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m Outwitting: Anarchists in China. When their M - jesties recently left Etio Paik for Pekin there were in th? imperial cortege six imperial sedan cbaics exactly alike, all . :cupied and l>orne by the same number of idol as usually carried their Majesties' sedan chairs, the only exception bein#J thai no one kuew which of these sis imperial sedan chairs contained either the Empress Dowager, Emperor or Empress. This was, of course, to confuse !iuv would-be Anarchists.?North China Flerald. BOY'S TERRIBLE ECZEMA Koath and Kyest Covered With Crusts? Hands Finned Down?Miraculous Cure by Cuticura. "When my little boy was sir month* ?ld he Lad eczema. 'Ihe sores extended jo quickiy over the whole body that we at >nce called in the doctor. We then went to another doctor, but he could not help lirn. and in our despair we went to a "liiv/J Ana Mafforo KpMTTlf* QO HA'I tfl'lt I,-\ he had regular holes in his checks, large enough to put a linger into. The food bad to be given with a spoon, for hu mouth was covered with crusts as thick > as a linger, and whenever he opened th? mouth t?:<y began to bleed and suppurate, m did uiso his eyes. Hands, arin3, chest and back, in short, the whole body, wad covered over and over. We had no rest by day or night. Whenever he was laid in his bed we had to pin his hands dow?j, otherwise he would scratch his face, and make an open sore. I think his face mi*st have itched most fear?ul!y. "We finally thought nothing could help, and 1 had made up my mind to send my wife with *he cHld to Europe, hoping that ' the sea air might cure him, otherwise ho .v.'was to be put under -jocd medical care >. there. But, Lord be blessed, matters came differently, and we soon saw a miracle. A friend of ours spoke abou*-. Cuticura. We made a trial .vith Cucicura .Soap, Oint, ment and Resolvent, and within ten days, or two weeks we noticed a decided improvement. Just as quickly as the sickness had appeared it also began :o disap?ear. and within ten weeks thfe child was H absolutely well, and his skin was smooth and white as never before. F. Hohrath, S President of the U. L. Hohrath Company, Manufacturers of Silk Ribbons, 4 to 20 ? Rink AUey, South Bethlehem, Pa. June | 6, 1905." ProTerbf of New York Streets. I ' A new Broome street's clean. | The Broadway leadeth to destruction. S Stone Wall streets do not a prisoa I make. S How old is Ann street? | A Bowling Green gathers no moss. I Never say Dey street. | O! Liberty street, what crimes are j committed in my name. Division street is as bad. A Rose street by any other name would smell as sweet. Better Laight street than never. He asked for bread and they gave , him a Stone'street?Metropolitan Magazine. Catarrh Cannot Be Cared With local applications, sis they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order i to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and / 1 ' acts directly on the Mood and mucoussurface Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. . If was Dtescribed by one of the beat physicians in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the v Jtest tonics known, combined with the best \ ' blood purifiers, acting directly on the mu} sous surfaces. The perfect combination ot the two ingredients 13 what produces such \ woo<Jerful results in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney <fc Co., Props., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, price, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation Carl Schurz In '48. ' One morning toward trie ena or v eut> ruarjv 1848, I .at quietly in my attic chamber working hard at my tragedy of/'Ulrieh von Hutten," when sud1 d^nly a friend rushed breathlessly into ' the loom exclaiming: '"What, you sitting here! Do you not know what has happened?" "No, what?" "The French have driven away Lou's Philippe and proclaimed the Republic." I threw down my pen?and tiat was the end of my "Ulrich von Hutten." I never touched the manuscript again. We lore <lown the stair; into the y street to the uarket square, the ac' customed meetin" place for all the student societies after their midday dinner. Although it was still forenoon, the market was already crowded with young men talking excitedly. There ,was no shouting, no noise, only agitated conversation. What did we want there i This probably no one kne - But since the Freneh had driven away Louis Philippe and> proclaimed the Republic, something, of course, must hrppen bere, too. Some of the student? had brought their rapiers, along, as if it were necessary at once to make an at-" tack or to defend ourselves. We were dominated by a vague feeling that a great outbreak of elemental forces had begun, as if an earthquake was Impending 01' which we had felt the ' V first shock, and we instinctively crowded together.?Carl Schu-z, in ' Reml?niscences of a Long Lif in Mc' y - Clue's. INCIPIENT CONSUMPTION. Sow Food Headed Oft the Insidious l):4eaie. The happy wife of a good old-fa.?hioned Mich, farmer says: "In the spring of 1902, I was taken eick?a general breaking down, as it were. I was excessively nervous, could not sleep well at night, my food seemed to do me no good, and I was so weak I could scarcely walk across the room. "The doctor said my condition was due to overwork and close confinement 1 and that he very much feared that con sumption would set in. For several wv months I took one kind of medicine after another, but with no good effectIn fact, I seemed to grow worse. "Then 1 determined to quit all medicines, give tip coffee and see what Grape-Nuts food would do for me. 1 began to eat drape-Nuts with sugar RNd cream and bread and butter three limes a day. "The effect was surprising! I began i to gain flesh and strength forthwith, my nerves quieted down and grew normally steady and sound, sweet sleep came back to me. In six weeks' time I discharged the hired girl and com' menced to do my own housework for a family of six. This was two years ago, and I am doing it stili, and enjoy It." Name given by Popiuin Co., Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Read the little boob, Tht Boad t? Wellville," in pkgs. BATTLESHIPS IH CRASH The Alabama Rams the Kentucky in Avoiding Stranded Kearsarge. TWO SHIPS OF FLEET GROUND Plate* Knit Much of the Superstructure i'.aill.T Dumateil on the Kentucky? l'uta Bark to New Ynrk Harbor Aftei the Peculiar Accid.iut Which Occurred in the Lower Bay. Now York City.?Waite five of tlie his battleships of th? North Atlantic squadron, under Retr-Admiral Evans, were steaming out 1o sea, bound foi Hampton Roads, th? Kearsarge and the Kentucky went aground, a*bout noon, off the uorthwest point of the East Bank, about a mile and a ha!< south of Norton's Island and two miles east of West Bank Light The Alabama, fourth in line, tore through the channel and struck the Kentucky on the starboard quarter with terrific force, tearing a hole in her own port bow and seriously dam? 1... m./v flr.of n-oo aging tue iv:iuin^. mr ucri proceeding under reduced speed. prob ably uot more than seven or eight knots, when the high wind and strong tide eddies played havoc with the Ken tueky, forcing her to swing nlmosl half a mile off the main channel. The Kentucky rammed her nose into the hank first, then the Kearsarge. stationed 400 yards in her wake, tried to veer to the eastward to avoid her, but the strong tide and heavy winds made her slip, and she drifted to the westward of the Kentucky and went aground rather than ram her. Neither of the battleships had time to reduce speed.'- Hardly were they aground when the Alabama, fourth iu line, foliowed, and, before she could reduce speed or swing away from the mud held battleships grounded ahead of her, she rammed the Kentucky with all the terrific force behind the impetus of 12,000 tons of steel. The Ken tacky was forced to return to Tomp kinsville, where an immediate inspec tion of her hull was ordered. The diver who inspected her hull would not make public the damage, it any, sustained below the waterline Her starboard quarter rail was torn away, heavy sbeel da vita snapped oil and the captain's gig cut in two as though by a keen bladed knife. Be sides this her plates were torn and twisted from water]ine,to superstruc ture. Apparently her steoring gear alsc was damaged, for slie limped back tc Tompkinsville like a wounded .bird. Besides splitting open her port bow fifteen feet above the wateiline, tlie Alabama's forward davits wore torn away, all the rail of the port bow snapped off. plates dented and the huge iron shutter on one of (he gunports torn away. The Alabama veered off into the channel and proceeded down to the Southwest Spit, where she was able tc swing around. CJomius: back she drew alongside of the Kentucky, and re mained there until tlie Kentucky and the Ivearsarge pulled off under theii own steam and joined the flagship Maine, which was already outside Sandy Hook. Rear-Admiral Evans ordered the Kentucky back to Tompkinsville for examination. After making tempor ary repairs the Alabama joined the fleet outside the Hook, and all except - T 1-? ? 4-~ TI?,nnlnn I Ut? \"V ITU L UU IU JLXULUjfc/lV/AJ Roads. The accident is oue that, according to mariners, is liable to happen any time iu the Lower Bny, because of the narrowness of the channel, the high winds and strong tide that prevail there -he year round. Rear-Admiral Robley D. Evans, commanding the fleet, was outside the Hook when the accident occurred. Rear-Admiral Da vis, wno was on the Alabama, stated briefly how the accident occurred, but would not make any comment. According to the official statement, ail five battleships left Tompkinsville at 11.15 o'clock in the morning, under orders to steam to Hampton Roads. Rear-Admiral Evans, on the flagship Maine, led the column, displaying the signal. "Follow the flag." This order means a single column formation, each vessel 400 yards in the rear of the preceding one. They steamed out in the following order: The Maipe, the Kentucky. the Kearsarge. the Alabama and the Illinois. The Maine passed on to Sandy Hook, but the Kentucky, when about a mile and a half south of Norton's Island, found it impossible to follow the order, because of the lii^h wind mirl heavv H(if? Thp K>nr sarge, 400 yards behind her, had already been forced eastward on account of the tide, but had hoped to get into the column any moment. The Kentucky lowered her speed, struggled for a few minutes and then ran aground. The Iv ear.sarge could not get to the eastward of the Kentucky, and, seeing no other way, ^viing to westward and went aground, rather than ram the Kentucky. The Alabama, coming behind under the same speed, was confronted with the same conditions at this point, except that she was 800 yards away from the Kentucky. She tried to pass to the eastward of the Kentucky, now lying with her nose in ton feet of mud, but her steering gear was not working properly, and the wind and tide became stronger every moment. Before she could reduce speed she rammed the Kentucky's starboard quarter, then veered off into the channel. Mexico's Cotton Crop. The Mexican cotton crop for tbe year is less than 90,000 bales. Found Dead From Bullet. With a bullet wound in hia head, President Jacob C. Itustman, of the Jefferson Ice Company, was found dead in Chicago, 111., apparently a suicide. Frick's Nephew Drowned. Howard Childs, Jr., aged sixteen, a j nepnew or ti. u. irricK, was urowneii at Pittsburg, Pa. With five young men lie was playing hockey on the ice when it broke, and three of the players, including Childs, went down. Two Children Burned. Two children were burned to death at Fairmont, W. Va., when the home of Philip Johnson, colored, was destroyed. Horses Killed in Fire. Many horses were killed in a firo which destroyed a big stable in New York City. Captain and Crew Arrested. The captain and three of the crew of the fishing tug Alberta have been arrested at Cleveland, Ohio, for flshins: out #f season. t - ! f THE NEW HAVEN MYSTERY Charles A. Edwards Believed by Coroner to Have Bean a Suicide. Needed Money Coming to Hig fYlfe Fi.ou> lliller Estate? Pistol and PoUon Found in Back Vard. New Haven. Conn.?Officials investigating (lit* death of Cliarles A. Edwards are more fully convinced than ever that Edward* died by his own hand. They believe they have discovered a motive for ^Edwards' suicide, although the relatives and friends of Edwards and the public still thinks Edwards was murdered. To i>ear out the Coroner's theory that it was a case of suicide, because of financial difficulties,. it has: beent learned that very recently Edwards made several ineffectual attempts to get a portiou of his wife's share from the estate of Mrs. Abigail Hiller, his mother-iu-law, who died last November. There are those who hold the view Uiat &u warns pianneu ins imiuiuk w to create the belief that be had been killed by some oue who had blocked Ui* plans to secure a part of Mrs. Hiller's property. When Edwards' death was first mentioned to Allan Maxcy Iiiller. his brother-in-law, Hiller said if the authorities wanted to find a motive for Edwards' death they should investigate his financial affairs. According to the Coroner the first sign to support the suicide theory was discovered when I>etective Donnelly turned over some leaves in the yard and unearthed a whislcy flask labeled rock and rye. He found that it contained a small quantity of laudnaum. Detectjve Owen Daley began a thorough search of the stairways leading1 from Edwards' chamber to the basement. On the stairway, with a high power electric light. Detective Daley found blood stains that led almost all the way from the rear door to the upstairs chamber. With this evidence in favor of the suicide theory Coroner Mix and the detective started a new search for the pistol. The detectives, with a rake, went carefully over the rear lot and finally came upon the pistol, the handle sticking out of the ground. It looked as though it had been thrown and Lad struck the soft earth, muzzle forward, almost burying itself. Two or tne chambers i were empty aiid the calibre was the same as that of the bullet in Edwards' head. Then a:bole'in the back door was examined. and it just fitted a bullet from the pistol, showing that the first shot had gone through the jamb of the door, Coroner Mix and those aiding him were then pretty well satisfied that Edwards had shot himself. The Coroner said he would continue I liis search to find where Edwards procured the revolver and the poison. EIGHT DEAD IN HOTEL FIRE. Guests Leap From Windows of The West in Minneapolis. Minneapolis. Minn. ? Eight persons were killed and a score of others injured in a fire in the West Hotel, Hennepin avenue and Fifth street. Seven hundred guests and employes were thrown into a panic. The fire was confined to the elevator shaft and the two top floors in one corner of the building, but a dense 6m'oke pervaded everywhere, and the excitement which followed the first alarm hurried people into the hulls and out on window ledges iu frantic attempts to save themselves. Many persons were not dressed when the fire started, shortly after 7 o'clock. The dead are: John Berwin. fire captain; W. G. Nickels, Minneapolis: Thomas Summerville, Burnside, Conn.; J. E. Wolf, Minneapolis; Clinton B. Lamme, New York City; J. D. Peisniger, New York City; Mrs. M. E. Hodges, Minneapolis, and William Black, New York City. THE HIGH COST OF LIVING. Average Price of Commodities Highest iu Twenty-three Years. New York City.?The London Economist's "index number" of commodity prices for December 31 is remarkable as showing that average cost of the necessaries of life, at the end of 1905, not only exceeds all records of any month since the great rise in prices began after 1896, but is at the highest reached since the close of 1862. Prior to last year, high record of the period was the 2.240 figure of March, 1JKK). This was passed for the first time by the 2.255 at the end of last October. The "index" of December 31,1905. was 2.342. The lowest "index" ever reached was the 1.885 of July. 1897. GERONIMO'S EIGHTH WIFE. Famous Apache Warrior, Now Seven ty-six Years Old, Married Again. Lawton, Okla.?Geronimo. the famous Apache warrior, was married the other day for the eighth time. The bride is Mary Loto, widow of a prominent Indian who died two years ago. While Geronimo has in some rcsptvts taken up the ways of white men, particularly in his religious observ| ances, be would not go so far on this occasion as to have a clergyman perform the ceremony. He simply went over to the bride's tepee, after several months' courtship, and took her to his own home. Geronimo is seventy-six years old. His seventh wife died two years ago. KILLING ARMENIANS. \f-lccfi^rA hv Tartars Prom Elizabeth pol?Tiflis Bombarded. * Constantinople, Turkey. ? The situation at Tiflis, the capital of Russian Transcaucasia, is again very serious. Russian artillery have bombarded the city. The rebels met a Cossack attack with bombs. Complete anarchy prevailed at Elizabethpol, a city of about 17,000 population, ninety miles southeast of Tiflis. There have bepn terrible massacres of Armenians by the Tartars there. Feminine Fancies. Mrs. Nansen, the "wife of the explorer, is a singer of note. Mrs. Chauncey Depew is in London, England, at the bedside of l)er mother. One of the most widely known of American miniature painters is Mrs. Amalia Kussner Coudert. There is one woman in France?Mme. Dieulafoy?who lias official permission to dress always as a man. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, has accepted the office of honorary Vice-President of the State Mothers' Assembly of New York. i IBITSi NEWS WASHINGTON. Tbe appeal of Senator Joseph Ralph. Barton, of Kansas, from the sentence of a tine of $2000 imposed by the Federal Court at St. Louis, Mo., for accepting compensation from the Rinlto Grain and Securities Company for services in connection with proceedings before the Postoffice Department, was tiled in the Supreme Court. It is well within the facts to say that Washington is deeply stirred about the case of Mrs. Minor 3Iorris, the woman who was dragged from the White House when she sought the President. OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. The Hawaiian Islands' crop averages about .TT.j.OOO long tous of sugar per annum. Simoon Wharton, the three-year-old son of Henry - Wharton, of Honolulu, who had been missing, has been found murdered in a cane field at Waiaula, on Oahu Island. The child had been dismembered and horribly mutilated. Plans for a large Japanese immigration movement are being arranged at Honolulu. Russian Molokans from near Los Angeles, Cal., to the extent of several thousands in the course of time contemplate going to Hawaii, to settle on the island of Maui, providing the Territ-nr-inl flnvmimpnt is willinEf to be reasonable in the matter of homestead lands. The Hawaiian sugar planters are at present intensely interested in immigration. They liave very recently awakened to r?ie necessity of encouraging white labor to come rhere. Great activity prevails among the troops in Manila. Three regiments are under field orders in view of possible eventualities in China. The Siber arrived in Honolulu, bringing fifty-nine Chinese, including two Commissioners of the Emperor of China. DOMESTIC. The r?4."3-foot steamer Joseph Seliwood was launched at Lorain. Ohio. Deputy Commissioner O'Keefe, of New York City, ordered that hazing of iiaw nnliremen be StODned. The Federal Grand Jury, at Butte, Mont, has indicted Daniel B. Jacobs for running a lottery. Nothing has been leamed regarding the $18,000 express package lost between Augusta, Ga., and New York 'City. John M. Pattison, of Cincinnati/Ohio", who defeated Governor Myron T. Herrick by 01.000 plurality, was inaugurated Governor at Columbus. ' Making a short cut to his liome, Dr. Harrison S. Hathaway was struck by a train.on a trestle at Toledo, Ohio, and hilled. William M. Ivins. addressing a Brooklyn, N. Y., congregation on dishonest upbuilding of wealth..criticised Rockefeller. A motion for a rehearing of the case o? "Bluebeard" Johann Hoch, under death sentence for wife murder, has been filed at Springfield, 111. ? l-MI-J Two rauroau men were Kmru Uuu three hurt in a head-on collision of freight trains 011 the Burlington road near Woods Station, Mo. The Newfoundland west coast fishing season has practically been ended by ice aud American vessels are leaving with about half cargoes. The Commercial Savings and Trust Company, at Memphis, Tenn.. will liquidate the affairs of the defunct American Savings Bank and Trust Company. Shot through the body, O. W. Meadows, a farmer, was found dead in his buggy at Milledgeville, Ga., probably a victim of robbers. An eighteen-ton flywheel at the Morgan Engineering Works, Alliance, O., burst, without killing any of the many men working around it. Passes for New Jersey's legislators have been provided as usual by the railroads. Three white and eighteen negro miners were entombed at noon in the Coaldale Company's shaft, operated by Cooper Brothers at Coaldale, W. Va. The explosion was so terrific that the people of the surrounding country thought an earthquake had occurred. FOREIGN. After their defeat at Puerto Plata the Jimenistasretreated towards Monte Cristi, Santo Domingo. A small expedition from Monte Cristi attacked Samaua, but withdrew, defeated. General Sollohub, Governor-General of the Baltic provinces, telegvaps Premier Witte, at St. Petersburg, from Riga, that he sent a detachment of troops to Windau, where they arrested the local Social Democratic committee. Three of the sixteen chief ringleaders were killed; Germany will send a squadron of warships to the seat of the Morocco conference next week. The German White Book on the Moroccan case was Issued and was received in Frr.nc? as a harmless series of documents in no wise affecting France's attitude. St. Pierre-Miquelon. in return for conI cessions, has. agreed to aid thj? cam paign of Newfoundland against American fishermen. ' Negotiations between Venezueh and the Bermudez Asphalt Company were broken off and the matter will be referred to Congress. Chile produced last year no less than 1,000,4")0 tons- of nitrate. There are over 2G.000 workmen employed in the nitrate industry of Chile. The Government of unue nas appropriated the amount of $8,000,000 for railroad improvements. British official circles believe that the chief source of danger at the Morocco conference is the possibility of a clash in the views of Germany and France over questions of policing on the Algerian frontier. Dr. Stewart, of the Southern Nigerian Government, in Africa, while separated from his carriers, missed his .in/! l'ifiinf his. hipvrle into a has tile village, was killed and devoured by cannibals. According to a special cable dispatch the town of Masaya, Nicaragua, bas been visited by a succession of sever? earthquake shocks. Russia's Christmas passed in peace and festivity. The demand for automobiles is steadily increasing In the Argentine Republic. Most of the cars imported are of French origin, but American cars are now being introduced on a larger scale than during the past three years. Mr. Lloyd-George in a campaign speech in London, England, refuted Mr. Chamberlain's cry that Britain was going to the dogs by showing her great increase in trade. '* > . ?" 'T-y-y KILLED 1A LANDSLIDE i i Over a Score of People at Haver- ] straw, N. Y,, Perish. 1 7 < ENGULFED IN GREAT BRICK PIT j i Brickirtnker? Ar? Held Responsible Be- ] cause of Their Encroachments?Fire ( and Water Add.Ml to the Horror* of J tho Awlut Nlgrht of Terror?Kire Department Helpleas. Havers traw, N. Y.?The bodies of ( twenty-two persons were buried under thousands of tous of clay and quick- * sand as a result of a disaster'which , overwhelmed the northeastern part of t this village at night." ^ Rockland street, for a distance of five i city blocks?,' was swept in to. an abyss' f caused by the settling of the clay bank I upon which it stood. This for years ' had been steadily undermined by the ' brickmakers, whose yards are down the valley. The brickmakers, however, 1 ;ire expected to profit from the slide, as $200,000 worth of clay was dumped iuto their pits. ( The whole town is built on a huge r clay-hank, and the principal industry of the place is brickmaking. The top 1 layer of ground is sand about thirty J feet deep. Tlsen comes a stratum of j fairly soft clay, such as is used for brickmaking. This is about? forty feet thick. Beneath this is a soft, blue s sand mixed with clay, of the consistency of mortar and about thirty feet thick. j For years the brickmakers had been j digging away at the clay bank below Rockland street in such a manner, that they had practically undermined that ^ part of the village above. The lowest stratum of soft clay and sand slid out, and the tons of clay and sand above settled straight down. At jj the same time the so;'t mass of clay c and sand lowest down rose up like a fc great geyser, and, falling, Bettled over i the entombed part of the village. S A great fissure was seen in the ground at the end of Rockland street at 4 j, o'clock In the afternoon. Warning was quickly sent around that the clay bank was settling. Some persons ]eft their J houses and went to another part of the 5 village. Cave-ins had occurred before, but never so close to the residential section. u Into the chasm were swept thirteen houses, only one'of which stands today, 200 feet away and 150 feet down p into tbe pit. Tim was rue oniy one of the thirteen that was vacant. That the landslide occurred in three distinct u parts, about fifteen minutes apart, accounts for the fact that the lives lost are not counted in hundreds. ? Now a dozen houses, from which the tenants have fled, are standing on the brink of the abrupt declivity into which they will sink with other slides which are bound to come. For three blocks around the danger zone houses have been deserted. The ground is honeycombed with great Assures, and bits of the bank break away every few minutes. < There was a consultation among the 1 people living at the edge of the bank. They agreed that there could be no danger while the mass below was frozen, but that it would be a dangerous section should a thaw occur. Most of the people in the neighbor- j hnnrl iroi-o n wa fcpnprl lit 10.5ft o'clock by a loud rushing sound like the incoming of a huge wave as the soft clay slid out. Three houses began to settle. The first to go was a, boarding house run by Mrsf. Foley. John Burke awoke to see the sky through a great rent in the roof above him. He ran to a window n and jumped, almost into the arms of I Mrs. Foley, who had run out the front | door. They raced away just as the * house, turning completely over, went ? crashing into the pit. With this house were engulfed two Hungarians and a Swede. The experiences of others was similar. Directly after the first crash the alarm bell on the Town Hall was rung and' this brought Mayor Wilson P. Foss and the Fire Department to the scene. By the time the department arrived the wreckage was a masa of flames. > The overturned stoves in the houses set fire to them, and flames shot out from broken gas pipes. Sparks and burning brands were carried on the stiff breeze that blew from the river directly oyer the village. But for the snow that lay deep 011 the roofs, of the frame houses the whole village might liave been burned. The firemen stood aghast when they discovered that in the landslide the ? ?: water ukiiu sujjyijfuis ixiiii. ijuii. ua mt town had been carried away, and from a its broken edges tons of water were ^ pouring down "o -er the clay pits. It a was manifestly impossible to use the ^ apparatus under the conditions, and after some delay the water was turned off in that main and a line of hose laid up to Broadway. Soon ' the Garnersvilie department from five ? miles away reached the scene, and, j taking the affair out of the hands of the local department, saved the city. Among rue dead are: Joseph Albert. J! Mrs. Joseph Daley, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Manion, Mr. and Mrs. William * (Johen, Michael Barry, H. Nelson, Ben- ? jam I n Nelson, his son; Mrs. Silverman and her baby. Rabbi Aligen, an un- ? known Jewish man, the Proticb fnmil.v of three, Bart ley McOovern. Abraham Dias, William' Hughes and John Bonnet. 1 " cl TVor Ttisks on firain. I k 1/ War risks are being placed on groin fi contracts in Berlin, Germany, owing a to alarm over the Moroccan situation. t< 0 Rhode Island Governor on Insurance, p The message of Governor Utter, of >1 Rhode Island, ,<5?ued at Providence, M dealt wii-u Insurance. a el Take Charge of Walsh Banks. The presidents of six Chicago hanks assumed control of two John H. Walsh a banks. b Carons Kaneko and Komura Honored. *j Baron Kaneko and Baron Ko.-iura a have been made members of th? IVivy y Council. Newsy Gleanings. Hall Cainc contemplates writing a life of Christ. , They have taken to fitting Failles ^ with hosiery in the shoe stores at o] Lopeer, Mich. 0j A Texan named Dismuke has boon fe married three times and is the father ni of thirty-one children. ei Mrs. E. P. Chalmers, of Helena, S. C., has a pair of spectacles that are more than 200 years old. V The American Bible Society, it was reported recently, found itself for the first time in a quarter of a eeulury in 1 deht " *1*4-' r. : > Igrnorant of Napoleon. The instances of general ignorance to which attention has been drawn recall a remarkable case once mentioned by Lord Beaconsfield. He related that Napoleon I., a year after he became Emperor, determined to find >ut whether there was any one in the svorld who had never heard of him. Within a fortnight the police of Paris lad discovered a woodchopper of Montnartre, within Paris, who had never leard of the Revolution, nor of the ieatli of Louis XVI., nor of Emperor Napoleon!?London Chronicle. A Fifteen Ton I'iece of Coral. The dredger Go 'ernor, in the old Pa;ific Mall dock, did herself proud yeslerday morning by landing a fifteen-ton )iece of coral on dry land- The big scoop had beei, 'leiivcrine ordinary o?db, vvneti the boom dropped and the rflgine started to haul in a fresh load. CJien the'gear<groaned and things comcnenced' to make a bfg fuss, and more jteam.was given and everybody stood ?y. Balanced as neatly-'as an egg in a ipooii came up a coral rock far too big x> get in the scoop and just able to iramp in under the gin block.?Hououiu Commercial Advertiser. The regular standing army of the Jerman Empire numbers now f>05,000 neiu N.Y.?2 "ITS permanently cured. No fits or nervou.*igsb after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great forvfl Restorer,$2trial bottle andtreatisefree )r,R.H.Kline, Ltd., 931 Aroh St., Phila., Pa. The Christian En-cavor has new 67,003 o^Aties. A Cnar&nteeil Core fur Piles. tchinjj, Blind, Bleedinor, Protruding Pil?s. >rMg?ists are authorized to refund money it azo Ointment fails to cure in C to 14 days. 50c. Persp-'ring hands are almost always cvilence of nervousness. Kobbeit In Cliurch. Just thinkrwhat an outrage, it is to be obbed of all the benefits of the services y continuous coughing throughout the ongregation, when Anti-Uripine is guaraneea to cure. Sold everywhere. 25 cts. f. W. J>iemer, At. U., manufacturer, ipringfield, Alo. Even hunger isn't an infallible cure for iziness. To Cnro ? Cold In One Day 'alee Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. >rug<?ists refund money if ft fails to cure. E. y . urove'3 signature on eacn box. zoc. Sallow complexions are often caused by nwise eating and a torpid liver. .'do not balieva PIjo's Cure for Consumeionhasanoiual forooagtis and colds.?Johx '.BotEE,Trinity Springs, Ind., Peb.-15,1903.. More than 17,000,000 postage stamps are aed in this country every day. WHO SI SKETCH OF THE LIFE < \nd a True Story of How Had Its Birth and How it to be Offered for Pu This : remarkable woman, whose naidea name was Estes, was born in jynn, Mass., February 9th, 1819, comag from a good old Quaker family, for some years she taught school, and >ecame known as a woman of an alert i nd investigating mind, an earnest 1 eeker after knowledge, and above 11, possessed of a wonderfully sympa- 1 betic nature. In 18-13 she married Isaac Pinkhara, 1 builder and real estate operator, and hoif aorlir marripd life was marked bv 1 rosperitv and happiness. They had ' our children, three sons and a ' aughter. 1 In those good old fashioned days it ! ras common for mothers to make heir own home medicines from roots nd herbs, nature's own remedies? i ailing in a physician only in specially 1 rgent cases. By tradition and ex- * erience many of them gained a won- 1 erful knowledge of the curative prop- ^ rties of the various roots and herbs. * Mrs. Pinkham took a great interest ? I the study of roots and herbs, their 1 liaracteristics and power over disease. J he maintained that just as nature so J ountifully provides in the harvestelds and orchards vegetable foods of 1 II kinds; so, if we but take the pains J j find them, in the roots and herbs ; f the field there are remedies exressly designed to cure the various ? Is and weaknesses of the body, and , was her pleasure to search these out, v nd prepare simple and effective medlines for her own family and friends, c Chief of these was a rare combina- ? on of the choicest medicinal roots I nd herbs found best adapted for the lire of the ills and weaknesses pecu- c ar to the female sex, and Lydia E.Pink uu's friends and neighbors learned ^ lat her compound relieved and cured t rut it Oecame quite popular among * lem. 1 All this so far was done freely, withnt money and without price, as a * tbor of love. F But in 1973 the financial crisis struck c ynn. Its length and severity were too j mch for the large real estate interests _ f the Pinkham family, as this class f business suffered most from v larful depression, so when the Centen- n ial year dawned it. found their prop- f ty swopt away. Some other source f f income had to be found. At this point Lydia E. Pinkham's y egetable Compound was made known f i the world. g The three sons and the daughter, a ith their mother, combined forces to v Oxon as Racers. Attempts are being made in France to train oxen for saddle" riding, and several races have been oragnized to test tlielr capacity. Tliey have been trained not only as racers on "the flat," but also as successful jumpers. The bridle and saddle used are simt- | lar in general design to those for hunt- J ers. J The green ants of AustraHa make nests by bending leaves together and I uniting them with a kind of natural J glue, which, erudes from them. A Illlterse/ In the United States, 1 According to the census use of the ^ 1 term an illiterate is a person not under | ten years of age who is unable to write either in English or in any other language. In most cases the illiterate is also unable to read. At the census of 1900 the number of illiterates enumerated' iil-tbe'Unked'States.vexclusive.of v j Alaska, Hawaii and all other outlying : I territory, was 6,180.06% This was ap?... I proximately one-tenth of /the -popuLa- . tion at least ten years of age, the exact mathematical proportion being 106.6 Illiterates to 1000 population. Of the native white population the proportion* of illiteracy is 46.4 per 1000, or lea? than: one in twenty. There is ground for satisfaction and encouragement is th# statistical evidence that illiteracy 1* . steadily being reduced. In 1890 the number of illiterate* per 1000 wa? 133.4 for the total population, 62.3 for the native -white population, 130.6 for the foreign-born white and G<57.6 for negroes, including Indians and Mongolians. fcn most European countries illiteracy is much more prevalent than in the United States, although thl* country is still far behind Germany^ Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Swits* * erland.?Harper's ..Weekly Feat of a Greek Scholar. >. > 1 i It' may' safely be said that no feat nf tra nolo f isvn in nnir ont^ hfta iV&Of | vi. uaiioiuuv/u iu uiij muo vi v? equalled that achieved by Profe?or I Jebb In rendering Browning's "Abt j Vogler" li^to Greek verse. This flue i soliloquy of the siusiclan la less obscure, no doubt, than many other of its author's production..; but It abounds in imagery and in turns of i thought which even an Englishman finds it not very easy to follow, and of vhlch he hardly could have conceived it possible that any Greek equlr- v alents should exist Yet they did exist, for Jebo found them, though 11 may be doubted whether any other Greek - scholar vliving* would jthaveJjee*. equally successful in his search.?London Telegraph! - .V 1PWAQ 1L< Y T 1 __. : 'J i OF LYDIA E. PINKHAM the Vegetable Compound the "Panic of *73" Caused blic Sale in Drug Stores. restore 'the - family fortune. They argued that the medicine which was so good for their woman friends and neighbors was equally good for the women of the whole world. y T3i?*1?V?atvio Vio/1 m/tnA? otiii * x lie jl iunnuui^ uou uv uivuvj f w?w little credit. Their first laboratory was the kitchen, where roots and k herbs were steeped on the stove, gradually filling a gross of bottles. Then came the question of selling it, for always before they had given it away freely. They hired a job printer to run off some pamphlets setting forth the merits of the medicine, now called Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and these were distributed by the Pinkham sons in Boston, New York, and Brooklyn. The wonderful curative properties of the medicine were, to a great extent, self-advertising, for whoever used it recommended it to others, and th4 demand gradually increased. , In 1877, by combined efforts the family had saved enough money to commence newspaper advertising and from that time the growth and success of the enterprise were assured, until today Lydia E. Pinkham and her Vegetable Compound have become house. hold words everywhere, and many tons of roots and herbs are used annu< ally in its manufacture. ^ I Lydia E. Pir&ham herself did not live to sec the great success of this ivork. She passed to her reward years ago, but not till she had provided means for continuing her work as effectively as she could have done it ' lierself. V During her long and eventful expe- H innoo wan pwp mfithodieal in her H ;vork and she was always careful t ~?re- I serve arecord of every case thatcame to ler attention. The cage of every sick B voman who applied to her for advice? D ind there were thousands?received 8 ;areful study, arid the details, includ- ~ I ng symptoms, treatment and results I vere recorded for future reference, and I ,o-day these records, together with 9 lUDdreds of thousands made since, are tvailable to sick women the world H >ver, and represent a vast collabora ,ion of information regarding the H reatment of woman's II* whlc for Luthenticity and accuracy can hardly H >e equaled in any lib"ory in the H vorld. f B With Lydia E. Pinkham worked her H laughter - in - law, the present Mrs. B 'inkham. She was carefully instructed B n all her hard-won knowledge, and B or years she assisted her in her vast B orrespondence. B To her hands naturally fell the H lirectkm of the work when its origina- H| /-?*? r>n QnroTr TlV** nnorlrr fnTanfv IBB Ui jmootu u ?T UJI i. Vi I'VUI 1J in^uujive years she has continued it, and M lothing in the work shows when the irst Lydia E. Pinkham dropped her >en, and the present Mrs. Pinkham, tow the mother of a large family, took t up. With woman assistants, some as apable as herself, the present Mrs. HB Mnkham continue* this great work, and MH irobably from the office of no other SB lerson have so many women been ad- . H[ ised how to regain health. Sick wo- |9 nen, this advice is "Yours for Health" Ifl reely given if you only write to ask or Such is the history of Lydia E. Pinklam's Vegetable Compound: made rem simple roots and herbs; the od6 ;reat medicine for women's ailments, SH ,nd the fitting monument to the noblo gfl .