jt. f . " i . t ..'" ' . J W. , li ft ft" !! i ff- I Hin a Tho first domocratic convention to nominato Olovoland eat two days; tho second renominated him by resolution on the first day, and tho third t aat for thrco days. Tho Chicago republican con vention which nominated Lincoln over Seward in 18G0 sat for three days. Gonoral Grant was nomi nated tho first time on tho second day, and re nominated on tho first day. Tho convention which nominated McKinloy in 1890 sat for threo days, as did tho democratic convention which nominated Bryan in the samo year. Four years later, both conventions sat for three days, though the action of boUi was a foregone conclusion when they camo together. Tho delay in each was prolonged ono day bocauso of tho vico presidential nomina tion." MANY pathotic stories of tho "General Slocum" disaster havo been written, but nono aro moro touching than ono relating to tho unidenti fied body of a little baby. Tho story is told by the Now York World in this way: "A little child is lying decked with flowers in tho vast temporary piorguo on tho Twenty-sixth street pier. Sho must havo been a winsome little creature in life, not quito ono year old, blue eyed, pink cheeked, With silken, fair, brown tresses. This littlo blos som seemed sadly out of place in that great field of doath. Around her lay tho adult dead from tho Slocum, with burned and swollen features. Tho child seemed to havo just fallen asleep. Her tiny hands, no bigger than little roses, were folded upon hor breast. Sho was still wearing the pretty whito dress trimmed with lace in which her fond mothor arrayed her for that fatal day's outing on tho Sound. Surely hor mothor will come and get her, It seems impossible that tho poor little cre ature Can bo abandoned to a nameless grave. Or perhaps her mothor and father and all who held hor dear wero blotted from lifo in that awful fire. All day long this lonesome little one held court as if sho wero queen. Few of tho thousands of men who slowly marched past could do moro than glance at her. A policeman had to be stationed bosldo tho littlo coffin to drive tho weeping women forward and keep them from lingering there. Lato in tho afternoon a wee girl brought in a bunch of whito roses and sweet peas and jessamine buds and laid tho flowers on the baby's breast. On a card was written: 'With a mother's sympathy. " A NEGRO named Jordan D. Scott recently died at Richmond, Ind. A Richmond correspon dent says that S:ott made tho rope with which John Brown was hanged, adding: "Scott was eighty-two years old. It was while in slavery near Harper's Ferry, Va., that his master ordered him to make tho rope to bo used in the execution. Scott, with unwilling hands, constructed tho hang man's nooso and witnessed the execution. Ho as uorted that ho kissed Brown while he was on tho way to tho scaffold." THE killing of the governor of Finland took place at a psychological moment in tho opinion of a writer In tho New York Sun. This writer says: "Tho blow was struck just as Rus Bia's friends and enemies in Europe had about xnado up their .minds that victory would remain to tho end with tho Japanese. Tho opinion of tho Austrian press on the act is romarkablo and typi cal. Threo journals of Vienna, all favorable to tho czar's government, agree in declaring it a case Of killing, not murder. Says one: 'If tho czar does not see after this patriotic act of a noblo Finn that holy Russia is on tho wrong path, a (series of defeats on tho battlefield will bring tho lesson homo to him.' Another remarks: 'Gov ernor Bobrikoff has fallen a victim to the patriotic indignation of a people.' Tho last is no less em phatic: 'It is not murdor; it 13 simply the re moval of tho hangman of a whole nation.' " AN OUTBREAK occurred at Swedish instiga tion, at Helsingfors, and tho Sun writer says: "It is said that the offices of tho governor general were sacked and that a number of official persons wero killed. Of course, tho authorities are suppressing all information on the subject .That Scandinavian sympathizers with Finland wero active had been known at headquarters for some time. Before tho death of Bobrikoff, a jour nalist from St. Petersburg, who had been on a tour of inquiry, roported as follows: 'I visited all the towns along tho west coast of Finland and called on tho best people. Everywhere I was greeted with discouraging opinions. The people loyal to Russia have a hard time. At Nikolaistad Which may bo regarded as the' Swedish stronghold' and at Ulcaborg tho anti-Russian movement is The Commoner. steadily growing. There may be heard such ex pressions as 'guerilla warfare' 'complete defeat or Russia by the Swedes' and 'assurances of Britisn aid.' It is time for our statesmen to interfere. Thoy aro deceived about pro-Swedish sympathy. England is everywhere working against us. I heard tho most gloomy and most discouraging statements on all sides." THIS writer says that of course England is "not in tho game directly," and explains: '"i'lie reference to her means simply that the Finns, the Poles and other oppressed peoples within tho ompiro aro relying on Great Britain, as, an ally of Japan, to prevent tho intervention of Germany or France for tho purpose of making a diversion in favor of Russia. The defeat of Rus sia by an Asiatic power, the despised Japanese, would demonstrate that the bureaucratic system had failed in every way. Success in tho field would havo furnished some excuse for its exist ence. Internal disturbances in the empire would not injure tho chances of Finland and Poland and the liberal party in Russia. Nothing is to be hoped for from tho czar until his present advis ers, and tho system that they represent, have been completely discredited." THERE is published in Paris a paper called "The Cry" and tho Kansas City Journal says that The Cry's editorials on American poli tics probably convey as accurate a suggestion of the subject as the paragraphs of journalistic, jok ers this side of the Atlantic do to continental af fairs of state. In a recent number of The Cry ap peared thi3 luminous effusion: "Political issues of real importance will, perhaps, be discussed in the next presidential campaign in the United States. But more momentous and conclusive considera tions than questions of policy are now brought to the front by friends of the rival candidates. Mr. Roosevelt's opponents ignore as unworthy of se rious comment, his imperialism and Caesarism shown in the coal strike and in the pension order. They criticise him severely, however, for playing tennis, which they call a girl's game, and for carrying a cane, which gives him a Frenchy air. They point with pride to Judge Parker, who, as a real farmer, has on his farm at Rosemount a red bull that took first prize at tho last cattle show. The bull's name is Peter. He is the father of eight calves, and this prolific paternity has made all the American farmers solid for Judge Parker." NEW YORK boasts of a modern Robinson Cru soe. According to the New York correspon dent for the Kansas City Journal this man has lived at one of the largest hotels on Broadway for more than eight years and the Journal correspon dent says: "The clerks say that he has not a friend or acquaintance in the world. He does not even know the bell hops by name and he leaves a sealed envelope for the maids and the boy on tho mantelpiece every Monday. One is marked 'Boy' and tho other 'Maid.' This is the way ho does his tipping. He has patronized tho restaurant in the hotel all the time, but he was never seen to entertain a guest or to be entertained. He has been approached a, thousand times by other guests, but ho presents such a frozen front that not one of them has been able to break through it. Ho never says 'Good morning!' even to the clerks, unless they bid him the luck of the day first, and then he does it so grudgingly that tho old-timers have long ceased to practice the amenity. At 7 o'clock every evening ho takes a place which has been kept sacred for him in the dining room and eats a steak and drinks a pint of wine. He has coffee and a cigar and ho usually stays about two hours. His tip to the dining room man is made weekly and in a blank envelope laid on the ta ble. He has never called up anyone on the tele phone and has never answered a telephone." THOSE who do not understand just how it happened that Senator Fairbanks came to be the republican nominee for vice president may be enlightened by reading a statement made bv Walter Weliman, the Washington correspondent for the Chicago Record-Herald. Mr. Wollman at tended tho national convention and this is what he said about the Fairbanks boomr "Railrnn,? influence was yesterday so conspicuous in support of Fairbanks that many men who aro in position to know what is going on behind tho scenes iS national politics wondered if Fairbanks is tho L? the railroads and financiers have picked to for president in 1908. The final and annaLT, decisive set for Fairbanks began yesterSa? m0rn- VOIiUME 4, NUMBER 24.,' ing when Governor Odell'of Now York ch from advocacy of Cannon to open announcement that the Empire State would throw its big block of votes to tho Indiana senator. Governor Odell's change of baso followed immediately the arrival in Chicago of E. H. Harriman of tho Union Pa cific and an interview between the governor and the railroad magnate. Harriman, and not Odell or Piatt, is said to be really in control of the New York delegation on all matters save the presidency. In an hour or two after New York's flop it became known that Pennsylvania, Iowa, Wisconsin and other states more or less under railroad influence would follow New York's lead. And thus tho nomination of Fairbanks appeared t6 be assured before nightfall." A DUBLIN veterinary surgeon, Allen by name, has discovered an antidote for carbolic acid poison. The London Daily News says: "Some time ago his attention was drawn to two horses which were evidently suffering from poisoning. On examining one he noticed that the mucous surface of tho mouth was blanched and that tho animal was staggering. There was a general twitching of the muscles, the eyes were staring and the animal was rapidly assuming a comatose con dition. Mr. Allen asked for some oil, linseed for preference; if not, any kind of oil that was handy. Some was brought, and about two wincglassfuls administered to one of the animals, the effect be ing, to. quote the words of Mr. Alien, miraculous. For the first time ho then noticed that the 'oil' which had been given to the horse was the ordi nary turpentine of commerce. So satisfied was ho with the result that he gave the second horse a dose, although at that time tho animal was un conscious. In about ton minutes it recovered, and both horses wero at work the next day as if noth ing had happened." SOON after this, Mr. Allen was asked to look at a blacksmith who had drunk a glass of stout and had become very ill. In the forge the veterinary surgeon found the blacksmith in a con dition of coma, a strong smell of carbolic acid per vading the premises. Ultimately he discovered that the man had drunk out of the wrong vessel and imbibed a solution of the acid instead of tho stout. A doctor was at once sent for, but in the meantime Mr. Allen administered a dose of tur pentine that happened to bo on the premises, and the maii not only quickly recovered, but resumed his work within an nour. Turpentine as an anti dote in similar cases had been previously un known, and the representative of the Daily News recently sought out an expert with a view of get ting a medical opinion on a matter of so much importance. "The symptoms in the case you men tion," he said, "are distinctly those of carbolic acid poisoning, and so successful does the treat ment appear to have been that further experi ments in the same direction .are well worth trying. If subsequent experiment confirms the oil of turpentine treatment, then on every packet or bottle containing carbolic acid should be printed this simple antidote."" A HUNTER in South Africa' tells the following story of an adventure with a buffalo: "I was in the act of descending the bank when Prinsloo, a Dutch hunter, who was lower down the slope, saw the dark outline of the buffalo standing at bay behind the screen of reeds. Next instant, seeing it about to charge, he shouted, 'Daar koin hij ('There he comes'), and fired, rather at random, I am afraid. Then, rushing down the path by which he had advanced, he threw himself headlong Into the reeds on the left. This all happened in a few moments, but I had suffic ient time to raise my rifle to my shoulder and fire as the enraged bull rushed straight at mo through the reeds with nose thrown forward and horns back. As I fired I endeavored to jump aside to escape the charge, but my feet got entangled in the matted grass and I fell on my back, luckily, however, retaining my hold on tho stock of my rifle. My first shot seemed to check him for a moment, but the next ho was rushing up the slope at me. I shall never forget the look in his fierce eyes. It was but a moment's work to draw back the bolt of my Mauser and to close it again, thus pushing another cartridge into the breech. I had no time to raise the rifle to my shoulder. There was barely time, just before he was in striking distance, to pull the trigger with the stock under my armpit, while I lay on my back on the top of tho sloping ground. Without so much as a groan, he fell in his tracks and rolled over into tho muddy water, two yards below, with a great splash, shot through the brain." -y m iV '$' manp Ait,.J-i--iTf)ff M