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-> " '7; -V-*' ':" What: is F h v ji? * Is it a Catarrh Rer or is it Some people call Feruna a great t r? ' great catarrh remedy. Wtiich of these people are right? catarrh remedy than to call it a tonic.? Our reply is, that Feruna is both j deed, there can be no effectual catarrh r In order to thoroughly relieve any only have a specific action on the muc tarrh, hut it must have a general tonic t Catarrh, even in persons who are o dition of some mucous membrane. The the circulation, to give tone to the arteri Perhaps no vegetable remedy in tf tendon from medical writers as HYDIU fnl efficacy of this herb has been recogn its hold npon the medical profession. <X)PA1BA a trio of medical agents is fo specific remedy for catarrh that in the cannot be improved upon.. This action, ?s COLLINSONIA CANADENSIS, COH SEED, ought to make this compound ai Stages and locations in the body. From a theoretical standpoint, the |The use of Peruna confirms this opini< ; ? - every quarter of the earth furnish ampli over enthusiastic. When practical expei cry the result is a truth that cannot be j KEEPING UP. "These burial associations have cut the prices of funerals of late, have c they not?" ' g "Yes," replied the undertaker; 0 ""our profits are not so large on a e single funeral, but since the auto j. r'.-- ; came to be the rage we have twice n ?s many funerals."?Houston Post. ^ fe' - c FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Neryous Diseases persaanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatise free. 1 Dr. H. E. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. E Before giving advice prepare tto a <dodse the conseauences. s K'V vT" t BLOATED WITH DROPSY. * the Heart Was Badly Affected When ^ the Patient Began Using g x Doan's Kidney Pills. Mrs. Elizabeth Maxwell, of 415 g West Fourth St!, Oiympia, Wash., u s-.ys: "For over- { j0p*Bh three years I g suffered with a c . dropsical condi- g WS ^ BLlvv tion/ without be- ^ ^ Jwp\ jjjjfffii*'n^ aware that . kidney trouble. e 'Jhe early stages c ^ "were principally a -backache and ^ V bearing down n - pain, but I went d v nlong without worrying much until u tiropsy set in. My feet and ankles p swelled up, my hands puffed and be- a came so t^nse I could hardly close : ^ Jthem. I had great difficulty in breath- ! " fling, and my heart would flutter with j- ^the least exertion. I could not walk & ^ "far without stopping again and again & **o rest. Since using four boxes of "Doan's Kidney Pills the bloating has gone down and the feelings of disI' vtress have disappeared." ^ .y A Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a tg "box. Foster-Milbuvn Co., Buffalo, _ r.^v ? ?] H.Y- ' ol * V If you would make your friends F ii' smile let your money talk. pi :> St .. to To Cure a Cold in One Day - m "Take Laxative Bromo Ouinine Tablets. ' Druggists refund money ir it fails to cure. ?. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. 1? "Faith is what a woman thinks she ^ -t>elieves because she believes it. sl o) s ? t WORLD'S WONDER COTTON ^ A new species; first sold last spring; was n( planted by 100 different farmers; has proauoed from 2 to 5bales per acre; highly prolific ; $ig boll, small seed, good staple; E. n< Humphreys, Godwin & Co., Memphis, Tenn. 2( fc Almost 15,000 women work about f. the mines in the German empire. i I-., ' <V Ttch cured in 30 minutes bv Woolford's Sanitary Lotion; never fails. Sold by Druggists. Mail orders promptly filled bv Dr. Detchon Med. Co., Crawfordsville,Ind. $1. S( Of all men sailors suffer most from rheumatism. !" ; ?? ' . ANOTHER RUSS OFFICER KILLED Prefect of Police OS St. Petersburg ^ Victim of Assassin's Bullet. tt Major General Von Der Launitz, ^ prefect of police of St. Petersburg, n Uussia, was shot and killed by an n xmknown young man at the Institute of Experimental" Medicine Thursday. * While mingling with several oilier official*. the prefecr of police <vas ap ^ "proaehed from behind by fhe assas- a: sin. who drew a revolver and shot 0 him in the base of the brain. g As the assassin turned to flee, one ? of the officers present drew his sabre ? to cut him down, when he cooly turned his revolver against hinr^lf and suicided. CORTELYOU GIVES UP JOB v I As Chairman of the National Republican Committee. George' B. CorteJ/on has announced J his retirement as chairman of the Re- ^ publican national com mitt est. Hon. Harry S. New, vice chairman, will L?e- j come acting chairman of the commit- j tee. For many months it has been nr.- j <derstood by these in touch with j Postmaster General vortelyou that he proposed to retire at a convenient | time from the chairmanship ol the ua- i , tional committee. j , ' . . Cjj&i ' - . ' - ' - "'v. <%*.. -v: ' " \ v' >e-ru-na? ncdy, or a Tonic, Both? ooic. Others refer to Peruna as a Is it more proper to call Peruna a *> n tonic and a catarrh remedy, in* emedy that is not also a tonic, case of catarrh, a remedy must not ous membranes affected by the caption on the nervous system, therwise strong, is a weakened conre must be something to strengthen es, and to raise the vital forces. le world hbs attracted so much at* ISTIS CANADENSIS. The wondertized many years, and is growing in When joined witli CUBEBS and! ruied in Pcruna which constitntes a ' present state of medical progress, reinforced by such renowned tonics :YDAL1S FORMOSA and CEDROX i ideal remedy for catarrh in all its lrefore, Peruna is beyond criticism, on. Numberless testimonials from e evidence that this judgment is not rience confirms a well-grounded thesliaken. Oriental Clubs. The Oriental is passionately fond >f club life, and the smaller the deiree of personal liberty he enjoys in irdinary life the more intense is his enjoyment of membership in some urotherhood. It does not make very uuch difference what the nature of he cluib may be; it is the mere joy of dub life, irrespective of object or Tinciple, that appeals to him. Havng once "tasted this joy, he will do Quch rather than forego a continunce of it. . Oriental society is so contituted that the family or clan is he social unit and not the individual. l man cannot be alone in his punishlents, for they are also visited in jreater or less degree upon his relaiveg as well. He cannot enjoy or uffer alone. Now, a chib or society J a much smaller organization than ociety as a whole, and the individal forms a correspondingly larger raction of it. This i3 an immense timulus to self-esteem. The man beomes somebody. This explains why .Imost any society, irrespective of ts object, can instantly gather a umerous and enthusiastic constituncy. Any man with a little tact ould go out on the streets of Seoul ud in twenty-four hours establish a ociety for the cultivation of mush;oms on thatched roofs, with presient, vice president, secretary, treasrer and executive committee comlete and a membership list as long s a piece of string, if not longer. Tiny? Simply because membership 1 "any old" society <foes just a lite to lift a man out of the humrum of life.?Korea News. English Channel Tunnelling. The proposal to drive a tunnel un:c the English Channell, to connect ie French and English railway sysms, is again receiving attention, and nglish feeling is supposed, in view ! the good relations at present with ranee, to be more favorable to the pject than ever before. The chalk rata under the Channel are thought be easy to penetrate, with a minium risk. The distance to be tun 2lled is 34.4 miles?a large contract. l 1883. a tunnel seven feet in diamer was driven 5,521 feet in eight id oneihalf months on the French de. This was extended to a length 6,033 feet and to a diameter of 1 feet. On the English side a tunil was driven 5,905 feet, nine-tenths ' it being under the Channel. The ?w proposal is to have twin tubes ) feet in diameter and 60 feet apart ?r traffic, with an auxiliary smaller mnel for drainage and construction urposes.?Baltimore Sun. . SELFISH GEORGE. "Just think or it! Every girl in our it has been divorced -but me." "Why, won't George let you have divorce?" "Oh, the ninny says he loves me" Safe, Sure and Speedy. No external remedy ever yet devised as so fully and unquestionably met these iree prime conditions as successfully as 11 cock's Plasters. They are safe because ley contain no deleterious drugs and are lanufactured upon scientific principles of tedirine. They are sure because nothing >es into them except ingredients which re exactly adapted to the purposes for hich a plaster is .required. They are oeedy in their action because their mediclal qualities go right to their work of ilievmg pain and restoring the natural ad healthy performance of the functions f muscles, nerves and skin. Alloock's Plasters are the original and enuine porous plasters and like most leritorions articles have been extensively nitated, therefore always make sure and et the genuine Alloock's. THE MALCONTENTS. - -' <? "Wtoat CLO tney naui; "Laws that allow anything." "And require nothing, I s'pose?"? .ousville Courier-Journal. Piles Cored in 6 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any ase of Itching: Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. UNFORTUNATE REFORM. Friend?Well, has your husband juit all his bad habits' since you married him? Wife?Unfortunately yes. Friend?Why, what do you mean? Wife?The only bad habit he had was' theatregoing, and I haven't seen a show since our wedding day. 3 ' ' ' - - Ac V y:. rS v -7- ? ' - -'' ' * ",r~' /' : ASK FRAUD ORDER Cotton Growers Move Against New York Exchange. APPEAL TO CORTELYOU Congressman Livingston, Harvie J or dan and Charles Barrett Call on Postmaster General and Present Evidence. A Washington special says: Congressman Livingston of Georgia appeared before Postmaster Cortelyou Wednesday afternoon, and urged the department to investigate the specific charges of fraud against the New York cotton exchange, which he presented. Colonel Livingston was accompanied by President Harvie Jordan of the Southern Cotton Association, he having invited. President Jordan and President C. S. Barrett of the Farmers' Educational and Co-Operate Union, to come to Washington and help push the case against the New York cotton exchange. The charges recite that the exchange operates under fraudulent contracts; that its business is largely speculative, and has become a mere gambling game, and that the officials and members should be forbidden the use of the mails in advertising their business. The action of Colonel Livingston in moving against the New York cotton exchange was provoked by what planters consider proof of fraud being practiced by the exchange to the harm and detriment of the legitimate cotton trade of the south. This proof appeared in the official market re port of the New l'orK couon excuauge issued on December 28, which was notice day. On -that date the price of cotton futures on contracts calling for December delivery was 9.02 and 9.04, while the price of spot cotton was 10.65. The disparity between the actual value of the staple, and its value on future contracts made on the floor of the exchange was thus 163 points, which would make a difference of $8.15 per bale. On the same day, New Ojleajis was nearly 100 points above New York, its quotations being 9.98 on futures "and 10 3-16 on spots. In discussing the matter Colonel Livingston laid particular stress upon this situation as proving the claims of fraud in connection with the New York exchange transactions. He said': "If McFadden or any other cotton operator had bought cotton on that date at 9.02 and could have secured the actual cotton, he could have sold it in the spot market and made a profit cn the 114,000 bales traded In on that exchange that day of $11,? - - ? 1\AAAllOA Vl Q 411,WO. .tie am um uuj, uctausc knew, and all knew that there was no cotton to be had. If the New York cotton exchange operates on the same plan. as the stock exchange, or the corn exchange, and I am informed that such is their charter, they must keep on hand for actual delivery the cotton traded in, just as does the broker who sells railroad or other stock3. I do not know that sucli is their charter, and I have be?n unable to find out, but, if it is true, they must keep commercial salable cotton on hand to meet their contracts." Harvie Jordan was of the opinion that if he had at his disposal a fund of fifty thousand dollars to employ the legal talent to push the case, he could put the New York Stock Exchange completely out of business on this ground, provided this provision is found to be a part of its charter. It is declared, however, that there is no purpose to prevent the legitimate transactions of the exchange, but simply to break up the alleged fraudulent contracts. The postmaster general referred his callers to Judge Goodwin, assistant general for the postoffice department. v - t 1 a It Is likely tliat a hearing win De neia by Judge Goodwin. CALLS TEDDY THE "BELOVED." Fulsome Flattery Is Bestowed on Roosevelt by Sultan of Morocco. President Roosevelt has received a letter from the sultan of Morocco expressing gratitude for the appointment of Samuel R. Gummere as American minister to Morocco. The sultan addresses the president as "The Beloved, the Most Cherished, the Most Exalted, the Most Gracious Friend, Most Honored and Excellent Presi ?! ..c -v.. I,!!/, rw f thp TTnltpri aenc 01 me iicjjuum, u? ?~v ^ States of America, who is the pillar of its great influence and the director of its most important affairs." OSBORN MUCHLY MARRIED. Man With Many Wives Landed in Birmingham Jail. In John Osborn, alias Dr. Ellwood J. Osborn, who is in jail, the Birmingham, Ala., police think they have a man who has at least seven living wives, and one dead. Osborn confesses that he has three living wives, but says that he was never legally maried to four other j women. o . -vV'V ? V-L-' - - -V - ' .... fiCi-* \ .. -,.. . i'ry*'. - ':y.\ ; : _ : - ijjj t BEQUEST FOR MORE PAY Made by the Conductors, Switchmen, Brakemen and Trainmen of Offi cials of the Southern Railway. The conductors, switchmen, brakemen and trainmen of the Southern railway have sent representatives to Washington to confer with the chief executives of the road for the purpose of securing an increase in wages. Those who are now at the capital are the regularly elected delegates of the organization of the conductors and the trainmen known as the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen. These delegates also have instractlrtno romnin in Wflshinpr.tnn until they secure the advance in wages or a direct and absolute refusal to grant the request. If the increase is granted, and it is confidently expected by all of the trainmen and conductors, the stay of the delegates in Washington will be a short one. If the request is refused, it is stated on the very best of authority and frcpn those In a position to know oflicially that a strike over the entire Southern railway system will be declared and that almost every conductor, switchman and trainman will go out to a man. Under the present conditions of traffic these railroad men do not believe that any such drastic measures will bs necessary. They say that the business is more than the road can handle and that what with the shortage of cars, the delayed schedules and other disadvantages to the shipper and the traveling public that the highest officials of the Southern railway will grant their request rather than tie up the entire system of more than 7,000 miles. The conductors state that during the past few years and especially the past year or two, the necessities of life have incveased from 25 to 50 per cent and that with their present wages they are unable to meet their monthly j bills that belong to the average-sized. family. Requests for an increase in wages have been made and the matter taken up only to be deferred from time to time by the officials having the authority to make this increase that is asked for. It was stated by an official that the conductors of the Southern railway are making from $110 to $120 per month, the exact amount of the wages depending on the length of the run. A 10 per cent increase in these wages is asked for. As to any compromise or postponements, the instructions to the delegates were that in this case both compromises and postponements were barred. The switchmen, who now belong to the B. R. T., instead of the former organization of their own composed only of switchmen, say that they are asking for the standard scale, which is $2.65 per day. They also state that they are dow getting $2.15 per day. The conductors' organization, the Order- of Railway Conductors, is one., of the strongest in the country. It is stated that far over <K) per cent of the conductors of the Southern railway are members of this organization and that they are absolutely a unit in regard to the demand for higher wages, as is proved in the Instructions to the delegates to remain in Washington until some definite answer is received. The Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen is also very strong;, and has been greatly strengthened lately by a number of organizers who have been at work along the Southern railway and other southern roads preparing for just such conditions as now confrnt the executives of the Southern railway in Washington. ? COULDN'T LIVE WITHOUT OFFICE / - - - - ? ?? i i _ a -i Defeated incumoent or jod uong neiu Goes Gas Route. Depressed, it i3 believed, over his defeat of re-election to an office he had filled for twenty-five consecutive years, Thomas Temple, who was until Wednesday the register of deeds for Suffolk county, Mass., took his own life at his home in Neponset Thursday by inhaling illuminating gas; Temple was 70 years of age. NEW COURT ORGANIZED. Georgia Appellate Judges Are Sworn In By Governor Terrell. The new Georgia court of appeals was formally organized at Atlanta on Wednesday. The members of the court, Judges B. H. Hill of Atlanta, Arthur G. Powell of Blakely and Richard B. Russell of Winder met in the office of Governor Terrell, who administered the oath of office in the presence of a number of capitol officials, and presented them with their commissions. I INVITE DEWEY AND EVANS To Attend Blue and Gray Reunion In North Carolina. Invitations have been sent to Admiral George Dewey and Rear Admiral Robley D. Evans, United States Navy, asking them to be present January 15 at the reunion of the blue and gray on the grounds of the engagement between the Confederate and Federal forces at - Fort Fialier, N. C. Rear Admiral 'Evans was wounded during the attcak cn the fort , > i '-ie-'-'j ci~ > v-?r.v?i X THERE WERE OTHERS. "That cornet-player on the third floor has remarkable endurance," remarked the casual visitor. "He has," agreed the regular hoarder. "But it's nothing compared to fiie other boarders."?Toledo Blade. Some American consuls abroad complain that they have to pay as much as $6 or $7 a month in fines on letters, etc., sent to them with insufficient postage. ARTIFICIAL VEGETABLES. The Academy of Sciences, Paris, recently heard Prof. d'Arsonval describe artificial vegetables, which he exhibited, and which were produced by the methods of Prof. Leduc of the 1 Drnf ^'ir. in ames imruicai ^-nese. x iui, u ..... sonval interested his colleagues greatly, but unfortunately for the lay public he did not say whether the socalled vegetables are edible. While they were described as vegetables they have nothing of the vegetable in their makeup, but they behave after their production as do the real vegetables they resemble under natural conditions. Into the composition of these products nothing living* enters. Prof. Leduc makes seeds in pill form, one pairt of sulphate of copper and two parts of glucose. These are -deposited in bouillon made of gelatine, to which are added 3 per cent, of ferro cyanide of potassium and a little sea salt. The seed develops sometimes on the surface of the liquid and sometimes in its depths, giving birth to plants resembling seaweed and other marine plants. It was announced that these a."fifrd*i plants were not merely scientific curiosities. Pre? T>dito has been able to recognize that they have the same properties as the plants they resemble, and are influenced similarly by heat and light. Screams No More. Harry O'Briant's eagle is dead. Six fancy, highbred, game chickens have also gone over the dead line. The went first and the eagle fol vuivnvui^ it v?*b w lowed suit The eagle killed the chickens and Oliriant killed the eagle. The big bird had been in captivity about a week and had his eye on the chickens all the time. He was allowed certain liberty with one foot tied to a rope. Until his untimely death the eagle had been cock of the walk in the neighborhood of Crowell street, in South Atchison. He even had the dogs bluffed. The other day,, when no one was looking, he got into j the chicken coop. Well, there was J something doing on the jump. Right and left the eagle startled to snatch i the game fowls bald-headed. And he did?six of them. They were game chickens in name only when it came to fighting an eagle. The bird from the mountains will be stuffed.?Atchison Globe. Eloquence and Success. Rev. J. M. Buckley, D. D., the editor of the New York Christian Advocate, has said that the best lecture which he ever heard on the subject of success in life was delivered by a man who was an absolute failure in everything he undertook?except that lecture. The lecture was a great suocess, but the lecturer who delivered the lecture was a failure in everything he ever undertook. He failed in the ministry. He failed to bring up his children-properly. He failed to keep out of debt. He failed everywh/M-o nn<i in everything except the lecture on "How to Succeed"?that was a tremendous success. It always drew full houses and its author w?s always sure of an invitation co return and repeat his wonderful discourse. It is vastly easier to tell others how to succeed than it is to 2 'Lieve success lor yourself.?Young Men's Magazine. NEVER TIRES Of the Food That Restored Her to Health. "My food was killing me and I didn't know the cause," writes a Colo, young lady: "For two years I was thhi and sickly, suffering from indigestion and inflammatory rheumatism. "I had tried different kinds of diet, plain living and many of the remedies recommended, but got no better. "Finally, about five weeks ago, mother suggested that I try Grape"Niits and I beean at once, eating it with a little cream or milk. A change tor the better began at once. "To-day I am well and am gaining weight and strength all the time. I've gained 10 lbs. in the last five weeks, and do not suffer- any more from indigestion and the rheumatism is all gone. "I know it Is to Grape-Nuts alone that I owe my restored health. I still eat the food twice a day and never tire of it." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. The flavor of Grape-Nuts is pecu liar to itself. It is neutral, not too sweet and has an agroeable, healthful quality that never grows tiresome. One of the sources of rheumatism is from overloading the system with acid material, the result of imperfect digestion and assimilation. As soon as improper food is abandoned and Grape-Nuts is taken regularly, digestion is made strong, the organs do their work of building up good red blood cells and of carrying away the excess of disease-making material from the system. The result is a certain and steady return to normal health and mental activity. "There's a reason." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkg3. ' j ' v: * .. . - . . V s.x? a i ii i !NEGROES TO PHILIPPINES. i j All Colored Troops Now in United States Are to Be Sent to the Island for MllitaryDuty. A Washington special says: The ninch and tenth cavalry and the twenty-fifth infantry, including all the aegro soldiers in the regular army in this country, have been ordered to prepare for service in the Philippines, and "will sail at different times be- . ./ tween March 5 and June 5 of this .-V' year. The only other regiment com- ^ posed of negroes, the twenty-fourth | infantry, Is now doing service in the Philippines. Other troops ordered to the Phil- $ ippines are the sixth cavalry,' the eighteenth, twenty-sixth, twenty-ninth ClilU lUU ^XCUi illiauvi jr, J lie . f-w which will be relieved by the sending of these new regiments will be the ' | fourth, seventh and eighth cavalry, and the ninth, thirteenth, fifteenth, sixteenth and nineteenth infantry. g* It was stated by Major General Bell, chief of staff, that the negro regi- z# ment# are being sent to the Philip- jS pines because it is their turn to gov*:' and not because of any desire to get S. them out of the United States at this . time. The negro troops are to sail for the Philippines before most of the jM white organizations, the last of which " $. will not leave this country until early V;. in January, 1908. The following statement was issued from the war department in explanation oi the orders: . * "There was a time, between .1902 ' % and 1905, when the colored regimentswere not sent to the Philippines at alL In 1905, however, this policy was ^ tentatively changed, ?md the twentyfourth infantry, a colored regiment, was sent to the Philippines, and is J|jj now mere. une service 01 uie iweuvy fourth infantry in the Philippines has ipl been entirely satisfactory, and it is ' thought that the service of the other '7^ regiments will be. . "In reporting upon this subjecj^^'/? General Wood states: " 'I recently visited and made an inspection of the departments of the ; Visayas and Mindanao, and found th?> twenty-fourth infantry very weH liked?||a by the civil authorities In the nefgh- . borhood of its varied, stations. In fact, .at Tacloban, the governor expressed particular appreciation of the fine conduct of this regiment' "Because of this report and expe- , rience, the general staff recommend* ed and the department decided it ^ be wise to return tor the former po!-. icy of equal foreign service for alF.?3| the regiments, of the army. "The present assignment of the pther colored regiments to the Philippines is merely for an equal distri- . bution of foreign sendee. They nave not been there for four years. It now" becomes fair to them and to the other * regiments that they be assigned the Philippines in due order. "Foreign service, it should be stated, increases the pay of the men .gjjlrag per cent and counts double time for retirement. It was pointeid out at therefore, that the ideifcv-3l?i that these orders were prejudicial tgrfjjKj the! colored troops, or were made on ,iaccount of the Brownsville affair, ! utterly absurd." CANT BLUFF LIVINGSTON. Managers of New York Cotton E* change Threaten Congressman. A Washngton dispatch says: Rep resentative Livingston of Georgia Fri- . day made the following statement concerning the action in New York Thursday of the board of managers of ther New York Cotton Exchange in deciding to consult counsel as to the adTte^;^ ability of bringing suits for against himself and President Jordan "lO of the Southern Cotton Growers' As-sociation, for their recent action to S asking the postofllce department a fraud order against the Exchange: "It is a losing game if they thiiik they can bluff me out by threatening^: libel proceedings. An attempt is being <5gjj made to cloud the issue by asserting ^ , that I am after the New York Cotton TT-y-rhanee as a body. I am after theV;|3 governing body, the steering commit- .. 7; tee composed of about fifteen men,.';,'^ who are responsible for existing con- .^g ditions. There are many honest mea.Vf'^ in the exchange.'! STEAMER REPORTED LOST. The City of Panama Failed to Reach South American Ports. A dispatch from Pescadero,. near$;^ San Francisco, says that the Pacifi&v ? tj mail steamer City of Panama, which left TYi3co on December 31 for South and Central America, was wrecfc^^|| near Wardell beach. J Tlie Panama had a passenger lift |3 of seventy and a crew of thirty more. Life rafts, fully provisioned,-;^^ and much werckage marked "City Panama," are coming ashore, hut no sign cf a survivor. MEXICAN JUNTA FORMED. Its Purpose Is to Bring About a Rfp||?9 olution in Republic. A Mexican revolutionary junta withr a constiution similar to the .one existing in St. Louis, was formed in San Antonio, Texas, Sunday, by pioin*;f?|$S inent Mexicans of the city, who con- ^ stitute the liberal party. 4 -. -A