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Advertise Tour Town. It is estimated that Atlantic City. N. I, spends S100.000 a year In advertising. This sum includes the public impropriation and the money spent by several of the hotels. The Long branch newspapers urge their town :o follow the example of its neighbor. One hotel in Atlantic City is reported to have spent $18,000 a year. The simple striping of the red and yellow in tho ffag of Spain was sua g?sted by the arms of Aragan. Lord Curzou is to reign as viceroy >f India. N. Y.-2D. ?ITSpermanoatly cured. No fits or nsrroiHaess after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Serveltestorer,*2trial bottleandtroati.se free Dr. It. H. Kline, Lcd.,'J31 Arch St., Phila., Pa. There are iu Germany twenty-one universities. Cure Forjhe Blues ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS NEVER FAILED Health Fully Restored and the ioy cl Life Regained When acheerful, brave, light hearted ! woman is suddenly plunged into that j perfection of misery, the BLUES, it is j a sad picture. It is usually this way: l iilie has been feeling "outof sorts'* j .'or some time; head has ached and > back also; has slept poorly, been quite j nervous, and nearly fainted once or 1 twice; head dizzy, and heart-beats very | fast; then that bearing-down feeling-, i ?nd during her menstrual period she is ! sxceedingly despondent. Nothing j pleases her. Her doctor says: "Cheer up: you have dyspepsia; you will be , all right soon." But she doesn't get " all right," and j hope* vanishes; then come the brood- j [ng, morbid, melancholy, everlasting I BLi,'ES. Don't wait until your sufferings have ! driven you to despair, with your nerves ! all shattered and your courage gone, \ but take Lydl* E. Pinkham's Vege- j table Compound. See what it did for j Mrs. Rosa Ad?\zis, of S19 12th Street, ! Louisville, Ky.. niece of tho late Gen- ! eral Roger Hanson, C.S. A. She writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkbam:? j " I cannot tell you with pen and ink what j Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound j lias dona for me. i sutrerea wtn lemau | troubles, extreme lassitude, ' the blues,' i nervousness and that all-gone feeling. I was i i id vised to try LydiaE. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound, and it not only cured my female j derangement, but it has restored me to perfect | health and strength. The buoyancy of mv I younger days has returned, and I do not suf- j i'er any longer with despondencv, as I did bo- ! fore. I consider Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- j table Compound a boon to sick and suffering : women." If you have some derangement of | the female organism write Mrs. I Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. j One Too Many. Senator Ilansbrough. of North Dakota. bus long been the owner of a .' ountry newspaper. Of late years .?clier duties have prevented bis giving it much attention, and he lias depended on divers itinerant journalists. "I've !iad some good men in the place, ! h>o." t.'ie Senator once observed to a I. nf li<\M!n?y on i?ri. I M litUii i iijyii vi i?v/iuiuD utt port ant place on a city daily. Then I have liad some who did not altogether make good. I remember one in particular. a man named Linkwood. Linkwood was never satisfied with simplicity. He would refer to an 'equine luir.se.' and in the case of a tramp killed in a railroad accident said that the "unfortunate man sustained a fracture of tlie spiral column.' Another of )is pet expressions was 'tripping the light bom ha stic toe.' " "You probably didn't keep him long." suggested the friend. "Oh. I didn't mind these so much. IV.it when the daughter of a leading citizen was married and he spoke of the bridal procession 'proceeding down the aisle to the entrancing strains of Mendel & Son's wedding march.' I derided that we had reached the parting ;?f the ways."?Harper's Weekly. l>osr With Hoofs. A dog with hoofs like a cow is owned by Daniel Brown and is a cross between a shepherd and a spaniel. It was purchased by Brown from Miles Dickey, a Panhandle engineer, three years ago, whon a pup, but not until recently did the hoofs grow on Its feet, and the owner is at a loss to know how to account for them. The 'growth has appeared on all forefeet . and is as hard as horn. When the dog walks across the board floor of the saloon where it is krpt there is a sound like a pattering of a couple of children with wooden shoos.?Indianapolis News. COMES A TIME When Coflee Shown What It EI*h liceo Dolus. "Of late years coffee has disagreed with me," writes a matron from Home, K. V.. "it's lightest punishment was to make me 'logy' and dizzy, and it i *a fKinl>nn tin m r KIaaH HITIUCU IU lUitncii mj# u?%? ujvv/vi. The heaviest was when it upset my stomach completely. destroying my apyrttite aiul making me nervous and irri/able, and jsent me to my bed. After one of these attacks, in which I nearly lost tny life. I concluded to quit and try Postuin Food Coffee. It went right to the spot! I found it in*, only a most palatable and refreshing beverage, but a l'ood as well. "All my ailments, the "loginess' and dizziness, the unsatisfactory condition of my blood, my nervousness and Irritability disappeared in short ordvr and uty sorely afllicted stoma"!! begnu qui-.Uly to recover. I began to rebuild and have steadily continued until now. Have a good appetite and aia rejoicing In sound health, which I owe to the use of Postum Food Co5>?\" Name given by Postum Co.. ?>;;ltle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Read the little book. '-Th? Road to .Wcliville." found in each Dkg. jGHLILY AWIIED DEATH | rnspirin? Bravery of Japanese o>-. Sinkmg Cruiser T^kasagcu i : !SH? HAD HIT A FLOATING MINE i , First Story of Hotv Commaailjr N'akayauua and 300 Men rortsJiod With Che Warship ? The 500 Aboard Faced | Dronnin^Whlte Checriag Clip Mikado, singing and Pearefnlljr Smoking:. Tokio. Japan.?' Let no one leave the i ship until she sinks," ordered Captain ! Ishibashi, of the cruise Takasago, ! after she struck a stray m'n? while on' j duty off Tort Arthur. "We will all j share the ship's fate." ' Standing on the bridge, he directed AfAm* imoii Mt/v 9.1 %/v L.X tlxl VI lUt Li\tT L'iUlUI '(] J X1 I Li IT | ship's company. ther ass?inbled on ' deck, to put on a life-preserver .1 ad ! wait. The crew sang the national anthem, I cheered the Mikado, sung "Oallant I Sailors," and then, as a relaxation, were allowed io smo!:?, nud thus oahnl/ faced (ieatli. Not until long after tilt- i'.nsshiii fleetwas wiped out in Japan Sea did the Government permit anything <o be published about the catastrophe except the bare fact that she had struck a mine and gone down, although it occurred last December. Now one of the survivors, a a officer, hi permitted to tell his story to the public. He says: "It was an extremely cold night, with a gale and snow. At two minutes past midnight the ship struck a mine and a terrible explosion occurred, the sea leaping high above the ship. The mine made a breach six feet in diameter in the middle of the water-line on the ieft side. "In fifteen minutes the electric Sights suddenly went out and everything was dark except for a light on the bridge and the glare of rockets telling of the riL:ixtf?r \ "At 12.42 a. m. the vessel reported her condition to our squadron by wireless telegraph. "At 1 o'clock the crew saug the national hymn. Then at the instance of Captain Ishibashi rousing banzais were shouted for the Mikado, the empire and the navy, "after which the crew sang a naval song, 'Gallant Sailors.' "Owing to the list the captain and others gathered ou the bridges, in the masts au-l netting, and waited. The waves rose higher and the snow fell thicker. "At 1.10 the vrssel suddenly careened, and after once clipping her masts into the waves, raised herself with a convulsive shudder and plunged to thibottom. "Three boats which had been lowered fortunately were afloat, with their regulation crews on board, and they did their utmost to rescue the officers and men: but the fate of the boats themselves seemed precarious. "A few minutes later a searchlight was se?n to the southeast. The war ship Ottowa came to tlio- rescue, stopped 300 yards away, used all her search lights, and s?nt threa boats to the rescue. The men. who had resigned themselves to death, cricd for help. "But only one hundred and thirtythree. including Captain Ishibashi. were saved, more tiian three hundred' and sixty being lost, including Coir mandcr Nakayama. A number of men died from exposure after being picked up."' SAILORS DIE IN SUBMARINE. Bodies in French Boat Show the Horrible Torment Undergone. Bizerta. Tunis.?For unredeemed horrors tlio most weird and uiieart'uly tale written by that gloomy and fantastic American author. Edgar Allan Poe. contains nothing to compare with a story revealed in the mournful work of extracting the bodies of the ill fated crew from the French submarine boat Farfadet, which sank at the entrance of th? port of Sidi Abdullah on July <?. and which was towed iuto dry dork after the inc-ssant efforts to raise her had been finally successful. While, of course, what actually occurred in the doomed boat, as the men imprisoned in her waited for death never "will be known, the positions of til? bodies ana tne expressions iuui could be traced on their almost unrecognizable features, together with evidences of their tight for life, tell as cieariy as words could express the horrible torment and suffering they endured in the thirty-two hours it is known some of the unfortunate thirteen lived after the craft sank first. The men who for thirty-two hours after the sinking responded to the signals of the divers consisted of ei^ht Sfamen and Lieutenant Robin. They wer? in the after compartment. When the chain cable of the derrick which raised the boat to the surface the first time broke, and she plunged down again horizontally, held by another cable at the bows, the machinery evidently was displaced, and some of the men were pinned beneath the engines and other apparatus. liicutenanrCobin was found Iyia~ 0:1 his back with lhs arms extended. Near bv was the quartermaster, wlios? sweater evidently had caught in a hook close to the faulty hatch which caused. the catastrophe whiie he was trying to escape. Sixteen Women Killed in Hospital. At Fermo, Italy. sixteen women wore killed and thirty-two injured by Mie falling of the roof of th<? chapel of the Women's Hospital during mass. Assassin is Identified. The assassin of Prefect of Polic. Shtivaloff. at Moscow. Russia, was identitieil as a former school teacher in St. Petersburg, named Kuli-Kovsky. who belonged to the Terrorist organiza. tion. I Rich Beggars Bussed. Six beggars, each a property owuei nntl one with $300 :n his pockets. \v- r4 arrested when solicit ins alms at a fos tivn! of the Church of Our Lady <m Mouni Carmei. in New York (J?!y. Newsy Gleanings. The flood of new gold continues l'ron I the Klondike and from South Africa. In Norway on pay days saloons an closed and savings banks open unti midnight. According to 11kInterstate Comraerc; Commission 1"20 railroads have 3:!7. S51 stockholders. A net profit of $100,000 was made In the Louisiana penitentiary on cottoi raised by convict labor. There were 1034 sail anil steam vp? sels of 2G3.0U4 sross tons built and ofli cially registered ia this country in thi past year. f ! ' STARTS FOrf NORTH POLE | | i ___ . ! I Commander Peary Sails From New ! tVTgff York in The Eoos&velt fciplorer Confident That Within Tito Year! Ho Will riant tl?o American Fl?? j ou llio Cartli'n Arctic ICiid New York Oitj'.?Lieutenani Robert I 13. Peary beamed with happiness when j his polar .steamship. The Roosevelt, weighed anchor in North River and j stuck her nos" toward (he ocean and | the far-off North Pole. The water front about Thirly-flrsf street and North River was lined foi Ijfocks with friends and admirers ol j the brave commander, and scores of jvomcn and girls kissed their hand# I and wished bun voyage to the mn:i j who heads the first expedition in many J years to start from New York ta j search for the coveted Pole. Flaunting a large American Hag. and j with no other flag, signals or name displayed. The Roosevelt sailed smooth- I ly down the bay, accompanied by the I tug Pentucket, of the Navy Yard, to I which the prnesis were transferred off the Narrows. Lieutenant Peary, although he directed the start, did not sail on his ship. He left New York at midnight for Sidney. The commander expects The Roosevelt to arrive in six days. Mrs.'Peary did not go. I-ler mother, Mrs. Magdalen Diebitsch. and Mrs. Peary's children, Robert R. Pear.v, Jr.. and Marie Anighnito, will go as far as j Nirtnev nnri reltirn hv rail. Aniclinito i was born in the Arc:tic zone, and hence the Esquimaux nam?, which means a ' high pointed, mountain." Before starting Commander Peary said: "I have the best equipped expedi- 1 lion that ever started out to plant, a hag on the uppermost part of the globe. Every possible thing that would facilitate the work of discovery and every comfort for my men have been attended to, and the start is none too soon for me." Commander Peary assured all that he would return to New York three years hence with a "piece of the Pole." He will sail from Sidney, Cape Kretou. and expects to reach the Pole within eighteen months. This will alIatv civ mnnHio fnv fha niorhh thr* rvirfv will have to rest. Those who will accompany Com- ! mander Peary to the furthest point I 1 north arc Poss E. Marvin, a graduate of Cornell University, who will assist , ' in geological work; Dr. Lonio ,7. Wolf, who for the past six months had been in the dispensary at Bellevue. Dr. Wolf, applied for and received the up- 1 pointment as ship's surgeon without notifying his'parents, who are wealthy j and live in Silverton, Ore. He is a graduate of the Cooper Medical College, San Francisco. Chief Engineer George E. Wardell, Steward Charles Percy, a veteran explorer, and Matthew A. Hansen, a negro, who has been with P?ary on all his previous dashes for the Pole, will also io. Among the friend?, of Commander r>~.vim nnnnmivnnnil Til/-, 1? nhen I'/llf clown to the Narrows were: Professor 1 Monroe Smith, of Columbia University; ' li. L. Delatield, Frederick P. Delnfield. General .T. Russell Lowell, Charles Mill-ken. Herbert L. Brhlgman. secretary of the Peary Arctic Club; Fred K. Walcott. Wallace Downey. Mrs. Mag- [ dalen Diebitscii, mother of Mrs. Peary, ' and Mrs. Peary and children. As The Roosevelt moved down the river every craft that carried a whistle put it in use, and the shrieking and screeching of tugs ind steamers made a deafening roar. As the vessel passed Sea (late she received a salute from the Atlantic i'aeht Club, which was ' returned, as were all the other salutes, by the constant dipping of the colors. As The Roosevelt passed the Battery on the way down the bay Secretary Eridgman made a brief address. "Commander Peary,' said he. "you take with you the best wishes of (ho Peary Arctic Club. Everything has been dene to make the trip a successful one. and we hope when you return you will bring back the news that the loug-sougL'c goal has been found." Dr. Wolf will meet the ship at Sid uoy. G A. n.'S CHIEF DEAD. General Black mar Seized With Fatal Illness at Boise City. Idaho. Borse, Idaho.?General W. W. Blackmar. ot' Massachusetts. Commanderin-Chief of the Grand Anny of the Republic. died here of nephritis, after an illness of several days. His wife and her sistpr. Miss Alice Brewer, were at his bedside when the end came. . At the National. Encampment of the G. A. ti. in Boston last August General Blacicinar. distinguished as a soldier and in public life since the war, was elected Commander-in-Chief by acclamation. He made a tour of the country soon after his election, and 011 July 0. accompanied by his wife and her sister, left Boston for a second tom\ Hc.? was in fairly good lieattJi at the time. Genera! Blackmar was born July 2?">, 1S41, at Bristol, Pa. General Blackniar is succeeded by John R. King, of Washington, senior " 1 -? uommanuer-in-i.nier. BLOWS HIMSELF UP IN COURT. .Prisoner, Ccvqunits Suicide With Dynamite? and Injures Court Officers. Wellington, New Zealand. ? During the hearing of a civil case here the defendant. a man named Murchison, blew himself to atoms with dynamite. The magistrate and a police inspector were badly injured, and the front of the court house was blown out. DON'T WANT CHINA IN. Japanese Newspapers Against Having Third Power in Peace Conference. Tokio. Japan.?The Japanese press strongly reseats China's request to be allowed to join in the peace negotiations. and will strenuously- object to any third power taking part in the conference. The newt-papers think that Russia induced China to proffer her request with the object of creating ill-fec'ling through Japan's refusal to grant it. MOORS KILL ISO REBELS. Sultan's Forres Also Capture Many of tlie Pretender's Troops;. Tangier, Morocco.?.Moliaminaed- EI Torres, representative of tir> Sultan l?erc, has received information that the Imperial forces have won a victory over the Moorish pretender near Ujda in the Northeast of Morocco. The pretender cscapcd, leaving ISO men dvad. The Sultan's troops captured many prisoners. Leaders of Disturbance Hanged. Twenty-four of the leaders in thei Odessa disturbances ivpw hantrwL f jUHV ON TIE fflOVE Disembarks North of Vladivostok? Fortress Menaced,, M. WITTE STARTS FOR rums IIuHecn\T? Threaten)* l<ASt fort of the ltusniaus From the West?HnyaAbi's ltoply to StiKCCRtina About Moderate Pcare Demands?Bepnted Strength of the Defenoen. London, England.?The Tokio correspondent of the Daily Telegraph says tliat a Japanese army lias been lauded north of Vladivostok, and that the complete envelopment of the fortress is imminent. I*: is known (hat a fleet of Japanese transports recently left (Jen-San, Korea, and their supposed destination was Possiet Bay, south of Vladivostok. It is possible that a landing was instead made north of the fortress, am? it is of couyse also possible that the Russian stronghold is being threatened from both north and south. That it is being threatened from the west seems certain. Even more mystery has surrounded the movements of Marshal Oyama's armies recently than before the battles of Liao.vang and Mukden. The Russian General Staff has frankly admitted that it is mystitied. The news, however, that the Japanese last month made a raid on Omoso, 150 miles east of Kirin, and between that place and Vladivostok, was confirmed on good authority, and it was Ihouglft that this raid had beeu ordered i<v Mi? Jan.-inesp Staff in order to make sure ef-the ground on General-Hasegawa's left before the expected advance of lh.it General on the lower Tumen and Vladivostok. The strength of Vladivostok is unknown outside the fortress, except by the authorities in St. Petersburg. It was recently stated that General Liuevitch had a number of twelve-inch and nine-inch guns. A. British military critic remarked that these were about as suitable an ornament for an army in the Held as a cameleopard in a lady's boudoir, but whether suitable or not, there is little doubt that the guns same from Vladivostok, and it has been suggested that the Czar is not desirous of making the Japanese "another pfes eat of a bouquet of 528 guns, as at Port Arthur." General Cbreshchatitzki commands troops in the Ussuri region, with Major General Rutkovski as Chief of Staff. Lieutenaut-tJeneral Kasbek commands at Vladivostok and his troops include seven battalions of fortress artillery and throe companies of sappers and miners. Japanoso Jfo Atijals. r/Ondon, England. ? Baron Hayashi, the Japanese Minister here, scicl that Russia liad appointed good men as [leace plenipotentiaries. Nevertheless, even M. Witte and Baron Rosea had not inspired Japan with confidence in a favorable outcome of the negotiations. "We do not know," the Minister idti^d, "what powers have been delegated to them, and after the events of the past eighteen mouths Japan puts faith only in accomplished facts. The terms will be communicated only at tlie conference. Then we will discover what powers the Russian plenipotentiaries possess." It was suggested that the general opinion prevailed that the Japanese terms would be moderate. "I cannot see where people get .such an idea." replied the Minister. "The public evidently mistakes the Japanese for angels." Minister Haynshi intimated that Japan was ready to continue the war unless she secured suitable terms. He called attention to the fact thai practically the entire sum realized by the last two loans was unexpended, and said the capture of the Island of Sakhalin was not precipitated by the approach of the conference, but was a natural sequence of the Japanese campaign, the plans for which had not been altered since Russia acceded to a conference. An earlier attack on the isiaud was not undertaken principally because of the severe winter and be cause the summer season was more preferable for campaigning and the establishment of a new government in the island. St. Petersburg. Russia. ? W. Witte had a linal interview with Emperor Nicholas at Peterhof. Count Lams, dorff was present, showing complete harmony of views between M. Witte and the Foreign Minister. M. Witte later left St. Petersburg for Paris, accompanied by Mine. Witte. At Paris they were to meet their daughter, who is the wife of the Secretary of the Russian Legation at Brussels. Mme. Witte had no intention of joining her husband in America. ft is announced that 475.240 men will be called to perform military service in the course of the present year. AMEPvICA STEAMER SUNK. Reported Lost With All Hands After uin-i.iof Minn r Port Arthur. 3t. Petersburg, Russia.?ft Tvas rumored here that an American steam ship struck a floating mine between Port Arthur and the Elliott Islands and sank with all hands. The date of the accident was not given and there uas nothing to confirm the report. PRINZE PHILIP WANTS DIVORCE Files Suit Against Princess Louise Daughter of King Leopold. Gotha.?Prince Philip of Coburg ha? filed a petition for divorce from thf Princess Louise, daughter of ECinj Lf-onold. Roosevelt Camps With Boys. President Roosevelt took his boy: and their friends o:i tlirir annual over night ramping expedition to a wood: near Oyster Bay, L. f. Labor World. The Pacific and Idaho Northern Kail road has contracted for GOO Japnncs< laborers. The number of deaths l'roin industria accidents in (Ireat Britain, reported i) 1004, was 3758. The American Labor Union bas an nounced the postponement of its an nual convention. Two thousand wood workers ew ployed by various firms in Chicag' went on strike for higher wages. It is reported from Mackay, Queens laud, that the .Lips are a great dange tn Mia nrltffo umrl-ors in Miu? district struggled to tiie surface, ana cneers from both banks greeted hhn. Bj' that time Graham, who is fifty-live years old, and who had the advantage of having swam Hie rapids In September, 1901. and in August, 1902, had gained ou Glover. By the time they had reached the end of the rapids, just "above the Suspension Bridge at Lewiston, however. Glover had gained so much of what he had lost when he was struggling for life in the whirlpool that only a short distance separated him from his rival. It was in the smooth, swiftly running water below the rapids that Glover passed Graham, the former finding swimming there comparatively easy, and the latter laboring heavily. At 4.2S o'clock Glover swam to the end of the pier in Lewiston and was hauled out of the river quickly by the judges and others awaiting him. While lnJ was being rubbed down and dressed, Graham, four minutes behind the Mar.vlander, swept alongside the pier He was in such a condition of C* haustion that lie collapsed as soon a? he was hauled up on the pier. Within fifteen minutes after Glove! was taken out of the river he was dressed and telling his father and othc^ friends his sensations as he swepl through the water at the rate of n I mile in loss tliftn seven minutes, anu particularly of bow be felt when Inwas caught by the whirlpool, sucked down and held there two minutes. It was expected by the friends of the two men that they would be cut and bruised severely by being dashed against rocks, but they escaped all such injury and suffered from nothing except exhaustion from their terrible struggle. WILL SUBLET BILTMORE. George TV. Vanderbilt Finds Farming Too Expensive. Asheville. N. C.?George W. Vanderbilt is to give up farming at Biltmore and is going to let somebody else do it. for him. He lias believed all alone that his vpnture could be made to pay expenses, or nearly so, but he has been disappointed. He considers that his experiment of ten years justifies liiin in changing his mind about the money there is to be made in farming. Mr. Vanderbilt has made the Biltmore farms among the most famous in the country. They consist of general truck farms, a dairy, a creamery, a chicken and duck farm, live stock, kennels, and hothouses. It has been estimated that he has expended a large fortune for the privilege of being a farmer. J. T. DAVIES IN ROOT'S PLACE Mayor Weaver Announces Choice?Delav Over New Arrests. Philadelphia, Pa.?Mayor Weaver announced that lis had retained Julien T. Da vies, of New York City, of the law firm of Davies, Stone & Anerbacli. as associate counsei with ex-Judge Gordon in place of Elihu Hoot. Mr. Da vies was retained at the suggestion of Mr. Root. Ex-Judge: Gordon said that no fur ther arrests in connection with frauds by contractors would be made at presi ent. When the time came to begin I proceedings, he said. District Attorney 1 Bell would be invited to co-operate ir. i every stage. The delay at present was due to Mr. Bell's accident. Now Command For General Stoessel A dispatch to the Exchange Tele? graph Company from St. Petersburg, said it was stated there that General . Stoessel, tne ueieuuer ai iuu .uiU..i; would be appointed- commander of th;r , Seventh Infantry Corps. Castro's Latest Duplicity. By establishing eight new custou: ? houses President Castro of Venezuela Is diverting commerce from ports the > receipts of which are pledged for 'lie payment of foreign debt. Prominent People. J M. Carrie is extremely fond of his ? native Forfarshire. I The Kins of Belgium is developing a , mania for building. President Loubet has finished his . sixth year in the French Presidency. King Edward receives daily no fcwei than 3000 newspapers and 1000 letters i- John Alexander Dowie has seen ret [> options on $?00,000 worth of land ir Mexico. t- The Pope has consented to sit to M r Carolus Duran, the French artist, foi his Dortrait. w TWO SWIM NIAGARA RAPIDS Glover Beats Graham in Rao9 From New York to Canadian Shore. One t>C the Contestants Sucked Into a Whirlpool Uut Got Our, Roactimg Sliore In Safely. Niagara Fails, N. Y ? Protected by life-belts and with inflated rubber rings _ arouud their necks, Carlisle D. Graham,, of this city, and William J. Glover, Jr., of Baltimore, Md., swam the lower rapids of the Niagara River without serious injury, although Graham was so exhausted he had to be hauled to his hotel in a wagon. The two men had a terrific struggle, and but for the life:savlng apparatus they wore it was admitted lH>th would have been sucked beneath the swirling waters and drowned. As it was Glover got in -the grip of one eddy which drew uiui ueueaiu cue Jsurmce auu. sein ujiu there almost two minutes. It was a race. Glover beat Graham by four minutes, covering: the distance of four miles in twenty-six minutes. It was said earlier in the day that the two swimmers would tempt fate by trying to swim through the upper rapids in which Captain Webb, the brave English swimmer, lost his life many years rgo, and much excitement resulted. It subsided somewhat, how, ever, when announcement was made that the race would be through the lower rapids, which are not nearly so dangerous. From Flat Rock, on the American side, the start was made at 4.02 o'clock, and the course was from there to Lewiston, on the American side. Glover took the lead from the start. Ilis father watched the contest from a flat car, which ran along the Gorge. Glover entered the rapids a minute ahead of Graham. Both of the sturdy swimmers were held fast in the grasp of the swift current and roaring rapids until they reached the Devil's Hole. There it was that Glover, who is thirty-eight years old. was caught by thie whirlpool and sucked under. As second after second ticked off and be did not reappear the hundreds on the high banks thought another had been added to the whirlpool's victims. After two minutes had elapsed Glover / ^ / ilNOBEVFNTSOFIHEWEEK WASHINGTON. The U. S. 8. Dolpliin left the Washington Navy Yard under orders for Gloucester, Mass. She xvlll participate in target practice, afrcr which she will be at the disposal of the peace envoys. Secretary Bonaparte left the capital for Lee, Mass., with Mrs. Bonaparte, who will spend the rest of the summer tn the Berkshires. President Roosevelt has decided that the cotton report scandal shall not end with the dismissal of the statistician. Holmes, but that every effort shall be oiade. to punish adequately all the guilty men. After resting in a vault at Oak Hill cemetery since bis death, last December, the body of Jamc3 N. Tyner. forner Postmaster-General. Assistant At:orney-GoneraI and Representative in .'Jongress from Indiana, was buried in the family plot at Oak Hill. Secretary Bonaparte decided against i Saturday half-holiday for employes )f the Washiugtou ftavy Yard. OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. Since the departure of Secretary Taft, Miss Alice Roosevelt and party from Honolulu, en route to the Philppines, affairs in the Hawaiian capital save assumed their normal trend. Secretary Taft and his party arrived it Honolulu after a pleasacit voyage >n the Maucliuria, and sailed for Maaila. A condemnation suit was brought in the Federal court at Honolulu by Untied States Attorney Sreckons to secure three and one-quarter acres of land on Waikukl beach. The land is jwued by Mrs. Afong, and it is wanted for forts and fortifications. DOMESTIC. A shot from ambush killed an Infant carried by Annie Williams while she 1 uvas on" her way home ni?ar Knott's Mills, S. C., and wounded the mother, but there is no clew to the- assassin. Brooding over ill-health caused Cashier B. W. War field, of the St. Louis bounty Bank, at Clayton, Mo., to take bis life. Prominent astronomers gathered at St. John's, N. P., to sail for Labrador to observe there the sun's eclipse August 30. A detention station for immigrants is to De Duiit at san Francisco, uai., iana having been acquired on Angel Island. , General W. W. Blackmar, Comma nder-in-Cliief of the G. A. R.? died at Boise, Idaho. Mayor Weaver, of Philadelphia, Pa., on the advice of Elihu Root, is expected to begiu criminal prosecutions against Israel W. Durham and the ather members of the McNichol contractiug firm. More than 2000 people and four passenger trains on the Colorado Midland Railroad were held up at Tunnel No. 15, two miles west of Manitoa, by a South American jaguar. Each of the nineteen routes laid out for new subways in New York City ivas approved by the Board of Estimate aud Apportionment. During a quarrel 'over cigarette smoking Raymond P. Stough was Silled at St. Louis, Mo., T. John Freas!er being accused of the murder. General Horace Porter, former American Ambassador to France, has relumed home. Uiro la f/M- *!i<\ hnnrl nf thf* nam? fsrirl and in her presence, William Monray svas stubbed to death at Ashton, W. Va., by Jobn Hawthorne. The cruiser Maryland established a new record at Newport. R. I., when 1300 tons of coal were taken'on in eight hours. A special Federal Grand Jury will be summoned in September in Milwaukee, Wis., probably to investigate the Paper Trust. Twenty-five passengers of the steamer Allianca, from Colon, were held in quarantine at New York City for fear of yellow fever. The presidency of Notre Dame University, at South Bend, ].nd., has been resigned by Andrew Morrissey. The Massachusetts Board of Charities has purchased Peuikese Island, ia Buzzard's Bay, for a lep?r hospital. To escape the camera :n the Rogues' Gallery in New York City Samuel Levine jumped from the sixth floor of Police Headquarters aud was fatally hurt. President Roosevelt has declined the invitation from Australia, extended to 1 A li/>A DrtrteatToll" trisHf fllfit 1TJ- * nilLG nv/UOCT?i?.t LV I av?w %MW, country as the guest of the Government. The American Medici! Association at Portland. Ore., advocated the new Cabinet position to be known as the Department of Public Health. FOREIGN. It was reported from Tokio, Japan, that the cruiser Paliada and the battle, ships Pobieda and Poltava would sood be floated at Port Arthur. Tramway and underground railroad lines ia London, England, to cost $120. 000,000, were proposed iu the r^porl of the royal commission appointed tc investigate the problem. M. Witte. in St. Petersburg. Russia declared he fears the terms to be proposed by Japan will make a treaty ol peace impossible. Mutinous troops in the Ekateriubur;: Regiment, stationed iu Lodz, killed om of their officers. Emile Arton. one of the principa' figures in the French Panama scandal I was found dead ia Paris. Japauase warships returned from a recounolssance near Vladivostok auc' reported that the Russian cruiser Izumrud was a total loss. A dispatch from Tokio says it is es timated* that re-enforcements have brought General Linievitch's force uf to 400,000 men. A scene of excitement prevailed iu the French Chamber of Deputies, nt Paris, when M. Lasier, an Anti-Semite r ember, attacked the late Minister of War, Andre, and his successor, M Berteaux, left the Chamber. A special cable dispatch from Val paraiio said there were 100 new cases of smallpox daily, and the mortality at Ilia lazaretto amounts to ninety per tcia. Or. Franklin Clarke, au American was arrested in Kingston. Jamaica, for breach o? the Official Secret Sorv' ico act. ?n..i .imninroc: nf the Vienna. Ltxls | lur viiij-ivj . --- -- and Kalisz Railway have decided tc use the Polish language in the trans i action of railway business. In the House of Commons, at London. England. Premier Baifour de . clared himself opposed to conscription I for tilling the ranks of the army, and i advocated the Government scheme for army reform. Count Sergius Witte was appointed chief Russian peace plenipotentiary ir DJace of M. Muravieff. M A VETERAN OF THE BLACK HAWK, MEXICAN AND THE CIVIL WARS. i \ Bufferings Wzre Protracted and Seven | ?Tried Every Known Remedy Without | Relief?Serious Stomach Trouble Cured by Three Dottles of Peruna I Capt. W. W. Jackson, 705 G St., N W., Washington, D. C., writes: "I am eignty-thrce years old, a veteran of the Black Hawk, ^Mexican and ib? Civil Ware. I am by profession a phyai cian, but abandoned the same. "Sotn*: years ag:> 1' -.van seHou*tflH affected, with catarrh o/ th? stomach^ if?/ sufferings were protracted amfl severe. I tried every known remedSM without obtaining relief. B "In desperation I began the uie your Peruna. I began to realized immediate though graduaHmprove-M ment. Hi "After the use of three bottle* even! appearance of nir complaint was 11 iniimd J ana I have no hesitation in reconrmearf-M ing it as an infallible remedy for that nprtop ff?W W Jdptrunn IB Address! Dr. S. B. Kartman, Presidett of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbve Ohio. Roasted. , A local merchant asked a Sallna editor to roast the coadministration f<w letting an itinerant peddler come ia Jiere and undersell him on goods. This jp> what the edltor^wrote: "City dads, jou will hereby take notice that y?i Are roasted for permitting peddlers ta yell goods here. The merchant f<x whom we do this favor has his job printing done In Chicago." ? Kaowui City Journai. power gasoline submarine boat for tAc French navy. 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