f s t tt THE KM) riiOUl) CIHIW. FRIDAY, MR 21, "1 SH. is fr '-" vv 0Pi58SshsS V ..WAV VWi yvi- BBDRlh.T.OLIVERs. 'vj're 5SS3, niA!Ti;i: wit :...hm h.. "Co after lilni." cites ThIcit, mill lon't lot your eves In oil' nf nun until I mc yen again. Ci'tiiiMiiliiM'. wiitch him like u hawk."' 'I hi- servant stnrils open mouthed lirlori' llilll. With mi tingiy m, the detective iiiii(s hlni aside mid 'hurries t uvurd tin 111 rary. I'm) late; A pistol sliol sounds mil t: ,m t:i 1 1 1 1 iiiL'ht. 'I'ulit:' opens tin- ill or. In tin- IijjIii of llii ga, which tin' w retched nimi must liuvi' lit ii on enter iijf the loom, hi- H'n the Jigurcof Ail nan Dyke stn tched out upon the iloor In his light hand a ituiImm1, stil smoking, from his mouth the life-blood gushing out in torrents dyeing the rich i-urnct. 'I he living man smili - ,t grim smile as hi1 sees tin' detective. " I have escaped you." lie gasps, tin lilootl gurgling nut of his mo'Mh, al most tit ti i i njr speech. 'You -I ill not" watch ine -close 'poiigh - Coil Jii'lp " He is dead. Taker stands in the door u-id gazes upon tin- lifeless form. 'I'Ik-ii with compressed lips turns anil leaves the liousi'. leaving .lanii'.'. Potter bending over his dead master, tears in his eyes. As hi walks along tin roail. his hat pulled ilown over his eyes, his Miliar turned up, hi' mutters, " There are some men who are men, some who tiro fools: there's one in the house there, lie plotted hut hadn't the nerve to play loser: well, some folks muv eull it retriliiitiou. p rhaps it Is. They'll attend to him ail right, 1 must see what linger.-on is doing. CHAITF.K Will. i oi: i in- ii. .si. ni or m i: m i The eloeks in the neighborhood have just struck the hour of midnight, led oil' by the heavy booming of the. one in the tower of the court-lions,-, followed by this tinkling of musical clocks, the eliimingof metallic clocks, ihcstiiking of all. big and little, in the houses of all the good people of West Chester. The sound arouses Henri Careau from his reverie. He has been sitting before his ilesi,-. a number of medical works before him. studying, reading up all the world's best authorities on diseases of the stomach. He has read until his mind has drifted olV upon other topics, and has remained in pro found meditation until the striking of the clock in the cunT-housc tower has aroused him. "Twelve oY ock." lie murmurs; "midnight. The time has come. 1 will scarcely be disturbed now." llu sees to the fastening of the shut ters, the lock of the dour, all secure: then he goes to his desk, nulls out one of the drawer anil takes therefrom a llat morocoj ca.-e. lie opens it; the light of the tamp rellects upon the con tents a case ' surgical instruments. He e.Miinines cvt ral of them carefuPy, then reclo-ing the case lie takes the lump mid goes into the adjoining room. Although the night is uarm there is 'i Muring lire in the stove. The air is ueavy with heat. The doctor sets lown his ca-e of instruments and turns to an object which oecup'o.s a long, narrow table in the renter of the riioni: an object covered with a sheet. Ho reverently iciiioves the covering: a nude, corpse lies revealed, the body of his partner and benefactor. Dr. Wil bur. He gacs upon it with a sad, tender smile playing around his sensi tive, expressive mouth: gazes upon it with love in his In own eyes, murmurs K-s hu gacs, ".My hist sad duty will soon be o-.er, dear master. Here in the silence of night shall your wishes be carried out. No careless' hand shall touch your sacred form. -No hearties student of vour honored ptofcssioii shall gloat upon the discovery (If Mich will be niiide) of your strange malady. 1 shall do it alone. Here, uiivwitehcil, unseen, save by your eye in spiri. laud and the cverainl ull-sceingcyo of Cod. biiall 1 do as you have bidden me." Bile prepares his instruments, ar ranges the light and basins which sur round the table and then takes up a scalpel. A few deft, skillful cuts, showing the hand of the experienced demonstrator, of the scienced surgeon, and the stomach Is laid oiii'ii. Hu works rapidly, The contents of the stomach are taken out and plu'-cd i:i a basin, then the study of the oig.ui it elf. A light ocr.spreads his hand some face us he studies-a light of triumph and satisfaction. tew inuiioreii woriis.wiru ne iiirns from the subject and writes hastily in it .small book. fie has discovered the cause of the doctor's malady. lie then turns to the contents of t'tc basin. The rain is pouring down on the roof outside. The storm is raging. "An awful night," he mutters, and proceeds witii his work-, It is nearly completed. He Ik about lo depose of the ghastly contents of :he basin when he si'essomethlng that iiTcsts him, that causes him to set town the essel and rciiio.'t'. something from it. A small, almost round object, not half-digested food, not any portion of the organ itself, but a foreign sub stance, a strange thing to tiud in a mini's stomach, A bull of paper! Abtounded -curious, ho puts it bv th'j htovu to dry (for it Is soft anil puipy, iruui the juices of the stomach) tLini i nref if.'y straightening It out, ex icising extreme earn not to tear It, he "cuniiu'b it. He falls buck In his chair, gasping for breath, bewildered, surprised lic vfliul all measure For, faintly upon the nearly de stroyed paper, almost illegible, he sros die marks of ii lead pencil, the famllitr murks of the dead nun's handwrit ing. home parts of It eaniMt jc tzaciid. lie riunies into the next room -tiieotlice iinl puts the pauer iiuihu' a powerful uilcroiciine. An, ho can rend it Wirv .j urs flair . , J-50SK C3CS'J' ijn t cjsvj nju,V. all or enough to slow him what is written, and he stands gazing in won der upon the strange dl.sc.vcry. It is the missing 1, af from the doc t r's note-book'. He stands engaged In thought tor many inluufs, unhcediiig the lapse of tunc, not noticing the sound of the v.urof the elements outside, only think ing of the srup of paper before him, hisinltid beset with mai, curious con jectures "llow came this paper in the place 1 found it.'- rings tnroiigh his brain. "Me must have torn the leaf from his note-book and swallowed it lint why'.' It must have been shortly hefoie his death, for it would have been entirely do.-tioyed if it had been there two hours while the organs of digestion were performing their functions " He reaiU the paper again. Middenly he nit-Ms a cry of eager jov. "I have found It," he cries, found the solution, for here upon this naper Is recorded the fact that the child born to Alice l).ke was a female; that to Conrad Card tier a male. Adrian Hvke testified at the ituptcst that his child was a male. II" must have lie I. They have changed the children, he knew that the record was in the note-book, determined upon possessing it. followed my gocd old partner, and in .some way aroused his suspicions. Perhaps in the struggle the doctor tore out this leaf and swallowed it. Adrian Dyke got the book, but that for which he com in. tied the murder cUectiiu I ly eluded his giasp. That must be tue solution of this mysterious problem, llow won derful are the works of the Almighty!" He takes the note-bonk from his pocket and carefully places the miss ing leaf in its place. "It will be a terrible witness against Adrian Hyke." he mutters. Kap, tap. tan! ome one is at the door. Tlie doctor turns in surprise. Who can want him upon such a night'.' It must be something serious to bring any one out in the storm. lie lu.s the book upon the desk and goes to the dour. He throws it onen. A man, heavily bearded, dripping with ram is standing outside. The wind is howling furiously, driving the rain in sheets in at the open door. "I want to st. Dr. Carcan." says the stranger, with a slight foreign accent. Henri starts. Where has he heard that voice hefoie'.' lie looks intently in the man's face, it is unfamiliar, he cannot place it. "ionic in." he says abruptly, "I sha'l be washed out " 'I he man shrugs lijs broad shoulders, anil shaking himself like : dog, enters the olliec. "I am Dr. Careau. what do you want'.1" The man looks upon the handsome young man with iidniir.itiou. "You Dr. Careau?" he asks. "Who would have thought it: you have im proved with age " Improved w ith age! What can this man mean'.' 'Well, state the obfeet of your visit." he sass curtly. "I am em a;vl. have work to do." The wet. dripping stranger drops into a chair --a chair betore the desk-. "It will take me .some time to tell you why I came toscetou at this un seasonable hour, mi you had letter compose yourself to listen." tli' speaks calmly, almost insolently. The young physician Hushes with au ger. "I hate no time to hear anything you have to ay. do not w ish to 'be an- "n is mi. tps-iMj i i:.vr. nn.tcil with you. If you come upon business please state it brielly; if not I shall be obliged to show ton the door." The . stvini'i' visitor shrugs his shoulders. "Turn me out in the rain, ok'.' Well, I guess you won't do that. Your greet ing Is mil a wry iiirdial one. but I think you'll decide to allow me the privilege ol staying here all night, at anv rate, when you know who I am." 'The young man stands aghast. Such asstiianic! Mich impudence! 'nn the man be mad'.' IVrhups he K an es caiH'd lnnath', who has seen the 1'glit sViiing over the glass irannim of the oil Ice door, mid has determined in his mad brain to seek a harbor of refuge here. Hut. no, the eyes that are rov ing compla 'cutly about the room mo not wild, the winds are not discm -uciiteil mid rambling. ISesidcs, hu has asked to see Dr. Careau, lie must have come there upon some business, with a llxcil purpose. Ha answers the self-satlslied strung er contemptuously, coldly, "I admin your assurance. It is only equaled by your iiupudcucc. Thure is not much likelihood of my inviting you to remain here, for if you do not statu your business In one minute, I shall throw you out of that door." I I In voice l.s angry and forcible a;, he Hn'.shcM The stranger looks at the door as If " '; lis (P ! I i m ::j . I u mi,o ,..,,, "As I said before your greeting Ii not very cordial Well, I won't har bor any nuillce on that account, it In not to lie evpectcd. You did not know I was coining. It has been twenty tears since you saw me. am piob'-" ably changed Twenty years does change a man soiuci It' litis worked miracles in you. I.iokatmc, my bov. don t you i ccognie something familiar about me'.' Ain't there something in inv general appearmiie that Jim have seen before" Think." The easy. iiiict impudent words of the man cause a f-eiiug of sickening horror to creep into the .toting man's heart. Twenty years' Much has hap pened in thal'tiine Ills mind tine lu sciously goes back oer all those years. A fearful thought e uues to him, a thought that causes his brain to reel. The tnati is watching hlni. A cold, hard smile comes to Ills bearded lips. "I see you are thinking," he says i iliuly. '-are beginning to think about right. Well, I'll help you. I don't mind giving your memory a lift. Don't ,tou remember a man who, u little over twenty years ago was Ckcii Irom you. to be burled alive in a dungeon, a man win was .entenced to twenty years Hard work in the Hast en! penitentiary" All, I see ton do: well. I am tl'tat man. ' I a'ui your father'" With a cry of horror and angui."h the sou falls hack in his chair. His father' This coarse, brutal wretch the author of his being, the parent whom he feared in those days of child hood: crept to his miserab'e pallet to escape, when he hud heard his reeling footsteps on the walk! the heartless criminal, who in a tit of drunken an ger had stitick down his nollier, his w hite-faceil, hard-working mother! He has forgotten his existence, has never dreamed he would return, and now he sits mockingly before him, chiims him as his son. comes to claim the shelter of his roof. Horrible, hor rible' "You don't seem glad to see me even now. I rather evpectcd ton would throw yourself on my breast ami say. 'Welcome home, father,' hustle out mid trot in the fatted calf and so on, lint instead of that you seem toshritik from me. you seem paralyzed with horror. Not a tery agreeable home coming. I must say. Not a very tilial greeting after all these .tears."' The mocking words' of the man arouse him: lie tecovcis himself with mi elTort. and says, "You have never been a father to me. have never done aught to arouse any feeling but horror and loathing in my breast." "I've never had a chain e. I've been in jail nearly all your life. You have never learned mv good ipial ities." 'I lie young man shudders. "Von were sent to prison for the murder of my mother, von deserved it." "Perhaps you look on it like eveiy one els-does. You don't know what I had to put up with -her scolding tongue, her abuse. I will admit the devil got the tipper hand of me. If I had not been loaded 1 wouldn't have struck her I didn't intend to hit her so hard, anyhow. I!y Cod. I've paid for it all. Twenty tears of hard labor has innde it sintare." The son feels his heart growing hard, as he hears the words of his brutal parent. He must get rid of him. lb- must be bribed to keep away fiom him. lie determines to net diplomatically. t'oniuerliig his re ptignance, hesays: " ithout doubt you have suffered. We will not recall the years thai have missed. wc will look only at the future Why did vou Mime here'.'" "I'.'iat's better! Now you speai. more like a son. Well. Ill tell you, Henri. I never would have come near you if I had not been forced to. 1 got out of 'I'liny' nearly three inoudis ago. 1 got a littlu Job of work in the eit.t, mighty hard work, too -long' shoreman, but 1 lost it over a week ago, and .ton know I ain't much of a saver, so 1 had no money. knew you were lie:e. I found It out by looking in the Mate directory. .o I came to you to help me out. Let me stay here to-night. Ii' me in the morning' eiiil me a little dust once in a while mid I'll never trouble you. I found you had turned out a '.saw -bones,' and was pre lit well thought of, and I know 1 an t much of a father to be proud of. so I'll keep away from you." The young physician rises to hi feit. It will be easier than he has thought, lie has dreaded that this mail would insist on living with him, or in some way disgracing him. Yes. lie will give him money -anything m rerson as long as hedoes not intrude his unwelcome presence upon him. "It shall be as yon wish," he says. "You shall remain here to-night. In the morning I will give yon inoney.aiid yon will return to Philadelphia 'upon the llrst train." "All riiilit. Now as I'm sure you'll take me in, I guess 111 remove my coat." lie rises and prepares to do as he has said, As the coat falls back, the glitter of a watch chain catches the son's eye, a heavy chain of solid work manship, of peculiar design. He springs towar I his father, in another moment he has dragged the watch, to which the chain is attached, from the pocket of the vest, ('im look at the case, ami then he turns llercely, sav agely, upon the man who stands cow ering before him. "Where did you get this watch and chain'.'" he h.iarsely demands. "Can't a man have a 'super-.'' " "Where did you get itV Come, tell inc. No evasion' Answer me plainly." ' i bong it it from a man in the city, He brought it from Hiigland. "You lie! 'Ibis watch tvu the property of mv partner. Hz.ra Wilbur. It was upon his person the night ho was mur.lered I f you cunnot explain lo mo. satisfactorily inshie of ten min utes how it came in your possession, 1 shall have you arrested us t ho murderer of the man who has bren more to mo than you ever were a father!' (7ifici"i-iui''---rfi.i llrlKhl I'rtHi'M-t. ld Centleiuaii Little bov. why am you Idling around the i.tre'et during scnool honr.s. mid, -.till worse, smok ing and elie wing tobaico, and uctlnr like a young tough generally, instead of .studying your lessons unit trying to be a little gentleman'.' Hoy Wot yer givin' us'.' CldCentlemuH Itciiiember, thothns Is not fur distant when you will havu to earn your own living, llov ThuKiill .ight. I'll live in a I'lf Avernoo house mi' have a hteam .viit. I'm goln inter polytics. . -surr Himself that mi,fi,it ,t.,il tl,., k.ifw 1 1)) K HKACII 1TV INTREPID DR. NANSEN IS HOMEWARD BOUND. viiil it Misviyi'. Whit n, 11utti-tir. lines Nut km Wliellii-i- tin- r,ili ttus Item lint Mr. Vnivn ll.i llci li r,l iu ttnnl I'rciui ll,i Miitliiunl, t.llMiON, VI,. I".- T. lb It ish eon- snl at Archangel, the capital of the Itiisslan got eminent of that name, telegraphs a continuation of the ie port thai Dr. Naiiscn is reluming fiom the North pole. This Is legarded as eonelu-.ivc thai the Norwegian ex plorer is h sinew u rd hound, even If he did not icai-li the pole Dispatches from dill'creiit parts of the continent indicate gieat interest In the news from the North pole, which is generally credited in Hiiropcun cap itals. )r Niiiisens wife and relatives, however, did not believe tlie .innoiinee meiit which caine through Kouch liareir. the agent of Dr. Naiisen, near tlie month of the Lena river, residents of which locality freipientlv visit ;,Vw .Siberia They have icceitcd no word from the explorer. Ai'coriliiig to the opinion of Arctic experts here, when the I rain left the Kuril sea in Is'iishc tna have found the sea northwards free of ic and pushed on until she was locked in. They add that she then may have been allowed to drift until the expedition came to land near the pole and that Dr. Naiisen and his partv mat have returned in sledges to the .Siberian Islands At the ."Siberian islands it is believed Dr. Naiisen mid his com panions may have been stopped bv the broken lee. Dr. Naiisen wrote to ISaion Toll from Yugoro strmts. saying that he exneeted to return to Koicny. Siberian islands, where dos have been await big him. DUN'S WEEKLY REVIEW. llir (irin-r.it Itiislm- Slliiiillim I Id,., t tlci-t i:iri lalliiii. Ni.w Yoisu. IVb. I". II I. Dim A o.'s weekly review of trade says: The went her still hinders business and coiitb'.'.ied closeness of money fol lows tin prolonged inaction of Con gress, but ciiiitldeiice increases. The demand for boots mid shoes is still disappointing. .N't-ctul factories have closed and few are working full time, belief in lower prices still pre vailing, although further reductions have been made in mosi lines, amount ing, slurc .lutiuury, to to i per ecu'. Textile work shows little change, though the cut in print cloths to ?.. :" mid a general concession in brown ami bleached staples, averaging for the whole list iiioted six per cent since .'miliary I, induced more buy ing which the known accumulation of goods ahead of demand has hindered. .Sales of wool have been small for two weeks of February. (i,T.'0,7oi pounds, against lu.i.'.i'i.Va.i last year and l.'.:.()j,r..Mi in le'j.t, but higher prices abroad, sustained by heavy shipments of goods to thiseoiintr.y. in cline holders of wool here to malic the concessions, so that iiiaiiufaeturer.s have the more ditlleiilty in meeting competition. Produce markets tend downward, mainly becansu supplies e.xeeed ex pectations. Wheat has decline! ,, with Western receipts !,U'.".',:um bush els, against ST'.,I!i'.i last year, while Atlantic ex-ports for two weeks have been only .1. ii::. I i.-. bushels, against '-,7'.'l,;:il last year Corn is a shade lower and both pork and lard a little lower. Cotton re oipts. at tills season never large, still indicate a supply for the current crop year, including stocks brought over, much in excess of the world's needs, so that the prospect of increased acre age mis inu more power 10 ue press prices, mid spot cotton hns declined an eighth for the week. I.'xports in Jan uary tveie s,,r,.-,:i,.-iiii less than last year, though prices were l."i percent higher. Failures for the week have been 't'.'l in the Inlted .States, against '.'To last year, mid ' in Canada against .'! last year iriiik C'li-,irlns. Ni;w Yoisk, IVb. 17. -The following table, compiled by Itradst reefs, shows Iheelearanees at tho cities named and Hie percentage'? of Increase or decrease as compared with the corresponding week last veur: i leu riiiK I in1 l)ts .Sew York H.rl'.iVi III I Clii.-iiKi TO.J ii.HH ... I n A St, Louis :J 13 villi .. . I il Kim-'ufii) ii.i u.C.m -S- :i (IiiiuIiii I, .'..'.nil ;i).vl lleiniT ' 'J,lll,i!VI j ,', I st. Jo. e. I. l.'i'S'.lVS I.I.' . . I.llirnlii i',X!i Ii 'i Wii-ltllii -C.iii.lls .. ill. I ii!H'i.!i . .'.;.'.; .ci ; UNCLE SAM'S NAVY. I'lKht VH Will lit- Kr-iilr fr t'llllUllllllll .lulj- I. Wasiiinhion. Feb. 17. Owing to the rapidity with which the work of constructing naval vessels in being pushed, eight ships will be added to the naval list for commission before the first of July. Ninety-seven m-i cent of tlie work on the battleship .Massachusetts has been completed, while on the double turret monitors Puritan, Terror and Moiuidiiocl- the work done is represented by uj. u mid !!i per cent respectively. The battleship Oregon is so far advanced that only li.j pur cent of the work re mains to be clone. As for the three gunboats building at Newport News, tho Nashville, Wilmington ami Helena, though L'tl per cont of tho work is yet to be done, the builders are sure that tiio ships can all be in commission be fore July 1. NO APOLOGY OFFERED. Diinr.-ttrii .-InttMrf-il-;i4 tin, Kreitipl nf Iho New "lorU Ymi'IiI ('lull ll-tli,n. I.uMio.x-, Fob. 17. The purport of Lord Dunraven's replies to the Now Yoik Yact club were obtained this nftui'iioon. The letter to .Mr. Phelps Is the most important, it treats In de tail thu finding of thu committee, but no apology is offered to tho New York Ynoht club for the failure of Ills lord ship to substuntiuti) tho charges brought ugalnst Defender. Lord Dun raven clings to the evideiuo he sub mitted to the committee. DUBIOUS. i llm TIip t'.t- rrlte K-plnrt-r Tit Ik Ali.nil Urpiirl I'i-iiiii Vntvii, W.tsiiiMiro.v, IVb. 17 The mesMige from Archangel continuing tlie report of the return of Naiisen, from the North pole, does not amount to aeon lirtmitioii In the opinion of Ceiieral Creeley and of Lieutenant Sellout -z.e. The latter, will, the possible excep - tion of (otnmoilore Melville, who is ieiiipiir.M-ii.viin.seni irom vtiisliiiigluti, lu I...I i .... ,,...,.,.1 , i ,i ,,i .1 In Washington upon the ehiiraciei-ls ... ...... .i.-., ,, tiiiiii.iii) iiiner oiueuil tics of the North Siberian coast, which he has visited on a government mis sion, being charged with the distribu tion or lowmds to the natives who nlileil the survivors of the unforlunatu Jcaiietle expedition. -Said hi 1'hls continuation from Archangel isas If wo Inula telegram from Portland, Me., oonllnulug a story from Sandy Hook." Cciii'ml'lit'eely took a similar view. ami held that It was itirouci'ivuhlc Hint the same stott should emanitti- from i wo places so remote, from each other us me Irkutsk mid Archangel, lie knew of no way In which news of Nmiseu's approach to tho mouth of the Lena delta should leach Archan gel. With the aid of a chart Ceneral Cicely indicated the great distance between the two places. He showed that if it was ically true that news of Dr. Nunsen's incitements had reached the month of the Lena mid had so worked up the river to Irkutsk, then It was linpiobable that the .nine in formation could hate reached Archan gel. Then, too, theie was the smut! luck of detail about this hut Uispatcii that Had been noted in the llrst. and tills absence of even a hint j of where Naiisen was. or how he was . communicated with, easts suspicion In Ills opinion on both reports. Arch angel, said Ceneral Cicely, is a largo mid important llussimi town, with good connections with the outer world, mid If such news had rent-lied there, he saw no reason win- full de tails were not obtainable. He called attention to another point, that if NatiMiii had really emerged from the Polar regions, nny w here oil the .Siberian coast t hen ho hits himself disproved tlie correctness of the theory upon which his expedition was embarked. It would show that, instead of their existing a current, across the pole, there was a current that swept him up from the neighbor hood of llennett island to the pole "nil tl turned back and returned him to his starting point. Ceneral Crcely not. unnaturally thought this state of ii D'aiis was hurdlv possible. Cert ill iily there was no scientific evt- iienee. oi i ue existence ot such an i """!;" iint-tiu us mis, aim, ineie fore, notwithstanding the Archangel story. Ceneral Crcely stood unshaken in his disbelief in tlie return of Nan sen as described. win. in: iiipkii'i-i.t to tKiittt. Lieutenant Sellout-', declared that if the story from Irkutsk was true, then Naiisen was sighted or heard from oil the Lena river delta away last sum mer. From Irkutsk to Yakutsk, which is tlie most northerly Itiisslan post of any slgiillicanee, is a distance of about 'J.oOo miles mid communication is had only by sleds or in summer by rafts "down the lliver Lena. From Yakutsk to L'.st Yausk at the mouth of the Lena, where tho Jtiissian trader is said to have heard from Naiisen, is a distance of I, .-.00 miles through an unbroken wilderness mid the means of commu nication are reindeer or dogs. The only travel between Yakutsk and 1st Yunsk Is by a few half breed tiadors. w ho go to the latter point carle in the winter and stay through until the next spring. Many months nro re- Itiired for the trin, and any news com ing from 1st Yausk of Naiisen would be very old, declared the lieutenant. lie explained the dlliictiltics that might, he encountered in an attempt to trace a rumor. Tho natives who may have sighted thu Arctic, explorer could not conceive thu nature of his undertaking, and owing to their dense ignorance it would not be possible for them to transmit mi Intelligible tie count of the event. Tim natives of the Siberian islands were stricken with terror at l ho signt of the steamer Vega, which had a hunting party in that legion, mid they hid themselves in tlie ice for months' afterwards. ANDREE'S EXPEDITION. Ilirri' Ctitrrnuiriit liitrrrntetl In the Srlirmit fur Iniul hjr I'.nlliiuii, Lomio.x. Fob. 17. -Advices from Stockholm are that the foreign min istry lias received promise from the governments of Crcat llrltalu and llussla to give all the assistance "is .tihlii to Prof. Andree's projected bal loon expedition to the North pole. Clements II. .Markhatn, president, of the lloyal Ccographieal society, is sending a circular to Canada, with a drawing of Prof. Andree's balloon, asking the Dominion authorities to take every step possible to have tlie balloon watched for, and reported, if seen, to the liritixh Oovorniucnt. Thu Hudson Kay company will bear thu cost of the distribution of a large number of these circulars in the north ernmost districts of thu Dominion. An olllcial of the Iloyal Ccograph ieal society says a largo sum of money bus been raise! i to help Prof. Andree's scheme, which is thought to be feasible. .Mt-Kliili-j l'lrt ( liuli-ni .tllliui Si-iiiihI. Favi.tii.. Mo, Foil, 17. I ti ma convention Williain .MeKinley was tie cslnred the tiiianliiiou choice of llow urn county for president, and Allison of Iowa second choice. The meeting declared in favor of ono State conven tion, tiud unanimously favored the re nomination of Hon. John P. Tracey for Congress from this, tho Seventh, district. t'tMiU County lli'imlillt-uii 1'rlm-irliM. Cine too, Fob, 17. Primary elections were held yesterday in all the wards of Chicago and in the country towns in Cook county for the election of del egates to thu 1'epiiblican county con tention to-day. There wus no objec tion to tlie ''machine" plans and they carried the day. W.tsiitMiTOX, Feb. 17. For Oklaho ma and Indian Territory Fair and wanner; southwesterly winds. For Missouri Continued fair and warm; southwesterly winds, For Kuiisas--Falr; colder in north ern portion; winds b-seoatlng uorth westerly. GEN. GREELEY BIBLE. . Tilt- Itimk I for l'n In ii,.. t.,i.ii srhi.i.l mid , .Nt.n.srtiurlitii. '"IIP M.o, Feb. 17 . Tin, ,lcw lhIc prepared for use In the public schools has been completed and will bo sub mitted to the board of education for approval. The aim of those who com- 1 that tvouht be nnobjeetio .i,,. 0 Z denomination. any piien i ne oook- was to prepare a work P " i-i M the Hible was retrul irlv i ,..,,,,i :.., i... ....,. . i , .?""'. I " " "ne I'litinc sciioois or i i.i........ is.v some it was approved, but others onlcred a protest so strong t littt it eventually prevailed mid the readliigH were discontinued. A few years ago ti movement was begun to reinstate the Ibble. The book which lias just been com pleted is the outgrowth of a suggestion made by Professor David Swing, that a coinniltteo consisting of members of tho Protestant, Catholic, Jewish and other denominations compile a Umk for the use of school children niado tip of selections from the llible. For the convenience of children and better to facilitate the work, tho book is graded in its arrangement. Those selections appearing llrst on Its pages are adapted to the needs mill intel lectual .standards of the lower grades of the grammar school, tho latter part of the book being belter suited for more mature minds. Quotations nro given in the book to slunv that men dilfcrinir widely hi relbrlous b. .. - - ,.,w,,. lief, ranging from Professor Huxley to ii, i'...... i i... i i i... . ....-:,. the scheme! that has been carried out. "in, ii.i,ii iiiiiur;,i--ii nisi. Hiii'M n HELD FOR MURDER. Minimi .I.IpcII St-nl It, .lull Without II. lit ill 0ivrii, Kim., for W'lfr Murilrr. ilsivnin, Kim., Feb. 17. Tho pre liminary examination of .Marion As bell, accused of murdering his tvlfo on January as, closed yesterday after noon, the defendant being bound over to the next term of court without bail. The examination was held In tho opera house, In order to accommodate the throng which had assembled from the adjacent towns mid country. Asbcll was once the ehamplor. wrestler of Kansas; is rich; has served a term hi the penitentiary; has Ik-ch tried for perjury mid other offenses; has had two wives, both dead, mid is now accused of killing liertha White house, uuother step-duuglitcr, whose .mysterious death occurred several years ago. BRUTAL FOOTPADS. in lllil .111111 Atumillfil ami Itohliril uml l.t-fl fo IHn t'nilnr Trrtlr. Four Sen rr, Kan., Feb. 17. II. S. Ilruinive.ll, tigeilS.-i years, wus assaulted by two tramps on a Memphis railroad trestle about ,H o'clock lust night. Ho was knocked down and fell through the trestle to the ground twcnty-tlvo feet below. One leg was broken and he sustained other Injuries from which he may die. The tramps robbed tho Injured man, and left It i tit where ho had fallen. About o'clock this morn ing, after lying helpless for about eight hours, his moan Ing was heard by the night watchman of the Fort Scott Hydraulic Cement works, who summoned aid and removed him to .Mercy hospital. KANSAS POPULISTS. Twii Contention llrcltlt-tl l'wu I7 III" SlHttl tVlllml Ciiiiiiutllrip, Toitka, Kan., Feb. 17. The State central committee of the People's par ty last night issued calls for two Statu conventions, the llrst to he held at Hutchinson March is to select nation al delegates ami the second at Ablleno August.! ti iiominnte State ofllccrs. The basis bl representation for thu Hutchinson convention will be one delegate-at-largi! for evcy county and ono for ivovy .100 votes cast for Lew oiling in 's'.i. For the Ablleno con vention, one at large for every county ami one for every '.'.'ill votes east for Lewelliiigin I.V.M. This will miiko a convention of about ."ii( delegatea at Hutchinson and about Goo at Ablleno. IVHIltlruwr In l';ivnr of lliillllllu L.ittiiKNCH, Kan., Feb. 17.- - W. J. lliiehiiu has secured the support of tha Douglas county delegation for Con gressman O. L. Miller to run In sue .Mission. Iluchau was hero yesterday ind all arrangements were iiitide, the Douglas county candidates withiiriw ifig. Caucusing for several days ended last night with a unanimous vote for Iluchau. Morphlun unil liniiiiliiteil l.ovr. .i:-i intiK, Okln.. Fel). 17 Miss Stel la Xnrno of Cooper was found dead in her bed at her mother's homo Thurs day morning, with an empty morphine bottle at her side. Disupunlnlmcnt in love was the cause of the deed. NEWS IN BRIEF. I'epresenlatlvcs of the Southwest ern Millers' association are in Wash ington hustling Congressmen for reciprocity laws on export of bread stuffs. The new I per cent bonds are not so much In demand in tho open market. Tho Nebraska Prohibition conven tion declared for free silver at MS to 1. A blacksmith shot and killed an oflieer at Frankfort, Ky., and was him self slain. The Keller family were acquitted of the murder of Clara Shanks ut Terra Haute, Ind. Champ Clark says that he will prob ably bo a candidate for emigres in the Ninth district. The llocntgcn rays are to be used in an attempt to locate a bullet in a Louisville man's skull. Judge lllchard II. Clark of Iho Ceorgia supremo court was found dead in his hotel room lu Atlanta, Covornor llradley promises to send troops to protect Jackson and Walling if thoy are taken to Newport, Ivy. Tho Nevada Electric and Oas Com pany has tiled suit against tlie city of Nevada, Mo., for SIJ'OO alleged back pay for lighting the streets. Miss Minnie F.dson was asphyxiated iu the homo of C. A. iUhe, tho New York match manufacturer, under peculiar circumstances', Kaho Is under arrest and can't bccuro bait, Prineo lioris of llulguria wua bap tism! into tlitCrrk church. CHICAGO'S f 5 a sv.' II 7JT 1C . Js3Sgr. 7fu'rNSMttt-MHMB il r-,Air!f?&,35?r5y5B