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Cannery in the German Vary. The German Admiralty proposes to Increase the standard of marksmanship with naval guns of llgbt calibre, and at the same time provide a reserve of seaBen trained in laying and aiming a gun by offering increased pay to those vrho, after receiving a special trainingingun ery Te-engage at the end of their three years' compulsory service for a similar period. Such men in the home fleet will receive $150 additional at the end mt their additional three years' service. ?New York Commercial Advertiser. Lost Hair MHHMHBnmKnmmranNHH " My hair came out by the handfa!. and the erav hairs began to creep in. I tried Ayer's HairVigor, and it stopped the hair from coming out and restored the color."? Mra. M.D.Gray, No. Salem, Mass. There's a pleasure in offering such a preparation as Ayer's Hair Vigor. It gives to all who use it such satisfaction. The hair becomes thicker, longer, softer, and more glossy. And you feel so secure in using such an I old and reliable prepara-1 tion. $1.00 a bottle. AH drentsts. | ix juut uluj^gtpll vauuwb jwuj b aend us one dollar and we will express I 70a a bottlo. Be sure and give the name I ?f jour nearest express office. Address. I gj J. C.AYER CQ., Lowell. Mass. g The Cop at Dead Man's Curvo. The big pohieman stationed on "Dead Man's Curve" was proving very second that his lot was anything bat a happy one. Within five minutes he made four rescues. First, he went to the assistance of a man who tried to dispute the right of way with a car; then he grabbed a woman who essayed to dodge a cab and was about to fall under the wheels, b.ht who, when he sprang forward, fell on him instead. Next, he pushed back a fussy old man who ran before a bicycle, and gathered under his wing a little girl who was barling puny defiance in the face f an automobile. Finally he went back to the curbstone to act as convoy to a flock of *<mld maidens. Hp marshaled them around him, -waved his white-gloved hand, ahd with the aid of a Damrosch Jied: "Now, all together, ladies, please?all together."?New York Press. A Deep Anchorage. The greatest depth to which a ship has been anchored is 2000 fathoms, considerably more than two miles. I IDidNot Feel Thai I Could, Walk ' "Dear Mrs. Pinkham :?It is m E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compou me. My work keeps me standing 01 long. Some months ago it didn't s would get so dreadfully tired and m; with the pain. When I got home ai go right to bed, and I was terribly bl lar and the flow was scanty, and I w a girl friend who was taking your r ought to take it too. So I got a boti table Compound and commenced After the first few doses menstruat: I some time. It seemed to lift a load o I felt brighter than I had for month I never have an ache or pain, and I j time. I am regular and strong and "I recommend Lydia E. Pinkh ever I hear of a girl suffering, for I you feel so sick."?Miss Mamii Ket Women should not fqjl to pr< women; just as eurely as they i merated in their letters, just so a Vegetable Compound cure othei bles, inflammation of the ovarie; painful menstruation, nervous e: tian; remember that it is Lydlt pound that is curing -women, a sell you anything else in its plat Miss Amanda T. Petterson, E mil" AB Vegetable ^/ auvayfieit No other fei received such widespread and other medicine has such a reco Those Women who refuse warded a hundred thousand ti: ? a cure. Sold by Druggists ev< $5000 which iriU^iro * v Matter's Highest Speed. The highest speed which matter has beeu known to reach is that attained by the eruption of hydrogen and other gases from the sin, which is at times several hundred miles a second. { Arizona'* Potionoas Sostces. More poisonous snakes are found in Arizoni than in any other part of the United States. I . Colorado produced last year more dollars' worth of silver than Alaska did 1 of gold. It is not generally known that the jackal is a greater destroyer of humanity in India than the tiger. Statistics published by the Government of India show that while 928 persons were v killed by tigers, more than 1000 chil- t dren were carried away by jackals. j ?? "7771777. * JUTS permanently our?a. .10 uisur untium- * o??8 after flrit day's use of Dr. Kline's Great KerveRestorer.'j2trlalbottleandtreRtlsefre9 c Dr. R.H.Kline, Ltd., 981 Arch St., Phila.,Pa T An opportunity seldom comes back for f a second trial. a Denfnen* Cannot Be Cared t by local applications as they cannot reaoh the j diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by const!- ? tutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucous lining of I the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in- I flamed you have a rumbling sound orimper- ] feet hearing, and when it Is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam- . mation can be taken out and this tube re- 11 stored to its normal condition, hearing will a be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,which is nothing but an li inflamed condition of the mucous surface. n We will give One Hundred Dollars for any j case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that . cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Cir- ~ eulars sent free. F.J.Cheney A Co. .Toledo, 0< * Sold by Druggists, 75c. li Hail's Family Pills are the best. s \ Wheu a man is henpecked he is not apt to crow about it. n Laundering the Baby's Clothes. 7. Many mothers are ignorant of the serious t injury that may result from washing the clothing of an infant with strong washing a powders and impure soap. For this reason n it should be laundered at home under the ? mother's directions, and only Ivory Soap used. To throw the little garments into the p ordinary wash shows great carelessness, " Eleanor R. Pahkeb. 3 The one thing that every man is willing p to share is trouble. Ladies Can Wear Shoes P One size smaller after using Allen's Foot- a Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new shoes H easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating, aching it feet, ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At t] all druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't ac- | (j cept any substitute. Trial package Fbee bj mall. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y ^ A fellow generally gives a lame excuse tl when he has his leg pulled. . - s JamsurePiso's Cure for Consumption saved * my life three years ago.?Mas. Thomas Robbies, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17,1903. 6 A girl may have a far away look in her p eyes and still be near sighted. Putxam Fadeless Dtes cost but 10 cents per package. ^ ,A- trnrKnilf hflV* loll can i utt>c a uiw?-vuv ing something to blow in. jj^'" ^djKBBprJSL TnPwMKyrQBlliMfttjflQufM^ r* ith thankfulness I write that Lydia 11 nd has been of the greatest help to * i my feet all day and the hours are " eem as though I could stand it. I " j back ached so I wanted to scream n b night I was so worn out I had to ue and downhearted. I was irreguas pale and had no appetite. I told nedicine how I felt, and she said I E tie of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- 0 to take it. It helped me right off? ? ion started and was fuller than for Y ff me. My back stopped aching and ^ s. I took three bottles in all. Now 0 ?o out after work and have a good g am thankful to you for the change, o tarn's Vegetable Compound when- c know how hard it is to work when n rns, 553 9th Ave., New York City. o >flt by the experiences of these vere cured of the trouhles enuirtainly will Lydia E. Pinkham's , s who suffer from womb trou- t ' " vi J 1 if KICLney irouuies, iricgumi nuu e scitability, and nervous prostra- j, i E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cornnd don't allow any druggist to ;e. !ox 131, Atwater, Minn., says: d . Mrs. Pinkiiam. ? I hope that you " h this testimonial so that it may a rs and let them know about your t medicine. re taking Lydia E. Pinkham's i Compound I was troubled with land of fainting spells. The blood l 1 to my head, was very nervous and t . tired, had dark circles around eyes. 1 ve now taken several bottles of E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- ! and am entirely cured. I had taken medicine for many years but it did :ood. lease accept mv thanks for this most. 1 it medicine which is able to restore o suffering women." < nale medicine in the world has unqualified endorsement. No 3 ?i -"ii-ou ft# fomolp trnnhlps. 1U VI VI w- - to accept anything else arc remes, for they pet what they want ( jrywhere. Refuse all substitutes. , rith produce the originnl letters and signatures oi > ? their absolute geuulneneaa. a E. Flnkham Midlcla* Co., Lynn, Mail. . ; . ' 1 fHE PRESIDENT WEIcoId San Francisco Greets Him With Unbounded Enthusiasm. GNITES A $115,000 MORTGAGE >uuquomu uy iui ^iiuciia vumixiivivc m\ the Palace Hotel ? la Hie Speech ltooaeTelt Sara That Our Currency Syatein Should Be Made More ElattlcSuffgeata Further Financial Legislation San Francisco, Cal.?President Eoose-elt arrived here and rode for miles beween walls of densely packed, cheerng humanity. M. H. De Young made he speech of welcome. Admiral Bickord, of the British Pacific squadron, onveyed the good wishes of Kiug Edvard. and said that the arrival of the lagship to assist in tire greeting was mother instance of the cordial relaions existing between the two nations, 'resident Roosevelt begged that his [ood wishes be given to His Majesty. Before entering his carriage Mr. ioosevelt warmly shook hands with Engineer McGrail and Fireman EverV, who had' piloted him safely from he South. In the parade the line was leaded by a troop of colored cavalry? n innovation. At the Y. M. C. A. Building a throng iad assembled to see the burning of mortgages representing the total inlebtedness of $115,280. The President, iy request, torched a lighted match to he documents, and as the flames licked ip the papers he joined "with the asemblage in singing "Praise God, from Vhom All Blessings Flow." The President was banqueted at ight at the Palace Hotel by the Citiens' Committee. In his speech the 'resident said: "There is unquestionable need of encting further financial legislation, so s to provide greater elasticity in our urrency system. At present there are ertain seasons during which the rigid:y of our currency system causes a tringency which is very unfortunate n its effects. In my judgment, the longress that is to assemble next fnll hould take up and dispose of the ressing questions relating to banking nd currency. I believe that such ac:on -will be taken, and I am sure that ; ought to be taken. It is needed in tie interest of the business world, and : Is needed even more In the world or roducers. of earth tillers, of mpn who lake their living by the products of tie farm and ranch. Such actiou would upplement in fitting style the excellent rork that already has been done in reent years, as regards our monetary ystem." Before his arrival here President Roosevelt visited Leland Stanford, Jr., Tniverslty, at Palo Alta. He was reeted by President David Starr Joran. the faculty and students, to whom e delivered a brief address. SIGNS DRASTIC LIBEL LAW. ernar P?nnypacker liefer* to HI* Being Cartooned as a Dwarf. Harrisburg, Pa. ? Governor Pennyacker signed the Grady-Salus libel ill, and issued a long statement giving is reasons for so doing. The bill, rhich Increases the liability of newsapers for carelessness, does not affect ie weeklies. Daily newspapers are squired to print in each issue the ames of the responsible publishers nd editors. The Governor sa3's reputable newsapers need have no fear of the now iw, and that if it fails to accomplish ie ends desired it can be amended or jpealed. He refers to a cartoon in hich he was pictured as "an ugly lite dwarf" standing on a stool which nd been so placed that the starting of ie wheels of "a huge printing press" 'ould throw him to the ground. Put ito words the cartoon asserts to the orld that the press is above the law nd greater in strength than the Govrnrnent. This attitude, Mr. Pennyacker says, a self-respecting people 'ill not permit to be long maintained. BUSINESS MEN ENJOINED. maba Labor Unions Secure a Sweeping Counter-Order. Omaha, Neb. ? Judge Dickinson, in ie District Court, on application of A Vai'fAH on vnnffleant 1/iIU \J. JLCIOCI, an il IIU1 IIXZJ j.? the labor unions whose members re on strike, issued an injunction gainst the business men and propriojrs even more sweeping than that isned by the Federal court against the nions a week ago. the order restrains Lie business men from refusing to sell oods to dealers who employ uniou laor, prevents them from boycotting nion labor, requires the Business Ien's Association to cease holding leetings or conspiring against the nions or in any way interfering with h<? unions in the management of their ffairs. HTr?. Eddy> Church fllft of S120.000. Through the gift of the Rev. Mary taker Eddy, the Christian Scientists f Concord, N. H.. are to have one f the finest church structures in the Jranite State. The gift of Mrs. Eddy acludes the lot of land now occupied y Christian Science Hall, in the heart f the city, at the corner of State and icnooi sireers. in auuiuou 10 me rili f this site Mrs. Eddy presents to the hurch a cash donation of $100,000, aakinc her total gift represent the sum f $120,000. Maachurla Open to World. M. Plancon. the Russian Charge ['Affaires, at Pekin, China, announced hat all Manchuria was open to forign travel, and that passports were no onger necessary. Report! of Rusftlau Activity Denied. The Tokio correspondent of the Lon ion Times says me .Japanese uunsui t New-Chwang has telegraphed denyng all the rumors of Russian military ictivity and the reinforcing of the garisons in that region. Site Fop the Peace Palace. It is stated that the Hotel Vicux .")oelen will be purchased as a part of iie site of the Peace Palace, at The Iague. Holland, which is the .cift of Vndrew Carnegie. The site is the hcst it The Hague. The price is $:?00,000. Newny Glcanlucg. But two and a half per cent, of the leopiP OI Duigunu nfc i>iu^n-nii3. Sixteen ounces of gold are sufficient to gild a wire that would encircle the >arth. Cremation is illegal in Prussia, and recently the Diet rejected a bill to legalize it. The linked States Weather Bureau employs 1400 trained observers at ISO stations. The Association of the Officials of Bureaus of Labor Statistics meets next 5'ear at Concord. N. H. a WARNED AGAINST TITLES Minister Appeals to the Daughters oi ine nevoiuuan. fJelleve* Marriage of American TVomea to Foreltrn Noblemen li Disloyalty to Blood Oar Forefather* Shed. New York City.?At the opening of the twelfth annual oouvention of the General Society Daughters of the Revolution. in St. Paul's Chapel, the Rev. Robert Morris Kemp preached a sermon on marriage and the mission of women lhat greatly interested the 1200 women present. Dr. Kemp said, in part: "Patriotic societies such as yours have. I take it. no more reason for establishing an aristorcacy of birth in this land than they have in condoning that far more reprehensible aristocracy of wealth which seems often emphasized in the marriage of our fair young womanhood to the title of impecunious ? often miscalled ? noblemen. Is this not disloyal to the blood our founders shed? The American woman stands as nowhere else on the very pinnacle of influence. Let the patriotic women of to-day stand first for God and then for Godly things. CONTRACTED FOR A NEW WIFE. I "? T, n? T,l?? fa THAI Do A QUSUtlUU O J.WU10II VIV J.uva> ? mefttlc Dlfiruption. Syracuse. X. Y.?Mrs. William Kaull)eck, of the village of Baidwinsviile, lin-? taken her sis-year-old son and loft home because she found that her husband had s "written contract with Miss Helen Fones. a sixteen-year-old girl, to marry her within two years after the death of Kaulbeck's wife. The Kaulbecks have been married eleven years r.nd lived harmoniously together. Helen Fones is the child of a neighbor, and she has been at the Kaulbecks' house frequently since she was nine years old. Mr. and Mrs. Kaulbeck were both fond of her. Mrs. Kaulbeck was informed that a marriage agreement existed between her husband and Helen, and when she inquired about it Kaulbeck, under pressure, confessed and told her where the contract was hidden. Following directions Mrs. Kaulbeck found the document locked in a box and buried under an elm tree in a romantic spot called "Smoky Hollow." AGED COUPLE FATALLY- BURNED. Exploflion of Ga? Caonett Death of Heinan IBlaiflcn ana nm ?*u?. Buffalo, N. Y.? Heman M. Blasdell and his wife were burned to death at their home in North Collins. Mrs. Blasdell awoke at 2 o'clock and found the room filled with gas. She lighted a match and the gas exploded. Mrs. Blasdell ran down stairs with her night clothes on fire and fell in the street tt-rvihly burned. Her husband jumped out of the second story window and was picked up so badly burned and bruls-pd that he died at 6 o'clock. Mrs. Blasdell died at 11 in the morning. Mr. Blasdell was a prominent Republican. He founded the town of Blasdell. and was its first postmaster. He was Assemblyman in 1895 and 1896, and served with Ellsworth's A veneers in the Civil War. He was sixty-three years old and very rich. HARD BLOW TO MOTHERS-IN-LAWCourt Hold* That Wl?ei Need Not Stand Their Domination. Chicago, 111.?Judee Ball, of the Appellate Court, has delivered a decision against mothers-in-law that will not make him popular with these women. "If a husband, able to provide a separate home for a wife, takes her to a home presided over and wholly controlled by the mother-in-law and relegates his wife, in spite of repeated protests to a subordinate position, and submits to seeing her dominated by such mother-in-law, is the wife thereby justified in living separate and apart from her husband and therefore entitled to moinfonnnoo^ TTn^Pr flip oil* oi[?n&uiu luuiui^ v..v ? cnuistances of this case I unhesitatingly say yes." Then he granted Mrs. Ernestina Giese separate maintenance after the Circuit Court had rul->d she must live with her mother-in-law. RENSSELAER STUDENT ^DROWNED.' Charles TV. Sherrerd, of Scranton. Victim of Canoeing Accident. Trov, N. Y.?Charles W. Sherrerd, of Scrantoti. Pa., a member of the senior class of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. lost his life in a canoeing accident on the Hudson River. With three other classmates Sherrerd had gone out upon the water to spend the afternoon in two canoes. A squall suddenly came up and both canoea were upset. Sherrerd was drowned, but his companions were taken from the water in time to save their lives. Sherrerd was twenty years of age, and would have graduated in .Tune. He was also a member of the Delta Phi Fraternity. Besides a father and stepmother, he Is survived by a brother, who is attending Lehigh University. "SPOTTED HiVtK " uu I dkclmis. It Dcvelopii Ainonc Navy Recruits at League Inland Navy Yard. Philadelphia. Pa. ? Deadly cerebrospinal meningitis, popularly known as "spotted fever," and one of the hardest contagious diseases to combat, has developed in the ranks of the 1200 men aboard the receiving ships Minneapolis and Puritan at the League Island Navy Yard. Already it has killed three young recruits. while five moro victims are hovering between life and death. Fears prevail that others among the embryo bluejackets who ate. worked and slept with the stricken men may be attacked by the fever. Kill* Brother by Accident. Henry Griffin, fourteen years old. a son of Morris Griffin, of Indian Orchard. Mass., was accidentally shot and killed by bis brother William, nineteen I years oid. The older boy was remov ing tlie shells trorn me magazines i?l his rifle and touched the trigger. The bullet passed through his brother's throat, causing death live minutes later. Government Victory In Spain. The result of the recent elections in Spain has insured the Government a large majority iu the Senate. Prominent People. Bourke Cochran, of New York City, is 011 the Island of Corpu recovering from his recent eriou.s illness. A movement is on foot at St. Johnsbury. Vt.. to urge Henry C. Ide to run for Governor ol' Vermont next year. t.?.irfrt t,i.? nrtt Aviuiptoil to rot urn to the Philippines oil -.ccouiit o? bis henltb. Alfred Capus, the Frencli writer, is about to so to Ilussia iu behalf of the French dramatists in an endeavor to obtain ? treaty similar to the American copyright law protecting tbern against the pirating of plays. ; MUST CDNTROl TH E PACIFIC' President's Most Important Speech Since He Left St. Louis. WE INDEFINITELY DESIRE PEACE But to Maintain It* Supremacy America Unit B? Constantly Prepared For Wax ?Hli Theme Was Trade Derelopment and the Protection of Our NewlyAcqalred Possession*. San Francisco, Cal.?President Roosevelt made the most Important speech he has delivered since he left St. Louis at the Mechanics' Pavilion here. His subject, "Expansion and Trade Development and Protection of the Country's Newly Acquired Possessions in the Pacific," together with the advocacy of a greater Navy, made his speech of particular interest to Califorhians. and he aroused his auditors to a high pitch of enthusiasm. The President saidl^" "Before I saw the Pacific slope I was an expansionist, and after having seen it I fall to understand how any man confident of his country's greatness and glad that his country should challenge with proud confidence our mighty future can be anything but an expansionist. In the century that is opening the commerce and the progress of the Pacific will be factors of Incalculable moment in the history of the world. Now, in our day, the greatest of all the oceans, of all the seas and the last to be used on a large scale by civilized man bids fair to become in its turn the first in point of importance. Our mighty Republic has stretched across the Pacific, and now in California, Oregon and Washington, in Alaska and Hawaii and the Philippines, holds an extent of coast line which makes it of necessity a power of the first class on the Pacific. The extension In the area of our domain has been Immense; the extension in the area of our influence even greater. "America's geographical position on the Pacific is such as to insure our peaceful domination of its waters in the future, if only we grasp with sufficient resolution the advantages of this position. "We have taken the first steps toward digging an isthmian canal, to b? ?J? n nonal VrlllMl uirua uul vnu vuunui, a \.uuu> ?? will make our Atlantic and Pacific const lines, to all intent and purposes, continuous, and will add Immensely alike to our commercial and our military and naval strength. The inevitable march of events gave us the control of the Philippines at a time so opportune that it may without irreverence be h'eld providential. Unless we show ourselves weak, unless we show ourselves degenerate sons of the sires from whose loins we sprang, we must go on with the work that we have begun. "I earnestly hope that this work will always be peaceful in character. We infinitely desire peace, and the surest way to obtain it is to show that we are not afraid of war. We should deal in a spirit of fairness and justice with all weaker nations: we should show to the strongest that we are able to maintain our rights. Such showing cannot be made by bluster, for bluster merely invites contempt. Let us speak courteously. deal fairly and keep ourselves armed and ready. If we do these things we can count on the peace that comes only to tlis just man armed, to the just man who neither fears nor inflicts wrong. "We must keep on building and maintaining a thoroughly efficient navy, with plenty of the best and most formidable ships, with an ample supply of officers and of men. and with these officers and men trained in the most thorough way to the best possible performance of their duty. Only thus can we assure our position in the world at large and in narticular our position here on the Pacific. "All our people should take this position, but especially you of (California, for much of our expansion must pro through the Golden Gate, and the States of the Pacific slope must inevitably bo those which would be most benefited by and take the lead in the growth of American influence along the coasts and islands of that mighty ocean where East and West finally become one." In the afternoon the President broke ground at the Baker street entrance to Golden Gate Park for a monument to be erected to the memory of President Mckinley by the citizens of San Francisco. .FEAR SCOURGE ON ISTHMUS. Dangerous For White Man on Canal Zene, Says General Haln*. Washington, D. C.?General P. C. Halns, a member of the Isthmian Canal Sub-Commission, who has just returned from the Isthmus, says that fever is prevalent there and that it is o.uite dangerous to white men. He says it is either yellow fever or such a malignant type of malarial fever as to be as bad as yellow fever. The condition can ha improved, but it would require control by the Government of sanitary measures. He thinks it would take about a year to placc the canal region in proper sanitary condition. VAfa Cwaatii Vaw TTamnililrfl. The cities of New Hampshire have voted for license. The towns went fifty-nine for license and 127 for no license, prohibition having been the law since the 30's. The eleven cities gave a majority of more than 11.000 for license?yeas, 18.75S; nays, 7324. I\In<l Carpenter Dead In the Hold. Stephen Oscar Writanan, the mad carpenter of the Norwegian baric Emigrant, who for uineteen days was in the hold of \the vessel and held the crew at bay. was found dead at Halifax, N. S., beneath a cask. The Plague Spreading in China. Consul-General McWade at Canton. China, cabled the State Department, at Washington, that the bubonic plague is spreading rapidly auioug all the towns and villages west of the Canton Iiiver. Submarine Boat* Accepted. The submarine tropedo l>oats Grampus and Pike have been formally accepted by the Navy Department at ? * ?>+ Co? Washington, iroui me uuuuwa ??.u. Francisco, Cal, Frlncehs Alice to Marry a Greek ?,rluce At London tli-o betrothal is announced of Princess Alice, the favorite granddaughter of Queen Victoria, to Prince Andreas, fourth son of the King of Greece. No French KbtaI Maneavrea ThU Year. It has been decided that there will be no French naval maneuvres this year. t I SALT TRUST CONVICTED' Pleads Guilty to Charge of Main' taining a Monopoly. | Cm* Mark* tba First Conviction Under the Sherman Law-A Victory For the Government. San Francisco, Cal.?Before Judge De Haven, in the United States Dis- 1 trict Court, the Federal Salt Company, of which D. E. Skinner :s President, was convicted of maintaining a monopoly contrary to the Sherman antitrust law. When the case was opened counsel \ for the corporation withdrew its orJg- ] inal plea of not guilty and pleaded guilty to the first count of the indictment. The maximum fine Is $5000. ( This case marks the first conviction 1 under the Sherman law. which went ? Into effect lu 1892. The Attorney-Gen- j eral's office won a civil suit last fall before Justice Morrow against the same company on the same evidence. 1 The successful termination of that suit j abolished the contracts the Federal i Salt Company had. . The Federal Salt Company was or- ' ganized in New Jersey In 1900. It es- . tablished a business in California and , quickly secured a monopoly of the product on the coast, raising the price from $2 and $6 a ton to $30 and $35. GIRL'S SUITORS MURDERED. \ Second One Killed In Two Wepk? While Driving Home In HIi Baggy. Indianapolis, Ind. ? Louis Yeager. a younc man livine near Fairfield. How- ] ard County, visited Miss Emma Fin- ] ley, and when his father got up in the morning he found the son d?ad in his < buggy at the front, gate. An investlga- , tion showed that the young man had < been shot in the side and also in the j right temple, and his position in the 1 buggy indicated that he had been , killed killed while driving along the , highway. Miss Finley says that he i left her house about 10 o'clock and started In the direction of home. Francis Sutton, a young man who j was also a suitor for the hand of Miss i Finley, was found dead In his bugsy two weeks ago with a bullet in his \ brain, having been shot the night before while driving alone: the road. It was supposed that he had committed suicide, though there was nothing to ] show that he had shot himself, but the ] murder of Yeager under precisely simi lar circumstances leads to the belief , that both young men were assassin- j ated because of their attentions to Miss Finley. There is no clue to the. inur- j derer. THE KISHINEFF MASSACRE. Additional Details of tbe Antl-Jewl Outbreak la Bonala. St. Petersburg. Russia. ? Additional , details of the Klshineff massacre of Jews are printed here daily. The correspondents give the number of victims thus far buried in the Jewish cemetery at forty-four, and say that eighty-four p?rson.3 seriously wounded are still in , the Jewish hospital. The horrors reported scarcely bear repetition. In one instance spikes were driven through a woman's head into the floor, and reports of cases of bodily mutilation have been authenticated. About S00 to 1000 persons were nr* restad. an energetic official having beon sent from Odessa to deal with the situation. The apathy of the local authorities during the two days of outrage and murder appears to have been fully established. TELLS HIS HEIRS TO MARRY. Pierre Olivier Enjoin* HU Nieces cal Nephews Not to Follow His Example. New Orleans, La.?The will of Pierre Nuuia Olivier has been opened. Mr. Olivier was a descendant of one of the original founders of New Orleans, aud . his family owned a large part of the site upon which the city is built. He served with distinction in the Confederate Aany. He leaves his entire fortune to his nephews and nieces with the injunction that they marry. "I shall die." he says, "with tbe signet of not having fulfilled the mission of a man on earth, that is to say. not having married and raised a family. I advise my nephews and friends not to follow my example in this matter." NO REDRESS FOR MOB HANGING. T ?>- nfa (n 9n!f Fni? tiurj nuua cur jr<c7?cu\?Mu?n 525,000 Damasres. Freehold, N. J.?The suit brought by Charles Herbert, who "was strung up by the neck because a vigilance committee thought he might have been concerned in incendiary tires in Matawan two years ago, was ended in a verdict for the defendants. Herbert sued former Senator Henry Terhune and others for $23,000 damages. No one denied the hanging had occurred, but all denied having guilty knowledge of the affair. Senator Terhune said, after be had questioned Herbert in the Terhune homestead, he left him in one room while he went to another to consult the town authorities. King Hold* Lavee in Hol.vioocl Pal&cn. The City of Edinburgh. Scotland, w&s in 1101 iuay uiurt*, tiuu iuuuvuoc crowds warmly greeted King Edward and Queen Alexandra as they proceeded from Dalkeith Castle to Holyrood Palace, where they held a court ] and a levee, the first of such functions to he held in the historic palace for eighty years. On their arrival at the palace the King and Queen received a number of public addresses. Presentations followed. MJitnrio Silent on Foreign Relation!. The Emperor of Jap.in opened the Diet at Yokohama in person. He an- 1 nouneeil the introduction of measures ' essential for the completion of the national defenses, but did not allude to foreign relations. 1 Bnsineas Continue* Largre. Bradstreet's says: ''Business continues large and industry active, iu most cases surpassing previous years at this date, despite unseasonably cool weather in some sections and a swarm of vexatious labor troubles." Minor Mention. * ,f X * ?ill nl\f>A?iK nhrtltf An ordinary unuti ?m uuauiu auuui sixteen ounces of water. Umbrellas to the value of $10,000,000 are annually sold in London. There are reports of excellent trout fishing in several New Jersey streams. Th? Salvadorean Congress has refused to pay the $500,000 judgment awarded to El Triunfo, an American corporation, by an arbitration board. Denver (Col.) bakers will remain steadfast in their demand-: for all day work and for the nine-hour day. It is believed, however, that an agreement 1 will be reached. excited m?e 111 connw | II \t ?I II.J..1 P._? iUA Un4 ' mew lone marcei vmc ui me mvui v j Sensational in Years, | MANUFACTURERS ARE UNEASY. J Raw Cotton Too Qifli and Cloth Too Low ^ ?May Be ? Cut in Wage* or Prodoc* 1 tlon? Price* of Futures AdruiMM to 37 Points at New Orleans? He all tin* i: Canses a Kecesslon. New York City.?Monday was one of < the most sesational markets ever v; known on the New York Cotton Ex- ! change. Prices fluctuated violently all fj dav, and all day an excited crowd of brokers struggled around the pit railing -V jndeavoring to snatch up the offerf of ong cotton, which the bull clique wat Landing out freely, because on each . bale sold at the high prices they real- 3j Ized a heavy profit. The aggregate gain of the Sully clique was estimated ^ is being way up in the millions. How* ^ much it was no one could say, exceptng, perhaps, Mr. Sully himself, and if ; be knew he declined to tell. The opening of the market was ac?ompanied by scenes of the wildest ex- gjj ?itemeut. The Liverpool cables, which : | tlraost always have an Influence on the market here, showed an advance since M Saturday of eleven ppints, whereas no 3ne had expected to see an advance of more than seven points. Buying to - ^ Liverpool by shorts on this side of the Atlantic is supposad to have been large- , ,<: ly responsible for this rise. ^ Whatever the cause, the result w&jm that the market here opened up twen*1 ? ty-flve points and more, while In New 1 Orleans, where there is also a corner ] in May cotton, the opening was from- V? thirty to forty points above Saturday's ;] closing. It is estimated that upto noon 100,000 bales were traded in. xne next,' am two hours were rather quiet. It was stated that nothing- like prices quoted have been known In the, cotton market for many years. In Jmw',' uary, 1901, a squeeze of shorts carried the price to twelve cents a pound, and ?| in 1890, also in-January, cotton sold at 1 12.75 cents a pound. Fall River, Mass.?The continued In the price of raw cotton and the stag- | nation in the cloth market, together 4 with certain other unfavorable feat-:/. ^ ures, are causin? some uneasiness ,:j fimong many of the managers of the ; forty manufacturing corporation* In / this city. Manufacturers assert that | the wages as well as cotton are too. ,a high, while cloth is too low. i w Some of the managers favor a gen erai reduction in wages, wnue ocaers .v. advocate a curtailment in production*. M but so far there hag been little dispo^ Bition among all mill treasurers to act. ';ja In harmony. New Orleans, La.?The cotton market 1 was a surprise even to the long side. J At the opening, prices of futures took 3 a jump of from twenty to thirty-seven1 points in the active months and the . j advance was so strong-and wild tbnt^^a prominent longs, feeing danger in store ; for local traders, sold the market dow^X almost immediately. Within , fifteen' '.M minutes after the opening from five to ; twenty-seven points had been shaved 3 off from the advance, which brought -jj prices down to a more conservative level, although even then a stiff ad- .j vance was maintained. The cause of tue advance was a continuance 01 j.ai ,jm bull campaign to which was added re?- ?y| ports of sensational advices in both ^ Liverpool and New York markets. 3 HOSTILE MOROS SUBDUED. [f-M Ten Fort* Captured and Destroyed and. Every Hostile Datto PnnUhed. - , Washington, D. C.?The War.Depart* v|| ment received news of Captain Pershing's successful invasion of the Moro country about Lake Lanad. In a gram to Adjutant-General Corbin\ 'f General Davis says: "Captain John J. Pershing has com- v pleted a circuit of Lake Lanao via the east coast from Camp Vicars. Ha<? i sharp fight at Taraca. Captured ten forts, many prisoners, thirty-six lanta- j cas and sixty rifl?s. All othe? dattos | friendly. Liberated prisoners, destroyed hostile forts and lantacas. Our ' f loss two killed and four,wounded. "Every hostile Lanao datto 'has novr J been chastiscd.' All Moros know oar jjj friendshin is valuable and freely' ex- 1 tended to all who deserve It. No property save hostile forts has been molest- * ed. Troops returning to Vicars via the h west coast. Moro labor eager for employment on ti:e sheds and shelter buildings: former about finished, the latter progressing rapidly. "Troops havet behaved splendidly, S not only in contending wit!i a fanatical - t savage foe, but with a dreaded dis* -5I ease, and. besides, had to construct ; many miles of road through tropical jungle. No more hostilities are anticipated beyond occasional sniping.-"' ; ? Secretary Root cabled General Davia $ as follows: "I congratulate you on the work done :j In Mindanao. Exoress to Captain Per- \ shing and the officers and men under ? his command th? thanks of the War Department for their able and effective accomplishment of a difficult and 1m portant tasK." Montana Ranchmen Drowned. While trying to ford the swollen Jef- .j ?erson River at Anaconda, Mont., John $ Finney and John Sullens, prominent ranchmen, were drowned. Planter AMaaslnated From Ambmti. B T. Henry, one of the most exten* r> =>ive cotton planters of the Brazos Valley, Texas, was fatally shot from ambush by an unknown person. Holls Decline* to Be Umpire. Frederick W. Holls. of New Yorb< to whom President Roosevelt offered Hie post of umpire in the settlement of the claims of Germany and Italy ngalnst Venezuela, has notified tW Srate Department at Washington thai he is obliged to uecliue. M HjS Tinv Firebu;* Keleaaed. Margaret Cuddy, thirteen, who confessed to setting live fires discovered in the house of Julius Gens recently, was released with a reprimand at the Police Court at Lawrence, Mass. i Labor World. * Steps are being taken for the formation of a coachman's union in Chicago, 111. The organization of a Federal Labor * t Union has been effected at Kenton, Ohio. Chicago (111.) makers of suspenders -if wore tiit. first to organize a Suspender Workers' Union. ? Wages of plasterers in Montreal, j Canada, have been increased from twenty-eight cents to thirty-two and *1 one-half cents an hour for a day of nine hours iustPid of ten