FORT MILL TIMES.
VOL. XIV. FORT MILL, S. C., WEDNESDAYJDECEVIBEIi 20,1905. . PfO.39.
^ ; "
THE WORK OF CONGRESS
What Oar National Law Makers Arc
Doing Day by Day.
Rp.to Bill By Tillman.
With spirited debates on 1he subjects
of railroad rate legislation, arising
through the introduction of a hill
by Mr. Tillman to authorize the inter- '
state comeree commission to li\ maximum
rates, and the Panama Canal,
due to a controversy over the reference
of the emergency appropriation
hill to a committee Monday's session
of tic Senate continuously proved interesting
for more than four hours.
An adjournment was taken without a
mention of the late Senator "Mitchell,
of Oregon, and so for the Hist time
the death ?i a member was permitted
to pass unnoticed bv the Senate.
After more than a score of Senators
had discussed the Panama Canal bill
it was refered to the appropriation?
committee by a vote of 40 to 'Jib
Hon so Committees.
The addition o ' a Republican member
to all of the important committees
of tt.< House lias enabled Speaket
Cannon to solve the dilTieult problem
of committee assignments in a mattei
wl:i"h npepars most satisfactory to
both parties in the House. Only two
important chairmanships were vacant.
npp:opriations and public hniblinns
and rounds. In filling the former,
th? 'Speaker followed ]>recedent and
look" 1 the whole House for the available
material, .lames A. Tawnev, ol
IMi-.n.. was chosen chai'iuan of appropriations.
and Richard Hartholdt. of
Missouri, chairman of public buildin
its and grounds.
The minority committee places
were decided on by Mr. Williams, the
minority leader. The chamres of note
are the transfer of Shackelford. (Mo.)
and Lamar. (Kla.) from the interState
and forehrn commerce committee
and the substitution in their places
of Hartleys, (<la.) and Russell, (Tex.)
Messrs. Cnderwood, (Ala.) and
Granger, (R. 1.) wer named for the
Democratic vacanieies on ways and
means.
Brief Session of Senate.
The open session of the Senate
woo 1\1M o r mil
> uvn.a < ..till. UUC Will \\ ilS JIMSSed.
Mr. Taliaferro took the oath of office
for his new term as a Senator.
He was escorted by his colleague, Mr.
Mallory, before the vice-president,
who administered the oath. In the
executive session Senator Ixnlge moved
to send hack to the committee on
foreign relations the treaty in relation
jo Santo Domingo affairs. Opposit
i m developed, and w<t!?out explaining
his reasons for asking for
the consideration of the treaty again
by th ? committee, Senator Lodge withdrew
his motion. Senator Morgan
said that before any nmenmeuts wen
voted upon or the treaty itself was
discussed, it was desirable to have
? further information as to what had
been done during the recess of the
Senate. If the provisions of the
treaty " had boon carried out before
the treaty had been ratified it Avns
desirable to know why such action
had been taken and by what authority.
While the liovering joint resolution,
directing the Secretary of Agriculture
to furnish certain information concerning
the cotton crop is not taken
very seriously as a piece of prospective
legislation, a number of people
will doubtless bo interested in the provisions
of the bill, and it is therefore
given:
1.0VML* 1 N( 1 'S RESO 1.1 TI(IV
Whereas, the estimate of the {Trowing
cotton crop made and published
by the Agricultural Pt' part men t on
December fourth indicated a total production
in the United States for the
season of nineteen hundred and live
one ninctenn hundred and six of ten
null inn one hundred and sixty-seven
thousand eiirht hundred and eighteen
hales of five Imndred pounds each,
irross weiirht ; and
Whereas the census returns of the
cotton sfinnod in the various States
up to the tirst of December nineteen
hundred and tivc, show that in the
minxes >i i\ortli Carolina, South Carolina.
Georgia and Oklahoma the yield
lor the entire season as estimated by >
I lie Agrieultural Department had been
nioie than ginned; and
W i -rcas neither the picking nor
tin* ginning of eotton in the State
name; . . r in any other of the eotton
prod ! in : States of tin* United State's
is c- ni;:! t-sl by the first *> 1 Docember,
and that therefore tlie estimate
% 1
of th' Agricultural Department as i
to th yield of cotton in the States
named is plainly nn understanding
and likely to mislead, and damage the i
cotton interests of the United States; i
and
Whereas, in various other States ?
where the picking and ginning is '
known not to have 'progressed toward
completion even as fully as in the four
States named the amount of eotton
ginned up to the first of December 1
sh -w- that the Agric iltural Depart- . i
men'-'s estimate of the yield is nnquesH?""v.blv
nn underestimate: r.nd i
Whereas it is a matter of the first i
in ..tan t< the people of the United i
Sr .ats that they he supplied with a I
more accurate estimate of this sea
son's cotton crop; Therefore he it
Resolved by the Senate and Honso
of Representatives of the Vnited
States of America in Congress assi nthled
that the Secretary of Agriculture
is directed to proceed immediately to
collect such data as may, in his opinion
be necessary for r more correct
estimate of the season's crop, and
to publish the same on the tenth day
of January, nineteen hundred and six,
together with a full and complete
statement of the method l?y which the
estimate is arrived at, and of the details
of the various reports comprising
said estimate
Sec 'J That the sum of twenty
thousand dollars is hereby appropriated
out of any money in the treasury
not otherwise appropriated, as a special
fund to defray the expenses of
collecting and publishing such a revised
report.
The Senate spent four hours Thursday
in discussing the Panama Canal
emergency appropriation hill, and
when it adjourned the hill was still
under consideration*. Tluwo ? ?...?
speeches hy Messrs. Teller, Scott and
Morgan, asnl tliey were followed by
a general debate in which nil pliazes
of the controversy were exploited.
A separate hill regulating the issuance
of bonds foi the canal and
placing them on the same basis as
other government bonds, was passed
without tie bate.
The Republican members of the
House, in caucus Monday unanimously
declared in favor of admitting Oklahoma
and the Indian Territory as
one State and by a vote of 11(1 to Go
declared in favor of admitting Arizona
and New Mexico as one State. Roth
Statehood (piestions are to be contained
in one bill. The only opposition
to the program was directed
against joining Arizona and New Mexico.
Rebate on the recommendation in
the' President *s annual message regarding
insurance regulation occupied
the House again Thursday without a
break.
The House then adjourned.
The Panama Canal was again under
consideration by the Senate Friday
and Mr. Tillman occupied the
entire time given to that subject except
when he gave way to (piestions
from or interrupted by other Senators.
He did not indicate any intention of
opposing the passage of the appropriation
of opposing the passage of
the appropriation bill, but lie critiscd
1 lin nwdlmJu i lw? *1
, ,.v .... 'I IH\ x .tiiiii
in many r?t' ils transactions. When
the Senate adjourned the hill was still
pending, hut there was an agreement
for a vote Saturday.
Tin* House devoted four and threequarter
hours to a lively debate on
the possibilities of controlling insurance
companies. No conclusion was
reached on the committee reference
of the insurance feature of the President's
message which is the matter
under consideration, and the debate
will uroeeed Saturday.
Receiver for Railroads. ..
Cineinnatti. Special.?An application
for the ap])ointmeiit of a receiver
for the Cincinnatti, Hamilton & Dayton
Railway and the Pere Marquette
Railroad was filed in the United
States Circuit Court here by Lawrence
Maxwell, Jr., circuit Judge
Lorton immediately began hearing the
application and appointed Attoney
General Judson Harmon as receiver
for both roads. Insolvency is admitted.
Confirem as Public Printer.
Washington, Special.?The Senate
in executive session confirmed the following
nominations:
Charles A. Stillintrs. MnrannlmonUs
to be Public Printer.
Henry W. Furniss, Indiana, minster
ta Hnati.
Postmasters:
Georgia?Rntledgc A. Griffin, Quitman;
Thomas K. Hensohn, Sylvester;
Walter I. Cooper, Sylvania.
Alabama?Ella G. Nix, Fort Payne.
South Carolina?Wm. C. Brown,
Bolton.
Witte is Interviewed.
London, By Cable.?The correspondent
of The Daily Telegraph at St.
Petersburg, in a dispatch dated December
1 > by way of Eydtkuhnen,
sends an in; rview with Count Witte,
in which the Premier indicates that
Russia is nfronted with the altcriiative
of a revolution or violent coercion.
T >i;_:h the count has not abandon:
d 1 <| . he is not sanguine, and
if t< rcihle repression should become
l.ni'owo.ii'11 r -
i, nTTTTrmTlg X(> 1 lie
correspondent, resign bis task to other
bands.
Persians Threaten to Invade Turkey.
Constantinople, I?y Cable.-?Trouble j
is threatening on the Turko-Persian I
frontier at )>oints which have never I
been exactly <leliraited. Five thousand
armed Persians threaten to invade
and tak(? possession i>f n strip
of territory the Vilayet of Mosul
claimed by Turkey. Two hatallions
of Ottoman troops with three guns
have.been despatched to repel the invasion.
\Vri
/ MI'
* Eh&I
RECANVASS OF BALLOTS
New York State Courts of Appeals
Sustains Contentions of ExJudge
Parker for Mayor Mc'Clellan That
Election Law Does Not Empower
Courts to Grant Mandamus for Recanvass
of Balots.
Albany, N. Y., Special.?The Court
af Appeals, in a decision handed ?lowu
Wednesday in the New York city ballot
box case, sustains the contention
jf counsel for Mayor George It.
McClelland and denies that of attorneys
for William Randolph Hearst
and bis colleagues on the Municipal
OwnersY|? League ticket. The court
holds, as was argued by former
Chief .Iml'rn Pai'l-ni' ??,.! l.Jo
eiates, that Hie courts have no power
under the election law to order by
mandamus the opening of the ballot
boxes and a recount and re-canvass
of ballotsl The case relates directly
<o the vote for mayor, eoiuptroler
and president of the board of alderman
east in the second election of New
York county at the election of November
7. last, but is of the utmost
imoprtance in Mr. Hearst's contest
for the mayoralty of New York city,
and is fundan ental 111 it> effect upon
tl.e olecvrial system of this State under
the present e'*.ction law. The de?-ir-i-.:i
was vc ?!.' .I by a d'.v n?*ii
Cfitri. f vc to t w >.
Thomas F. Ryan told the insurance
investigating committee what K. H.
llarrimati said to him when lie learned
of the purchase of the llvdc stock
in the Kquitable and demanded to be
let in on the deal, and United States
Senator Dryden detailed the operations
of the l'rudential Life Insurance
Company of which he is president.
The gist of the majority of opinions
is that the courts arc "without power
or authority to order a recount of the
ballots cast in the election district,"
and that therefore the candidates defeated
on the face of the returns are
"left to such action at law, or otherwise,
as liny be appropriate wherein
to question it, as to the ballote counted
without question.'
The dissent ing judges lmhl that the
purpose of the Legislature in the election
law in commanding the prescvalion
for six months of the h;ill??t?
and other documents relating? to nil
election was ninnit'esly for the purpose
of having; them avnilahle for a
recount. If this is not to he permitted
under the present law, they say
"a new election law cannot be to?i
soon drafted and enacted,"
Miss Alice's Engagement.
Washington, Special.?Formal announcement
has been made by tin
President and Mrs. ltoosevelt of tin
engagement of their daughter, Aliet
Lee Roosevelt, to Nieholas Lungwort h
Representative in Congress from thf
tirst district of Ohio, one of the Cincinnati
districts. Coupled with the
announcement of the engagement is
the additional announcement that the
wedding will take place about the
midelle of next February. While arrangements
for the wedding have not
been made, it is expecteel that it wLV
occur at the white house.
Merriwether Sentenced.
Washington, Special.?('ontinement
to the limits of the Naval Acad?tnj
for the period of one year and a public
reprimand by the Secretary of the
Navy is the sentence of the court ir
the ease of Midshipman Minor Meriwether,
Jr., tried l?v court martin* at
Annapolis on charges of mnnsIniigUtci
violation of the third clause of tlu
eighth article for the government ol
the navy, and conduct to the prejudice
of good order and discipline; all
three charges arising from a fist fiMil
net ween the accused and Midshipman
James R. Branch. Jr., on November 5.
Inst. Two days later Midshipman
Branch died.
Locomotive Works Doubled.
Richmond, Special.? Preparations
are beim* made to enlarge the Richmond
plant of the American Locomotive
work- to almost double its present
capacity. The plant is now working
day and ni'/ld with a force o(
about 'J.4ilit men. It has lan;e orders
1'or locomotives and will erect new
Jill il/l iixx ! ..iw.,.
Fivs Men Blown to Atoms.
Birmingham, Ala.. Special.?The
mixing house, or upper shop "punching"
department of the Dupont powder
mills, located eight miles north of
Birmingham, blew up and jive men met
a horrible death. The explosion was
heard for 1"> miles. The men who were
killed were employed in the mixing
department, and while it has been
tlio rule not to allow much powder
or dynamito in these separate rooms,
thero was enough to blow the buid1
ing into smithereens.
L
| DIVJtlKSJ.-k'JLO/iTi.Otf VS. OV?R1
. PRODUCTION.
Thi' Southern Oott on Association
will not ask tin? fnrnii: s of tlie South
to reduce tlu? cotton a ere aire tor 1!MH>
Ices than that planted in 1!>'> "?. The
Association i'.ocs ask am! insist with
all the inter at its command that the
average planted in cotton thmuirliout
the holt in 1!'(V> l?r not increased during
the plant ins; season of !!)ii!i. Let
the watchword of every Southern farmer
lie Diversification, ami throusrh
that aireney proilnee an abundance of
food supplies to maintain each farm.
Permanent iiidepeudehee.1 thrift and
prosperity can only be enjoyed by
Southern cotton ';rnw .fs through the
adoption and maintenance of a system
which will make each farm selfsustaining.
It is the only medium
through which the present iniquitious
credit system which has so lonir held
our peojle in bomhure. can be effectively
broken up and relegated to the
' i # :- ?i i .i .
I-II.-.I. >1 1.-. nil- ?uu\ ..iriMllIIl IlllTHl^ll
which tin* great masses of cotton produccrs
can ever hope to control the
sale ot' their cotton i:i the lnarkels
of the country and force consumers
ami buyers to pay them fair and just
prices for the stap' \ Any system
which forces the producer to market
his crops rapidly in order to meet maturing
nhli'.rations to pay for supplies
that could he more cheaply raised at
home will ever tend to make a slave
of the grower, minimizing the rights
of manhood whieh every Southern cotton
raiser should enjoy to the fullest
extent.
Over-Production a Serious Menace.
In sprint;, l'Htd, a erisis serious and
potential faced the cotton growers of
the South hy reason of over-production
of cotton in 15)04. The Southern
Cotton Association at that time \va;;e<l
an active and effective campaign
for a reduction in the cotton area of
he planted in l!)t)~>. The advice of
the Association was loyally supported
hy cotton growers throughout the entire
cotton belt and a reduction ol
fully live million acres was stricken
from the cotton urea for 1 ! ()."? and
planted in other crops. The result oi
this display of good judgment on the
part of the farmers is today seen in
i bringing the production of cotton with
in the legitimate demands for eonsumption.
good prices fur the staple
1 and well-tilled corn cribs and smokehouses
from North Carolina to the lxio
(Iranile Hirer. The agricultural, com
i mereial. industrial ami financial interi
ests of the South are today enjoying
an era of prosperity far in excess ol
I ........a i
,uitt |?? i iw.i r.\pri u-iin-u witlllll lilt
past halt' century. To maintain out
, present positi*?i;. and forge ahead in
i the achievement of greater sueeess. it
is imperative tiia-t no serious mistake
he made by the planters who are now
making t'heir arattgemcnts for the
spring plant ing of l!H)t>. Let every
man pause and calmly consider hi*
future even while enjoying the flush
of a victory which has been the most
marvelous ever won in modern times.
Present Acreage Sufficient.
The present estimated twenty-seven
million acres planted in cotton is snllieient
under normal climatic condition*
to raise enough cotton to meet the demands
of spinners for the American
staple. Any material increase in the
cotton acreage for llMMi will tend t<
stagnate the cotton market and depress
prices below their legitiinntf
value. The legitimate laws of supply
and demand is the only true medium
of regulating fair and legitimate
prices for our great staple product
The Southern Cotton Association tlm
all its sources of strength and co-npcr
.. i: -- <
...... .... .iim II- ?>i ui?i"iuiiiuii;r mior
mntion t i's loyal and patriotic supporters
with an oye sinjrle to the future
prosperity of all cotton grower?
and business interests of the South
earnestly makes this appeal for broad
eninjr the splendid advantages that
are to he trained by diversified airriculture
on Southern farms. Plant at'
ahundauee of small irrain. corn and
side erops. Raise more hay. eattU
and lioirs.
Peace and Plenty.
Lot well-tilled eorn erihs and smokehouses
he the ureal bulwarks of safoU
between the fanners and the world o|
trade with whom hey have t<> deal
Rotate your erops. intensify your aereave,
rlilh liberally, cultivate well
produce pleutit' 11 y on the rere
aire (hinted enf ' those n wards
which should he fulsome port'r:.
of tin-.' \\l"? jo Suitlu.ru :-i>i .
St ltd:1" tile J.: - ' i our : oil?
and o.nnr i i io a] in i ill
I ...
anil <': ' 1 " i. li'ltul ITS Te at
o.if i , ; n. i . the field, i ar<i( 1;
nini orchard >f Southern agriculture
Become <1 jut.- it<.i - In your hanks rather
than borrowers. (Jet on a cash
basis as rnp'dlv i - pn-sible ami break
t:)? the ruinous e rod it system which
in the past ha- been so fatal to rotton
growers. As Southern farms hecome
eaeh year more sell'-snstnininc
un-.ler the adoption of a diversified
ami inter.si . system of culture and
pp.per rotation of crops, the f^rowert
of the Sou".It'.- reat staple .can (pickIt
fe ulai. market in*.; l i n eet thr
legitimate <!-. rands of o >nsi<inptioi:
: maii-taii. iu price at sAeh fl^nref
rs will al\va>s _>ive to th<i producei |
a pi-. .It or. its production. Build I
glj L-. V *' '
] " CUT II
n says the doctor ro many of h
doesn't know of any medicinal
s4S cure womb or ovarian troubles,
That such a medicine exist
&& by the wonderful cures pert
?& in thousands of cases, by
?rs W . B I
j| IT CURES WOi
fctij It has saved the lives :
Bp] women, and has rescued th
??j melancholy lifetime of chronic
you, if you will only give it
t" Sold at every drug store in
y WRITE US A LETTER
Put aside all timidity and wiito us
Kaj freely and frankly, in strictest conli- ,
g&5 donee, telling us all your symptoiua 1
fcSQ and troubles. We will send free advice
ffl (in plain, scaled envelope), how to J
euro them. Address: Ladles'Advisory
r Dept., The Chattanooga hlediciuc Co.,
Chattanooga, Tcuu.
gHMBEmi
warehouses wit 11 your surplus money,
ttiul secure adequate storage facilities
for (ho (troper handlinti of yom
eoitou iu the markets of the country.
Let us reach out ami broaden t lit
markets and uses for American cotton.
Let us bring about direct trad:
between the producers and the spin
tiers of the world and in sa legtin riling
our magnificent and valuable staple
from the greed of speculative interests
enjoy the blessings of its monopoly
and through co-operation rapidly develop
our beloved Southland into the
richest and most prosperous section ot
the entire I nion. Cause, relied and
make no fatal mistake in entering upon
the new crop year for 11MHi. The
sun of pesne and plenty is shining
on the loyal and patriotic heads ot
Southern planters today. I'rovidene:
lias IllpiiWll wuiiitmi I ',A
may thicken ami darken our horizon
ill the spring i!" wo grow heedless ot
our duty. The Stillborn Cotton Association
sounds its note of warning
ami issno its appeal t<> the people.
Your* trulv.
UAKVIK .JOIfPAX.
Pres. Southern Cotton Association
Six Children Burn to Death.
Dubois, Pa.. Special. Six children
v.-ore burned to death at l.emlsey. near
Puxsntwaney, at an earlv hour Tuesday
and William Morgan and wife
the parents, with their two remaining
children, barely eseaped with tlieir
lives. Both the father anil mother
were badly burned in attempts to
save their little oues from the burning
home.
$2,500 Jewelry Packages Disappear.
Houston, Texas, Special.? Three
packages containing jewelry, watch
cases and works to the value of $2,500
disappeared from an express wagon
The packages were left under the seat
while the driver stepped across the
street. When he returned they were
gone. They were consigned to jew_1
.... ?: - ii* - ?
*-n > in ui? in iioiisioii mill were about
to ho delivered. A similar event occurred
last week when a package valued
at $1,100 disappeared.
Cow Stirs Rattler's Wralh.
A cow which John Takes of Outlet
valley was driving to pasture stepped
an the tail of a rattlesnake, and tht
nraged reptile turned on Takes, whe
Hed to his barn.
The snake chased him to the door
which Takes closed. Takes was held
trisonpr half an hoar before the snake
?eased its rattling and went away.?
Hazelton correspondence, Philadelphia
Record.
fwt Nssar Risappo
p Viq Fulfill Every Promise and !
f , r ffagS^-tC St riot ii r o without the fcr
?? ,|lv, putii or ileti niloo from
ctircu u*;v>r i?? miuru, wlthm t mprrury
I'lmitlvrl;
.') ^ ,l>:- \ Ttio !>r. Kintf M.
" i /C'i)', ) la*? of tlir . i.M? '
m\ /''JLtil, *f S'l-i v'.ij .mil ..hri>.
'? .* i, P L \ (hisInstitution, la
Li 'ilV-aiS^; A bjr *l'IT,,f
I? KtHaXa 'f /=?!? Oursiic(\-;?. In tl
.1 xV ?<i: wcivfliKiiln
, ' "*7" t? "* ? j Our oflln sare c<
< < lo*. X-r iT. lolct i
I J V C-.nuisance know!
"I n"'(ixrn in evnrjr
I l)?:,<! officii
M N. x*" am) I Icon set! i- b y I
i I ^ Wo .. .
J ^ \ \ ^,'-V Pa!ri>na?ro -r.ot . <
r I'" \ V ,aw>a'2*i liyllils inMuli->n.
' , V? \ \*niV lOflO.OOpei- ii.o;itl
>| ^ v-4fiy#!V nncoot o r ir.: .7ii
MYKSTRtFEPEWElS. GHSQKieBt*
YiV'dV
?v? UNTIL CURED. ^ Tumorn
N-xc. 1 Broil', It"
N. K. KINO, M D. (-In- ulo l)l?rn:
C"it* Consunma Physic am, Unneiurnl D,?c!iir
' *?# >? ? ?*% ui to-day rojran!ln(t yoorr nd 'to
or i< t It? ?->n! you tf'jr literature, li <"luut:iz
' CONSULTATION* BXAMINAi
tts
r out7' ]
is lady patients, because be pf?
treatment that will positively
except the surgeon's knife.
s, however, has been proved &|
'ormcd on diseased women,
B11 MlV S |
IVH3 OB3?A3i^a j|i
>f thousands of weak, sick |K
ousands of others from a jjfl
: invalidism. It will cure ml
a chance. Try it. |JM
Ji i.oe bottles. |*P
GAVE UP SUPPGRTER. ^
"I wore n ?np)ir>ri?<r for fotir yonrd, to fcrr-? fiffl
up my *u In?-ti ti i.l rt. wil.il i-vrrytlilnj fffrC
iton-u It." writcii .Mr*. S. J, Clirmiiiuu. i-#-1*
pf Mnniivnllu. S. V. "M y doctor tol.l me no MM
IIIiMhMII.- WOtllll ll-lp till*. I Ullf.Ti .1 IITlt.'llt
miwry.iiiHl ftml.l li.vrdly walk. After tnI.itiv* H9B
l wo Pot I If* of i iiritm I oovoupmy *upporti'r. ffW
Sow I mil tnkltiii iny fifth Im.|*1i-. have no lent Km
fi'i'llinm :i* formerly, mid can Iw onuyfwt
I :ilt ii tiny nt h tiinr. t itronnlv mnhUinetMi
Liuiliu to evcry auticiliig wuiuio." iJW
PERSONAL COSSIP,
It will cuts of Nice are about to erect
a statue in memory of Ncbain Dubois.
Ex-Congressman .lerrv Simpson, who
died recently, left an estate of SIO.(KK).
Sir Frederick Treves. King Edward's
surgeon, is tlie orator in his profession.
The Duke of Connuught will sail for
South Africa on a tour of military inspection.
Oscar Hunt, one of the Carlisle footbnll
team, is an Indian millionaire from
Oklahoma.
I.onl Elgin claims to l?e the direct
descendant of lie male line of King
Robert the 1 truce.
lsnne Thomas Parker is a railwajj
conductor, and also-lie is the Lieutenant-Oovernor
of Delaware.
(Jenernl Pleasant Porter, chief of
flbc Creeks, may lie tlie tirst Indian to
sit in the I'nitcd States Senate.
Sculptor (iluseppo is dead and the
colossal Victor Emmanuel monument
in Home is far from completed.
Harry S. Schuyler, a native of Philadelphia.
is to be chauffeur for the
rrinco ami rrinoess <>r Wales during
their Indian tour.
Sir Archibald I'Jeikie, the famous
geologist, predicts a not Iter deluge on
account of the universal decay of the
surface of the land.
Mayor-elect Tracy, of Taunton.
Mass., started out in life as a bootblack,
and now Is a self-educated law*
yer, with at practice of $12,000 a yeair.
Brigadier-General Thomas II. Barry,
who was with the Russian army in
Manchuria, will he made president of
the Army Wair College in Washington.
Admiral Lord Charles Rcresford
claims the distinction of being the llrst
European who was allowed, by invitation,
to gaze on the face of the Mikado
of Japan. This was in IStlS, ^
The new Ambassador front Mexico,
Mr. Casasus, is by all accounts a very
amiable and accomplished man.
- *The
real friends of football are all
united in deploring the brutality and
roughing tactics, ill-feeling and fisticuffs
which will unfailingly sound tho
knell of what is, in its proper estate*
a splendid American game. Football
is fast coming to tho point where It
must be either totally reformed or
al>olished, declares the Richmond
Times Dispatch. Football is too good
!i frame tn ln,? Km Kml fur l>nt.
tor lose it than keep it in its latter-day
developments. Far better
would be the doing away with th<?
men who are wholly ruining it for
decent sportsmen. An intercollegiate
board should run down every man
guilty of dirty play and rule him permanently
off the field.
Fhlna's "open door" is now propped
vide opm by the Anglo-Japanese alliance
'
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ievor MiJd flu* F&ls? Hopes. U
ilfo in V Icui'fIn r. Ihimt B
bmtlo. i-.; Coniu.'t kii I'looil Paid'in H
or mlncrM nutun ; I.om n' Manly V
y r.irril; no si minim i tin; pcrinRiior. t. a
.llrul Co. la an In Utu:im ii-.-.-.i:i!.n I i i'.t I Ivi
.f ?. -.ir," i .r Ui?* trf.iii v i.i ... r ?I! fc|
;< , . ?. i)r. iv. i. in' f ' .dor of RJ
the chief o- nsultlnir ey- ialUt, bclnx assisted B
nl physleiuuiinud .urgem I
i -tr? miii' Di <?r ?.hr. r.lc fi:-?-asc? la iinn'jrpis- I
iioillml r..' I i lnctlical aftmoleii.
III1 ; I ?*<i .. !i i I tli'i ;:.11 fr.rsdlc batter- L
ray. imtt Mn'cn ray: In fuel, erory rlertrlrnl I
11 > tlu mo'ilcal profOf.io.i. Oiirrmltarlum I* I
reapcot, and ?vr employ nono lull lire boat I
nt attendants. rrjrulni.y Qualifletl ctrmluaurs !<
rums being |ii charge. i |
i.'iilvadlurf nranj to aecuro patients and H
). D.'t or una <L' il for lltorntuni are cent out LH
Our t> ntii loi trantu.. at averni.-o from i-' "0 H
ded) and wog'ft tlio sssur- H i
ihin a siiecine i imir. Vj A
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ooolct 51 ilB
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