EMJCATIONALCOLUUN notes about schools and their management. fchoole la the French Capital Are Prison In Com pur Icon witb Thoae in America How to Have an tJr derljr Koom-Traln Pupil to Think. Pi. He rchnola. The large I'arls schools are called lycecs, or lyceuuis, hut the pupils refer to them an "boxm"; and thin is uot at all surprising when you consider that the boys are kept shut up in the schools Juet about a If they were In a box or a prison. Tln'y are also required to wear a tl ist im 1 1 ve uniform, which Is usually of dark-blue cloth, witb go! 1 buttons and gold embroidery, and i peak cap bearing the monogram' of the M-bool in front, 'i'hey sleep In dormi tories, fifteen or twenty in one room, and get their exercise and recreation iu a graveled courtyard lu the rear of 'the school buildings. This yard Is uhu ally not very large, uud the only games 1he scholars p';ry are marbles, tops and leaiefrog or tag. '1 here Is uo football, or baseball, or tenuis, and even the childish, games they do Indulge In are under the suierv'..sloii of a tutor. On Thursdays the boys are taken out for a promenade lu charge of a tutor, and they are marched around the streets twolty two for an hour or more. Those boys whose parents live In rails, and those who have friends lu the city, are allowed once Ir two weeks to visit their friends and relatives ou Sunday. Of course, almost every Isiy enn rake up some sort of a "relative," for the saki of getting out of the '"box" occasionally and those with Imaginary relatives spend their time on the boulevards eat ing cakes and seeing the sights. This they would probably not do If they enjoyed the liberty accorded to Ameri can boys. Instead of being confined for weeks In a walled yard. Tb,melhod of punishment Is to make a scholar write several thousand lines as a task, or to deprive him of one or more of his Sundays out. A minor pun Ishment Is Indicted by making the boys stand up against the wall of the play ground Dad learn Latin verses by heart during recess. The working hours are somewhat longer than In America, because cer tain fixed hours are set aside for pre paration and study. For Instance, there ts a recitation at 8 o'clock In the morn ing, then p. study hour, and then fif teen minutes' recess, followed by an other study hour. In the afternoon there are usually two recltatlou hours ami one study hour. All studying Is done In the class rooms, under the sn pervlsloti of a tutor, and no talking is allowed. As a result of this enforced alienee, the boys become adepts In a sort of deaf-and-dumb sign language, and carry on lengthy conversations which they would rever think of wast ing time on If they might say what they had to say out loud. At 4 o'clock very afternoon the boys line up lu the playground, and servants pass along In front of them with baskets of bread and butter, each boy helping himself to a slice as his turn comes. Harper's Young People. An Orderly Noom. "A place for everything, and every thing In Its place," is a maxim nowhere more necessary than In the school room. I'uless the rule be constantly Impressed and observed, disorder and much waste of time will Inevitably 1 ol io w. Picture a room In which the rule appenrs to be wanting: bookB litter the window sills, the Ismnls are half clcun- i-d, maps and other specimens of work are pinned to the wall without the slightest semblance of order, the teach er's desk Is covered with odds and ends of various kinds, and the children's desks are likewise untidy. Another picture shows a room of a different character. An open cupboard door re veals neat rows of books, boxes, papers, and other materials; window sills are 1st re but for a half dozen house plants (Handing In shining saucers. On the teacher's desk are arranged the books and material necessary to the day's work, while the children have nothing on theirs but the slate and pencil. Comment on the order and general working of these two classes Is unnee wiry. Disorder In these external mat ters does not bespeak orderliness of Kplrit, but rather the reverse, and there Is no doubt as to the effect upon charac ter of a atrlct observance of orderliness and neatness In all things. Try to have the children take a pride In their room, and encourage thetn In every effort to make It pleasant and attractive. Though nothing he done towards dec orating. It can be kept clean and neat. If this spirit prevail there will be no bats on the floor, no papers aboil', the desks, uo dlrly slate cloth (sponges and a clean rag should be the rule), and no untidy desks. There will Ins picture on the wills and on the unused black board, plants lu the wludows, and per haps a flower glass on the teacher's table. It la a great deal easier to keep every thing lu Its place than we somcl iocs think. All that Is necessary Is to re turn everything to Its accustomed place as soon as we arc done using It. "Or der In everything" must be our motto l( we would have a successful school; the order to which lot", sympathy nnd re gard for other are the Incentives. The Influence of oderllnc In thnae so called atnall matters reaches far be yond the school walk and th) rhool life, and cauot tie too highly estimated. Educational Journal. Train Pnplls to Think. Train your pupils to think. If there la one fault mora noticeable In our school ayateina, public an private, pri mary and advanced, city ana) country, than any otter It ii tbat of mere mem- I ory uit. The Uif Uiry is mo important faculty, and of course It should receive all due trainlug. but it 1 so much easier for a teacher to listen to a more rota recitation than Jt In to awakeu thought that even the -ollege professor often pronounces a verbatim recitation good yesterday forenojn. alopel lengthy re without making any effort to learn actions touching the Armenian ques- whether thought has been aroused In i . . i...;. ; ..... i tion. The resolutions say in part: the wind of the learner. , , , , ,, A student has just remarked. -When ! "Relved. That we urge respectfully I weut to the high school and recited , Civics to Miss I?., no questions were ever aked and no explanations made. All we had to do was to commit the words of the book to memory and re cite them when class was culled. If our recitation agreed with te book, no questions were asked by the teacher, and the boys asked none because they were glad to get a high mark and rest content with that" That was poor teaching, and yet there Is many a high school In which It is no lietter, and the same might lie said of both primary school) and colleges. The teacher ought to arouse thought. That Is an Important part of his busi ness. If he fails in that ami In creating Interest on the part of his pupils It ought to tell him that teaching Is not bis calling. Possibly, considering that many, probably a majority, of those who teach, take up the work merely as a means of supiort until something more agreeable or more remunerative offers, we ought not to expect uimii teaching ability to exhibit Itself. But even this class of teachers ought conscientiously to make thinkers of the pupils. Edu cational News. A Word tof Do teachers who constantly practice the habit of keeping pupils In at re cess and detaining them after school realize the wrong done the pupils? A certain amount of bodily exercise Is needful to Insure good physical health, without which there can never be good mental growth. A certain amount of hearty, enjoy able play should be Indulged In by both hoys and girls at least once in the morning and once in the after noon. To Insist upon the pupil remain ing in his seat for a few moments oc casionally, to perfect a lesson or n punishment for misbehavior, Is par donable, if he Is allowed at least a part of the recess. But to deprive a pupil of recpss entirely for several days In succession, and even for weeks, as I have Known, Is cruel and usually non-effective. Detention after school is rarely to be resorted to unless to help pupils with their work. An equally non-effective mode of punishment Is the practice of standing children on the floor to study. Ten chances to one .lolmnie doesn't want any better opportunity to make fun for the children than when lie Is up on the Hoor where the whole school can watch his antics. The best pre ventive for bad behavior Is an Inter esting Rchool disciplined by a firm, se rene teacher. School Education. Order. (iooil order cannot be secured with out active attentlou, and active at tention cannot be got without glvlug pupils employment of the right kind, and this, in turn, necessarily Involves continuous study ou the part of the teacher. If a teacher finds difficulty In keeping order, let hi m devote more time to the preparation of the lessons he is to teach the next day, and par ticularly to those lessons he Intends to assign. Many teachers spend plen ty of time on the lessons they are about to teach or examine on; but give little or no attention to the selec tion of lessons previous to the time when they are about to assign them. Lessons are often assigned in a hap hazard manner. Special attention should also be given to the selection of definite work for pupils while not engaged iu actual reci tations. Those who fail In the man agement of an ungraded school may be able to trace the cause to a neglect of this essential part of their duty. It would be folly to expect children to control themselves properly In school for hours with nothing to do. If teach ers do not furnish suitable employ ment, the pupils will find exercise In the shape of fun and mischief. Cnrie of tie Aire n,i. . ..... .1.1a I,. .1,, J lie greui cuinu ui ujia Uc is u-ii- in;-, mand for rapid education. In the bur-, ry to go through college and complete a university course, many a person la sacrificing the Tery thing for which he seeks, namely, the power to think and do.-Dr. W, O. Krohn. Chumming In Africa. The natives, I notice, generally have a chum; the pair consists, as a rule, of one strong man with a certain amount of Influence; the other a weaker crea ture, with nothing to say for himself. The latter derives a certain amount of protection and respect from the strong er mail's acquaintance, and Is content to do what drudgery or hard work falls to the partnership. In engaging guides 1 notice always one who carries all the belongings; his chum, a stronger J man, takes the lead In all things, knows tne roan; the other acquiesces in every- thing said or done. Century. lit' llojr. LI Hung Chang la attended by a re markably attentive servant, who lately waa addreawed by an English officer In public with "(rood day, commander." "1 am no longer commander," he re plied. "I am LI Hung Chang's boy." He bad been n Chinese naval com mander, but, baring loat hla vessel In the war with Japan, had been degrad ed and condemned to death. Ills re prieve waa conditioned on hla becoming the servant of some high state official. LI Hung Chang has taken him Into bia aervlce. The Assyrian King all wore very , long curly beard. .. ' WAaTCLEVKLAKUTO ACT. Miaaloearr Hoard re-lM to PetlUtCj tha Chief Executive Interfere. Toledo, O., Oct. 9 The American board of foreign missions at its meeting tie president of the L nited states to lie tft on the issues by the Turkish govern ment of the proper exequ itur that our c niuls may gd-.urely occupy, under the fligofour country, the post which our government assign to them, and in the interest of justice and in accordance with treaty right! a Itniifnte.r with authority the diltie-i of tlie'C office. "Resolve!, further, that we ure the pred-taut of U:nte 1 S'ates of America to drfnan 1 of thi Turkish authorities at once an 1 pare.nptorilv, indemnity for the wronn inflicted on Americans ; re iuilmrs 'iiirttit f r the destruction of their properly a id the ptioish-n ml of thos persons who have been guilty of these crim-s. We believe th.it tiie adoption of such an American policy will receive ttie loyal sup.i'.irt of t ie A-iurican peo ple " The b ir I ap ) iut f 1 a c I'umittee con ti'ting o; ptvsi I -u I I?. 'A'igell, of Micbrin iii-ve-sly; R )V. .IS. Todd an l H)n. If 0 ! I i l-i. to praient the reflations to Pr nide it Olevalau 1. The boir-1 p.nr.iei'Jy '1 a .- 1 of all its bmi nes ye-t-'r 1 iy ift ;-;t o i. St or ILiV3n, Conn., win sale : e 1 to." tha mxt, meet ing, whic i will !a hil 1 O.ioVr 12, 1897. Trie Mlj-vliig oTi :ers wre elected : Pre sMdnt, R jv. R. n. itorraj'vio president, E. W. I'l.itrthfor.l; prulentiil oinmit te9tfor ture yeirs) U. H, Whit'-omb, Rev. J. ). Voe, II. D. Hyde, f. Si. W. II.ill; for U-o yetrs: R?v. W. 11. Davia; r-or liii; s.icrat iry. If. iv. II. A. Stimson ; assistant, Rv E X. Packird; treasur er, F. H. VViins; auditors, Samuel Ja'inson, E, H, Ba'cer, E. R. Brown. Itoilrr Kt,ilu I..11 vin Two Dtsvnxr:, P t., '.:'. 9 The big roll ing mill hc-e. OAned by the Philadelphia & Reading Railroad company, and oper ated by the Reading Iron company ol Reading, Pa., was the scene of a disas trous explos on yesterday evening, by w iicii a mm anil a baby were killed, eix msn seii nidy hurt and seven othera injured. The dead : Johne Basselman and a Hungarian baby, name unknown. Too seriously injured are i Tho nan and Oliver Stromwcll, Guf Yerrick, John Mullen sr., John Mullen jr., Clinton Major. Urn furnace was not in aervice last night a id a number of b'ick layers wen e.igaged in repairing it. Suddenly the furnaci b iler exploded.scatteringdeath and injury among the men about. The b ilcr was lifted by the force of the ex plosion from its bed through the mill wall and flying acr.-ss the street, crashed through the frail walls of a Hungarian b a -ding lions', killing the baby, one of the inni.it' s of the place. it ittlmorA H'llia tlln Cui. Ci.kvki.am), Oct 9. Baltimore won the Temple cup by winning yesterday ' g ime irom the Clevelands. This is the third fenHon of the Temple cup garni f. Bain mure has played in all the contests for its jo-fBeesion, losing in 1894 to New York, in 1895 to Cleveland, and in 189G will take the cup home with them. The gams was a fine exhibition for six in nings, neither side scoring during thai period. Cirbett was in the box for th orioles and was invincible. Once, wjtfc a man on second and third and only one out, be kept the spiders from scoring. He struck out eight men and added to the glory of his performance by bitting safe y every time he waa at bat, one of his hits being a sharp, clean two-beggar in additon to which he stole a base prettily and played a generally high clast game. Cuppy pitched a beautiful ball for sis inning, only four hits being made off him to the seventh. In the seventh a double followed by a long ingle and three out resulted in two rum. Corbett singled in the eight and after McGraw had filed, Keeler and Jennings doubled, Kelley fanned and Doyle singled, three runs scoring. The Templars filled the cup with champagne reatedly tonight and at the Ilollenden, with some of the magnates ami the spid ers, drowned Telieau'g sorrow. An Old 'Ilia liald-up Santa Fit, N. M , Oct. 8. Informa tion has just reached this point that the San Antonio White Oaka'Uge has been held up by masked robbers forty miles from San Antonio. The hold-up occur ed in a lonely gorge in the Oscura moun tains. The driver was compelled to dis mount, the mail pouches were rifled, and to secure delay in pursuit, the rob bers stole the Stage horses, compelling the driver to walk to Han Antonio. Three hours later, the White Oaks stage pasted the same point and little doubt la entertained that It met the same fate, The men are probably member of the KK wno held up the Atlantic A Pacific express at Albuonemue a few veari am in which the leader was killed. They are wanted also for numerous other rob beries. Posies are searching for them and there it little question of a conflict ahould they come up witb the bandit. Uarmsny laallatlaa- Americas Cattla. J Indianai-omh, Ind., Oct. 0. From in . quirie made here yesterday t developed that the German government is making, on ita own account, an investigation of health of the American cattle, probably with a view of again placing an embar go upon American beef. The state board of health received a letter from the German consul at Cincinnati aiking for a detailed-itatement of how much, if nTi tuberculotia eiitttd among the cattle ol Indiana. JllhO IN lULO BLUUi) Twj Eobb.-rj on Bicyclas Enter a iaak and Kill. CASHIFR AND TRAVELING MAN DEAD Ouwoftlie &ct lariug K-bttrrtes vr Coiiiailtlt-d In V iuu-ol VI hoi 1'uwm Out lu Putsuit of Hie Mur.lerera. Phkkbi kxe, Minn., Oct. 8. This town waa in excitement laet night over the greatest tragedy that has ever oc curred in southern Minnesota. The bank of Sherburne waa robled of a large mm of money, and two men were al most instantly killed about 1 .20. At noon two men, one of whom looked like a mere boy, r-xie along the main street on bicycles. They were both well dressed. No particular attention was ;.aij to them, as Sherburne is a tovn of :iut people, most of them working "n, and at that hour they were liurrv i' home to dinner. The at range's bung around the out shirts until Hhorlly after 1 o'clock, ap parently sizing up the fituation. Ai 'hat time they sauntered lazily down the street, and ftoj ped immediately lu front of the bank of Sherburne. After a moment's talk they went into the bank and the elder of the men engaged Assistant Cashier (ieoige Thorhurn in convert-ation. Precisely what occurred intide tho bank is not known, sa nobody was in the street in that vicinity at that time. One of the desperadoes, however, evi dently got tmld of a roll of bids amount int to about $1,000, Tliorburn probably t; e4 to prevent the man from getting in with the money, and they drew out their revolvers an I began firing, at the tjame time retreating. One of the bullets struck Tliorburn in the neck and another cut the aortar, causing al most instant death, from internal hem orrhage. The shooting ir. tlifi bank aroused the town, the people began runnii g in that direction The first man to reach the place was Olaf Oestern, of I.uverne, a traveling salepnian for the Wood Har vester company, of St Paul. The des peradoes evidently feared that they would lo captured, as they quickly turned their firearma upon Oestern. He made a dash to grapple wi'h them, but was not quirk enough, as be was ttruck in the head and fell dead at their feet. They ran down the street, firing at ramdoui, while people in the street ecurried to places of safety. The fleeing robbers ran about three blocks loa clump of bushes, where they mounted their wheels and rode rapidly away toward the Iowa line, six miles to the aouth. Mayor C. E. Everett, together with the town marshal, at once did all in his power to run down the bandits. He also Bent a dispatch to Crovernor ('lough at fit Paul, telling him of the tragedy, and asking bis advice. The governor an swered immediately: "Wire all points and send out posses surrounding Sher burne." Tiie governor also wired W. P, Hill, sheriff of Martin county, to send ount pnsps at once and to wire all fiirrounding points. Sheriff II ill waa at Fremont, the county seat of Martin county, twenty miles cast, but he cnms on here by train and organized a large poefe of deter mined Sherburne men, which moved southward on horseback late in the af ternoon. At 10 o'clock last night the sheriff'? pos6e returned to town, having found i.o trace of the desperadoes. A poBse ol BOO men will leave here at daylight to day. CoinmnmorHte Lincoln UoiirIk Debate. '--Gai.ksruho, III., Oct. 8. Knox college yesterday honored the memory of Lin coln and Douglas by the unveiling of a bronze tablet commemorative of the thirty-eighth anniversary of the great Lincoln-Douglas debate, Preparations for this celebration have been under way for a year and a large crowd wa present to witness the exercises. During the morning a beautiful sol diers' monument in Hope cemetery was unveiled. Shortly after 10 o'clock a pa rade composed of the local G. A. R. and visiting posts, the veteran league, ev eral companies of slate militia, the po lice and fire departments and Woman's Relief Corps of the G. A. R. passed through the prin- ipal streets and wai reviewed in the public square by t lie mayor, Cbauncey M. Depew, Senatot Palmer and other distinguished guests. The procession then marched to Hop cemetery, w here the monument was un veiled by Hon. Roliert T. Lincoln. At the monument was unveiled it wat saluted by a number of rounds from th two brass field pieces. Hon. Robert T. Lincoln then delivered a splendid ad drees. The event of the day took place short ly after 1 o'clock A reception commit tee composed of the sophomore class o' Knox college and a number of promin ent citizen escorted Or. Depew. Mr Lincoln and Senator Palmer to a largt platform capable of seating MX) invited guest, which had been erected in fronl of the college. WantMt to IMa Totlmr. Lima Roc k, Ark.. Oct. 8. Otto An derson, cashier of the saving depart ment of the Bank of Little Rock, and Mis Cora Houdlette were found uncon clou On the porch of the public achoo building yesterday morning. The youni lady wa taken home and waa revived by doctor. The young man wa take to the city hall, where physician at tended him. He will very likely die, i note waa found in Anderson' pocket, but hil father refuaei to disclose ita coo tents. tWrtL HCTCHERlaVi IN HAVANA tu barn lotto of Graeml Wevler aa4 FrUoaara to Sbarfca Chicago, 111, Oct. 7. A special Iron Key West, Fla., eavs: Butcheries on an awful scale are being perpetrated nightly in Havana, accord rig to a letter received here from one of Uie moat reliable correspondents in the Cuban capital. Chief of Police La Bar- rara, who was said to nave been ap pointed because of his brutal nature by ' Weyler, is responsible for Uie b. ttherief, ', i is stated. La Rarrura's oitice corres- I ponds to colonel f the army, but no -o onel woul 1 acept the office under 'he conditions of cruelty imposed by Weyler. tvery night at police headquarters, prisoners are taken out and put on the books as released. These individuals, .uarded by one "celador," or police del egate, and two policemen are taken be i ween 1 and 3 a. in., to a landing place it the entrance ol the harbor, two blocks from police headquarters. Once there he prisioners and tL,rte policemen step in a boat and etait off. They do not Und anywhere, but after a while the officers come back w ithout the prison- iS This action lias been watched nig). t after ni-ht. From tiie lot of September to the 30th eighty-three prii-otierg have dibappeared .n this way. Five were drowned on the night of September 29. From the Morro castle prit-oneis are taken out and 'iiowned in the same way. The reason they are taken out of the harbor is on account of the number of sharks, which set hold of tiie bodies and leave no trace. The families f oflic'ers living n Morro castle and the 'Cubans have complained of the lamentation- they hear late in the night, The crit s are attributed tc prisoners being drowned. La 15arrara has five men under arrest on suspicion of putting & dynamite liombundira gas main. The torture consietB of feeding them with dry cod fish and not allowing them any water. So other food is allowed, and they dieo) starvation if they refuse to eat the eall cod. This said to be the means em ployed by Weyler in Barcelona, and it h said it never failed to produco the de sired effect. Jng-Hcrd lu Sliarp Nhootlng. Lkadvii.le, Colo., Oct. 7. A lively skirmish between a party of miners and two soldiers took place Monday night at the Resurrection mine. A detail of ten men was sent to the Resurrection mine. Flight of them went at once, but two were down town and did not reach Ibex until late. They at once started for tht Resurrection. They state that a party of eight men followed them almost tc i the Resurrection. The soldiers became 1 alarmed and ordered the men to halt. They did not do so and kept on ap proaching, when shooting commenced. When several volleys were fired, the men who had followed the soldiers gol behind rocks and stumps, and th soldiers sought similar protection, and for several minutes a lively fusiiade wai kept up. The soldiers believe they hil one of the attacking party, but the fel low was carried away by his coinpan ions. Oat of Cars Id Iowa. Des Moikrb, la., Oct. 7. There is i car famine in Iowa, which is growing! more eeriouo daily. The railroad com missioners are receiving constant corn plaints from all over the state of insufti cient eervice. The rush of grain is tin cause. Along the Chicago, Great West eru road in many towns farmers havt left their wagons standing by the tracks for days, loaded with grain, waiting foi chance to dispose of it. A week age I the trouble was con fled to the north and I northwest Iowa, but now it is general 1 and getting worse constantly. Tin ! roads that have eastern lines have or- dered cars to be rushed to the state, bui I they are not ahie m lie had. hecAiiai I road will not give up cars of other Iinei when once tbey get them. Two Engine Collide, Alda.nv, Ore , Oct. 7. Two engines collided on the Southern Pacific al Greens station early yesterday morning, killing two person and injuring foui others. The dead are : Fireman M'Gonigle, of Portland. Breakeman Toigh. The injured are Engineer Porter, En gineer McCauley, Dr. Wall, Urakemac Lewis. The engine were sent out from Koseburg and Dillard Itation, bound in opposite directions. Ihere wag a mis understanding over the order and tin collision occurred when they passed al Green. Suspicion at Murder. . Albany, Ore., Oct. 7. News wa re ceived here yesterday of the burning tc death at Summit, west of Albany, on Sunday evening laat, of Mr T. Savage, her infant child and two young son. Tn? affair ia regarded by the neigh bors as mysterious. The diacoveiy ol an axe on the1 floor ha caused auiptclon that the fire may have been preceded by foul play. What On Robber Cau Uo. Stccitok, Cat., Oct. 7. The stage running between Sonora and Oakdale, was robbed of the mail and express mat- J ter by a lone highwayman yesterday morning. The amount secured ia not known. There vere Ave passengers on the stage, but they were unmolested. Washington' Tree Blown Daw. Washington, Oct. 7. A sad reminder of the wrecks wrought by the tornado ol last Tuesday come In the destruction ol one of the most preciout relic that adorned the historic ground at Mount 1 Vernon a magnificent magnolia tree tbat wa planted by George Washing ton, and baa withstood tho gales of s century. This tree, planted in the very year of the death of the "father of hil country," presented a most ei poind front to i he storm and l uffered badly In the general wreck, F0Uii INDIAN LAlb BURNED Cremated Alive in the Burning of a School. SCREAMS WERE SICKENING TO HEAR Tha Indlaa fccboot at Cbecaltaa Bara u the Ground With Four or lis lumata Oiltrra art Saved. Antlkbs, I. T., Oct 6. At 11 o'clock Saturday night Sencer Academy, located ten miles west of Antlers, burned to gether with all furniture. Four Choc taw boye were burned in the flame. Their names are: John Smith. Daniel James. Thomas Kunioli. William Whi.'eon. Those injured are: Alfred Bryan, bruised and bnrned on the head. Harris Fisher, sprained foot. Colton Bacon, legs sprained. Edward Clark, jaw broken. Sam Spring, burned in face, head, shoulders and wrist sprained. The origin oi the fire is supposed to be incendiary, as no one was occupying th room in which the flames broke out and there had been no fire in it this season. Superintendent J. B. Jeter, who is in charge of the school beard the flames popping and when he got up the stair way was on fire. He ran on the outside and wakened all the boys and barely saved his own life. The boys tiirew Iheir beds out of the w indowsand jumped to the ground on them. One of the boy who was burned to death was a cripple and the other three were in rooms in which there were no windows. It is said their moans and groans were sick ening in the extreme. At dawn an Associated press reporter visited the ruins. He found only the ashes and charred bones c what were yesterday four string, healthy boys. The fire is still too hot to get the bone out for burial. The academy was built by the " -l Choc-, taw nation and 102 boys were there when it burned. Everything io a total loss,-as the nation did not carry any in-i turacce. Superintendent Jeter doe not know whether the nation is going to, rebuild, as it is financially embarrassed' and is away behind with the Bchool funds. - )t'' An Embt xzler Eacapaft. South Exw, Okl., Oct. 6. Frank Royce, convicted embezzler, sawed through the bars of the cage of the jail Sunday night, while the jailor was at supper, and escaped. No trace of him has yet been found. Royce once prac ticed law at Atchison, lvas., but at the opening of the Cherokee strip, he went to Pond Creek, then came here and be-' came cashier of the Oklahoma County1 bank. This failed in Jnly, 1894, and. Koyce was indicted fo receiving de posits when the bank was insolvent and for embezzlement. While he wa out on bail, he became president of small private banks in Jamaica, la., and from there issued bogus drafts upon various banks in Chicago and elsewhere. These were negotiated by George El wood, Frank Olive and James Long, all of tyrant county, and many banks in Colorado, Texas, Kansas and Indian territory were delrauded. About laat lecember the conspiracy was discov-. ered. Olive and Long are now serving sentences, while El wood is still at large. Bear End Collision. Hazcetom, Pa., O'Jt. 6. While an en gine stood on the frog at the lumber yard on the Lehigh Valley railroad yes terday, some passenger car crashed into it, crushing in the end of the smoking car j j : . i . : -r-L Bnu UBUlaS'"B euB" P ' " 7 r lonowing were nun ; v j Mrs. Harry B. Price, of Sandy Run, arm and body cut, t Dominic Cosslay, Brooklyn, forehead cut. P. J. Cunningham, Allentown, head cut. Strike Nearly Ended. Montreal, Oct. 6 The Canadian Pa cific telepraphers' strike cannot last much longer, according to the official of the road. They claim that on three di visions, the Quebec & Ontario, and from the Soo to Sudbury, everything is work ing first-class shape and on other divi-' aions matters are approaching a normal condition. Freight is now being moved in good shape. Squads of special con stables have gone north from thii city, and Toronto to the North Bay and Sud bury districts, where trouble has always, seemed to crop up when a strike is la, progress. The people strongly sympa thize with the strikers and they even go so far as to abuse the new operators. Several have been practically drives, from their position and it is to protest them that the police have been sent out. A special dispatch from Carter states! -that a fight was expected at Warren tad a special train wa being sent there with police. Lord KtiMel (1ml Hon. Niw York, Oct. A. Baron Russell of Killowen, lord chief justice of Greet Britain, sailed for home with Lady Rus sell and their daughter. Believe In Beet Sugar. Butte, Mont., Oct. fl.-W. A. Clark, the mine millionaire, congressman end newspaper man of this city, is about to erect an extensive sugar beet plant at Anaheim, Oal. It will be one of U largest plants of the kind In the world. It will cost more than 1400,000, and will grind 700 tons of beU daily, making 15,000 tons of sugar ia the four months of the season. He is also considering toe section of a sugar factory in Mom Una.