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w' H Speaking of Ancestry. Mr. Chase has s;ich an ?'.\asi:orated ^ espec-t for the blue blood of Boston which runs in his veins that his man nor is slightly patronizing. He was lately introduced to a Syrian of good birth and education, who lives in this "And may I inquire." he said, blandBy. in the course of the conversation, "if you are of the Christian religion?" "My family wascouverted to Christ's teaching at the time of John's second risit to Lebanon," quietly replied the Syrian.?Youth's Companion. Your Work 1'^ Atkins Saws cut 12^ not only wood, iron 1^7 anc* other materials H i >7v\. ^^"bctter than any I other, but they cut i That is because they ' arc n,ac^e best stce^ i iSjBK? the world by men that j *>*??*" know how. J Atkins Saws, Com Knives, Perfection Floor j Scrapers, etc., are sold by alt good hardware J dealers. Catalogue on request. E. C. ATKINS (EL CO. Inc. Largest Saw Manufacturers is the World j Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis | Blanches?New York, Chicago, Minneapolis Portland (Oregon), Seattle, bin Francisco Memphis, Atlanta and Toronto (Canada) Accept no substitute?insist on the Atkins Brand i SOLD BY GOOD DEALERS EAB}YWOfT~f] Londoner's Wonderful Climb. Mr. H. Doran, of London, accompanied by the Guides Egger and Bohren. of Grindelwald, climbed to the summit of the Wetterhorii the other day. j This is the first time that one of tue most dangerous and most difficult mountains in Switzerland has been ascended in the depth of winter. DEATH SEEMED NEAR. Bow a Chicago Woman Found Help When Hope Was Fast Fading Away. s Mrs. E. T. Gould, 614 W. Lake St., Chicago, 111., says: "Doan's Kidney Pills are all that saved me from death afjj* by Bright's Disease? that 1 know. Xr I had eye trouble, ifj backache, catches ""'ben lying abed or when bending &uid ancl otten dizzy and bad sick headaches and '|||i| f bearing down 1 Hi ? Ij 1 pains. The kidI 1 ney secretions iwere. too copious and frequent, and Very bad in appearance. It was in 1903 that Doan's Kidney Fills helped me so quickly and cured me of these troubles *nd I've been well ever since." Sold.by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. 1*. Kainr I)?r in California. The present storm commenced here &n the 11th of this month and at noon Jo-day the rain guage registered 27V* inches. Yesterday the rainfall was 7U Inches, and Tuesday, which so far has bejen the champion rainy day, the precipitation was 81/-. inches.?Stirling City Correspondence Chico Post. After two recent nights of fog nearly 3000 birds were round dead uuaer rue lantern of Cape Grisnez lighthouse. A TRAIN E After Years of Experiei Regard to Tl Mrs. Martha Pohlman of 56 Chester Avenue, JhSSS ;Newark, N. J., who is a i : graduate Nurse from the I Blockley Training School, !at Philadelphia, and for ;*!x years Chief Clinic i Nurse at the Philadelphia ! writes the letter printed below. She has the advantage of personal experience, besides her professional education, and what she has to say may be absolutely relied ?|pj||f|^ Many other women are afflicted as she was. They IS|||?||jjjf| can regain health in the same way. It is prudent I * to heed such advice from such a source. Mrs. Pohlman writes: "I am firmly persuade^ jtTw M after eight years of experience 0A/\ h e with Lydia E. Pinkham's BT Vegetable Compound, that it A/% is the safest and best medicine * * a r 1" for any suffering woman to lf\ 1 1 n?e." %rohlm< . 44 Immediately after my m marriage I found that ray ^ ^ health began to fail me. I became weak and pale, with severe bearing-down pains, fearful backaches and frequent dizzy spells. The doctors prescribed for me, yet I did ?ot improve. I would bloat after eating, and frequently become nauseated. I had pains down through my limbs so I could i " hardly walk. It was as bad a case of female ^trouble as I have ever known. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, however, oared me within four months. Since that ! time I have had occasion to recommend it to a number of patients suffering from all forms Of female difficulties, and I find that while it is considered unprofessional to recommend a patent medicine, I can honestly recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, for I have found that it curo3 : female ills, where all other medicine fails. It la a grand medicine for sick women." Money cannot buy such testimony as this?merit alono can produoe such rey suits, and the ablest specialists now v?*gree that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the most universally successful remedy for all female diseases known to medicine. When women are troubled with irregular, suppressed or painful periods, ' weakness, displacement or ulceration of the female organs, that bearingdown feeling, inflammation, backache, bloating (or flatulence), general debility, indigestion, and nervous prostration. or are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, faintness, lassitude, excitaLydla E Pinkham's Vegetable Comp V Yale University is to have a commercial museum. N. Y.?7 HC Me I MJORN W.MOBHIS, lUalldlUIV Washington, D.C. 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims. H I>ai.?PHnq}d?i BxAmlaor O.8. PonaionBureau. 8 5ris w clnl wor, 15 atauueatioc claims, attj since To R? Made an Example Of. '"A Iittk? girl came crying from school one day." says Miss Dempster, of amateur art fauie, ami was askeil Avhat grieved her. "T-t-teaclier s-s-says." she sobbed, "that unless t I-l-iearn m-aiy arithmetic lesson belter she'll m-m-make an example of me." "She's quite right." was the answer. "Suppose you study and learn it." "B-b-but if she ni-m-makes an example of me she'll p-put me on the blackboard, and oue of tlio*e n-n-uasty boys will rub me out?boo-hoo." BABY COVERED WITH SORES, Would Scratch am! Tear the Flenli I'u1cm HxikN Were Tied?"Would Have Died Hut For Cuticura." "My little son, when about a year and a half old, began to have sores corae out on his face. 1 had a physician treat hiin, but the sores grew worse. Then they began to come on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. Then I onllpd another nhvsieian. Still lie grew worse. At the end of about a year and a half of suffering he grew so bad I had to tie his hands in cloths at night to keep him from scratching the sores and tearing the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton, and was hardly able to walk. My aunt advised me to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I sent to the drug store and got a cake of the Soap and a box of the Ointment, and at the end of about two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sores ot any kind since. He is now strong and healthy, and I can sincerely say that only for your most wonderful remedies my precious child would have died from thoee terrible sores. Mrs. Egbert Sheldon, R. F. D. No. 1, Woodville, Conn., April 12, 1905." Not on Thnt Diet. A scientist now declares that one may live 180. years on a diet of sour milk. But who would want to live that long on such a diet? FITSpermanentlycured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer,$2trial bottle andtreatisefree Dr.K.H.Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. The works of Schopenhauer are being translated into Japanese. A Guaranteed Cure For Files. Itching, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Pil^i. Druggists are authorized to refund money i! Pazo Ointment fails to cure in 6 to 14 days. 50c. Germany is gaining on England in the trifjuriauun ui L'uai IU jriauw. To Cure ? Cold In One Day Take Laxative Promo Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money If it fails to cure. E. \V. Grove'sslgnature on each box. 25c. Of the 66C female students at the University of Jierlin, 483 are Germans. The famous asphalt lake of Trinidad looks like a great black swaiup surrounded with a fringe of cocoanut palms. How'* Thin ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney <fc Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, hav*; known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all buaine&s transactions and flnanoiallv able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Tuuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Waldinq, ktnnajf <Sc Mauvix, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Hall's Catarrh Cure is takeninternally.ac1'ing directly upon the blood aud mucuoiis suriaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Italy's War Pigeons. The Italiau War Department now employs over 3000 pigeons for transmitting news and instructions. !D NURSE ? 4 U/AMan In Ite, AUVidCB TTUUK1I iu heir Health. bility, Irritability, nervousness, sleepI lessness, melancholy, "all-gone " cnc. "want-to-be-left-alone'' feelings, blues I and hopelessness, they should remember there is one t?-ied and true remedy. Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. The needless suffering of women from diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible to see. The money which they pay to doctors who do not help them is an enormous waste. The pain is cured and the money is saved bjr Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It is well for women who are ill to write Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. The present Mrs. Pinkham is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham, her assistant for many j'ears before her decease, and for twenty - five years since her advice has been freely given to sick women. In her great experience, which covers many years, she has probably had to deal with dozens of cases just like vours. Her advice is strictly confidential. wind Succeeds Where Others Fail gOp for 50o worth of leading l!*i6 novelties in Choici 11? est Garden Seeds. $l*s worth of Universal Pro IU luiuiu Cout'ous free with every order. HOLUIANO'S SEEUSTUKK. BALTIMORE. riPHPQY NEW DISCOVERY; S^P B ^ I W I ?Itm qalrk rrllrf and cnrc? wont cu?(. Book of tMtlmanlila inil IO D>;i' trf?tm??t Frae. Dr. ?L_U. J^BKK.VS ?OSS, lor B, itluta^ tt*. CHINA EXECUTES WEBS" Pekin Ministers to Decide Whelhsr Troops Should Go or Stay. ! PREDICT BIG CHINESE MASSACRE i State Department Urging Military Prepnrations For Kxpectcd Suppression of Anti-Forcicn Rislntr?Americans Advised by Cable to Return Home at Once. Pekin, China.?The Imperial Government has ordered the Viceroy of Foofliow immediately to execute the leader of the Changpu mob and to punish severely th.? others concerned in that affair. * The Viceroy reports that the trouble . at Cliaugpu arose over the detention of a Chinaman by-the Catholic mission The populace destroyed the mission and then the anti-foreign element arose and wrecked the English mission Troops were sent as soon as possible and tired on the mob. killing twelve rioters. London. England.?Great Britain demanded that China compensate the missionaries for the destruction of their property at Changpu. near Arnoy. and also asked for the punishment of those responsible for the disorders. The Government knows nothing of the reported general unrest in China beyond the reports of Consuls, which are conflicting, some considering the disorders local, while others believe they foreshadow a general anti-foreign uprising. While Great Britain, with the other Powers, agreed at Emperor .WMlljam's suggestion to withdraw ( troops from Chili Province, it has now been decided to leave the question with the Ministers at Pekin. They nrobably will decide to maintain the J ; troops stationed at Tientsin and withdraw those occupying outlyiug station!?. Cincinnati. Ohio.?Wong Fong, former Secretary of the Six Companies, in San Francisco, who is visiting here, says the Boxer trouble in China will culminate in the greatest massacre of modern times. He issued this warning to several American friends, tele- i graphing it to Seattle, Los Angeles and i San Francisco: i "The blow is about to faU. Cable warnings to friends to leave China at once. Tell them to seek protection of ! : Germany temporarily and to get out of the co.untry.;before February 24." Fong is visiting Ah Loo Wai, the ! I wealthiest of the local Chinese resi- j dents, and after the messages were i sent, he said: "I received word that j : the order has been sent out to the subordinate circles of the Chinese Reform Association to throw off all the { foreign elements in our country, starting February 24. The association is ' - - ?- M.1? " usieusiui,v ?jaiiiuii\.. - i , Washington. D. C.?While not re- j 1 warding an anti-foreign uprising in I China as imminent, Secretary Root j is convinced it is his duty to pursue [ the course he has already outlined for 1 the protection of American life and : property. The Chinese Government. ' while not actually aiding the develop- i ment of this anti-foreign sentiment, ! has not exerted itself to prevent the 1 spread of the anti-American boycott, notwithstanding the publication of numerous proclamations by the Viceroys. So Mr. Root will continue to j urge uppn Secretary Taft the adoption of military precautions. Officers returning from the East say that the Japanese do not appear to be ; involved in this wave of anti-foreign sentiment in China. There is no evi- , dence that they have in any way encouraged the boycott movement, but it I is said they are likeiy to derive substantial advantage from its spread because the Chinese must buy somewhere and the Japanese are iilcely to reap the benefit of the exclusion of nthpr fnrpien commodities. The troops ordered to the Philippines to strengthen the forces there so this Government might be prepared for any eventuality in China are now en route to the islands. The President has suggested that another infantry regiment be sent to Manila. Military experts well know that in the last five years the Chinese array has increased in efficiency at a wonderful rate. The maneuvres held l there last fall demonstrated that the Chinese army is not only well equipped and trained, but it is very efficient. The entire army at this time number? 250,000 and is constantly growing. BEAVERS PLEADS GUILTY. Admits Charges of Conspiring to Defraud Government. Washington. D. C.?In the Criminal Court George W. Beavers pleaded guilty to the indictments charging him with conspiring with former State Senator George E. Green, of Binghamton. N. Y., and W. D. Doremus to defraud the Government in connection with the furnishing of postal supplies, and also i of bribery, and was sentenced to two years in the Moundsville, W. Va., penitentiary. He was at once taken into custody, and will be conveyed to Moundsville with flirt first batch of prisoners going there. Balfour Defines His Policy. Mr. Balfour, in a speech at London, England, defined liis policy as one to build up British industries by maintaining a larger foreign market foi manufactures. Last Rites For King Christian. The body of King Christian of Denmark was quietly taken from tho Aiualienborg Palace, in Copenhagen, to the Slotskirke, -where great crowd? paid hor.ur to the dead sovereign. Copper War Over. F. Augustus Hcinze, at Butte, Mont., sold out his Montana copper mines to Amalgamated interests, and thereby ended the big copper war which ha? waged for years. Labor News Notes. The Reading (Pa.) Iron Company em I ploys 2000 hands. Agricultural laborers in Spain have a union with 3317 members. The workmen engaged iu building operations receive the highest wages. A strike In the Humble oil field at Houston, Tex., involved about 400 men. The number of men on the payroll of the railroads of the Uuited States is 1,290,121. Onion funerals will hereafter be demanded by the Funeral Drivers' Union of New York. SEEK NEW CONTINENT Expedition to Hunt Mors Land Tor ; the United States. i Danish Captain Plans Trip From the J Mouth of the Mackenzie to SiberiaImportant Discoveries Expected. Washington. D. C.?President Roosevelt was made acquainted with the plans of an expedition intended to locate and possess for the United States a great and unknown continent, or enormous archipelago, about the size ! of Greenland, which exists somewhere j between the Parry Islands and Wrangel Land, off the Siberian coast. Captain Mikkelson, a Danish subject, who will be the leader of the expedition, had .been officially indorsed by the Danish Minister and was personally introduced to the President by Henry Edward Rood, of Harper's Magazine. Afterward Captain Mikkelson and Mr. Rood announced the details of this new exploration plan, which is said to be novel in the history of Arctic expeditions. Captain Mikkelson has no intention of trying to reach the North Pole, an undertaking which he believes to"* be both impossible and useless of attainment. In addition to his intention to locate the unknown Arctic continent, he desires to make acientiflc expeditions which probably will result in new and important additions to present knowledge of geology, meteorology, hydography and " probably ethnology, astronomy and physics. Geographical bodies throughout the world are agreed that a continent, or a mass of great islands, lies to the north and west of the Beaufort Sea, in the one wholly unexplored region of the Arctic Ocean. Captain Mikkelson says that upon discovering the new continent he has arranged to plant there the American flag, to comply with necessary formalities, and claim . it as a possession of the United States. Accompanying Captain Mikkelson will be Ernest Leffingwell, of Illinois, his partner in the undertaking, who ?in /\f oil fKa Will littvir uuai^c ui an cut isctvuwuw work, and Ejmar Ditlevsen, of Copenhagen, who is both a zoologist and an artist. In the latter part of May Mr. Leffingwell and Mr. Ditlevsen will start from Edmonton, British North America, on a voyage of 2200 miles to the mouth of the Mackenzie River, where a fleet of eleven Arctic whalers are now frozen in. For the first 1200 miles they will journey in a light skiff, built for rough water and shooting rapids. This boat will be waiting for them at Athabasca Landing. Arriving at Fort Smith, Great Slave Lake, they will board a steamboat of the Hudson's Bay Company, and travel in her the remaining thousand miles. Meanwhile Captain Mikkelson will . sail from San Francisco, Cal., for Ber< ?? u hJo Auffif nf 1U? OUUll, tail JIU^ uig vuiuv sledges, furs, provisions, firearms and scientific apparatus. Captain Mikkelson will sail under American colors with an American crew and a competent sailing master. After passing Bering Strait Captain Mikkelson will touch on the Arctic coast of Siberia and there pick up two Siberian ponies. Then lie will return to Northern Alaska and will coast : eastward along Alaska and the extreme northern boundary of British America, landing now and then to buy dogs from natives and: reaching the mouth of the Mackenzie River in August, where he will meet Leffingwell and Ditlevsen. They will board the ship, which will go straight to a sheltered bay on the northwest coast of Banks Land, where permanent headquarters will be made. For eighteen months Captain Mikkelson expects to spend much of his time in the extremely important work ol training his dogs. While Mikkelson !s bringing his dog teams to the highest point of efficiency he will be traveling constantly over Banks Land, about which nothing has been added to the records made by McClure in 1831; and he will also journey ? * ? ?- - il. across Wollaston Liana 10 tue suuw east, where he will remain with one companion some eight' months, living with Esquimaux and studying their modes of living and their legends. In the early spring of 1908 Captain Mikkelson with Mr. Leffingwell and Mr. Ditlevsen will say goodby to their ship and start northwestward. Captain Mikkelson expects to reach Wrangel Land (or the Alaskan coast) by June, 1908, haying no dogs left and he and his companions themselves dragging their remaining supplies and three kayaks or Arctic canoes in which they will paddle and drift across the hundred miles of water between Wrangel Land and Siberia. Having no camp equipment remaining. they will sleep 011 the ice floes at night. On reaching the Siberian or Alaskan coast they will board the firsl homeward bound whaler. ORDERS CHINESE BEHEADED. Government Acts in Case of Men Who Attacked Mission at Changpu. Pekin. China.?The Government has ! directed the Viceroy of Fuchau to b& j head the leader of the Chinese who 1 l.itelv attacked the mission of Chang< | pu and to punish severely the others I who took part in the attack. Tho Viceroy reported that the trouble arose from the mission detaining a native, thereby arousing the anti-foreign feeling of the mob. Slight Operation on King Alfonso. An operation was performed on King Alfonso at Madrid, Spain, for the removal of an abscess from his shoulder. Miss Roosevelt Has Birthday. Miss Roosevelt's twenty-second birthday was celebrated at the White House in Washington with a dinner. Another Jewish Massacre. A massacre of Jews is reported to have taken place at Kalarashi, Bessarabia. Die in Portland Fire. Six persons were killed by a fire in Portland. Ore., and several were reported missing. The Gentler Sex. Mme. Bernbardt's pet superstition is "Never twice without a third time.") The death has occurred at Banff of a woman named Mrs. Timpson, age 302. Mrs. Hansbrough, wife of the Senator from North Dakota, is said to be a cisvor arcmtecr. Miss Helen Gould's mnil has grotm to suoli proportions as to be burdensome to lier two secretaries. Mrs. Anna Gridley, eighty years o!d. mother of the late Captain Gridley, is a clerk in tho Land Office at Washinston D. C. [. .j - W WESTERN THIS WRECKED Two Men Killed and Many injured in Three Accidents. FLAMES ADD TO THE HORRORS Passenger Trains at Columbus, Kan., lilt* String of Vox Curs ? Fast Mnll on Missouri Pacific Ditched ? Sleeping Couches Leave Italia at St. Louis, Mo. Fort Scott, Kan.?St. Louis and San Francisco passenger train No. 118, jortlibound. was wrecked at Columbus, Kan. Harry Roundtree, of Fort Scott, tlie express messenger; one passenger, and a newsboy, names unknown, were burned to death. George Woods, the engineer, was badly hurt, and W. F. Runyan, tbe fireman, had his leg brokeu. The passenger train ran into a string of box cars that had broken loose from a freight train, and had run back on to the main line. The entire passenger train, except the sleeping car, was burned. The train carried few passengers. The wrecked train was known as the Toplin-Oklahoma express, and ran between Afton, I. T.. and Fort Scott. The train, which left Afton at 7 o'clock at night, was made up of baggage car, sleeping car, smoking car and two chair cars. Fast Mnil Train Ditched. Kansas City, Mo.?Fast mail train No. 7. westbound, on the Missouri Pacific Railway, which left St. Louis at 3 o'clock In the morning, was wrecked at the Gasconade bridge, twenty-seven miles east of Jefferson City. Two of the mail cars were ditched, caught fire, and were destroyed. Several members of the crew were hurt, but no one was killed. The train carried no passengers. The train is the regular Kansas CitySt. Louis mail, not the new Texas fast mail. At the tj *o of the accident it was running at the rate of forty milos an limir Twn hundred feet east of t'le bridge the engine jumped the track, and, with two mail cars, went into a ditch. The other cars jumped the traca., out were not badly damaged. .SIe?pir*tc Cars in Collision. St. Louis, Mo.?While coming into St. Louis at tae rate of forty miles au hour, two sleeping cars of a St. Louis and San Francisco train, too*, a siding. tore loose from the train, and craBlied into a box car, loaded with terra cotta. The passengers were hurled pell inell, but none was hurt beyond bruise*. Charles Lewis, a negro porter, was badly injured. The car of terra cotta, v 1- od .-.t $2000, was demolishes . KILLED BY TIDAL WAVE. Twenty-five Shocks of Earthquake in Eight Days. Guayaquil, Ecuador. ? Fassengers from tJie province of Esmeraldas, in Av^iAm/v A(?foi"n nOt'f nf LJUiU tTA. tL CliJtr UUllUH COIC1 14 pui t v*. Ecuador, who arrived here report that earthquake shocks were felt there and that several towns in the provinces of Esuieraldas and Manabi -were seriously damaged. At Esuieraldas City several houses collapsed, including the Government I16u.se. The village of Pinguagi. near the Colombian frontier, was inundated by a tidal wave, and many inhabitants.were drowned. Ninety bodies were washed ashore at Tumaco. At Rio Verde several houses collapsed. During eight days twenty-five shocks were felt in Eameraldas. The Colombian village of Guacada also was inundated by a tidal wave and 200 persons were drowned. The eruption of the Colombian volcano Cumbal caused the earthquake. Washouts on the Chanchan River detained at Huigra the train bringing former President Lizardo Garcia to Guayaquil. PALERMO'S Bl'GGEST FIRE. Damage of $800,000 Caused by Destruction of Pecoraino Mill. Falenno.?Losses amounting ti> more that $800,000 were caused by a terrific fire which completely destroyed the great Pecoraiuo mill, with all its stores of flour and grain. A storm was raging at the time, and a number of firemen were injured. It is the largest fire that has ever occurred in Palermo. Rich, But Starved to Death. Miss Maria Corsa. fifty-six years old, and worth a million, died of starvation in her home* in the Bronx, New York City, because of her life of seclusion and false economy. France Modifies Insurance Laws. The French Government has agreed to modify the law respecting foreign fnsurance companies so as to meet the American contention. Arrestod as Counterfeiters. Giovanni Anpelino, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and his daughter, Franeesca, were arrested by Secret Service men as counterfeiters. Chicago For Su-Cent Gas. The Chicago Council passed the eighty-five-cent gas bill over Mayor Dunne's veto. Senate Passes Ship Subsidy Bill. The Ship Subsidy liill was passed by Hie Senate at Washington, D. C., by a vote of 38 to 27. Longworth For Governor. The Attorney-General of Ohio began a boom for Congressman Nicholas Longwortli as Governor of Ohio, at Cincinnati. King's Aid a Suicide. General Marquis de Mandegorria, aide-de-camp to the King, committed sqicide at Madrid, Spain. Bougiit $100,000 Worth of Rugs. .T. P. Morgan, the New York fiuaucier, bought $100,000 worth of rugs. News Notes. The turbine ocean liner has come to stay. The deposits in Prussian savings banks have almost doubled within the last ten years. The name of the Illinois couple to whom twins have been born six times and triplets once is Joy. Haarlem. Holland, has the distinc! tion of possessing one of the oldest newspapers in the world. Chicago's Board of Education will name the proposed commcrcial high school for Marshall Field. - mi . f BiTSi NEWS' WASHINGTON. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs lias favorably considered the Longworth bill appropriating $5,000,- i 000 for the purchase of American Lega- 1 tions and Embassies in foreign capitals. ( Rear-Admiral W. S. Schley has been mustered as a member of Theodore Roosevelt Garrison of the Army and Navy Union at Washington. Senator Foraker called up the treaty with Cuba relative to the Isle of Pines in executive session of the Senate, but no action was taken. 1 Public Printer Stiliings nas named ' Dr. William J. Manning, of Boston, , Mass., as medical director of the Gov- ( ernment'Printing Office. The Senate Appropriation; Committee has added $1^1,87.012 to. the House 1 . Urgent .Deficiency bill. President P.oosevelt pardoned Minor Meriwether, Jr., the naval cadet, who was convicted of hazing. The recommendation for pardon was ruado by the court-martial and indorsed by Secretary Bonaparte. Meriwether en- | rracraH in <1 ?>!firr TeiHl Midsllinman I bu&v.u ah u -n-r ' Tames R. Branch, Jr., who died as a result of the fight. .1 I ' OUR ADOPTED ISLANDS. Major-General Leonard Wood, commander of the military division of the Philippines, is preparing for gigantic , field maneuvres, which will extend , over the greater part of the Island of Luzon. ' . The sentence of Lieutenant Pendlc ton, United States Army, who was con- < demned at Manila, P. I., to life impris- \ onment for murder, has been reconsid- j ered and changed to imprisonment for | twenty, years. i Major.;General Wood is-preparing for field maneuvres, to begin as soon, as the additional reeiments being sent to the Philippine Isiands arrive. The operations will extend over the larger part of Luzon. They are said to be intended to fit the troops for possible service in China. DOMESTIC. The Nebraska Supreme Court has ordered dissolved the Grain Dealers' Association, holding that the organization is in the nature of a Trust. Four masked men broke into a jail at Gadsden, Ala., took a negro assaulter to a nearby bridge aud hanged him. Falling from a Wabash fast train at Steubeuville, Ohio, M. Schormack, said to be an Austrian nobleman on1 his way home, was killed. In a freight wreck at Rippon, Va., Engineer O. P. Hendrickson was killed and Fireman H. L. Wood was seriously iujured. Finding his wife in a room at the Grand Pacific Hotel, ia Chicago 111., with Dr. D. P. Padfield, i? Cairo, 111., George W. Durphy, Superintendent of i the Chicago Dock Company, shot the | physician and then surrendered to tne police. Governor Cummins, of Iowa, admitted that he would be a candidate for a third term. Their sawmill boiler exploding, Simeon Wilder and John Hatcheit, partners, were instantly killed at Rock Hill, Ga. Mad Wolf, one of the leaders of the Cheyenne Indians, died at Cantoment, Okla. Paul Laurence Dunbar, negro poet and author, died at Dayton, Ohio. FOREIGN. London pays about $8,000,000 a year to keep criminals in check, that being i the suui paid out for her Police Courts, prisons and prosecuting officers. The-Commercial Cable Company an Jl--u fA Tnr* nounces mui uiu muv ivuw ?.? key, Persia, India and the Far East ia interrupted. The British Government has decided j to send a Royal Commission to South ! Africa to investigate the question of Chinese labor and report on the future government of the Transvaal, with special reference to the basis of the Hew Constitution. A serious fight has occurred in Old Servia between Turkish troops and two Servian bands near the villages of Nikujan, Dragomanzi aud Chelopek. The Turks, who were the attackers, lost forty men killed or wounded. The Servians lost eighteen killed or wounded. Rome diplomatic circles were pessimistic over the outcome of the Moroccan conference/ A special cable dispatch from Santo Domingo says that General Caceres has been persuaded to retain office until the treaty with the United States | is ratified. The first section of the Transandine Railway was inaugurated. The line reaches to the foot of the Audes, where the tunnel begins. The line will .shorten the time to Bueuos Ayres by six hours. Turkish reports say that the rebel- ! lion in Yemen has been crushed. Comparison of the American and [ Prussian railroads, in. favor generally ' of the latter, is made'by commissioners j sent here in 1904 by the Prussian Gov I'rmueiii. An earthquake caused serious damage at Cantanzaro aud Monteleone, Calabria. The inhabitants camped in the streets. Serious fighting between Tartars and I Armenians is reported in the Kaxagh district. Villages have been besieged and burned. The anti-foreign agitation at Canton. China, is said to be due to the attitude of the Viceroy. I The chiefs of police at Penza and I Kutais nave oeen ^luruereu, su^o u ?-><. Petersburg dispatch. Official reports of the foreign commerce of Argentina for 1005 shows that imports were 9203,000,000 and the exports $322,000,000. The Parahiba do Sul has broken its banks and inundated the lower parts of the city of Campos, Brazil, to the j depth of twelve feet in some places. I Many houses have collapsed. At Rickmer'a shipyard, at Breinerhaven, there was launched the biggest sailing ship in the world. The length of the craft is 438 foot, .aer breadth is titty-four feet aud she is of S000 tons burden. Revelations regarding the smuggling of aruis into Finland from Sweden have redoubled the vigilance of the guards on the Russo-Finnish frontier, and they were rewarded by the capture of two wagons loaded with rides, which were on their way to St. Petersburg. A statement that Americans have ob* tained concessions for a Central Asiau railway is absolutely untrue. ' 7 - ... .ri '.v?r? ' . MR Ifi NOW OVER , Vn?. Amalgamated Copper Company Buys Out the Heinze Interests, END OF LONG MONTANA FIGHT [jiligation Lastiiff Over Seven Year* \*V Come* to ail End by the Sale of Ikv llich Miulnc Properttei?Statements l>y Lending Financier! Connected With the Transaction. New; York City.?Official announcement was made iu this city of the % "c-'mination of the seven years' copper warfare in Montana and of a deal ivhereby the Heiuzes have sold out all .heir properties in the Butte camp svhieli have been in litigation with the . (Vmalgamated-'Copper Company. The purchasers are capitalists connected. with the Amalgamated Copper Company and the North Butte Mining Company. Physical possession of the [>roperties was taken by the new interests in Butte. Thomas F. Cole, president of the Oliver Mining Company. the iron ore department of the United States Steel Corporation, who has become a leading copper figure in the Montana district, apptared as the purchaser of the various Heinze properlies in the bills of sale filed in Butte. Mr. Heinze said the United Cop ! ? ?. -1 AAA AAA [JcL ^umyituy recejveu Q>?O,vw,VW J-UI tlie lands in dispute. ' H. H. Rogers, president of the Amalgamated Copper Company, pressed for a, statement, said: . "I understand a settlement has been reachad and that the deal is closed. Naturally, I am pleased and gratified about it and believe the transaction will be beneficial to the copper industry of Montana and . to the copper trade of- the wprld." \ As is'thoroughly-wfcll known in the financial district, the United Copper Company, in which the Heinzes aro paramount, is a holding company controlling through stock ownership the several subsidiary companies whicli hare figured in on the great lawsuits. Among these subsidiary companies are the Minnie Healey, the Belmont, Nipper, Johnstown, etc., a list of which, comprises the properties acquired. SPAIN'S FAMINE SERIOUS. Bauds of Unemployed Men Pillaging in me aoutu. Madrid.?The famine in the meridional provinces is again very (grave. The intense cold of recent days- has killed the sugar crop in the provinces of Seville, Cadiz, Malaga and Granada, ruining the region and throwing Ifcrge numbers of people out of work. Numerous bands of men unable to obtain work are scouring the country, pillaging farms, bakeries and provision stores, and threaten to attack the land owners. In the cities large numbers of people have been fed by publicr subscription up to the present time, but the loss of crops puts an end to this, in so far as the greater number of unfortunates is concerned. VESUVIUS WRECKS RAILWAYS. Destructive Lava Streams Inspire Life Precautions. Naples, Italy.?Mount Vesuvius' eruption assumed alarming proportions. The Funicular Railway track has been damaged at six points and the principal station was threatened with destruction. Au effort was made to save the station by the construction of a thick wall of masonry, reinforced by embankments of sand. Streams of lava flowed rapidly, destroying everything in their course. The authorities are taking precautions to prevent loss of . life. FIGHT FOR LOWER FARES. Wisconsin Commission Asked to Fix 'J-Cent a Mile Rate. Madison, Wis.?Walter L. Houser, Secretary of State, filed a personal com'plaint with the Wisconsin State Railroad Commission against the Wisconsin Central Railway as a test case. He sets forth that he travels fre? -- ?? i-l? KA<-mAAn f \r\r\a An f lio W1*O. IJliemi.V ucmccil Sliuiuug vu luv .. cousin Central, paying at the rate of threa cents per mile. He believes that a fair rate of compensation for such seivice should not exceed two cents per inile. He asks the Railroad Commission to iix a reasonable rate. . ^ FOR WIFE MURDER. Fringo Gets a Sentence of Eighteen Years. New York City.?Pasqualo Fringo. twenty-one years old, of 15 Mermaid avenue. Coney Island, was sentenced to eighteen years and ten months in State prison for manslaughter by Justice Davis in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court. r7 Frlngo shot and killed his wife, Em- * ma, on December r> iast at their apartments. 193 West Thirtieth street. He was indicted for murder in the first degree and subsequently made a plea of guilty to manslaughter. WILL SAIL FOB LIPTON CUP. .New York Yacht Hounding the Horn to Race to Honolulu. Honolulu.?C. L. Tutt, of Colorado Springs, has entered the yacht Anemone for the proposed race from San Francisco to Honolulu for the cup given by Sir Thomas Lipton. The Anemone is now on her way from New York for San Francisco around Cape Horn. FIGHTS DOG WITH HANDS. Bitten in Lower Lip and Chin, Makes Desperate Fight. St. Louis. Mo.?When a big, ferocious dog attacked Weber A. Le Blanc at Broadway and Locust street and tore his lower lip and chin, Le Blanc seized its collar with his right hand and its pioiit- mt with his left hand and held the snarling brute at arms' length until a policeman fired two shots into Its body and killed it. 1 Noted Personalities. > King Edward used to wear a No. 7 hat. Now he wears a 7^. The King of Portugal is the best royal ritie shot in the world. The wealth of the Hockefeller family is estimated at $1,000,000,000. Congressman "Nick" Longwortli is said to be an amateur violinist. Senator Clark, of Wyoming, is chairman of the great Judiciary Committee. The German Emperor has added two new seventy-horse power automobiles to his collection.