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r-.v u>'. * CONGRESS IS The Election of The Rep: York Practical t i REPUBLICANS CARRY THE HOUSE, f< tn CO tiere Was Little Excitement in the f() lectio.i of Tucsdny and Results Show Tew Surprises. 1* . ! lC! ? r?3 Tuesday's election passed off quiet- ly in all sections* of the country. The ar latest ret jrns obtainable indicate that di the republicans will have a small majority in the next Congress, though Cq the democratic gains have been heavy, j pc New York seems to have gone republi- J in can by a small majority. The South ^ went solidly democratic. The voting (r was light everywhere. I In j m NEW YORK New York, Special.?Although the fr unofficial reports from the State appar- cs ently showed Odell's election by 19,798 or "'""'i'" Mr pnipr his Democratic op 1^1 ui a*u ? , " J to ponent, refused to concede defeat, de- j r ciaring tl at he wished to have the offi- pi cial coun;. Mr. Coler's statement was m followed by a rather sensational an- Pi nouncement from Secretary Mason, of ^ the State Democratic committee, that I he refused to concede Odell's election; , ^ that fraud had robbed Coler of many j cl votes up the State and that Senator ti< Hill and Chairman Campbell, of the ; W: State committee, would come to New York this evening to decide on a plan i vr of action. About the time these state- js meats appeared a rumor was circu- ; h Jsted that Coler intended to make a in contest in the courts, and simultane- , bf ously the Evening Journal issued an i * extra ed.tion. declaring that former pr Seaator Hill. Chailcs F. Murphy and j m Hugo McLaughlin claimed Coler's elec- h tion. This report, together with the ja statements made by Mr. Coler and Sec- j \ retary Mason, have caused consider- : tr . < able excitement in the city. Mr. Coler's statement follows: rMI think personally it would be a Vc good thing to watch the official count c< up the State closely. Suppose the Dem- ; Vlocratic ticket had received say in the : ? \ neighborhood of 150.000 majority in i Gi Greater New York, there was nothing r to have stopped the Republicans from i tb claiming; the upper section of the State I to by 200,000. What the Democratic party ' cc needs up the State is tried and true w material who will look carefully after I h the party's interests. I don't mean by i jn anything I have said either last night i m or this morning that I in any manner ar conceded the election of my opponent. m I want to wait for the official count, for my latest advices are that the vote is very close. I am hopeful of receiving todfcy news that will put a new d, complexion on affairs in this State." John A. Mason, of the State commit- r, tee, spet.king for the committee, issued W; the following statement: "We concede cj nothing Odell's election is simply a d, claim. We will not admit his election se -.. *11 l\a 11 r\r n 11 I UU11I CTCIJ UUCVUlt uunvv V'? M..VQX-- rl befective ballot has been scrutinized, jn and every vote that of right belongs to oc ojir party is counted. The alleged de- 3, fective ballots uncounted for the Democratic ticket by Republican inspectors , are more than enough to elect Coler. I ar We have evidence of wholesale de- 1 tll bauchery and corruption in Orange, j ]a Oneida and Albany and Erie counties. and in the cities along the New York st Central Raifroad. The defective bal4 lots and the chicanery practiced on , " the three judicial districts where the CI Republican State machine bent every j g] energy to elect Attorney General Da- | Ci vis is alone sufficient to change the j m result. We shall contest every foot of ground " Davii B. Hill and Frank Campbell 7 will bt at State headquarters this p evening and a meeting of the State g. \ committee will be held either this evening or tomorrow and a plan of action ti, will be formulated. m Col. Dunn, chairman of the State Republican committee, when informed to- tr day of the report that the Democrats w threatened to contest the election, said: j p "If they start anything of that kind m xwe will give them all the contest they ta want right here in New York county 1 and tbey will wish they had never heard of contests." a The revised figures for Governor are m as follows: Odell 133,836; Coler 123,038; th Odell s plurality 10,798. a] NORTH CAROLINA. CI Raleigh. Special.?The returns from cj 35 counties gave a Democratic ma- e( jority of over 30,000 and these are from the eastern and middle counties and the same ratio will give the democratic State ticket a majority in ?' the State approximately about 35.000. j 0( At midnight there is no change in ss the Democratic State majority, which A is apparently about 63,000. Kluttz, di . 1- ?t - J _ ti,. j... In 1/viuuuai, is saie iu luc ci^uiu uj i ?about J,500 majority. Moody, Republi-I ?( can, is defeated in the tenth district, j S1 by a majority of about 1.000. Clark, ; m Democrat, is elected Chief Justice, : despite a desperate fight made on ic him. but has been scratched by about 4.000 votes.. The Legislature and State Senate will be overwhelmingly Demo- C cratic and a Democrat will succeed i Si Jeter C. Pritchard as United States fa Senator. iT] SOUTH CAROLINA. pi Ch.vlcstcn. S. C., Special.?The Dem- st oerats elected their entire Federal, \ al industrial niscellany. Hotel keeping pays in London. The i.. 1 Carlton has earned a profit during the ,nl yea: of about ?03,000 ($315,000.) This ] enabled the directors, after declaring get a dividend of 10 per cent, to add the | , modest sum of ?25,000 ($125,000) to ' their reserve fund. It Is safe to say | ' -that Americans spent nearly three-1 3 quarters of the total sum taken in by set the Carlton. The Cecil did a business | kn during the year of nearlv a quarter ' 1 of e million pounds, earning a profit | as * of more than ?58.000 ($200,000.) jab r t . REPUBLICAN. ublican Ticket in New lly Certain. ate and county ticket almost without C ^ligilltru uppusitiuii. UtVi^lun i4 untv eloets a full Democratic ticket r the first time in 35 years. MISSISSIPPI. Jackson. Miss., Special. The vote ia ississippi was very light, the tabulaDns so far made indicating a total of ss than 40.C00. All the Democratic ndiaates for Congress were elected ithout oppositon. The constitutional neniments are believed to have been feated. ARKANSAS. Little Rock. Ark.. Special- Less than per cent, of the normal vote was died in the election for 'Congressmen Arkansas. All the seven Democratic miinecs were elected by majorities nging from 3,000 to S.OCO. In six disicts there were Republican nominees, i some places the negro voters reamed away from the polls. CONNECTICUT. Cow Haven. Conn., Special.?Returns om 50 towns in Connecticut indiite the election cf the entire Republiin ticket by pluralities ranging about i.000. The returns from the same wns indicate that Connecticut will turn four district Congressmen. Relblicans. and a Republican Congressan at large. The General Assembly omises to be comfortably Republiin. thus insuring the return to the nited States Senate of O. H. Piatt. DELAWARE. Yilmington. Del., Special.?The polls csed in Delaware at 6 p. m. Indicaans are that the vote in the State as lighter than two years ago. The mtost for the Legislature is aptrently close and the result probably ill not be known until the full vote counted. The election of Henry ouston. Democrat, for Congress, is dicated. At 9 p. m.. the returns were ing received slowly. Reports from over ene-half of the ecincts in the first district of Wilington indicate the election of Dr. . G. Buekmaster, Democrat, over imes Hitch, of the Republican party, warm fight was made in the dis 111. FLORIDA. Jacksonville. Fla.. Special.?A light >te was polled throughout the State :>ngressnjen Sparkman and Davis ere re-elected from the first and cond districts respectively, withit opposition. Attorney General W. , Lamar was elected in the new ird district. There was no oposition i the Democratic ticket. StateN or ingressional. The Legislature elected ill re-elect United States Senator allory to succeed himself, he havg already been nominated by priary. The proposed constitutional nendment providing for three extra embers of the Supreme Court bench as carried. ALABAMA. Montgomery, Ala., Special.?The emocratic State ticket was elected r a large majority. The "Lily White" epublican vote was not as large as ne evnprtpri Returns are lnsuffi ent to give definite figures. The pmocratic nominees in the first, cond, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, ghth and ninth districts are elected, i the seventh district Burnett, Dem rat, leads Street, Republican, and urnett's election is probable. VIRGINIA. Richmond. Va., Special.?Returns e slow. The State will certainly rcrn a full Democratic delegation. The test from the ninth district, where iere was the only serious contest, asires the election of Rhea. Democrat, is stated. Norfolk City gave Maynard, Demoat, 2.680 against Hughes. Republican. 14 votes for Congress. Maynard will irry the second district by fully .5,000 ajority. TEXAS. Dallas, Tex., Special.?The vote in exas was lighter than in 1900. The emoerats swe^t the State, electing amuel W. T. Lanham, Governor by a ?a*y majority. I^ate returns 6how iat tho Democrats elected Congress en from all 16 districts. The only ird fight was in the fifteenth disict, where John Scott, Republican, as defeated by John M. Garner, emocrat. The constitutional amendent requiring voters to pay a pollix carried by a good majority. OHIO. Columbus, O.. Special.?At 9 o'clock Republican State committee estiated their plurality in Ohio at more lan 100.000, a gain of between 30,000 id 40,000 over last yean The Demoatic central committee made no aims on the State ticket, but claim1 a gain of Congressmen. MICHIGAN. Detroit. Mich., Special.?At 9:30 clock Chairman Whiting, cf the Dem ratic State central committee. tid: "Tne Democrats nave eiecieu lfred Luckil to Congress in the first strict and has elected many mem;rs of the Legislature. Rurand, Dem:-ratic candidate for Governor, shows cat gains this far and if thev are aintained in the same proportion he ill be elected by over 10,000 marity. MINNESOTA. St. Paul. Minn., Special.?At 10:30 hairman Jamison, of the Republican tate committee, said: "Returns so ,r received while somewhat meagre, idicate that Van Zandt will have a uraiity of 30.000 for Governor. Subantial gains have been made all ong the line." Minor natters. \ gentleman of leisure excels in dol nothing gracefully. Honey ceases to talk after a miser ts a strangle hold on it. Time will tell?but the woman with I secret never gives time a chance. It's the girl who can't sing that j ;ms anxious that every one should ow it. Don't be so aggressively charitable to make beneficiaries uncomfortle. . > REPUBLICANS STILL IN CONTROL Washington, Special.?The latest returns received up to 10:30 Wednesday night show that the Republicans (including in this description the fusionists elected from the Pittsburg and Allegheny districts in Pennsylvania) will control the next House by a vote 01 zu* nepuDiicans iu 119 uemucrats, with three districts, the eighth Tennessee and two California districts remaining so much in doubt that the official returns will be needed to decide the result. The totals given are believed to be correct, although there are a few districts, such as two in I Colorado and one in Minnesota, where I the Republican and Democratic party ! managers do not concede defeat, but the general result does not affect even should their claims prove well founded. The table by State is as follows: Dem. Rep. Alabama 9 Arkansas 7 California 2 4 I Colorado 3 I Connecticut 5 i Delaware 1 1 Florida 3 I Georgia 11 J Idaho 1 ; Illinois 9 16 Indiana 4 9 Iowa 1 19 Kansas 8 Kc-ntuckv If. 1 Louisiana 7 Maine 4 Maryland 2- 1 Massachusetts 4 10 Michigan 1 11 Miunesota :. 1 8 Mississippi 8 Missouri 15 1 Montana 1 Nebraska 1 5 Nevada 1 New Hampshire 2 New Jersey 3 7 New York 17 20 North Carolina 10 North Dakota Ohio 4 17 Oregon 2 j Pennsylvania 4 2S Rhode Island 1 1 South Carolina 7 South Dakota.. 2 Tennessee 7 2 Texas 16 Utah 1 Vermont 2 Virginia 9 1 Washington S West Virginia 5 Wisconsin 1 10 Wyoming . 1 Totals 179 201 The eighth Tennessee district and the first and second California districts are not included in this table, being classified still as doubtful, leaving three votes to be added to the columns according to later returns. ILLINOIS. Chicago, Special.?Meagre returns prevented at midnight anything like an accurate statement of the result of the election in the State of Illinois. | although there is every indication that the Republican ticket has been elected by a good majority. The next Legislature will be Republican without a doubt, and the successor to United States Senator Mason is certain 10 be Republican. THE REPUBLICANS CARRY COOK COUNTY BY 10,000 MAJORITY. Chicago. Special. At 10 o'clock it was evident that Bussc, the Republican candidate for State Treasurer, had carried the city by at least 8.500, which will give him between 13.000 and 14.! 000 in Cook county. At Democratic headquarters it was conceded that the Republicans had carried the county by 10,000. Rhea Defeated for Congress in Virginia. Richmond. Va., Special.?Returns from the ninth district seem to place beyond doubt the election of Slemp, Republican, for Congress, over Rhea. Democrat, thus giving the Republicans one and the Democrats nine Congressmen from Virginia. Van Zandt's Majority Great. St. Paul, Special.?With the receipt of more complete returns, the majority of Governor VanZandt assumes large proportions. It i sat least 50,000 and may go as high as 75,000?a record-breaking majority in Minnesota for a gubernatorial candidate. Eight of the nine Congressmen are Republicans, the Democrat being ex-Governor John Lind, who defeated Loren Fletcher in the fifth district. Dubois, Democrat, still claims a victory in the sixth district, but figures so far received indicate that Buckman, Republican, i* safe. Arizona Election in D^ubt. Phoenix, Ariz., Special.?The election of a delegate to Congress from Arizona is still in doubt. Whether Republican or Democrat the majority will probably be less than 300. Mor rison, Republican, carried tne nve Northern counties by more than 1,000 majority, and claims two other counties. The six remaining counties have certainly gone for Wilson, Democrat. Bigelow Carries Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Cleveland, O., Special.?Complete returns "from this. Cuyahoga county, give Laylin, Republican, for Secretary of State 33,886; Bigelow. Democrat, 36,247. Bigelow's plurality is 2,356. The Republicans elected a portion of the county ticket and the Democrats the remainder. Fusionists Win in Nevada. Reno. New, Special.?The entire fusion State ticket has been elected with the exception of Bray, Superintendent of Schools. Spark's majority for Governor will be fully 1,700. Van Duser. Democrat, for Congress, carried the State by 1,000. Foreign Notes of Interest. Despite reports to the contrary, the Pope continues in excellent health, taking the air dally in the Vatican gardens. Though his body appears frail, his mind is as clear and alert as ever. Tothing Hall, the house in which Defoe was believed to have written "Robinson Crusoe," is about to be sold at auction. It is now said, however, that the house was not built until quite a , century after ^efoe's death. >- ^RiSSBHMMBnnR^B i PROBABLE FUTURE Of the Philippines is Given Out From Washington CONDITIONS NOW SATISFACTORY. General Chaffee and Vice-Governor Wright Arrive at Honolulu En Route Home. Honolulu, Special.?The transport Sumner arrived here October 20th, en roue to San Francisco, with General A, R. Chaffee and Vice Governor Luke E. Wright, of the Philippines, on board. The steamer had a terrible experience in a typhoon soon after leaving Manila. She lost one of her boats and had sevcial damaged, and for a number of hours was in grave danger. In an interview, Governor Wright had the following to say of conditions in tlr Philippines and their future: "The developments following the inauguration of Jhe civil government of the islands have been most satisfactory. They have now civil government aimcst everywhere, and tLe people seem to be learning its advantages. The system of provincial and municipal government has worked well. During the past year there has nut been a sin-rlo defalcation and verv few thefls. The government is strictly one of civil service. There is a degree of peace and safety in the Philippines now that was never reached under the Spanish rule. The Spaniards used to pay the brigands to keep the peace, but we have refused to continue this system. After the passage of the Philippine bill, iast year, we established the insular constabulary and we have now 0.0U0 of these police. We find they are the best men for the business and they have closed the provinces of lawbreakers with great activity. The service is one .vh'cS appeals #to the natives. for the police are chosen from the tribes which they must serve. The future of the islands will be a great one. What are n-v.Wl most are railroads and those may bo built soon by American capital. There is a trunk line en the island of Luzon noW under consideration and its building will help matters greatly." Governor Wright also stated that he considered the return of the friars v-as the best thing for the islands and he expected that the Pope- would send a representative to appraise the Church property in the Philippines. San Francisco. Nov. M.?The transport Sumner left Honolulu last M6nday and is expected to arrive here tomorrow. On board the Sumner are Major General A. R. Chaffee and L. E. Wright, vice governor of the Philippines.' Mason identified. Boston. Special.?After having given out Saturday night the confession made by the young negro. George L. Perry, with reference to selling the watches taken from the murdered women. Miss Clara A. Morron and Miss Agnes McPhee. the police admitted that Morris declares that Allan Mason is the man from whom he receives these articles. This admission was made after young Perry was taken to the jail in East Cambridge. when; Mason, the prominent Boston man under arrest on the charge of killing Miss Morton, is confined, pending 3 hearing in the Cambridge court. In one of the jail corridors Perry positively Identified Masoh as the man who had given him the two watches. Mason by neither look nor word, betrayed an.v knowledge of having seen Perry beforp VVhpn miesHnnpri hv Sheriff Fair bairn, Mason merely said: "I do no) know this man; I never saw him before." Three Killed fn Wreck. Indianapolis. Special.?In a collision between a freight train and a work train on the Cincinnati. Hamilton S Dayton Railroad, three men were killed and one was injured. The injured man. whose legs were cut off, will die The dead are: John Veeth, of Genesee Mich., craneman on work train; "Bud1 Foutz, Montezuma. Ind., work train laborer. Brownsville; George Merriam telegraph operator, Brownsville. Th< wreck is said to have been due to i misunderstanding of orders. For a Branch Factory. Greenville, S. C., Special.?Th< American Cigar Company has made t proposition to the Greenville board oi trade to locate a factory here. Ovei $7,000 has been subscribed towards the erection of the building for this purpose. A further canvass will be made Monday and there is every indication to believe the amount required will b? raised. Killed By Farmer. Independence, Ky., Special.?Nicholas Hopperton. town marshal of this place, was shot and killed by Wm. Rice, a farmer. Rice had come to towc intoxicated and carrying a shot-gun The marshal arrested him and disarmed him. but somebody gave him his gun as re was aouui iu ie?i>e iu?u, n a few m nutes Rice returned and darec the marshal to arrest him.. The marshal advanced to disarm him, when Rice fired and the marshal fell mortal ly wounded. He, however, fired threi shots at Rice, each taking effect. Hoppertor. died in a few minutes. Rice's wounds are said to be mortal. Railroad Sued. Cincinnati. Special.?The Shaw 5 Irwing Commission Company, of Cincinnati. have entered suit against th; Chespeake & Ohio Railroad, at New. port, Ky., for $24,000 for the alleged failure to deliver seven car'ioads ol groceries to grocers in the coal mining regions of West Virginia between Auguest 27th and September 5th. The petition charges that during the coal strike seven carloads of groceries were their destination. js i-m SOUTHERN INDUSTRIAL Appalacdian National Pa-k. (Manufacturers' Record.) The report of Hon. James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture, upon the proposed Appalachian Forest Reserve, is reproduced as a special feature of this issue of the Manufacturers' Record, together with a number of striking illustrations accompanying the report and republishing through the courtesy nf fho A p-ripiiltiirn! npnartmpnf. The practical advantages of the establishment of the reserve are set forth clearly in it ,and are summarized at its conclusion. President Roosevelt, in transmitteng the report, said that with those conclusions he fully agreed, and in addition wrote: The report of the Secretary presents the final results of an investigation authorized by the last Congress. Its conclusions point unmistakably, in the judgment of the Secretary and in my own, to the creation of a national forest reserve in certain parts of the Southern States. The facts ascertained and here presented deserve the careful consideration of the Congress;- they have already received the full attention of the scientist and the lumberman. They set forth an economic need of prime importance to the welfare of the South, and hence to that ot the nation as a whole, and they point to the necessity of protecting through wise use a mountain region whose influence flows far beyond its borders with the waters of the rivers to which it gives rise. Among the elevations of the eastern half of the United States the Southern Appalachians are of paramount interest for geographic, hydrographic and forest reasons, and as a consequence, for economic reasons as well. These great mountains are old in the history of the continent which has grown up about them. The hardwood forests were born on their slopes and have spread thence over the eastern half of the continent. More than once in the remote geologic past they have disappeared before the sea on the east, south and west, and before the ice on the north; but here in this Southern Ap; palachian region they have lived on to the present day. Under the varying conditions of soil, elevation and climate many of the Appalachian tree species have developed. Hence it is that in this region oc lui uittt uia: vciuujj vaiicij auu m.uness of plant growth which have led our ablest business men and scientists to ask for its preservation by the government for the advancement of science, and for the instruction and pleasure of the people of our own and of future generations. And It is the concentration here of so many valuable species with such favorable conditions of growth which-has led forest experts and lumbermen alike to assert that of all the continent this region is best suited to the purposes and plans of a national forest reserve in the hardwood region. At the meeting last Saturday at Asheville, N. C., of the Appalachian National Park Convention it was resolved. That this convention heartily approves the action of Congress in establishing the great national forest reserves in the Western States and Territories and the more recent action of Congress in providing for the construction of a great system of irrigation works in those States. Inasmuch as the n.rests ana tne sous v/nicn tnese forests protect in the Southern Appalachian mountain region serve as a natural reservoir for the storage for the water which falls in excessive rains in this region, this convention asks the co-opcration of senators and representatives in Congress from the Western States in securing the passage of the Appalachian Forest Reserve bill now before Congress as an extension to these Southeastern States of the great policy of natural water storage by the government, which has already wisely been inaugurated in the West. In consideration of the fact of the rapid and steadily-increasing rate at which the forests on the slopes of the Snilthprn A nnnlorMan miwntalno ?-.1 being destroyed, the growing frequency of the floods carrying away the fertile soils from this region and depositing me same m navigaoie streams, having recently caused over $18,000,000 of damage, this convention urges upon Congress the prompt passage of the bill now before the House of Reprerentatives providing for the establishment o! the Appalachian National Forest Reserve as the only possible means of overcoming the existing and increasing evils. Dr. C. P. Ambler, the secretary of the association, gave an interesting sketch of it3 purposes and explained the status of bills in Congress Rooking vu wis estuuiisiiiuem ui a lurest rejorvo in the Southern Appalachian mountains. One bill, the Burton bill, has passed the Senate, but with an amendment by Senator Bate of Tennessee, which practically makes the bill of none effect. The House committee on agriculture has rejected this amendment. Dr. Ambler said that the measure did not lack friends in the Senate and House; that the country recognizes it as a just one, and that a hearing has been promised to Southern congressmen during the coming short session of Congress. He urged that efforts of friend3 of the bill should be centered upon the rejection or modification of the Bate amendment in the Senate, and upon a hearing of the measure upon the floor of the House of Representatives. In furtherance of the bill the Senate has published a magnificent volume, known as Senate Document No. 84, containing the message of President Roosevelt recommending favorable consideration by Congress and the elaborate report of Secretary Wilson of the Department of Ag.wulture and comprehensive and valuable appendices. These official utterances leave little to be said about the necessity for the Forest Reserve. But there is danger that without organized effort on the i part of everybody interested the objects of the bill may be defeated through delay. / "K i . \ > SAW POISON MAlfl New Evidence in the Famous MoliiKV ? *eux Case. A WOMAN GIVES HER EVIDENCE. She Would Have Spoken of the Incident at Once, but Her Husband Persuaded Her Not to Do So. New York, Special.?The greatest sensation in the second trial of Roland B. Molineux. charged with the murder of Mrs. Adams, came late Thursda.when Mrs. Anna Stephenson, the wife of a Brooklyn policeman, was called to the stand by the defense and testSed positiveliy that Molineux was not the man who mailed the now famous pois on package at the general posloifiee on the -vening of December 23, 189S. Then the witness partially identified Harry Cornish, who. was asked to stand up in court, as the man whom she saw standing in front oi her in the line at the pootoffice and holding in. his hand a package addressed to "Air. liarry Cornish, Knickerbocker Club.'* That was all she saw. Her identification of Cornish was not positive. She said he lcoked very much like the man. The witness' account of her movements on the evening of December 23. and her reason for tret appearing at the first trial were given is detail. Tue- ' prosecution on cross-examinatici brought out the fact that Mrs. Stephenson had suffered fiom attacks of nervous prostration within the last two years and had carefully read the details of the former trial. The questions, of the assistant district attorney tended to show that an effort would be made to prove insanity or delusion, it is also said that an effort will be made to prove an alibi for Cornish. Mm. i Stephenson was on the stand wheur^ court adjourned. When court opened Thursday David. N. Carval'ho, the handwriting expert, who was on the stand when adjournment was taken last night, resumed his place In the witness chair. He said he did not believe that Molineux wrote - - ?? ? MM ? MM AMtt rt# tne poison pacnage wiappei ui au; m the disputed writings, and in detail explained to the jury his reasons for hift opinions. i As soon as the direct examination of i Carvalho was completed Mr Osborne, assistant district attorney, made another attempt to get the "Barnet diagnosis b'ank" in evidence, but Justice ' Lambert declined tc reverse his earlier ! ruling excluding it. The sc-called | "diagnosis blank" gives the measure: ments and other data of a man suffering frcra a trouble the patent medicine ; venders, to whom the blank was adj dressed, guaranteed to cure. When the technical part of the crossexamination of the witness was finished counsel asked Carvalho if he had ! compared the disputed writings with the handwriting of Harry S. Cornish and Rudolph Helles, both of whom have been shown interested in the; case. Carvalho said he had. "Did Cornish write the address oa the poson package?" asked Mr. Osborne. "He did not." replied the expert witness without heistation. "Did Heilers write it?" "No, sir." "Mr. Carvalho," said ex-Governor Black, "you answered a question here ; as a physiologist. You were asked whether you thought a man when writing an address on a poison package would disguise his writing and you re- a plied "Yes." Let me ask you another ! question. Do you think a man sending? ; a poison package to himself would write the address at all with Mid ; hand?" Mr. Osborne objected and the court declined to let the witness answer. After the recess seven witnesses testified that Molineux did not write the poison package address. These witnesses were Clarence Foote. David W. Torrey, Sampel H. McDowell, and Geo. Duncan, handwriting experts from banks; E. D. Bushneli, who was chairman of the Knickerbocker Athletic Club house committee, and had seen Molineux write; Prof. George Golday, % of Princeton University, who had correspondence with Molineux, and Samuel Pittinger, cashier of the New York Athletic Flub. Louis Jacobson, who worked in a New York store, testified that he knew Cornish and Mrs. Rogers well, and that he frequently saw them together. He said he had sold bromo-seltzer to Mrs. Rogers. Cornish, in his testimony, swore he had never tasted bromoseltzer and Mrs. Rogers said she had never bought any of the stuff. The as sistant district attorney, in cross-examining Jacobson, got the witness to admit that he could not remember the names of any others of his customers who drank bromo-seltzer. The defense then called Wm. J. Liell. proprietor of a drug store near the house where Mrs. Adams died. Cornish testified that when Mrs. Adams 1 became sick he ran to Liell's store and ; Liell gave him aromatic spirits of am- A monia. Liell corroborated that testi mony. He said Cornish seemed very I much excited, but that he did not look fl sick. A Emma Miller testified she sold thefl bottle-holder in which the poison wa^H sent, after the store lamps were lighiJH^ ed, and Barton Huff, a traveling sales- w mJin cniH Vio tt'oc ?n T-Torfr>+n**A WWIU **V "U? Ut IIUIVUCqOU O a LUIC at the time. He said a man brushed by him and asked to see a silver bottleholder, but witness did not see him buy it. He described the map, his descriction tallying with that of Miss Miller. . i A Liberal Victory la Yorkshire. London. By Cable.?The election in the Cleveland division of Yorkshire Thursday for a member of Parliament to succeed A. E. Pease, Liberal, who i recently resigned the seat resulted, a Stewart Samuel, Liberal, 5,834; Geof-''^ frey Drage, Unionist, 3,798; Liberal 3 majority, 2,036. The government's edu- 7 cation bill, eight hours' work for mln- .*j ers and temperance, were the principal issues. At the last election Mr. Pease j ' was elected without opposition.