
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TpBWKAirtlS ML
■AILS. UfcO
Best Cough Syrup. Tasteu----- .
in time Sold b? dniaSistd.
CO N S U MENTION
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