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r ? PAINS | AMERICAN WOMEN FIND RELIEF The Case of Miss Irene Crosby Is One ' of Thousands of Cures made by Lydla 1 , EL Plnkham'a Vegetable Compound. How many women realize that I 1tis not the plan of nature that women i ahould suffer pi severely. ? Thousands of American women, however, have found relief from all monthly suffering by taking- Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as it is the most thorough female regulator known to medical science. It cures the condition which causes so much discomfort and robs these periods cf their terrors. Miss Irene Crosby, of 313 Charlton Street, East Savannah, Ga., writes: " Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I Is a true friend to woman. It has been of I 5 great benefit to me, curing me of irregular ! I and painful periods when everything else had | failea, and I gladly recommend it to other j I suffering women." I Women who are troubled with pain- ' I ful or irregular periods, backache, I . bloating (or flatulence), displacement I of organs, inflammation or ulceration, | that " bearing-dowu " feeling, dizzi- j I ness, faintness, indigestion, nervous I prostration or the blues, should take I immediate action to ward off the seriI ous consequences, and be restored to I perfect health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ComI pound, and then write to Mrs. PlnkI nam, Lynn, Mass., for further free ad| vice. 8he is daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham and for twenty-five years i has been advising women free of I charge Thousands have been cured I by so doing. I A Cavefull ot Dead Indians. t- .leff -Adams, a well-known cattle [ man, rode into Phoenix with a talc ! most gruesome. In the Superstition j Mountains he bad found a cavern | 35 by 100 feet in area, beaped up with J the skeleton of about 200 dead Indians Tbe cavern is up in tbe side of a precipitous gorge, reached only by a dangerous trail. In Phoenix Adams found that he had rediscovered the long-lost cave where, in December of 1872, the Fifth Cavalry accomplished the greatest job of Indian killing in the history of the army. Tbe Indians, ? Mojaves and Apaches, had tied to the cave, pursued by five troops of cav- j airy and a company of Maricopa In[ flian scouts. [ The besiegers had settled down to , starve the aborigines out, when one ! W the troopers discovered that by j shooting at an overhanging rock bul- I lets could be made to glance into the j cavern. Firing in this manner was j Kept up until tue glancing Dunets una | ;, killed or wounded erery Apache with- j In. Then the Maricopas1 led the way | and finished the bloody job. Under the body of its mother was j found a year-old babe, which was ^ adopted by a Maricopa squaw, later to ; t>e sent to Eastern schools and to be- I <orae the famous ludiau physician. Dr. 1 Carlos Montezuma. To-day the skele- | tons lie as the bodies fell under the : merciless .carbine fire, and it is doubt-'! ful if in the intervening years a single j tfoot, with or red, has pressed the dust | ?of the tavern floor. The Maricopas cleared the cave of j YQhiables and took the' scalps of the ! victims.?Denver News. Tlio fn1lAn'in<r 4hnll" ic r>rt?r] I ? ? j fted to a Frenchman who. while prome- | nading with a friend, noticed a passing j cab drawn by a pair of horses, one , black and the other while. "Look,' [ said one; "you don't often see a pure \ white hor^e and a pure black one liar- j nessed together.'; "That's so," was the response. "Do | yon know why the black horse is on the near side?" p* "No." "Why, they always put the horse \ 1 that isn't the same color as the oilier on the near side."?Harper's Weekly. . FOOD AND STUDY A College shan't Experience. Mil through my high, school course lud first year in college," writes an ambitious young man, "I struggled with my studies on a diet of greasy, pasty foods, being especially fond of cakes and fried things. My system got into a state of general disorder and it was difficult for me to appiy myself to school work with any degree of satisfaction. I tried different medicines and food preparations but did not seem able to Correct the difficulty. "Then my attention was called to f; Grape-Nuts food and I sampled it. I had to do something, so I just buckled av?u iv u. 115m vuoci >auv;c vi me uutv.tions on the package, aud in less than no time began to feel better. In a few weeks my strength was restored, my weight bad increased. I had a clearer head and felt better in every particular. My work was simply sport to what it was formerly. "My sister's health was- badly run down and she had become so nervous that she could not attend to her music. Sbe went on Grape-Nuts and had the same remarkable experience that I Lhad. Then my brother, Frank, who ic in the Postoffice Department at Wash. Jngton city and had been trying to dc f brain work on greasy foods, cakes ane, All that, joined the Grape-Nuts army. I showed him what it was and could do and from a broken-down condition he has developed into a hearty and efficient man. "Besides these I could give account numbers of my fellow-students who ^ have made visible improvement men tally and physically by the use of this food." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mlcb. By There's a reason. Read the little book. "The Road to Weilville." in *)kes I B: ' , ' 1. J'iL.' BIG 1WDBATTACK8NEGR0ES White Men in Scringe!?', Ohio, Use Torch end Beat Blacks, CROWD DEFIES STATE MILITIA Seek Ktvenjre For Shooting ? Guardsin?n Suppress Kiotinsr One*. But i the Mob Iteturn* and Overpower* I the Soldier* ? Entire Hoa*cs In ! ; Kaius. i Springfield, Ohio. ? Local militia 1 called out to check a race riot caused j by the shooting oC M. M. Davis, a , brakcman, by a r.egro, were unable to i | stop rioting, and an rppeal was made I to the Governor to send more troops. ] A mob of 2000 men, led by railroad men, descended at night on the negro 1 quarter of the town. They burned ' buildings and attacked all the colored ' men that ventured on the streets. Edward Dean and Preston I.add, ] who were suspected of the crime, were j secretly removed to Dayton to save j them from the lynching that awaited , them here. J The rioters seemed determined to j take vengeance on the colored popula- j tion in whatever way they could. Un- ( offendiug nejrroes were dragged through the mud and badly beaten. , The ringleaders of the mob were j armed and revolver shots were heard , frequently. | lvempler's saloon, on East Columbia t street, was the first object of attack. s It was looted, and the owner fled down ^ the street, leaving his wife and three s little children asleep in a room over \ Ihe bar. Just as the crowd was about A to set tire to the building Ihe police , and firemen forced their way to the ^ door and rescued the woman and children in the nick of time. I Chief of Police O'Brien after this in- j cident ordered all the saloons in the j town closed, and the order was ^ promptly obeyed. j T On leaving Kempler's the mob j rushed across the street to a five-story r frame building from which the inmates j had fled. They smashed in the windows t and poured cil on the beds. They then c set the house on fire, and it Is now in t ruins. The firemen did their best to c save the structure, but as fast as a line of hose was run out some one in t the mob would cut it. The police a seemed powerless to interfere. j Major Horace Keifer called on the c two local companies of militia to aid , in restoring order, aud the Xenia com- , pany was ordered to report a": a mo- ^ ment's notice. Three companies of the t National Guard were called out. Jinjor iveilei, 1U cuiuuillliu Ul uuar panies B and E <Jf the local militia. e formed cordons arouud the endangered j district. It was believed at midnight r that the disturbance bad be.n quelled, s but the mob formed again after the j. militia thought it dispersed and re- t netved the attacKs on the negroes and the burning of buildings. j \ The quarter in which the disturb- t ance took place is known as the "Jun- t gles," and thi leaders urge their men r on with the cry: "Burn the Jungles." j It Is hoped that with tlte closing of the salo-.ns and the arrival sf the militia g the police will be able to stop further j: rioting. q Similar scenes were enacted here j two years aj,o, when a negro was a lynched for murder, and militia had to be tailed out to suppress the mobs in ^ the "Jungles." . KAISER'S SON WEDS. J Prince Eitel Frederick and the Duchess T Sophia of Oldenberg Married. xi Beriin, Germany.?On the twenty- -*1 fifth anniversary of their own mar- c riage, the Emperor and Empress wit- ? nessfed the marriage of their second k son, Prince Eitel Frederick, and the J Duchess Sophia Charlotte of Oldenburg, daughter of the reigning Grand r Duke of Oldenburg by his first conssrt. ^ wlio was Princess Elizabeth of Prussia. c The wedding ceremony took place in the palace chapel. A heavy rain falling could be heard by the brilliantly * costumed company gathered under the K dome. The attendance was limited to 500 persons,' including only members of the royal families of Germany, the a nobility of the highest rank, the Cab- t inet Ministers, the highest officers of 3 the Imperial Army and Navy, and the t Diplomatic circle. \ EXPLOSION KILLS SIX MINERS. r Several Others Mortally Hurt at Pi- j per, Aia. t Birmingham, Ala. ? Six men were ^ killed and twelve were badly injured 1 by an explosion in Lutle Cahaba mine s No. 2 at Piper. Aid. The minj is owned by the Little Ca- } haba Coal Company, of which J. R. * Smith, of thij city, is president. Pi- 1 per is in Bibb County, in the Blocton j field, about sixty miles south of Birmingham. The Little Cahaba settlement is on a 1 spur track of the Birmingham Mineral Railway, and wire communication I .with the pia e is difficult. . MOROCCOS CIVIL WAR. j Sultan's forces Frepr.ring to Attack 1 the Pretender. [ Malaga. ? Dispatches received here from Me.' 11a say that the Moroccan I land and naval forces were simultan- ' eously operating igainst the Moorish < ! pretender a:id his French filibustering i supporters, lue gunboat him el lurkv bomb.*rdcd the coast villages, anil the militair forces were concentrating for an attack cu tLo pretender's camp at Zelwa:i. BRITISH COMPENSATE FRANCE. House Votes S273.0i0 Fo- . Less, of Fishing Rights in Newfoundland. London. England.*? The House of Commons appropriated #273,080 to compensate France for loss of her fishing rights 011 the cra'jt oJ Newfoundland. Big Suit For Paintings. David H. King, Jr.. of New York j City, was sued for $iy,S2d.S4 for paiut| ings. For New Insurance Inquiry, j Thf> Insurance Commissioners of five Western States sought to obtain tbe co-operation of the New York Department in order to make a thorough investigation of Mutual Life affairs. Killed by Vendetta. 'Sabatinu, Dragone, a driver for a baker, was murdered in liis cart on tlie Fort Lee road. New York City, as the result of a vendetta. 1 J .Pierpont Morgan at Tangier. J. Pierpont Morgan, of New York City, has arrived at Tangier, Morocco. .. J.-.,V.. ... J BATE BILL BEFORE SENATE S Measure is Reported bv Mr. Tillman, of South Carolina. >r CROWDTHRONGS THE GALLERIES Majority Iteport or tl?e Committee to Be Presented Later?Statement by S Senator Aldrieh?Proinine That No h Unnecessary Delay* TV ill Be Inter^ posed to Consideration. Washington. D. C.?The issue on i- railway rates lias come at last in the n j Senate. Before a full attendance of e j Senators and crowded galleries, Mr. ? : Tillman introduced what now becomes i- I the Tillman-Hephurn Rate bill. j /" ~ - -i " y f . INSAN'TY IS INCREASINC Startling- Change in Fatio Puzzle Lunacy Commission, Nevr Vork Slnto- Institutions Care Fc 27,000 Victims ot Various Forms oT Mental Alienations. Albany. X. Y.?Showing a startlin increase in the ratio of insane person 10 the* total population, the sevcuteent mnna! report of the State Coinmissio in Lunacy was made public. It is se forth that there is now one insane pei >on to every 291) of the general popi: lation, as against one to 377 thirtee rears ago; nor docs this new ratio tak nto account GOOO persons treated i private homes. The total number o nsane patients treated iu public in titutious in 1005 was 27,000. "In 1802 the population of the Stat tvas 0.513.343. and the number of in >ane in all of the institutions of th State was 17.275. a ratio of one per.soi o 377 of the general community," say he report. "On the first day of Juut 1905, the population of the State wa >,0GG,672, and the iusaue under treat nent iu the different institution imount?d to 27.300, a ratio of the in ;ane to the general population of on :o 290. A similar increase is reportei >y the commissioners in lunacy o j'reat Britain. "The commission estimates that a nany as GOOO insane persons are nov jeing maintained in their own homes ind that in any calculation as to th atio of the insane to the total popula ion this fact must be taken into con .{deration. The commission consider his condition a grave one, but findi ome slight satisfaction in the facttha n 1005 the number of new cases de eloping was smaller than during tbi ifecediug year and but slightly in ad ance of 1903." The report shows that 27.406 pa ients were being cared for in Stati nstitutions for tiie iusalie on Septem >er 30, 1905. Of these the total num >er iu State hospitals was 25,518; ii he two institutions for the crimina nsane at Matteawan and Danuemora >03, and in the licensed private insti utions there were OSS patients. Ii fie state nospuais aione iue uet iu xease at the close of the year was 49U he lowest net increase reported by th< ,'ommission for the last ten years. Before the close of the year comple ion of the buildings in Binghamtoi ind Middlelown for the chronic Insam s expected to relieve the congeste< londition in the State hojspitals. Thi n-oblem of providing for the 4400 in ;ane now 011 Ward's Island, the leasi >f which by the State has but. a fev uore years to run, is discussed a ength. The commission reports a gradua xtension of the system of parolinj nsane patients to their friends fo nore or less protracted periods, thi ole requirements being that the pa ient shall appear at. the hospital fron ime to time for examination. The number of new cases of insan ty which developed, in the year, sayi he report, was 5346. Of the tota lumber treated in the hospitals 144! ecovered and 1237 were discharget u an improved condition. A list of improvements desired b] State hospital managers, totaling near y $2.0D0,000, is reduced by about $500, ?00 by the commission, many of th< terns in the list not meeting with it pprovrl. After referring to the good worl lone by the State Board of Alienists ,-nich is especially charged with re urning to their homes ali^n aud non esident lunatics, the report conclude: rith the following: "The commission reports the contin led success of the system inaugurate( iy it some years ago of bavins all pur hases of the larger staple articles o upplies made through a committee o Itate hospital stewards, associatec rith the auditor of the commission t is furthermore claimed that th< trices paid for these articles are fre [uently lower than evea jobb2rs re eive." KILLED TWO MEN. Spanish Sailor Held After a Fata Quarrel. Philadelphia, Pa.?Joaquin Alvarez . Spanish sailor, who shot aud killei wo men in au outburst of temper a ;ll South Second street, was commit ed to prison to await the action o ;orouer jermon. The men who fell victims to" Alva ez's rage were Hans Eens and Her nan Pearse. Both were sailors am ived in the international boarding a he Second street address. Alvarez vho is a deckhand on one of the Clyd L.ine steamships, also makes his hom Lt the house when on shore leave. The shooting followed a quarre vhich developed from an exchange o >anter between Alvarez and Alber S'ewman, another lodger. PRECAUTION AT PARTS. French Government Considering th Possibility of War. Paris, France.?M. itieane, th? Mir ster of War, made the statement i he Chamber of Depiuies that lip Go\ irnment was preparii z a scheme fo ihe organization of public offices i ;be event of war. The Mikado is Honored. The ceremony of the investiture c the Emperor of Japan with the Orde if the Garter took place at the palac in Tokic. Russian Assembly to Meet. An imperial ukase fixed May 10 a i?>~ /-.f n-iotiin" nf fhf* itussian Nl tional Assembly. No Reorder Business. Retail trade lias been nppreciabl helped by t':c weather, out conside able stocks will unquestionably t carried over because reorder busine.? has not been heavy, owing to mil weather earlier in (he season. Tt effect of this carry-over on next fa and winter demand remains to L seen. Gift For New York University. A gift cf $10,000 from the Ohio S ciety of New York to New York L'ii verity was announced. Labor World. The delegates at the Pittsburg Di trict Miners' convention adopted a re ohition decla:ing the offices of pres dent and vice-president of the bot vacant. One of the principal grievances < WHICH TI1U ;tIIlilrill-Ill.' imiit'ia v.uiui'in is that the system arranged for a justing disputes is so slow that th< caunot obtain justice. The Isthmian Canal Commission hi adopted a suggestion made by Chal man Shouts to experiment with lab from the uorth part of Spain in co struetioii work on the Isthmus. The scene was lacking in dramatic e qnalities. The South Carolina Senator g offered the bill and report in the fewa est words possible, with the announces ment that when he had digested cer' tain data he would present a written * report "presenting the views of those s of us who are in favor of this kind of - legislation." ? An unusually large number of Senai tors were in their seats. On Mr. Tillf man's desk lay a big pile of documents, the records of the hearings of the ln3 terstate Commerce Committee on the * general subject of Government regu'? lation of railroad rates. Sitting beside & him wr.s Mr. Bailey (Dem., Tex.), the - recognized minority leader in the absence of Mr. Gorman, and the two s Senators conferred earnestly. Mr. & Tillman decided, however, that he was t not prepared to make a formal report, * -and that it would be more effective - simply to report the bill in accordance - with the resolution adopted by the committee, which provides that the members are left free to exercise indis vidual judgment concerning amendments that may be offered in the Senate. 1 As soon as the Vice-President called 1 for reports- of standing committees a number of Senators arose, but Mr. Tillman was recognized. He an^ nouuced that he had been instructed * by the Committee on Interstate Com'< merce to report House bill 12,'J87, witb2 out amendment, and lie read the resolution adopted. After a discussion - concerning the printing of the testl* j mony taken by the committee, an or 5 der was made for the publication or 1 10,000 copies. s Mr. Tillman gave notice that be * would press the bill to. the earliest s consideration. He said that much of r the testimony was irrelevant, and that t the committee had employed two experts, Messrs. Newcomb and Adams, I and they had made an epitome of the ? testimony, which also was printed, c Mr. Tillman announced that, as soon 6 as possible he purposed to digest the - testimony and to submit a formal rei port on the bill. He said that within <wo weeks he should move to make the - rate bill the unfinished business and s to displace the Statehood bill, if that 1 measure was not disposed of before 2 that time. The transcendent impori | tance of the rate measure and the I .wide interest in the subject through T out the couutry, lie said, maae u ac sirable that the hill should be consid ered without delay. As soon as he had concluded Mr. ' Aldrich (Rep., R. I.) was recognized and made a short, prepared speech, ^ giving the views of the minority of the committee, and promising that no - unnecessary delay would be placed in the way of the bill's consideration. ^ Mr. Culberson (Dem., Tex.) said that from the report made by the Seu ator from South Carolina, he noticed 1 that certain members of the commit* - tee reserved the right to offer amendf meats. ? "The Senator is not entirely correct 1 in his statement," interrupted Mr. Tillman. "The resolution was adopted - by the committee, and all members - have reserved rights concerning the - offeriug of amendments." "Well, then," said Mr. Culberson, "I i take it that in a large degree the corn- j mitlee's action to be no more or no j less than a transfer of a controversy | 1 from the committee to the Senate chamber. Therefore, I offer a substitute for the bill .iust reported. This ij substitute is in effect tbe bill ou the ~ same subject, which I previously inc troduced." ' The bill was ordered printed and to " lie on the table until the Rate bill is taken up. i j COLORADO FUEL INDICTMENT. I t !? Corporation and Oflicers Charged With g Violating Truck Store Law. Pueblo. Col.?The Grand Jury has :1 returned iudiciments against Frank J. f Hearne, D. C. Benman, C. M. Scheuck, t A. A. Miller, the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, a corporation, and the Colorado Supply Company, a corporation. The indictment alleges that in Octoe ber, 3904, the defendants conspired in violation of law to establish a truck system in Pueblo. It is alleged that l" the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company u issued scrip, which was redeemed at r* the .store of the supply company. r Hearne is president and Beamau 11 general counsel of the Colorado Fuel Company, while Schenck and Miller ova nHionr? nf flip Colorado Suonl.v Company, a subsidiary of the Fuel >f Company, ami lias control of the supr ply stores at the various mining camps e of the parent company. Indictments were also returned against officers of the American Smelting and Refining Company for using 3' the scrip system in paying employes. i. but 110 capiases were served, as the l evidence is not considered strong ! ouougii to commit the defendants. y Insurance Presidents Meet, r- Presidents Morton, of the Equitable: >e Orr, of the 'New York Life; Peabody, >s of the Mutual, and Dryden. of the I'md dential, with other life insurance oilile c-ials, held a secret conference in New 11 York City. >e Dr. J. W. Palmer, Poet. Dead. Dr. John Williamson Palmer, poe! and author, a well-known Civil Wat ' correspondent and author of the poem "Stonewall Jackson's Way," died in Baltimore, Md., aged eighty-one. Teople Talked About, s- John Rouse has been in charge of the s- main door of the House at Washing si* ion lor uuiiy Henry Labouehere, who is about to retire from Parliament, lias spent more o? tl:aii $1,000,000 in defending libei suits. n .iolin (J. Clarke. Secretary of the Rhode Island Hoard cf Agriculture, ?y has sent his resignation to the Governor. 13 Em/le AJlemamli, a wealthy banker ir" of Basel, left a large fortune, itie iuor terest ou-which is to be spent iu sup"* plying poor girls of his native towu .with dowries. /.ink A ' ^ v- tyxgar- ;7;: EIGHT KILLED IN CHINA. Two English Residents and Sil Jesuits Are Slain. i Gunboat 131 Cano Hnrrtes Trp tin' J Y:?nyt8o Kianxr <<? Protest the Fugitives Shanghai, China.?Somcwliut coufused reports have reached here of a massacre of missionaries at Nancbang, j Province of Kiangsi. As nearly as | can be ascertained, six missionaries were killed and one child of an English missionary was wounded. It is alleged that after long continued . : disputes between the Catholic priests 1 and ,the Chinese Magistrate of Nan- | : I chang the priests invited the Magis- | trate to a banquet, where they tried 1 to compel him to sign an agreement 1 for the payment of a large indemnity ] for the destruction of Catholic mission 1 property. According to one report, the < Magistrate became indignant and com- ' mitted suicide, but the Chinese assert ! that a priest attacked and killed liiin. The officials, fearing to arrest the < priests, called a public meeting, where- ' | upon the Catholics, according to the 1 Chinese version of the trouble, set fire 1 to their own premises. The public 1 meeting of Chinese developed into a 1 riot in which, according to one story, ' six of the Catholics were killed, though a later account says the number of ] Catholics killed was four. H. C. King- ] man, a Protestant missionary, and his wife also were killed and one of their ,1 [ two children was wounded, the other being rescued. The only Protestant j mission uuuuiugs uwuujcu wcic uw,^ of tbe Plymouth Brethren. Fourteen Americans escaped in a boat. The [ Nancliang city gates are now locked. | Washington. D. C.?Consul-General ; I Rodgers, of Shanghai, cabled the'State j Department that tbe American mission stations at Nancliang, in the Province of Kiangsi, have been destroyed. The probable cause is local. Telegrams ; received from those points say the fourteen American missionaries at ' those places escaped, but six Jesuits | and two members of the Kingham ' family, English, consisting, of two j adults and two children, are reported j to have been killed. The American ; j gunboat El Cano, at Nankin, has been , ordered to proceed immediately to Kiu- ' | kiang. The scene of the trouble is j about 400 miles up the Yangtse River. Nanchang, where the missions were j destroyed, lies upon the shores of Lake Poyang, in the northern portion of ttoe Province of Kiangsi, and the Yangtse Riv.er is navigable up to that point as well as'"the lake itself for warships of ' i good size. . . A cable dispatch from Commander j Fletcher, of the Raleigh, at Shanghai, confirms substantially Consul-Geuerail ( Rodgers' report. 1 ] Pekin, China.?The American Motho- 1 dist Mission has a station at Nanchang. 1 No news of the missionaries bits bee* received at Pekin. It is supposed that they escaped to Kiukiang. RUSSIAN BANK HOLD-UP. Robbers in Finland Shoot a Man and , Steal $37,500. ; Helsingfors, Finland. ? Ten men forced an entrance into the Russian State Bank, shot the guardian, and j stole $37,500. They have not been ; captured. The robbery was committed in broad I day and on the principal street of the I citv. The robbers forced'the unarmed | | employes to throw up their hands, : took the keys of the safe and then drove the men into an adjoining room, I warning them that on any attempt to escape two "homos," which they placed against the door, would be exploded. The "bombs," however, were merely empty tomato cans. The robbers are thought to be'revo-1'' lutionists from the Baltic. .. 1 | N?\ i BIG FUNERAL BY STB EST CAR. " 1 Friest Who Was Against Costly Burials Has an Economical One. Chicago, III.?The body of Father Ma.-tin Van De Laar, a beloved priest in South Ch'.cago, was borne to the cemetery in a -street car. The funeralcar was follow;! by twenty street cars filled with mourners. Beside the hearse car v\alked a guard from many societies, and thousands of members of these and other societi'.s walked behind. / There was no crepe or other signs of ; j mourning on any of the cars. During i his years of ministration among the poor Father De Laar Had always I preached and advised ajjaiust expenj sive funerals. In liis will he asked I that street cars be used, and that no ; expensive flowers De sent. | TO STOP ELECTION BRIBERY. Senator La FoIIette Introduces a Bill to Compel Publicity. Washington, D. G.?Senator La Fol; lelte, ,of Wisconsin, introduced a bill I requiring committees of all political . ! parties in National and Congressional elections to account for ?.11 moneys expended in elections. JOSEPH LEITER ON TRIAL. Accused of Criminal Negligence For j Ziegler Mine Disaster. Duquoin, III.?The trial of Joseph | Loiter, owner of the Ziegler coal | mines, where about sixty lives were lost in an explosion last April, on a ' charge of criminal negligence, was begun. Yellow Fever in Panama. Surgeon-General Wymau Las noti tied the various Government qnarnni line stations of the appearance of yel' low fever at Bocas Del Toro. Panama. }ce Famine Coming. Wesley M. Osier, president of the American Ice Company, in New York ! City, said that there would be au ice lammc. Berlin Cabbies Strike. Ten thousand cab drivers of lie:IIm Germany, struck. News Notes. Charges liave been made in Ohio courts that directors of Miami and I Krie Transportation Company floated ! S.'t.OOO.UOU securities 0:1 $10,0tHJ paid up capital. Pennsylvania State officials besan suit against Pennsylvania Railroad to stop exaction of deposits on mileage books, alleging violation of State constitution. The j'e. ..ian government )'a- sent to the Keichstag a bill extenciL'2 to the United States the tRr:fcs giv.v. by Germany uuicr rt?iproi'al trrr.Uca with European State-. : ' ' - ... .. KILLS SISTER'S.Hl{SBAND 1 ' Tt rrag-edy in- Brooklyn, N. Y? Housa ( Caused by a Death. Co Le funeral of the Murderer'* Slst?r Set For 10 O'clock. Ho SbooU J Ilia Urother-iu-Law at 5J. ? York City.?A man rnn out of ' tl?? flat house at 15C West Ninth street, Brooklyn, at 8.30 o'clock in tlie morn- ^ ing. Around the corner of Court street M lie went, into S. Chess', drug store, and m behind him he left a red trail on the str pavement. The man was Fritz Fen- ^ nen, a bartender. He had been shot us by his brother-in-law, Thomas Beet- ^ man, a plumber. Fennen fell dead as he entered, the drug store. Back in 15G Beetman tin iut a bullet through his headland killed 1 1 himself instantly. "Mrs. Fennen, who 1 bad died of blood poisoning, lay in her bo coffin in the front room of the flat lwaiting burial. The funeral had been set for 10 o'clock. f - Fennen married Beetman's sister ^ 3nly three months ago. She had been sick a month before her death. One >torr had it that Beetman blamed the T_I] husband for not giving proper care to or the wife, and that this lay at the hot- qu torn of the crime. But Beetman's an >rother told the police that the plumber tei was angry because Mr. and Mrs. Fen- be uen had takeu his furniture and had WJ] not paid him. The police think that* brooding over his troubles led Beet- q uiau to the shooting. wi Beetmau a-nd Fennen ate breakfast v* together. The dead woman's brother fic Imd come to the house on her account, lor iind addressed few remarks to his usi l)rotlier:in-iaw. There was no quarrel. fir; When Fennen rose from the table tui Beetman quietly pulled a .44-calibre revolver and fired at him four times, mm Two shots took effect. F The wounded man made a dash for Hie door, bound for his pharmacist I friend, Chess, to seek aid. .As he went I Beetman turned the pistol on himself, a *M. ? ? -1-i A. Jl.l J JLlie orif SllUl weut Willi HUU ciuaiicrcu a mirror hauging on the wall. The second went through his head and killed him instantly. Mrs. Louise Lower, sister of Mrs. Fennen, and Mrs. Annie Larseu, a nurse, were sitting in the front room nrlth the coffin. Hearing the first shots they ran into the dining room aud narrowly escaped being hit by the, flying bullets. roliceman Mehaffy, of the Hamilton avenue 3tation, was standing in Court street. when Feniuen ran- -out- of the house. ' Hearing1 the man's'cries and seeing the blood, Meliaffy ran toward him, but-before lie1 reached pennen was de^d in the arms of the drug-" * gist. The floor of the little shop was soaked with blood. In three minutes an ambulance had come, and the surgeon had pronounced the bartender dead. Mehaffy telephoned to his station, and the Sergeant sent four men to the scene of the tragedy. Leaving the ' '"ohone, Mehaffy followed the trail 01 '^d Into 156 WT a?4- Vinfh efnaflf 01 'ioro fniind Beetman dead, and the two women in S hysterics. gl A year ago Beetman was employed. by tbe India Wharf Brewery, near the foot of Hamilton avenue. He got to drinking and was discharged. Shortly afterward his wife died. Up to that time his sister bad lived with him in a flat in Sixteenth street, Brooklyn, and after the death of Mrs. Beetman acted as housekeeper. Then Fennen married her and took her away. Beetman went to live in a furnished room at 25 Atlantic avenue. The druggist, Chess, said that .Mrs. Fennen had had plenty of medical assistance, and was in the care of a good nurse. The bodies of the dead men were gvien over to an \tndertaker. Mrs. 1 Fennen's burial was postponed. FATAL RIOT AT CHUItCH. 1 French Gendarmes Fire on Mob at ; La Puj*?Fifteen Wounded. Le Puy, France.?Serious disturbances occurred at the taking of an inventory of a village church near Sau- oh gues, Department of Haute-Loire. A ? large crowd armed with sticks and r stones surrounded the gendarmes, many of whom were beaten or pelted flu Tim rtflri/lovnjoc in it"i Wilil iiCU ^ J' OIUUCO, J.11C gciiuui Uivo, *U - ? order to extricate themselves, fired ex flieir revolvers, wounding fifteen men, 'irr two of whom were mortaliy iiurf. The officcr commanding the gendarmes and an the Government commissioner were U, badly injured by the rioters. The gendarrnes retired with difficulty. ev th REGIMENTS QUICK TRIP. of dii Taken From Jersey City to 'Frisco in re Six Days and a Half. ha San Francisco.?All records for the *n movement of troops from the Atlantic ce Seaboard to this city were broken with th the arrival of a Southern Pacific spe- al cial train over the Sunset Koute carry- Sf( ing the Eighth Regiment of the United os States Army. , The transfer was effected in six and one-half days, and had it not been for or a delay of seventeen hours at Lords- ev burg and a stop over at Los Angeles of l<?j seven hours, the time occupied would mi have been but five and a half days. mi of Japan's Ricj Shortage. Ei The Japanese rice crop this year is |je nearly fourteen per cent, less than the si] . !vornge and twenty-five jjcr cent, less , tiian last year. m: Judge Robert H. Little Dead. ?n President Judge liobert II. Little, of *? Columbia and Montour counties, Pa., | la died at Bloomsburg, Pa., from pneumonia. Bath Refuses a Carnegie Library. ^e The citizens of Bnth, England, deoi'.lod by a vote of two to one against aD the acceptance of Andrew Carnegie's [>r offer of $G3,000 for a public library. tic av New York Jeweler a Suicide. r0 \V. B. Kerr, a manufacturing jew- ^ oler, of New York City, committed sui- .. cide at his homo in the Oranges. ?1* Professor S. P. Langley Dead. I'1 Professor P. Langley. head of the 3V Smithsonian Institution, died at Aiken, ba S. C. The Seats of Learning. ?a The debating team of the College of cll .the City of New York won the sec- f ond intercollegiate contest with Hamil- ? ton at Clinton. 'K hfl The trustees of the George Washingfnn TTiiivprsitv have decided to ad- ^ vauce the requirements for admission *n to the law courses. la The important announcement comes 03 from the Ya'.e corporation that the proposed alumni advisory council, -which has been under consideration for two 0< years, is soon to be regularly organ- ga ized HIS ONE WEAK SPOT0 " ominent Minnesota Merchant Cnred to ^ Stay Cured by Doan's Kidney Pills. }. C. Hayden, of 0. C. Oaydeit & dry goods merchants. of AlbeJt a, Minn., snys: "I was so lame that tl could liardly walk. There was an unaccountable weakness of tbe back, and constant pain and aching. I could find uo rest and wa3 very uncouiforta- f ble at night. As uiy health was good in every other way I could not understand is trouble. It was just as if all tbe ength bad gone from my back, ter suffering for some time I began lug Doanls Kidney Pills. The remy acted at once upon the kidneys, d when normal action was restored, s trouble With my back disappeared. lave not bad any return of It:" i''or sale by all dealers.; 50 cents a ' x. Foster-Milburn Co..Buffalo.N.Y. "i Tibetan Officials. rh& officers, whose uniform includes 3at feather hat of a brilliant scarlet, ? particularly expensively attired. ipv invnrijiblv wear a charm box solid gold studded with large turoises on the back of their pigtails d a fine gold and turquoise earring -initiating in a drop shaped blue ad in the left ear. One, a mere boy, is wearing the most magnificent turoises we have seen in this country, rere every one who can afford it %rs turquoises. The sex of these ofials, owing to their ladylike hats, lg braided hair, and jewels of goid, ?d to puzzle the sepoys when we st reach Lliassa.?Nineteenth Cen* ry. ... -T; St Jacobs Oil I ior many, many years has cured and continue# tocure \ RHEUMATISM , NEURALGIA LUMBAGO BACKACHE 1 SCIATICA SPRAINS . BRUISES ' > SORENESS v . STIFFNESS FROST-BITES . ' i. Price, 25c. and 50c. 1 11 11 Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar v 3 v CURES Hoarseness, Coughs, Colds and Sore Throat. The standard remedy used for generations. * 25 Cents, 50 Cents, $1.00 per bottle; the larjrest size cheapest. At all druggists. Keiuse substitutes. ?E'S TOOTHACHE DROPS CURE IN ONE MINUTE The Jieal ?rnii''lln. rhere were not wanting sinister inlenecs, subtly and persistently inhibng the development of that large, ( ' plicit and national recognition of , ' anklin's services which a very little ing might have "called into full being <1 activity even during his lifetime. n/i thot mnsnmnintinn been realized en for a day, though it had been bnt e day after his death, the character , his fame would have been fixed (ferently, one cannot doubt, for the st of time. For there would then ve come fully and simultaneously to the national consciousness a conption of Franklin which?instead of e legend of the Philadelphia printer, manack-maker, and humorist, or insad of the legend of the moral phll- 1 opher who taught men how to thriv? ' J business and inculcated the practice ' honesty as one of-the best tricks of ery trade?should have given us the ?end of that historical Franklin, the - . ost famous patriot, the wisest state*?- * ' an, the most successful diplomatist his age,man with whose name all \ jrope?whatever America may hav? en doing or thinking of, then and ice?once rang from side to side, and ? hose presence in the world filled the ind of his generation with the ideas lightenment, magnanimity and free- . m.?William MacDonald, iu the Atntic. , ' The Amoving Saltan. \n interview with the Sultan of Turv h!i? its nmusinii side. That moo ch is not supposed officially to know iy language but liis own. An intereter thunders His Majesty's ques>ns at the visitor, thou cringes witU ve as he listens to the words of his yal master. The contrast is close lo e ridiculous. At the conclusion of e interview the Sultan rises and says n'etly in the visitor's language or in ench: "Now that our business is er, will you join me in my study and , ive a cup of coffee?' \ Cabinet Siiortamen. ^ The members of tbe new British binet seem to be outdoor men. Among e sports included in their reportory' rofM-fvitimi are rowing, racquets. irsc racing, hunting, cricket, footill, golf, cycling, shooting, angling, icbting, tennis, skating, boxing, waikg and mountaineering. Bums, the bor member, is a cricketei, skater, irsrnan and boxer. Tbe Chinese boycott of American >ur is operating to the advantage of .illng vessels on tlio Pacific coast.