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Hot \ ir Makes Them Cool. According to a writer in Harper's Weekly, there is a great demand throughout India, as well as in other tropical countries, for some sort of fan that will distribute a great deal of cool air at a low cost of production. A German firm has recently introduced in Bombay a portable fan which is operated at about ore-fifth the cost of electric fans. The fan is propelled by a hot-air engine, the heat being generated by a kerosene lamp which holds about one quart of oil. sufficient to keep it running for twenty-four, hours. To the lamp is attached ^ small glns*> chimney which fits into a larger met?l chimney connected with the engine. Upon the top of the engine is hung the fan, similar in shape md size to the ordinary electric fan, whose "peed is governed oy the size of the flame: that is. to reduce the speed i^e flame ia turned down, and to Jnciease it the flame is turned up. The whole outfit weighs about thirty pound?, and sits upon a small stand, raising the level of the fan proper to that of an ordinary desk. It is fitted with handbs, and can be easily moved rc f?ny portion of the room or house rresircd. TIm- Value of New Blood. All that the New Englanders could bring over from Great Britain was a British standard. and if the American standard now differs from the British standard, this must be due. more or Ipwst, to the pressure exerted in America by a oi.tribution other than Eng iish. If wo to-day prefer, as we do undoubtedly, the existing American standards and ideals and tendencies to <hf* Hritish- standards and ideals and tendencies, we must recognize tho various foreign elements in the United Stales as having exerted an influence satisfactory to us now. however much our forefathers may once have dreaded it. We must recognize that the commingling of stocks which has been going on here in the past has been beneficial?or at least that its results are acceptable to us at present. And in all probability our children will admit also that the commingling that is going on in the present, and which will go on in the future, is likely also to be beneficial or at least acceptable.?From Brander Matthews' "The American of the Future," in the | Qentury. The Rise of a Painter. Only painters looked long at the picture which Eugene Carriere exhibited at'the Salon of 1877, and for a dozen years afterward, while his portraits and his studies of children and women steadily gained in distinctive character, they puzzled and repelled the unwary. Their merging varied colors in a single tone, their dissolving of sharp contours in smoke-hued mist, suggested either insincerity or myopic vision. Yet little by little Carriere impressed, first a few artists and j critics, then a part of the public, then even the ministry of fine arts. In 1889 he was decorated, and in the nest year, when his paintings were seen at the then new Salon du Champ Mars, isolated in a single group, Carriere began to be more widely understood. His fervid sincerity, reverberating, as it were, from picture to picture, destroyed all suspicion of pose, and as his technique grew familiar, the sculpturesque solidityof his heads and figures appeared through that mist, in proof of his genius of eye and hand.?From Henry Copley Greene's "Eugene Carriere." in the Century. Jiist Two .Kinds of Men. "There are two classes of men," said the close observer. "One knows nothing about woman, having spent years in studying her. The other knows evervthine. never havinz stud led her." Newspapers in United States. The United States has more newspapers than any other country. Every weeV day there are 19,600,000 copies issued, and on Sundays the number is 11,300,000 copies. Pat and the Judge. In an Irish court recently an old man was called as a witness in an agrarian outrage case. He was very infirm and almost blind, and instead of going into the witness box, he groped his way past it, and was climbing up the steps that led to the Bench. "Is it a judge you want to be, , my good man?" said the Judge, goodhomoredly. "Ab, sure, yer honor, I'?? a poor done man, and mebbe it's all I'm fit for." And the judge had no retort ready.?Westminster Gazette. It's a Good Time now to see what a good "staying" breakfast can be made without high-priced Meat TRY A Little Fruit, A Dish of Grape-Nuts and Cream, A Soft-Boiled Egg, Some Nice, Crisp Toast, Cup of Postum Food Coffee. That's all, and all very easy of digestion and full to the brim with nourishment and strength. REPEAT FOR LUNCHEON OR SUPPER, and have a meat and vegetablo dinner either at noon or evening, as you prefer. tv'e predict for you an increase in physical and mental power. "There's a Reason/ Head the "little health classic," "The . Road to WeUville," ia pkga. ; r ' ; ... r. . 1 ^ H ' '.J _ . OOOTOR m 3 MB OiE BUM tattSB Motor Car. Driven by Rochester Physician, Kit by Trolley COLLISION OCCURS AT CROSSING Accident H;\pp."nro Strop CIradc and Passengers Say the Car Was (Joins; at a Ilate of Fifty Miles an Hour. Canandaigus. N. V. ? D:-. George Waldron. a venerable physician of Rochester, took three of his oldest women patients for a health-giving auto jaunt in the country. At the "Fresh Hour Crossing." four miles from here, the machine was struck . j by an express trolley car of the Roch ester and Easton Railway, anci an four were instantly killed. Another woman patient, who was to have joined the ar.to party at the crossing, alighted from the trolley car to step upon the body of the doctor. It is said she will die from the shock. The dead are: Dr. George Waldron. fifty-four, No. 40S Plymouth avenue, Rochester. Mrs. Catharine Farnsworth, seventy-five, No. 11 Eagle street, Rochester. Mrs. William Scandling, sixtyseven, Hopewell Hamlet. Mrs. Jane Hobbs. seventy, of Hopewell Hamlet. Dr. Wa'dron, one of the oldest medical men in Rochester, numbered among his patients the richest ana best families cf the city and the countryside for miles around. As one of the old school of medicine, he believed in the "fresh air" cure as much as in drugs, and frequently took his patients driving through the rural districts to add the finishing touch to his treatment. J A month ago he bought an auto, i Thinking he had mastered it, he invited three aged women to ride with him to Canandaigua and back. S "It will mean ten years of life to yuu4 ue aiiiU, ituu uuiiujcu lucrn iuiu the machine. The thirty-mile ride to Hopewell and part ot the return were made ^ without accident. But near the "Fresh Hour crossing" the auto a balked and the doctor could only get r it running in little spurts and cranky jumps. He blamed his inability to keep it going on the lack of implements in p the tool bo::. When the aged women bec?.me fidgety, he jocularly took from beneath his seat the box of t surgical instruments he always car- a ried and, with the aid of the scalpel and a pair of "nippers," tinkered the engine into running form. e Mounting the chauffeur's seat, Dr. ? Waldron drove along until he reached c * * - At- _ .4. 4- G cue crossing 01 me iracs-siate iruncjr system and the State road. Cars on that line dash past at sixty p mile3 an hour and one of them ap- a proached at the speed limit just as the auto stopped again, half-way ^ across the tracks. Before the physician or the fright- | ened women could cry out, the trolley 5* car had hit them. Splinters of the machine were hurled hundreds of feet in all directions. Its occupants we;e . thrown into a uearby pasture and ? against fence and telegraph poles. ^ "When the car had been stopped, a hundred yards beyond, its panic ~J stricken passengers crowded out and went back to find all the auto party ? dead. Among these passengers was Mrs. Leviza Baker, of Rochester, who p stepped upon the body of her physician, which lay beside the car. She fainted from the shock. ?r. Waldron's neck had been broken and his skull was crushed; every bone was broken in the body of ' Mrs. Farnsworth and the bodies of Mrs. Scandling and Mrs. Hobbs were so mangled that their husbands could ^ not identify them until late at night, All the bodies were put aboard a spe? cial car ar.d taken to Canandaigua. F AGED CLERGYMAN A SUICIDE. Rev. Dr. Jevrett, of Los Angeles, Brooded Over the Osier Theory.* ? Los Angeles, Cal.?The Rev. Dr. Edward Hunt Jewett, ,an aged Episcopal clergyman, cut his throat at a Manhattan Beach and "bled to death. He was a graduate of Hobart Theological Seminary and >Jield for years 1 the chair of theology at the General u Theological Seminary, New York. * He was a friend of Bishop Potter and held his position in the seminary. till four years ago. p He was despondent and often dwelt on the Osier theory that the superannuated should be removed. * p TORNADO BLOWS AWAY CHILD. t: Kills Baby and Causes Much Property a Loss in West Virginia. Wheeling, W. Va.?A tornado g struck the town of Woodsfield and j. New Castle, Ohio, wrecking a num- e' hf>r nf hnildinsrs anri dninz other dam age. The home of Samuel Bartemus, s near Woodsfield. was destroyed. A ? child was torn from its mother's arms r carried nearly a quarter of a mile a and killed. h fi Railway Books Destroyed. v The secretary of the Metropolitan ? Street. Railway Company, Isiew York | City, admitted that Its books had been destroyed. Ship Guns to Philippines. Several large guns intended for the 1 American Army in the Philippines t were loaded cn the British freight t ship Indrani in South Brooklyn, N. Y. 1 The vessel is taking a cargo l'o? the c Far East. r I Negroes' Legs Cut 03T. * By the sidewiping of a sleeping car of a worl: train near Yazoo City. .Miss., seven negroes naa ineir isgs cut off. Four of them died scon > after the accident. i BURNED MONEY, SHOT HIMSELF. Actor Threw Jewels Away at Webster I City, Iowa. * Webster City, Iowa.?In sight of an ^ astonished crowd, Carl Pressley, an j actor, made a bonfire in the street of liis paper money, throw his jewelry in a sewer, and then anuounced to . a group of friends that he was going to kill himself. He drew a revolver from his pocket J walked across tne street, ana, nmag * to a number of persons in the vicinity to watch him die, fired a bullet into 1 his brain. * \ HUNT POR H ?Week's cleverest cartoon 1 M B. PARKER ASSMI ays the Constitution Specifically Defines How Far Convention Judge Tells of Attempt Portland, Me.?At the thirtieth annu; kssociation President Alton B. Parker, of ] s he arose to make his annual address. H< ies. Speaking of the activity along the lii aid in part: "Now, he who surveys the action of I iartments of the State governments during ruth say that they have been inactive dur hat the Federal Government has been mc ction than have the States. ' Officials and others have suggest- of ca d various schemes having for their- is li: bject the bringing of railroads, other the orporations and interests under the 'The xclusive control of the Federal Gov- Unit rnment. To that end nationalyincor- nor oration has been proposed, as has are i lso a Federal license system. ly o ' The object which their advocates have ave in view is undoubtedly laudable, futu tut that is not enoush. if in the ex- the < cution of their plans they violate the bids 'ederal Constitution and directly than sad toward the destruction of our no r ual government. of tt "Every power with which it was are ( eemed necessary to endow the Na- pow< ional Government was given to it men: nd in the exercise of these it was lade supreme. To prevent any pos- Fede Ible assertion by the National Gov- Stati rnment of inherent powers, those beloi ssigned to it were carefully and ex- smo( ressly enumerated. dual "But to avoid even the possibility it ha f a contrary claim, the Constitution of tl ras at once amended by the addition the f ten articles?every one of which shot* perated as a restraint upon the Na- It h; ional Government. The last one, es- mem ablishing beyond even the possibility cial I0W THE BRITON MAY LEGALLY ' amous Bill Becomes a Law After Centuries of Legis] Until King Edward Came London.?Marriage with a deceased w ;alized in Great Britain. The House of Lords, by a vote of 98 t ,t its third reading, thereby making such m Throughout the battle in the House of ?y Lord Salisbury's relatives, the Cecils, ised every trick known to parliamentary i >eing reached. The law relieves the matrimonial difl eers. retro3pectiveiy legitimatizing their c These marriages, though lawful in in ] he colonies, were void in England, laws 'he whole country rejoices in the attei assage of the bill into law. Hou King Edward notified the Lords Com hat he thought the bill should pass, Ai nd this had much to do with its go- ried ag through. . it hj The passage of the Deceased Wife's thro lister's bill ends a remarkable legis- the 1 ative struggle, dating back to the tical arly history of the church. war< Previous to 1533 marriages of con- exan anguinity and affinity were wholly Oi overed by canon law and such mar- and iages from 1533 to 1835 were void- Lore ble. In the latter year the Lynd- ?seco mrst act made past marriages of af- Sist( inity valid and future marriages ever oid. The House of Commons at first who ejected the prohibitory clause as re- Lore ards marriage with a deceased wife's viou ister, but afterward accepted it. mon A royal commission was appointed law. Belmont and Ryan Fall Out. Frienda of August Belmont and M 'homas F. Ryan practically admitted year here was a grave breach between the huri wo financiers, and an effort by the Sylv 3elmont interest in the Interbor- Dill' lUgh-Metropolitan to throw the Met- e.urr opolitan Street Railway system of deat Jew York City back on Mr. Ryan's lands was predicted. ^ Money Market Kclicf. ptrai Secretary of the Treasury Cori.tl- pass rou announced a new plan for !non<:> Siis carlzet relief.' will The National Game. The Newark Club, of the Eastern S< ll *C> I VUHH-IUCI i^i^n lerinquez. II The Montreal Club has signed out- ^rai ielder James Snowden,of the dcftinct Ji )u Bois Club. ocra Jim MoGuire occasionally rocs Mar tcouting lor players for ii.s Boston rout American team. num The Reading Club, of the Tri-State stud ^eague, has signed pitche/ Fcrtsch, D ate of Lancaster. of 1 TVio Tdvrn Itaiilo PJnh r?f ;hp flfn- hfl<? ;ral League, lias sigued pitcher Geo. lina 3cott, late of Wheeling. 1 Uni 7? m* rfp. ARD TSfVIES. \y" UrttTFrrt) /W'BIIPCNN&A I TvMWn)/Zt^\ \s xJp by Triggg, in the New York Press. S CENTRALIZATION Goyernmsnt Can Go?At American Bat ; to " Despoil States." al meeting of the American Bar STew York, was loudly applauded i assailed the centralization theoae of regulating corporations, he the legislative and executive dethe last few months cannot with ing this period. Nor can he say >re active or more drastic in its tvil that the National Government mited to the powers specified in Constitution creating it, reads: powers not delegated to the ed States by the Constitution, prohibited by it to the States, reserved to the States respectiter to the people.' Other powers 1 since been granted, and in the re still others' may be given, but Constitution as it now stands forthe exercise of any powers other those granted by it. It leaves oom for finding in the language le Constitution a claim that there :ertain unmentioned and inherent irs which the Federal Governt may exercise. , rhe attempts on the part of the ;ral Government to despoil the 3S of the powers and functions nging to them will not tend to jthness in the working of our schemc of government. Already .s had its effect. The indignation Jie governing forces of many of States is already aroused. It is rn in the legislation of the year, id not a little to do, in ray judgt, with the recent conflict of judiauthority in North Carolina." m DEAD WIFE'S SISTER [ation?House of Lords Always Objected to the Rescue, ife's sister has finally become Ie o 54, passed the oft-defeated bill arriages legal. T^nrrls flip nnnnsitinn was headed Both Sir Hugh and Robert Cecil irocedure to prevent a vote from Sculties of a number of English hildren. L847 to examine the marriage , and from 1S49 up to the present mpts were made, both in the se of Lords and the House of mons, to pass the bill. s a rule the Commons have carthe bill by a large majority, but is been thrown out by the Lords, ugh the aggressive opposition of bishops and a few ultra-ecclesiaslay peers, although King Ed1, when Prince of Wales, set tk3 ople of voting for it. q August 20 last, after prolonged animated debate the House of is, by 111 to 79 votes, passed the nd reading of theDeceased Wife'? ;r's bill, the minority including y. one of the seventeen bishopa are members of the House of Is, and as the measure had presly passed the House of Coms this session it now becomes Mrs. Dills Buried Alive. rs. Susan Dills and her sixteen-old grandson, James Cope, were ed alive in a mica mine near a, N. C. They were visiting Mr. s mine, when an excavation ocod, and they were smothered tc h. Haywood's Tour Abandoned. 'illiam D. Haywood, feeling the in of the trial through which he c*d in Boise, Idaho, has given up nronosed tour of the East, and return to Denver. Prominent People. icretary Taft is to come homo bj of Siberia and Europe. all Caine says that "the Engiis-i na is not dead and is not dying." i 'go Austin L. Crothers, t*.e Dem.tic nominee for Go-ernor cl viand, was a farm boy in his :h, and later taught school for u iber of years before he began the v of law. Ho is a bachelor. r. Ilenry Parker Willis,, formerly Washington and Lee University been selected for the chair ol nco at the George Washington verslty. V . '' PfiOSPERITV nor flULTED . j Chicago Bank Reports Remarkable Assurances of Good Times. | Overwhelming Preponderance of Evi? j dcnce is That the Business Situation is Sound and Satisfactory. Chicago.?The conclusion of the seventh annual business statement compiled by the Commercial National Bank of Chicago from the reports of 3 0,000 correspondents in all parts of the country, just made publlic, is that legitimatebusiness interests throughout the country are prosperous and sound; only the purely speculative markets are feeling the ejects of money tension and stagnation. In part the report says: "The overwhelming preponderance of evidence is that the business situation is sound and satisfactory. Not one of the thousands of replies negatives this conclusion indefinite terms. That there has been a marked easing down from the tension of the spring and winter months of the year is generally admitted, but it is admitted without a trace of regret or misgiving." In regard to money, it goes on to say: "The bankers of the country, with few exceptions in the Far West, report an extraordinary demand for funds in all lines of busine?s activity. Interest rates are firm everywhere, and in the central reserve and larger reserve olties the inquiry for funds so much exceeds the supply that money is described as 'tight.' The range of our investigation, justifies the conclusion that bank deposits show a straight average increase of 14.2 per cent., against a similar average increase of 10.8 per cent, in the loans. The averages, weighed according to the relative magnitude of the totals, would probably show a closer correspondence between the growth of deposits and loans." The report continues: "Business is generally reported to be good in volume, making an exception for the great hesitancy in the metal market, especially in copp6r and the alloy metals. Voluntary concessions in the prices of these materials have caade buyers wary and they are generally waiting in the hope of further forced declines. "The iron and steel industry is going ahead under the pressure of orders previously booked for fall delivery, but it is conceded that the' current inquiry is lighter, leading to the shading of prices in pig and billets?the basic articles of the in^ dustry. The feeling prevails, however, that with a continuance of activity, even on a somewhat lower scale, the railways will be compelled to buy steadily. In fact, the strength of the market for plates indicates confidence in the tariff situation and a steady increase in freight equiment." Referring to the crop situation, it says: * "Our replies on schedules touching the crop financing operations of the banks show that though yields may be deficient in quantity and quality those defeats, in conjunction with an unabatin;; consumption, will require practically as large a volume of funds as last year." KILLED WITH BABE IN ARMS. Husband Shoots Wife Through the Heart. After Freqnent Quarrels. Washington, Ohio.?With her son, J.1 1 1J U tnree years uiu, uetu iu urcasi, mi a. Clarence Haines was shot through the heart by her husband here. The bullet passed through the hand of the baby, who was also severely crushed in the fall of the mother's body. When the parents of the woman burst open a locked door it was to find the baby half hidden by the body and holding up its hand, from which blood dropped on its face. Haines killed himself an instant after shooting his wife. The bullet almost cut through his brain, and he dropped dead in a corner. Ilaines was a prosperous young mprphant_ and the traeedv was the result of frequent quarrels with his wife. BAN ON RICE THROWING. Priest Announces That Archbishop Prohibits It at Catholic Ceremonies. Racine, Wis.?"Throwing rice is a relic of barbarism, besides being dangerous and exceedingly unpleasant. This practice is not to be tolerated at a Catholic marriage ceremony." This declaration was made upon instructions from the Archbishop of Milwaukee by the Rev. Father Theodore B. Meyer of St. Mary's Church, at the close of the ceremony uniting two of his parishoners. A crowd of guests was outside awaiting the coming of the bride and bridegroom. When the newly wedded ones reached the topmost steps there was a sudden shower of rice. "I forbid this," cried the priest, an:l his announcement followed. TEXAS SUES HARVESTER TRUST. Srefcs to Oust Company From State and to Collect $1,000,000 Penalties. Austin, Texas.?Suit was filed by the Attorney-General's department j'or the State of Texas against the International Harvester Company of America, whk.j does business under a charter granted in Wisconsin. The petition alleges that the defendant has violated the anti-trust law of Texas, and the State demand^ penalties in the sum of 51,100,100, CONVICTED OF I*AXD FRAUDS. Defendants Cot 12,000 Acres of Gov. eminent Land in California. San Francisco.?John A. Benson and Dr. Edward B. Perrin were convicted in the United States Court of c onspiracy , to defraud the Government out of 12,000 acres of land ia California. The punishment provided by statute is a fine of not less tban 51000 and imprisonment of not less than two years. SIOUX INDIAN A SUICIDE. Cause: His New Motlicr-in-Lavr Wouldn't Chop (he Wood. Siotix Falls, S. D.?Because his mother-in-law would not share her home with himself and hride and chop all flic wood, a Sioux warrior named Red Shirt, who resided in tho extreme northern portion of the Rosebud Reservation, near Whita River, committed suicide by shooting nimseu. It is one of the few cases which are recorded of a Sioux Indian ending Lis own lilo. FLEET SAILS FDR THE PUHHC 18 OECEKB Official Announcement After a Conference at Oyster Bay. ROUTE VIA MAGELLAN STRAiTS Sixteen battleships Will Visit Sau Francisco and Probably Pu^et Sound?Return Route Xot Decided?Evans in Command. ' BATTLESHIPS FOR PACIFIC. Sixteen, with' total tonnage of 228,COO tons; 353 guns. Speed, Tonnage. Guns, knots. Connecticut . . 16,000 24 18 Maine ... 12,500 20 18 Kansas 17,630 24 18 Vermont 17,e50 24 18 Minnesota . ..17,050 24 18 Louisian . .10,000 24 18 Ohio 12,500 20 18 i<> inn on is i'l I---L7III 1 ( t ? JlO Virginia 14,948 24 19 Georgia 14,948 24 19 New Jersey... 14,948 24 19 Rhode Island. .1'!,948 24' 19 Alabama 11,525 18 17 Illinois 11,525 AS 17 Kentucky 11,525 22 10 Kearsarge ...11,525 22 16 ' I ~ Oyster Bay, N. Y.?In an official statement. President Roosevelt announced that the Atlantic fleet of sixteen vessels would sail for the Pacific in December by the Straits of Magellan, and that the time and route of return had not yet been decided. The President's statement followed a long conference at the Oystor Bay pummer capital, to which Admiral Evans was summoned by wireless from the Connecticut, which was cruising fifty miles off Chesapeake I Bay. Eeoides Admiral Evans and the 1 President, the conference was par[ ticipated in by Acting Secretary of 1 the Navy Newberry, and Rear-Admiral Brownson, chief of the Bureau of Navigation. i Here is the President's official statement: "The conference this afternoon between the President and the three officers of the Navy was called to decide details in connection with the Atlantic fleet going to the Pacific. The fleet will consist of sixteen battleBhins. It will start some timo in De cember. The course of the fleet will be through the Straits of Magellan, up the Pacific Coast to San Francisco. The fleet will also, in all probability,* visit Puget Sound. The question of the route by which it will return to the Atlantic has not yet been decided. The destroyer flotilla wjll leave for the Pacific about the same time as the battleship fleet, but the destroyers and torpedo boats will not accompany the fleet." I SETS FIRE TO HIDE MURDER. Farmhand Kills Woman Employer in Fit of Jealousy. Trumbull, Conn.?In a fit of jealousy, because he thought she was going to marry another man, Lucas Koplinsky, a farmhand on the estate of Aaron Mallett, at Tashua Hill, just beyond Long Hill, shot and killed Miss Lillian Mallett, and to hide his crime set fire to the barn connected with the house in which he had slain the woman. Miss Mallett, who was fifty-five years of age and wealthy, on the Sunday before buried her father. She was in the kitchen talking with Koplinsky, when suddenly, according to his own statement, he took out a revolver and fired two shots at her, both taking effect. He says he heard Miss Mallett tell another farmhand that she would marry him, and Koplinsky says this enraged him. Koplinsky has a wife and family in New Haven, with whom he has not lived for ten years. He has worked on the Mallett place for seven years. Mrs. Treadwell, the next door neighbor, was at the Mallett farm at the time of the shooting, although not on the spot. She was then going to find Miss Mallett when she heard the reports of a revolver and saw Koplinsky come out of the shed. She ran to her own home ajjd gave the alarm. Dr. Seth Hill, another neighbor, found the body of Miss Mallett and started the chase after her murderer. He did not make any resistance when overtaken. ANGRY BULL KILLS FARMER. Riding to Pasture When Brute For First Time Showed Ferocity. Phillipsburg, N. J.?John N. Van Camp, a well-to-do farmer, living one mile east of Blairstown, rode one of his horses to the field to bring his cows from the pasture. A bull which never before had shown any signs of being mad. attacked the horse, throwing Van Camp to the ground with such violence that he never regained consciousness and died a few hours afterward. He was fifty-five years old and left a widow and several children. Family of Three Burned to Death. While kindling a fire in a stove at their farm house near Mentone, Ind., Mrs. Charles Webster's clothes caught fire. She ran into the bedroom where her husband and twoyear-old baby girl were sleeping. All three and the house were burned. NEGROES FOR FOKAKER. George Republican League. Declares For J-Iim For President. Atlanta, Ga.?Resolutions indorsing Senator Foraker for the Presidency and denouncing the Georgia disfranchisement law were ador.ted at a rally of the Republican State League held here. It was atten'ded by 3000 negroes and a sprinkling of white Republicans. They denounced Roosevelt for appointing Democrats to office !n the South to the exclusion of Republicans. Amnesty For 8000 Roumanians. King Charles announced amnesty at Bucharest, Roumania, to $000 persons. or all who were implicated in the recent agrarian revolt, with the exception of about 200 militant priests and those already sentenced for murders committed during the uprising. New Jersey Trolley Merger. Plans of a new corporation with $38,000,000 capital to absorb the trolley lines of New Jersey were eom^ pleted, < ? r?t- ' -i. J> .? ' . * V I * a ? A. Jt I ^.TD MAN-A-l-ire Cojyilfht 1906, by Too MmsltaOo, MAN.A JIM le An ..innnuti ig nirExcellent Remedy for Constipation. , There are many ailments .dl- v rectly dependent upon constipation, such as biliousness, discolored and pimpled skin, inactive liver, dyspepsia, overworked kid- ' neys and headache. Remove constipation and all of these ailments disappear. J; MAN-A-LIN can be relied np-j| ' I on to produce a gentle action of the bowels, making pills and drastic cathartics entirely unnecessary. A dose or two of Man-a-Hn is advisable in slight febrile attacks, la grippe, colds and influenza. - ? THE MAN-A-LlM CO, COLUMBUS, OHIO, U. S. A. , . - <&. A School Coinage. < It is not a generally known fact that the Bluecoat School (Christ Hos-. > pltal) once possessed a coinage of Its own. At that time the coin of V the realm could not be used at the hospital. Before he could buy anything in the "tuck shop" a new toy* had to get one of the beadles, who were the school money changers, to change his shillings and pence into "housey money," as it was called. This wa&made of copper, the coins being octagonal in shape, with their v value stamped on them. These curious coins are now very rare, and numismatists possessing any are fortunate.?From the Captain. FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diaetaes permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 Arch 8t,,Phila.,l'k. England's fishing fleet consists of 26,501 boats and 106,793 men. ' Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Chfldrea teething.eoftensthegums^educesinflamma-,, tion. allays pain,cures wind cobc, 2ScabottI? Tbe motor licenses issued last year in* Ei^land numbered 5443. . - ' Easy.' Teacher?"Harry, a mother har five children and but four potatoes.* How can she divide the potatoes sof' that each will receive .an equal portion?" Harry (quickly)?"Masb 'em."-< Harper's Weekly. Meanness. There are Bomepeople so mean that {? they got a free seat in heaven they would sell it to a speculator.?Judge. The Sole Criterion. John Sloan, the noted Illustrator and etcher, laid down a newspaper account of the sale of a Bouguerean for $75,000. "Such sales," he said, "remind me of the conversation of old Gobsa Golde and his daughter Lotta. , " 'Well, did you buy that picture?' v said Lotta, on her father's return from a gallery. " 'No,' the old man answered. " 'Why not, pop?' " ' 'Twasn't dear enough.' " ? The Reflector. 1 iHiiiiiujiuuuuu^infrra |^]Paiiit Purity^j | & The Dutch Boy Painter is , H I found only on kegs of Pure White H a Lead?simply metallic lead cor- H S roded. This White Lead is not H | I only pure pigment?it is pure H a paint. >' H I Compositions that are only M | partly White Lead are only partly M | paint. The trade mark below S j guarantees absolutely Pure White B I I Lead made by the Old Dutch 89 | I Process. All first class dealers. Hj 5 Send for what \ve-ca!l our "XX" H| | | book, which gives vaiunble information Rj on the paint subject?tree. HO I IN A 1 IUINAL LI.AU LU.MIAA Y in vchichrvtr cf the folltlv~ ing citUs is nearest you: Xew York, Boston._ Buffalo, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chic.iK", St. Lotus, f Phil*delphia(JohnT.LewisOi Bros.t o.), Fittsjurgh . N'at;ur.<l Lead & Oil Co )