* I ON THE VELDT # A South African Love Story ( Continued. ) Here John Martin met him with an old-fashioned English welcome . and Hcndrlck was ushered Into the sitting room , where sat Nancy and her lover. Nancy greeted him heartily , If some what shyly : "I am glad to see you , Hendrick let me introduce you to Mr. Harvey. Dick , this is our friend , Henry Hoop- stad. " "I am very glad to know you ; we can't have too many friends these troublous times. You look like a fighting man. I hope you are with us ? " "I cannot fight against Miss Martin's countrymen , and the blood in my veins Is more English than Dutch. I amen on my way now to volunteer. " "Then we are well met ; I am enroll ing a body of volunteers to act as scouts. I saddle in a few hours , so if you are willing we go together. " "I ask nothing better. But what of Miss Martin surely she must not stay here. " "I am glad you add your entreaties to mine. I am trying to persuade Mr. Martin and Nancy to retire to the coast until danger is past. " "That's all right , Dick , " answered Mr. Martin. "I should like to persuade Nancy to go , but I am going to stick to the farm. " "You run great risk , Mr. Martin , " said Hendrick. "If you stay here you will be commanded to join the Boer army. " "I am an Englishman , and my farm is in Natal ; that , I take it , is out of their jurisdiction. " "Possibly , but I hardly think they will draw so fine a line. " "Well , anyway , I stay here , and It won't be healthy for the commando that interferes with me. " "Then , if you are so determined , I must ask you to be equally determined in insisting upon Miss Nancy going to Durban. My married sister lives there , and she would be quite safe. " After much discussion it was decid ed that Nancy should depart for Dur ban immediately , with Hendrick for an escort. Dick Harvey would accom pany them as far as Mooi river , where he would have to leave them , and Hendrick was to rejoin Dick as soon as Nancy was safe on the coast. Hen drick knew now that Nancy could nev er be to him more than a friend , and in that friendship he determined that no sacrifice should be too great for him. him.The three rode together until Dick had to leave them ; then , with a tender and almost heart-rending farewell , he passed her into the care of Hendrick and departed. They reached Durban without mishap , and Hendrick , hav ing handed Nancy to the care of his ; sister , prepared to return. "I thank you , Hendrick , for your ; care of me. " "I wish no thanks ; to be of service to you is the aim and end of my life. " She looked at him curiously and seemed to penetrate his secret. : "I am going to the war , " he contin ued , slowly , fixing his gaze upon the : ground ; "to fight for your countrymen and you. It may be that I shall not survive , and I should like you to think kindly of me. You are the only Eng ns lish woman I have been privileged s ; to know with any degree of friendship , tl ; and the days have passed happily with tlH me. A hope full of vanity was born H within me that perhaps the caprice of hitl fate might turn your heart towards tlN me in love. Forgive me for saying tlk this. I am only a fooling man , but k I thought I would like you to know. " "Poor Hendrick ! " hi hih "I have seen the man you love , and h my vanity is dead. Good-bye. I should k like may I er I should like to kiss PI your hand to seal my vow that hence forth my life is consecrated to serving lub you and yours to the death. " b The tears rolled down her cheeks as she gave him her hand. The strong h man kissed It passionately and de tce parted. e ( Hendrick made his way back to Dick ta Harvey , and was formally enrolled as a volunteer. News came soon after that the Boers had crossed the bor der and were invading Natal , and Captain ai aifl tain Harvey began to _ have fears for fl the safety of John Martin. He con sulted Hendrick on the subject. st "What do you think of it , Hoop- stol stad ? " ol olei "Bad , very bad. John Martin will ei have to join a commando , or be shot. " lim "So I fear , and I want you to start m tonight and make your way to Gala- w don Farm. If you find John Martin sc there persuade him to come back with scw you ; but if our worst fears are realiz w ed , and he has disappeared , find out ct : what has become of him. " t "I will start in an hour , and I thank a is you for giving me the opportunity. " PIni "Good luck go with you. " ni nim In an hour Hendrick took the road m for John Martin's farm. Numerous tr parties of Boers were about , and ex treme caution was necessary. This 'I ' meant slow progress , and it was not until the second evening that he reach ed the homestead. Dismounting , he rapped on the door , but elicited no response , and it was soon evident that it John Martin was absent. Upon look ing round , Hendrick discovered the lac lad < frightened face of a Kaffir boy , peep ing at him over a fence. d "Halloa , Cabbage ! Where is your T master ? " h "Baas ! him dun gorn 'way. " vn "Where to ? " n "Baas Shiel 'im dun took 'im 'way. " ) "Shiel ? " "Sarten , 'im ride up , big many , took Baas Mart'n , tied um-hands , an' dun gorn 'way. " , "Which way did * they ride ? " "Cabbage um follow Baas Glencoe then um come back here an' wait fo' Baas. " And then Hendrick realized that the worst had come to pass , and John Martin was a prisoner in the hands of Commander Shiel. "I will not return with such meagre news , " he said to himself. "I will push on toward Glencoe and learn more , even if I have to penetrate in their camp. " He accordingly made his way to wards Glencoe and found his progress more difficult every mile. Time after time he was stopped by bands of Boers , but always got away by saying that he was riding to join Shiel's com mando. As he had taken the precau tion to wear his own clothes , this ex planation was accepted as satisfactory. Nearing the heights of Glencoe , Hendrick thought it prudent to re main in hiding until evening. Teth ering his horse In a small wood , he concealed himself in some bushes and endeavored to get some sleep. He was awakened some hours later by the sound of voices , and peering from his place of concealment , he discerned a party of Boers on horseback about twelve yards away. "Do you think they will attack to night ? " "Either tonight or tomorrow morn ing. Villjoen brought word. " "Well , he is a reliable scoundrel. " "A good spy. Well , if the cursed Rooineks storm Glencoe they will find our guns manned by their own coun trymen. " "Aye ! manned by Rooineks with their hands tied behind their backs. Ha , ha , a good plan of Shiel's to truss those who refuse to fight and make them targets for their friends. I'm sorry for John Martin , though he was a good friend. " They moved away , and Hendrick realized from their conversation that Shiel had tied those who had refused to join his commando behind the Boer guns , so that there was every possi bility of their being killed should the English make an assault. Carefully picking his way he led his horse to within two miles of the Boer position. After making the animal se cure he proceeded on foot. He ad vanced at first without any attempt at concealment , answering when chal lenged that he was on his way to Shiel with news of the enemy. The audacity of this proceeding was justified by its success , and Hendrick found himself well'inside the Boer position almost without question. On the ridge where the guns were posted ome twenty men were lying. Hen- Irick walked among them unsuspect- d. They could not tell whether he lad just joined the commando or had 3een with them for weeks. New ar- ivals were pouring in daily. Passing along the ridge Hendrick ame to the guns , and there , with his lands tied behind him and secured to he gun carriage , lay John Martin. "Mr. Martin ! " The captive looked at him wearily. "I am Hendrick sst make no loise do not speak. Miss Nancy is afe at Durban. The English storm his position tomorrow , I will cut your ends , but it is all I can do for you. 'f you can escape you will find my lorse in the brush , two miles along he road to the right. Should you see Tancy again , say I did my best to teep my promise. " He hastily severed the captive's ends , and bidding Martin hold his lands ; as if still tied , he left him the cnife ; and passed along the ridge. He roceeded down the mountain and was ust congratulating himself on his ucky escape , when he was confronted J y ; a band of armed men. They challenged him , and he gave us : usual reply that he was on his way o Commander Shiel. The band open- id out , and Hendrick was faced by a all man on horseback. "I am Commander Shiel. Who are rou and what do you want ? " For a moment Hendrick was silent , ind before he could speak a light was lashed ; on his face. "I know him it is Hendrick Hoop- itad , " cried a voice. "Hoopstad , the man who refused to bey the call of the government , and snlisted as a volunteer with the Eng- ish ! You see , we are well informed , ny brave spy. Bring him along , men , ve will show him the reward we re- Hendrick was seized by rough and villing hands and hurried to the Boer amp. Without any delay he was sen- enced to be shot at break of day , and he was being taken from Shiel's iresence he heard a messenger an- * lounce the news that John Martin had nade his escape and could not be raced. "Thank God ! ' he exclaimed aloud. g do not die in vain. " . ( To be continued. ) Tark'sh Women Can Marry at Nlnr. vf vt The Turkish woman is marriageable f the age of 9 years , and by Turkish I aw , at that age , if married , she is H ompetent to manage her property and S lispose of one-third of her fortune , fhe law allows her to abandon her msband's house for just cause , and E yill protect her in so doing. She can- a lot be compelled to labor for the sup- ort of her husband. 1 ; TALMAG-E'S SERMON. TIMELY DISCOURSE ON RELIG IOUS DOCTRINES. lie Would Frco Humanity From the Gravcclothos of Old Kcclosiastlcal Dog mas Faith In Christ the Teat of True Christianity. [ Copyright , 1900. by Louis Klopsch. ] Text is John xi. 44 : "Loose him and let him go. " My Bible is at the p'ace of this text written all over with lead , pencil marks made at Bethany on the ruins of the house of Mary and Martha and Lazarus. We dismounted from our horses on the way up from Jordan to the Dead sea. Bethany was the sum mer evening retreat of Jesus. After spending the day in the hot city of Jerusalem he would come out there al most every evening to the house of his three friends. I think the occu pants of that house were orphans , for the father and mother are .not men tioned. But the son and two daugh ters must have inherited property , for it must have been , judging from what I saw of the foundations and the size of the rooms , an opulent home. Laza rus , the brother , was now at the head of the household , and his sisters de pended on him and were proud of him , for he was very popular , and every body liked him , and these girls were splendid girls Martha a first rate housekeeper and Mary a spirituelle , somewhat dreamy , but affectionate and as good a girl as could be found in all Palestine. But one day Lazar us got sick. The sisters were in con sternation. Father gone , and mother gone , they feel very nervous lest they lose their brother also. Disease did its quick work. How the girls hung over his pillow ! Not much sleep about that house no sleep at all. From the characteristics otherwise developed , I judge that Martha pre pared the medicines and made tempt ing dishes of food for the poor appe tite of the sufferer , but Mary prayed and sobbed. Worse and worse gets Lazarus until the doctor announces that he can do no more. The shriek that went up from that household when the last breath had been drawn and the two sisters were being led by sympathizers into the adjoining room all those of us can imagine who have had our own hearts broken. But why was not Jesus there as he so often had been ? Far away in the country dis tricts , preaching , healing other sick , how unfortunate that this omnipotent Doctor had not been at that domestic crisis in Bethany. When at last Jesus arrived in Bethany , Lazarus had been buried four days and dissolution had taken place. In that climate the breathless body disintegrates more rapidly than in ours. If , immediately after decease , the body had been awakened into life , unbelievers might have said he was only in a comatose state or in a sort of trance and by some vigorous manipulation or power ful stimulant vitality had been re newed. No ! Four days dead. The Sepulchcr of Christ. At the door of the sepulcher is a crowd of people , but the three most memorable . are Jesus , who was the family friend , and the two bereft sis ters. We went into the traditional , tomb ' one December day , and it is deep down ' and dark , and with torches we explored it. We found it all quiet that afternoon of our visit , but the day spoken of in the Bible there was pres ent an excited multitude. I wonder what Jesus will do ? He orders the door of the grave removed , and then he be gins to descend the steps , Mary and Martha close after him , and the crowd after them. Deeper down into the shadows and deeper ! The hot tears of Jesus roll over his cheeks and splash upon the back of his hands. Were ever so many sorrows com pressed into so small a space as in 3 that group pressing on down after Christ , all'the time bemoaning that he had not come before ? Now all the whispering and all the crying and all the sounds of shuffling ( feet are stopped. It is the silence of expectancy. Death had conquered , but . now the vanquisher of death confront ed the scene. Amid the awful hush of the tomb , the familiar name which * Christ had often had upon his lips in e . the hospitalities of the village home , came back to his tongue , and with a pathos and an almightiness of which 3 the resurrection of the last day shall only be an echo he cries , "Lazarus , * come forth ! " The eyes of the slum- berer open , and he rises and comes to r 5 the foot of the steps and with great difficulty begins to ascend , for the cerements of the tomb are yet on him , a and his feet are fast and his hands are aT. fast and the impediments to all his T. movements are so great that Jesus c commands : "Take off these cere- Unfasten these graveclotb.es ! Loose him , and let him go ! " Oh , I am so glad that after the Lord raised Lazarus he went on and com manded the loosening of the cords that bound his feet so that he could walk and the breaking off of the cerement that bound his hands so that he could stretch out his arms in salutation and the tearing off of the bandage from around his jaws so that he could speak. What would resurrected life have been to Lazarus if he had not been freed from all those cripplements of his body ? I am glad that Christ com manded his complete emancipation , saying , "Loose him , and let him go. " Only Half Liberated. The unfortunate thing now is that so many Christians are only half liber ated. They have been raised from the death and burial of sin into spiritual life , but tt-ey yet have the graveclothes on them. They are , like Lazarus , hob bling up the stairs of the tomb bound hand and foot , and the object of this sermon Is to help free their body and free their souls , and I shall try to obey the Master's command that comes to me and comes to every minister of re ligion , "Loose him , and let him go ! " Many are bound hand and foot by religious creeds. Let no man misinter pret me as antagonizing creeds. I have eight or ten of them a creed about religion , a creed about art , a creed about social life , a creed about govern ment , and so on. 'A creed is something that a man believes , whether it be written or unwritten. The Presbyteri an church is now agitated about its creed. Some good men in it are for keeping it because it was framed from the belief of John Calvin. Other good men in it want revision. I am with neither party. Instead of revision I want substitution. I was sorry to have the question disturbed at all. The creed did iiot hinder us from offering the pardon and the comfort of the gos pel to all men , and the Westminster Confession has not interfered with me one minute. But now that the elec tric lights have been turned on the imperfections of that creed and everything that man fashions is im perfect let us put the old creed re spectfully aside and get a brand new one. It is impossible that people who lived hundreds of years ago should fashion an appropriate creed for our times. John Calvin was a great and good man , but he died 336 years ago. The best centuries of Bible study have come since then , and explorers have done their work , and you might as well have the world go back and stick to what Robert Fulton knew about steamboats and .reject the subsequent improvements in navigation , and go back to John Gutenberg , the inventor of the art of printing , and reject all modern newspaper presses , and go back to the time when telegraphy was the elevating of signals or the burning of bonfires on the hilltops and reject the magnetic wire which is the tongue of nations as to ignore all the exegetes and the philologists and the theo logians of the last 336 years and put your head under the sleeve of the gown of a sixteenth century doctor. I could call the names of twenty living Presbyterian ministers of religion who could make a better creed than John Calvin. The nineteenth century ought not to be called to sit at the feet of the sixteenth. Change In Conditions. "But , " you say , "it is the same old Bible , and John Calvin had that as well as the present student of the Scriptures. " Yes ; so it is the same old sun in the heavens , but in our time it has gone to making daguerreotypes and photographs. It is the same old water ; but in our century it has gone to running steam engines. It is the same old electricity ; but in our time it has become a lightning footed er rand boy. So it is the old Bible , but new applications , new uses , new in terpretations. You must remember that during the last 300 years words have changed their meaning , and some of them now mean more and some less. I do not think that John Calvin be lieved , as some say he did , in the dam nation of infants , although some of the recent hot disputes would seem to im ply that there is such a thing as the damnation of infants. A man who be lieves in the damnation of infants him self deserves to lose heaven. I do not , think any good man could admit such a possibility. What Christ will do with all the babies in the next world I con clude ! from what he did with the babies in Palestine when he hugged them and kissed them. When some of you grown people go out of this world , your doubtful destiny will be an em barrassment to ministers officiating at your obsequies , who will have to be cautious so as not to hurt surviving friends. But when the darling children go there are no "ifs" or "buts" or guesses. We must remember that good John Calvin was a logician and a metaphysi cian , and by the proclivities of his na ture put some things in an unfortun ate way. Logic has its use and meta physics has its use , but they are not good at making creeds. A gardener hands you a blooming rose , dewy , fresh , but a severe botanist comes to you with a rose and says , "I will show you the structure of this rose , " and he proceeds to take it apart and pulls off the leaves and he says , "There are the petals , " and he takes out the anthers , and he says , "Just look at the wonder ful structure of these floral pillars ! " - and then he cuts the stem to show you the juices of the plant. So logic or metaphysics takes the aromatic rose of the Christian religion and says , "I will just show you how this rose of religion was fashioned , " and it pulls off of it a piece and says , "That is the ' human will , " and another piece and says , "This is God's will , " and another piece and says , "This is sovereignly , " \ and another piece and says , "This is free agency , " this is this , and that is that. And while I stand looking at the B fragments of the rose pulled apart , one whom the Marys took for a gardener comes in and presents me with a crim son rose , red as blood , and says , "In hale the sweetness of this ; wear it on your heart , and wear it forever. " I must confess that I prefer the rose in i full bloom to the rose pulled apart. m * P < Ours JTot the Only World. Ii Iivi Backed up by the teachings of your vi Bible , just look through the telescope 9 ] some bright night and see how many ; worlds there are and reflect that ali m yea have seen , compared with the number of worlds in existence , are less than the fingers of your right hand as compared with all the fingers of the human race. How foolish , then , for us to think that ours is the only world fit for us to stay in. I think that all the stars are inhabited and by beings like the human race In feelings and sentiments , and the differences in lung respiration and heart beat and physical conformation , their physical conformation fit for the climate of their world and our physical conformation mation fit for the climate of our world. So we shall feel at home In any of the stellar neighborhoods , our physical limitations having ceased. One of our first realizations In get ting out of this world , I think , will be that in this world we were very much pent up and had cramped apartments and were kept on the limits. The most even of our small world , is water , and the water says to the human race. "Don't come here or you will drown. " A few thousand feet up the atmos phere is uninhabitable , and the atmos phere says to the human race , "Don't come up here or you cannot breathe. " A few miles down the earth is a fur nace of fire , and the fire says , "Don't come here or you will burn. " The caverns of the mountains are full of poisonous gases , and the gases say , "Don't come here or you will be as phyxiated. " And , crossing a track , you must look out or you will be crushed. And , standing by a steam boiler , you must look out or you will be blown up. And pneumonias and pleurisies and consumptions and apoplexies go across this earth in flocks , in droves , In herds , and it is a world of equinoxes and cyclones and graves. Yet we are under the delusion that it is the only place fit to stay in. We want to stick to the wet plank in midocean while the great ship , the City of God , of the Ce lestial line , goes sailing past and would gladly take us up in a lifeboat. My Christian friends , let me tear off your despondencies and frights about dissolution. My Lord commands me regarding you , saying , "Loose him , and let him go ! " Getting Into the Light. "But , " you say , "I fear to go because the future is so full of mystery. " Well , I will tell you how to treat the mys teries. The mysteries have ceased bothering me , for I do as the judges of your courts often do. They hear all the arguments in the case and they say , "I will take these papers and give you my decision next week. " So I have heard all the arguments in regard to the next world , and some things are uncertain and full of mystery , and so I fold up the papers and reserve until the next world my decision about them. I can there study all the mys teries to better advantage , for the light will be better and my faculties strong er , and I will ask the Christian philos ophers , who have had all the advan tages of heaven for centuries , to help me , and I may be per mitted myself humbly to ask the Lord , and I think there will be only one mystery left ; that will be how one so unworthy as myself got into such an enraptured place. Come up out of the sepulchral shadows. If you are not Christians by faith in Christ , come up into the light ; and if you are already like Lazarus , reanimated , but still have your grave clothes on , get rid of them. The command is , "Loose him , and let . * him go. " The only part of the journey I made i years ago to Palestine that I really s dreaded was the landing at Joppa. \ That is the port of entrance for the t Holy Land , and there are many rocks and in rough weather people cannot land at all. The boats taking the people ple from the steamer to the docks must run between reefs that looked to me to be about 50 feet apart , and one mistroke of an oarsman or an unex pected wave has sometimes been fatal and hundreds have perished along those reefs. Besides that , as we left Port Said the evening before , an old traveler said : "The wind is just right to give you a rough landing at Joppa ; indeed I think you will not be able to land at all. " The fact was that when our Mediterranean steamer dropped anchor near Joppa and we put out for shore in the small boat , the water was as still as though it had been sound asleep a hundred years , and we landed as easily as I entered this pulpit. Well , your fears have pictured for you an appalling arrival at the end of your voyage of life , and they say that the seas will run high and that the breakers - ers will swallow you up , or that if you ti reach Canaan at all , it will be a very tisi rough landing. The very opposite will sip be true if you have the eternal God for p v-our portion. Your disembarkation t : ( Cor the promised land will be ag : smooth as was ours at Palestine. Christ will meet you far out at sea and pilot you into complete safety , and you will land with a hosanna on one side Df you and a hallelujah on the other. 'Land ahead ! " Its fruits are waving O'er the hill of fadeless green \nd the living waters laving J : Shores where heavenly forms are S seen. S : ( Rocks and storms I'll fear no more dh When on that eternal shore. Drop the anchor , furl the sail ! I am safe within the veil ! America Leads the World. c < The United States is now the world's fcd , greatest producer and exporter of d neats , which form one of the most im- h 71 ortant features of the export trade , n 1SS7 the total exportation of pro- isions and live animals was $102,774- w 110 , and in 1899 their total value was. 207,105,637 , having thus doubled neantime , and forming in 1899 17.2 ier cent of the total exports of that sc C : ( ear. p > 5T = a Making Preparation to Leave for His Post of Duty- WILL BE INAUGURATED MAY IS ! The New Oovornment to lie b t Up , Af tei Temporarily Which the Governor Will Oc- The Heturn to the United States caslon to Me Marked With BeUUlnB Ceremonies. WASHINGTON , D. C. , April 18. Mr. Alien , the newly chosen governor of Porto Rico , Is arranging to leave Washington for San Juan toward the end of the present week. He will bo accompanied by Mrs. Allen and their daughter. The trip will be made on the United States ship Dolphin , Cap tain Southerland. which is now lying at the navy yard. It is Governor Al len's intention to make this a flying visit. He will set up the new civil gov ernment and inside of three weeks will return to the United States and ar range his private affairs. The president and Secretary Long have determined that the inauguration of the civil government in Porto Rico shall be marked with as much pomp as is befitting an event of that magni tude. Therefore , the United States will see to it that there is at San Juan on the occasion of the Inauguration of the first American governor a digni fied and impressive ceremony that will fix the event In the minds of the pee ple. ple.The United States ship Dolphin , which will carry Mr. Allen to San Juan , will enter the harbor there , es corted by the entire North Atlantic squadron under the command of Rear Admiral Farquhar on his flagship New- York. The squadron is now at Ber muda and will time its movements seas as to arrive off the north coast of Porto Rico about the time the Dolphin is sighted. Governor Davis will be Inaugurated at San Juan on May 1 , and General Davis , the military governor , will turn out all of the United States troops un der his command in honor of the occa sion. The ships of the squadron will fire salutes , which will be answered by the shore batteries. There will be some speeches and at night the fleet will use their electric lights and there will be general illuminations. ROBERTS READY TO ADVANCE Doer Tactic * Force the Hand of the Itrltlsh Commander. LONDON , April 18. At last Roberts seems to be on tne eve of maKing nis main advance towards Pretoria. Un less all the usually reliable sources of information and ail the indications smuggled past the censor are at fault the British army within a few days will be marching northward. After many premature and unrounded re ports that have purported to tell of this move there is naturally , even In the best informed quarters , considerable hesitancy in definitely settling upon the day Lord Roberts Is likely to leave Bloemfonteln , but there is a settled im pression that it will occur either at the end of tnis week or tae beginning of next In the World. NEW LONDON , Conn. , April 18. The Eastern Shipbuilding company to day took possession of the land at Groton on which will be established its plant and at once set a gang of men at work clearing the land. With in three months the keels of two steamers , the largest in the world , will be laid. The steamers are for the trans-Pacific fleet of the Great North ern railway , and are to be of 34,000 tons displacement. Sustains Democratic Officials. FRANKFORT , Ky. , April 18. In the circuit court today Judge Cantrill over ruled the demurrers to the petitions filed by the democratic officers and sustained demurrers to the answers of the republican officers. The result : s in favor of the democrats and the re publicans can appeal now by refusing to plead further or may ask leave to amend their answer , which will oniy delay matters a few days. Soldiers Speedily Rally. MANILA , April -18. Twelve hun dred Tagalos attacked Case's battalion headquarters of the Fortieth regiment at Cagayan , Island of Mindanao on the 7th. The Americans had fifteen zasualties , while of the attacking force fifty were killed and thirty wounded ar taken prisoners. Close Down All Plants. CHICAGO. 111. , April 18. Labor iroubles in the building trades are stated by President John W. Lambert f the American Steel and Wire com pany as the reasons for orders issued oday closing down all the plants of he concern in the vicinity of Chicago- ill those at Joliet , 111. , excepting the Rockdalc mill and the evtensive plant it AndersonInd. Twelve plants were jrdered closed. Thousands of skilled fl - K-orkmen were temporarily suspended jy the action of the wire magnates. Iowa Man Kills Himself. DBS MOINES , la. , April 18. Frank 7 Faquit , secretary of the Des Moines sprinkling : company and prominent in ocial and business circles , was found lead < today with a bullet hole over hi' ; leart. Despondency was the cause as signed for the suicide. Miss French Dead. AMHERST Mass. , April 18.-Miss Mary Field French , aged 75 years a ousln of the late Eugene Field , and ° ra number of years his , guardian lied : suddenly at her home today. She th ; to'hlf i EUSene Field from W years First of the Expoaltlon Fetes ui PARIS , April 18. The first of i it ieries of official fetes to onnection with the lace tonight at the