University of South Carolina Libraries
4 lies" Ooiii] Democratic Convention at Saratoga Names State Ticket. HARRISON FOR SECOND PLACE Candidate!* Are Finally Chosen Willi No Opposition?David E. Hill Nominates Judse Herrick ? Tlie l'lal form in llrlot?-Sketch of the JnCce's LifeDescription of the Convention. Saratoga, X. Y.?After a two days' session the Now York Stale Democracy nominated the following ticket: For Governor?D. Cady Herrick, of Albany. For Lieutenant-Governor ? Francis Eurton Harrison, of New York. For Secretary of State?John Tallace, Jr., of Monroe. For Attorney-General ? John Cunncon, of Erie. For Comptroller?George Ilall, cf St. Lawrence. For Treasurer?"William Mucucii, of Onondaga. For State Engineer and Surveyor? Thomas H. Str>\er, of Oneida. l.wlffn'nf t!lf> Court of AD" 1 VI MUIVL W UUJV Vfc ?? _ peals?Edgar M. Cullen, of Queens. For Associate Judge?William E. Werner, of Monroe. < The delegates began the inarch to , the Convention Hall an hour before i noon on the opening day of the Democratic State Convention. Charles F. Murphy, leader of Tammany Hall, accompanied by W. ] Bourke Cockran and Senator Victor J. , Dowling, took a seat at the head of the Tammany delegation 011 the left ( front of the hall. McCarren, with his t Kings County followers, sat further ( back to the right. j Chairman Cord Meyer, Jr., of the . State Committee, rapped for order a J few minutes after noon. He asked ] Messrs. McCarren and Harrison, of < New York, and Beardsley, of Oneida, < to escort William B. Hornblower to the chair, which they immediately did. ; Mr. Hornblower received an enthusiastic reception. His speech con- j sumed about an hour. t At the conclusion of Hornblower's ] address former Assemblyman James J. < Fitzgerald mounted the platform, and ( cave notice of withdrawal of the con test instituted by former Assemblyman Curry. Thomas F. Smith, the Secretary of , Tammauy Hall, called the roll of dele- < gates. < After the various committees had been appointed a recess was ordered ] until 11 o'clock the next morning. t At a conference of Democratic lead- ] ers, which began at 11 o'clock that | night and lasted well into the morning, an effort was made to settle on a can- j didate for Governor. j The conference was held in the rooms j of ex-United Staes Senator Murphy in j the Grand Union Hotel. The others ( present at the conference were Mr. ] Sheehan, Charles F. Murphy, Joseph Cassidy, President of the Borough of Queens; Norman E. Mack, William S. urnmr- PliqIrtnnn nf XWUIC UUU VVIU .UVJWI, vuu?4u.uu w ^ the State Committee. The object of the meeting was eith- * er to overcome the opposition of Mr. Murphy to Comptroller Edward M. j Grout, whose nomination Hill and the j Albany men had favored, or to select ^ a candidate on whom all could agree. r At 12.45 in the morning Senator Mc- j Carren and George Foster Peabody joined the conference in Senator Mur- . phy's room and Mr. McCarren was j made .acquainted with Tammany , Chieftain Murphy's objections to ' Grout and with the fact that the ma- ( jority of the conferees favored an up- ^ State man. Senator McCarren stoutly insisted on Grout's nomination. j The convention was called to order j on the second day at 12.22 o'clock. The hall was crowded to its fullest j [capacity when Chairman Hornblower ;vapped for order. There was no opening prayer and after Mr. Hornblower j had appealed to the smokers to desist j 'out of respect to the women present, the report of the Committee on Per- j manent Organization was presented j and Duncan Campbell Lee was elect- , ed Permanent Chairman and began his speech at 12.27 o'clock. Professor Lee read his speech, which he concluded at 1.05 o'clock, and J Chairman Raines, of the Committee on Resolutions, then read the plat- 1 form. The platform was adopted at 1.30 J o'clock and the band played "The Star Spangled Banner." The clerk then called the roll of counties for nominations for Governor, j Albany was called at 1.33 o'clock , and David B. Hill took the platform j to place Judge Ilerrick in nomination. Mr. Hill said: "In behalf of thp Democracy?the united Democracy?I desire to present to you for consideration the name of a model citizen of my county. He needs , no elaborate introduction to you or any other Democratic audience in the State.'* The speaker then reviewed briefly Judge Herrick's career. There were loud calls for Bourke Cockran and at 1.45 the >7ew York orator took th<? platform and seconded Herrick's nomination. Luke D. Stapieton. of Brooklyn, who was to have placed Grout in nomination, then took the stand and seconded. in behalf of Kings County, the nomination of Judge Ilerrick. Ex-Judge II. Ilockwell, of Chemung, one of Mr. Stanchfield's boomers, was Elected Bishop of Kentucky. The Rev. Dr. Arthur S. Lloyd, Secretary of the Board of General Missions! in New York City, was choseii Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Kentucky by the Diocesan Council, in session at Louisville, Ivy. Fire in the Minnesota's Ccal Bunkers. Fire was discovered in the bunkers of the steamship Minnesota, which was coalirg at Norfolk, Ya., preparatory to sailing for San Francisco, Cal. Prompt work put the blaze out. Ship Sold at Big Frofit. Sunk for four years in the South Pacific, the steel bark Falls of Garry, now loading in Brooklyn, N. Y., was bought by the wreckers who raised hei for $o75 and sold by them for $350,000. . , Court Justices Chosen. Mortimer C. Addoms was unanimously nominated fo\- the State Supreme Court bench, and Justice ^ohn Palmieri was unanimously chosen to succeed himself in the City Court by I the Republican Judicial convention. I v f next rrcognized by chair ami look the plat form. He seconded Justice Ilerrick's nomination in behalf of the ' Stam-hfield faction. At -.10 o'clock Mr. Cock ran moved that the secretary cast" the <*onven- j lion's ballot for Ilerrlck. The motion was carried. Senator Thomas F. Grady then went on the platform and presented the name of Francis Burton Harrison for Lieutenant-Governor. t Charles X. Bulger, of Oswego, was recognized and seconded the nomination. Mr. Grady, at 2.30 o'clock, moved J that the secretary east the vote of the convention for Mr. Harrison. The motion was carried. George Raines took Ihe platform when nominations were called for Secretary of State. In a speech of about five minutes he placed the name of .Tohu Pallace, Jr., of Monroe, before 1 the convention. 1 Only iifty-seven minutes elapsed be- ( tween the time the nomination for ! Lieutenant-Governor was announced ' and the final adjournment of the con- ' vention. yet in that time the other five ; State officers were named, as well as ( the two judicial nominees. I . "When tlie nominations lor Judges j were cailed for there were cheers for j ! Senator McCarren as he arose and | wfilkorl in the nlatform. The band j < played "Wc Won't Go Homo Till ] Morning"' ns lie fa ml the audience. Only the adoption of the star as a j party emblem and of the usual com- j plimentary resolutions remained after j the judicial nominations had been j made. Then, at 3.27 o'clock, the con- 5 vention adjourned sine die. The rush for the trains began at j once. Special trains, bands, and dele- ( gates, as well as shouters, all departed ( at night, and the town became dc- , serted. v , D. CADY HEWUCK. ' ] D. Cady Her rick was born in Es- , ierar.ee, Schoharie County, N. Y., in ] :V.prii, 1S47, but his parents moved to ( \lbany when he was oniy six years < )ld. He received his education at < he public schools, and at Anthony's | Classical School. Following a course \ it the Albany Law School, he was ( graduated in 1SU8. He did not imine- < liately seek to practice, but spent two ? more years in the office of I-Iungerford fc Hotaling before hanging out his < sign. < Subsequently he married Orissa H. \ Salisbury. { From 1S77, when he ran for office for s :Ue lirst time ana iuueu vi t-ictuuii, < o tbe office of district attorney, Mr. derrick's political career bas been one )f storm and struglge. Early in that career be led several fights against fa mm any Hall in State conventions. Justice Herrick is a Supreme Court histice and Associate Justice of tbe \ppellate Division of tbe Supreme Sourt, bis term being due t? expire >n December 01.1905. Justice Herrick is a member of tbe Fort Orange Club, of Albany, and of ! be Ileform and Democratic clubs of j s'ew York City. He resides in Albany. j Justice Herrick bas been active in | politics, particularly as related to Albany County. He bas been District attorney in Albany County and Cor- I )oration Counsel of Albany. He is a lirector of tbe Albany City National I Bank. j THE PLATFORM IN BRIEF. Tbe platform adopted by tbe Democratic State Convention was in brief is follows: Tbe Democrats of tbe Empire State )roelahn anew their devotion to the principles of government which were munciated by Thomas Jefferson, the miniiov rtf tiio nartv. and ! nake tiiese declarations upon State ssues: The paramount and overshadowing ssue in State affairs is between official lonesty and official corruption. We see again before the bar of public judgnent the one-man power that to-day lominates the Republican organiza:ion of New York State. Taxation, whether direct or indi* ect. is always a public burden, and however or wherever collected, its proceeds should be strictly devoted to pubic purposes instead of private enrichment. Excise reform is demanded for the i)est interests of this great State and its numerous cosmopolitan cities. i We favor and honest and just enforcement of the State civil service i laws, according to their letter and spirit. We are in favor of removing the public schools and the entire educational system of the State from the realm oi' partisan politics, and to that Dnd demand that a fair and honest representation on the Board of Regents i shall be at all times accordcd the mi- I nority party, whichever party that ! may be. We favor the construction of good ! roads. Such roads should be built un- j dor a wise and comprehensive plan of i ] safeguarding tlie interests of the tax- j payers. Wv demand that the present | p:rade crossing law he enforced and ; all grade crossings abolished as rap- j ; idly as possible. We favor local self government for municipalities. We endorse the Democratis National platform and resolutions adopted at 1 St. Louis in July last as a complete exposition of Democratic principles ! and policies upon all the living issues of the present time. Japan's Sick List Xot Large. Satisfaction is felt at Tokio. Japan, , that the sick list at the front equals the casualties, thus duplicating the record of the German Army during the Franco-Prussian War. There is some beri-beri among the army in front of Port Arthur. There are no epidemics among the troops in Korea or Manchuria. Killed His Boarder by Mistake. Ralph Coles was shot and killed in j Portsmouth. Ya.. by Jesse Diggs, who ; mistook him for a burgler. Coles I boarded with DIrrs and always used | a night key. but lie was drunk and j tried to set in through a window. Six Men Killed in Oil Tank Explosion, j An explosion of the oil tank of the i Texas Oil Refinery at Port Arthur, j Texas, killed six men. The men were ! at work on the roof of the tank when a j bolt of lightning struck it Promineit People. Rear-Admiral Schley will shortly DUblish his autobiography. Maurus Jokai, the Hungarian author, died owing $20,000. The Archbishop of Canterbury, nowvisiting us, bas $75,000 per annum salary. Herr Kubelik. the Bohemian violinist. is said to have made more than $500,000 in the last three years. Assistant Postmaster-General Wynne will visit North Wales on bis trip abroad. Ilis parents came from there. JAPANESE TROOPS ON MOVE" SiGeneral Nodzu's Forces Continue b Press Kuropatkin. j n ARMIES IN RUNNING FIGHT; j Marshal 0.v?mr? Keep* l*p His Asrcre*- j sivo Campaign .Acain?>t the Kii??iuns ! : In With No Let-Cp?Knssian Commander I ro Hn* Gained in l'oint of I'onltions IIclJ 111 ?Kuropatkin Well Prepare-!. Mukden.?Doubt of Marshal Oyama's m Intention in respect of an advance on a this place was dispelled when a strong jn Japanese force crossed the South Sha m River at a point eighteen miles south- ly ivest of here shortly before dawn, and a Advancing rapidly seven mile's in this ^ iirection, began sheliing the Russian w positions from the town of Chang- j m jhing. The Japanese centre and right ! he At noon rested on a line runuing from i 01 Changshing east to Chuchiatun, which j latter place is six miles northwest of i n( raiping Mountain. General Nodzu's 1 0, troops ve marching north through the ! 5, mwiiI vhIIpv between the limestone 1 tv region and the railroad. The Japanese ! f0 left, under Geueral Oku. early in the j fr morning moved from Shihi to South ! 5ha and began building a pontoon ! g, jridge east of the railway for the | transportation of Deldpieces across rc the river. General SanisoiioITs Cos- ; flj sacks destroyed the military bridge j h( icross that stream resting on the high- , ivay, and the railroad bridge was dam- ' w iged so severely by Gen. Stakelberg's I V( irtillery it was not strong enough to j ^ Jear even the enemy's lighter guns. A letachment of dragoons, supposed to i j0 constitute part of Oku's left wing, j 1E crossed the South Sha River west of ! j,, :he railroad and made a reconnoissanee :oward the east bank of the Hun River hi jpposite Sancliiatsu, in the course of fc svhich it engaged in several sharp ^ skirmishes with Cossack outposts. jr The attacking force resting on tl Shangshing evidently was the van- m juard of Xodzu's army. It was made S( lp of several battalions of infantry j, ind four field batteries, with a half squadron of cavalry. The enemy u .helled three Russian batteries brijaded with four battalions of Major a General OrlofFs infantty, and was an- fl swered with a severe fire from the Russian ;:uns. An artillery duel at long ange lasted more than an hour. Then he Japanese infantry advanced under . over of their guns and opened a scat ering fire on the Russians. Two bat- j ^ alions of the Russian infantry moved j* south in open order, approaching the !l rnemy's skirmish line until the faces of " he prostrate sharpshooters were plain- ^ y visible. Steady firing was main- ~ allied by both sides until the enemy's ravalry made a flanking charge against ? he Russian left. Orloflf's riflemen I ; allied quickly, repulsed the dragoons | * md fell back slowly in good order. ! }nc of the Russian batteries scattered i he enemy's skirmishers with a welllirected tire, and Orloff's infantry vithdrew toward Partapu. The Rus- M ?ian guns were shifted under fire to tj :he hitter town where they renewed lc he fight, having the advantage of bet- tl :er support. No further gain was made a; >y the enemy In the afternoon, the firnp: being discontinued at dusk. General Kuroki's forward brigades vere pressing north through the au- h iiracite fields, midway between Taipng Mountain and the Imperial Tombs G >f Yang Pass. Cossack sotnias recoil- L' loitering southward from the Hun. ;ast of Mukden, were fired on by his ; ranguard, and withdrew without a omplete idea of his strength. It is ^ in accepted fact here, however, that j.j [vuroki is making all speed possible in [( lis detour against this point. General vuropatkin has disposed adequate "orces along the eastern road, and it is i lelieved the Japanese will not cross the ' Sun in that direction without a'disas- _ rous battle. It apparently is no part . >f General Kuropatkln's purpose to be y luttlanked by Marshal Oyania without letermined resistance. The turning actics of the enemy cannot find the Llusslans unprepared, as in former Uages of the Manchurian campaign. Moreover, the relative positions of the ^ jpponents practically are the same as lefore the battle of Liau Yang, while he Russian commander has several ad- li antages lie did not possess in that part )f the country. A general engagement, ivhether fought here, as expected by the more practical, or around Tie Pass, d is Russian optimists, hope, will find ol Ivuropatkin ready for any stratagem it Jyama may employ. GIRLS KILL TKFIR FATHER. | E Didn't Want a Stepmother and So They; | tl Chopped His Head Off. T Marlin, Tex.?Tho mystery surrounding the murder of C. S. Stewart, a farmer living eight miles south of here, was cleared by the confessions of liis j? two daughters, aged eleven and thir- ; teen years, that they committed the ! * crime. The body of Stewart was found lying ' on a cot on the porch of his residence, j The head had been cut off. d According to the story of the girls ! 8 their father was about to remarry, j 8 They objected to a stepmother. Re- I rently a letter came for their father ! during his absence from the prospect- i ive stepmother, and the children de- ti stroyed it. The father learned of this, n and he told the gins that he was going b to kill them, and that they must say their prayers. lie did not carry out the threat, and when he went to sleep ti e girls got the ane and chopped his head 0 off. r Big Fire in Halifax. A wharf lire at Halifax. X. S., which ! started early in tho morning, and was j thought to be under control, broke out ; v afresh and did $200,000 damage. i' Not to Attend. I ? Russia refused to instruct her Min- j 1 '.ster to Servia to attend the coronation c )f King Peter at Belgrade. Bismarck's Burial. The bodv of Prince Herbert Bismarck o will hp buried in the vault beneath his | o father's mausoleum. t From the Seat of War. The report that Admiral Prince Ouk? tomsky would be supplanted was con- r d j urmeu. Russian General Staff denied reports c tliat Kuropatkin's rear guard was aii- i niliilated. The Mikado congratulated his triuni- r pliant troops, but told them "the ?-nd A of the war is still in the distant future." r European experts agree that the end I of the Eastern war is a Ion;: way in) matter Low the present campaign -i ends. I IAYOR KILLED BY THIEVES j lot While Assisting- Town .Marshal in Making- Arrest i < 1 lomsoti, 111., Thrown Jnto Stare o( i Wild Excltcraent by tlio AffairMob Threatens Lynching. Thomson, 111.?Tills village was rown into great excitement by two bbers, who subsequently gave their imes as John Thompson and William yers. They shot and instantly killed ayor V. S. Bennett. The men, after long chase, were captured and lodged the village jail, where an angry ob soon collected, and threats of 1 nching were heard. The mob lacked leader to do violence. The murder was the result of robng Creno Geison's saloon at Chadick early in the morning. The two en robbed the place aud tlien in true )ld-up style, drove at breakneck speed om the village toward Thouisou, ght miles distant. Marshal Matthews, of Thomson, was , JtiQed by telegraph to be on the look- i it for the robbers. A few minutes j ?foro 10 o'clock the marshal entered | le only saloon in Thomson, where he j mud the two men. Matthews hurried i om the place to secure assistance. ! lie found Mayor Bennett and to- j ?ther they returned to the saloon. The j arshal placed the two men under ar(st, but met with considerable restance and called to the Mayor for ?lp. The Mayor had barely moved to?? wIiam r\nll or! n uiu me xijuu ?iiuu tuv.ii 1/uwv.u 3lver and fired. Three bullets hit the [ayor in the region of the heart. The iayor dropped to the fioor of the saon. Brandishing their revolvers the icn broke away from the marshal and arried down the street. The shooting was hoard for several locks, and in an instant the crowd irmed a posse, and, headed by the larshal, they gave pursuit to the ficeig men. The men fired six shots into le crowd, all without effect. The tarshal kept tiring, and shot Thomp>n in the leg, causing him to surrener, while Myers continued his flight. ;e Avas finally captured and both men ere lodged in the village jail. News of the murder spread rapidly, ud soon a large crowd collected and ireats of a lynching were freely made, i Prosperity Emphasized. More expressions of opi -ion were ob- j lined from bankers attending the j invention in New York City, regardtg the commercial, financial and poticul situation in the various secons of the country from which they )me. The evidence thus obtained in* ! icntes a general con^ltiou cJ prospcrir all over the United States, and also jows that ajiong the officers of flnan* lal institutions little anxiety attends le prospect of a hard 1 attic at the ational election. Molineauxs Save Lives. General E. L. Molinp^ux and Roland folineux, who was twice placed on ial for murder and finally acquitted, ;d a party into a gas filled cellar at ieir paint factory in Brooklyn, N. Y., J d saved two workmen. Prince Visits Betrothed. Crown Prince Frederick William and is betrothed, the Duchess Cecilia, ot [ecklinburg - Schwerin, visited the j rana jl>uko at scuwcrm wuu tue [aiser and Kaiserin. Turkey to Pay Claim. The Ottoman Bank informed the merican Legation at Constantinople lat it holds $23,000 to pay the claim )r land of an American cltizcn ideally seized at Smyrna. British and Tibetan Prisoners Out. In accordance with the treaty, the i iritish and Tibetan prisoners were rc;ased. Some of the Tibetan prisoners ad been in captivity for more thaw iventy years. To Prison For Life. Waiving a jury trial, Fred Strube, 'ho killed his swelheart last winter j ecausc she refused to marry him. as at Havana, 111., sent to prison for fe. To Try Militiamen. Governor Terrill, of Georgia, has orered a court-martial to try the militia fflcers who failed to prevent the lyucl>jg at Statesboro. Baltimore Colebrates. A general holiday was observed at | Jaltimore, Md., the other day. it being ic anniversary of the bailie ot' North oint in 1814. Famine in Mukden. Foodstuffs were reported to be a Ilost unprocurable at Mukden and civians there were threatened with staration. Bis Fire at Halifax. Fire in Halifax, N. S? did $o00,000 araage, and only a shift iu the wind aved the town from a great contlaration. Bank Robber Killed. Alva Rivers was killed while robbing lie bank at Warsaw, Ohio. The village larshal emptied a shotgun into hi? i ody. Prince Bismarck Dead. I Prince Herbert Bismarck, eldest son i f iho Trmi <*li:ilicpllor. ilir?il at Fried- ! iclisruh, Germany. i Russia Refuses Our Request. The report is confirmed that Russia, rhile admitting cotton, food and fnol o the list of conditional contraband, .as refused tin? request of the United Hates for similar treatment of railood material and certain classes of aacliinery. Judge Cullen Takes?Oath. Justice Edgar M. Cullen took the ath as Chief Judge of the Court f Appeals of New York State, at Alia ny. The Field of Sports. George E. Cook won the Leecii cup ifle match at Sea Girt. Entries for the Vanderbilt Cup rnce losed with eighteen automobiles nomnated. Frank Kramer lowered the American nile cycle record to lm. 49 2-js. at the 'ailsburg track. M. Charley offers 910,000 to the first notor boat crossing the Atlantic from iavre to New York. Mrs. J. B. M. Grosvenor's entries gain carried off the honors at the I sewport Horse Show. 1IN0REVEM THE WEEK" WASHINGTON. The Postoffice Department has equipped about a hundred free delivery routes with cyclometers, and intends extending their use to other n routes in the near future. Insanity in Washington is rapidly in- . creasing. During July and August {; and the Srst ten days of September 1 ninety-three persons were declared in- f sane by marshals' juries. For the 1 same period last year the number wai? a sixty-two. t * r OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. The Civil Commission, at Manila, P. \ I., is prepared to pay to the Augustlan Order of Friars ?2,070.000 gold for the lands in the islands held by the order. The native constabulary of the isl- g ands has been reduced to 1200 men. a A labor paper is to be started in t Ponce. Torto Rico. Eugenio Sanches, c organizer for the American Federation f of Labor, is to be the editor. j It has been recommended that the j force of American soldiers in the Phil- f ippines be reduced from its present standing of four regiments of cavalry 3 and nine of infantry to three regiments r of cavalry and seven of infantry. Major-General Wade, commander in the Philippines, will exchange posts with Major-General Corjbin, Depart" s went of the East. c I t DOMESTIC. o A negro near Atlanta, Ga., was taken from the Sheriff by a.mob and lynched. Faith curists in convention in Jersey City, N. J., told startling stories of cures by prayers. Tho American Bankers' Association [ visited the Military Academy at West i Point. Thirty-two Providence (R. I.) Knights Templars returning from the conclave were injured, several of them seriously, in a train wreck in Kansas. Mrs. James Kinley, unable to assist, saw her little daughter sink to death in a quicksand at Tort Washington, f L. I. . The American Neurological Associa* j tion, after electing Dr. Z. W. Spiller. ? of Philadelphia, Pa., as President, t voted to meet next year in New York j ' City. | The Canadian Pacific ipanagement I announcefl that it would make no con- } ' cessions to its 500 striking boilernmk- 11 ers. j * Militia guarded the jail at Lydia, S. 8 C., where Sam Marks, colored, was t confined for a vicious assault upon Hill 1 Langston, a white man. An explosion of oil on the tank steamer (jeorge W. Looiuis, at Portland, Ore., caused serious injuries to 1 the second engineer of tht steamer aud t considerable damage to the vessel. e Three quarrymen at Bethel, Vt.,werc e killed by being run down by a Boston ; [ and Maine freight train. { c The whaling schooner Ellen A. Swift ; ^ buought into New Bedford, Mass., eight j t men of the crew of the wrecKecl ! t schooner Fred. H. Gibson. < j The steamer Pilgrim, of the I-'all i River Line, which runs to Providence, ! . B. I., from New York City, ran j' aground in Narragausett Bay. She was ashore for seven hours, but floated 5 at high water. 3 The Iroquois Memorial Association * Is trying to arouse sentiment against 1 t the reopening of a theatre on the i ! site of the ill-fated Iroquois Theatre, in Chicago, 111., but a license was granted to the management. The Pacific Squadron sailed from r San Francisco Bay (Cal.) for target s practice at Magdalena Bay, leaving J the cruiser Marblehead to guard the , Golden Gate. Japan made inquiry about th? dis- ' position of the Lena's crew. Assur* . ance was given that the men would be kept within the limits of San Fran- 1 cisco. The Lena was takeu to the < Mare Islaud Navy Yard. < Nine Chicago firemen were hurt, two 1 fatally, by the collapse of a wall of a I burning building. I Napoleon Shipley, once postmaster t at Washington, D. C., and a large oil < speculator, died in a Pennsylvania ! poorhouse. ( Commander Peary received a cup | and talked of his plans for a new Arc tic trip at a dinner in honor of the for- . eign members of the International Geo- ! graphic, Congress, in New York City. ' FOREIGN. More fears were expressed in Russia . that China will fail to keep her atti- j tude of neutrality. Three hundred Arab soldiers pillaged j the port of Salonica and the Cazar. j Field Marshal Oyania sent a report j of great quantities of ammunition and . stores captured by General Oku's |' army at Laio-Yang. All the powers except Russia have instructed their Ministers at Eelgrade ' to attend the coronation of King Peter. 1 A proposition to submit the question 1 of separation of church and State in 1 France to the people was opposed by i M. Combes. i President Loubet, in a speech at Paris, intimated that he would retire i from public life at the end of his pres- i eut term. I Turkish militia battalions are bein;* i mobilized to suppress another Alban- |; lan outbreak. , Municipal Council of The Hague has ] rejected a measure providing for using , part of The Hague Woods for the Carnegie Palace of Peace. The Canadian Government has offered $3000 reward for the capture - ? tlio fiimi OL UIU Uilliuiia ?uu Iitiu U,, ...v, ~ . . dian Pacific train at Mission Junction. | The Berlin Foreign OfBee denied that | any recent political understanding with | Russia had been arranged. Miss Pauline Astor will be married In London to Captain Spender Clay, the Bishop of Itipon officiating. Senor Canolejas at democratic meeting in Pampeluna, Spain, declared that 1 the country should defend itself i against clericalism and that the con- j ; cordant should be attacked. j i Milan was described in a special | cable dispatch as being under a reign of j terror, the anarchists insisting 011 pro- j longing the strike. | ; A special Berlin dispatch states that j < upon the invitation of the American delegates the International Dermatological Congress decided to hold the next convention in New York City. The appeal of the German Crown Prince against paying taxes 011 an estate was decided against him. A Turkish force was surrounded at Prisreiul, in Macedonia, and Suleiman Pacha, with sixteen battalions, were sent to its relief. Anarchists were reported active in Spain. A bomb was exploded at Barcelona. and a plot against a high official was discovered in Madrid. ' ' ' , ' - ". ' ' * ' T'The Fat Cattle. CO But few cattle reach the market that w re as fat as they might be, and it Is m requently the case that steers could le, >e made to weigh 100 or more pounds fu f properly prepared for market. A nc at steer that can be made to take on nt 00 pounds more will not only have the w iddltional value in weight, but will th irlng one or two more cents more per in ound; hence, the additional 100 di >ounds may add from $15 to $20 to the th alue of the animal, and at small cost, ti' al Marketing Prodncta. Farmers often allow their stock to :o on the ma-ket in an unfit condition, re nd in consequence, realize unsatisfac- jg ory prices. Others market fruit, vegitables, grains, etc., without being Ij( troperly sorted and clcaned. The diference between marketing products ^ n this condition possible is the diference between marketing a finished fa .nd unfinished product, and the prices gj eallzed are generally in proportion. g? te Tho Milk Separator. ^ When milk is run through a separ- n< itor immediately after milking, the jj, ream has an added quality over that vhich is skimmed at the end of twelve r more hours. The separator is the lest aerator of milk yet invented. j1? jarge city dairymen run their milk ^ hrough separators in order to aerate t and take out the odors that may be j0 herein, and they find that the milk gJ vith the cream put back into it is of gl nuch better quality and keeps better ^ han that which has not been so treat- gc ;d. The use of the farm separator ei ends toward better butter, and hence w ligher prices for-it. ? a] GftpCH. Of course, there are many highly :ommended remedies for this scourge, tnd no doubt they are more or less ef- Ie 'ective; but prevention is better. If j*1 iome one could give us a sure preven- le ive that some one would be entitled o knighthood, or, at least, to "spurs" n the poultry yard. The writer's famlv 1ms raised noultrv on the same farm . or nearly twenty-five years, and has lever been troubled with gapes. About fl! til we do that could be called a prevenive is, that we always keep plenty of " ime scattered about the poultry yard. 81 y Value of halt Tor Sheep. tl Experiments recently made in a Trance for the purpose of ascertaining si he nutritive value of salt for sheep H toow that sheep which had been fed tt ialt gained in weight four and a half u jounds more than those which re- f< ?eived no salt. Moreover, the sheep n( vhich received salt produced one and si hree-quarter pounds more wool and y< if a better quality than those which ei ecclved no salt. T It is in accord with the experiences n this country also. Perhaps no careul experiments have been made to ihow these facts, as in France, yet the ^ bservations of flock masters are to ho effect that salt is a very essential ^ hing for sheep, and it is their pracice generally to supply it regularly. f le To Cure Mango. Mange is not a disease in the eomnon sense of the term, but is caused ilther by a vegetable parasite or by in insect, which grows in the skin. Chere are two kinds, but both are reated alike. The skin is first washed vith warm water and carbolic soap o soften it and open the pores, in vhich the parasites are embedded; it vill help matters to rub the skin with L corncob or something rough to >reak up the vessels and remove the :rust. The parts are then dried and ubbed thoroughly with an ointment nade of four parts of lard, one part lulphur and one part kerosene, adding Lbout twenty drops of creosote to ton >unce of the mixture. Work this well nto the skin with a hard brush, relating daily for two weeks or more in >rder to destroy any new growth from ;ggs or spores. a Sowing Clover With Wheat. ri Farmers who appreciate the value a ?f plover in farming operations are If juite "willing to go to some trouble to <1 )btain a stand. Oftentime failure re- ri suits, tut in many cases this failure is p lue to some fault in the plan of sow- s; ng the seed. Try the following plan: p The wheat field is thoroughly prepared a ind gone over with a spring tooth har- b row before sowing the wheat. Level tl the soil with a harrow and theu apply s] fertilizers at the rate of 300 pounds per H icre, making up a ton of it in the following proportions: 1000 pounds of icid phosphate, 800 pounds of kainit ind 200 pounds of muriate of potash. P The fertilizer is broadcasted on the ^ soil and then about eight loads of line manure put on; then the whole field is P harrowed two or three times, and it is v ready for the wheat seed and clover. The plan as outlined involves consid- c erable labor and expense, but it is n likely to bring desired results.?Indian- '3 apolis News. a h Early Scarlet Karilah. Si While there may not be a groat deal P of money in growing radishes, the crop " is one that is easily and cheaply a ? fimn nnrlv in tllP sea grinvu, tiuu iui ? ntuv. ? ? on sells well. Naturally, the earliest v sorts are the' most profitable, al- 0 though, if one is located near a live 11 town and will grow the radish crop 11 so that they are crisp and fresh at all b times, it is possible to extend the pro- fl P.table season. The Earliest Scarlet 11 is one of the best of the early sorts, a mid as it has not been grown for sev- ^ oral season, it has proved its worth. The skin is a rich scarlet color and ^ (he flesh white and crisp. While it is R favorite for growing under glass, it ^ is equally profitable grown in the open 0 ground, where it matures quickly and r thus retains its crispness. By dropping ^ seeds in the ground whenever a pulling v is made, the radish season is consid- ^ crably prolonged and the soil made to yield a larger percentage of profit. The v variety is well worth planting every- ^ where. I . r Soil Krosion. More soil fertility goes into the L streams in winter than soes to grow f a crop tiie following summer, unless t the surface is covered with growing s roots. A well sodded pasture field j f without naked- spots will not wash. A ' - . . rnfleld well set with green rye e heat of strong, full growth will d uch less surface washing or so: aching than a barren field wheffe th rrows run with the Incline and hay > curptfi ul greeu iiu a wiaiuj uu^b > roots to bind the surface. ThB aste land o: southern Indiana bearM e mark f 'Lie corn cultivator traver^B g up and down the hlKslde, maklnH tches to carry the water rapidly tBj e valley below. Then this hilly cu^| rated land was permitted to was^B I winter without a covering, the finHl vulet following the furrow of the cu^| rator every time the loose earth moved until a well-established ditc^B formed. 9| When ditches are formed the onlHj >pe is to break the sol), fill th^B tches and get something to grow o^B em during winter. Oftentimes tb^H II sowing will afford : afficient lat^B 11 pasture or early spring pisture f(fll leep or pigs to pay for the expense c^H wing the cover crop. Then the pr^H ctlon given in winter is a free gif^B any farmers on their rolling lan^H ;ed these free gifts it they make H3 ring en their hilly farms. Raising Turkeyi. SB Turkeys, if properly cared for, pe^B ips, give better results than any oth^B anch of poultry on the farm. SB First, select the best blood possib^H ir the amount of money you caHj )are, and In order to get the best rHj ilts, consult the buyer of your nelgflg )rhood; he is sure to know the pe^R in with the best stock, and can geH| ally buy, for market price, birds th^? lit do for the beginner. For profit,^n link the bronze are best, because th <fl| re larger and have stronger constltj^w ons than the other breeds. gffl To raise a number of turkeys doJH t the bens sit on their own eggs, bflE jt the eggs under chicken hens, ast the first and second layings: 19 When the little turks are hatcb^H ike them from the nest as soon as dflfc id place in a box with straw or sai'^H list on the floor. Above all thlnJH on't feed them; .they won't eat. Bfl rst, but when they are hungry, wjHj sck at the smallest thing to be fomflB /"ait several hours, then give th^K uearease, all they care to eat, frt^E T\/v ?Af onrfhlntr L/UL IJdUU, XJ\J UUI? uuj imamq le smearcase for some time. Keep^HI dry place where they can have si^U line and, shade as 'suits tliem. T^nj ttle pen must be tight enough to kefljl lem in, for they will follow anythi^H a til they know the mother. Aftac^H sw weeks wheat may be given, Dt until they become tired of tfl9 nearcase. I may come again and tHfi 3U something of the profits I'haHQ ajoyed by the above method.?C. RH ., in Indiana Farmer. jgj Typical Bronxe Turkey Cock. The above splendid specimen MM ronze turkey was second gobbler [adlson Square Garden poultry shcHH ew York, last whiter, exhibited Kgj [r. George W. Salsbury. Fo^H >und bronze males are not rare at tflfl adlng shows. However, males tl^H OVER FOBTY POUNDS. re so much above standard wei^H irely possess such rounded form^H 11 sections. The great fault in nil irge poultry is coarseness. The HH ium sized oirds of the breed, aK ale, are nearer the ideal form. K9| resent the above as one of the nflKS ym metrical males shown above ounds. The size, general form, cl^HS cter and color points of this typH9 ronze cock are worthy of imitatiorflHS ae best turkey ranches and wl^BE how quality i? sought?F. Seweli^^B lettable Poultry Journal. up Silage For Horao*. M Corn silage is a natural food lilking cows and growing cattle. i useful in the ration of fattci^nH imbs. It may be fed to horses robable advantage, but u must beH&E ith extreme caution. flBK If fed in regular amounts notMaj ceding ten to fifteen pounds per Ufggj lany experiences have been enHra r satisfactory. If fed in unlhr^ES mounts, and Especially if the siflH as been poorly made o~ has under^Hw ome further degeneration, it BmBh roved very deadly in its effects. -inter, in Minnesota, a man came t^^H t the Farmer's Institute with a^^| awful tale. He had filled his rith frozen corn and there was mHB n the silage. He had no hay. ~ ~ rrrvro'nf? TV it'll SiflHS uistra udu ^vr4dv.\* .? ? aving 110 other feed. They aBjflfl ushel or more a day. They gain^HH esh for a time. Tlieii they lysteriously to sicken r.nd die. HBH lysis of the throat was one symnHB >ro remedy helped them. All tiink, and he was a poor ebt for his farm. BH Last wirter a friend fed lamb^^B lge. What they rejected was thflffl| ut in the yard in a rack. From^uH ack cows gleaned. One day orses running in the yard ate all^^H ranted of this half spoiled silage.HflB ied. The symptoms were pecB|S ^eluding nervous spasms, and^^H eterinarlan pronounced the di^^HE ydrophobia. It may possibly eon. but I fear the silage alone^^H esponsible. This need not deter any one ^NB| milding silos. There is abundanHgH or silag? in the dairy barn, thi^^^J le yard, the sheep pens, even iHB wine pens. Let the horses ImvHnfi orage or siliize in very suiall ann^^^J -Joseph E. Wing mH