H i 'I ' - t f r. if I-: ' BM. It . KT. V 1' A1UJ3 is ukazed! Tkg Iwgtgf of Murderer Carr Makes Man; Mas Demon. HE P'GNTS A PITIFUL APPEARANCE e Brokea at fba Drop and UnlkCouM I . Two M aota End of the fu Who Mardrrctl HI Own IbUd. ! Kassas Citt, Dec. 18. William Carr, the child murderer, was banged at the Olay county court house at Liberty yes terday morning. The drop fell at 10:34 o'clock. carr passed a restless night. When breakfast waa brought to him he turned from it with disgust nd lighted a dear. He tood for a long time looking out ,ra his window. Presently the under taker arrived and asked Carr what dis position he wanted made of hie body, saw . -. ' ii my wile take care of it. Oh I let her take care of it!" he exclaimed, with a aob. Bis spiritual ' advisers followed and urged him to face hie fate like a man. "I'll try," Oarr Bobbed, "that'a the beet I can do." The Bible waa read to the pritoner, followed by the singing of a hymn, dur ing which Oarr sobbed and trembled like a child. Carr presented a pitiful sight as he was finally led to the gallows, but braced himself spasmodically and went through the ordeal with a eomvarative show of strength. The sheriff pulled the trigger at li);34 o'clock, and two minutes later the life had gone out of the child mur derer. The neck was broken, cracking like a whip cord. ' Following the Am momentary lull af ter the drop had fallen the mass of 800 spectators, as if moved by a single im pulse, rushed forward, calling, crying, shrieking and laughing, surged under the gallows and packed close around the ' dst elmg corpse. It would not be satis fied until a close view of the hanged mm was revealed. The men were an gry ana cursed one another; tned to force the v selves up the gallons step and cried and hooted at the sheriff. Finally in their excitement the crowd attempted to break down the barricade surrounding the scaffold. Sheriff Hymer rushed through the first breech and ex citedly warned the crowd against any further violence. The sheriff's deputies ranged about him and the crown halted for a moment, then, suddenly, with one accord, a mighty scream was sent up, and, surging forward, the crowd swept back the guards and burst their ws.y through the frail stockade. Once in the street the crowd gave vent to its feelings with further shouts and finally disperi-ed without trouble, and what for a lew minnles looked like a Email tiled riot ended quickly. William Carr's crime waa one of the! most brutal and unprovoked in the his tory of the state. His capture and ex ecutio ) followed with fitting dispatch, October 10 last the body of Belle Carr, a tftree-year-old child, by the murderer's first wife, was found on a sat d jar in the Missouri river near Kansas City. Thei case remained a complete imstery until October 2"), when Carr waa arrested at his home in Liberty. He at first denied bia guilt, but when brought to Kansat City to prevent a lynching broke down and confessed. Fire May Pr..ve a Molxcauat. Gamd Fokks, N. D. Dec. 16 Fire broke out at 4:30 yesterdav morning in Sash Kris. wholefsl? groceuy store and Bfread -o lie Ho el Dakot ah, where nearly a thousand -iusts were housed. They canie down by the fire escape, a ladder cme foot wid1 running from the lixth aoor to the first. The fire de-jart-mfiot rescued a large number, and buf lor the timely assistance, hundreds ol people would have been burned. Hall the people in the hotel were almost palled out of bed and then shown the anry way of escaping. By 6:30 o'clock the Hob 1 Dakotah, Nash Bros, and the Grand FoTk mercantile wholesale gro mry bouse were burned and all the build ings on both sides of Third street for two blocks hail sunVreo loss. - Nash Broa. carried a stock of 150,(XK); the lirand Forks Mercantile company abont the tame. The hotel is stated at $175,000. All buildings are owned by ike 8ecnrty Trust c mpany of Nassau, K. H. The burned district is the buii. MM portion of the eity and the blow to bnaiaeas is teveie W. VV. Fegan, wholesale cigars ; Robert Bergh, druggist and the Peeress Maehine company oc anpied stores in the hotel and lost every taicg. Tha lose will aggregate $450,000 aa stocks, turniture, ate., and 3OO,OO0 buildinjra, totally destroyed, while Over lossas wiil probably reach $100,00 A. 0. Howe and wife and a passenger of Minneapolis are luppoaad to ta baan barned to death, as no traet J thawi can be found. Wmmm to Haath. torn a, Kas., Dec. 18 J. H. Martin tatty proatUisnt hardware dealer ol twin toe, waa found Iu a paature neat i Irosea to death. Trr Wrack the Paat Mail. Oaeuiit Dee. If, An nasoocesafa, U wrack the (set mail traia JUw Orleaaa to Chicago oa tba OMtral waa made at AIbm, m torn Cbaiaco. Hs piecea of lab lnt, twelve bat km, were placed caciMa mm wbera Um 'TTiJf r ; CrxX tLl Ji3 raraiktf at a rata of i OMarnrifcSav,aWfttoBtaMI :tt Ijm m jo MMwtka ahinm nKi it ick ii i t.ii rt.i H L-li iirrbvr Commit Mite d JrilplUK If'W Wlia..r Wsaiiuiirot, !., 22. Mies Leili Hrriie.-t. novel ol t- rut daulitrs ot the en-Secretary of it e nvy, died here yes terday as the reauit of a fail from the third-story ind w of her home in Xew Haujpjilnre avenue, just off Dupjnt eir- The Jratti a as reported at the polio headquarters as a cass of suicide, due to melancholy a.id tempirary aberration of the uii nd as the result of a long ill ness, but the fnen is of the family think Miss Herbert's untimely eud was an ac c nt. However, last September while in Virginia, the unfortunate girl, who was very iona ot Horseback riding, was thrown from her aud sustained severs injuries to her baca. Since that time she has bet-n subject to acute melancholy Secretary Herbert, whose wife is dead, i now in Alabama. The coroner returned a verdict of eui cidi due to temporary insanity. As the iwti in thecae were clear he decided that an inquest was unnecessary. AgAiDat Autonomy, Havana, Dec. 22. At yesterday's meeting of the conservative party over O, w J I . - . . ouu u-ieaies, said to represent tyj per eat ot the wealth of the island, were pr sent. In all twenty-seven speeches were made against autonomy, all the speakers agreeing that autonomy will not brins peace to the island as proved by the protests of the members of the Cuban junta of New York and the re cent death of Lieutenant-Colonel Kuit and five other Spanish commissioner!! who have beeu killed by the insurgents t . , xi. aa announces irom ttie palace that during the baft ten days thi inemr e .ts have lost 303 men killed and that in a Iditioe p the Spamati tr.xjpj have captured seventeen pmoners and sixty nine armed insurgents have surreud ?red. Tfie Spanish troops during the same period lost three officers and thirty threj killed and had thirteen officers and 213 soldiers wounded. Philadelphia. Dee. 2'. John B. H,irt, the principal owner of the vessels ot the Hart Sieamer Company, was last evening taken to th eastern perjiteu uary. Hart was convicted in the Uni ted Mates district court several months o of aiding a Cuban flllib lstemig ex ledition on the steamship Laurada and sentenced to two years' imprisonment, P ndinj a decision o,i appeal Hart was almwed his libertv oa bail, Todav Jesse Eldridie,one of Hart's four bonds- nen, notified the court that he desired to be mieved of hi teenritynd Hart's re-rrest followed. IroIUy Cur Arii.laat, Phii.aukli'Hia, lec 22 Ooe person -as probably iataliy rmrt a.id ix others j t ta more or less mj.ir.-d this alu rnoon it . ..ll . . I. u . i . It : .... .1 ' " """" , tv iaiira unit r.titr )au oil ine out rkirts of this city. Ujiile desceuding a hiil a trolley car became unajatmjjeabfe a i account of blip my tracks, and, de scending at full sjjeed it ir(ik a horce ear at the fKt of ihe incline, piougiied tnroUjh one eud of il aud brought up against a trolley puie. The roof of the trolly fell iu on the psengcra, the stove a t and the wie :k caught fire. J. R Lmn, agel twea y-mie, conductor of the runaway car, suffered liiiunea wuich may result in his ue.i.ii. Tht mot rmau in 1 passengers were severely cut and bruised. Iiapnfl ililmoa. Chkaijo, Den. 22. Two men were tl!el anl two were erio:ij4iy injured veaterday aiternoou a renr-r.r,d c;dli MOn on the Chicago v Eisl ll.muis rail way, at Cayuga, Inn. The dea.l ; J. is. HODSUN,(Juicaot engimer. L. B. HOKT0X, Ciiicago, engineer. The injured were: J. K. H irtou, fire man, lea broken ; II. W. Keliagi,', air brake inspecter, heaii badly cut. Passeager traia Xo. 7, in charge of Engineer Hodson ran into an open s vitch and crashed into the rear end ol a freight train which lay on a side track, (1 .ilson saw the danger a moment be fo e the collision. He appl ad the air brakes and reversed his engine, but was unab.e to escape, Morton was a new engiaee- learning the road. No oasseugers were injured. Hanuit IVixs. Hums. Wasuinoton, Dec. 22. senator Han r.a has left tor Ohio. ' "f shall spend the holidays in the quietude of my home in Cleveland, atter which I elial. es'ahbsh headquarters at Columbus and remain there until the questiou of my succesi or defeat is dis posed of," he said yesterday afternoon, Strangled to Death. Bt. Locis, D.c. 21, At6 o'clock last evening Jacob Weinerd, agedeixty-nine ,:vini( wii -Nut Lii Broadway, was found dead in his kitchen by ins wile, who had tw-nt the afternoon visiting. He had been gagged aith a handkerchief, buund v.d '-hoked to death by twisting a towel aicund his neck like a garroie. The bouse bad been ransacked from top to bottom. In the kitchen were evidences f a terrible struggle baring taken place. He was a poor, but highly respected itiz n. Kororatlier' nt Chicago. ' Oaicaao, Dee. 22. "Foref there' day" rae celebrated by a number of banquet aeld by d Herein societies. The Hons of ins American Revolut.on, the Society of i ol mlal Wars aud the Congragational I ciety were the leading organizations that observed the day. At the benqoet af the latter society tha leading apaakar was Rev. Henry M. Simeoa ol New York ho took for bia subject, "The HeHtf r tha Men of Today." Local epekkere lea delivered addn Cubau Officers Es-iew Thtr Allegi aiice to Ouoa's Cause. NOTHING BUT ABSOLUTE LIBERTY out a It orui nt tin). htna n ii Ei. rjr lour ry r In talking Again t talk koM Niw Yohk, Dec. 21. CN pies of itatement signed by the officers of the fourth army corn of Cubau army operating in the department of Las Vil las, renewing allegiance to the Cuban sause and forswearing autonomy, a at received in this city yeetemay. Thii iction by the offic rs of the Las Villas lepirtment makes 1 e oppjslon to au iuuuuit praciicaiiy unanimous aiuorm the Cuban officers. The statement eass npart: We are convinced that the prom ul jetfon of reforms is a evidence of weak- less on the part of Spain, and is in itself i triumph for our aruir. Our fighting ittitude will continue just as it is today intu our unfortunate country is made dee. "We will accept no other settlement ihan based upon abiiolute independence hich must be agreed to with our gov ernment and the ass-mbly of repiesen atives." wsvlfb's main sirssios. Madr-d Der. I'l. Tlw Nacional prints a doable-1 aded article to the iifect that ue priric,(.al mission in life jf General Weyler at the present time to defend the army and his command m Cuba against the "insulu" allt-ged lo have "been continue! in President VIcKinley's recent menage and that he ill energetically protest to the minis :er for war and to the "juetn regent igainst these "insults." Nkw Yokk, Dec. 21 A letter written by one of the foreoiotd diplomats ia Spain and one, moreover, in the entire Sonfldence of the government and con sequently in a position to speak official- y, destroys tome of the arguments that bare been ued time after time in the past few days by those in opposition to iho Meral ministry, says the Madrid jorrespondent of the Herald. Fpeaking of this minisfy, the writer H"8 0u ir e -i . -hat Mr. McKin .'y V mes -age mo b j construed as at ckin4 the honot o Uie Spanish army, '8 General Weyler mhJ his friends like j 10 mane ine puwc believe. In the m-c-nd place, General Weyler was not re ulled under pri B-ure from the United 5 a'ef, but by the express wish of the jueen recent. His recall has been de iided upon durmtr t ie late Premier Can ron' lifetime. In the third pl-soe, the ;hird place, the nation as a whole ap-pi-a 8 to !e more strongly in favor of the rnvern ment than h.ts been the case in Spain for a long time. Every one is !agr to have done with the Cuban ques tion and at this ver. moment the city is le -o-ab-d and iiiu uiiiateij as a sign of r-j licinz over the establishment of peace ,ii the Philippines, while on every hand rou hear wishes that the next bit of I iod news may ns of a 'asting ieace in Uaba. Kcibl-il a hl-uiiii,t. Nkw Yckk, Dec. 21 The City of iVaiiigtc-n, that sailed from Vera Crux D'cember 1 and arrived in this port on Wednesday, carried iu its strong room HJO.OvH) in Mexican coin. This wag not a minimally large shipment of treasure tor ttie niw to handle and no one in tuthonty dreamed it rob fiery. N'.-ver-;iieie.- during the voyage the strong room, wi. c i ai b nit to stand the at tacks of almost anything but dynamite nd locat-'d so as to be under comstant obsera,ion, was broken into. Only $3,000 was taken by . the robbers, but the general impression is that tha Jitui ! of the thieves ai to seize the entire treasure. Every effort has been ma le to keep the matter quiet so that the strong force of detectives pot upon tne ca by the company could wora to the best advantage. The supposed robbery of $3,000 in Mexican money from the steamer City of Washington during her last trip from Vera Crui to this port, was con Aimed to lay by Secretary Smith, of the New York aud Cuba mail su-atuship com pany, who said . 'The city of Washington reached her pier last Wednesday morning and im mediately began discharging her cargo. Among other things there was a con signment of 103 cases of Mexican coin for a firm in Ixindon. Each case repre sented about (3,000 Mexican money aud weighed 200 pounds. In counting It was f ound that there were only 102 t-a-es ami the bill called for in.?, a bundle of canvas, in which about tlOOol the com placed tvas found in the bag gage, ami leads to the belief that the robbery was committed during transit. The only keys to ttie strong room wett in the bauds of Captain Burley ard his uibi manj ana as no violence bad been used entering the places iktleton key must have been need." Nantanea of I.I fa linitrlaoaasant. WsfiasH. Wis,, Due. 2l.-Jame Butler, who was eonvicted on Friday last of reorder in the first degree wat senumceu u llie imprisonment. I.art M f hm a Fnrgar. Ciiicaoo, Dec. 23. Four notee for $1, 000 each, beld by Judge Willi.m A, Via cent, formerly counsel for Adolph L Leutgert, ami given by Lim to Judga Vincenf lor legal services, ate said U bear forged rndorwineotfl, Tbey art signed by Lcutert and iodoraed witk hi name of Paul H. Jaeeeh k,ap4aab !2lh!!!jr!ile ?WT- J denial nahatlcally baring signed tbeea. Jndge Vincent if eatdte bve advaaaad 14 itgart $1,000 la cash oa the itrat of the four notes, " l . I I i,l I, IMIg I "" ( fur lh, r 4M. Wahiv,t,n, Hrc. n.-The Iioums yesterday p4.ed a bill aporopnatinw $175,OK) fur the relief of the jwoplf aho are in the Yukon river country, and also the bill passed by the senate to pnhib.t pelagic eling of American Otiiens. A pPsexl the sum carrie'd by it is to be expended under the direction of the secretary of aar fir the purchase, tracs- jx ritti u aud ditrthuiion of snbsiet- ence stores. It provide! that thete sub sist :nce stores may be sold at price fliel by the secretary of wkr or donated here the people are unable to pay for them. It empowers him to purchase remaeers and employ drivers not citi ensof the United Statee and after ward dispose of the reindeer, The bill to prohibit pelagic sealing was warro'y antagonised by many west ern members and daring the debate there were many eaceedingly caustic crit cisms of the course of our Bering I 'a negotiations, past and present. Mr. Cannon (rep., 111.) brought' for ward the bill lor the relief of the miners in the Klondike region and Mr, Sayers (dem., Tex.,) and Mr. Bailey (dem., Tex.) spoke in favor of it. Mr. Cannon submitted to the house a statement pre pared by Dr. Sheldon Jackson, one of the agents of the commissioners of edu cation, who was in the Klondike region as late as Sentetnber IS that ihr would be no suffering as far up the river as Ft. Yukon, but that the food supply n the upper Yukju would not last be yond March, and he indorsed the recom mendation t f the secretary of war that food be sent in bv reindnpr vfa Tlvaa lr. Cannon said that whether these miners were in American or British territory; whether thev were American r British subjects, if they were starv ngitdid not become the American con- k"os iK-siiaie suoui voting them re- if. (Applause.) The bill was passed without division. A aa him ted an A c 1 o r. LoNixi.v, Dec. 17. William Terrisa, the well known actor, was assassinated last night, being stabbed with a knife as he was entering the stage door of the Adeiphi theatre, Terrisa' assailant, sup posed to be a former super, had the ap pearance of a foreigner, and wore a long loak. Ihe murder rushed at the actor as he was stepping across the pavement rom his cab and stabled him just be- ow ttie heart, lie made a second plunjre at his victim, but was eeiied by tna spectatots at the theatre entrance. The wounded man was carried into the theatre and doctors were summoned, but Terrius died in fifteen minutes. The murderer whs taken to the Bow frtreet police station followed by an an irry crowd. His name was given as Archer. The motive of the crime is not yet known. A large audience which h id assembled were dismissed with the announcement that Terriss had met with an accident and that there would be no periormance When the people learned that Terriss had been assassinated much horror and indignation wag generally expressed. Upon his arrival at the police station Archer still had the weapon, a big butcher knife, concealed beneath his cape. On being charged with murder he exclaimed : "lie done me out o the benevolen' fund this morning and I am out of it for hfe. k"lill ,SwlMllltlt Kaksah Cnv, Ikx. 17. The Santa Fe Railway company is f-aid to have been swindled out of several thousand dollars l y means of forged mileage Ixxjks which 1 ave ten s ld by scalpers in Kansas Cify a:id Chicago, The fraud was dis covered by the company's auditor at Topk to whom the forged mileage slips were returned, after having been taken up by conductors. John Peebles, an employe of a local scalper, has been ariested. Durrani Mint Hang Soon. Saw Fkaxcisco, Dec. 17, Theodore Durrrnt was re-sentenced to be hanged Jan. 7, next, for tke murder of Blanche moot. Durrant's attorndys made a desperate effort to secure further delay, and pave the way for another appeal to the su preme court, but Judge Bahrs was in exorable, Durrant as in court and carried bime.f with his customary cool ness. A Hrnlal fraarhar. Mokticki-Lo, N, Y,, Dec. 17-The Rev. David Howell of the Protestant Episcopal church is serving a eentenve of fivedays' imprisonment in the county jail, imposed yesterday (or choking and beating his wife. Mr. Howell was given the alternative sentence of a V One or five days' imprisonment and chose the latter, M ai.t an Ks-tra .rr (Josiias, lnL, Dec, 17 The grand Jury Wednesday returned a three count Indictment against ex-treasurer IfJ.u.. nun of Elkhart conoty, charging ,j,n with embexzlement, grand larcenvand n in sppiopriation of trust fundi, Hilde man left Uoalien two weeks ggo j M yet has not bean apprehended. His horUge Is said to be from speculation and loans to prominent men which Could not be realised when called for III 'a farm Man-gar WiuifxoTOM, Dai,., Dee. 17. George Farra, aged flfty-flve years, who for tba leat two years hat had charge Mrs. Ne!. Us U. Bradford's (arm, just outside ol the eoatbara city limits, was murdered daring (be night, In the kitchen af his TCUeVaee. Robbery waa the objaet. A Mgro aamad Char lea Tbora, who had en aorkiag for Mr. Farra about two eat, ia alMtaf , ad eaapaataw af Um marder. .. , i.rii, i I'obtlc Hoada .Ncalrctcd. The country road baa U-en raucb neg- meil. When we ts gan to build rail tads In this country, (State au county axes were levied that bouuaea might h- givfti to railroad projector. Cities nade lurpe appropriatloim, ami, not wnteut with this, rent heavily Into lebt to aid In railroad ctmst ruction, "kmgress Hulmldised most of our large ailroHii systems by, large grants of public lands. Canals nave Ix-en aiml arly encouragwl by city, -ounty, Htate tnd nation. It is etiKtonmry to subsl w flliuost evcrj' uevr MteamtHwt line, fet nothing of the sort has Imhti done for the ioinmon pulihe road. It bus een the sfcp-l)lll of a srreat nation. Bijually !miKrtant lu Hs way with the railroad, It has lKen left to shift for ;tadf, while the steel highway which spans the country from ocean to ocean nas been petted and pampered until It has grown fuL It Is this Injustice to the common road that the League of American Wheelmen Is trying to remedy, and In this effort it looks for assistance from those who are most directly Interested in the subjectthe farmers of the Uni ted States. --Otto corner. Road llulliliiiK In Iiiiliaiia. An Owen County correHimmlcnt writes the Indiana Farmer as follows: "In a recent iiuuiIkt you say, "If you ever get a chance to see a stone crusher t work, chewing up its favorite diet. don't miss the opportunity." I want to siiy to you and to ull who wish to sat isfy their curiosity in thif direction, that the opportunliy for doing so can le abundantly satisfied In Owen Couu ly at this lime. From the foundation of the world, so fnr ub I know, Owen County bus nlmunded In Inexhaustible limestone cliffs, and now In several of our townships these huge monsters of iron, with Jaws of steel, with insatiate greed and appetite never appeased, can be seen busily devouring their diet of stone. "It Is not a question of how much stone these great goruiundlecr can de vour In a given time; the question i iow can the stone ! fed to them fast enough to satisfy their voracious tippe tltes. On any week day, near my borne, one of these stone crushers cuu lie ecu, sitting at the base of a lime stone cliff, with fifteen or twenty mu busily engaged; some drilling and some with heavy stone hammer breaking large rocks into pieces small enough lo ln loaded into wheel barrows, niwl liangs of men wheeling the broken j alone and dumping It Into the jaws of j these machines, which mince it into; pieces, the regulation size of which ! must ls small eiiuiii:h to go Into a man's mouth or pass hrouch a tvvo iuch ring. And this crushed stone Is carried by elevators Into an elevated bin, under which wngoiiK are driven to In loaded. A trap door Is opened and the wagon Is almost Instantly filled. A yard square of this stone fills a wagon bed made for the purpose and weight alwuit it ton. The finer stone, or screening), as It Is called. Is curried lulu a separate bin and Is used bm a lop dressing over the coarser stone on the road. The roads that are Isdng Improved have all been tinder the care of district suisTvisors, but when coititileted I hey nass under the management of the Hoard of Conn- j ly t'omitilssiotieis, to 1 kept in repair j by them. Owen County has at this time under contract and In process of j construction alKiiit a hundred miles of stone on macadam roads, at an average cost of alsuit f 1.400 per mile. Thus you see we are creating a large debt and imposing on ourselves a heavy burden of taxation." MlrUs Puzzud by Kite. Many amusing experiences have been the lot of the scientists who have been manipulating kites for scleutlflc purposes, says the Chicago News. I.arge birds are always luterented in the strange devices floating lu the air, and cannot quite make out what tbey are. Prompted by sharp curiosity, they hover around the floating kite, and stibjeo? themselves to the danger of Iweoining entangled in the silken striug and being dragged to earth. No Wrd. however, baa ever alighted on a kite or attacked one. While one scientist was flying a train of Ave klfes, a couple of years ago, a large silver tipped eagle came suddenly out of the highest air aud swooped round and round the flrst kite, looking against the sunset sky like a huge all ver hull. As the train of kites waa pulled Iu. the eagle followed, visiting one kite and theu another, seeming un certain Just what to do. In a few min utes, when he seemed to have decided thai they were not good to eat, ami he knew nothing about (hem any way, he indignantly flew off and was lost to view. Another experience was had with a stork that came from the New Jersey ride of the Hudson and flew straight for the queer object In the air.- He ap parently hud made up his mind to go straight through It, but changed and dived underneath. He went around and above It, and through a glass II could be seen that he cocked hi eye at the Intruder In a most comical man ner. He started away a few hundred feel, changed his mind and came swooping buck. He reluctantly went away, mystified over this queer addi tion to the Inhabitants of the air. Pesaonal lnp-idiiy. The bravery of Willie Is surpaseed In tbe quality and fll-er of lie latrapld Ujr by tha cwrafa which faces a eaa- I flatti-ailon or a wreck. Imn sum ine oai a. tie fervor l lielwd oul by patriotism. spirit of company, and o'her t-uiotlons which have a distinct place Iu the aol-j dier'a heart. The great Ore at Paris,' and particularly the heroic death HiereJ of the Duchesa d' Aleucou, recalla at brave exploit of this hidy a uue, Duke Charles of Bavaria, many years' ago. It was lu 1S23, and some sort of ex-i ceptlonal representation at the Real denz Theater at Munich had attracted a large and brilliant audience. Duke' Charles was seated in the royal bo. Suddeuly an attendant rushed la and whispered excitedly: "Your highness, the theater la on flrel' Hake your escape before the paale breaks out." This alarming account did not caaae, a change of expression on the prince's face. First satisfying himself bf a word of Inquiry that the stage waa. really on fire, the prince rose, ateppedi calmly to the front of the box, and said to the audience: "I am Informed that a Are has broken out on the stage. There Is time enough for you all to get out before' the danger becomes Imlmnent; tbe; ouly thing that you have to fear la a panic. I urge you, therefore, to quit' the hall in the most perfect order, and. 1 give you my word that Jf you do a' you will all escape. To prove that I ui(n w hat I say. I shall now sit down.j and shall not leave my seat until the last one of the audience Is out of the house." Duke Charles then sat down aa un-' moved as If the performance was tolf proceed. The sight of hU calnnea reassured the audience, aud the peo-! pie moved deliberately out In nn order-' ly manner; the flames burst through the curtain to the proscenium; the peo-i pie looked at Duke Charles, who UU: sat Imperturbnbly In his place; no one could make, a cowardly rush In the of such an example. faeaT In ten minutes the hatise was entire was etitlre hurr; Dnkg out. I a eel r was al! oil nmplefely dlf ly emptied, no one Isslng Charles was the last to go other install! the Interior fire, and the house waa con stroyed. Wearers of Wooden Hhoea. A wagon load of wooden shoes, such, as are worn by European peasants, lay. In a heap on the floor of a wood-wear dealer's store down-town In New York the other day. '; "Who wears "em?" Inquired the writ er, as he looked at the stock. "More people than you would tblnk,1 was the answer of the dealer, "and not only foreign -torn, old fashioned folkfi,: but quite a nnmlter of Americans. Their, chief sale Is In winter. In fact, there' is little or no call for them at any other season. Our customers are mostly' dairymen, gardeners, farmers, brewers, dyers and men employed In slaughter houses. Chicken cleaners In the dressed poultry business who stand In feath ers and steam wear them to wave thefr shoe leather. Gardeners' wives and daughters wnr them about home, and sometimes In the severest weather In the market. "In cold weather car, truck and cabj driven lu New York and other cltlea wear them for the reason that they are warmer than any other footwear. Some drivers cover them with black (doth, or blacken them, and then tack old rubber or leather IsKitlegs to the top. Worn thus the thick soles are a great protec tion ngiilimt frost, and one's feet are always dry. They are also worn, by street cleaners and nidi who work at paving roads, esjiechilly vvheu hot as- phult Is used, which Is found to Ih very I destructive to leather." j Wooden shoes are bow sold by the thousand in New York. Koine ' of them ate made In Maine, but most of them come from Holland. They are made of birch, ash and boxwood and sell retail ut from .V cents to 1.25 a pair, according to Ihilsh and quality. ( rntika at the White House. The White House Is beset with the usual number of cranks, says the St.. liouis Republic. These gentry come from every part of the clvlllxerl world and for every conceivable purpose. Some of them ars mild and some wildly Insaue. The harmless ones are sent on their way, while those who are real ly Insane are placed In the hands of tbe authorities and eventual) go to some asylum. S Women are not lacking among the lKr creatures who come to see the President, and occasionally one appears with a baby In her arms, which she wishes to lay In the President's bed for good luck or which she wishes him to touch or kiss, or to look at, believing that contact with the President will bring success to the child. The most persistent crank that has culled recently at the executive man sion is a man named Jackson from Newark, N. J. He Is a good-looking fellow, well dressed and wlfh good manners, who labora under the delu sion that he Is the chosen agent of (lod to warn people of approaching disas ter. He came all the way from his home In New Jersey to advise with the President and lo predict that the death of some high official, possibly tbe Pres ident himself, would occur In the next few days; to announce that tbe world will come to an end la November, 1M9I), and to offer bis services to unveil tbe m.v terlee of tbe future. He talked flucutly of bis bobblea, but waa so evi dently out of his mind on this subject that be was placed In tbe banda of tbe police, wbo will send him bark to his home. Destroyed Her Might. Particles of tbe glaaa from aa Inean dtHcent light bulb wnlc toilaaawri an. ten-i tbe eyes of Mrs. R. I). HoaMns, wife af a supreeae owurt clerk, of IM. march. N. D and deatroyed her sight. Uulsae a maa to ape ta aewvletleu yon can't eaut sUn up with yaur ergu ueata. - i V i', if 'sJa -.. jr