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4 NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. SUNDAY. JT'NE 26. 1004. His of food while doing: this work is was detailed to the task of watching the condi- allowance rice, bacon, IN ra<;h three pounds a day of oatmeal and car- tion of the injured passengers In the hospitals, OF RICH MEN'S SONS COLLEGE. i:\rot on the sled for the purpose, and Just what MENACE inti:< rackers ruffianism. ried fats, though both of them have more and getting from such as were able to talk ac- his master fortune, than once, through the vicissitudes of been counts of escapes from death and their ob- compelled to travel far on much less food. their AUTOMOBILES, A Kr*Mt many of tin1 den u*ed in the j\lom»U<« servations of the accident. Experiences of sur- AT HARVARD^ HOODLUMS THROW THEM IXTO Shep's brood, they seem to PROBLEM IS REGARDED for Bleddlnß are of and vivors ;is they related to Urn general facts of the HOW THE hp cood f"'r the work. The "husky." which la the ISTO HOUSES AND AT HORSES. Cog Invented by the Hudson Bay people and origi- disaster were to bo part of Urn main story also. VIEWS OF PROFESSOR LOWELL. nally nsf-ii for the purpose, is a cross between tha "main story" man and his assJptr.nt trcn dog and the wolf. They are some* The Newfoundland utronger collies, but of gathering them on the ground at North Brother what larger and than the surely lnrltyof the city nmhcrl- unusual to observe a boy who can light a fire- much greater endurance Ifthe latter be ac- sons be- what It should be. there is another cause; Thanks to th» reneral not Island. Is the Increasing number of rich men's the community lire. usual, undergoing explosion his climatfd.— (Philadelphia Record. atmosphere of and that Is defective The tle«. New-York Is. an its cus- cracker niiil so time its and direct Bo much for special mention of \u25a0 few of the coming a menace to the tone and real training of student* cornea from one another siffTtrt,'. Inside which the Infre- aim that it will land on a little girl across the Col- the but with tomary month of chief phases that had to be developed promptly. American colleges, more especially of Harvard as well as from instructor's: tha quent bombardments of I'ort Arthur pale Into I'i- ptreet. Naturally, n good many children set remedy? seem to be growth innumbers c'.as3 feeling has become a very To make a long story short, here is -.< transcript lege, and if so, what is the than it «i thirty years ago; Anticipating- by nearly a month the burned; there I*an «-ndJ"ss nmount of noise, which at least a much weaker thins ficnlficanee. THE SLOCUM "STORY." assignments which by question? that are at preser.t agitating and the general sense of solidarity amon; larg*» July, the rec- makes day hideous and :Il;111111 horrible; but the of the were recorded 1 oldtim* celebration of the Fourth of certain proportion of Harvard alumni and profes- groups of students has declined. The old beads granted worst p. m. on the day of the disaster: away: yet it would seem to ri>sary permission to sell fireworks was element In the situation Is the recklessness sors. Tin cry for a more democratic spirit and are passing and ba and since th.it date 385 dealer* In ex- and criminal carelessness in the use of explosives — clear that in our country a college education with- on June 10. SJocum accident general story. mode of lifein the academic or college department community permanently been ir.lr.Jsterlng to as many hundreds that It develops among: the children." lloxc the News of a Great Disaster out a Ufa cannot young succeed. plosives Lav*> See St. Mark's Church. of Harvard University has lone been heard In the To expect that a large number of men. from disorderly youths The practice of throwing stones nt automobiles inspectors. years of age. of roughs, corner hoodlums and See federal boat land, and various remedies for existing conditions eighteen to twenty-two without a equipped, this rapidly grow- has recently developed with startling rapidity. Is Gathered and Arranged. See Knickerbocker Steamboat Company. The coir -non life or common aspirations, without the thejclU* over. Tlius have been offers! and some of them tried. the advantage of healthy of the community ha* been Certain parts of the city are no safe for vrfien was Slocum Inspected? Her capacity. and incentive of rivalry or disorderly portion lonscr Probably only a proportion of the steamship?. Harvard Union was built by Major Hlsstnson. Intercourse with one another, -will get any great udly eagaced In frlKhKr.lag and \u25a0."rnir!«- horses, persons li; automobiles. The firecracker bombard- small read- Overloaded senior simply pursuing courses of study 1 Tribune, See Collector Stranahan. thero was an effort on the part of a recent benefit from \u0084f luinlnK and destroying- property \u25a0•• even maiming ment has added to the Joys of pelting, as i: has ers of The when they opened their of prominence in which they can foresee no immediate application Humes of victims and East Side. class to put more underclass men of the American youth. betas*, through the agency added to the of the passers. When the papers on the day after the Plocum disaster and in is to expect a great deal iird di^fieurlne human duissra Other biff steamship disasters. athletics, debating and the like to live together real benefit of college education and the other police are to repress* lawlessness, it Is wellnigh pages of accurate, graphic To set the men of the roman candle, the flrerracker strufislirsr saw six on summer excursions. dormitories In the yard. But the cry has the of a college. certainly a question — — Effect the old must live life modern cele- matter of just how valuable any .by Long City. explosive horrors that characterize the story pictures and text had idea how that Rescues factories in Island hitherto been accompanied by rather vague reasons what he considers the pita and ef- any further incentive to disorder really is. T'p nt North Brother And then he states tratlon. That this HeMWe. more promptly on splendid result was attained. It was a result of Scenes Island. tl;e democracy urged upon the students. To before, History <>; capacity, for the problem, the withdrawal of th» rich into fectively accepted than ever has resulted The Harlem River last week the stone throwers any the Slocum. her etc. trained, men are, in an atmos- of found a rare variety which newspaper could be proud and on Injured at hospitals. men r.s Harvard private dormitories apart from the college, H» rot xiicreJy In greater destruction, but also In the of amusement In pelting- the the Individual Is intensely fostered, oarsmen which Th« Tribune has received many felicita- See captain and crew. phere where writes: rtlrau'iUkm of ruffianism, is the universal testimony with stones. Mil. scenic effect might the cry often seemed based on rather sentimental be secured by (if tions. Few newspaper readers have any con- thought quickly college ran do what It ought to, can stimulate of observers. a nightly bombardment rockets All these points had to be of grounds, rather out of harmony with the Harvard No of since patriot- or firecrackers, and there is little question ception of the work, the real hard labor, the Intellectual enthusiasm, or the love hard mental In earlier and loss patriotic times— hy the city editor and his assistant In order to In fact; and it was often uttered In deaf exercise, or true fellowship, unless every the that such a. development patriotic care, the, vigilance, the watchfulness, the re- tradition. man lt-rn, a* New-York interprets it. mean.* noise— of the mania give the reporters plenty of time to gather ears, or catalogued with those bombastic phrases stands on his own merits and finds his own social of limited to twenty- may follow. Commissioner lfcAdro announces source, minute planning; that were called his own mental and moral force. A col- celebration the Fourth was the th-Mr fncta and write their "copy" early. Sug- of the class day orator about "the true Harvard level on village up the that he in*-ans to prevent the celebration about lege. In other words, to be successful. mu?t be a Jour hours. The boy v.no shinned into ploy to "cover" a "story" of the magnitude staff were spirit" and "our beloved alma mater." democracy cannot meeting hospitals, but will hardly deter the gestions from other members of the democracy end a continue t» < l'.urcli aVeeafte a"id managed to set the .this roug-hs of the East River horror of June 15. A small But a new note seems now to be audible, and the exist if the richer men live apart by themselves hi time, while who are busj- fll!o- Into The office from lege as an institution altogether our- But »•\u25a0 iMa has this bulletin c«ne Tribune Instance, the story of a survivor might to pay attention. It Is their contention that the schools which July 3 1. but eMca and antl-toxirs w.'th which reflect selves to the work of the prepare t» C July logins, not en or even July they treat the Its report* st i*olice Headquarters: become a menace- to th» In- life: or we must bring our patriotic injuries, seriously on the conduct of another person In rich man's «on has men for practical with, men sr promptly upon the, stroke of midnight on June I. wide rang* of from bv.rna to fibre of our colleges, and together into a real community, a corruaoa result lockjaw. In th« words of carrying a Bun- a part of the city, or might disclose tellectual tone and moral ;to be aaptliuMd for twesitv-five days. Of the a somewhat cynical The steamer General Slocum. different of h-uoh * r are l^trinninK have evidence. Jt is not that the actual participants Inthe infernal •e.-upa based largely on \u25a0wealth. patriotism given by point of view: and-thlrty»elghth-st. Women and children the evening papers were being connected precocious and premature was Jumping the water, pome All afternoon to with graduate and pro- It can be done only by means of modern colle?** "It promises to be Interesting Into with their cloth- no fault find American dormitories, large enough :.- great a youthful patriot of Jamaica, who aimed a fire- an celebration." ing on Ambulances have b^n railed from searched for suggestions, and the bulletin* from schools, tut he does feel that the tone of to^fcouse t butlc young amaz- fire. fessional of the ntudenta within the college -wails. Such rv cracker at «the eye of a colt with such four hospitals. Casualties will be heavy. Police Headquarters enme pouring In. bearing colleges la becoming less and les« con- plan nny one class alone, but all destroyed the eye. American would benefit not ing accuracy that the explosion Bent one required Investi- life, to the training of think- the undergraduates. Many of the men who comn agony. The city editor grabbed his telephone and detail after another which ducive to intellectual soda] O:hers need not arrC the BMMMIcolt ran for miles in Again. ONE THOUSAND DEAD. calling telephone From observations he thus to us need a larger lif?. accomplished the feat a hurry call to the bead of the art department gation. Reporters were on the ers anil scholars. Ma only this, but also more Intellectual stimulus, and the youthful enthusiast who the present day types of undergraduates, all of them need to be shuffled together. This only individual Instances of for photographers. Inside of ten minutes two from various points, and supplementary orders describes escaped. These are writing In "The Harvard Graduates" Magazine": question is a large one. but itis one that we must successful celebration. had packed their cameras and were on their were communicated to them as details cam* to face. This Happens About Every Eleven light. Men come to college from very different sur- But among those who live In the crowded tene- \u25a0way to the scene. One reporter WSJ In »he of- very Pro^assor .Lowell advocates the erection of dormi- life, beet, roundings and In different ctrcumstanow. ment districts, where even at Its in Aim- Minutes by the Clock. fice- at the time—the men are not due to work In the evening a fresh detail of men Imfl to be Some who uro poor, look upon the college chiefly tories 0:1 college ground, attractive enough to ij sner is Tar from pleasant, are many unpatriotic until p. pi. was dispatched once Ma made to reporters sent out the after- an a step toward a. future livelihood. This is espe- nttsfy th« rich ami inexpensive enough to enabla 1 He at M the In cially of who Intend to be teachers. declare that present demonstrations, j a cftastropha which suddenly blots out nearly truo those say / enough to the In sort of outsider to look the ground over and noon MM in and writ* fh many students feol i•> great attitude of the boys' own and the calmer sacrificed his: man stayed thrre until 8 a. m. from far that, early training, or the lack of It.theso. boys recelva •Sect this celebration Is little less than Intolerable. Of afterthought that, thanks to the figures of the p. m., responsibility in college. They think how- college life, for were not due nt the office until 7 but all The lists of dead, missing and Injured were ever ldlo th^y may b* there, they will work hard, ts to blamo for their outlook on From the social workers In the tenement districts statistician, such an accident, terrible in Its detail mark, and this their Increases tendency to "segregate, on a money were required to start for the ofllce on receipt Th« Tribune by th« City and make their after graduation; have pointed out that :i'ly take assignments that In, orders worker In college Is apt to amount to task of a college- to exert its influence on all its ment and protest against this patriotlo outburst, world or the nation, but even In the State and the to city papers with general news of accldont9, the nerlousi pupils, and to give up because its students enter to "cover" of the "story." llythis nothing afterward, and that the. man who '.3 bad \u25a0which Is more harshly termed by them. city. certain parts They were collected at the at Is likely to be good at making badly equipped la to admit failure. crimes and the like. examination* thine ,it least seems certain— that American Indicative of this feeling is the comment of The estimated time the "outsider" had telephoned that the dis- Island, police money. There sec mi to -b« an Impression not only One seriously annual death rate for the world of morgue, North Brother the sta- students, the world outside, that social conditions of to-day are beginnins Lillian headworker of the Nurses' 45.000.000, 123.000, aster was enormous proportions, that the among the but In tnat Miss Wald. Set- a dully total of sends Into obacurity of tions nnd other places where bodies were ld«ntU habit* of Indolence and of mental laxity. th» pass- to make themselves felt in the colleges, and tlement, which comes In close touch -with the phy- the thousand or fewer who were slain on the Gen- death list could not be less than two hundred inK of un.-'s time In the society of a small clique of at Harvard in particular the increasing number of flod Hti-1 reports of lnlnslng persons filed. The a good sons of the very rich, herding together in luxurious sical effects of the bombardment, by day and by eral Slocum. Inthe omniscience of God, whether one and was more likelyto be five hundred. Bulle- frl.i-nds. nil of the same type. Is preparation many lints were arranged In alphabetical order, col- for an Industrious, energetic and useful Hi*. Idleness, has come to be regarded by thou?st- tight, upon the community. Miss Wald cays: assume position doubter or cynic, bearing distressing as -i. menace to the intellectual tone of the of the Urn tins the same Information lated, In ful alumni Of Iought to toe able to say that the the death roll of single accident, though It corrected and verified The Tribune After mentioning sots* possible technical defect* th>» college, as a danger to its usefulness and his» course. a even were pouring In from police headquarters. It mission, must some means or other in tha children burn their little fingers off with,the great- as as of the Genera] Slocum, can be ojiiv.: by two men specially assigned for th« our educational ho continues: that by regularity, they manage be great that was "story" of a lifetime, the city editor In system. near future be faced down. ev*n U drastic measure* «st and do to get burned detail, Insignificant, the task. And It was an all night Job for both of frequently, but the really serious thing that ap- only a minor even more In view knew, Ho time was to be lost. One re- Ifwe do not altogether succeed In making college hava to be taken. to any one who in trying of the fact all If parish. In the and peals to work in this part that life doomed to porter of long varied experience, especially them. of the city, who Is trying to make conditions of life case of this recent horror nearly a thousand lives, and easier a noisy So much for tho gathering of the news. But at the bayo the least bit in crowded quarter. Is any In "covering" accidents, fires, Crimea and the tion about eqi a] Norway. Its 2.500.000 people- are sired by Russia, almost the point of that one more source of noise Is added. To the a larger number than In similar accident In that Isn't half of It. It must be arranged, col- to rick weary living years, lost. For like, was assigned to write the main story— that Scandinavian!*, of t!; Finland was a Army and scattered all over the empire, ter of no little importance, especially when you add \u25a0wharves river trans- and Russian ufllca? formed Into a morgue. In a single day there were sent along with him to look up outlying points put together In the most attractive read- Grand Duchy of Swedon. Alexander Iof Russia all UN brutajity that bus made tho to the iaet that there isn't the least doubt that 1501 tao language wa» da» adds to the demoralization of the and more two hundred funerals of victims, and the associ- able order. Itmust be logically divided. "What In that year wrenched Finland from the weak notorious. In national it. children than while work under orders of his older tooguij In tti* . fteacbes them to disregard the comfort and safety city -plunged Into mourning phases told In separate articles must Swedish monarch. But In taking- this province clared to be no longer thd official of the people about them. the was and the civi- ate. They headed straight for the scene. should be gave Russian, . • world expression to its sympathy determjned. What phases should grouped Alexander published a proclamation, under htj Senate, and placa to while Russian That It makes the children reckless In the. use lized crave and But the general narrative or main story was be bo country with of fire, there can be no two opinions. own hand, which has been for over ninety years regiments garrisoned th© CossodC And What sorrow. only part pages was another questlpn to be decided. For this I reason or good end is served by all this racket? a email of those five which ap- the basis of liberty In Finland. This Imperial re- ! cruelty. The Yet. great ts was the tragedy at the moment, its Hlocurr. was established, 1 Sire laws are strict enough about the bakery fires peared In The Tribune on June IG. There were purpose a "desk" with faith the* said: In the mla time Finnish yvo^le had I** In tenements? Why should they permit this much part even In the death list of year Is only script. pledging the of Romanoffs. Oka the a and one phases that had the city at head. Now, "desk" In a tested no uncertain voice. A petltian, sijce^ more dangerous playing with tire. ItIs the con- slight. In normal existence of this metropolis hundred to be de- editor its placed possession In *T the office la generic name for a depart- Providence having m la of the Finns, Czar, but an audi- sensus of opinion of the workers over hare that as many persons die every 108 hours from reasons scribed, and described minutely and accurately. newspaper a Grand Puehy of Finland, we have desired, hereby, ;C23.0C0 vaa carried to the the indiscriminate use of firecrackers for so long copy. It doe» not implythru confirm and ratify the religion and fundamental i enco \u25a0M refused to the messengers, and Finland a period enhances In no respect the pleasure Incident to city lire as perished In the holocaust What did the officers of the company owning ment that edits the to of the laws of tho land, as wall as the privileges and adopted a policy of passive resistance to Russlaa- children, is positively Injurious to the health and near North Brother Inland. That this number the boat have to say about the disaster? What rest of the staff -write on their knees. It's sim- said duchy In pur- comfort thousands, greater this year than Inpre- should be equally significant Divine rights which each class in tho IIzation. Local district officials resigned rather than ceding of to the Power was their explanation of the swift ply a freak of- terminology. To this doslc all the ticular, and nil Inhabitants In genera!, be their years, and we can't see what possible good destruction liU-h low, enjoyed accord- publish the list of recruits, ministers refused to comes It all. must to granted, and, as death is the commonest "good ship" they In. was examined by Ik* position or have hitherto i from life, of the to which had Intrusted oopy was turned It ing ta tho constitution. Wa promise to maintain read the military In churches, recruits factor inhuman it cannot be regarded from a over to editor law*, [ law MM . Eaually pronounced Is the disapproval expressed the lives of some hundreds of human beings? head of the desk and turned one all these benefits and firm and unshakable .crowded emigrant steamers at the rate of a tfcou- different standpoint, whether it occurs in accident writing In their full fair.- i Toy Professor James H. Hamilton, hsadworker of ordinary Somebody had to find that out. for the readers or another for revision and the of heada. j sand a week, anil less than fifty responded to th« \u25a0 or in course of affairs. the Vmverslty In Within this State of Settlement. Eldridge-st. In dis- every day. The of The Tribune would ask that question. A schedule of the arrangement the story was On this firm foundation was built Jhe filth of \u25a0 draft of over eight hundred in Helslngfors. •\u25a0\u25a0 matter, 860 die tale of deaths in the United But cussing the he said: 2,850 daily, then, It was not enough to occupy one out by the city editor, and, according to the Finns In their Russian master. Two more , of these were cripples, and the rest were mobbed "For a States reaches a flguro three times that man's made - number of days now we have been en- of the of the Riorum. time. There were questions which plan, the account was divided and arranged. Alexanders* In turn ratified this remarkable re- by their indignant countrymen. The. Senators who during experience In victims General other could this an which sound, at least, There die annually in greater copy was going to script. Alexander IIIn MM and Alexander 111 in ', yielded to Russian pressure and voted for the mili- a St New-York seventy- be answered In the same neighborhood. The Throughout the night, the '.'.recalls battle. seems to me both unwise and five thousand persons, larger 18S6. For ninety years the Finns, protected in their tary law were boycotted. Helstngfors hotels «- unnecessary, noise, a number than that of government inspectors of eteam vessels were the composing room Inbatches every few min- ti this carnival of stimulating the the population of Trenton, liberties, passed from generation to generation the fused to receive them, and no Insult was too vehe- lawless tendencies N. J. "Within the United responsible for the safe condition of tho boat. utes, each article marked with a distinctive of the community, This pro- States graves are annually dug for more than covenant of the Russian Czars and the assurance ment for them. I'll.- proprietor of (MMhotel, whlci. longation of holidays getting be a had they inspected her and what word by. Its place In the general scheme Is to a familiar million coffins. In the face of vast When waa which Of Its inviolability. It was not until the present through a clerk's error, received such & Senator. feature with us and X this harvest of their report on her? many recognized by the men who arrange Czar, now. think the day Is losing mortality, the number slain on the General last How persons could be almost coincident with his proposal of the was actually driven into bankruptcy. much of Its significance, while Slocura carry, men busy Meantime, 13 real the twenty- eeems slight, even to the human intellect. In the was £he allowed to and had she exceeded the typo in the forms. It kept four Peace Conference at The Hague, first -ran his even the women were taking part five days* riot Is fraught with consequence "handling." campaign to curtail the liberties Finland that the protest. l has a record ba croud of. interesting. followed t>7 tumult ;•»*" •That the result Is demoralizing goes without to and There would be no end of to dispatches, th« pajace of the began the crushing of the liberties of the accession of power by removing all the jui. ItIs something- like nine thousand miles, of which a<.rainf r*c«nt Finns. * raying. It makes the children reckless la their dramatic scenes In "Little Germany," so one General at Helßlnsfars, the capital ninety-one years* after his great predecessor the Appellate Court, who had pronounced t!l vise of considerable -was on 6h«p Is a dug-, a Scotch lit*Governor Just fire. Then, the extension of the tfme af- foot. man was sent up to the east Finland, wo» Backed, gives evident assurance had pledged them liberty Inviolable. la January, i military law unconstitutional. Even the national fords collie, the property of G. Carlton Woodward. Ha side with orders of en incentive to find methods of employing for a graphic description of happening* in that the Finnish indignation at the destruction 1899, two bills were Introduced Into the Finnish press was ruthlessly suppressed. All power now the aad la of th« average size and more than usually well the crackers roxnaa candles that would not the stricken of their liberty has at last passed from that state Senate, at Russian behest, which wiped out the centred In the Governor General, and I>obri*oC» Imagined covered -with long, yellow hair, which district. Ho was told especially j be la a single day's celebration. turns to with which it has contented Army, made i nfter years of effort, r,.'.:u! himself In \u25a0 position t> over, More- black on the tip ends. to watch the church from which the ill-starred of passive resistance Independence of the Finnish It an In- Ihave been In New-York City for many last flva years Into a state approach- of the Russian system, increased it j enjoy the fruits of his labor. That ha oversteps** Fourths, Born somewhere. In Montana, h» found his way excursion went out and the office of the sexton im-.-lf for the tegral part and Ithas been my invariable experience rebellion. That Itneeded only the slight- from men. provided for the scattering j even Finnish endurance seems apparent, for nln< that, as Klondike, InDawson City, in and home of pastor, to In*open 6.600 to 12.000 a result off the prelude, the Fourth Itself to the where. 1902. he the the which undoubt- spark to eet afire with the rebellion hua Finnish recruits In territory, and [ months after he secured absolute control, a Finnish Is was purchased by Mr. "Woodward, to one many est Finland of the Russian the Quietest day la the whole period. Indicating bebome edly pathetic reports of dead and missing been the vosdlct of travellers for th» Inai five deprived the Finnish Senate of allpower over these , patriot ended his car r. even day of a team to draw a Bled from there to Fairbanks, ' that the loess significance under the would be carried. The arrangements for fu- years. of the man most forces, destroying the char- The fata of Finland, like that of Poland. sert«* present system. 660 miles away. He was bought at a bargain, too, In the assassination national thus national We. In the Settlement, have suf- nerals were part of this assignment Another hated of the Russian officer*. General HobrtkofT, of the army. to indicate the meaning of Russian rule, It serves fered more this year before, for ho cost only $50, and showed such intelligence all furnished, acter ! then ever and it still man was sent to same neighborhood the necessary spark seems to have been While still wrestling , also to explain the reason that the chancelleries that he 'was made leader of the team. the to the Senate was with these persists.** collect dangerous conflagration are of Europe anxiously watching for evidences os Not counting his trip from Montana to all the experiences of survivors that he and the signs or a bills, but after their rejection had been made cer- : are From the West. SICe «f the city comes a similar Dawson Internal revolution as the Russian armies mov« City. Shep's travels since Mr. Woodward has owned could get hold of. Every man on the story apparent. tain, the Russian Czar Issued a rescript with j plaint. Here the Italians predominate, 'and the use American, and unmolested In th» may to defeat. there still survives, have as follows: From Dawson to was told to do the same thing-, Incidentally, To the sate which the real liberty of Finland be said to j from defeat That , of CreworVs is even more indiscriminate. Of the him been Pair- liberties, the story of the Finnish despite all Russian oppression and tyranny, a banks, pulling a sled. 660 miles; from there down whenever opportunity offered. enjoyment of his have ended. Written almost at tho direction of i res situation here Miss Elizabeth Bartholow. of the the to Itreveals a loyalty to liberty which might easily «P /f**,£,; Tana na River, by boat, £50 miles; up rescuers, revolt and causes that led condi- Bobrikoff. who has now paid the penalty with his , may be gathered from the Richmond 1111! House, said recently: th» thence to The feats of the the devoted care of seems beyond any in' rebellion to\Krn^u»<» Dawson by TO) miles; thence to tion of affair* that miserable life, this remarkable ukase declared that the Fin- , extract from the favorite national lyric or The continual use of firecrackers makes our steamer. White the injured by the doctors and nurses at North comparison. Out of a tax on tea and a few British Finns : h«re exceedingly Horse, walking and sledding, 450 miles; thence to nish Senate would no longer be permitted to legis- children cw recklts* with fire. Brother Island where Blocura had regiments th*. here found They Bkagway.. by. 110 miles; thence to Seattle, by the been thirteen Colonies Justi- late for Finland, the Czar reserving the right to tie «tm our iplMJdl.l colon*, taouzh tattered. oa*«* eeem to be inspired with the dtslre to shoot train. beached, recovery of the Independence. borne. _-_ • miles; Francisco, by the. and care dead at fication for a. successful war of Out act Inmatters involving the common of . . \u25a0•* the crackers at each other. with obvious results. boat. 1.000 thence- to Ban rail. Interests Or KinIand » arct«nt itan Bhep does his fifty miles a day to the moment when BobrikQff was assassinated, Czar became obvious; stripped of every vestige \u25a0lifciffgli , --, -. , \u0084. glgerent. No little accuracy k. developed In the ex- feet all right, without the statements of the injured captain other of i .. .- ./ a3«* a any trouble .it his are and ifpull- and had mad« merely a cause tor passive resistance. power, to Policeman— Tes. The autolat pays a fine *MMs4 period allowed for celebration, and it is not ing a sled ha goes from tlilrty-nve to forty miles. members of crew. remodelled suit Russian convenience, tho i' to resources of the state. The burglar goes r PVMr&TfkM-iTßfiMTfftitnrrrritmiinft. mi<« wmiimi mm rm the Still another reporter Finland little nation, In popula- the la a In area and Senate passed the Military Conscription law' de- prison and the state has to pay fur hla —<*•