University of South Carolina Libraries
MLS ROOSE Daughter of the Pr Wife of Congres A BEEATIFUL WEDDING SERVICE With. a'L the Splendor of a Grand O!icial Function and the Devotional BEauty of a Cathredal Service in the Historic East Room, the Presi dent's Eldest Daughter Becomes Mrs. Nicholas Longworth, Taking Her ?lace in the Memories of the Mansion as its Twelfth Bride. - W:sih i:i. !7I, Sp ee1 a.- -In ihle beau i - . -:1hi'.1va: b a.: 4 1 the *h -. ..e, a i w a i les after esn y. 1 \11 n-erble4 I. Iev. Ih j y Y tee B.bo vf Wash S :. - hl'r test11 .is al ( t-h (r i uP edth i i ulw ns Roos.-ve , ~ .-I llet d n ip.' of Il i (.u- . was atin Ith :n- i an w h a l t CI (Il XI de ia t~ -4.. MRS AUE.ROS head si entretlol srvhT .l ' Iy J OA' 2 o4oc.i1r al he south entrace, theeb"avid a.-se be Ii frn* ftem n .,0. A MRSt.e AnCere aaROE t :mdared ierail wa. They s.-~ t-' 'i.-- malersood 4' b u ot di' - 'o e d aut hii ely . ' tel coutry1' a, few miles- from?.. y the ato da t- ' n "I e Tenalvt'i wn1 ~roiad. photographti lef the brVlie m huer non gownIwa taen beor herVil <- adreir the hltCita lit nt' L-a ' fhte .l 'ou e fruta ty lua o er XX MA4.id 41m . 311, l4 idhht4'.iI velt. he tO rat lid e brie ring te au o::. hia. ti k I ih t I4 her h1"tlj~it e-- wh ie mo den han he eb ic --I~ li bt ter.' * *. t ~ i "aii' br.1 ide. eacher~ ied During Hunt. on, Ga.'t." Spc.411--l eV. 71. Lee -eli, (1 X a Pr byte i11tn 4 ud iterat er hi . 1rind v hile they were bird i 3Ir Powel!, after a ha bee tRul1hed. te~ pped back .1 and in breiking the gun .... er1 w4 icagd th'la e .-z:*mauI. Death was immediate. Treasurer S5.C. 0 Short. - mighamZ 111. Ny.ee.inl--AUd i t o r' 5 * 'n' ( o. t e el r. ln ule I booksN (f 5e4*retary I. L.e VaiTmn eftl A BRID esident Becomes the sman Longworth \'Zl IS - 'A 1. 1 n! thIat ,al IIV it- OIN'amW" f-I , 1* 1! : t11 ; I.\u - io ' .Sa -rl4 rl ,. Tender 1li tiV . i e 114. must h:.ve een te recllcinwox ls 14.ir 'al wa. one 441 tIhe vItIesses tof Rls ooSevehl 's weddine An Imposing Function. It h1,1d been the dlesire notj wnly "r .iss Roosevelt. who was st1114 tI endbill of thIe Pre-sidenlt a11, ll-S. OCVIlt that the weddinl udbe relebrated Iin a nai~umr compi~arotively nu1iiet. that it shoudii1 be a tmil t af fillr. This d('sire. it sh tmlv was' dis el-'sed, could n,-,, be irtiled. As i haall devlope. th wedinl :: the"4 I m timpin e tin thatever I.e '1"S II4 Ia . tok phce aite WIite lihue . Th thuand ( st s hfiddenL tI l the cre man. ben tharriv s ihtly aa -r 'cait tlok. The etered byp the s 1 Prrtce 1ind pas.e (It. yp the m stair cIII irt ctiv i th hIistori e Eas, 1 I -a . a111ti1 s al t ies. ohe noen ei was (1iite in it Wcdlsic 1-- had beeni ietnlldiIe t l h the Thenilornl t'i-:'asto we muolre oie greal aded electriw nt tf ti, rit 1er a cha dIelers. n . hile war tiiale i4s werv tilized tiroth t a ae Missth reAlicder of Dite Bride.Hus itwas detorinacl Societd toetr riage scene'~. S wth sunllittK I was5 a beatlifu'ei4loncit.l founded upon the1111 t h sun4 sines1 on.11'' No lov(el day 'aIs balmv.t'almosit.i i n s pring' t . Noiti Coean'ticirvs day for Joh wddin could'have bee "imaginedt.-'Il4irni'vn Tle flora le eortin wtere m~sorei labrate5 tha any~'i hereiIttOfore hnanve been in11 Presid Rooevieta s admin with decora'lt1tijtiona vrnc oft to waselio' needet ae oda thoe ess enplid ach of th('1e man thlsn w 4' handome abls. oe ech a th north Gild sont h ends f lero.br w~as at niw--i'.ificenit ceitiv 40'~ haX~ NAi rore 41141 :Ii ii'EL ("' i~ iL: .1;X 'Al- ill wElEEi i vlliEVE lll i Vo \ll . 4ILL m ill11 v .I - \c],"flE L ii ILI :lv i l ii' -- ,,fi I Il. 4E.11 .1 L E I \ ~I ; oc I byI do X i. I I v ! ('1 1 E is j EE 1 i 0 111 - 1) -zE , 11:. ] EI Ill WE 1': 1*-,] --di I i I - fJESEl. J ile hr, wae a 1. -1:111 4 '1*iL e~~~~~~~l~11 wI II Ij'iE liE'EE L t.i! i l I i I I EIE'IX~flTAIX!N IIT L 0 iW0RT11, OF VINCINNATI. t~l\ c:X tl' W, LIWLIELS EEdolwtI" l-eS. TILL IJ i* jcwcs E 1 LL l brhieI Wlv., III(. '.IEI1) EdialiEidi ]Ivek1:Ie. whVIich i I hviE. il i Ill.' LEEEEII. () e .111dIhuE 41.11111v , et l, V woh E i d,ii1-i Thiti!. le E(ILI iEIEESEEIV X.erE ; .iILI1..E4 i ld 1:1 ~ ~ j ca Iid !i c s Ie il 1) (.iA I I.,i- XX I v ii 'EXd il I (IL ifrlLL sail l t tlil)Ii I ili bows.JiM\. "lit' lsiP . ii) 'X e who 'I,, LI ol !c,.. IE1I lis I;]. * riic.! ll d 1)ht L 1~~ ~~~ i1 .,-LE IE I lI~ :iVa I ILEI E lit., . lll.L.Ji i- it) tILe XX;LI IL -i:dI II! 'Eil Icdpped I'' vLvILii l E ill 11w ~ i'cLL )(i l hisliiLLr An Auspicious Moment. 11ilEEilItIs ill fi t I-44lis '' Et* 0-1c W hil'' Ill IEE\X. vvI iesi.'s llit loieE Ls. IBisiiip St iele hl 11~. Ati the ("ELlisCI 'Ll Dii ItI I'Q-S(is% foili Ohe I; nie zilld MANY SPLENDID GIFTS Never Was a Bride so Generously and Lovingly Remembered--The Groom' Gift a magnificent Necklace of Se lected Diamonds, the Most Valuable of All. v bieie perllittei it w ".11-v il- br i pres1n1. F'r Iw I days tI ( er C PhOle in the librarIy 1 fl ,th.,1od Ii ,or of the White House a11n nIot for. namomeil were illey lef t unuarda'll. The &ins itiuber nearly 1 1a i1aln(l :o'i is known that all lave not ar- C rie.The display c.onlsists, prinlcip- e< ally (of jewelry i anId rare brie-a-brae f( mng the many bewautiful things re- r! (eivei are some rarle .1(ld Inces aiil o: Jwxels Iromli '1-s. Ie. tdie ranid- w inut her of the bride. p Partial List of Presents. b No list of presen t S was madhle pub lie allI 111) vomplete list tilat is even 5 aI-prioXilm(ely accurthltv v ll h iit ll pIle -d: bilt M il--oll" d 111h llaldrils 'e- i ceivedI bY iss Hoosevehl pre the 1,(,-C lowill: Presilbel Lout . If Fae--A W expressly tor' 3iss l44o5sev(e1. It is a sipe :lii an11 11t1lmlv 111 1l'r) ravs sceneS renwm-d In 1h ist'Or witl gems I II lel] va1lin. n1e11, 41 thle T von41 Steriilnirg. ll1- ( I':iilj 4( 101 the 1 :IrI It I'*4 ln1 The EM I (eror . o l i ill-- hle - Oully .bsed vs a piec of nderral .lap1"Imest mbo 9i Hvb-publiv of, (ub1)--A speciall neek - haVe (f selecte ellIS. the ( esignl ( of Z( thle lere heilig nia:1le il1: la is oI l e he stlr of lit.e t liba w l ve ille 1- t ill( ' l tll' ilst v1 1 a lt IbI e i!'Is re !el: I ) tihe bridk. wl' i I exn 1 l- 1 ll. V liv E 1-ilre s ql. ll v('Il cht lil - m .\ a d i1Inel2 4 Iad-.\ \-lwe ii ih!* Il - I' V II 1 )e111.1 l v~h f, (1.11 Vi lI! I 1( I11 S lnmbroi.deieji. ing5Cry4~ emvn uid ma I,. l bre-abra. I'I The KIing. of tay---A Aleie tb - h ly.depir-iting scelies ofr Italian lift. ! was manwfactured expressly hw or 3iss Houseve,1 lin. Florencev. Po)pe Plins X-A handl'somle Mosiaev 0i represeming, one of thev great pit ir"s inl thle Vatficav. z The Kigof Spaini-Piveof (i'anti I ue!( jewvelry of rare de ignad val UP. -1 1l1nd senlt a gift to the bride. but thee cit aacter of. it has not4 beeni disclosed.t~l W\hile some of the :nnbassadors4(1' anid n ni ini sters averedited1 to this c'apita 31i from for14iieignieI4 coutries senI t inidividut- el all presenlts to Miss Roosevelt. the. mat- ir ctity of t hemt 1reseliteil tol her off er- al i11s oft fl1owers. 1 they are'( known,. the Taifter's. have e. Liveni has bien seenl by several per' sons1. It is a ncLklace( of gold liks, se't herie an th1 lere wi th small di1 a mond14s. At tac-hed is a peindant . all al (.uamrine 111. set arom1214 with d uia- Y Washtub Full of Potatoes. b] Il yours'.' lTis bit of tender'I senit imentt ilIll) 111l1t arr'1ived at ilhe \Vtite 1? ouset5L fo4r tihe bride. Piled on1 topJ of1 the 0 express wag'on arith the tubl were sac-ks ho(lding~ two buhl obpoa to'es. i Thu11 it wvill be seentt 11 diamond necklac'es are nlot the on1ly gifts with Ii which Miss Roosevelt is favored. More than 6.000 valentinies were rece'ivedl by Miss Roosevelt. an extra force of' elerks being~ necessatry for their handling.q fi The Official Staff. s Dutrinig the time thle gtuests were al assembling tihe military anld niaval w ofticials detailedi for 1lhe occasion to w~ the White House as thec social aides bl of the President, were completing tile U: arrangement, by seeing that the dis- al tiruguished thironig was disposed1 pro- ti perly for the cremnony. The officers d; vcre: Colonel C. S. Btromwell, 1. S. c; A.. the Pre'sidenlt' m ilitarv siide: si Lieutenant Commfanduer' A. L. Key. . S. N.. thei( Presidenet 's~ navIl ide:1 31ajor C. L. Mc( rawle. I. S. M. C. (aptain GuIy : V. H einry. b. \. A.C (aptainl Fitzhulghl Lee Jr. . S. \. t< Lieent ant . Gra. S ird .i S. A.: Lieultenahnt (Chauiirey Shaielfor4d. b 1'. S. N: En>sign Adlphusl1. Andriew. iu I . S.x. : (atini Spen'lcer Crosby. U. ( -.-: 'pli A.W st .U . A w News Ttems.'4 Iulierstate ( 4411nere1' 44onan('sion to) 111ne :nembers4'1 11nd4 1to ma1ke !bW initial railwayv line liable to4 thel sippe4r for Count Lini de1 Cas1telialne was1 for n~llyi served with rit or114 separationI which accoirditng to the (on1te'ss will a 11lot oc contested. One of theC Mor'necan 'oniferecae 1 delegates reirardis the situnat ion as ex- j tremehv delicate. Secretary Blonaparte' an~d Rear-Ad miratl Sainds at tended a 'onfe'rence at thle White Houise. at which Naval 11 .\ca demy problecms were conside red. t Amaid imnpressive ceremonlies the lj bdy'O of Kin-z (Chria was removedb froma (opeinhagenl to Roskilde. At Oma~ha "Pa~)t" '' rowe was ae- t1 1pui tted (4f a chIarge oft robber'y of b 2.O.0O in oe~lctioni with tihe ab- f .',AUni1 ot 1:.lw-,1 ('tiaity, J. JASTRO STANDS PAT outh AmneriR. Leader Wi Try to Hold His Own ENSORSHi!P IS VERY STRIOT astro Claims Great Military Power and a Full Treasury, and Proposes to Test the Monroe Doctrine. Wilin m,. ad. Curacoa. v Cable. o0nd it ions 1in \eneznela Were ucliang Iat he date of the latest advices rm thait country. The censorship is v, ii. One report is that the attitude IN. Presidenlt \'incente1 Gomnez. ho is Sa id to be plotting against resident Castro in cas4e of a Freh(' [ockade. is causing somev anxiety. It reported also that G eiieral Aitoio elintini. Second Vice President. has a eret understanding w12 Wih France and iat he aspires to tilie presideciy. All is tuimoi'il over the Frenelh ( able ompanZI1y' concession1 is altriblndl 1'o lhe toai l str('l 1i 40 i eIv'tit' I2(; . as the army re'rts st'Ite. h- total ornmmient .0 Man-er icsvi' iuall artillery 9 . ir resid lit ( Is S saldi to bec l ml "e will test the . 'l(iro : dXeirine. Germany Renews Her Claim. l~i Tris. IC ta;ble. -A tresil s(mli- o Pial ilie enilnat"ina- froni 4 ernilan id claimilig that (erillanys alnoiur roluv d'.1 .inios that thie po li' of, [oroceo he either rendiated b"Y the )ne s 1stem u l1er tlie v1 ions uw.'r. elitiilv etmruisted to netral 11:1 4 is. lhas at1 t a e l Jitneh 11 ti ioll ire. The Tm devoetel its h-:liina rtlicl" to th, niote, pw!min Imtha terll. the p *e lerihs of4A, ance hit I we vr riii ttl '%v l h yellin I l'rI(I CS l'F: ile s as c jme! ne 11st Ib" (lll)iimed4 e wil lit-lli ' v ur1-1iusly ai (Tt in' .1 he 1.~er Ir,' 1 1 I lhe jt"('. powers. (Ii'. r in chi1;ln uisi hw enitirelY reeted .11.4i :h!wlil 'l ri.hls o.f the pIWers Ills 11t: la-na La n t ' ed-in ot hier wv ird. h r Iipt i4Oll of t I! forniem sit!liit PIll. Exposition Date Changed. Norf~olk. Va.. Specil. -T The iformal )e1111g oi the Jamesiown E:<psition is been set for Ap1il 26. 1907. in end of May 13. 1907. as originally lanned. It was on April 26. 1907. at the British set tiers in the London >paniy first debarked at Cape Hen r, Va.. and in the desire to fittingly lebrate the 300th anniiversarv of tat event as well ats the ter-eeniten al of the settlemenit at .Jamecstownu. [v 13;. is found thle reason for the inging the date of the formal open ig. The (celebriat ion of the landinlg .niversarty. May 13. will be made t occasion of a mlonster celebratiot, bich will be the great even of the cposition. Yoakum Terminal in Houston. HoutstonI. Tex.. Special.-Sam Laz. rus, of St. Louis. repiresenting the oakuini inte rests5 in Texas in the mat 'r of seenil ofl. I iuilts ot war ad ittedt thlat 11 leeni t purelhase oft 12 ocks in lie residenice district of onst on wa i thle intest- of the e the business ofl the Yoaktum roads :Houistot. To secure this pr'oper'ty. libotut $1. 30,000 has lbeen and is being expend 1, and Mr. Lazarus stated thant to aild the stationi and depiots and put 1 the terminal a further outlav of ,500.000 will be necessary. Options i the property are now being closed Serious Fire in New York. New York. Special.-More than a arter of a million dollars' worth of roperty was destroyed and several remen were injured, one of them riously, by fire in the six-story store 2d factory building at S26-S:3S Broad ay. The firemen who were injured ere caught uinder a mass of partly urned packing boxes when one of tihe pper floors collapsed. A few feet vay tihe flames blazed fiercely. and I pinioned meni were in extreme anger until a score of fellon firemen ie to their aid and dr"agged them at to safe-ty. Killed on Refusing to Leave. Roanolae. .. Sueeial.-Samutel arrI. a promtinient hunibermnan ofI Ma aki. WV. Va.. wats shot a ndl1 :intnt i1ed. by G. '1. iiley. in thle home 1 the inuer. hDad feeli'inadl existed itt returned fronm woirk an id foundE i rr in a very affabi le e~vers.In -ithI his wtIfe. Ho oirdered him to' -ave. hInt (air refttsed i'td madll an 1t(empht to draw a revoliver WhenI he -as killed b' Thiley. airoad President Dies at Homie in Nashville. Na-hville. Tenn.. Spoecia!.--Mj oln W. Thomas, p)resident of1 the' ~asville. Chattanooga & St. Lotnis ail road. died at his home here IM the e of 7)i. He was a ntative of Nash lle and hn~d been fonryears one of s most public-spirited citizens. eart failutre was the direct cause f his death. Fatal Explosion as Graysville. Chattanooga. Special- A special to .e News from Graysvill'. Teint.. says5 iiat the boiler of a sawmill owned by obert JIordani exploded an d was own fifty yards. .Jotrdan' s young st son was so badly hurt that he died . two hours. Aniothenr40 son'trm was rken and the fathler's sknll was ractured. Th'e acc'identi was (due to 2W-.ate i thoaler. CONGR[SS AT WORK What Our National Law Makers Are Doing Day by Day. Leaf Tobacco Freed of Tax. tA rcompromA ibil mo*' ternaal reve ltaIIn 1n:m a port by the lltuse aivs an2 ' comnu111ttee. A t lm ur enue laws impose l t: in barcov iI ca(e the prodi<+r pl * the hands of an agen for sve '.III permits the grower personal el his own tobacco without tax. I ider the measure agreedi upon, the sale ot leaf tobacco will be as inriiestriCtei as the sale of any other produet. Tobae co growers cideavored.l to have the bill extend exemption fro miax to twist tobacco but the committee would not include anything in the measure but the natural leaf. Subsidy Bill in Senate. The Senate east its fin ball' t on the subsidy shipping hill. whicb waF passed by a vote of :,S to 2. AE tle votes for tie bill ver byv Repluo IEan Senatmors. anl(d five lipubiea: Selators voted with the 'lleneerat oppositin. Th'ey wver." Messcs. BurIk-1 ett. Dolier1L F olh-11". one n W.arner. The vote on the bill was preceeued by actjion upnIl a miber OL aInicid Ments. :;id b'v an litive day if de' V.eC''C ace('jit e.l, binl in ol ly onie eas6 was iiditheatioll anixu to '?ial wai i:1 2iord'ii i ve witi th i sh s m 't1C managers'~ of the bill. Tie ('.:iEptil: Wason an i :iame1nheit 'idfered bv 3r. Spion r elliillttil'. ille p ov in givnghl-py (,I m b-roflthe N val Re-serxv wvho ve sr:dless llinu: six Ijonthis. FEATVi1m*S OF Tlll: 3ll-IASCltE. As la sseI. lie bill estab]lisles thia teen new cointrat mail lines an1 in creases 1tle silbrention to Aile octi4i ' liles T Inilg frIl v!! Pavilive coa.st to Alistralasia. Of the thiiteen :ew li:es. lire leave ( Atlantic coast prts. 1.,- run in )t Brazil. n to r - gliax n ii all ru{it ila. aiild in'' to Soluth ; frica : six 1i I1: 1 i1 1 n Il Il id;! of e,-x-i,. eliibracilv (ill!' to (. raiI. inc to tuba. oneI to 31exic' id h te enllal Alel 'iea anid t le islinnus of 1ana .: fou: r froin Palie ciast }iorts. embi'aein" two I,) a an. t'I ina and the P'LIilippilles dir( ei. one to .'a pan. China and the Philippines. via Haxwaii and one to Mexico. (entral America and the Isilus oI Panam. The bill also grants a subvention at the rate of 5 per gross toil p.e' ear to cargo vessels engaged in the for Ci'1 trade of the United States and at the rate of $6.50 per ton to Ves sels engae in the Philippine trade. The Philippine coastwise law beinmg postponied until 1909. Another fea tur'e of the bill is that ereating' a Na val Reserve force of 10.000 ofieers and men, who are to reecive retainers after the British practice. Vessels receiving subsidies are required to carry a certain proportion of Naval Reserve meni among their crews. The aggregate compensation for mail lines is about $3.000,000 annually. No steam vessel of less than 1.000I tons i.s to receive aid under the bill. Busy Day in the House. The "morninlg hour" prevailed in the House Thursdav until aftcr 5 o'clock. The result was the passage of a bill to increase to $30.000 a year the Federal appropriation to each State and Territory for the support of agricultural experiment stations - and of a bill repealing the present hkw g'ranting American regitster to foreign ships wrecked and repaired on the American coast in the dis cr'etion of the Secretary of the De partmecnt of Comerce and Labor. and requiring a special act of Congress to grant such register. The feature of the day was the at tcrmpt of Mr. Payne, chairman 'of the wa~ys and means committee. to get up his bill for the consolidation of cus toms collection districts. A furious opposition developed and on a roll call a large majority votedl against considering the bill. Again, when the experiment station bill came up, the debate reverted to the Payne bill and it was with difficulty that it could be brought to an end. Mr. Payne. speak ing on his bill, said it cost last year .91,400 to. collect no revenute at Beau fort, N. C.: at Albemarle. N. C.. it cost $1,606 to coilleet $5. There were fifty-one non-paying ports on the list which Mr. Payne read from. The total collected int these ptorts was $47.242 and the expense of' maintain ing thme ports was $15t;.1.3 Mr. Thomas. of Niirth Cardlina. deC vgloped an argrumenim againist the con solidation df ports. The measure. lhe declared. was no't onei 0of econotmv. If 211 the ports r'eferried to by the com rwittee werec abliishedl. he sa id. but $109.000 a year would bte saved and rore thtan thItis won]ld be list bv rea son of snuml itus. wie:. lhe maintaini ed, was carried on ini the abandonedl ports. Besides, there were many oth cr duties disch'largted by eustiom ifli ccirs besides collecting revenue. Mr. Blackbttrn. of Niorth C.ar'olina, also spoke against the Payne bi!!. An idirect compliment was p~aidl to Mr. Longworth by a vote to adjourn until Monday. although nothing will appear itn The Record of this pur pose. Overman Gets Appropriation. Senator Overman did a splendid piece of work on Thursday. He in duced the Senate to pass its bill ap propriating $73,000 for the erection of a public building at Salisbury and a few moments later secured the pas~ sage of a bill appropriating $15.000 for building the long proposed mili tarv road from Salisbtury to the Nat 1iinal C'emeterv. The So aute has conme ti view with 'disr'tor b ill appopr'i, ting? moniey for1 Snhl purposes,"' and it was olyx after' a brush withi Sen ators Ke~an and. Tleile' -hit h ob tained favorable act io OfFER Of 13 CENTS Syndicate Will Take a Large Amount of Cotton FARMERS MAY HOLD NIGHER A Propesition That Insures a High Price For Cotton to the Producer May Hold For 15 Cents. Atlanta. Ga.-Special. - President Harvie Jordan. of the Southern Cot ton Association. made the following announcement: "I have secured an agreement with a syndicate of Eastern capitalists, headed by E. R. Thomas, to take 500, 000 bales of middling cotton from Southern planters at the minimum price of 13 cents a pound, deliverable at interior points or the ports. by or before July 3, 1906, the deal to be closed as socn as option on the svndi cate's requirements shall have been secured. "The agreement further provides for the taking of all cotton ready for market next Aungust and September from the crop of 1906 at the then mar ket prices. to be not less than the min inum pric fixed by the Southern Cotton Association. This agreement is not intended to affeet holders who are demandinz a maximum of 15 cents at present. New York banker, are prepared to intanee fully all South ern bankers in assisting hold.-rs of cotton for higher prices. Option con traets will be forwarded upon appli cation to all cotton growers." Four Lose Lives in Fire. Portland. Ore.-Special1-At least four persons lost their lives in a tire that swept a busy commercial dijstrict at the east end of the Morrison street bridge spanning tile Willamette river and eleven pr. -sons were seriously in jured. The first started in the Mount Hood Saloon and consamed that place and tle lodging house above 'it, in which a majority of those killed and injured were sleeping. Twenty-two horses, property of te Easiside Transfer Co., were destroyed. Watchhman Nathaniel P. Young met death in a heroic effort to save the horses. He made several trips in to the transfer company's stables and finally was cut off by the flames. Looking from an upper window. he waved his hands to the crowd below, and cried: "Good-bye, boys; I can't get out this time,'' and he fell back into the flames'' The loss if $50,000. England Blames Germany. London, by Cabe.-It is expected in ofiial circles that the Algeeiras Con ference will break up. possibly dur ing the present week; leaving the Mo rocan situation where it was before the conference was called. Germany is given the eredit for the failure. In fact, it is believed here that Emperor William, realizing that there is no hope of Germany's demands being endorsed by the powers. is now anx ions that the conference shall fail. Great Britain maintains her position, supporting the French demands in regard to the police. and cannot see any reeson for a compromise. Should the conference break up, it is under stood that France will continue her policy of policing the Algerian fron tier. and should serious trouble break out within the Sultan's domains. France will undertake to suppress them, notifying the powers that she cannot allow the disorder to continue. as it threatens the peace'of her colony. Canton Victim to Blame. Hong Kong, By Cable.-A dispatch received here from Canton says that the anti-foreign sentiment there due to the attitude of the Viceroy, appears to be determined to create friction with the United States States. The Viceroy, up to the present time has taken no action in connection with the representations of the consular body regarding the recent attacks on for egners. A leflet has been widely cir culated in the city of Canton urging the people to co-operate with a view to tile expulsion of the Viceroy. N~ews in Brief. M. Olivier Taigny. formerly French charge d'affaires in'Yenezuela. on go ing ashore in New York talked breifly about his dilfferenees with Castro. and afterward went to Washington to con fr with Ambassador Jasserand. The testimnony. in G reene and~ Gay tor ca-e 2lated lor'y to stock dieah 'f Capt::in Carter with New York brokers. Mr. AntoinetteTo!a etecdt .eath for .ren~ m:i. got ttuoth Greene-Gaynor's Sixth Week. Savannah. Special.-The trial of Greene and Gaynor entered upon its sixth week. The most recently ex pressed opinions of courail for both the government and the defense in dicate that it will consume at least six weeks longer. Greater progress has been made during the last two weeks than seemed likely during the earlier stages of the trial. May Establish Fruit Exchanuge. Martinsburz, specinl. - President Alexander (Clohan, of the Berkeley County Horticultural Society, has is sied a call for a meeting of the so iety on Saturday. February 10. for the purpose of disc'ussinz the estab lishment of a fruit cecantze in this city. Prof. W. F. Rntmsey, of the West Virginia Azrienitural Station, will address tile society on tihe ques io of sae destrovers.