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STiCHEtf WES,KILLS Flit Four Workmen and a Merchant Are Victims at Providcncs. Mysterious Accident Wrecks a Fac tory and Makes an Odd Spec tacle?Probable Cause. Providence, R. I. ? Five persons were killed by the explosion of a miser in the starch factory of C. S. / Tanner here. The building was bad ly wrecked by the explosion and fire following completed the work of de struction. The dead are: A. L. Chase, Richard Gomes, John Dautt and two workmen known only as Mike and Tony. , The starch factory was an old j brick structure of three stories. The j exact cause of the explosion remains | to be determined. Mr. Tanner inti- | mated that it may have been due to a | spark from defective electric wiring, i ; igniting the starch mixture prema turely. The explosion tore away a great hole in the centre of the building and carried away the larger part of the roof. There was an upward rush of smoke, names ana a line puwuwr, which looked like a white cloud, and through this could be seen portions of timbers and bricks falling within the' building, and outside its walls as well. The house of Hose Company No. 2, in the rear of the starch factory, was slightly damaged, and so much debris was piled about the door that it was fifteen minutes before the firemen could get out to fight the fire. The property loss due to the explo sion and fire will probably not exceed 110,000. BANK ROBBERS GET $23,000 And Escape, After Wrecking Building and Rousing Whole Town. Rich Hill, Mo.?Stealing $23,000 in cash after dynamiting and wreck ing the $9000 building of the Farm- I Mo?tian!(ic' Rank in this rifv. I Ci o auu mc^uBUivo ? , ( five robbers, all heavily armed, ter rorized the citizens and after ex changing shots with the Sheriff's posse escaped to the rough country Bouth of here. No one was injured by either the shots or the explosion. A terrific roar caused by the dyna miting of the vault of the bank awoke the town half an hour after midnight. The population hurried to the two story brick bank building in the cen tre of the city. Many persons arrived in time to see the robbers ride away. Cashier J. W. Jamison said that all the cash in the bank had been stolen by the robbers. The bank ' building was completely wrecked and many neighboring buildings were damaged by the explosion. The Sheriff of the county organized a posse, but as the robbers got a good start there is little prospect of their being overtaken soon. The rough country to the south of the city af fords a good refuge for the robbers. SAYS 175,000 ARE OUT OF WORK. Chairman of a New York Union Meet ing Gives Surprising Figures. New York City.?In response to a call issued a week ago by a commit tee of men in various trades a meet ing of representatives from more than 200 unions was held at the Labor Temple, Eighty-fourth street between Second and Third avenues, to hear re ports as to the number of unem ployed workers in New York. After, each delegate had reported lia nVioifmnn fltrnroH nilt.that ahnilt. 175,000 were idle in this city. The ^figures were considered extravagant by some of the delegates, but the chairman insisted that he was right. The reports were then made in an other form and the meeting decided that from fifty to sixty per cent, of the mechanics were idle. JEROME SUPERSEDED. Hughes Designates Attorney-General .Jackson to Present Evidence. '' Albany, N. Y.?Governor Hughes has designated Attorney - General Jackson to appear in person or by deputy before the Supreme Court of New York to present the so-called "Ice Trust" cases to the Grand Jury. The point which tne jury musi ae- j cide is whether or not certain con tracts made by the officials and agents | of the American Ice Company consti tute a criminal action. The Governor's action is taken in response to the request of the Attor ney-General, who informed the Gov ernor that in his opinion a crime had been committed, and that District At torney Jerome had failed to present the documentary evidence to the Grand Jury. JAIL FOR SLOCUM'S CAPTAIN*. Van Schaick's Ten-Year Sentence Up held on Appeal. New York City.?The United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Judges La cornbe. Coxe and Ward sitting, af firmed the decision of the Circuit Court holding William H. Van Schaick, seventy years old, captain of the excursion steamer General Slo cum, guilty of criminal negligence on the occasion of the burning of the steamer in the East River on June were lost. Captafn Van Schaick was ] found guilty in the Circuit Court on ! January 27, 1906, and the same day | was sentenced to ten years in Sing Sing. He was subsequently released on $10,000 bail pending the appeal. | BANQUET TURNED TO CHARITY. Westinghonse Foremen to Give $1000 to Men Out of Employment. ' Pittsburg, Pa.?For the first timo in many years the Foremen's Asso ciation of the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company will not hold its annual banquet this year. All arrangements had been made, (but because of the many men out of twork the foremen decided to declare ithe banquet off and to devote tha + c.o flnlloi-o tr\ ll n VD RnPfltt 15, 1904, when nearly 1000 on the dinner to charit} ; DUQUESXE MILLS RESUME. 4000 Men Return to Work and Oth* ers Will Go Back Soon. Pittsburg, Pa. ? Four thousand men resumed work at the Duquesna "Works of the United States Steel Corporation. Fully three-fourths of the entire works are running, and all departments will be put iu operation in another month. The departments now working in clude blast furnace, Bessemer and opsn-hearth steel department, and merchant mill. Billets is the princi pal production of the Duauosni Works. MIS FEUDIST KILLED judge James Hargis, of Kentucky, Shot fay Son. Wifo of Victim Telegraphs From Jarkson to Louisville For an Exnensive Cofiin H.? Eoucht. Jackson. Ky.?Judge James Har gis, for years one of the central fig ures in the Hargis-Cockrili feud, waa murdered in his own store by his own son, Beacher. Judge Hargis was shot five times. The son, who was crazy drunk, is only twenty-one years old. He is the only son. the other child of Judge Hargis being a daughter, Evelyn, who was married only a month ago to Dr. Hogg, a prosperous physician of' thia town. Beacher Hargis has been unruly for several years and has frequently; run away from home. He was re cently arrested for vagrancy in Cin cinnati and his mother brought him back to Jackson. Several nights before Beacher Har gis and his father had a dispute, and Judge Hargis restrained the boy from doing him violence by superior strength. About 3 o'clock in the af ternoon he walked into his father's store and when the father upbraided him for drinking he ran behind a counter and getting a revolver began firing at his father. The first shot j struck Judge Hargis in the breast. just under the left nipple and he fell. ! The boy then ran toward him, firing as he approached until he had fired five shots. In the store were James Brophy and two women. Brophy grappled with the boy after he had emptied his revolver, and in a few minutes offi- i cers arrived and he was taken to jail, where he is a raving maniac. Besides the bullet in the breast-, which made the death wound, three bullets entered his abdomen and one his left leg. The boy when he began shooting threw his overcoat over his father's face. Judge Hargis was County Judge for many years, had made many friends and was a political power. The Cockrills, Cardwells and Mar cuses stood in his way. Marcus, a young attorney, headed a contest to the election of Hargis and Ed. Calla han, which started the Hargis-Cock rill feud, which almost bankrupted Hargis, and was blamed fox many killings. Judge Hargis inspected the stock j of the National Casket Company "at' Louisville, recently, and asked to be shown the most elaborate coffins the company had in stock. Nothing suited him, and he finally ordered one along his own ideas, costing; $1500. ' The following telegram was sent to; the company: ; "Express to-day coffin selected by James Hargis, as he is dead. "MRS. JUDGE JAMES HARGIS." ! _______ $20,005.81 FOR FALSE HINT. Peale, Peacock & Kerr Win Their Suit Aaginst Boston Financier. Boston.?A verdict of $20,005.81 against John M. Graham, president of the International Trust Company, was returned by a jury in the United States Circdit Court in an action brought by Peale, Peacock & Kerr, a New York coal company, to recover $30,000 from President Graham for alleged false and fraudulent repre sentations regarding the financial condition of the Thomas & Pike Coal Company, of Boston, which went into bankruptcy in May, 1906. The New York firm alleged that, as a result of representation by Presi dent Graham, it delayed to press its claim for $35,505.81 against the Tho mas & Pike Coal Company. It also declared that the International Trust Pnmnanv was enabled by said delay to recover full payment of claims against the Thomas & Pike Coal Com pany amounting to $68,500. CAID MACLEAN'S RANSOM ?20,000 Raisuli Surrenders the English Cap tive He Held Seven Months. Tangier, Morocco.?Caid, Sir Harry MacLean, commander of the Sultan's bodyguard, and next to the Sultan the most influential man in Morocco, arrived here under an escort from the bandit Raisuli, who has held him under bondage for seven months. He was brought here in accordance with an agreement which the British Government finally succeeded in mak ing with Raisuli for his release, in re turn for which Great Britain will pay ?20,000 to Raisuli and guarantee him protection and immunity from arrest. Ex-Slave Buries Old Master. Lewis Reynolds, eighty-six years old, who once owned 200 slaves and a large cotton plantation near Ruston, La., died penniless, and was buried uy Uliver l^ewis, a. uegiu, vmu uc longed to Reynolds in slavery times. The aged planter had been nursed and cared for by the negro three years. Monument to Confederates. The President told a committee at Washington, D. C., representing the Arlington Confederate Monument As sociation, that he was heartily in favor of the plan to erect a monument to the Confederate dead at Arlington. Number of Employes Increases. Industrial conditions improve slow ly, yet there is some increase each week in the number of operatives em ployed in the factories and mills. Returned After Twenty Years. Sir Genille Cave-Browne-Cave, twelfth baronet of his line, left New York City for England to assume the title and estates descending to him by the death of his father, Sir Mylles, after not having communicated with his family for nearly twenty years. German Treasurer Resigned. Freiherr Von Stengel, Secretary of the Imperial Treasury of Germany, resigned, his retirement being due to the financial questions which remain unsettled. The World of Sport. Women are allowed to attend prize fights in Paris, and they do so in great numbers. "Big Chief" Bender has signed with the Athletics. Pie won fifteen games in a row last season. En Sue, a Chinaman, ran fifty yards in 5 1-5 seconds at Honolulu, Hawaii, hreakinsr the American rec or.1. The current report of the Ken tucky State Racing Association shows that in two years the Kentucky tracks have paid out nearly $4,000,000 to successful horsemen. ?Striking cartoon drawn by Horn EMBEZZLERS BR! Employers' Money and Trust Fu makers--Trail of Crime t Gambling Furnishe the Tide Total Defalcations ] 1901 * 1903 X 1904 i 1905 t 1908 J 1907 I EMBEZZLEMENT | 1907 New York City.?Analyses < officers of the surety companies, crimes to their source, disclose r this form of robbery. The figures for the past eig thirty-five per cent, as a modera ments attributable to the luring access to other people's money. Of the $1,476,273 embfezzlei ty-two per cent., wa3 traced to th makers, and the facts as to man lacking. These doubtless would gambling on horse races. USE ELECTRIC! Novel Method Adopted Formosan San Francisco.?Ths exterminal of savage, murderous head hun 'by electricity is the latest novelty troduced by the Japanese in I mosa, according to Walter Clifl manager of a Formosan mercan company, who arrived here recei on the Japanese liner America Mi "These head hunters," said C ton, "number about one hund thousand and infest the entire e era coast of the island. All effi to civilize them have failed. T WOULD USE JAII I oieao Juage uamers ncn uco Determinate Toledo, Ohio.?James Austin, a police judge, of Toledo, haa. ,J finished a sentence of one day in city workhouse, imposed by him while on the bench this week. Ju Austin has been anxious to le from experience the exact meanini a workhouse sentence, and arraig himself on a technical charge of ' riosity," going to the workhouse the patrol wagon the same as a c< mon prisoner. "As I stood handcuffed ready get into the patrol wagon with crowd of Market Square loafers m ng fun of me and of my situatic he said, after his experience, "I simply enduring what I had s many a poor victim have to suffei days gone by. The time I spenl my own society in the cell has re fied my former views of time, fc know there are more than sixty n utes in an hour when you spend t hour in a cell, with nothing to smc chew, drink, read or write, and c the slant of the shadows in the eel let you know what time it is. found our workhouse well wari and scrupulously ctean, the f ?1?rUp-niiiUno firm WUUlCOUiliC uuu lug Uiov-ipiiiAo kind. All Cheerful. "I was impressed with the unif< cheerfulness of the inmates; it minded me of the happiness of i sponsible children," he contini "When we went out to cut ice chosen men obeyed, but did not si to go with alacrity. The thought the prisoners seemed centred on ting out. They did not appear tc anxious for work. In fact, in winter time our workhouse is a i nomer, through no fault of the cials. It is our loafing place, our 1 bor and haven of rest for the dere of society. "If all the workhouses are < ducted on the humane principles the Toledo workhouse a workhc Our Marines and Infantry Cover 25 Miles in Cuba in 10 Ho Havana.?Five companies of rines and three compauies of Twenty-seventh Infantry, proceec for target practice to Guana marched on Saturday twenty miles Detween b o ciock in iae m< Ing and 4 o'clock in the afterni with hourly halts of ten minutes an hour for dinner. They trav< | at the rate of a kilometer in ten ai ! half minutes, which is considered ceptionally good work for Ameri< in the tropics. Newsy Gleanings. A grip epidemic prevails in W; Ington. Our money system is the wors t.h? world, according to Chain Fowler. Lord Londonderry accused British Liberal Government of c ardice in dealing with Ireland. Justice Gaynor told the Peoj Forum at New Rochelle that courts were abusing their power. It was revealed at a court trial only three keepers guard 700 pri i ers in the New York Tombs at nij UT\ n AT DAfF TD A rtfQ LjU UlN unuij i iinuiij nds Used to Fill the Satchels of the Bcok .eads to the Betting Rings, Where ' s the Incentive For Theft. OF EMBEZZLEMENT. J Reported in the United States, t .$7,734,250 t 6,933,510 t 20,312,793 T. 10,068,971 ' 12,623,536 18,883,709 9,367,964 ? :S IN NEW YORK STATE. J $1,476,273 J Df the records of embezzlement by fidelity the men best competent to trace these ace track gambling as the chief cause of ;ht years have led to the acceptance of te estimate of the proportion of embezzle into the betting rings of men who have d in this State in 1907, $446,081, or thir e fat and bulging satchels of the book y of the individual embezzlements are increase the amount of stealing due to ITY OIN SAVAGES by Japanese to Exterminate i Mead hunters. recently inveigled a party of three hundred Chinese and Japanese into an ambush, on the pretence of show ing some treasure, and killed all but three. ''Large bodies of troops were sent out, and now when a company of head hunters Is located the place is surrounded by a wire fence. The wires are charged with electricity. The soldiers begin to shoot; the savages stampede, and then the dead ly wires get those that the bullets miss." L INSTEAD OF PINES s by Spending Day as Common Prisoner Sentence Not Favored. sentence is not a harsh punishment. Time is the only thing we have in common, and I have the conviction that the equitable punishment for crime would be the abolition of fines and the imposing of imprisonment under the indeterminate sentence. Let the time for liberty depend upon the reformation of the prisoner. - Desire For Freedom Helps. "The strong natural desire for free dom will give the incentive and fur nish the hope for the desired refor mation. It is rank folly to throw into a common prison the first offen der, the vagrant, the drunkard and tne naraenea ana eonnrmea cnmiuu and expect a reformation. Your rot ten apples will taint your whole bar rel. "In the workhouse I saw many men who were warmer, better fed and freer from care; in brief, better off than many an honest, poor man of family outside out of work and de pendent upon a niggardly public char ity for his support, i would not be less humane to the prisoner, but I would be more generous to the man who is willing to suffer and remain honest. "The workhouse should have sep arate departments, the inmates clas sified and the different grades kept apart from one another. All should have to work. Promotion from a low er to a better grade should be made for good conduct, satisfactory work and proven betterment. Increase the privileges aa the prisoner ascends in grade and at the end have your work farm and manual training depart j. m ? mif intrt H16I1L. A UrU vuui [Jiisuuci uut ?uvv the world able to do some honest work, get him a place to work or see that he has the means to live an hon est life till he obtains employment and the great problem and danger of society, the recidivist, the constantly recurring criminal, will be in pre ?ss of a rational solution." Predicts War With Japan, Does French Lecturer at Harvard. Boston.?Andre Tardieu, editor of the Paris Temps, now delivering the series of lectures at Harvard, said: "War is imminent, but while I do not think that the present internal conditions would permit Japan to rush into a war in the next three months with this country, I am cer eled tain that if an agreement governing id a Japanese immigration is not reached ex- soon the little brown men will be ;ans quick to seize the opportunity to teach the proud Westerners a lesson." The Field of Labor. ash- Important labor contracts expire this spring. t in A movement is on foot in Australia man to form a Newspaper Reporters' TTnlnn A branch of the Canadian labor party has been formed in London, England. The strike of boiler makers against the railroads in Minnesota has been declared off. Products to the amount of $35, 000,000 annually are manufactured by prison convicts in the United States. Doctor, in Oread of Homicidal I Mania, Killed Himself. Physician, Told That He Was Going ! I Mad, Took Poison?Left Letters in Wifn nnri Children. Utica, N. Y.?The ^details of the suicide in Malone a few days ago of j Dr. Stacy Dwight Williamson, a lead- I ing physician of that community, re-1 veal that, prompted by eipert medi-! cal opinion that he was rapidly de veloping homicidal insanity and that in an unguarded moment he might attack his two small children or his beautiful young wife, the doctor made his will, dressed himself for the grave and swallowed a quantity of morphine, which caused his death. Dr. Williamson had a very lucra tive practice, was a leader in golf and automobile circles in Malone and with his wife moved in exclusive so cial circles. He was of a jovial dispo sition until a year ago, when he was seized with a fit of melancholy and confided to his wife that his mother and another relative had died of hom icidal insanity and expressed the fear that he, too, would meet such a fate. Last summer he appeared to shake off his melancholy spell, golf, auto ing and outdoor sports and a tour of camp service with a National Guard company accomplishing a great deal toward this end. This winter, however, he devel oped another moody spell, and two weeks ago informed his wife that he was going to consult two of the phy sicians at the Ogdensburg State Hos pital with a view to ascertaining whether or not he was doomed to in sanity. Leaving his practice in the care of another Malone physician Dr. Williamson took a morning train over to Ogdensburg, and in the evening he returned with a message that shattered hops in his household. His medical friends at the Ogdensburg State Hospital had Informed him af ter a careful examination that his worst fears would eventually be real ized and that he was liable to become violently insane without a moment's warning. Dr. Williamson's mind was quickly made up as to his course of proced ure. One morning several days later he arose in apparently better spirits than usual, summoned his coachman and made calls on such of his patients as needed his immediate attention. Then he drove home, wrote letters to his wife and each of his' children, telling them he was doomed to insan ity and preferred death to existence in a madhouse, also mentioning their peril as long as he remained unre strained. Dr. Williamson then went to his sleeping apartments, took a bath, shaved himself, attired himself in his best clothing, swallowed a dose of ttu ?;#? morpmne ana lay on a ueu. ms wuc found him there a few momenta af terward, and despite his assurance that he was not ill she summoned three physicians. They cime prompt ly, but Dr. Williamson Informed them that their services were useless, that he had taken poison and would be dead in half an hour. Then he kissed his wife and children good-bye, as suring them he had done the proper thing, lapsed into unconsciousness and died in just half an hour, aa he bad said he would. FIVE SHOT TO DEATH. Wealthy Man and Four Women Vic tims in Quiet English Village. London.?The little Buckingham Tillage of Fawley was shocked by the discovery o* a quintuple murder. The scene of tho tragedy was the resi dence of F. H. Holmes, who was known to be wealthy. A gardener who was working out Bide the house alarmed at its unusual quietness so late in the morning en tered and found successively tho bod ies of two women servants, Mrs. Holmes and her daughter, all lying in bed in different rooms. Each had been shot in the heac. Later the body of Holmes was found in a nearby wood. He, too, had been shot in the head. The po lice so far are unable to decide whether he killed the women and then committed suicldc, or whether all five were shot by some person un- a known. TO KILL 15,000 WILD HOUSES. Orders Issued to Wipe Out Pest ou Government Lands in Nevada. Reno, Nev.?0rder3 have been sent ont by the Forestry Department in structing the rangers on the Toelyabe, the. Toquima and the Kouitor re serves. in Lander County, to kill all wild horses found on the Government domain. There are about 15,000 wild horses on the reserves. They are doing much damage to vegetation aud at tracting domestic animals to their herds. STANDARD OIL'S APPEAL. Case of $29,210,000 Fine to IJo Ar gued in April, It is Espccied. Chicago.?The appeal of the Stand ard Oil Comoany of Indiana from the fine of $29,240,000 imposed by Juige Landis will be argued, it is expected, before Judges Grosscup, Baker and 1 Seaman early in the April term of r the Court of Appeals. t The record of the case has just ^ been given to the Government law- ? yers. . c Mrs. Eddy's Niece Killed. At Reyolite, Nev., Mrs. Isabel Hesketc, who was killed by Fred ( Skinner, alias Fred Davis, who shot himself, was a niece of Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy, according to her hus band, C. C. I-Ieskett. t Quarrel at a College. | Sixty-five students cf Bethany Col lage, at Bellaire. Ohio, have q; t be- ( cause the faculty expelled fifteen for t burning an effigy of President Ram- . Women in the Day's News. Mrs. George B. McClellan. mo'1' :r 1 of the Mayor of New York City, is a 1 great favorite at Nice, Italy. Many messages of sympathy were 1 sent to Queen Amelie of Portugal a from all the capitals of Europe. More than 6000 women are em- j1 ninvpd in the Russian Secret Service. , Some draw a salary of ?2000 a year. 4 Lady Rosemary Cairns is declared j to be the handsomest girl in London's c younger set. She is but eighteen rj years old and is the only daughter of ?c Arthur William, the second Earl ct j Cairns, who died in IS90; Military Company of Thirty Over come by Mississippi Farmers. it lirooir Jtiavcn -uuu vitizuns Clubbed Off With Guns Mako a Second Charge. Brook Haven, Miss.?Eli Pigot, a legro, who criminally assaulted Miss Williams, a young white woman, was aken from a military company and a )0sse of deputies and hanged from a eJegraph pole. Pigot was brought here from Jack on during the morning by Sheriff frank Greer and the Capital Light Juards, thirty strong; who were or Lered out by Governor Noel to pro ect the negro during trial. The mob lad begun to assemble before day ight in wagons, on horseback and talking. .It included some of the Qost prominent farmers in Lincoln Jounty. When the train arrived here were more than 2000 men at he station. No attempt at conceal nent was made and not a man wore . mask. A rush was made at the soldiers, he mob using fists. The troops beat hem back with the butts of their ifles and took up the march to the Jourt House, but the mob, now much arger, surrounded the soldiers and wept down upon them. The com n<in/l uraa crivpn tn fire bv CaDtain A. LIUAAVl Tf MW O* ' -? AT j. Sairley, of the military, and two aen dropped slightly wounded, but he soldiers were swept from their eet and the negro dragged away. The hanging too.k place close to the Jourt House, where the negro was bout to be tried, and was seen by udge Wilkinson, who had come to tear the case. MANY MILLS REOPENING. thousands of Men at Work After Weeks of Idleness. Cleveland, Ohio.?Between 5000 nd 6000 men returned to work at he Lorain plant of the National 'ube Company. The plant of the imerican Steel and Wire Company at lalem, Ohio, resumed double-turn perations. Three mills of the Stark tolling Mill Company, at Canton, >hlo, resumed. The B. F. Goodrich Lubber Company has added 250 men rithin the last few weeks. Zanesville, Ohio.?The tube plant f the Mark Manufacturing Company, mploying 700 men, resumed work, nd the Roseville Pottery, employing 00, resumed on half time. Chicago. ? The plate, slab and tructural mills of the Illinois Steel lompany opened, giving employment a 2000 men. Before the end of the reek, according to W. A. Field, the eneral superintendent of the works, 000 more men will be put to work. Naugatuck, Conn.?Nine hundred mployes in the grinding department f the Goodyear Metallic Rubber roods Company and the Goodyear ndia Rubber Glove Company\ re urned to work. Before the end of he week the plants will be running a full force. Biddeford, Me.'? The Pepperell lanufacturing Company decided to esume full time in the local cotton lills. ' About 4000 operatives are af ected. i Maiden, Mass. ? More than 1000 peratives returned to work upon the eoperiirig of the Fells factory of the toston Rubber Shoe Company in thiB ity. Providence, R. I.?The 1700 em loyes of the Gorham Manufacturing ' nnfifiaH that- thp full ' U 111 pdU/ VTCI C UUVlUwu VMMW chedule would be in operation here fter. Manchester, N.- H. ? It was an tounced at the Amoskeag Mills that he mills will resume their schedule n full time. TOWN IS BANKRUPT. {eceiver Appointed For Historical , Cahokia, 111. Belleville, 111.?The village of Ca tokia. the oldest settlement in Illi iois, has been placed in the hands ol , receiver. This is the first time in he history of the State that such ction has been taken against a town >r city. Judge B. R. Burroughs, presiding a the Circuit Court, appointed F. B. tforrills, of Eelleville, as receiver ipon the petition of the Federal Jnion Security Company, of Indian .polis. The court order results from an iffort to readjust the affairs of the 'illa'se. which were entangled a3 a esult of the alleged failure of Super visor Anthony Bordeaux, who served he village from 1882 to 1S92, tc urn over to Camilla Droit, his suc essor, $20,000 collected in rentals. Cahokia, the first white settlement n Illinois, was built up around the nission established by the Jesuit fathers in 1700. The village was aken under the wings of the Virginia Sovernment in 17S1 as the result ol m expedition of Old Dominion sol Hers under the leadership of Colonel )lark and Captain Bowman. Morse Indicted For Grand Larceny. Two indictments, one of them ai east charging grand larceny, were eturned against Charles W. Mors? >y the special Grand Jury, in New fork City, which has bean investi ,rating financial matters coming un- , ler jurisdiction of the State courts. I TTkT> A TRTTST TVDICTED. Dharged With Conspiring to Rcduct Price of Raw Tobacco. Lexington, Ky.?The Fayette Coun- , y Grand Jury indicted the American ' Tobacco Company on a charge of con- I (piracy to reduce the price of raw i .obacco. This indictment is the direct rosuH )f Circuit Judge Parker's order tc he Grand Jury to investigate tar obacco situation in this region. About Noted People. The latest form of sport to which \ing Alfonso of Spain has devoted limself is polo. The Archbishop of Canterbury. 2ns;land. is one of the most remark- j ible of chess players. Henry Clews is in demand as a < neakei on the financial situation and j ho lessons of the panic. Andrew Carnegie has pledged 5200.000 to Berea. the mountain co!* ege in Eastern Kentucky. With the 'xceptiou of the $000,000 given to Puskegee, this is Mr. Carnegie's larg st single gift to Southern education, esed nine-hour agreement N The Barber and Emancipation. "Well, you see," said Lincoln once, "we have got to be mighty cautious how we manage the nsgro question. If we're not we shall be like the bar- ' .. ber out in Illinois who was shaving a ' . fellow with a hatchet face and lan- , tern jaws like mine. "The barber put his finger in hia customer's mouth to make his cheeka stick out, but while shaving away he cut through the fellow's face and cut off his own finger. If we don't play % smart about the negro we shall do aa *' the barber did." School of Window Dressing. Although the Viennese shop win dows are generally considered to be the mo3t artistically arranged of aiy capital in Europe, the tradesmen complain of the increasing difficulty they experience in getting first-class artists for this work. A special win- . ' dow dressing school is now to be established, says the London Globe, in which young men and women may obtain a thorough technical training in this branch of shop-keeping. How the Japanese Workman Live3. The Japanese laborer receives poor 4 wages, but his fofod Is very cheap. He subsists mainly on coarse rice, of which he has one meal a day. Some times, by way of a change, he has the heads of fish or the lnsides of fowls instead. He has water to drink, but on festive occasions he has sake, the wine of Japan, which tastes somer thing like sherry. He also has to pay for a mat to sleep on at night' 1 ' PURE FOOD No Food Commissioner of any State \ has ever attacked the' absolute . Xj purity of Grape-Nuts. ' Every analyst undertaken show# \ this food to be made strictly of Wheat I and Barley, treated by our processes to partially transform the starch /./ ] parts into a form of Sugar, and there fore much easier to digest. Our claim that it is a "Food for Brain and 'Nerve Centres'Ms" baserf upon the fact that certain parts o 5 Wheat and Barley (which we use) contain Nature's brain- and nerve building'ingredients, viz., Phosphate of Potash, and the way we prepare ] the food makes It easy to digest and 1 assimilate. Dr. Geo. W. Carey in his book on ' "The Biochemic System of Medietas" says: "When the medical profession fully understands the nature and range of \ the phosphate of potassium, insane y asylums will no longer be needed. i ;v "The gray matter of the bratn is \ controlled entirely by the inorganic cell-salt, potassium phosphate. "This salt unites with altramen, and by the addition of oxygen creates nerve-fluid, or the gray matter of the brain. [ "Of course, there is a trace of other \ ] salts and other organic matter In JI nerve-fluid, but potassium phosph&t* / J is the chief factor, and has the power within itself to attract, by Its own V law of affinity, all things needed to I manufacture the elixir of life. There- 1 fore, when nervous symptoms arise, \ due to the fact that the nerro4l?I<l has been exhausted from any cause, the phosphate of potassium is the only true remedy, because nothing else can possibly supply the de ficiency. "The ills arising from too rapidly consuming the gray matter of the JM brain cannot be overestimated. vH "Phosphate of Potash, is to my V mind, the most wonderful curative ' agent ever discovered by man* and the blessings It has already conferred on the race are many. But 'what shall the harvest be* when physicians ' everywhere fully understand the part ' this wonderful salt plays in the pro cesses 01 llie'f n wm ao as mucu as can be done through physiology to "" make a heaven on earth. "Let the overworked business man take ft and go home good-tempered. Let the weary wife, nerves unstrung from attending to sick ehfldren or en tertaining company, take it and not? how quickly the equilibrium will bG restored and calm and reason assert her throne. No 'provings' are re quired here. We And this potassium . salt largely predominates in nerve fluid, and that a deficiency produces well-defined symptoms. The begin ning and end of the matter is to sup ply the lacking principle, and is molecular form, exactly as nature furnishes it in vegetables, fruits and grain. To supply deficiencies?this 1b , the only law of cure." Please observe that Phosphate ol Potash is not properly of the drug shop variety but is best prepared bj "Old Mother Nature" and stored in the grains ready for use by mankind. Those who have been helped to Detter health by the use of Grape-Nuts are legion. , "There's a Reason." BRAIN POWER < 4 Increased by Proper Feeding. 1 A lady writer who not only haa done good literary work, but reared . a family, found fn Grape-Nuts the ] ideal food for brain work and 1.o de velop healthy children. She writes: , "I am an enthusiastic proclaimer of ( Grape-Nuts as a regular diet. 1 for- * merly had no appetite in the morning ' and for 8 years while nursing my four children, had insufficient nourishment for them. "Unable to eat breakfast I felt faint later, and would go to the pantry and eat cold chops, sausage, cookies, doughnuts or anything I happened to find. Being a writer, at times my j head felt heavy and my brain asleep. "When I read of Grape-Nuts I be nnfinor it ouarv mnrnirf nlsn gave it to the children, including my 10 months old baby, v<ho sopn grew as fat as a little pig, good natured. and contented. "I wrote evenings and feeling the need of sustained brain power, began eating a small saucer of Grape-Nuts with milk, instead of my usual indi gestible hot pudding, pie, or cake for dessert at night. "I grew plump, nerves strong, and when 1 wrote my brain was active and clear; indeed, the dull head pain never returned." POSTUM CEREAL CO., Ltd., BatMe Creek, Mich.