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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1897)
i They J our r and rtaln rever. lance vned e of vblle two uore :lin n ten a tea md era 'ing lent Ml 8 3 s ) i I KAVOUS LABOR tujaoction Decision ii Farortble to BtrikinK Miners. ' UCK OF LAWLESSNESS COMMENDEI lorn. I ic l)n( Inolilrn Urcur Yc"terdj Two llrpiili, Fight nod One Will Die Da Ai lull C Mtnrr- at Work, PiTTf-BCBo, Aug., 17. Yesterday wa fraught with exciting incidents in mat ters pretaining to the miners' strike Mutiny ia the miners' oamp, murder in Hie deputies' ranks, filing of criminal ind civil suits against the De Artuitts ind the hearing on the injunction case igainst President Dolan and other kept Doth sides to the struggle busy and on Ihe qui vive all day. The hearing on the injunction before fudges Stowe and Collier was perhaps ne of the most important and interest tog ever held in a Peimeylvania court, it was a hearing in which both capital ind rights of labor were interested and .he decision is expected to have a tell i)g effect on the conduct of the great ioal miners' sti ike which has been on lineeJulyS. From the testimony ad lu 'i d and from the expression of the urt it can be safely said that there will be some more surprises. That the junction will le materially modified liere can be no doubt, which on its face would indicate a victory for the strikers. Judge Collier said in court yesterday ;hat the strike would go down in his ;ory as one of the wonders of the coun try and remarkable on account of the tier lack of disorder which the striken ire commended for and have the sym pathy of the court. PjTTfcBi'Ho, Aug. 17. Two deputies, Robert Kerr and Frank Aldercon, em ployed as guardians of the New York md ClevelamltiiiH-Coal company fotight yesterday alternoan and as a result Kerr :annot live until morning. Alderson i ;he proprietor of adive on Water street, ihis city, and is known as a bad man. He was in charge of tiie deputies at sandy Creek. Kerr, who lives at Mc ee'a rocks, is a river pilot by occupa tion. It is not known what the men ought about, but after a few words a tough and tumble fight lasting about ive minutes, followed. Alderson suo ;eeded in drawing nis revolver, and olacing it close to Kerr's abdomen, (ired, ;he ball tearing throug the victim's in kstines ana lodging in his back. Alderaou is in custody. PiTTsnuMo, Aug 17. Although there nas no march Horn Turtle Creek, a aumber of pickets were sent out Mid with the aid of Held glasses i-aw twenty lour men enter the mine. They retuin d to camp highly elated, thinking the ine still badly crippled. They knew lothing, however, of tlie entrances of the nine, located near Monroeville. At layliglit yesterday morning seventy dig era were taken to Monroeville in wag ns ami cent into the mine tiirotign hese entrances. At .Sandy Creek every ,hing was quiet. The company claims i gain, while the strikers say but lour men are working. 'Weul llvr Ihe Cliute. Savanaii, Ca. Aug. 17 Yesterday aiorning at the government works on 1'ybee Island, the engine pushe I a llat tir up the incline plane to the sand ihutearid c.iul 1 not oe stoppel by the jngineer and the car plunged over the ;hute. Six men were precipitated twen ty feet below. Five, of them are badly injured and may die. Jinny May lie Frozen, San Francisco, Aug. 17. Henry Ga- We, an old and experienced miner, who was one of the first to join the rush to Klondike, has returned and tells a etory calculated to deter others from going north i" search of gold. , There is hard ly a trail in California, Arizona, Nevada or Montana with wnich Gable is not fa aiiliar. , When the news of gold strikes reached this country he determined to leek his f'U tune ia the Yukon, leaving his mit.cj in Arizona and coming to S.m Francisco. Here h." brought hi; outfit jnd supplies and left on the Umatilla ihroe weeks ago ( n route for' Klondike by way of Juneuu and the Chilcoot pass. Now ho is back, having sold Ins outfit, which cost $235. Ho learned irom inn ny experienced mining men Ht Juneau and further up that it would be iuicide to go before spring. He saye: 'When we reached Barnuin's bay, which is a little WHy from Dyei, I gave ap the idea. I left the vessel; intend ing to gj to work in the Comet mines there and wait no il next sprir.g, when f intended to go into the Klondike. I found tiie mines wero deserted, as the men will not work at this time of year, wlng to the water, which fills the tiiSnep, The Alankan mining men are positive that nearly all who are tryinu to get to Dawson City will he frozen up 911 route until spring and that their fate bj uncertain. I will not uriswer for th 'ives of the tenderfeet who are now oing." ' Murdered Mini linn lliirlril. Gai.t, Out., Aug. 17. Mrs. Anthony i')rr, wife of fartier living at North lijuurcB, diHMppiirjd lact Monday d..r Ing the absence nf her husband, fcjiin lay tier body was found buried in lornfleld near the house. She had been strangled and her skull ci united In. James Allison, with n farm himd Ind Wehlran 8. Trevellyan, a medical Itudent of this city have been arrested In suspicion of being ooncerned in th (q order qf lb woman. THINK MUKUMAN olltSX't MJ.AM IT Spaalards Kail lo Attach muj IwportanM to Mi-ruiao' Words. New York, Aug., 18.-The World prints the following dispatch from San Sebastian,-pref a. ing it with a statement that it has passed thrcigh tiie hands of the Spanish censor: Senor Casteler and several other lead ing etateemen, both liberal and conser vative, have been questioned concerning certain declarations recently attributed to Secretary Shermai, and they assure Be that they do net attach any import ance to them, even if the Spanish offici als and the government draw the line between the opinions and utterances of Secretary Sherman and President Mc Kinley. They are firmly convinced that statesmanship and justice would soon overrule the puerile secretary of state, even if the traditions of that oflioe did not oblige Mr. Sherman to understand the expediency of abstaining from com promising expres'iona of opinions form erly compatible with the independent position c.f a member of the senate, but not with that of a minister of the great republic. It seems the lines of division are al ready visible in the ranks of the conser vatives. TVrnailo t N-w Yo-k. Amsterdam, N. Y., Aug. 18. Today a tornado passed from the vest to the east about a mile from the villaee of Hagaman, a suburb of this city, wreck ing several buildings. Three barns were blown down and the house of John Harteg was wrecked. Mrs. Har teg was badly injured. The damage will amount to several thousand doilare. Crops was badly damaged. New Yohk, Aug. 19-Reports from up' the state tell oi much damage done by lightning during Monday's storm. The mostseiiom loss was at Copenhagen, Lewie county, where Flank . Nelli.-.' saw mi'd, valued at $20,000, was destroy ed. A tornado passed over the eastern end ef Fulton county, three fiirtn houses and many outbuildings beingcompletely demolished. Many people sought refuge in their cellars. Mrs. Robinson and son ol Broad Albin had taken refugri behind their barn, . The struc ture was blown down and both were seriously injured. Iler From Aiidree. BnitMN, Aug. 18. The Vosniache Zei tnng publishes a dispatf h from Hammer fest, Norway, which s.xys that one of the searchers for Heil Andree met the fast sealing vessel Aiken about July 22, and learned from her n.ptain that one of the crew had shot a pigeon between' North Cape and Seven Islands, on the m nli coast of Laplaud, bearing a mes sage addressed to the Vfdolbladt, Stock holm. The message lead as follows: "Flighty-two derives passed; good journey northward. Andree" The date of the menage cannot be as certained. Shut by a I l-chnrRed Kinpluye. i.lis, Kan., Aug. 18. E. II. F.sta blook, division master mecnanic of the Union Pacific railroad, with headquart ers here, was shot and mortally wound ed Monday night by William Leach, a dincharged employe. Leach, who had been drinking, was arrested and taken to Hayes City, it Icing considerod ad visable to take him out of town, owing to the great excitement over the shool iug. Esiabrook cannot live. I .,U' Kutnl I"J Tien. Ottumwa, Iowa, Aug. 18. By the breaking of the coupling in a cage in the, mine-of the Wopeil i coal company at Wtiitenian M n ay, twenty men were badly injured, mre of whom will die. The fatally injmed are: James Darby. Din Coulson. Charles Kdmonds. The 200 men employed in the mine were on a train of five cars en route down an incline from the mouth of the the shaft to their places of work when the coujiling between the last two cars broke, letting them down the grade. The cars struck a curve in too track and the cars were piled together in a heap. l'liile MfumM tint Tent. Washington, Aug. 18. Tho ordinance bureau of the navy department has test ed a sample of armor w hich is to be used for the superstructure of the battle ships Kentucky and Kearcargo. It was a eir-inch plate, made by the Betide men company; Two shots were fired a Blx-ini'h gun, the projectile being an rmor-picrciiig shell, one at a velocity of 1,402 feet per second, a-d the other at 1,(155 feet nor second. Both shells were smashed on the plate, which was hardly cracked and not pierced The armor was approved by the test. .Vy lixSeltlrd Ht i-fuctorlly Uustcih k, Bulgaria, 'Aug, 18. It i.1 asserted here on pood authority that the Austro-Bulgarian dispute which atose over certain remarks make by the Bulgarian premier, M. Stoiloff, with reference to the Austrian authorities in a recent interview with a representative of the Lolral Anzeigr, is on the eve of a satisfactory settlement. Ti 'Jiirne..- H rley, Mii.waukkk, Win. t Aug. 18. -Milwaukee: operators say that a wealthy syndi cate hai hrr.ii formed in Chicago for the purpose of cornering barley. Interesting divelopements are expected during the next six weeks. A number of hapless shorts, who thctight 38 cents was a high price for No. 2 barley a few weeks ago, are no, franti-ally bidding 10 centi higher in their elforts to cover and re-1 t'rfl at a considerable loss. 1TO KILL FAURE Folk EiplodVs Just After the Frenelt President has Fasted. MAY BEAN ATTEMPT TO ASSASSINATE Invr-tlgatlou Kuili and It I '.ring: Mde-Ilonib is b I oinptivrly JJurjn- Affir.. Paris, Aug., 19. The Jeparture of President Faure on his visit to the czar at St. Petersburg ytstciday was marked by a scene of greatest excitement, ac companied by the circulation of the wildest kind of rumors. After his de parture a bomb exploded along the route the procession had followed and al though no damage was done and in spile of the fact that nobody was hurt, the most intense excitement prevailed for a long-time, alter ard and the sensational reports had it that those who exploded the bomb bad intended an outrage of a more rious nature. The president received an ovation from the pub.ic when he started on his journey to Kusia, large crowds of peo ple lining the route from 'Flysee palace to the railway station and greeted the president with enthusiastic cries of "Vive le Republique! Vive le Russia! Vive le Faure! JTen minutes after the president's de parture, while the crowds were return ing along the route traversed by M. Faure, a bomb exploded at the cornel of the boulevard Magenta and the Rue Lafayette, in front of the restaurant Duval. The report caused a panic in the neighborhood and all sorts of wild stories were circulated, based on the fi' itements attributed to anarchists, that their next effort would b3 an attempt upon the life of IV sident Faure. Upon i ivestigitioa by the police, however, it developed that the explosion caused but little damage and that nobxly waa hurt. Tiie bomb was of cylindrical form, was covered w.t.i yellow paper and ap pears to have contained a black sub stance, possibly coarsj gunpowder, mixed with large headed nails, similar ti those unuaily found in rudely con structed infernal machines, used by the less intelligent class of anarchists. Fragments of the bomb were taken to the p-efecture of pilice, where they were submitted to a thorough examina tion upon the put of experts, who pro nounced the b rnb to have been a com paratively harmless affair. The co-incidence of the explosion of the bomb along the route eo recently followed by -the president was tho sub ject of considerable comment and an of ficial investigation into the all'air is in progress. 1,1 Lilly lo l Trouble. Ci-kvki.and, U., Aug. 19. The decis ion reached by the operators of the Pittsburg (lis; net at their conference hero Tuesday night, to open their mines regardless of the consequences, will u id mbtediy cause serious irauble. According to local coal men, it is the in tention of the Fittsburg operators to en gage Pinkert 'n men to protect their non-union men. 1 his action on their pirt will probably precipitate a terrible climax to the great strike and the oper ators admit that blood will probobly flow. In speaking of the probable re sult of the operators' decision, Loftus Curdy of the Curdy-Mullen Coal com pany, paid today : "If it is found necessary to do so a whole army of detectives will be era ployed to protect our men, and if the w ustj comej they will be Biipplied with (iatling gnus and other equipments to convince the strikers that we mean bus incs". Theie will be no delay innaugur a!ing this mavement and the flrpt step w ill bo taken Thursday, although I do not care to state what the first action will be." Mr. Curdy's statement is upheld by J B. Zcrke of the Indiana and Ohio Coal company. The conference Tuesday ninht was ad journed to meet ag tin in Pittsburg, at which meeting all the firms represented TueeUay will be present. I'Mke tho Town. CoFKRrv, 111. A ug. 19. Tuesday night the ttrikerswere inpossession of the town and Sheriff Randale has mustered Ida handful of men at the coal company's shaft, which he say.s he will protect at all hazards, The town authorities are utterly powerless, as the str kers can do as they wish. Tho people feel very in dignant towards the governor for the ?tand he has taken in regarc to Coffeeu. It was by his orders, through his repre (tentative, Mr. Hay, that the force of deputies were ndieved. Heavy Klue luijmneil. Ci.kvei.anu, 0., Aug. 1!). May Ander ton, the woman who was arrested in connection with the sale of forged B. A ."). milean, books, was Tuesday sentenc d to pay a fine of $."00 and costs and to lervesix months in the work house. If fier fine is not paid she will have to re gain in prison four years. The woman nept bitterly when the sentence waa passed and shrieked ks she was, taken 'rom the four', loom. hnllitil U Aim Mini. CoNhTANTiNoi i.K, Aug. 19. The porte, flannel at the strength of anarchy fhich exists in Turkistan, has ordered I general mobilization in the vilnviito if Bagdad and other eastern points 01 :he frontier. Murad Bey, former im )eial commissioner of the council of ,he public! debt and now leuller of the foting Turks, who fled from (Jonstan .inople in the latte r part of 1895 and uade his way to Russia, arrived here Honday and was received at Yildis Cio-k. ' IlKt II'kOL'l I V ..IT, I rHAMCK Overture of Kreucb Ouvrrameat Locking- to a Tram p. Washington, Aug , 20. Secretary SI lerniHn has acknowledged Ihe recent overtures of the French government, t irouL'h Ambassad r Patenotre negotiat ing a reciprocity treaiy between the United States and France under the reciprocity clause of the new tariff law, and the secretary adds an assurance that he hopes to take up this important .subject at an early day. It will be the firnt effort toward practical application of the reciprocity clause of the new law and to some extent it will shape the fu ture action of the government on the treaties to be negotiated. In view of this, cireful investigation is being made of the statues of trade between Fiance and the United States as a preliminary to tiie m goliations. This has developed that the reciproci ty clause will not permit an offer tJ France of much reduction of duties. The data prepared in ibis connection shows that imports from France for the y. ar 1S95-6 amounted to $67,000,000. It is estimated that the duties under the tariff law on imports of his amount would be $32,400,000, or 48.35 per cent of the value of tb. goods. If, however, the reciprocity clause is granted to France the duties on French imports is estimat ed at $31,500,000, or 47 per cent of the value of the goods. Thus the reciproci ty clause would reduce French duties lees than $1,000,000 on a year's imports. A I'ilgrlmage lo Kentucky Oak Lodoe, I. T. Aug. 20 Extensive preparations are going on among the Cherokee Indians for a pilgrimage to Russell ville, Ky. Charles Parker, a nephew of the celebrated Comanche chief, Quanah Parker, has just returned from Frankfort, Ky., with permission for 1.2C0 Cheiokee braves to march into state and hold a week's celebration in honor of Chief Watohona, near Russell ville, where the great warr or " as said to haye been killed in 181'.) in a battle with the Shawnees. In Septemoer 200 of the tribe, accom panied by Captain Raleigh, will begin the long march to the old battlefield and carry with them all the carved legends and war eouv, nirs of the great chief, which they will deposit on hia g ave. This deposit of mementoes and tribal relics is said to be due to a doc trine recently taught the Cherokees by a '.old medicine man that the tribe is doomed to complete extinction within a few years. The march will be taken up, it is said, about September 20. The party will cross the ' Mississippi into Illinois at Cheater and will leave the slate at Shawneetown. On tin; W.ty to Klondike. Seattlk, Wash., Aug. 20. The Asso "ociated press correspondent, writes from Lake Linderman es follows : Lake lixokhma.v, N. W. T., Aug. 7 On lakes Linderman and Bennett are nearly 500 people actively making pre parations and building boats for the descent to the Klondike. The Skagway trail ia open and the first contingent reached Tagish laka on Thursday last, numbering 200 people. The trail is nearly fifty miles long, and the horses ar able to pack 250 pounds from Fait water to Tagish. .Nearly 1,000 people are in camp at Skagway, and it is expected that they wid reach the lakea in ten days. That route w ill take nearly all of the travel from the Dyen route, except during the winter and spi ing months. The open ing of the Skagway road is sure to cause travel to continue as late as Sep tember 15. At present the Dyea trail is blocked with freight and passengers, and, to complicate matters, the Chil cuot Indians have s'ruck for 20 cents a pound, w hich makes tho cost of flour laid tlown at this place $11 a eack. Boatloads of people are leaving here a-id Lake Bennett every day for the mines. Pour Townbend, Wash., Aug. 20. Residents of Juneau, ilasdta, are very much in earnest over the proposed Yukon Mining, Trading and. Transpor tation company to construct a railroad from Tokou Inlet to Lake Tallin, a dis tance of 130 mile. The company alio contemplates a road up the beach from Tokou to Juneau, a distance of twenty nine miles. At the head of the railroad scheme is P. J. Packard, special agent of the company, who says his associates include Pieston Lea and Willard Sauls bury of Delaware and interested with them are New York and Philadelphia capitalists. The Yukon Mining, Trad ing ar.d Transportation company is capitalized at $3,000,000. During the past winter the company has applied for and received all necessary charters from the United States, British Colum bia and the dominion governments. St. I. mil Mku- a IIhI, Nkw Havkn, Conn., Aug 20. St. Louis has put in her bid for the next international meeting; of the fire chiefs. Too cecond day's session of the conven tion proved even more interesting than expected. Chief Swenie's paper on "The HeBt and Quickest Methods of Dealings With tire-in High Buildings' ulled forth a 1 ng disHtsion. Furl I ntn .tin 1 1 Nurvlco. Washington, Aug. 0. The Canadian government and tne I; nit ! States have sgreelin co operu'injr in augmcnMtig the postal facilities for tlie Klondike region, and the result will shortly b evidenced in a substantial doubling oi tho mail service from the coast into th district. The new arrangement will furnish an additional service, giving semi-monthly mails, the trips probably being natid wilt bed between the dates designited in the present contract of the United Statts. WHAT WOMExX WEAR. STYLES FOR THOSE WHO WANT TO LOOK PRETTY. S'owadaya "Anr Old Thin" Will Nut Do for a Traveling Drees New H ks Are Comfortable, Stylish and Neat Up-lo-late Veaigai. Fashion's Full Fancies, New York correspondenre: ASHIONING a traveling rig when the sum mer out ing i in prospect Is quite a different tusk from preparing it for the return trip.tliough many there are who start back with out reluctance. Then there are many, too, who defer their vaca tion until fall, so traveling dresses seasonable top- are an entirely ic, and one of general interest, for tra v eling you should do, and for it you must have a suitable rig. The time ts long past wlien any old, wornout dress would do for journeying, and dress makers are quite as particular wMih outfits for this purpose as with any out door gowns. The woman who is loath to set out will likely be moved to start by a' brief consideration of the season's modes, which show such a lot of fas cinating traveling rigs that she will feed she simply must go somewhere if only to have an excuse for wearing ne of them. Possibly she might be able to hold out a,gaint the gowns, but when It comes to wraps .she will surely suc cumb. It is told of one woman who got a traveling wrap, Iwit and gown to inatoh, that she dressed In it, went to the despot, and stood around a little while. Then she came back, walking all the way, and said it was most as good as having been out of town for a week. She had a nice tan on from 'having done all her summer sewing, in cluding the drs, 011 the roof, and as good luck would have it she met n lot of her stay-in-town friends a.s she came back. Said they: "In town for the day?" and sighed; a.nd she replied, "Yes," which was strictly true. But in all seriousness the dressmak ers have done much toward einaldlng ,womn to t.ike long journeys in com fort and yet lie entirely stylish a.nd aieat. The traveling rig shown In to day's first pk-ture whs essentially fash ionable, yet wits easy and misona.bly sure to bring Jus wearer to her jour ney's end in a fresh-looking, imcrtim p'led stale. It was limn ora.sh, a very 1 jHipiilar stuff for this use this season, j and was made up with an ndorabJf doepditied bodi-ee Ixdt of chestnut lii'own changealile taffeta. A gleam of the .same taffeta was at the throat above the. round neck of a quaint half holero, part Ivox, some cape and 11 good deal conit wrap. It was the w'rap that made the rig chamiing. Taffi-ta showed In tlie iniside fold of the box-pleated Ifrill at the foot of the skirt, nnd heovy Hn-n-i oolorvi p)f,p (wir'TiMl the tiiT'-ta Punier ni the top of the frill. To tio coiiiny the drew; weiv a brown ur feifca. umbrella with a big, brown Jet handle, nnd a ha of mahogany straw- inkn nt'HTKit nr-ouiFinn. wii.li a l.iiiich of lliM-n colored filler loops at the side. Comfort Is the chief cotwidemtlon In the inldMimmer traveJLng rig, and W Is quite usual to see a tatlor-mnde skirt of mohair In cool gray, ninde with a loose ly fltted, crtsp, ton law-n or dedicate AS UP-TO-BATI5 TKAVKt.KR. It JlPl'f 1 fmi vt 11 . 'jaMHLL''A la ff eta bodW. A sto-k to match topjied by a line of white linen adds the touch at the throat, and milady, re moving her istlff traveling hat In the cars, looks almost ready to pour nv o'clock tea on niie leans back in hei seat. But when at the station she don a trim jacket to match the skirt, boxy in front, juid belted snugly at the side and back, with a taffeta finish to collar and throat, she Is, with the stiff hai again in plaice, the picture of cool per- A HIG FOR SHORT JRIPS. fection and trimness. In this sort of marching order you see lier in the next pictmre. And a.s most stylish women are not content to let their gowns alone prove their stylishness,. this up-to-date trawler is seen with the newest wrin kle in luggage tlie plaid linen travel ing cover 'for shawl and toilet roll. Bags are all out of fashion, and these covers are the stylish tourist's trade mark. They are stiffened at top, bot tom and sides, and open at the ends. They come in loud, traveling rug plaids, and are supposed to be lauudrled as often as one's collar almost. They are deemed suitable onl for short trips and to carry cjr;e is flmogt tdyegtjse that you are "oowh for tne day" froW this or that swell resort. The old-time redingote for traveling is again being shown. It is not a. dressy a garment as some of tho later Inventions for astonishing car conduct ors, but. it will meet the emergencies of a long journey with an unruffled exte rior, and that is a consideration. These garments are made of pongee, mohair, light ladies' cloth, taffeta or alpaca, and sometimes of a solid liberty silk. The lighter materials are more pictur esque, but nothing is more servtceabl than alpaca. The one sketched here was ecru pongee, was made like an ul ster and buttoned where the left side lapped over. Collar and revers were brown pongee, all the edges being fin ished with bias folds. The hat wae brown straw, trimmed with ecru and white, and a white veil with small brown dots was worn. For the many short excursion trips that the usual summer woman must fa.-e, and which still can hardly b ANommi minus the ca.pk. called "traveling," something that U neither yachting, traveling nor staying nf home, there are offered this yeai very stunning capes. T hat presented in the lotirln piicttu'e was in rough woolen stuff, its plaid in large square! but in subdued colors. A tuilor-ni4id blue serge skirt was planned for weal with this, and the outfit included two bodices a comfortable blouse of navy blue taffeta with turned down coUai edged with ecru lace, and a fitted bodice of the serge showing a starched chemisette and collar and buttoning In the center with a narrow ripple basqu below the belt. Including In the costume for a short trip a ciipe of pleasingly striking stuff or cut, makes possible another trick. This is to wear with a stunning plaid skirt a rather fancy waist, trimmed with Insertions, etc, Thl waist being entirely hidden by the cape, milady l ready for a short Journey, and with Ui cape off at the end of the trip she looks us if she hadn't traveled at all. Such a continue minus the cape-appears la the fifth sketch. The bodice was In a plain green woolen goods, and hud s deep yoke of white; embroidered liatlmti In front only. Below this the material was bunched In n knot and fell hi folds to the side senilis. Sides and buck were fitted. It vva.i otihi : Miied with a sail or collar draped of grct.t nllk nppllquod with white, the stocK collar IkvIii of the same stuff us the yoke. The skirl was green nnd white cini k woolen ma terial made in a modified godf-t shape. Copyright. 1807. The gondolas of Venice are being gradually displaced by Ilttlo stMUB boats. m : 5' "- k V i f f 1, 0 1 :