4 5-' . 1' T 'a H' 4, &hfe Tencteneyio Shorten PresidentiaPCampaigns 1 By a Political Seer 7 r j..; ROB ABLY the National September The tendency of theHimes is to. abbreviate ; long campaign. The contests of "the present year show that there is nothing to be gained by holding conventions in June or July, and waiting for six' or eight weeks in which .11 J J , r II to notify the nominees. Sooner or later the whole business" will be done in the fall. This will give the politicians time to have their vaca- ttnno snrl ratnm in IisHok Vnni11tAn rnalro ItT thft tfnlceitS.' Pf ;ceuree the candidates will haveto -hustle a bit to get out their letters of ; iijceptane., ike better y They' will cut them snort The notification com , Hteesf wtil probably go from the convention halls direct to the homes of Mminee and 'deliver the goods' officially.; The candidate will get down to Wir betters tX, once and the campaign will begin in1 October. The country will welcome the change. .It ''won't be kept on the political for, two or three months And. what the cost tf conducting a presidential campaign will be considerably ca shed. . ' . . . . . -r - ' . --. : ' This arrangement would not coiiflict with state conventions. They could 4eetTthe week before national conventions, of the .week af ter, as seemed most,, lesirabiev and' the ' whole political, business, of the year cojihlbe bunched, and. Cane with. -' : ;. .- ,.' ' ' ' -: "' ':f--h$' . , (lf you. wIU look up the history of xtational conventions .you will see tnat .v Cwu tendency to shorter campaigns lias been, gathering ...imperceptibly, for , iaeay years. . :L':". -'; -'..: vV Away back In 1824, which was, before conventions were known as they . ti now known, the candidates were before the public for a-year and a half. wbe first convention was held in December, and the opposing party held theirs fa the May following.' Subsequent conventions were ' held in February, and . then May became the popular month. Then one party; the Whigs, fell back t December., but after that candidates were nominated.m, the same year as tSwt in which the election occurred. . - - ., U -1 believe the Democrats were the 'first to shorten tip th campaign by Mgs.inet a few weeks later. . ' ;:' ' ' i f J , U I am correct there was one national convention -that met as late as ftember. . That was the' Whig convention in 1856. The celebrated Charles 1 ton convention of 1860 met in April, but the country was more interested in "" w if,m u m VUMM V V NA , M W W M M&W W W W Mil 1 TTT T W V14 WW-v : M v .campaign began within, a fortnight. i - .The Republicans met in 1868 in ilay, and the Democrats met July 4. The -campaigns were under hot headway' by the middle of August or soonj after. She cboventions which named Garfield, Blaine, Cleveland; Harrison and Mc- fiQnley met in June; Bryan was nominated, both .times in .July, and this year tie Republicans did not meet until almost the last of 'June, while the Demo crats went over again to July. The McKinley-Bryan campaign of 1896 was . finder headway in August "The organizations were further along in their Tmofk. that jnonth than the organization of either party isnbwl But that was ' -ca excep&onaT campaign. ! " The country now sees that it is possible to have a short presidential cam- ealgn, en4 everybody is just as well satisfied. The conventions of the future will be held -later than ever. -Those of 1908 may not be held in the fall, but those of .1912 will com mighty near it Make a note of the prediction. oes the Eat Too Much r . By the Editor of What - T last there seemsd6br t 'lnTestig6s ,thathehman, family Cats vtoo;tnuch This;' ' qi course; does not, apply to every individual, ror tnere is no -STv .A"' J. Ji J. -1 1- . I uispute auoui uie iaci mat mwusanua 01 yeupie are poony fed and .improperly nourished; and .singularly enough; thes'e : ; do not belong always among the poorer classes. As a matter of fact, the middle classes are the well-to-do classes when it , comes to the question of the adequate nourishment of the human body to fit it for the daily and mental demands that re made upon it People who are well off in the world's goods are not always theones who adopt the most liberal and most , rational policy in the matter of electing a -diet that will contribute to their highest physical welfare and their ereatest personal enjoyment The table of the poor is not only the table of Intelligence and the table of plenty, but is quite often the table of hygienic and dietetic selection; for it is deprived of many of the vile culinary concoctions whih are dangerous and deleterious and which only Uie well-filled purse sup plies. Moreover, the employments of the poor are better calculated to bring about perfect alimentation and assimilation; and the penuriousness of the rich aite often makfl them scanty providers, depriving themselves of the more : nourishing edibles that are to be found in the markets; but taking the general average of the human family, It may be stated as a well-proven proposition ' 4hat the det of-civilised people is too ample, too hearty. In other words, we : -wlf eat ttfc much. , AnierAsans are undoubtedly the great meat eaters of the world, notwith- standi the fact that we have the most bountiful supply of all the most nour ishing foods that are-the products of widely diversified climate and many vari- dies of soil. The British soldiers in Africa, instead of being fed on rare roast beef, as we might naturally suppose from bur notions of British diet were giv- a a moderate allotment of vegetable and cereal foods with an occasional touch of jam to sweeten their rations and cheer their flagging spirits after the long march. The Japanese soldiers who are fighting in the far east live chiefly on rice and dried fish, while the Russian infantry and cavalry have a somewhat -kardier dieft because of the rigors of the climate in which. they have to conduct iheir canlpaign.'. It will be remembered that many hundred tons of candy were .Shipped to - our own soldiers in the Philippines during the campaign of occupa tion which followed the raising of our flag in the Archipelago. ; Since it has iteen found that mixing a moderate amount of sweets with a limited diet of egetables and other nourishing foods is good for the soldiers, who can con- jtend that it is not good for the man "in the ordinary walks of life? ; When Gossip ..... , By jRgneOrRepptier. OSSIP. after all, is fairly harmless, provided At is sensible and innocent The chief thing is that you receive :it for what it is' worth, and not magnify your friend's prattle or give idle words a terrible significance. All of us like to talk about 'our friends; all of us do tK'i'-.'--j-"ft..;--; of time; but that , doesn't mean that we like them , less "Or have the less confidence in them. You must take into con sideration the spirit v - s ; privacy that my Uncle Joseph is a cranky old gentleman; Try pernickety in his Ways. Are you, then, justified in going to Uncle Joseph mnn tiiincr him that I said he was a crank? If you have a bit of sense you now very well that his crankiness is mod that he has a thousand other virtues, which outweigh that fault Uncle Joseph, ok the ther hand, might tell you that I am a thoughtless fellow, given 4o taking the world lightly. Is it just to repeat to me that Uncle Joseph thinks me light-minded and brainless? You forget that; Uncle Joseph would the first to combat you if you said aught againsfc.me, and that down in his -Sieart he thinks I am one of the most promising lads' of his acquaintance. Gos- tip. then, is rarely evil m intention when it deals with friends. We speak of fSts, but in our hearts are a thousand reservations and the memory of many Vnrtnes. Knowing our own feelings. we hesitate less to criticise. The great -fhtag we must learn is that gossip is io be heard in the same kindly spirit and t. 43btLt it is not to be repeated. , Whoever, hears-wrongly, or whoever carries ill arards, wilfully, is in the devil's service. Gossip you will if yoh aTe human, but above carrying it, and be above misinterpreting a thing that has . been said about yourself. . Laugh at the criticisms of- your friends if they meet? your mn; smile indulgently and be; nice to tfeai if they talk of your faults, they '-' received iSTobbed of chance venom, and 23 jJonbly armed against me sung s or f a Conventions xf,; 1908 will be held ia is more to be desired tnan anypuing to - Eat. common agreement among scientific is Harmless X talk about theni and we will to the end of gossip, not the letter. I tell you in Iwhat particularly; endears him to me, your critics,ffor you can assure yourseli also appreciate your virtues. Gossip se the person who receives it cheerfully ortuce woman s Home. Companion. , Human Family I 1 jlTO SOPEN'-STOSSlpll " f I .. . . - . . House Gets Rue , k Falir Wreck Occurre Sa Atlantic ENGINEER ANlT FntEJI Engineer GuiHfome, Oldest gtneer on: Coast Une, MeetsTlnstaitt- ... l;irehtenlledydaiPojtal Clerk ; Injured-Passehsers Escape.) fWih Trivial lnjiiries 7 ..jr.; .41 which left Rocky Mount Tuesday morning at 5:17 o'clock : for Wilming ton, over the Atlantic Coast ' line, tan into an open switch at Warshaw a,bout 8 o'clock the engine overturning, .and killing Engineer Guilford : Horne, of Wilmington, land his colored 'fireman, WU1 Sterling. 2 The. s passengers were shaken up; but none was injred:ilr. Horne was the oldest engineer ine- employ of the Atlantic CoastIine, and the father of Engineer" W. H. orne of Rocky Mount Father and son met each other on- the road on their trains in the morning. 'V The wreck occurred ai a siding about one mile this side of Warshaw. The siding had formerly been used for load ing cars with wood, but had not been used for several' months past. !The switch ; was open, but how it came to be, open, at this time is not known Mr. Guilford H6rnet the engineer, and Will Sterling, bis- fireman were in stantly killed. It.-was; some time' be- fore they could be etricaied, as tbey were wedged between the" engine, and its tender. The " mail car was piled upon the tender, and all the cars were more or-less damaged.' Postal Clera Hdllingswdrh was badly injured, and Clerk Powell had to continue his run. All of. the passengers were more -or less shaken up, but noije df them were seriously hurt " - ' ; Mr. Home has been employed by thLjMr. Newlands replied that Mr. Bryan Coast Line for the last thirty-nW years. He was one of the most trust-' ed of all the men in the service yot the road. He lived in. Magnolia many years ago, where he was favorably known. - His death, has cast a gloom over the community,, especially noticeable among railroad people. The trains were: delayed for several hours, the 12 o'clock train not; reach , ipg here until 4:30 p. ra. , Wrecking trains wee: dispatched' bothJfrpm,1 BocKy Mpunt and. wlf miftgtot;i A Destructive Fire. j V Minneapolis, S pecial,4-Probably the worst fire that the city of Minneapolis has ever known occurredvhere Tues day night,, and at 12 : 30 o'clock ?3,W0,-' 000 worth of .property had Been de stroyed, with prospects -that the to tal loss will reach at least $ 5,000,000 The fire started in the photograpnie, supply house of O. H. Peck & Come; pany, on Fifth Ave nue south, and in less than one-hail hour thisfeuilding was, a mass wreckage-yflvext to the Peck ing is' the3'furnlture supply 'house of Boutelle Bros..1 the- largest house 'of its kind in the Northwest This build ing soon caught lire, sparks from, it being v carried' blocks by the norjh wind, .aided 'by cold weather, the fire-1 men meeting- diificulty iiheir work, as the fire burned ; itsaif out in one or " two buildings : knd the firemen's work, was entirely" directed tcfi Athe buildings in close proximity in. art .at tempi; to save them. It is reported. that three firemen lost their lives: ' - ' Alabama Cotton Growers.; . f: ' . Montgomery, Ala., SpeiaJ;,Gpm missipner. of Agriculture. R Ioole, has issued a letter: to the cotton i gr6W; meeting in all of the-towns audi cle on Tuesday, January 10th, to . di sc the best ahd most effective mode i manner of disposition;)i4 Vfhe "of action in making new cro05- oiH Fatal Shooting Affair.. i ; . BlkinV N.-.C.-.J Special. Newiii as 'just reached here that two . Alleghaney0 hiea are dyinglas the result of a pistol duel! at SpaVtalate Monday. :;'jMoxl ley ' and Acquilla : Rector had 'n?4e cattle trade; the day : beforeHah4; ;aftei the trading was , oyer. Rector wen awa.y and boastchat gpdone Moxley. Mox ey loaded up with corn iwhiskey and met RectoriM! Thorn p son's : storolflA quarrel gau. uuiu after the men ' began-, shooting, and . smoke v.cleared. Rector .had four wouhsamll Moxley one fatal " one. Moxley will.idie-: V Rector; may live.. Rector is a sober, peefupcitjzen fi; $10,000 For' a mo ac Nashville, Dec. 14 Houstont Bcftfti received a certified check from EviW1 Senate, Tuesday a number of .-. . tt l -r?trt)rivate nension; bills anil a f hills ville, Ind., for $10,000. . Four yearn ago an old gentlemna tell on the sidej walk in front of theiiotel and sevejtyj injured himself. Mr Bond went j'to his assistance, lifted hinrClfom -the ground and cared, for Aim until heihadv recoverea. Tne cneek was tne seauei. Mr.' Bond would not? disclose the name;; House JGets Bus v. amount of .miscelladfeoua ; hnino ,Mdftday,tarting, with pension" bills onsidefgjthe-HUi financial bill later ia .tus aay. a -number of bills ofiocalich&r : a aniuttournmcnt5torced for lack of a snorato;w,hen;anjattempt was made to : Pass ri,nei9iniaresoiuMoii Wnno the?irseof4tfee-Vas.hii lot ror, uie aiuci icau v;Kallway Ap- paNv!SP-X- V.- : . I The -hill :transf erring the? Forest Re- servis7fjomth' Secretary-of the n te riof to tb e Agricul tu rai Department, which has been pending Congress' for?. several years, was passed, . During discussion Of the financial bill Mr. Hill said we must get back to the gold standard,! which he learned from ery high' authorities had been "irre ocablyeetablisted .;Mr.WrtHi!.f was an in fluence; atwork'; to displace govern ment provided iRmbney with bank-pro-ided moneyl and thereby enabled the banks to paake he.profit on it "it is no w0nder,Thersaid, nhat nine-tenths of the bankers' are Republicans," add-? irg. thftt some i were depositories and others were hoping to? be. Duringia heated colloquy with Mr. Hill Mr. Wil liams said the biirunder consideration would double ?thc -possibility of the perpetration' of the1 "iniquitous wronr e predicted, that it simply syoulAv to-socialism..; The dse adjourned. Two Bills in the Senate. The Senate had under consideration the pure food and Philippine govern ment bill& The debate on the former was' confined -to falling attention to the inadeemaey of, the protection ; af forded the people of the United States- against impure foods and drugs The discussion of the Philippine bill related solely,? to the '.question of the guarantee by s the Philippine govern- meni' t.hc uigouie ui luieicsi ui bondl 'railroads in those' islands Mr. SpOnerr plWiscor ?in. and , Mr Bacon, of Georgia, leading in the criti cism. Tl suggest: on Was made by Mr. Nr rot Nevada, v that the Philisr tjernment snouid con- slruct ,:stem of rail roads pro poscd.ai iebate4" brought out the first referefico; in the Senate this ses sion to Judge! Patke'r's views of the Philippine question, caused 4 . by Mr. Newlands quoting from , certain ut terances of William J. Bryan and Mr. Roosevelt Mr. Foraker inquired why he had ignored Judge Parker, and .fdr eight years stood as the leader of ihe Democratic party. No action was Itaken on the bill and the Senate ad journed. The Smoot Matter. tv2Chree.' witnesses were heard Mon day in the case of Senator -Reed Smoot .before the Senate committee on privi iJeges andlelectionsethe committee re suming its investigations after a long ecess, The first was Rev. J. W. Buck ley edftor of the Christian Advocate Of -Ifew York, who told of a Mormon raeetjhg he attended;fin Salt Lake, Utah 'last summer, in which President run?tiisplur the t Churi. .tcaUii it e u mn- emqnies that .have'iaken"' placeiinl Endowment THouse ; and concerning ecclesiastical divorces granted by the -Church; ,and John Heriry Hamlin told of jthe plural marriage of his sister, Lilian Hamlin, to Apostle Abrain t&hhon,! which sceremony,, he said, he understood to' have been performed by president Smith since- the manifesto -of 1890. Most of tne testimony relat- to the inside Church policy, but did v connect ? Senator Smoot, with any Of; the alleged violations of. State- or pfJDr. Buckley told of a speech of jfn'esident Smith on the subject of vmarriage. . The witness said Presi- nent omiin aeienaea tne iviarman mar riage, and declared thatlpolygamy was hot adultery, but was ,a . system of marriage. . President Smith ,was quot edr by the witness as saying that he could not- give up any of hls;wives. , ?3ln answer to questions by Senator QverjaJV Mr. Reynolds said marriages were ' i)imed with dead, persons in thej "ment House. ' ' ;i llmpeath Judge Swayne. Mi Si,? as a grand jury, the House of Representatives Tuesday, with almost Kfull '.membership and after more than five hours discussion to the exclusion vof aft'ptherr business, adopted a resolu tion providing for the impeachment of Judge Chas. Swayne. oft the northern district of. Florida, for "high crimes and misdemeanors." The case against .the respondent was clearly set out by !Mr. Palmer, of Pennsylvania, chairman of the sub-committee of the judiciary committee, which heard the evidence in the case. He carefully dissected the; evidence bearing on, each of the speci fications, and said that if it were found that Judge Swayne had done well, he; should be vindicated, but if he had donjfcjll,vb'e should be sent to trial, fitmtpe his excuses and aoolosies mav or may not receive consideration." He wis followed by Messrs. Clayton, .of. Alabama: Powers, of Massachusetts: Henry, of Texas, and Lamar, of Elori. da, "'each of whom in most vigorous" term' advocated impeachment! Messrs. Gillett, of California, and Littlefield; of Maine in speeches opposed ;tbeir col leagues on all the specifications" except; one,; as to the account rendered to thel, government by Judge Swayne for-traV-' eling expenses., ... '.'"' . . . . , Pirst Since 1876. ( , v . . - Throughoutthe sesson intense-jnter-estwas shown by members, Following the'ildoptfbn of the impeachmeh't res-. blution, a provision was made fbr the appointment of five members to ..notify the.; Senate r of the impeachmeht- and for a committee pf sjeven to present the caiei to the Senate ? The nroceedinss Wetelthe first their kind since, the impeachment in of General W. W. Who was Secretary of "War in President Grant's" iabinet. ; ' t;IfriteCfsrbni8,Jn Senate. private pension bills and a few bills of ga semi-public character were pass ed; and ; there was some discussion of ; the pure' food bill by Messrs. Mc fCkimber,xPlatt :Conn.); and Spoon er. A resolution granting j the use of the Pension office building for the inaugu ral ball was also passed. Mr. Bailey expressed opposition to it, The Sen ttfn afl-fo-siTTirwl ; r ed he: would not give i FIERY TRAGEDY family Murdered and Bodies - .Were Burned in Building v.1 ICCUMED IN THE HEART OF TOWN iharred Remains of Mr. B. B. Hughes, His Wife and Tvo Daughters Found in the Smoking; Ruins, of Their Home in the Center of Trenton, S. A BuHet Through the ; Man's . Head and the Skii! Is of the Women Cru8h ed Robbery the Supposed Motive Governor tleyward Offers a Reward. ' Augusta SpeciaLA special to The !hrpnicle from Edgefield says:- 'The most hideous of all human hor ors; ' occurred at Trenton Thursday lighequai in horror to the Statesboro tffair, if: the general accepted theory be rue, that !the victims were first mur lered before the house .Was fired. At o'clock this morning the residence of B. B. Hughes, centrally: located in he town, Was discovered on fire. Neigh- Kjrs rushed'to the scene, but the fire tad progressed so far that entrance to he house was Impossible. At once in- luiry was- made as to the whereabouts f the inmates, it being thought that hey had made their escape in their light clothes. As soon as the fire had lied down sufficiently, a fearful scene net the eyes of the beholders. There ay the. charred and . almost unrecog nizable ibodies of the Entire family, con tisting of Mri'Hughes,. his rife, Eva, ind . two young daughters, Emmie, iged 19, and' tHattie, 14 years , of age. Ir. Hughes; body? lay just below where ras situated the door leading rrom nis 'pom to the hall, with a bullet heli Jirough the upper part of his head. A pistol with one ? empty chamber lay lear by. Part of his charred . clothes jeere on his Person, showing that he aras dressed at the time he met death. rhe body of his -wife -was on the. bed iprinzs. while those of the young ladies vere similarly situated. The skulls oi Jiese three were crushed as if hit with in axe or some blunt instrument. Theii todies when found occupied a most na tural position, with nothing to indicate i struggle, showing that they had been itruck and done to death, while asleep, rhe news spread like wildfire and soon ihe entire surrounding country was on '.he scene. "Under the direction of , Solicioti rhurmond. a coroner's jury was im paneled, but as yet no testimony has afipn takp.n. it beine thought best tc iwait further developments. It was said :hree tracks were discovered-leading from the field up to the rear of th aouse. The county blood hounds were secured and put on the train,- but this effort-has availed nothing. The horroi (s veiled in mystery. Every externa evidence goes to show that the familj were all killed before the house wai fired. One theory is the house was en fArri frf rtw nnroose of robbery: thai .rti hriiiia'isetedtbibber .pliSJthnjr 94mg'ni'lUrt(tffne re -if Rniipitnr Thurmond. Governor ttey ward has offered a reward for the ap prehension of the guilty parties Japs Prepared to Spend the Winter nAY ohi'u rTTfisLdnuaiters. vii iroon Ttv rahle. Delayed in Trana mission.) In the villages near actual Japanese line houses are th be ing repaired and built, scores of welli are being dug, , villages are being de r,rioi nt trees, and Quantities .of tue are heine nrenared. Every indicatioi tbe intention to remain the present line aunng uio vym c. The cold weather is not affecting tn Japanese, although the temperatun has already fallen to. a few degreei below zero. There are few sick men Bank Robbed. Enid, Okla,, Special. xne j armera State Bank, of Lambert, has been rob bed by three men, who dynamited tht safe, obtaining $3,000 as their booty Wnilo two robbers were t inside, th third guarded them, holding thi horses. The robbers escaped, makin; for the Gloss mountains. A posse ii in nursuit. , No More Assaults. -Tokio, By Cable. In disabling thi Russian fleet at Port Arthur, preclud ing the possibility of its being abh tp reenforce the Russian, second Paci flc (Baltic) squadron; the Japanesi baveidpllsh he '" dfesperate ( assaults against th "fortress which they ,have been makinj for tne pas,t three nidntiis. There ii f now a1 strohg-vprobkbility that, whili continulhg -.the siege tney win avou lojlfes tf . ;agni,tude already at tehtog their ' efforts, and instead o assa'tiltingr will rely- on - starving ou j.-i :0: . 4-11 t. t line nsgajxis'-, uum i- -jnuanf mum ture4i v . . . . ' ' : '' ':. evv 'Japanese Fortifications. "Washington, Special. Mr. Griscom ) the American minister &t iokio, nai cabled, the State Department that Mr Fisher, the American vice consul a Nagasaki,- reports that all shippinj has - been warned ' to keep 20 milei awayfrom Pescadores, an island of i. ; T?VrTnrR!. and thai xuu wcsl tuaot vjv - it ls reported tnat ioruncawus being constructed at Seoul. art Reward - Offered. Maccn, Ga., Special A reward o $300 and expenses has been offeret lor the capture of Maro S. Potter, thi defaulting and fugitive cashier of tin bank at.Davisboro, Ga., where he it alleged to be more than $20,000 shor in his accounts. The ('reward is offerer by the officials of the bank. ' - Potter is only 22 years old, weigh: 200 pounds and has light hair anj blue eyes. He is .very popular, am his friends express surprise f at hi action. . : .ix ... ' ' CHARGE VAST fAOl fiossian Officials; Strike a Hard Fifhi With Enemies of the GoTefDceot WILD SCENES IN ST. ! PETESSBUR6 Great Anti-Governmnt Demonstra tion and " Measures Taken to Sup- press It t Caused jExcltenent Un- 6 coualed Since the Riots of 1001 Previous Warnings ip the News- """..V f i"- -" - papers 'Only Served-, to ' Swell the ' 4 'f.-. Crowd of Students,, Workmen and Young Women. T t St. Petershurg,, By Cahle. A popular anti-government demonstratioa, the participants in which included large numhers off students of hoth sexes, be gan, at midday Sunday in the Nevsky prospeet and lasted about two-hours. Hundreds of police and' mounted? gen darmes, who were hidden in the court yard of the public buildings, emerged and suddenly charged the crowd at full gallop, driving the demonstrators in headlong confusion and Screaming with terror upon the sidewalks and into ad jacent-streets. This led to serious en counters, 50 persons being more or less severely injured. Large numbets were arrested. . Not sincethe riots of 1901, when Cos sacks, stretched across the Navski pros pect rrom building to building, eharged dow;n 'the boulevard from the Moscow station to-the Neva, has the Russian capital lived' through -such a day of excitement as this.' The authorities last night got wind of Uie big anti-govern ment demonstration planned for today by the Social Democratic party to de mand an immediate end of the war and the convocation of a' national; assem bly and this evening in every paper in black-face type was an explicit warning to the people, at their peril,, to desist from congregating in the Nev- Ski prospect near the " Kasean Cathe dral. At the same time.extesive prepar ations were made to quell any disturb ance. The police on the Nevskl pros pect were increased six times over and the devorniks, or house porters were marshaled in front of their respective buildings. Half a dozen .squadrons of mounted gendarmes were massed in the rear of the Gaseah Cathedral, and battalions of reserve police 'were sta tioned in several court-yards out of eight. Minister of the Interior Sviato-polk-Mirsky gave strict orders, how ever,, that no Cossacks should, be used J AT- 1 ' II J 1 l.U and the chief of police issued explicit directions to avoid harsh, measures un less it should become-absolutely neces sary. . . The newspaper - warning,, 'however, by Rivinar notice to those'tiot-' apprised- I of the prospect Of a demonstration, de feated the very , object of -which they were designed, attracting seemigly tXte whole;. population or'ihis .vast city to thel;hrba4fthroughilnd lonjg- " inents were so dense'that movement was almost impossible, while -the- snowr covered-boulevard was bjack :with a tangled mass of sleighs, filled mostly with the. curious. In throngs on the sidewalks, were practically tiieowhole student body, of the capital, including many young women; who. have lways been prominent in Russia in .revolu tionary, movements, and also, thousands of workmen belonging to the Social. Labor party. Towards I o'clock the workmen and students seemed to swarm toward' the corner of the Hotel Europe, opposite the Gasean Cathedral. The police, recognizing that the critical moment was approaching, tried in vain,, to keep back the human tide. Then,;' when there was not a single mounted policeman in sight, on the strike of 1 o'clock, from the heart of the thJekly wedged crowd a blood red Sag, like a Jet of flame, suddenly shot up. It was the signal. Other flags appeared in the crowd, waving frantically overhead ; and they were greeted with a hoarse road, "Down with autocracy." The stu dents surged into the street, singing the "Marseillaise," while innocent specta tors, seeking to extricate themselves crowded into , doorways and hugged walls. Dismounted police made a sin ele atlemti to force thir way into th crowu to wrest the flags from the de monstrators, but the students and workmen, armed with sticks, stood close, and neat back their, assailants.. Then, like a flash, from behind the Kasean Cathedral, came a squadron of gendarmie. The! doors of adjoining court yards were thrown back, and battalions of police came out. A dou ble squadron charged the flank of the -demonstrators with drawn sabres. Five otheir squadrons circled the mob, cut tin ! through the f rings of seDctators. who gladly scurried to cover. The main wedge of .the demonstrators stood fast only, a moment or two. There was a sharp rattle of cudgels and sabres, though the wounds showed that the police struck principally with the flat of their sabres. ' The women were r especially fierce in their resis tance. Many were struck and tram-, pled, and blood streamed down their 'faces.'- r: ' ;; - -' While the mob stood, those within managed to throw-hundreds of revo lutionary . proclamations over the heads of their fellows. The police urged their horses fiercely into the crowd, driving those who resisted into the courtyards, the HoteL Europe and the Catholic-Church. The intense ex citement lasted about ten minutes, af ter which mounted squadrons of the and the policemen, devoted themselves to keeping the crowd moving: ' ' Considering the sharp ilght the riot ers had up, - the police acted: hu manely with the crowd;' avoiding bru tality and roughness in keeping the throng moving, and snowing really, more consideration thanf,the police' ofi many cities C would j under similar circumstances. . . a :;' La the meantime those confined la the court yards, who were recognized as agitators, ' were arrested, but others-were allowed to go quietly home, the wounded first having their injur ies dressed. ... . '' : . ' " "". " ' ' ' ' '!; f Vi'fevV " . r. i