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The Cheese. "The late General Thomas H. Ruger," says a Stamford man, "was, like many army offieers, an authority on good eooking, but he detested rank, high cheeses. At a dinner he said that a very rank cheese was once left at his headquarters, to be called for, and after it had remained unclaimed two days he posted up this notice: " 'If the cheese sent here addressed ] to Private Jones is not called for in | two days it will be shot.' "?Wash- j ington Star. A Bumper Crop. "Ya-as," said the man from Southern Kansas, "I reckon that year was what you might call a banner year j with a bumper wheat crop. W'y, do j V ~4- o: 1 ~ v\ sn? nr V* _ 1 juu aijuyv uiai oixc uunaiuo j bor o' mine, Sile was?had sich a j stand o' wheat on a ten-acre field o' i hisn'n that he had t' rent th' field , next t' 'ira t' shock about half of it? j wasn't room fer th' shocks on th' j ground <t growed on."?Judge. Cherish the Poetry of Love. Laugh not at what some call the | extravagance of the young lover. It is the true business of love to idealize, to glorify its object. The pity i3 that love should ever lose its poetry and descend into the region of prose. That is the destruction of all the j beauty if not of all the happiness be- j tween lovers, the open gate to the di- j vorce court among married people.? j Western Methodist. V THE "YELL-OH" MAN And One of His Ways. To call a man a liar seems rude, so I we will let the reader select his own i term. Some time ago the Manager of j "Collier's Weekly" got very cross ! with us because we would not con- : tinue to advertise in his paper. We have occasionally been at- j tacked by editors who have tried to j force us to advertise in their papers at their own prices, and, on their own conditions, failing in which we were to be attacked through their editorial columns. The reader can fit a name to that tribe. We had understood that the editor of "Collier's" was a wild cat of the Sinclair "jungle bungle" type, a per- j son with curdled gray matter, but it j eatms strange that the owners would | descend to using their editorial columns, yellow as they are, for such ! rank out and out falsehoods as ap- i pear in their issue of July 27th, 1 where the editor goes out of his way j to attack us, and the reason will ap- J pear tolerably clear to any reader who understands the venom behind it. ] We quote in part as follows:? ; "One widely circulated paragraph I labers to induce the impression that i ' Grape-Nuts will obviate the necessity j 1 of an operation in appendicitis. This 1 is lying, and, potentially, deadly ly- 1 ing. Similarly, Postum continually j makes reference to the endorsements , of a 'distinguished physician' or 'a | prominent health official,' persons as mythical, doubtless, as they are mys- I terious." We do not hesitate to reproduce ' these mendacious falsehoods in order that It may be made clear to the pub- j lie what the facts are, and to nail the j liar up so that people may have a look ; at him. If this poor clown knew | what produced appendicitis, he might i | nave some Kiiowieuge ui wuy ue use | < of Grape-Nuts would prevent it. Let j; It be understood that appendicitis ; ' results from long continued disturb- : ance in the intestines, caused primar- j ily by undigested food, and chiefly by j, undigested starchy food, such as I: white bread, potatoes, rice, partly ! | cooked cereals, and such. These lie ; in the warmth and moisture of the ; I bowels in an undigested state, and j : decay, generating gases, and irritat- ' ing the mucous surfaces until, under j J such conditions, the lower part of the ; colon and the appendix become in- j j volved. Disease sets up, and fre- i j quently, of a form known as appendi- ! citis. 11 Now then, Grape-Nuts food was : I made by Mr. 0. W. Post, after he had I 1 an attack of appendicitis, and re- i quired some food in which the starch j was predlgested. No such food ex- | isted; from his knowledge of dietetics ! he perfected the food; made it pri- { marilv for his own use. and after- ! wards introduced it to the public. In this food the starch is transformed j by moisture and long-time cooking | into a form of sugar, which is easily j digested and doas not decay in the , intestines. It is a practical certainty that when a man has approaching i symptoms of appendicitis, the attack 1 can be avoided by discontinuing all ! food except Grape-Nuts, and by prop- ! erly washing out the intestines. J Most physicians are now acquainted j with the facts, and will verify the ; statement. Of course, this is all news, and should be an education to >.he person who writes the editorials for "ColMer's," and who should take at least troininc hofnrr* H n jwajiv ?.* Ui?iiUh ftSWlVT 4^ C4 A Lun\.d to write for the public. Now as to the references to "a dis> tinguished physician" or "a prominent health official" being "mythical persons." We are here to wager "Collier's Weekly," or any other skeptic or liar, any amount of money they care to name, and which they will cover, that wa will produce proof to any Board of Investigators that we have never yet published an advertisement announcing the opinion of a prominent physician or health official on Postum or Grape-Nuts, when we did net have the actual letter in our possession. It can be nn n'lv im/liirotnr.rl t h ft t mnnv llPfim inent physicians dislike to have their j lames made public in reference to : my article whatsoever; they have their own reasons, and we respect those reasons, but we never make mention of endorsements unless we have the actual endorsement, and that statement we will back with any amount of money called for. When a journal wilfully prostitutes its columns, to try and harm a reputable manufacturer in an effort to force him to advertise, it is time the public knew the facts. The owner or editor of Collier's weekly can- j not force money from us by such J methods. POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd. JAPANESE ATTACKED B'I imicoye Canadians Oppose the Inflow of Alien Asiatics. CONSUL COMPLAINS TO TOKI9 Apprehension in London Lest International Complications Result?Chinese Buy Arras aiitl Side With Japanese. Vancouver, B. C. ?Following a riot, in which Chinatownand the Japanese quarters were raided and damage done approximating $15,000, a further demonstration occurred later, in which Baron Aikujire Ishii, chief of the Bureau of Foreign Commerce, and head of the Japanese consular service, and Consul Saburo Hisamidzu, of Seattle, were the central figure^, and in which riot many Japanese and Chinese were bruised and injured by broken bottles and flying brickbats in the hands o? a frenzied mob. Baron Ishii and Consul Hisamldzu finally made their escape through the mob and the affair was immediately cabled to Tokio. Seven or eight of the Japanese were unceremoniously picked up and thrown into Buzzard Inlet. The Asiatic Exclusion League held a parade and later a meeting, at which Lieutenant-Governor Dunsmuir, who vetoed the bill, introduced by the present Attorney-General, to enforce the Natal act in British Columbia, was burned in effigy and a resolution was passed to ask the Dominion Government to allow this bill to become a law. After that the mob stormed Chinatown. deliberately smashing the windows in all stores. Street orators gathered crowds, who even swarmed up the telegraDh pcles. and a strong cordon cf police across the street had all they could do tc keep the mob from again entering the Chinese quarter. As there had been threats of burning, the fire brigade was ready with hose to use this method if necessary to keep the white men back. While the speaking was going on the sound of breaking glass was acclaimed with joyful yells by the hoodlums. Then the mob br~ke loose in Howell street, a few blocks away in another direction, where the Japanese reside. Here windows were broken also, but the Japanese resented, and with bottles and boards, attacked their assailants. Several per iw* V. />aii ry+At. o f _ dUXIS WCiC 1UJU1CU 1U tllC Luuuai u,v.~ tacks. Japanese and Chinese crowded the local gun shops to buy firearms and ammunition. They say they will delend their lives and property. In case the Oriental quarter is again attacked. it is feared that there will be aloodshed, for the Japanese and Chinese are thoroughly aroused and are convinced that the police are poweress to protect tbpm. The police orJered the gun sto to cease selling Srearms to any on until such timei is all possibility of further outbreaks lad passed. Before the order was issued. however, hundreds of Chinese md Japanese had armed themselves. All Chinesp and Japanese domestic servants, of whom hundreds are employed in Vancouver, have stopped vork and have been forced by threats >f their countrymen to act as part of ;he defensive guard. Orientals emjloyed in the mills have also stopped Kork and have taken refuge in th6 luarter occupied by their countrynen, where they are preparing to assist in opposing any further attacks :hat may be made on the quarter. London.?The news of the attacks lid not surprise the Colonial and Foreign Office officials here, who had long 'eared an outbreak against the Asiitics in Western Canada, but they iave the greatest confidence in the ability of the Canadians to suppress iny disturbance and proteqt aliens. \t the same time the officials realize :hat a most serious problem ha3 irisen, particularly as the feeling appears to be strongest against the subjects of Great Britain's Eastern ally, md that it requires the most careful handling, for whatever action is taken is likely to be resented either by the colony or by Japan. $8000 BANK ROBBERY. Safe Dynamited While Thieves Held Back Townspeople. Frankfort S. D.?The James River Bank, of Frankfort, was dynamited ?a,-ly iu (he morning and robbed of $S000. Seven charges nf dynamite were used in blowing open the bank fault. Persons aroused by the explosion ivere prevented from interfering by ;rards stationed by the thieves at ;he front and rear of the bank. Frank Fitzpatrick, who sought to_ break through the guards, was sho't. His wound is not serious. Many shots were fired to keep back :he townspeople while the robbers left the bank, broke into a section house on the Chicago and Northwestern Raiiroad. stole a handcar and es zaped. New Sultan Well Disposed. Mulai Hafig, the newly proclaimed Sultan of Morocco, issued a proclamation stating that he proposes to satisfy the French demands and enter into good relations with all other powers. American Ideas at The Hague. At The Hague peace conference the entire American project for a permanent international high court of justice presented by Joseph H. Chcate, was accepted, with the exception ot ine paragrapn reLerring to me allotment of the judges. Hermit Roosevelt Shuns Notoriety. Because of annoying attentions from women and sirls K>rmit Roosevelt deserted the regular cavalrymen with whom he was making a:, overland march. Unprofitable Horse Cars. Testifying for the Public Service Commission, Oren Root, Jr., declared that all forty miles of horse car lines in NTpw York Oitv arc rnn at ?. loss. and that electrification would mean greater losses. Public Conscience Aroused. Governor Hughes of New York in an address to the Vermont Game League, at Bluff Point, N. Y , said the public conscience was aroused and there would be no more plundering of the Dublic, DRIVE HliJSjRi! CU1 iweive minarea Asiatics rorcei to Flee From Beiiingham, Wash. Mob of oOO Whites Raids Lodging Houses and Mills?Kace Troubles Long Brewing. Beiiingham. Wash. ? Sii hadl; beaten Hindus are in tho hospital 400 frightened and half naked Sikh are in jail and in the corridors of th< City Hall, guarded by policemen, am somewhere between Beiiingham ant the British Columbia line are mori than 750 natives of India, beaten hungry and half clothed, making theii way along tne ureat iNorcnern nau I way to British territory and the pro | tection of the British flag. The long expected cry. "Drive ou the Hindus!" was heard the night be fore throughout the city and alonj the water front. The police weri helpless. All authority was paralyzec and for five hours a mob of half i thousand white men raided the mill! where the foreigners were working battered down doors of lodging houses and, dragging the Asiatic! from their beds, escorted them to th< city limits with orders to keep going. The trouble started at C and Holl} streets, a lodging house district. Th< houses were cleared and the mob th^er swept down to the water front anc mill after mill was visited, the whit< employes joining the mob. Ever: Hindu was hustled outside. Here the police suggested that th< mob victims be taken to jail. This was hailed with delight and the Hin dus were hustled along. From thu time on few were beaten. The mol kept up its work along the watei front until early next morning, wher Larson's mill at Whatcom Lake was visited and 100 Hindus brought ir from there. Four women were found among th< crowd in the city building. The cit] is quiet, but there is a strong under current of opinion which apparent!]! approves the action of the mob, anc it may be found impossible to punist the leaders. Racial feeling has played no smal i? nfPnirn Viaro IT.xrorV A Q V ycXLL m auan o 1-1^1^. ?-j ? j uuj ? utwi have been replaced in the mills b: Asiatics. Many instances of whit< women being pushed into the gutteri or insulted on street cars by the for eigners were reported. General un easiness of the whites is given as i reason for the outbreak. The Hindus are all British subject! and this matter is being placed befort the British authorities. Goldwin Smith Foresees Trouble. Toronto, Canada.?In an interview on the mobbing of the Hindus at Bel linghara, Wash., Goldwin Smith sai< he anticipated a contest between Eu ropean and Eastern races for suprem acy on the Pacific Coast. He urge< the admission of Asiatic women Great Britain and the President wil smooth out the present difficulty, bu the future is extremely dark. Complaint Expected From England. Washington, D. C.?While no offi cial information has reached the Stati Department concerning the expulsioi of the Hindus from Bellingham Wash., it is expected that Ambassado Bryce will soon lodge formal com plaint. All that the State Departmen can do is to ask the Governor o Washington to take steps to preven a recurrence of the trouble. Th British Government is likely to fini itself embarrassed in dealing with th Bellingham incident because of th ever present danger of similar at tacks upon the East Indians, who ar numerous in British Columbia. TWELVE DEAD IN IOWA WRECK ! Rock Island Express Train Crashe Into a Freight?Twelve Injured. , Waterloo, Iowa. ? Twelve person | were killed and a dozen were injure ' when a north-bound Chicago, Rod Island and Pacific passenger trai; left the rails at Norris, Iowa, an crashed into a south-bound freigh train standing on a siding. AH of the dead and injured were ii j the smoking car, which was immedi j ately behind the baggage and mai i cars. The smoking car was demo] I ished. The north-bound express wa I ten minutes late at Norris, where th j freight train was waiting. The ex ! press came along at terrific speed i: j an effort to make up time. i The dead: P. B. Cliver, Waterloo I Will Goodman, Waterloo; John fv i Watson, Waterloo; C. L. Landphere Shell Rock, Iowa; Wray Johnson Dike, Iowa; B. R. Christy, Minneapo lis; Lepovan Toja, Hammond, Ind. W. K. Meyers, baggage man; four un identified men. The severely injured I J. H. Douglass, Waterloo; collarbon j and arm broken; Thomas Evanson j Mors, Minn.; leg broken; V. 0. Mar ' tiD, mail clerk; W. H. Myers, Alber 1 Lea, Minn.; arms and legs crushed I J. A. Newell, conductor; arm torn off ! Dr. Ctiarles J. O'Keefe, Marble Rocfc i Iowa; leg crushed; John Shaw, Wat I erloo. *. - ! HARVESTER TRUST PAYS FIXE : Gives $35,000 to the State of Texa aiul Agrees to Quit Business. Austin, Texas.?The Internationa I Harvester Company ol Wisconsi pleaded guilty in the anti-trust suit Instituted against it by the State o Texas and paid the fine of $35,00 assessed by' the court. The company also subscribed to th perpetual injunction fobidding i from operating in any way in Texas Married Wrong Twin. Mrs. Addie Thomas* of Paris, III has brought suit for a divorce fror ! Calvin Thomas on the ground tha she made a mistake in the brothe she was to marry. She thought h was Alvin, Calvin's twin brother, sh alleges. Woman Sacrifices Her Life. ! Mrs. Kairinu Aronovitch, eight { years old. of New York City, sacri ! Ua.. i;f,i Pi r?{a wt'ilrn c*nr j lltcu ii*7i I11C UL n. Ill'-; I.\s jmcwvv oui ' h^r grandchildren and great-grand children were safe. The World of Sport. Prince Henry of Prussia srteerc his yacht, the Tillie X., first over th line in the second of the series of th Sonderklasse races at Kiel. President James Pilkington, of th National Rowing Association, ha been asked to appoint a committe to select the all-star oarsmen wh are to form the crews to complete i England next year. By winning the national champioi ship in the single sculls Harry S. Bei nett, of Springfield, Mass., becomf one of the foremost figures in tb aauatio world. 7 ?Week's Cleverest Cartoon by George B I All 5outh and \ I at the Ide 3 5 New York City.?Just at this time ) while pessimists who tremble at the ; mere mention of Wall Street are i looking for financial stringency, New 3 York hotels are reaping a harvest i from an army of men whose predictions reflect the financial conditions ? better than can any rise or depresr 3ion of securities. This legion repre sents the merchants of the entire conr tinent. 1 It Is a conservative estimate to say i that $5,500,000 has been spent in New York City by this buying and 1 selling commercial army, in small ad5 vance orders, in living expenses and f in amusement, for the daily expedi5 tures of a majority of the visitors 3 have been very heavy. ' "TX7>i 11 OffAaf hnro QO 1UU UlttJ uac >T cut LJUV.VI. UV,! V - a bugaboo with which to frighten 1 Fifth avenue and to keep Newport meek at times," said Ernest Jackson, s at the Cadillac,' "but the American 3 people don't tremble at the mention of the name any more. The talk oi an approaching panic, while it seems to make New York feel glum, is v scoffed at by those who appreciate the real resources of the nation and j who feel that a panic cannot come even if the money kings try to create one." j Mr. Jackson has for years been among the chief Southern traveling [ men of Arnold, Constable Co., toucht ing on his travels the principal cities and towns of fourteen Southern States. Scoffs at Talk of Panic. . * "If there is a panic coming, as g those who see trouble where no trou2 ble exists predict," said he, "it wil be due solely to that fear whict r causes a child to look into the dari . hall for a bear. The men of Wal t Street da not any more hold the f money power in their hands. Whal t if they do get together and say there e is a stringency? That doesn't altei i the fact that Texas will grow 4,000,' e 000 bales of cotton, worth at preseni e prices $180,000,000, and that the . other cotton-growing States will adc e 9,000,000 additional bales, wortl $450,000,000. "Think what that crop alone means to the country. A $600,000, 000 cotton crop means prosperity foi the South. That is an enormous sun of money ? within $150,000,000 o! the debt of New York City." s "We did just what we expected,' { "COMES HIGH, BUT SO d i ?M0U?''^^ ; co*tflN mwv pi ( /J? jj^ > ' ~~ ?2R /C^N COTTC l? t&SL (LV) "z^10 ' /vjHftT 6A\.L! >s * /VNfVE AlWMS own PElCfc^^/^ it 3. 'V* yfAi'Vf>***''] ? MURDERERS OF BARILLAS DIE 11 Mexico City. ? Floroncio Morale! t and Bernardo Mora, who were 01 r June G convicted and sentenced tc e death for the assassination of formei e President Barillas of Guatemala hen on April 7, were executed in th< Belim prison. This ends an interna tional episode which at one tinn y threatened to bring on war betweei i- Mexico and Guatemala. e The assassination of General Baril [- las took place at the height ! a pout ical crisis in Guatemala. The Labor World. . Newspaper writers of England hav< a union with 1500 members. e y A general strike has been declare in Lodz, Russia, and more than 32, 000 men are out. ,e LS New Bedford (Mass.) Weavers ,e Union has again affiliated with thi 0 United Textile Workers, n Thirty-six unions, out of a total o forty-six In Dilluth, Minn., are af flllntorl with the trartfls assembly. j. More than 100,OdO railway em >a ployes in England are required ti q work from twelve to fifteen tiQura pe day._ 'S FINABLE OUT THERE." larr McCutcheon, in the Chicago Tribune. Vest Scoff ;a of Hard Times i said the manager of the Victoria, i "New York is so busyit doesn't watch i the ebb and flow of travel as do the hotel men. The lobby has been full ; of Western and Southern merchants for six weeks, and the talk has all i been on 'shipments' and 'case lots' and 'percentages' and 'discounts oft for ten or thirty day payments.' " "I've had commercial men and buyers here in swarms for two and a half months," said the manager ol the Cadillac, "and a busy spending bunch tbey are. They have all been cheery and happy, and I have yet tc see one who predicted anything but a booming trade." 1 Too Busy For Pessimism. "If the United States wants a 1 panic, or if Wall Street shuts up on ; New York's money supply, send word ' to South Carolina and we'll help the East out," said W. G. Aarants, buyer 1 and manager for the Kerrlsow Dry \ Goods Co., of Charleston, S. C. "The State in which I live is too busy mak1 ing money to pay any attention to j or to have any sympathy with, talk | of panic or hard times. L "Our merchants are getting rich. IIlaUUlclULUl ICS die S^iiuglllg u y, uu adding enormously to the wealth ol the farmer and the spinner and our ' banks and trust companies are carry' ing millions of dollars on deposit. "Cotton at six cents is profitable; 1 at fourteen it is a boon incalculable. 1 for it means nearly $700,000,000 annually to the South. While we have billions we can't see Wall Street. Nc ; trust magnates, using that imperfect . financial thermometer, the Stock Ex [ change, should be allowed to cause i the country a single shiver." c A. V. Billet, of the William II 1 Horstman Company: "Texas alone is ? an empire vast in dimensions and sc t vastly wealthy that her people would ; brand themselves ridiculous to think of hard times. The farmers and the cattlemen are rolling in wealth; the t oil industry has added millions and > the merchants are doing tremendous I volumes of trade." i T. F. Connole, of Baltimore, says: "With Iowa boasting a $350,000,000 > corn crop and Kansas almost reach ing her, while the South is getting fancy prices on 13,000,000 bales of i cotton, there is money in plenty. Tht t South and the West now think Wall Street a wooden ghost with the sheet ' pulled off." > IS EVERYTHING ELSE!" M Cartoon from tho Atlanta Constitution. QUICKSANDS' DEATH GRIP. 3 Peoria, 111.?Quicksand in the IIi iinois River caused the drowning ol 3 Charles McEnetee, Keeling; WilsoD r aud William Stinger, of Lacon, 111. i The bodies were found erect in the ? river, all three held firmly by the - quicksand, which reached above the 5 knsss. It is thought that the men's i boat was overturned and that they were exhausted by the quicksand in - their attempt to wade to shore. The water was barely over their heads when they were found. l'lio National Game. 3 Catcher McLean, of Cincinnati, is now wearing shin guards. 1 The crusade against spikes is gain ing ground. Fifty stolen bases do not offset one gashed arm. > "Doc" Newton has been pitching 2 winning ball since his return to the New York Americans. f New York has no champion team - this season, but she has the champion ' * ' - TTl- ~ l? Tkf.1l*, tmra DUSGmmi. nia uauiy i?s ucyuu, - and he is the best on the diamond toa day. He is weak on one point, how* r ever. H$ can't get foul balls tha.V ;" Lover the. grand stead*. - < i- r*- - 10,000 M hied VETEHAHS1 LI Forty-first Parade of the G. A. R. in Saratnaa a Stirrirnr Sight. AGED SOLDIERS MARCH IN RA1M Traversed a Mile Through Village Streets, While Thousands, With Uncovered Heads, Watched the Faltering Lines and Old Banners. Saratoga, N. Y.?The Grand Arm7 of the Republic held its parade?its forty-first. Ton thousand limping, gray haired veterans, the remnant of the army, whose scores of thousands passed in review at the national capital when the war was over, braved a driving storm to march once more beneath their battle flags. As unmindful of the storm as in the days of " '61," when youth and vigor and love of the flag knew no physical fnoao rfwinrJHnsr thousands passed once more in review. While scores dropped out when the rain began to fall the ranks; held their line and braved the driving storm as if again going to their places in the front of battle. The rain poured with steadily increasing force as they marched, but through the drenching torrents they kept on. Few there were who even held umbrellas. For an hour and more the old soldiers plodded on between lines of cheering people as plucky as themselves, keeping step to the music. Governor Charles E. Hughes, his military staff, the national officers of the Grand Army and distinguished visitors stood on the reviewing stand, poorly shielded from the driving storm. When the last rank had passed in review the rain ceased, the skie3 cleared and the sun broke out. The dripping but undaunted old soldiers found their ways to lodging places, satisfied that such a trifle as a driving rainstorm had no more arrested their onward march than it had in the days of war. The parading distance was reduced to one mile, the shortest ever fixed for the national encampment. For the first time the parade was limited to members of the Grand Army instead of being open to all survivor? of the war. The village was ablaze with the national colors, covering the fronts of buildings, festooned at every convenient point, strung in rows at short intervals across me streets auu turnpletely covering the interior of the great convention hall where the sessions of the encampment were held. One of the features of the parade was the presence of a big flag which covered the body of General Grant od its way from Mount McGregor to the tomb. In custody of the Grenadier Guard, commanded by Colonel A. S. Fowler, of Little Rock, Ark., of which every man was over sis feet tall, and each represented one of the forty-five departments of the G. A. R., this old flag brought up the rear. MAY GET JAMESTOWN SITE. Believed That Exposition Co. Will Fail to Repay Government Loan. Norfolk, Va.?No statement was forthcoming regarding the failure of the Jamestown Exposition Companj to remit to the Government an account of its $1,000,000 loan. it is a foregone conclusion in the minds of many that the exposition will never be able to repay this loan and that the Government will get the site of the exposition for a nava.' training station. The.exposition is now going along with a good attendance, but the receipts are not up to what had been expected. The explosion is having trouble collecting concession money. BOY TO PRISON FOR LIFE. Lad Found Guilty of the Murder ol His Friend at Bowdoinham, Me. Bath, Me.?Sidr.ey K. Preble, fifteen years old, of Bowdoinham, was found guilty of the murder of his friend, Norris W. Heath, at Bowdoinham, on May 11, by a jury in the Supreme Judicial Court. Under the Maine laws the penalty is life imprisonment, for which he was sentenced. Preble and Heath quarrelled ovei a dog, and several days later Preble encountered Heath on a country road and shot him in the back, death occurring instantaneously. CRUSHED TO DEATH BY CAR. Photographer Killed arid Five Per sons Tnjured Near Allcntown, Pa. Allentown,-Pa.?At Nazareth, neai 'here, a car of the Lehigh Valley Transit Corqgiany, which was descending a steep grade, got beyond the control of the motorman, and jumping the tracks at a sharp curve, turned turtle, crushing John D. Owens, a Bethlehem photographer, to death, and seriously injuring five persons. Woman's Speculation Alleged Reason. It became known that E. B. Havens & Co., New York Cltv, the failed Wall street firm, sunk $657,443 in speculation, more than half of which was incurred in the name of their bookkeeper's wife, Mrs. Fish, whe says she never speculated. Cavalry For the Philippines. The United States army transpon Thomas sailed from San Fraucisrc I for Honolulu. Guam and Manila, with nine troops of the Sixth Cavalry and a detachment of field artillery for the Philippines. Smallpox Epidemic Keeps l'p. There ara no signs of abatement in the smallpox epidemic at Vienn.-. Austria. During the last few days 100,000 persons have been vaccinated. Puolic meetings and processions have been .'orbidden. Prominent People. Ambassador Bryce spoke at the an nual convention of the American Bar Association at Portland, Me. Andrew Carnegie has written an article on the German Emperor's economic mission, highly eulogistic of the sovereign. rrince wniieim ui oweueu visneu the President at Oyster Bay and the town was decorated with Swedish colors in his honor. Rear-Admiral Charles H. Davis, in command of the second squadron of the Atlantic fleet, was retired, ha?ln? reached the aee. of sistY-twq. * \ . ' " -V ! | ALL HAIL PE-RU-NA. 1 A Case, of ^STOMACH CATMffll ^ r? ^ " ^ ''' ' i j Miss Mary O'Brien, 306 Myrtle Ave., "~ Brooklyn, Is. Y., writes: "Peruna cured me in five tceeka of catarrh of the stomach, after suffering for four years and doctoring without effect. In common with other grateful ones who have been benefited By your discovery, 1 say. All hail to Peruna." Mr. fl. J. flenneraan, Oakland, Neb, writes: "I waited before writing to yoa about my sickness, catarrh of the stomach, which 1 had over a year ago. "There were people who told me it would not stav cured, but 1 am sure that I am cured, for 1 do not feel anv more ill effects, have a good appetite and am getting fat. So 1 am, and will say to all, i am cored for good. "I thank you for your kindness. " Peruna will be our house medicine hereafter.? Catarrh of the stomach is also known in common parlunce as dyspepsia, gastritis and indigestion. No medicine will be of any permanent benefit except it remove* the catarrhal condition. Gained Strength and Flesh. Miss Julia Butler. R. R. 4, Appleton, vVifl., writes she had catarrh of the ctom- f! ach, causing loss of sleep and appetite, with ! freguent severe pains after eating, tiha { took Peruna, her appetite returned, she i gained strength, flesh and perfect health. An enterprising American has begun to j manufacture cement tombs. ^ FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, N ervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 82 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr.H. R. Kline,Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila.,Pa. New South Wales has bought 4000 miles of rabbit-proof wire netting. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens theguma,reducesint1ftmnuw' tion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 25ca bottle ?????? The new Cunarder Lusitania will consume 1200 tons of coal a day. H. H. Green's Sons, of Atlanta,Ga.,are the only successful Dropsy Specialists in tbe world. See their liberal offer in advertisement in another column of this paper. Burbank, the "plant wizard," grows 12,000 varieties of potatoes. ENDURES ECZEMA 5 YEARS. ? . y Sores Behind Ears Spread to Checks ?Best Doctors Fail?But Cuticura Remedies Effect Care. "I had been troubled with eczema for five years on my ear and it began to extend jn my cheek. I had been doctoring with the best physicians, but found no relief whatever. As the medicines and salves did, me no good I thought I would get the 'Magic Three,' Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Pills, costing me one-half of one visit to my physician. I can truthfully state that I found instant relief. When 1 had used three boxes of iM Cuticura Ointment and two cakes of Cuticura Soap 1 found my skin as soft and fine as a baby's. Miss Netla Ayera, 131 Franklin Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 1 and 15, 1906." v'?| To Mend Hot Water Bags. A hot water bag will ofttimes sud- ^ denly spring a leak when most needed. A piece of adhesive plaster placed over the break will stop the leak immediately and will stay in place for quite a while. It can easily be renewed and proves a most satisfactory first aid to an injured rubber article.?The Circle. DA/iinA ITonnSnaQC A' V4 AAM|f|/*UVWW* We can have the highest happiness i only by having wide thoughts and ' much feeling for the rest of the world ! as well as for ourselves.?George I Eliot. . WORN TO A SKELETON. | A Wonderful Restoration Caused a Sensation in a Pennsylvania Town. Mrs. Charles N. Preston, of Elkj land, Pa., says: "Three years ago I ^^^ found' that my housework was becoming a burden. I tired eaaJX ily, had no ambition y)jf ^ y? and was failing fast. W /cJP My complexion got V yellow and I lost J over 50 pounds. My thirst was terrible, on/1 thoro Slgftr I - ? ----in the kidney secrei tions. My doctor kept me on a strict' | diet, but as his medicine was not I helping me, I began using Doan's j Kidney Pills. They helped me at ' once, and soon all tr>ces of sugar disappeared. I have regained my former ' weight and am perfectly well." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. The Gun Radge. The Alabama-Legislature will pres1 ently consider a bill providing that any person who carries a pistol must j take out a license and wear a neat > metal badse with the word "Armed" ! thereon. Baltic Sea Has Most Wrecks. The wreck record of the Baltic Sea ! Is greater than that of any other part ; of the world. The average is one a i day throughout the year. Professor Chauffeur. The King of Spain has created a j chair of automobilisra at l'Ecole des ! Arts ct Sciences at Madrid. The proI - *?? V- -J ?i..A oil fKfl : lessor wm ut; e-xjiccieu iu give ?n i practical and theoretical instruction | young chauffeurs require. For Appearances Only. Little Fred?"Why is it that womi en are always complaining about their servants?" Little Elsie?"Oh, that's just to let , people know they can afford to have ; | 'em. ?Chicago - I